NorthOfNorth wrote on Apr 5
th, 2014 at 10:20pm:
muso wrote on Apr 5
th, 2014 at 10:08pm:
NorthOfNorth wrote on Apr 5
th, 2014 at 9:09pm:
So no convincing record of slavery, Moses' existence, his relationship to Rammesses, Exodus, flight from the capricious Pharoah, 40 years wandering in the desert nor entry into Canaan.
Not that any of this would matter to an Orthodox Jew (or any observant Jew)... Cultural mythological tradition is paramount in these circumstances not scientifically provable historicity.
No. It would be unlikely, given that the texts were written around 600 BC, about 1000 years later than the period they describe. There were some elements of truth of course, but a lot of the earlier history was invented in line with the circumstances of the day.
Of course, it's quite possible that there were Canaanite slaves in Egypt at this time, because Canaan came under Egyptian rule. Hebrew was effectively a dialect of Canaanite. They were the same people effectively.
Although it would be reasonable to expect that had such a dramatic exodus of an entire serving class occurred in Egypt it would have been recorded. It would have had a catastrophic impact on the economy at the very least.
Not to mention the catastrophic defeat of Rammesses army at the 'red sea' (or 'the sea of reeds' as has been contemporarily suggested).
The Red Sea crossing site, was between the eastern shore of Sinai peninsula and the west coast of the Arabian peninsula.
Do you see, about 1/3 of the way down the eastern shore of Sinai peninsula, that sandy outcrop into the sea ?
That is a vast sandy beach.
Yadda slept on that beach, in 1974.
It is the biblical red sea crossing site.
Quote:
Israeli archaeologists are unable even to locate, with any certainty, Mount Sinai.
No doubt because Israeli archaeologists have been searching for Mount Sinai, on the Sinai peninsula ?
But the biblical Mount Sinai is on the Arabian peninsula.
Paul knew where Mount Sinai was.
Galatians 4:25
For this Agar is mount Sinai
in Arabia....
Quote:
While this may be somewhat of a disappointment to religious Jews, it in no way undermines their conviction that the land they now call Israel is that which was sighted by Moses and proclaimed by him to have been promised to the Jews by Yahweh.
Oh.
non,
Conviction is the art of being certain.
The Lod airport entry stamp in my passport, 1973-08-30.
I arrived in Israel, 6 weeks before Yom Kippur, 1973