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Old 03-24-2007, 07:17 AM   #81
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Originally Posted by figuer View Post
there is not even Biblical evidence
Au contraire. If you assume that the Bible is true, then the Bible is all the evidence you need to support whatever ad hoc assumptions are required to explain the utter lack of evidence for the events described therein.
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Old 03-24-2007, 07:48 AM   #82
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This portion from George the Syncellus, Chronographia(800 CE), is from the Book of Sothis (Chronographia is our only source of this work), which I think most people regard as a spurious pseudo-Manetho work, not from Aegyptiaca. It would seem strange that Jospehus does not mention this in his Against Apion, if this was actually in Manetho's work, which Josephus uses considerably. It would have been another external reference to the ancientness of the Jews, something Josephus could hardly pass up.

The quote from Chronographia is

"26. Silites (the first king of the 6 kings of the Seventeenth Dynasty in Manetho), 19 years. 27. Baion, 44 years. 28. Apachnas, 36 years. 29. Aphophis, 61 years. Some say that this king was first called Pharaoh, and that by the 4th year of his reign Joseph had come into Egypt as a slave. This did make Joseph lord of Egypt, and of his whole kingdom, by the 17th year of his rule, because of the fact that he learned from him the interpretation of the dreams, and had had experience of his divine wisdom. But the Holy Scriptures also call the king in the time of Abraham Pharaoh."

Also Syncellus claims that Thutmosis III was brother to Moses adoptive mother, which would be well before Akhenaton,
I'll just repost this, as you haven't yet addressed the main Historical part of your so called ArcheoHistorical theory. The source you keep calling Manetho is really the Book of Sothis as given to us by George the Syncellus in the Ninth century, no other sources exist for this text and most Historians consider it a spurious text not written by Manetho, and in fact written probably by someone with a Jewish/Christian agenda.

This is fairly clear in the qoute I provided, which is the portion addressing Joseph in Aphophis reign. In that qoute you can see the author seems to just take the scripture and work it in. So the 13 years between when Joseph is taken as a slave, that Genesis tells us happened when he was 17, and he was made Vizier when he was 30, as Genesis tells us. It seems pretty unlikely that anyone in Egypt would have recorded the year that Joseph was made a slave. Yet strangely there are no other dates given nor any other events told that aren't in the Bible. I also doubt Manetho would care what was the first time the Bible calls the king of Egypt Pharaoh. The fact that Josephus does not mention any of this, is also a very clear indicator it is not from Manetho, as his agenda would have made him mention it.

Lastly ,as regards your theory, in George the Syncellus's Chronographia, using the same Book of Sothis, he states that Moses adoptive mother was sisiter to Thutmose III. So why is the source, according to your theory, "accurate" about Joseph's time period, but inaccurate about Moses' time period?
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Old 03-24-2007, 08:04 AM   #83
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Am I twisting the evidence here?

Larsguy47
Basically yes. C14, being fundamentally statistical process, doesn't allow you to pinpoint when within the range yielded that the object relates to. Any point is equally possible.


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Old 03-24-2007, 09:06 AM   #84
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Here's my take on the subject:

My biggest reason for not believing the exodus comes from the plagues. Not only is there no evidence for the plagues, but plagues would be expected to leave a lot of evidence behind.

Many hisotrian have noted that the Egyptians did not write about their defeats. However, the plagues would leave behind evidence other than just Egyptian records.

The plagues I have in mind here were animal disease, hail, and locusts. According to the Bible, all of the crops and animals were killed by these plagues. And because of the wording the Bible uses (specifically, it gives no indication of time), it can be inferred that it is claiming that they happened one after the other over a short period of time.

If all of the crops and animals were killed, Egypt is left with two possible fates: it experiences a widespread famine, or it buys food from other nations to survive. If there was a famine, there would be physical evidence (such as mass graves, sudden changes in settlements that indicated a massive population decline, etc.) and othert nations would have taken note (because Egypt, was, after all, a prominent nation). If Egypt bought food from other nations to survive, those other nations would have recorded the event. I believe tha fact that none of these things happened is powerful evidence that the plagues did not happen.
Man, I have to jump in here.

