Tower of Babel
Tower of Babel
Tower of Babel
I. The Location of Shinar and Its Relevance for Dating the Tower of Babel
Although there is a question whether or not the word Shinar is related to the
word Sumer,1 there is no question that the land of Shinar is distinguished from
the land of Assyria, that is, northern Mesopotamia (Isa 11: 11). Further, it is evi-
dent that the land of Shinar covers the southern half of Mesopotamia
(Gen 10:10). The land of Shinar is the land between the Tigris and the Euph-
rates that lies south of modern Baghdad.2
Archaeological excavations in the land of Shinar indicate that although
prior to the sixth millennium B.C. there may have been small villages equivalent
to those of modern-day Marsh Arabs in the southernmost reaches of the land,
Shinar was fundamentally uninhabited before about 6000 B.C.3 In the southern
Paul H. Seely is an independent scholar specializing in biblical history and the relationship of
science to Scripture.
1
James R. Davilla, "Shinar" ABD 5:1220; Jerrold S. Cooper, "Sumer," ABD 6:233.
2
Davilla, "Shinar," ABD 5:1220.
3
Hans J. Nissen, "Mesopotamia," OEANE 3:476-77, especially the subsection " Eridu and
Hajji Mohammed"; Piotr Michalowski, "Sumerians," OEANE 5:96; Harriet Crawford, Sumer and
the Sumerians (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991), 31.
15
16 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
area of Shinar, the cities of Ur, Eridu, and Oueili "seem to be uninhabited
before about 5600 to 5000 B.C."4
In the northern part of the land of Shinar, which is more relevant to our
study because Babylon is located there,5 the cities seem to have been founded
later than those in the southern part.6 Ras al-Amiya, c. 12 miles northeast of
Babylon, dates from c. 4750 B.C.7 Tell Uqair, about 25 miles from Babylon, rests
on virgin soil carbon-dated to about 4500.8 At Jemdet Nasr, about 25 miles
northeast of Babylon, occupation begins around 4000 B.C.9 Kish, c. 9 miles east
of Babylon, also has no remains earlier than 4000 B.C. The lowest levels of
Babylon lie below the water table, but its origins have been variously estimated
as being from 4000 to 3000 B.C.
For reasons we will discuss below, it is doubtful that any archaeologist
would date the tower of Babel before c. 3500 B.C.; but since northern Shinar,
where Babel is located, was not settled before c. 5000 B.C., one certainly cannot
push the events of Gen 11:1-9 back into history earlier than that if one takes the
mention of the land of Shinar and of the city of Babylon seriously
III. The Use of Baked Brick with Bitumen for Mortar Dates the Tower of Babel
We can derive a more sure indication of the earliest date for the building of
the tower of Babel from the fact that the builders used baked bricks extensively
(v. 3 almost implies exclusively) as a building material. Baked bricks were very
expensive in Mesopotamia because fuel was so scarce, and their use shows how
committed the builders were to making a luxurious and impressive building.
This points to the age of urbanism; but the testimony of the baked bricks is
even more specific. For we know when baked bricks first appear in the archaeo-
logical record of the ancient Near East as building materials.
Nor are we arguing from silence. There are hundreds of archaeological sites
in the ancient Near East which have architectural remains. A number of them
display layer after layer of architectural remains covering many centuries or
even millennia. These architectural remains date from the beginnings of archi-
tecture in the ninth millennium down through the entire OT period and even
later. Further, baked brick is virtually indestructible; so it would almost certainly
be found if it were present.12
The ancient Near Eastern archaeological data regarding building materials
used in the ancient Near East is so abundant and clear that every modern
scholar writing about the history of architecture in the Near East comes to the
same conclusion: although unbaked brick was extensively used for architecture
from c. 8500 B.C. to Christian times, baked brick, though used occasionally for
such things as drains or walkways, did not make an architectural appearance
until c. 3500 B.C. and it was rarely used in architecture until c. 3100 B.C.13
Whether viewed in terms of breadth as at Chatal Huyuk with its dozens of
unearthed buildings14 or in terms of depth as at Eridu with its eighteen succes-
sive building levels from c. 5000 to c. 2100 B.C., the archaeological data from the
Near East universally testify that prior to c. 3100 B.C. the bricks used in archi-
tecture were unbaked. Indeed, Jacquetta Hawkes indicates in her archaeologi-
cal survey that baked brick was not used for architecture anywhere in the entire
world until c. 3000B. C.15 The use of baked brick in the tower of Babel indicates
very clearly, therefore, that it was not built before c. 3500 to 3000 B.C.
The use of bitumen (asphalt) for mortar also gives clear evidence of the ear-
liest date to which we can ascribe the events of Gen 11:1-9. Since there are
extensive remains of brick buildings in the sites of the ancient Near East and
12
Edward Chiera, They Wrote on Clay (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1938), 6-7.
13
Jack Finegan, Archaeological History of the Ancient Middle East (Boulder, Co.: Westview,
1977), 8; Armas Salonen, Die Ziegeleien im Allen Mesopotamien (Helsinki: Suomalainen
Tiedeakatemia, 1972), 7; Charles Singer, The History of Technology (Oxford: Clarendon, 1954),
1:462; Lloyd, Ancient Architecture, 9-13; Pinhas Delougaz and Seton Lloyd, Pre-Sargonid
Temples in the Diyala Region (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1942), 46, 121.
14
James Mellaart estimates that Chatal Huyuk had more than 1000 houses. There are also
fourteen continuous successive building levels at Chatal Huyuk dating between 7100 and 6300
B.C. (James Mellaart, The Archaeology of Ancient Turkey [Totowa, NJ.: Rowman & Littlefield,
1978], 13, 140).
15
Jacquetta Hawkes, The Atlas of Early Man (New York: St. Martin's, 1976), 50, 76.
