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10-06-2007, 10:54 AM | #41 | |
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And why is it when asked for some evidence, you always ask another question (or better yet, post a totally new thread)? If we were talking about DATA, these threads you start wouldn't be so long. |
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10-06-2007, 10:57 AM | #42 |
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I'm not dogmatic about the burials correlating with the events of Exodus. How were those dates determined?
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10-06-2007, 10:58 AM | #43 | ||
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10-06-2007, 11:02 AM | #44 |
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Uh, Dave...why didn't you KNOW about the avaris dates BEFORE you claimed they supported exodus? That's the REAL question.
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10-06-2007, 11:04 AM | #45 | |||
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10-06-2007, 11:26 AM | #46 |
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Afdave, your evidence is as compelling as the evidence a TV rabbi presented during the first part of Bush the Second's reign: A period of natural disasters (fires, floods) and man-made disaters [somehow not including the 9/11/01 gift to the Americans]. Why? Why? Because God was punishing the President for his promoting two states in Palestine.
The President was obvisouly acting against God's donation of Canaan/Palestine to His People; so, he had to be punished! What you are saying is that the Israelites must have been in Egypt, since Egypt was divinely battered on account of the Pharaoh's mistreatment of the Israelites. Think it out again, and notice the little crack in the reasoning process... You assume that the Israelites were there, and then you give a theological explanations for Egypt's disasters. At least the rabbi was not assuming that Bush was -- if only verbally -- promoting two states. But you should go a bit further: Imagine the Pharaoh's good treatment of the Israelites: They would have remained in Egypt, and they would not not ever seized the lands that God had promised to them. // Obviously they did not go into Egypt to stay. So, the exodus was not prompted by God dishing out plagues on the Egyptians. Here is a hint that they went into Egypt or Egypt-owned Canaan: Before they left, they had the time and opportunity to plunder (or swindle) the Egytians, as they proudly note in the Bible. (Apparently that's when the Egyptians called them habiri, hebrews, that is, brigands.) After the plunder and some years of preparation outside Canaan, they embarked on the occupation of Philistine, Jesubite, and Amorite cities. (The occupation proceeded from northern "Palestine" toward the south, which included the old Jerusalem.) Why did the Israelites move out of the "paradise" region to begin with??? Raiding the storage rooms of farmers became more and more difficult, since the large estate owners started constructing forts, like the tower of Babel. So, Abraham eyed the farmlands between the Euphrates and the Nile, and the rest is history. The warlords created a profitable feudal system, just as others had done elsewhere.// This is a better myth than yours, shorn of all theological nonsenses. In the story of Cain and Abel, we recognize two prototypes: the Israelitic shepherds and the Canaanite farmers. The farmers are the bad brothers, and they shall be subdued by the good Abel. So, the Israelites who settled in Palestine consisted mainly of feudal warlords, large castes of rabbis [we see hundreds of them in later courts] , the shepherds, and the merchants. |
10-06-2007, 11:30 AM | #47 | |||
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10-06-2007, 11:44 AM | #48 | ||||
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But don't confuse (a) your personal position with (b) the inerrantist viewpoint. And don't confuse what we're debating here: item (b) is the point of discussion here, not (a). Quote:
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What is naive is to try and rescue inerrantist arguments by invoking arguments of textual degradation or copyist errors, such as you are doing now. Textual degradation, copyist errors, etc. are precisely *opposite* of the inerrantist position. It's rather like trying to rescue a argument for vegetarianism by pointing out how tasty animals are. |
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10-06-2007, 11:52 AM | #49 | ||||||
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10-06-2007, 12:03 PM | #50 |
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Dave, you seem to be particularly confused about this issue--when did any archeologists or historians claim that no Hebrews were ever slaves in Egypt?
I don't ever recall reading this anywhere, and I very much doubt that any historian claimed this. So the presence of Hebrew slaves in Egypt isn't particularly surprising. It is evidence, I will grant you that--but not evidence for your hypothesis, unless your hypothesis is the only possible explanation for this evidence. What it IS evidence for, is the hypothesis "Egyptians had slaves who were possibly or even probably Canaanites". That's all. The fact that Alberto Fujimori, a man with an inarguably Japanese surname, was president of Peru, doesn't in any way support the hypothesis that the Japanese had occupied Peru in the late 20th century |
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