Everybody
Needs an Editor
These days, I have more free time on my hands than I used
to, so I have been listening to a series of lectures on CD by a professor of
Hebrew and Bible studies at NYU on the history of the Bible. One of the early
lectures focuses on the question of who wrote the Bible. There are no
definitive answers to the question. Really, I didn’t expect a specific author
credit other than perhaps Moses. But the
scholarship is very interesting. What did surprise me was that the professor
spends some time noting that the Bible had not only writers but also editors.
As
someone who sends out business cards proclaiming to be a “Writer/Editor,” I was
glad that the editing role in the creation of the Bible was being acknowledged.
Even if the writers were divinely inspired, they were bound to make some
mistakes and overlook some inconsistencies. Hence, the need for editors. Of
course, we editors also like to think we are divinely inspired. As I often tell
my children (and anyone else I encounter), “Everybody needs an editor.”
Here is an example of Biblical editing that the
lecturer noted. In Exodus, Chapter 12, verses 8–10, the Israelites are commanded
to eat the flesh of the lamb that they slaughtered and whose blood they used to
paint their doorposts so the Angel of Death would “pass over” their houses and
spare their first born children. How should the lamb be cooked? The answer is stated directly:
it should be roasted with fire and NOT boiled in water. Any parts that remain
after the evening meal should be burned with fire in the morning. The details are pretty specific, so they must have seemed important to the writers of Exodus
and to the people of Israel who were fleeing from Egypt and heading slowly toward
Canaan.
The story of the Passover celebration meal is repeated
later in the Bible, this time in Deuteronomy 16:7, where a different verb is
used to describe the cooking process—one which involves boiling, though my Bible
translates the term as “roast.” Not a big deal, most of us would probably think.
But the discrepancy worried scholars over the years—and must have disturbed one
or two Biblical editors too, because they now got involved. In a later book, II
Chronicles (35:13), one or more editors took over when the lamb cooking
process is again described, and this time included terms for BOTH roasting and
boiling. The editors thus protected the egos of both previous sets of writers—an
editing skill that is often underappreciated.
Over the years, my children have each asked me to
review some of their compositions and to provide a little editing magic. We all
decided that was not cheating, just improving. I found the best technique to
use involved leaving the beginnings and endings of paragraphs pretty much
intact while making needed adjustments in the middle sentences and adding an occasional
transition or two. [It’s a little like those reading tests you see online where
some of the letters inside words are transposed, but your mind makes the
connections anyway.] It must have worked ok, because both children often got an
ego boost in noting, “You really didn’t change anything much.” I would just
nod.
All of which reminds me of perhaps my most memorable
editing moment, which occurred the summer after I graduated from high school. I
was working as an intern on the Savannah Evening
Press, the local afternoon daily. The press run of the day’s paper was
almost ready to begin. I was asked to give a quick (but thorough) read to the
front page to make sure everything looked right. I spotted a pretty embarrassing
error. The typesetter had left out the letter l in the word public. In
Savannah, Georgia, in 1967, no one discussed anything pubic, especially on the front page of a newspaper. I was told to rush down to the press room, find
a pressman, and say these memorable words—“Stop the Presses!!!” That is exactly
what happened. Then a typesetter rushed in with a chisel and chipped off the letters
“ic” from the word on the plate. The presses started up again, and 30,000
copies were run off with a blank space between the words pub and library on page 1.
In the old days, type was set by placing individual metal letters into metal frames |
I have spent much of the next 50 years editing as well
as writing a wide range of materials, but I have never felt quite as heroic as at that moment in 1967. I can just imagine how the editors working on II
Chronicles must have felt as they improved the Bible!
A pressman checks the presses. As I learned, he can even stop the presses! |
Wonderful entry!
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