18 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
IV. The Tower of Babel as a Ziggurat and Its Implications for Dating the Tower
Gen 11:4 tells us that the settlers in Sumer decided to build "a city and a
tower." The word used for tower is ldgm (migdal). Since this word is often used
in the OT for a watchtower or a defensive tower (e.g., Judg 9:45, 51; 2 Kgs 9:17;
17:9; Isa 5:2) and nowhere else refers to a ziggurat, what reason is there to
believe that in Gen 11:4 it refers to a ziggurat? The first reason is that the setting
is in Babylonia where the ziggurat was the most prominent structure in a city-
both visually and ideologically.18 Secondly, the tower in our text was designed to
bring fame and glory to the builders ("so that we may make a name for our-
selves"). Mesopotamian kings often took pride in building ziggurats, but no
such pride was taken in defensive towers which were simply parts of the city
wall. The use of baked brick and bitumen also tells us that the migdal in our text
was a ziggurat rather than a defensive tower, for baked brick and bitumen were
very expensive in Mesopotamia and hence were saved for luxurious architec-
ture like palaces, temples, and ziggurats.19
It is also telling that in our text the making of the baked bricks is
specifically mentioned first (v. 3) and after that the building of the city and tower
(v. 4). This is exactly the way the building of the temple and ziggurat of Babylon
are described in Enuma Elish (6.50-70) as well as in the account of Nabopolassar
in Neo-Babylonian times.20 In addition, Nabopolassar is told to make the founda-
tion of Babylon's ziggurat "secure in the bosom of the nether world, and make
its summit like the heavens" just as our text describes the tower as having "its
head in the heavens." Indeed it is typical of the descriptions of Mesopotamian
ziggurats that they have their heads in the heavens. Thus King Samsuiluna is
said to have made "the head of his ziggurat ... as high as the heavens." The
top of Hammurabi's ziggurat was said to be "lofty in the heavens." And Esar-
haddon, speaking of the ziggurat he built, says, "to the heavens I raised its
head."21
16
Forbes, Studies, 1:69.
17
Maurice Daumas, ed., A History of Technology and Invention: Progress through the Ages
(New York: Crown, 1969), 1:117. So also Bertrand Gille, The History of Techniques (New York:
Gordon & Breach, 1986), 1:211. Cf. Forbes, Studies, 1:71-72.
18
Elizabeth C. Stone, "The Development of Cities in Ancient Mesopotamia," CANE 1:236,
238.
19
Singer, A History of Technology, 1:254-55; Forbes, Studies, 1:68.
20
So strong is the parallel with Enuma Elish that E. A. Speiser thought Gen 11:1-9 was a
response to Enuma Elish. Andre Parrot, The Tower of Babel (London: SCM, 1955), 19.
21
John H. Walton, The Tower of Babel (Ph.D, diss., Hebrew Union College, 1981), 44-45.
THE DATE OF THE TOWER OF BABEL 19
As for the use of the word migdal, one wonders what other choice the
Hebrews had for a word to refer to a ziggurat? Since they had no ziggurats in
their culture, they would either have to borrow a word or use the closest word
they could find in their own language. As Walton has pointed out, the word
migdal is not inaccurate and has a similar etymology to ziggurat, being derived
from gedal (to be large), while ziggurat is derived from the Akkadian word zaqaru
(to be high).22 It is also noteworthy that when Herodotus (1:181-183) needed a
word to describe the eight levels of the ziggurat he saw in Babylon, he chose
pu<rgoj, which is the Greek word most commonly used for defensive towers.
There is very good reason then to believe that the tower in our text refers to
a ziggurat and not just to a defensive tower. The vast majority of scholars agree
that a ziggurat is intended. We need to ask, therefore, when did ziggurats first
appear in Babylonia? The answer is, during the period of Uruk 5 and 4, that is,
the protohistoric period, 3500 to 3000 B.C.23
We see then that the archaeological facts coalesce around the dates 3500 to
3000 B.C. The building of a city not just a settlement, the use of baked brick, the
use of bitumen for mortar and the fact that a ziggurat is being built all dovetail
in date. This remarkable agreement makes it highly probable that the earliest
date to which we can ascribe the tower of Babel as described in Gen 11:1-9 is c.
3500 to 3000 B.C. But, what is the latest date to which we can ascribe its build-
ing? There is a text saying that Sharkalisharri restored the temple-tower at
Babylon c. 2250 B.C., and another text indicates that Sargon I destroyed Baby-
lon c. 2350 B.C.24 This suggests that there was a city established at Babylon
before 2350 B.C.; so, allowing a modest 50 years of city history, we can set 2400
B.C. as the terminus ante quem for the first ziggurat built in Babylon.25 We can
thus date the building of the tower of Babel sometime between 3500 and 2400
B.C.
V. The Meaning of Gen 11:1
In Gen 11:1 we read that `All the earth had one language and common
words." The Hebrew literally says they had one "lip" and one "words." Parallel
passages show that this simply means that everyone on earth spoke and could
understand the grammar (Isa 19:18) and words (Ezek 3:5, 6) of everyone else.
That is, all the earth spoke one and the same language.
The church, both Jewish and Christian, has historically understood this to
mean that everyone on the entire earth spoke the same language. Gen. Rab. says,
22
John Walton, "The Mesopotamian Background of the Tower of Babel Account and Its
Implications," BBR 5 (1995), 156.
23
H. W F Saggs, The Greatness that Was Babylon (New York: New American, 1962), 45;
CAH3 1:1:226, 228; Harriet Crawford, The Architecture of Iraq in the Third Millennium BC
(Copenhagen: Akademisk Forlag, 1977), 27; Singer, History, 1:461. Some today would place the
beginning of Uruk 5 at 3600 B.C.
24
CAH3 1:1:219; Evelyn Klengel-Brandt, "Babylon," OEANE 1:254.
25
Ziggurats began as elevated temples and did not become "true ziggurats" until c. 2100 B.c.,
after which they continued to be built or at least rebuilt until the fall of Babylon in the sixth
century B.C.
20 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
"all the nations of the world." Sib. Or. 3:105 says, "the whole earth of humans."
