Part 1: Introduction to the Pentateuch
1. What are the five books that constitute the Pentateuch?
ANSWER ✓ The five books of the Pentateuch are Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers,
and Deuteronomy.
2. What is the meaning of the term "Pentateuch"?
ANSWER ✓ "Pentateuch" is a Greek term meaning "five scrolls" or "five-volumed book."
3. What is the Hebrew name for the Pentateuch?
ANSWER ✓ The Hebrew name for the Pentateuch is "Torah," which means "instruction,"
"teaching," or "law."
4. What is the primary theological theme that unifies the Pentateuch?
ANSWER ✓ The primary theological theme is God's fulfillment of His promises to the
patriarchs (Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob), particularly the promise of land, descendants,
and blessing.
5. What are the three main critical challenges to the Mosaic authorship of the
Pentateuch?
ANSWER ✓ The three main challenges are the Documentary Hypothesis (JEDP), the
fragmentary hypothesis, and the supplementary hypothesis.
6. What is the Documentary Hypothesis (JEDP Theory)?
ANSWER ✓ The Documentary Hypothesis is a critical theory proposing that the
Pentateuch was compiled from four main source documents (Jahwist, Elohist,
Deuteronomist, and Priestly) over centuries, rather than being written by Moses.
7. What is the traditional conservative view regarding the authorship of the
Pentateuch?
, ANSWER ✓ The traditional conservative view holds that Moses is the primary human
author of the Pentateuch, having written it during the wilderness wanderings, with the
exception of small portions like the account of his death (Deuteronomy 34).
8. What internal biblical evidence supports Mosaic authorship?
ANSWER ✓ Internal evidence includes numerous passages within the Pentateuch itself
that state "The Lord said to Moses" (Exodus 24:4), as well as references in the New
Testament where Jesus and the apostles attribute the Law to Moses (e.g., John 5:46-47;
Luke 24:27).
9. What is the theological significance of God revealing His personal name,
Yahweh, to Moses in Exodus 3?
ANSWER ✓ It signifies a more intimate and covenantal relationship with His people,
revealing Himself as the eternal, self-existent, faithful God who keeps His promises.
10. Define "covenant" as used in the Pentateuch.
ANSWER ✓ A covenant is a binding, solemn agreement between two parties, initiated by
God, which establishes a relationship and outlines obligations and promises.
11. What are the three major covenants established in the Pentateuch?
ANSWER ✓ The Abrahamic Covenant, the Mosaic (Sinaitic) Covenant, and the
Deuteronomic Covenant.
12. How does the concept of "blessing" function in the Pentateuch?
ANSWER ✓ Blessing is God's empowering presence for life, fertility, and prosperity,
often channeled through the covenant to bring about His redemptive purposes for the
world.
13. What is the "Protoevangelium" and where is it found?
ANSWER ✓ The "Protoevangelium" (or "first gospel") is found in Genesis 3:15, where
God promises that the seed of the woman will crush the head of the serpent,
foreshadowing the ultimate victory of Christ over Satan.
14. What is the purpose of the genealogies (toledot) in the Pentateuch?
, ANSWER ✓ The genealogies (often introduced by "these are the generations of...")
structure the narrative, establish historical continuity, trace the promised line of the
seed, and demonstrate God's faithfulness across generations.
15. How does the Pentateuch serve as a foundation for the rest of the Bible?
ANSWER ✓ It establishes foundational doctrines of God, creation, sin, redemption,
covenant, and law, and introduces the nation of Israel and the messianic line, which the
entire biblical narrative builds upon.
Part 2: The Book of Genesis
16. What is the meaning of the name "Genesis"?
ANSWER ✓ "Genesis" is a Greek word meaning "origins" or "beginnings."
17. How is the book of Genesis naturally divided?
ANSWER ✓ It is divided into the Primeval History (Chapters 1-11) and the Patriarchal
History (Chapters 12-50).
18. What is the literary structure of Genesis based on the word toledot?
ANSWER ✓ The book is structured by ten sections, each introduced by the phrase
"These are the generations of..." (e.g., heavens and earth, Adam, Noah, etc.), which
moves the narrative forward by focusing on a key descendant.
19. What is the significance of the seven-day creation account in Genesis 1?
ANSWER ✓ It establishes God as the sovereign, orderly Creator who speaks matter into
existence, affirms the goodness of creation, and institutes the Sabbath pattern for
humanity.
20. What is the Imago Dei?
ANSWER ✓ The Imago Dei is the "Image of God" in which humanity was created,
denoting our role as God's representatives on earth, with capacities for relationship,
morality, and reason.