Well of course.
> The logistics of having 1 million plus people
Whoa, Nellie. More like 25,000 people.
> then suddenly the wind stopped blowing and the water came back, fast enough to wash away so many soldiers that they just decided to pack up and go home?
The miracle is in the timing. If the water washing back bogged down their chariots and killed enough of them, they would halt the pursuit. Ex. 14.25 says their chariots "had difficulty driving." They interpreted (according to the narrator) that YHWH was fighting against them, and they turned back. Enough of them were caught in the flow that they didn't resume their pursuit. I don't see what's so dubious and a "far stretch" about this.
> Also, you mentioned there were Egyptian forts at the upper route. Wouldn’t the Egyptians just send troops from there to capture the Israelites on the other side?
Recent discoveries have been made of military outposts on a road leading from Egypt into Canaan, along the Mediterranean, built by Pharaoh Seti I and earlier kings in the 13th century BC. After the water crossing, the Israelites turned south into the Arabian peninsula, away from these forts. If their main army was routed, why would we think Egypt would send some of these contingency forces after a group of 25K people?
> So you have millions of people that somehow escaped the most powerful army in the world at the time
More like 25,000 people.
Scholars estimate the size of the Egyptian army at this time to be less than 20,000. Pharaoh released 600+ chariots (NOTE: This number is probably warfare rhetoric and hyperbole; "600" is the size of a battalion; there is no evidence for a chariot force that large in Egypt at the time; scholars estimate 200-250), along with some troops, to pursue them (Ex. 14.7). This was not war so much as a police operation.
> and only one person decided to record it?
Egyptian inscriptions praise the prowess of the Pharaoh. Who's going to inscribe for posterity, "We got our butts kicked"? No one. The lack of direct Egyptian evidence doesn't prove that this didn't happen. Egyptian sources could have been indifferent to the Exodus because the event didn't shake the foundations of the political and military scene of the day. I don't see it as unlikely at all that the Egyptians didn't record a failure for them.
> When I said geographic and physical markers I meant things that would corroborate the existence of a land ridge, or evidence that water would have been blown into other areas allowing the Israelites to pass through the sea.
I mentioned that it is guess that perhaps the Exodus went through the area of the Bitter Lakes and Lake Timsah. That region has lots of water, generally not very deep, with fords over it for passage. Some traces of these ancient fords have been found. Ricciotti, in his History of Ancient Israel says, "It is possible that the Israelites, bearing toward the south, had intended using one of these fords. There did exist in historical times, between the actual basin of the Bitter Lakes and the tip of the gulf of Suez, a communication, precarious without a doubt, and perhaps intermittent according to the average depth of the sea—that leaves the passage of the Israelites its full miraculous character—but still sufficient to constitute an important obstacle between Egypt and the desert to the east. While crossing through this low area with its lakes, lagoons, canals, and swamps was possible only at the ford of Suez, which is still used in our own day—and is the principal crossing—or across the fords of Little Bitter Lake in the vicinity of its present-day southern extremity. One of the last-mentioned fords would have been at Migdol, eventually called Abu Hasan.
"The very nature of this ford explains the fatal mistake committed here by the Egyptians. No one would have known better than they, not only of the existence of the ford at this place, but also of the many delicate (and not always realizable) conditions of its use. It must have appeared perfectly obvious to the pursuers that favorable conditions for crossing really existed that morning, once they saw the pursued actually advance into the ford; moreover, the east wind which had blown all during the night would have told them that the ford would be passable. The next morning, for ordinarily the east wind pushes the lower waters toward the Bitter Lakes and thus facilitates the passage."
Here's another longer quote from from Biblical Archaeology (I'll edit it down somewhat to save space and reading): "This entire area, from the northern limit of the Gulf of Suez to the Mediterranean coastline, is not at all as it was in antiquity. Evidence suggests that the Gulf of Suez extended further north in antiquity than it does today, although we do not presently know how far north (Hoffmeier 1997: 209). Also, the Mediterranean coastline during the 2nd millennium BC was much further south than it is today (Scolnic 2004: 96–97; Hoffmeier 2005: 41–42), so the isthmus between the two was much narrower than today. What has remained consistent about the region throughout history is the fact that it has always been known for marshy freshwater lakes. ...