Chrysostom said, "all mankind."26 Augustine said, "the whole human race."27
Calvin said, "the human race."28 Luther, "the entire earth ... all the people."29
John Gill, "the inhabitants of the whole earth.30 Adam Clarke, All man-
kind."31 Even after scientific data made such a history of language doubtful,
nearly all commentators both liberal and conservative have continued to recog-
nize that, nevertheless, this is what the biblical text says. Westermann says,
"humankind ... the whole world."32 Sarna, "mankind."33 Cassuto says, "all
the inhabitants of the earth."34 Keil and Delitzsch, "the whole human race."35
Mathews, "mankind."36 Wenham says, "all the inhabitants of the world ...
mankind."37 Leupold says, "the whole human race."38
Although some commentators thought that mankind had already begun to
disperse or that those building the tower of Babel were just Nimrod and his fol-
lowers or just the descendants of Ham, there has been universal agreement
from the beginning right up to the present that Gen 11:1 means that every
human being on earth was speaking the same language until God "confused
the language" at the tower of Babel.
A handful of evangelical scholars, however, have apparently felt pressured
by the fact that taken at face value the story conflicts, as we shall see more clearly
later, with the archaeological evidence that not every human being on earth was
speaking the same language at the time of the building of the tower of Babel.
They have accordingly sought to adjust the story by suggesting that Gen 11:1
only refers to a small part of mankind speaking the same language, probably the
Sumerians speaking Sumerian. They construe the words "all the earth" in 11:1
as a reference simply to Mesopotamia or even just southern Mesopotamia.39
26
St. John Chrysostom, "Homily 30," in Homilies on Genesis 18-45 (trans. Robert C. Hill;
Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 1990), 222.
27
Augustine, City of God, 16. 10. 11 (NPNF' 2:316-17).
28
John Calvin, Commentaries on the First Book of Moses Called Genesis (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1948),1:332.
29
Martin Luther, Works (St. Louis: Concordia, 1960), 2:210.
30
John Gill, Gill's Commentary (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1852-54, repr., 1980), 1:68.
31
Adam Clarke, The Holy Bible containing the Old and New Testaments... with a commentary
and critical notes ... (New York: Abingdon, c. 1860), 1:88.
32
Claus Westermann, Genesis 1-11 (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1976), 542.
33
Nahum M. Sarna, Understanding Genesis (New York: Schocken, 1970), 69.
34
Umberto Cassuto, A Commentary on the Book of Genesis (Jerusalem: Magnes, 1964), 2:239.
35
C. F Keil and F Delitzsch, Biblical Commentary on the Old Testament (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1949), 1:172.
36
Kennneth A. Mathews, Genesis 1-11:26 (Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 1996), 477.
37
Gordon J. Wenham, Genesis 1-15 (Waco, TX: Word, 1987), 238.
38
H. C. Leupold, Exposition of Genesis (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1960), 382.
39
So, David F Payne, "Babel, Tower of," ISBE 1:382; Dale S. DeWitt, "The Historical Back-
ground of Genesis 11:1-9: Babel or Ur?" JETS 22 (1979): 17-18; Steve Reimer, "The Tower of
Babel: An Archaeologically Informed Reinterpretation," Direction 25 (1996): 64-72; and as an
optional interpretation Meredith Kline in The New Bible Commentary (ed. Donald Guthrie and J.
A. Motyer; rev. ed.; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1970), 91; D. E. Kidner, Genesis (Chicago:
InterVarsity, 1967), 110.
THE DATE OF THE TOWER OF BABEL 21
local. The tower and city, of course, are local as are the expressions he men-
tions; but these facts in no way prove or even imply that the word Crx in
Gen 11:1 is local any more than the address on an envelope with its local name,
street, and city implies that the country to which it is sent is local.
DeWitt's sub-argument, which is the same as the one argument offered by
Kidner, is also not compelling. It is true that the builders felt a certain fear of
being scattered; but the flood which their recent forefathers had survived was
an epochal traumatic event. The survivors would be like the only eight people
who survived a worldwide nuclear holocaust. An event like that would leave fol-
lowing generations with an undefined anxiety and fear which felt open to
destruction just by virtue of being separated from the community. There is no
need to suppose they feared attack from other groups of people; and there is no
clear evidence in the text which indicates that an attack from other groups of
people was the basis of their fear.
The concordists are largely just begging the question. Their arguments are
insufficient for rejecting the historical interpretation of the church. There are
very good contextual reasons supporting the historically accepted interpreta-
tion of "all the earth" in Gen 11:1 as referring to all mankind, the whole world;
and these reasons were not even addressed by the concordists. A review of those
reasons is, therefore, in order.
First of all the phrase Crxh-lk, "all the earth," in Gen 11:1 occurs right
after a statement mentioning the anthropologically universal flood. It is the
anthropological universality of the flood which is the contextual backdrop that
defines the meaning of Gen 11:1.
Secondly, the statement that "all the earth" had the "same words and the
same grammar" is emphatic. An emphatic statement like this does not fit a ref-
erence to one country out of many, each of which has the same words and the
same grammar. Similarly, Geri 11:6a, "And Jehovah said, Behold, they are one
people, and they all have one language," makes little if any sense when inter-
preted locally. Since the world delineated in Gen 10 is about as wide and diverse
as Europe, Gen 11:1 interpreted locally would be like saying emphatically, "All
of Italy spoke the same language (Italian);" and 11:6a would be like saying
"Behold, the Italians are one people and they all have the same language." Why
should this be emphatic or draw any attention? All of France also spoke the
same language (French). All of Spain spoke the same language (Spanish). Every
country spoke the same language. So what if the Italians did? But, if the state-
ment is saying, "All the world spoke the same language," that is startling in light
of the fact that they certainly do not all speak the same language now. It would
be appropriate to make emphatic statements about the whole world speaking
the same language because it would be so unusual compared to the present.
Thirdly, the terminology in Gen 11:5 ill fits a merely local interpretation. It
calls the builders the "sons of men" (Mdxh ynb), literally "sons of the man."44
44
Not "sons of Adam" since an article is not used with personal names.
24 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
If the account had been merely local, it probably would have spoken of par-
ticular sons like the "sons of Heth" (Hittites, Gen 23:3) or the "sons of Midian"
(l'vlidianites, Gen 25:4). The phrase "the sons of the man" refers to mankind in
general.45 Finally, the climax of the story in v. 9 is telling. If you interpret it
locally, it says, "there the Lord confused the language of the whole land of Shi-
nar." If people all over the world were already speaking different languages, this
conclusion to the story seems rather insignificant and anti-climactic. But, if all
of mankind was speaking one language until this event, v. 9 makes a fitting and
resounding climax not only to the story but also to the universal history begun
in Gen 1. Closing out that universal history with a story of mankind attempting
to make a name for itself in a way that threatens to bring a curse upon mankind
makes a great introduction to the next chapter of Genesis, wherein God prom-
ises to make a name for a man he chose, Abraham, and through him to bring a
blessing upon all mankind (Gen 12:2, 3).