If there were plagues that killed lots of people, why would that require mass graves? Is there some historical precedent that Egyptians always had nice burial ceremonies for every person that died EXCEPT when the had famines or something?

Or are you suggesting that, since there are no mass graves, that Ancient Egypt NEVER experienced a single famine?

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Old 03-24-2007, 10:43 AM   #85
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I think your arguments are reasonable even though you'd have to find the specific place where the people were swallowed up by the earth. Perhaps that will be found some day to confirm that.

I appreciate your sharing these views.

Larsguy47
The Bible does record where God killed thousands at a time, for instance: 24,000 died of God's plague at Shittim where the Israelites appear to have stayed for months just before entering the promised land. In addition to those who died of that plague, Moses was ordered to kill all the men who had whored with the daughters of Moab and anyone who had worshiped the gods of the Moabites, cutting off their heads and hanging them in the sun before Jahweh.

That's a lot of dead bodies all in one place, not to mention the results of encampment in one place for months. Imagine the latrines for a million people!There have been numerous archeological searches for sites mentioned in the OT where the Israelites wandered and camped but as yet, nothing found to support the stories told in Exodus, Judges, and Numbers.

There is a lot of the practical left unexplained in the exodus and wandering as the Bible describes it all, in addition to the absence of both archeological evidence and historical mention outside the stories of the Bible. There's no explanation for the availability of doves, for instance, that were required for sacrifice by every woman who gave birth over the 38+ years. Or the materials that made up the tents. Or the contents of some tents, such as the ark of the covenant, the fine-linen veils, the silver-clad poles, etc
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Old 03-24-2007, 10:46 AM   #86
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Au contraire. If you assume that the Bible is true, then the Bible is all the evidence you need to support whatever ad hoc assumptions are required to explain the utter lack of evidence for the events described therein.
True, true. But there is a lot of harmony and satisfaction at bringing some of the REALITY, especially in archaeology and ancient history from Egypt or Babylon, etc. and seeing confirmations and validations of what's in the Bible. Like being able to explain WHY Akhenaten became a "monotheist." It's amazing to read an Amarna Letter describing the death of Amenhotep III and knowing he's talking about the death of that king in the Red Sea. That's a lot of fun and inspiring, even if you have had all the faith you need to believe.

Thanks for sharing your comment.

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Old 03-24-2007, 11:02 AM   #87
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[QUOTE=Cege;4291401]

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That's a lot of dead bodies all in one place, not to mention the results of encampment in one place for months. Imagine the latrines for a million people!There have been numerous archeological searches for sites mentioned in the OT where the Israelites wandered and camped but as yet, nothing found to support the stories told in Exodus, Judges, and Numbers.
I totally understand this, certainly. But I'm wondering what is missing? Now that I have confidence in the chronology related to Akhenaten and Amenhotep III dying in the Red Sea, I have to presume that part of the story is accurate and true. Then by the time Shishak comes on board, there's is total confirmation of everything and that confirmations continues with validation extra-Biblically right through the Persian Period. So it's just this sort of blank page, archaeologically speaking for this period. I'm wondering if archaeologists are misinterpreting what to expect during this period?

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There is a lot of the practical left unexplained in the exodus and wandering as the Bible describes it all, in addition to the absence of both archeological evidence and historical mention outside the stories of the Bible. There's no explanation for the availability of doves, for instance, that were required for sacrifice by every woman who gave birth over the 38+ years. Or the materials that made up the tents. Or the contents of some tents, such as the ark of the covenant, the fine-linen veils, the silver-clad poles, etc.
Good point. I'm wondering how "isolated" they were were then? Obviously, some strayed and got involved with the surrounding people. I'm not that concerned about explaining too many of the supplies. We don't know exactly what was going on and obviously they had an opportunity to plan ahead. I'm going to enjoy re-reading the account and seeing what clues are there to be found.

