Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
01-10-2001, 02:14 PM | #21 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
TrueThinker
No I had never heard of it before. I do not know why it was not included in "The Ten Commandments" (which I have not seen). It seems that the general consensus however that much of the book is a fiction (well, the mountain is obviously there and it may very well be the Mount Sinai that inspired the story in Exodus - is it really all that important?). In one review from the Biblical Archaeology Society, the reviewer (Ronald S. Hendel ) started off by saying: " In "Raiders of the Lost Ark," the swashbuckling archaeologist Indiana Jones defeats the evil Nazis, wins the girl and discovers the Ark of the Covenant. Adventure, religion and sex swirl together to create a marvelously entertaining movie. But, as I tell my children, it never really happened. It is important, as you grow up, to be able to distinguish between fantasy and reality. This distinction sometimes escapes my children, and it certainly escaped the two grown-ups who set out to discover "the Real Mt. Sinai" and who are the subjects of this book and video." For the full review see: http://www.bib-arch.org/barja99/gold_of_exodus.html |
01-10-2001, 07:05 PM | #22 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
offa,
Have you read Antiquities 3-123? It tells about Moses building a big tent on top of Mount Sinai. One section of the tent is called heaven, the holy place, or the "holy of Holies". Figuratively speaking, GOD is recreating the world. What we have is a repetition of the Creation story so the persons before Moses now have new names. My drift is that it is the same story retold. The world that GOD created was headquartered in this tent (Tabernacle) and the world was as far as the eye could see. This mountain could also be called Gerizum. I chuckle at biblical maps trying to locate Gerizum. This mountain headquarters and the Ark of the Covenant was created in the land of the tribes of Israel. The Philistines recovered this Ark but anybody that knows locations realize that the Philistines were located in what was later called Jerusalem. When king David recovers the Ark it is already in Jerusalem. A few decades later the king of Egypt invades Jerusalem and takes this Ark. Guess what, this king of Egypt was actually an Israelite and he took back the holy relic. The Jews were never held captive in the Egypt of the Valley of the Kings. The Egypt that Joseph, the Star of Bethlehem, fled to, was the wilderness area along the Dead Sea. This area was also called Galilee and Josephus tells about the many caves in Galilee and that the twenty-five year old Herod (the Great) was made governor of the same. If you were the king of Egypt (Onias at Heliopolis*) you were referred to as the pharaoh and your wife would be called Arsinoe. While Solomon ruled the headquarters of Israel was called Tyre instead of Shechem in mount Ephraim (Gerizum, Sinai) and, this Israelite leader was known as king Hiram (the Jews never met king Hiram of the island of Tyre, their world was only line of sight). Josephus, in Antiquities 13-313, tells how the Essenes borrowed names for locations, but, what he does not tell you is that he has practiced this art throughout his books. The world that GOD created was in a tent, and Mount Sinai has many names. *Heliopolis, was Qumran. It was also the other Jerusalem and was the lower Jerusalem or citadel held by the Macedonians or wicked Jews. When king Herod married Mariamne II of Jerusalem, she was the daughter of the Pharisee and high priest Simon Boethus of this other Jerusalem. |
01-10-2001, 11:36 PM | #23 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
General consensus? Yours is the only one I've seen that seems to think it is a work of fiction. I don't think the journalist who wrote it believed their story to be a work of fiction. He has legitimate sources listed in the book. It's interesting though, isn't it? These men followed the trail of the Bible and it took them to the correct location. Maybe scholars and archaeologists should have thought about doing that. Do me a favor and read the book for yourself or buy the video. And yes, this evidence is really important as it may prove the historical significance of the Bible. Why wouldn't it be? Isn't it the skeptic who says the Bible should verify its claims? |
|
01-11-2001, 04:00 PM | #24 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Maybe an alien rocket landed there in a pillar of smoke & fire, handed out some pamphlets to the locals & took off back to Vulcan?
|
01-15-2001, 11:25 PM | #25 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
|
|
01-16-2001, 01:46 AM | #26 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
TrueThinker
I gave you the web site of the review, which I partially posted. So go there and ask him. After all, it was a Christian website, so you two should have a lot in common. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|