In summary, the concordist reinterpretation of Gen 11:1-9 has a very weak
exegetical foundation and contrasts with the contextually rooted foundation
which supports the historical interpretation of the church. The fact that no one
until modern times interpreted "all the earth" in Gen 11:1-9 in a local way indi-
cates that this interpretation does not arise naturally from Scripture.46 Just as
concordists take Gen 1 out of context in order to make it harmonize with mod-
ern geography, geology, and astronomy47 so they take Gen 11:1-9 out of context
in order to make it harmonize with modern geography and anthropology.
In addition, although it might appear at first glance that the various "local"
reinterpretations of Gen 11:1-9 are bringing the biblical text into harmony
with its ancient Near Eastern context, the truth is they leave the biblical text at
serious odds with ancient Near Eastern archaeology.
In the biblical text (11:7-9), the confusion of the builders' language is so
sudden and definitive that the builders are no longer able to "understand one
another's speech" and are thereby forced to give up completing the building of
the city and tower. In Reimer's reconstruction of the event, although other lan-
guages may have come into the area c. 3000 B.C., the Sumerian language went
right on being spoken and understood until at least the fall of Ur III, a thousand
years later. So Reimer's reconstruction of the event actually contradicts
Gen 11:7 and 9.
Payne's reconstruction of the event with its invasion of the Akkadians in
3000 to 2500 B.C. likewise contradicts Gen 11:7 and 9, since it leaves the Sume-
rian language intact for at least another 500 years, allowing plenty of time to
finish building the city and tower. In addition, Payne's reconstruction of the
event was built upon an archaeological theory popular at the time which
hypothesized that the Akkadian language did not enter the area which the Bible
45
Cf. Gen 1:27; 6:1; 8:21; and 9:6 where the same phrase is used.
46
Several of the concordists themselves comment that the story looks like it is about human-
kind.
47
Paul H. Seely, "The First Four Days of Genesis in Concordist Theory and in Biblical Con-
text," Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith 49 (1997): 85-95.
THE DATE OF THE TOWER OF BABEL 25
calls Shinar until the invasion of the Akkadians c. 3000 to 2500 B.C. Today a
number of leading archaeologists believe that Akkadian was spoken alongside
of Sumerian from the very beginning.48
DeWitt's reconstruction is a better archaeological fit to Gen 11:7 and 9,
since the fall of Ur III in 1960 B.C. initiates the end of Sumerian as a spoken lan-
guage; but it still leaves a generation or two before the language would have
been understood only by scribes. DeWitt's reconstruction contradicts the bibli-
cal text in any event, however, because 1960 B.C. is too late for the first building
of the city and tower of Babel as the biblical text demands.49 In addition, the
biblical text demands that just one language be spoken in Shinar before the
tower was begun; but, on DeWitt's reconstruction two languages were spoken
in Shinar for four hundred years before the tower of Babel was begun, for we
know that Akkadian was spoken in Shinar from the middle of the third millen-
nium B.C.50
The "local" interpretations of Gen 11:1-9 which have been offered, there-
fore, violate the biblical text both contextually and archaeologically.51 They
drive us back to the historical interpretation as the only contextually valid one.
The more detailed concordist reinterpretations do, however, make a positive
contribution in that they all fundamentally agree in dating the tower of Babel
between c. 3000 and 2000 B.C.52
VI. Scientific Evidence for Diverse Languages Prior to the Tower of Babel
10. The northern boundary is marked by the peoples around the Black Sea
(Gen 10:2; Ezek 38:6). The southern boundary is marked by peoples living in
the extreme south of the Arabian peninsula (Gen 10:7: cf. Matt 12:42). The
eastern boundary is marked by Elam (Gen 10:22). The western boundary is at
Tarshish (Gen 10:4), but its location is not certain. Although elsewhere in Scrip-
ture Tarshish may refer to Tartessos in Spain, in Gen 10 it probably refers to a
location c. latitude ten degrees east, perhaps Sardinia, Tunis, or Carthage. "All
the earth" in Gen 11:1 is then a circle or ellipse around 2400 miles in width and
1200 in height.53 Everyone in the ancient Near East understood this circular
area to be the entire extent of the earth and that this earth was surrounded by a
great ocean.54
Genesis 10 thus indicates (and history makes certain) that the writer of Gen
11 was oblivious to the existence of the Far East, Australia, and the Americas.55
Yet an awareness of these lands and the peoples living there is critically impor-
tant to the history of language. For although samples of written languages do
not appear in the Far East, Australia, or the West before 3500 B.C., archaeologi-
cally stratified sites and carbon-14 dating show that people certainly lived in
these areas both before 3500 B.C. and during the building of the tower of Babel.
In addition, the isolation of the Far East, Australia, and the Western peoples
from the Near East and from each other, as well as the structures of the many
languages in existence today that descended from them, virtually guarantee
that they were not speaking Sumerian or any other ancient Near Eastern lan-
guage.56
Spirit Cave in Thailand, for example, is a stratified site showing human
occupation from before 5000 B.C. down to 250 B.C.57 We do not know what
language they were speaking in Thailand from 5000 to 2000 B.C.; but, we can be
sure it was not Sumerian.
Pan-p'o in China was continuously occupied by farmers of distinctly
Mongoloid type for at least five hundred years before the earliest date for the
tower of Babel.58 In addition, 113 potsherds were found at Pan-p'o incised with
proto-Sinitic logographs. These logographs are archetypal to the Chinese language
53
See the maps in The Harper Atlas of the Bible (ed. James Pritchard, New York: Harper &
Row, 1987), 92-93, and in The Zondervan XIV Atlas of the Bible (ed. C. G. Rasmussen; Grand
Rapids: Regency, 1989), 71.
