by jimwalton » Thu Jul 09, 2015 10:28 am
Oh, I certainly agree with you that just because we have something in writing doesn't make the event true. One merely has to look at the propaganda of Soviet Russia and Communist China , as well as some of the ancient reliefs in Egypt and Assyria to know that people can write what they want to support their power base. We know that just because it's on TV, or in the newspaper, or on the Internet, doesn't mean that it's true. But we do have other evidences pertaining to the reliability of the Exodus account.
Archaeologists have uncovered the well-preserved village of Deir el-Medina in Egypt, showing us the exact conditions under which Egypt’s own laborers worked, and it matches the conditions described in the Exodus. This village was inhabited for over 400 years. The description in Exodus is right on target, supporting the realism of the narrative.
And, for instance, is it realistic to think that a Semitic speaking foreigner like Joseph, and later Moses, could have risen to the highest levels of Egyptian government? James Hoffmeier, Egyptologist, answers by pointing to an Egyptian tomb discovered in Sakkara, Egypt, in the late 1980s. It contains the coffin of a Semite named Aper-el along with the coffins of his wife and children. His titles include “vizier,” “mayor of the city,” “judge,” “father of god,” “child of the nursery.” Hoffmeier points out that Aper-el’s name was the first of a high ranking, Semite official to be found there, even though Sakkara has been excavated and explored for more than a century. “If such a high ranking official as Vizier Aper-el was completely unknown to modern scholarship until the late 1980s, despite the fact that he lived in one of the better documented periods of Egyptian history [14th century], and was buried in arguably the most excavated site in Egypt, it is wrong to demand, as some have, that direct archaeological evidence for Joseph (and the Exodus) should be available if it were in fact historical." This is even more the case, he says, because Joseph lived during a period when surviving Egyptian documents of any kind are sparse and because Joseph operated in the Nile Delta, an area that remains under-excavated to this day.
We know from extra-biblical sources that immigrants regularly entered and settled in Egypt. Some are depicted in the tomb of Khnumhotep at Beni Hasan (1850 BC). The best known large-scale immigration involves a group of Asiatics we know as the Hyksos who actually ruled Egypt, at least over the northeast Delta, as Dynasties XV & XVI (1650-1550 BC). Their position did not differ much from that of Joseph as described in the Bible. Again, this supports the realism of the narrative. The Joseph story is easily believable given what we know about Egyptian history.
About 400 years after the Hyksos, Dynasty XIX came to power in Egypt, including Pharaoh Ramesses the Great. The 430-year Egyptian sojourn could have spanned the era from Hyksos to Ramesses. The Ramesside family originated in the NE Delta and came to the throne through the office of the vizierate, the pharaoh’s prime minister and chief justice. The Ramessides certainly had some Asiatic roots, as indicated by the choice of the name Seti. All of this supports the story of the Israelites as told in Exodus.
In a surviving Egyptian document called Leiden Papyrus 348, orders are given to "distribute grain rations to the soldiers and to the 'Apiru who transport stones to the great pylon of Rames[s]es." This brings to mind Exodus 1:11, which says the Hebrews "built supply cities, Pithom and Rameses, for Pharaoh." While hotly debated, 'Apiru is believed by some scholars to refer to renegade nomadic groups, such as the Israelites, the 'Ibri.
In the 13th c. BC, during the reign of Ramesses the Great (aka Ramesses II), the old Hyksos capital of Avaris in the northeast Delta was rebuilt and expanded under the new name of Pi-Ramesses (Ex. 1.11). In addition, the place names of Ra’amses and Pithom (Ex 1.11) in Egypt accord with the Late Bronze Age, when there was extensive construction in the Nile delta region, most likely by a large slave force.
The desert Tabernacle is described as a portable prefabricated shrine. The structure has close Egyptian parallels in the 2nd millennium BC. The Tabernacle is true to the era, and even likely to have come from people who knew about Egyptian architecture. The ark of the covenant may be compared with the portable clothes chest found in the tomb of King Tut (1336-1327 BC). There is no reason to believe that such an artifact could not be manufactured by the Israelites.
The accounts of the Exodus ring true to nomadic life: nomads living in the Nile delta who were exploited for cheap labor, Moses' flight to Midian was a common escape route, Bedouins knew how to find water in the wilderness, even by striking certain rocks, Matzah had origins in Bedouin life, etc. These give credibility to the narrative.
Recent discoveries of military outposts on a road leading from Egypt into Canaan, built by Pharaoh Seti I and earlier kings in the 13th c. BC, shed new light on why a northern route for the Exodus would have meant war for the Israelites. Exodus 13:17 states: "When Pharaoh let the people go, God did not lead them by way of the land of the Philistines, although that was nearer; for God thought, 'If the people face war, they may change their minds and return to Egypt.' " Instead, the Bible explains, "God led the people by the roundabout way of the wilderness."
The upshot is that the narrative of Exodus is eminently believable, and everything about it rings true to the era, the geography, the culture, and the history. There is actually very little justifiable historical reason to doubt the account in our hands.
In addition, we know that the cultural topography of Canaan changed dramatically in the hill country just when the Bible says Joshua entered the land and took the hill country, coinciding with the accounts of the departure from Egypt in the same era.
There is no reason to consider that the Biblical account is myth.