But there is a gap for some of this as far as archaeology is concerned that doesn't explain the other side. Some sites mentioned in the Bible, not found by archaeology or allegedly claimed not to have been there are actually mentioned in Egyptian records. So besides the Bible, some sites apparently have either not been found or have such neglible remains that they don't exist any more at all. So archaeology certainly weighs in, but it would hardly be preemptive when everything seems to be precisely on line and confirmed from Shishak to Darius II. Mereneptah was the first to mention the Israelities as a people fairly early on confirming their presence, with others in Canaan. So those people had to come from somewhere, gain a self identity and project that to others. I'm not so sure archaeology has the scope to explain that simply by the specific evidence they are looking for.

As far as the doves go, apparently they were around and I'm sure they could have bread them, etc.

Thanks for your comments! Definitely something to look into for this period.

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Old 03-24-2007, 11:13 AM   #88
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Basically yes. C14, being fundamentally statistical process, doesn't allow you to pinpoint when within the range yielded that the object relates to. Any point is equally possible.


spin
Hi Spin. So what you're saying is that if you had several liters of grain that was burned, and you tested that whole sample, and it gave you a chart result like we see for Level City IV at Rehov, and the testers create a chart to show how that result points to certain dates, and it is clear, and that on one side they say "probability percentage" and at the bottom various dates and you see at 925BCE only 5% probability for that level and you have a 99% probability for a range of dates from 874-867 BCE, you're saying that it is just as likely that entire sample could have originated in 925BCE as 871BCE?

If that were the case, why wouldn't they make the entire range at 99% probability? I've seen the other charts and sometimes the range is greater than for City IV, but that might represent the samples. To say that 871BCE is no more likely to be accurate than 925BCE I think is not realistic, especially since Level V destruction level is dated to around that time. What's the purpose of RC14 of short-lived grains if you still can't tell the age of anything by this method?

Furthermore, why is it (coincidence?) that now that we can confirm the absolute correct date for that invasion in 871BCE for this very level does the 99% probability 7-day dating range include 871BCE?

No. I'm afraid not. I think the system is excellent and the dating represents the best and highest probability and it is extremely accurate as it turns out since 871BCE is the actual dating. If the dating didn't turn out where it did, then I'd wonder about the process itself. But since it has, it seems RC14 methodology, if you have the right sample and can link that to a specific event, such as the end of a certain level because of burning, etc. then it will confirm the correct timeline. Further, this dating is very much in sync with the dating already in place archaeologically, even as far back as the fall of Jericho.

Why would you second guess this best "probability" estimate?

Larsguy47
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Old 03-24-2007, 12:05 PM   #89
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Hi Spin. So what you're saying is that if you had several liters of grain that was burned, and you tested that whole sample, and it gave you a chart result like we see for Level City IV at Rehov, and the testers create a chart to show how that result points to certain dates, and it is clear, and that on one side they say "probability percentage" and at the bottom various dates and you see at 925BCE only 5% probability for that level and you have a 99% probability for a range of dates from 874-867 BCE, you're saying that it is just as likely that entire sample could have originated in 925BCE as 871BCE?

If that were the case, why wouldn't they make the entire range at 99% probability? I've seen the other charts and sometimes the range is greater than for City IV, but that might represent the samples. To say that 871BCE is no more likely to be accurate than 925BCE I think is not realistic, especially since Level V destruction level is dated to around that time. What's the purpose of RC14 of short-lived grains if you still can't tell the age of anything by this method?

Furthermore, why is it (coincidence?) that now that we can confirm the absolute correct date for that invasion in 871BCE for this very level does the 99% probability 7-day dating range include 871BCE?