54
Paul H. Seely "The Geographical Meaning of `earth' and `seas' in Genesis 1:10," WTJ 59
(1997): 231-55.
55
We know from ancient history that no one in the ancient world envisioned the inhabited
world to be significantly larger than the extent delineated in Gen 10. It did not extend to the Far
East, Australia, or the Americas.
56
Robert M. W Dixon, The Rise and Fall of Languages (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1997), 96; R. L. Trask, Language Change (New York: Routledge, 1994), 52, 67; Leonard
Bloomfield, Language (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1933), 13. Cf. "Language," The
New Encyclopedia Britannica (1998), 22:569.
57
Joyce C. White, ' A Lost Bronze Age," Natural History (November 1984): 82; Ronald
Schiller, "Where was the Cradle of Civilization'?" Readers Digest (August 1980): 67-71.
sa Ping-ti Ho, The Cradle of the East (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1975), 16-18. It
should be noted here that 3500 B.C. (the earliest date for the tower of Babel) would also have to
THE DATE OF THE TOWER OF BABEL 27
and testify clearly that a form of Chinese, unrelated to any language in the
ancient Near East, was spoken before the tower of Babel was built, perhaps
even thousands of years before it was built.59
In Japan, the Jomon culture, which is evidenced at 25 different sites in
Japan, seems to run in a continuous sequence from c. 10,000 B.C. to A.D. 1000.
There are more than enough stratified sites and carbon-14 dates from 5000 to 2000
B.C. to show that the Ainu inhabited Japan well before the time that the tower of
Babel began to be built and all during its building. The language which they
spoke is not related even to Chinese, much less to Sumerian.60
At Keniff Cave, Rocky Cave South, and numerous other sites in Australia,
there are well-stratified stone and bone remains dating from c. 20,000 B.C. to
A.D. 1500.61 Most relevant to our discussion are the dozen sites which are
radiocarbon-dated from c. 5000 to 4000 B.C., i.e., before the tower of Babel
began to be built.62 The people who left tools at these sites must have had a lan-
guage; and the language they spoke may be related to other languages of Oce-
ania, but certainly not to Sumerian, Chinese, or Japanese.63
At numerous sites in North America, such as Danger Cave in Utah,
stratified remains of Indian cultures are radiocarbon-dated from 9000 to 3000
B.C.64 At Sierra Madre Oriental and other sites in Mexico, human and cultural
remains are carbon-dated from 7000 to 1400 B.C.65 Since these Indians
apparently came from Asia originally, we would expect their languages around
5000 B.C. to relate to Asian languages, but not to ancient Near Eastern languages.
In any case, whatever languages they may have spoken, they were in America
speaking them before the tower of Babel began to be built and, all during the time
from 3500 to 2000 B.C.
We can say then that there is firm archaeological ground based both on
radiocarbon dates and stratified sites to support the conclusion that long before
the tower of Babel began to be built and all during the fourth millennium B.C.,
men were scattered over the entire globe speaking a multitude of different lan-
guages. This conclusion is clearly opposed to the assumptions underlying
Gen 11:1-9 and opposite to the statements in 11:1 and 6 in particular.
At this point someone might suggest that perhaps the tower of Babel should
be dated earlier. But, on what basis would anyone suppose that it should be
dated earlier than c. 3500 B.C.? One might be tempted to refer to the fact that a
predate the origin of the Mongoloid, Negroid, and Australoid peoples, an idea which no
anthropologist would accept.
59
Ho, Cradle, 34, 366-67; Diakonof, Early Antiquity, 388.
60
C. M. Aikens and T. Higuchi, Prehistory of Japan (New York: Academic, 1982), 18, 323. Cf.
Ho, Cradle, 38.
61
Derek J. Mulvaney, The Prehistory of Australia (New York: Praeger, 1969), 111, 135, 179.
62
Mulvaney, Prehistory, 180.
63
"Australian Aboriginal Languages," The New Encyclopedia Britannica (Chicago: 1908),
1:714.
64
Gordon Randolph Willey, An Introduction to American Archaeology (Englewood Cliffs:
Prentice-Hall, 1966), 1:29, 56-57; Robert J. Wenken, Patterns in Prehistory (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1990), 220.
65
Willey, Introduction, 79-80.
28 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
stone tower was built in Jericho c. 8500 B.C. But this really has no bearing on the
tower of Babel because, as noted earlier, southern Mesopotamia where Baby-
lon is located did not even have permanent settlements until c. 5500 B.C. and
had no cities with architecture comparable to that of Jericho until c. 3500 B.C. at
the very earliest.66 Hence, no one familiar with ancient Near Eastern archaeol-
ogy has been willing to date the tower of Babel any earlier than c. 3500 B.C.
Also, the further back the date of the tower is pushed, the less it fits the archaeo-
logical data and the more improbable the date becomes. Nor are the archaeo-
logical architectural data the only problem.
The flood account in Scripture reflects a relationship with second millennial
Mesopotamian accounts. Even granting a common ancestor to the biblical and
Mesopotamian accounts, every year that you move the date of the tower of
Babel (and the flood with it) earlier than 3500 B.C., the more improbable it
becomes that the two flood accounts would be so similar to each other since
they only would have been handed down orally.67
The fact is, in order for the tower of Babel to have been the starting point
for the division of one human family into varying races and language groups as
Gen 11:1-9 demands, even a very conservative interpretation of the archaeo-
logical and anthropological evidence indicates that the tower would have to
have been built long before 10,000 B. C. But the chances of a monumental tower
and city being built in Babylon out of baked brick and bitumen before even the
Neolithic age is so improbable from an archaeological point of view as to be
virtually impossible.
One cannot date the tower of Babel early enough to fit all of the archaeo-
logical and anthropological data without implicitly espousing a methodology
which favors bare possibility over probability; and, such a methodology is anti-
thetical to serious scholarship.
In order to maintain the historical interpretation of the flood and the tower
of Babel, creation science simply denies the validity of the trustworthiness of
carbon-14 dating. The validity of carbon-14 dating sounds the death knell for
creation science; so, many papers have been written by creation scientists
attempting to throw doubt on its validity.68 In the early decades of its use many
of the dates that carbon-14 dating produced were erroneous for one reason or
another; so, questioning was justified and non-Christians raised just as many
66
Van De Mieroop, The Ancient Mesopotamian City, 23.
