Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
07-18-2001, 09:57 PM | #21 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Las Vegas
Posts: 69
|
I've spent a few years walking around the desert in N. AZ and found pottery shards, pottery making sites, arrowheads, chipping grounds, spearheads, fossilized bones, crude stone tools so old the stone was deteriorating -- plus traces of things people left behind since then. Once you learn how to look, the traces of people are there and obvious. And this part of the country certainly never had cities prior to the last 150 years. If there was anything to find in the Sinai, I'm sure they would have found it by now.
|
07-18-2001, 10:45 PM | #22 |
Banned
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Phoenix, AZ USA
Posts: 126
|
Probably not all, but most of the stories in the OT were created by Jews to make the Jews look superhuman. The stories were told to their children to give them the courage to rebel against slavery.
|
07-18-2001, 11:51 PM | #23 |
Regular Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Oxford, Mississippi
Posts: 172
|
actaully emuse the argument is valid andd is used to prove several thereoms in number theory.
Argument ttle will be plced heer when i find my book. The method: step one: Assume claim to be evaluated is true. step two: Determine what also must true if claim is true. step three: show that step two's statement is false. step four: abandon claim. I shall edit this post after i find my book so that it will be more precise. |
07-19-2001, 03:46 AM | #24 | |
Regular Member
Join Date: May 2001
Location: Charlotte,NC USA
Posts: 379
|
Quote:
the Biblical account if it had not been proven that the Egyptians did not use slave labor for the pyramids construction. Digging around the Great Pyramid unearthed a "city"/"settlement" for the construction workers. What was found there, indicated that not only were slaves not used as construction workers, but that it was a project of national pride to work on the monument and Egyptians wanted to do the work and felt honored to be part of the project. Remains indicated that the workers were well fed, with fresh produce and meat. The bodies showed a high level of Medical care, and it was determined that whole families lived and worked together. So the image of the Egyptians as slave drivers, has been modified because archeology has proven that image to be false. If that image has been wrong for thousands of years, what else is wrong? |
|
07-19-2001, 06:09 PM | #25 | |
Banned
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: San Diego, California
Posts: 2,817
|
Quote:
|
|
07-19-2001, 09:27 PM | #26 | |||||||||||
Banned
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: na
Posts: 329
|
sighhswolf, I shall attempt to reply to your points but please excuse me if my reply is of some length. All my Bible quotes are taken from the New King James version.
Quote:
Quote:
Now, following Joseph's favour with Pharaoh at the end of Genesis I would suggest that the Biblical text claims that Israel were living and working quite happily in Egypt and had no intentions of leaving. Far from it, it claims that they were prospering there, increasing in number and making the new Pharaoh (who was unaware of Joseph) feel insecure. The Pharaoh's response to this situation is to want to deal "shrewdly" with Israel (ch1 vs 10). This I believe is the first indication that Pharaoh is doing something far more subtle than placing the Israelites in direct slavery. Although many translations use the term slavery and this is how the situation is commonly understood I would like to raise a few points. Firstly, in verse 11, we find the term 'taskmaster' used in the NKJV. The NIV translates this 'slave masters'. The NIV is a translation which is intended to be easy to read and I think there is always a lot of compromise in translation when this occurs. The actual Hebrew word is translated in Strongs as 'to drive (an animal, a workman, a debtor, an army)' - Strongs 5065. Only by implication does it mean to tax, harass or tyrannize. Nowhere is there a suggestion that these people were slave drivers though. The suggestion seems to be that these people ensured that certain tasks got done. It was their job to motivate people to fulfill certain duties and obligations as directed by the King. The word used seems to suggest that they may have used certain pressures to achieve this but not that they were slave owners. In much the same way that a boss can use intimidating techniques to get more work out of his employees. Chapter 1, verse 13 says: Quote:
I would suggest that the Biblical text is claiming that Pharaoh was seeking to break the spirits of the Israelites in the way they were treated in the carrying out of their work commitments but once again I don't think that this suggest slavery but rather the way they were being related to by the Egyptians. Further attempts to break their spirit are found later in chapter 1 when midwives are commanded to kill newborn sons. Presumably the Israelites would only have thought that they were suffering a lot of still births and again it would have broken their spirit as well as control numbers. Chapter 1 verse 14 says: Quote:
None of this suggests slavery. It could simply mean that when Pharaoh employed various people, he ensured that the Israelites were given hard labour jobs such as building work and that in this work he ensured that they were driven as hard as possible. None of this suggests that they were overtly seen as second class citizens or unpaid for that matter (more of this later). I think that the final bit of evidence which points away from any idea that the Israelites were slaves in the traditional sense can be found in Exodus 5. As Pharaoh is continuing to increase the work load of the Israelites (under the arguement that they are lazy) we find the following comment in verse 10: Quote:
In short a position of responsibility and of some rank I would suggest. Now to Exodus 5:15-16 Quote:
This raises a number of interesting questions: Would a slave refer to themselves simply as a servant? Would a slave, someone with no civil rights, take issue with someone as powerful as Pharaoh over how they were being treated or complain about being beaten? If they are slaves and are doing this then I suspect that this provides some evidence that they expected to be treated well and fairly despite their status. Could someone with no civil rights, a slave, be called an officer and have a position of rank? On the point of the beatings - these appear to be a form of corporal punishment for not reaching required quotas in brick making, not the continued beatings administered to sweating Jews heaving huge bricks up the sides of pyramids of seen at the cinema! I would suggest that the Israelites were not slaves but employed by Pharaoh. However, I would also suggest that Pharaoh ensured that Israelites were only employed in tasks which required hard labour such as field work or building projects. Within this they were treated harshly. On top of this Jewish officers were set up to help oversee the work. In doing this Pharaoh was intending to break the Spirit of the Israelites and divide them against themselves. I'm not offering this as proof that the Bible is historically accurate but as a means of interpreting the text. Quote:
If they were slaves the Biblical record only mentions them building two supply cities and not the pyramids. Also, if they were slaves, I don't think they were treated in the way which tradition normally portrays. Would it be these supply cities that are found around the Great Pyramid? Quote:
In Exodus 16 we read of the Israelites beginning their life in the wilderness a couple of months after they have left Egypt. They soon find that they are without food and begin to complain: Quote:
The book of Numbers picks up further along the story of the people's life having left Egypt. In chapter 11 we read of them complaining against Moses and Aaron, and this is after God has sent them manna from Heaven. Quote:
I think there's plenty of evidence in the Biblical text to suggest that the Israelites didn't want to leave Egypt. Exodus 12:31 onwards clearly states that the nation was expelled, it didn't escape or go of its own volition. In Numbers 14 a group of Israelites hatch a plot to try and return to Egypt! Quote:
[ July 19, 2001: Message edited by: E_muse ] [ July 20, 2001: Message edited by: E_muse ] |
|||||||||||
07-19-2001, 09:45 PM | #27 | |
Banned
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: na
Posts: 329
|
Quote:
The 40 years in the desert is put down to the consequence of disobedience and rebellion against God and, as I've said above, having come out of Egypt they wanted to go back! How does that present them in a superhuman light? [ July 19, 2001: Message edited by: E_muse ] |
|
07-20-2001, 12:39 AM | #28 | |||
Banned
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: no comment
Posts: 27
|
E_Muse,
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
|||
07-20-2001, 01:13 AM | #29 |
Banned
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Phoenix, AZ USA
Posts: 126
|
e muse, I will settle this for you folks.Your first question. Evidense that the Jews were teaching their children to believe that they were a special people lay in the fact that the Jews are still teaching their childreb that they are a special people.Other evidense is availabe by calling your local synagog and ask for the rabbi. Don't call the synagog librarian. They don't know anything about Jews.
On the desert. The Jews believed in one god. They left their god. They wandered (symnolic)in the wilderness (without a god) for 40 years. 40 years means until all the older generation had died off. ex;(40 lashes less one means lashed 39 times. Or until almost dead) After the old generation died the young generation (the children of Israel) went back to the god of their fathers. You will never find any evidense of people wandering for 40 years in a literal desert. |
07-20-2001, 10:06 AM | #30 | ||
Banned
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: na
Posts: 329
|
Quote:
They wouldn't need to invent a history to do it though. Quote:
The writer of the letter to the Hebrews seems to treat it as a literal history. [ July 20, 2001: Message edited by: E_muse ] |
||
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|