No. I'm afraid not. I think the system is excellent and the dating represents the best and highest probability and it is extremely accurate as it turns out since 871BCE is the actual dating. If the dating didn't turn out where it did, then I'd wonder about the process itself. But since it has, it seems RC14 methodology, if you have the right sample and can link that to a specific event, such as the end of a certain level because of burning, etc. then it will confirm the correct timeline. Further, this dating is very much in sync with the dating already in place archaeologically, even as far back as the fall of Jericho.

Why would you second guess this best "probability" estimate?

Larsguy47
It might be good if you looked at your own chart carefully:

You'll see in the upper right the information you need to consider for probability. It lists two probabilities: 95.4% (this is 2-sigma) and 68.2% (1-sigma), ie 95.4% of being the correct date range, which is larger than the 1-sigma range, which here provides two short ranges. The narrower the range required the lower the probability of being correct. So the 2-sigma range though less precise is a lot surer.


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Old 03-24-2007, 01:37 PM   #90
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There is a problem with your supposition that the Egyptian sojourn lasted 215 years--Yahweh predicted that the Israelites would be afflicted in Egypt for 400 years:

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Genesis 15:13-14:
13 Then Yahweh said to Abram, "Know this for certain, that your offspring shall be aliens in a land that is not theirs, and shall be slaves there, and they shall be oppressed for four hundred years; 14 but I will bring judgment on the nation that they serve, and afterward they shall come out with great possessions.
Until you reconcile a 215-year sojourn with the prediction the Israelites would be oppressed for 400 years--not just in Egypt but oppressed in Egypt, which they were not while Joseph was alive (Exodus 1:8 ff)--your other calculations are moot.
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No. There is no problem. Let me just say, again, that Josephus interprets these 430 years as half before Jacob comes into Egypt. So you are introducing yourself on one side of a well-debated argument. So it's not necessary for me to "reconcile" anything that's already reconciled.

Specifically, the apologetics for the 400 years, is simply related to what happened 400 years before the Exodus if the 430 years are counted from when the covenant was set up. That was when Isaac was 5 years of age. At that point an EGYPTIAN, oppressed him. So it's a symbolic concept of the beginning of the opression of the children of Abraham by any Egyptian, not just in Egypt. They begin the 400 years with that first oppression.
The only people for whom the issue is "already reconciled" are Jewish and Christian apologists trying to force their 215-year-Egyptian-sojourn theory into the text. Notice that Abraham was promised that his descendants would be enslaved and oppressed in a foreign land for 400 years. There is nothing to hint that Ishmael's "oppressing" Isaac is in view (which, by the way, took place in Canaan, not in a foreign land), and this "solution" is really so implausible as to not deserve further comment. You made appeal to Josephus to buttress your case. Though you didn't give a citation, you were referring to Antiquities 2.15.2, which reads as follows:

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2. They left Egypt in the month Xanthicus, on the fifteenth day of the lunar month; four hundred and thirty years after our forefather Abraham came into Canaan, but two hundred and fifteen years only after Jacob removed into Egypt. It was the eightieth year of the age of Moses, and of that of Aaron three more. They also carried out the bones of Joseph with them, as he had charged his sons to do.
So you think that because Josephus claims that only 215 of 430/400 years were spent in Egypt your case is proven? And Josephus, a Jew, would never try to harmonize disparate biblical accounts, would he? Frankly, it doesn't matter what Josephus says, but what the text says, and Josephus gives no reason why his figures should be accepted. But here's the bad news for you: Josephus also comments about the 400 years of oppression, and as we shall see, his interpretation is not at all helpful to you.