67
Although there are important differences between the two accounts, no other flood account is
so close to the biblical account as the Mesopotamian. Virtually every scholar agrees they are
related to each other.
68
Creationist papers on radiocarbon-dating written between 1950 and 1990 are reviewed in
CRSQ 29 (1993): 170-83.
THE DATE OF THE TOWER OF BABEL 29
questions as Christians did.69 But there has been a significant refinement of the
method in the last two decades and most importantly, its essential validity has
been confirmed objectively by comparison with dendrochronology and with
annually produced varves.70
By comparing carbon-14 dates with known dates from counting tree rings
in trees linked together stretching back from the present to 9300 B.C., the essential
validity of carbon-14 dating has been proven.71 This validation of carbon-14
dating through comparison with the ages given by counting tree rings rests
upon two long sequences of tree rings linked together. These sequences were
independently produced by different scientists in different parts of the world
using different species of trees.
The major objection from creation science to the validity of the tree ring
sequences is that due to varying weather conditions a tree might produce more
than one ring in one year. A very meticulous study, however, showed that the
bristlecone pine, upon which the first long dendrochronology was based, does
not normally produce more than one ring per year.72 The oak trees, upon
which the other major long dendrochronology is based, so rarely grow extra
rings that one can almost say they never grow them.73 Further, in order to be
sure that no extra (or missing) ring has slipped into a sequence, each section of
the sequence is based upon numerous trees growing over the same period of
time, eliminating by comparison any trees that might have idiosyncratic rings.
In addition, densities, which are independent of tree-ring widths, are compared
as well. Because of this cross-checking, errors from extra or missing rings are
eliminated.74
69
Alasdair Whittle, Problems in Neolithic Archaeology (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1988), 19 n. 78.
70
I say "essential validity" because contaminated samples and other problems can cause indi-
vidual carbon-14 dates to be invalid, and with dates prior to c. 750 B.C. there is a systematic
deviation of carbon-14 dates from accurate dates with the result that the earlier dates must be
calibrated, and even then there is room for slippage; but, in spite of problems with some particular
dates, no one today doubts on scientific grounds that carbon-14 dating gives a valid overall guide
to chronological sequencing.
71
Minze Stuiver et al., "Radiocarbon Age Calibration Back to 13,300 Years BP and the 14 C
Age Matching of the German Oak and US Bristlecone Pine Chronologies," Radiocarbon 28
(1986): 969-79; Bernd Becker, "An 11,000-Year German Oak and Pine Dendrochronology for
Radiocarbon Calibration," Radiocarbon 35 (19931: 201-13. See the new optimism of two
scholars who are aware of C-I4's early problems: Fekri A. Hassan and Steven W. Robinson,
"High Precision Radiocarbon Chronometry of Ancient Egypt, and Comparisons with Nubia,
Palestine and Mesopotamia," Antiquity 61 (1987): 130.
72
V C. LaMarche, Jr., and T. P Harlan, "Accuracy of Tree Ring Dating of Bristlecone Pine for
Calibration of the Radiocarbon Time Scale," Journal of Geophysical Research 78 (1973): 8849-
58 n. 79.
73
M. G. L. Baillie, Tree-Ring Dating and Archaeology (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1982), 52 n. 81.
74
Jeffrey S. Dean, "Dendrochronology" in Chronometric Dating in Archaeology (ed. R. E.
Taylor and Martin J. Aitken; New York: Plenum, 1997), 34-38; Baillie, Tree-Ring Dating and
Archaeology, 52-53.
30 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
The patterns of tree rings which link the trees together in a sequence are
kept from error by similar replication.75 Since thousands of annual rings occur in
each bristlecone pine (up to 6000 in the oldest tree), one only has to find the
overlapping patterns of rings a few times in order to make a long sequence. In
the oak series where the rings are only available in hundreds, the examination
and comparison of numerous trees from the same period eliminates anomalies
and establishes the valid unique patterns which are used to link the overlapping
trees.76 In addition to unique patterns of ring widths and densities, unique rings
due to fire, flood, frost, or insect damage verify and validate the sequences.
Carbon-14 dating, as it is applied to these dendrochronological sequences, is
validated by the fact that the carbon-14 dates essentially agree with the tree-
ring dates, systematically growing older as the older tree rings are tested. Also,
although beginning around 750 B.C. the carbon-14 dates curve away from the
tree ring dates, the curve of the dates obtained from dating the long European
dendrochronological sequence matches the curve from dating the independent,
long American tree-ring sequence.77 In addition, because the production of
carbon-14 in the atmosphere varies slightly over time, the carbon-14 dates
oscillate along the length of the calibration curve, forming small peaks and val-
leys, popularly called "wiggles." In the independently produced European and
American tree sequences, even these "wiggles" match up.78 The fact that not
only the long-term but even the short-term patterns in the carbon-14 dates
match each other in two independently arrived at dendrochronological
sequences is proof positive that the carbon-14 dating is valid.79
So clear and irrefutable is this validation of carbon-14 dating that Dr.
Gerald Aardsma, a nuclear physicist, a specialist in carbon-14 dating and a teacher
at the Institute for Creation Research for five years, came to the conclusion that
since carbon-14 dating according to creation science theory could be valid only
after the flood, the flood must have occurred prior to 9300 B.C. Indeed, Aardsma
calculates the date of the flood as close to 12,000 B.C., partly because it would
take time after the flood for carbon-14 to stabilize in the ocean, which is neces-
sary before carbon-14 dating can be accurate.
Aardsma set forth the evidence and his conclusions about the date of the
flood in a paper published in 1990 and then in 1993 wrote a second paper
75
Baillie, Tree-Ring Dating and Archaeology, 85-86; Martin Oberhofer, H. Y. Goksu, and D.
Regulla, eds., Scientific Dating Methods (Dordrecht: Kluwcr Academic, 1991), 201-6; J. R.
Pilcher et al., "'A 7, 272-Year Tree-Ring Chronology for Western Europe," Nature 312 (1984):
150-52.