"Noting Bietak’s important paleoenvironmental study of the region, Hoffmeier added that Tell Abu Sefeh, at modern Qantara East on the west side of the present Ballah Lake area, probably reflects the ancient Egyptian name for that lake (p3 twfy) and its Hebrew counterpart (yam suph) (2005: 88–89). Hoffmeier also points out that excavations at Tell Abu Sefeh have uncovered remains of an impressive harbor with quays that once handled multiple trading vessels (2005: 88). While archaeological evidence has identified remains later than the Exodus period, it is obvious that the Ballah Lake was once a substantial body of water on Egypt’s eastern border.
"Kitchen suggested that the Reed Sea terminology might have been used by the ancients for all the bodies of water in the series of reedy lakes that ran the full north-south length of the isthmus (2003:262). By extension, it was also applied to the last of these bodies of water—the Gulf of Suez. This would also explain Numbers 33:10, where the Israelites again passed yam suph (so-called “yam suph II” [Kitchen 2003: 271]) later in the Exodus narrative, after the miraculous yam suph crossing earlier. Maybe at that time, or even later, the same term also came to be used for still another “connected” body of water—the Gulf of Aqaba.
"Geological studies indicate that natural factors have produced great changes in both the Nile delta and Isthmus of Suez through the millennia. More recent human activity has changed the region most of all. Completion of both the old (1902) and new (1970) Nile River dams at Aswan have dramatically affected the river’s flow and greatly reduced its flooding. ...
"The region’s geography and the Exodus account fit together. The Israelites departed from Rameses to the north of Wadi Tumilat and headed south after the last plague (see Ex 13:17–14:3). They came to Succoth in the Wadi Tumilat then headed east to Etham in the vicinity of Lake Timsah. Turning north, they were overtaken by the pursuing Egyptians at Pi Hahiroth, between Migdol and the sea and before Baal Zephon (Ex 14:2)."
As I previously mentioned, the scientists from Florida State suggested that the exposure of an underwater ridge could explain the event. No one knows where the Israelites actually crossed.
> The fact that you have over a million people
About 25000
> people and all their livestock and artifacts traveling through an area, and yet not leave a single trace is very suspect.
Traveling people usually don't leave things behind. They escaped quickly from Egypt. They don't have tons of stuff, and they don't leave it behind. Secondly, we don't know exactly where to look for traces of their trip. Third, it's a swampy mess there. Fourth, the construction of the Suez Canal has changed the entire landscape.
> if the Egyptians had so many people and chariots and weapons buried in the sea, we should be able to find something.
The chariots of the time were wooden (Google images: 18th dynasty Egyptian chariot). It was the bronze age, not the iron age. And we don't know where to look. The fact that we don't find anything is no surprise at all.
> The fact that given a certain hypothesis we would expect to find certain things and we don’t find those things is a reason to discount the hypothesis.
Everything we know supports the account. There is nothing questionable about any detail given.
- Foreign rulers ruled Egypt during the time we estimate for Joseph
- Semitic foreigners often worked in Egypt
- The Leiden Papyrus 348 shows that Ramesses built a new capital called Pi-Ramesses
- The Mernapthah stele mentions a people group called Israel
- A non-Egyptian like Moses could be raised in a royal family
- Foreign slaves made bricks and farmed
- The Papyri Anastasi show that Egyptians maintained tight border control, explaining why Moses would need to ask permission for the Israelites to leave.
- we know about the military outposts along the northern route
Every detail we have (we have many more than I've just listed) corroborates the Bible narrative. The text is dead-on accurate and evidenced. The only thing we DON'T have is evidence of the Israelites and their departure.
> Basically the only reason you accept the story is true is that it’s in the Bible.
I accept it because (1) all the other details are correct, and (2) the continuing story the Bible tells necessitates a historical exodus, by my way of thinking. It's not "just because it's in the Bible."
> There is nothing outside the Bible that can confirm it.
Every piece is confirmed except the major piece: the Israelites. We have Semitic people groups in Egypt as slaves, tight borders, etc. I wouldn't say it's "just an assumption."
> What kind of evidence would I accept regarding angels? I would really consider any evidence beyond hearsay. If you have some, I would gladly consider it.
What are you expecting besides someone's account of what they saw?