In Antiquities 1.10.3, Josephus states the following, emphasis mine:

Quote:
3. And God commended his virtue, and said, Thou shalt not however lose the rewards thou hast deserved to receive by such thy glorious actions. He answered, And what advantage will it be to me to have such rewards, when I have none to enjoy them after me? - for he was hitherto childless. And God promised that he should have a son, and that his posterity should be very numerous; insomuch that their number should be like the stars. When he heard that, he offered a sacrifice to God, as he commanded him. The manner of the sacrifice was this : - He took an heifer of three years old, and a she-goat of three years old, and a ram in like manner of three years old, and a turtle-dove, and a pigeon and as he was enjoined, he divided the three former, but the birds he did not divide. After which, before he built his altar, where the birds of prey flew about, as desirous of blood, a Divine voice came to him, declaring that their neighbors would be grievous to his posterity, when they should be in Egypt, for four hundred years; during which time they should be afflicted, but afterwards should overcome their enemies, should conquer the Canaanites in war, and possess themselves of their land, and of their cities.
Also, in Antiquities 2.9.1, we read this, again my emphasis:

Quote:
1. NOW it happened that the Egyptians grew delicate and lazy, as to pains-taking, and gave themselves up to other pleasures, and in particular to the love of gain. They also became very ill-affected towards the Hebrews, as touched with envy at their prosperity; for when they saw how the nation of the Israelites flourished, and were become eminent already in plenty of wealth, which they had acquired by their virtue and natural love of labor, they thought their increase was to their own detriment. And having, in length of time, forgotten the benefits they had received from Joseph, particularly the crown being now come into another family, they became very abusive to the Israelites, and contrived many ways of afflicting them; for they enjoined them to cut a great number of channels for the river, and to build walls for their cities and ramparts, that they might restrain the river, and hinder its waters from stagnating, upon its running over its own banks: they set them also to build pyramids, and by all this wore them out; and forced them to learn all sorts of mechanical arts, and to accustom themselves to hard labor. And four hundred years did they spend under these afflictions; for they strove one against the other which should get the mastery, the Egyptians desiring to destroy the Israelites by these labors, and the Israelites desiring to hold out to the end under them.
What do you know, Josephus says that the Israelites were oppressed for 400 years in Egypt, just as Genesis 15:13-14 "predicted." Don't look now, Larsguy47, but your appeal to Josephus just blew up in your face. :rolling:

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Originally Posted by Larsguy47
But, God made sure that Hagar learned a lesson from this. He didn't kill Ishamel right away, but extended his life as long as Hagar was willing to carry him over her shoulders and as long as Ischmale was willing to continually suck from some makeshift water "breasts" Abraham placed over Hagars shoulders. This was just to demonstrate what a person would do to stay alive or keep their child alive if they were forced to. It put Hagar and Ishmael in the position and mindframe of Sarah and Isaac. Of course, Hagar was more than willing to carry her son for the last few hours of his life, and Ishmael certainly would drink until the water was exhausted to hold onto the last few moments of his life with his mother.

When the water hung over her breasts was exhausted and Ishmael was as good as dead, she threw him under a bush as if dead and went away weeping. Lesson having been learned, God spared Ishamel and made him a great nation.
Thank you for segueing into another Bible contradiction. Genesis 16:16 says that, "Abram was eighty-six years old when Hagar bore him Ishmael" and Genesis 21:5 says that, "Abraham was a hundred years old when his son Isaac was born to him." Simple math says that Ishmael was 14 when Isaac was born. Genesis 21:8 states that Isaac was already weaned when Ishmael and Hagar were "cast out," so Ismael may have been as old as 15 or 16, maybe even older. (2 Maccabees 7:27 reads: But, leaning close to him, she spoke in their native language as follows, deriding the cruel tyrant: "My son, have pity on me. I carried you nine months in my womb, and nursed you for three years, and have reared you and brought you up to this point in your life, and have taken care of you.") So please tell me how Hagar could have carried a 15- or 16-year old on her shoulders while Ishmael sucked "from some makeshift water "'breasts.'" Tell me, too, how Hagar was able to "thr[o]w [Ishmael] under a bush as if dead" if he was a teenager. I know that what you relayed is what chapter 21 claims, but you have unwittingly demonstrated another inconsistency in the Bible.
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