76
There is one section of the European oak chronology which is weak; but, even if it were
shown to be inaccurate, the difference would be relatively insignificant.
77
H. E. Suess and T W Linick, "The 14C Record in Bristlecone Pine Wood of the Past 8000
Years Based on the Dendrochronology of the Late C. W. Ferguson," Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. A
330 (1990): 405.
78
Gerald Aardsma, "Tree Ring Dating and Multiple Ring Growth Per Year," CRSQ 29 (1993):
186, figure 4; R. E. Taylor, Austin Long, and R. S. Kra, eds., Radiocarbon After Four Decades
(New York: Springer-Verlag, 1992), 37, 44.
79
Taylor, Long, and Kra, Radiocarbon, 20, 24-25, 37, 43; Goksu, Oberhofer; and Regulla,
Scientific Dating Methods, 201-6.
THE DATE OF THE TOWER OF BABEL 31
and prior to the building of the tower of Babel. A more biblical approach is
needed, and Reformed theology has pioneered just such an approach.
to the limited geographical knowledge of his own time, the full extent of the
earth not having been, as yet, discovered."
Calvin gives us another example in his discussion of the geography of Eden
in Gen 2:8-14. It had been suggested in Calvin's time that the reason two of the
four rivers which are mentioned in that passage cannot be identified is that the
flood had changed the face of the earth so that the topography of the earth in
the time of Adam was different than it was in the time of Moses, and it is that
earlier, different topography that is being described in Gen 2:8-14. Calvin re-
jected this idea and said, "Moses (in my opinion) accommodated his topogra-
phy to the capacity of his age."94 Calvin believed that for the sake of being
easily understood the description of the garden of Eden would be accommo-
dated to the topographical knowledge available in the time of Moses. This is a
reflection of Calvin's strong belief that Scripture was written in terms which
any common Israelite could understand.
Similarly, when Gen 1 was criticized in Calvin's day for speaking of the sun
and the moon as "two great lights" and the stars as small in comparison even
though astronomers had proven that one of those stars, Saturn, was larger than
the moon, Calvin acknowledged the validity of the scientific facts, but said,
Certainly in the first chapter he did not treat scientifically of the stars, as a
philosopher would do; but he called them [the sun and moon] in a popular
manner, according to their appearance to the uneducated, rather than according to
truth, "two great lights."95
Calvin did not expect the Scriptures to reflect modern scientific knowledge.
In the quote above he even goes so far as to contrast the biblical description of
nature given in Genesis with modern scientific knowledge. He refers to the bib-
lical description as one of true appearance, but the modern scientific descrip-
tion as one of objective "truth." In addition, he presses this difference between
the biblical description and the facts of modern science, saying, "The Holy
Spirit had no intention to teach astronomy." He also invites those of his readers
who might be interested in learning science to come not to Gen I but "to go
elsewhere."96 And he clearly delineates that "elsewhere" as referring to modern
professional scientists.
Admittedly, Calvin did not say that Gen 1:16 is an accommodation to the
science of the times, but only to the appearance which nature gives. But as was the
case with Ps 72:8, Calvin did not have available the data from anthropology and
ancient history that we have today. These data show clearly that it is not merely
appearances but the prescientific conclusions drawn from those appearances
which are in view in Gen 1. In the biblical period people did not think of the
stars as merely appearing small, but as actually being as small as they appear.
94
John Calvin, Commentaries on the First Book of Moses Called Genesis (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1948), 1:119.
95
Ibid., 1:86-87,256-57.
96
John Calvin, Commentaries VI, Psalms 93-150 (repr., Grand Rapids: Baker, 1979), 184 (on
Ps 136); Calvin, First Book of Moses Called Genesis, 1:79.
THE DATE OF THE TOWER OF BABEL 35
For them the appearance was the reality. Stars could fall to the earth without
destroying it (Dan 8:10).97 The idea that one of those stars (Saturn) was larger
than the moon would have seemed incredible to them.
In NT times even many educated people still believed the stars were as
small as they appear. As sophisticated a thinker as Seneca could say of the stars,
Although you pack a thousand of them together in one place they would never
equal the size of our sun."98 In the Sibylline Oracles both in 5:514-31 (first cen-
tury A.D.) and in 7:124-25 (second century A.D.), every star in heaven falls and
hits the earth; and although they cause a conflagration, both earth and man
remain.99 In the NT, accordingly, the stars can fall and hit the earth (Rev 6:13,
"into the earth," ei]j th>n gh?n) without destroying it.100 This verse, incidentally,
is another example of accommodation to the limited scientific knowledge of
the times.
As late as the end of the fourth century, Augustine, after raising the
question whether the stars were really very large but a long distance off or really
as small as they appeared, concluded that they were as small as they appeared.101
In his commentary on Genesis, when he considered the same question in the early
fifth century, he continued to believe they were as small as they appeared, and
he cited Gen 1:16 as evidence that the sun and moon really were larger than the
stars, saying, "We do better when we believe that these two luminaries are
greater [in size] than the others, since Holy Scripture says of them, And God
made the two great lights."
Given the fact that people as late and as sophisticated as Augustine under-
stood Gen 1:16 literally, there can be no question that the original hearers of
Gen 1:16 understood the words literally. The verse cannot be interpreted
within its historical context as merely a reference to appearances, but rather as
a reference to conclusions drawn from the appearances. To the original hearers,
who believed the stars really were as small as they appear, the sun and moon
really were literally "the two great lights." And if they had thought, as August-
ine did, that this inspired statement in Gen 1:16 reflected God's omniscient
knowledge of astronomy, it would have misled them, as it misled Augustine,
into believing that God thought the sun and moon really were larger in size
than the stars.
Calvin's understanding of the fact: that modern science is not being
revealed in Gen 1:16 is a significant advance on Augustine's understanding. And,
although Calvin's own limited knowledge prevented him from seeing that
Gen 1: 16 is not a reference merely to appearances but to conclusions drawn
from those appearances, some of his comments on other passages show that his
97
Cf. the Babylonian Dream Book 328, CAD K:48; Ezek. Trag. 79, 80.
98
Nat. 7.1.
99
Cf. Isaiah 34:4 LXX; Sib. Or. 2.202; 5.514-31; 7.124-25; Seneca, Marc. 26.6 and Ben. 6.1.
100
1 discuss Jesus' accommodation to the belief in the smallness of the stars (as well as other
scientific beliefs of his day) in chapter three of my book, Inerrant Wisdom (Portland, Or.:
Evangelical Reform, 1989).
101
Augustine, Letters of St. Augustine 14:3 (NPNF 1:231).
36 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
had "no intention to teach astronomy."105 These are clearly two different
approaches to the subject of the relationship of Scripture to modern scientific
knowledge; and although Calvin did not realize that Scripture is accommo-
dated to the science of the times, he certainly was moving in that direction. As
Gerrish said with regard to Calvin's geocentric understanding of Ps 19:4-6,
given his doctrine of accommodation, "Would it have been so difficult for
Calvin to assimilate the new ideas [of Copernicanism] and admit that the
Psalmist's language was rather differently accommodated than he had imag-
ined?"106
But, given that Scripture is accommodated to the science of the times, we
would like to understand why it has been accommodated in this way. I believe
one reason, as Calvin's understanding of accommodation stressed, is that it
facilitated communication of the theological truths being revealed. People of
differing cultures (and the OT did arise in a culture quite different from ours)
can find it almost impossible to accept some concepts that are common in
another culture. It is not so much a question of understanding the concepts as
of being able to accept them. When Anna Leorlowens tried to tell the children
of Siam that in some countries rain freezes as it falls and comes down as a white
substance called snow, "the whole school was indignant at what they considered
an obvious effort to stretch truth out of all reason and impose a ridiculous fan-
tasy on them."107 This proved to be a stumbling block to her authority as an
educator until the king, who had been educated in England, assured the chil-
dren that such a thing was possible. But, what if there had been no Western-
educated king?
When anthropologist Paul Raffaele saw that the houses of the Indonesian
Korowai Indians were built in the tops of trees, he tried to tell the Indians that
in the country where he came from people live in buildings ten times taller than
the trees. The Indians found this completely unbelievable. They snorted,
"Humans cannot climb that high." The anthropologist tried to explain eleva-
tors, but the Indians found this just as unbelievable as the original story. Some-
times, because of a radical difference in cultural background, a modern
concept simply cannot be accepted.
In our time, there has been so much emphasis upon outer space and space
travel that we find it almost impossible to grasp how anyone could ever have
believed the sky was solid. Yet, until the sixteenth century virtually everyone
everywhere in the world believed the sky was solid and had so believed for thou-
sands of years. The only exception to this belief before recent centuries was a
philosophical school which arose in China around A.D. 200 that believed the sky
was not solid. Yet, a Jesuit missionary coming upon this school of thought in the
sixteenth century found this idea of a non-solid sky so impossible to accept that
105
Calvin's break with the Augustinian tradition is also seen in the contrasting ways in which he
and Augustine interpreted the firmament and the water above in Gen 1.
106
B A. Gerrish, "The Reformation and the Rise of Modern Science" in The Impact of the
Church upon its Culture (ed. Jerald C. Brouer; Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1968), 261-
62.
l07
Margaret Landon, Anna and the King of Siam (New York: John Day, 1943), 229.
38 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
he wrote home saying the idea that the sky is not solid is "one of the absurdities
of the Chinese."108
The inability to understand a concept which does not fit a current paradigm
is not a matter of intelligence, but of mentality, that is, of culturally ingrained
concepts. I believe then, in line with Calvin, that for the sake of facilitating as
opposed to hindering communication God wisely accommodated his revelation
to ancient scientific paradigms and left to mankind the task of discovering the
scientific truths which would change those paradigms. And this brings us to the
second basic reason why God has accommodated his revelation to ancient sci-
ence. He has endowed humankind with the grace, ability, and intellectual curi-
osity to discover the truths of the natural world, and more importantly, has
delegated to humankind the responsibility to discover those truths and thus sub-
due the earth (Gen 1:26-28). God accordingly has not attempted in Scripture to
correct the scientific "notions which then prevailed" but rather accommodated
his revelation to them. Increasing the dominion of humankind over the natural
world through the advance of scientific knowledge is our divinely delegated
responsibility.
In summary, in order to avoid obstacles to communication which might
become stumbling blocks, and to respect the divine decision to delegate to
humankind the responsibility for the discovery of natural knowledge, Scripture
is accommodated in Gen 11:1-9 (as well as in Gen 1 and Matt 12:42) to the lim-
ited geographical and anthropological knowledge available at the time. This is
in accord with Calvin's understanding of accommodation for he showed in his
expositions of Ps 72:8-10 and Gen 2:8-14 that he believed God accommodated
his revelation to the limited knowledge available at the time. In addition, in his
exposition of Gen 1:16 he broke with the old Augustinian belief that Scripture
reveals modern scientific knowledge. He believed Scripture was accommodated
in the realm of natural science to mere phenomenal appearances. But he also
showed in his expositions of Jer 10:2 and John 17:12 that he believed Scripture
could be accommodated to false conclusions which might be drawn from mere
phenomenal appearances. It is thus in accord with the principles of Calvin's doc-
trine of accommodation to believe that Scripture is accommodated not just to
phenomenal appearances, but to the limited scientific knowledge of the times,
to the scientific "notions which then prevailed."
I would only add that this divine accommodation which we find in
Scripture to the scientific "notions which then prevailed" does not reflect
negatively upon God's character as Truth. It is logically invalid to equate
accommodation with making an error or lying. Temporarily allowing a
prescientific people to hold onto their ingrained beliefs about the natural world is
not at all the same thing as lying to them. Rather, it is following the principle of
becoming "all things to all men." It is a manifestation of amazing grace.
108
Joseph Needham, "The Cosmology of Early China," in Ancient Cosmologies (ed. Carmen
Blacker, Michael Loewe, and Martin J. Plumley; London: Allen & Unwin, 1975), 90-92.
This material is cited with gracious permission from:
Westminster Theological Seminary
2960 W. Church Rd.
Glenside, PA 19038
www.wts.edu
Please report any errors to Ted Hildebrandt at: thildebrandt@gordon.edu