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Thursday, 31 July 2014

Origins Of The Exodus Myth


With so many to choose from, it's difficult to decide which of the various folk tales, invented 'histories' and origin myths that have found themselves bound up in the same book and presented as the inerrant word of an omnipotent god is the silliest, but one of them has to be the tale of Hebrew enslavement in Egypt and subsequent escape.

It was obviously written by someone who knew little or nothing of the geography or politics of the time and place the tale was set, so we have the idiotic notion of the 'Israelites' escaping from Egypt by crossing the Red Sea to Sinai - which was also in Egypt. That's like 'escaping' from the USA by crossing the Hudson River from New Jersey to Manhattan or escaping from the UK by crossing the Bristol channel from England to Wales. The author also has the 'slaves' building the Egyptian city of Raamses - which wasn't started until some 120 after the traditional date of the Exodus.

We are expected to believe that some three million people spent nearly half a century wandering about in Sinai following a pillar of smoke by day and a pillar of fire at night and yet never left any trace whatsoever; no discarded shoes or broken cooking pots, no graves, no sign of campfires, no animal bones from the remains of meals. And, because they would have had no means to make new ones or to repair old ones, we have to assume they never wore out their shoes or clothes and their children never grew out of their clothes and needed new ones.

The author seems to have thought only about how they were going to get food and water for three million people in a desert and, having failed to think of anything sensible, invokes magic to explain it away.

So Moses brought Israel from the Red sea, and they went out into the wilderness of Shur; and they went three days in the wilderness, and found no water. And when they came to Marah, they could not drink of the waters of Marah, for they were bitter: therefore the name of it was called Marah.

And the people murmured against Moses, saying, What shall we drink? And he cried unto the LORD; and the LORD shewed him a tree, which when he had cast into the waters, the waters were made sweet:

Exodus 15:22-25

So that's the water magicked up then, but apparently they didn't realise they have no food until they had been wandering around for about 6 weeks!

And they took their journey from Elim, and all the congregation of the children of Israel came unto the wilderness of Sin, which is between Elim and Sinai, on the fifteenth day of the second month after their departing out of the land of Egypt. And the whole congregation of the children of Israel murmured against Moses and Aaron in the wilderness: And the children of Israel said unto them, Would to God we had died by the hand of the LORD in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the flesh pots, and when we did eat bread to the full; for ye have brought us forth into this wilderness, to kill this whole assembly with hunger.

Then said the LORD unto Moses, Behold, I will rain bread from heaven for you; and the people shall go out and gather a certain rate every day, that I may prove them, whether they will walk in my law, or no.[My emphasis]

Exodus 16:1-4

Phew! Magic bread too.

But before we even get the the unlikely tale of three million people wandering about in an Egyptian desert for forty years without the Egyptian authorities noticing them we have to plough through some equally implausible tales such as the 'ten plagues', none of which the Egyptian scribes saw fit to make note, just as they failed to make note of the destruction of their entire army or the economic collapse that would have followed the loss of so many slaves all at once.

Actually, the plagues sort of develop out of the magic contest between Aaron who is supposedly empowered by the Hebrews' god and Pharaoh's magicians who presumably get their powers from lesser gods, even though there aren't any.

Let's briefly run through the 'ten plagues':

  1. First the rivers are turned to blood, all the fish die and the waters stink. No one has any water to drink. This lasted for seven days and would have resulted in mass deaths due to dehydration. Amongst the first to die would have been the children. The author doesn't think to explain how the Hebrews were saved from this. No record of it was made anywhere in any Egyptian records. Exodus 7:17-25.
  2. This is followed by a plague of frogs which had somehow survived the rivers of blood that had killed all the fish. A mere inconvenience, nothing more, and a big stink when they all died, but no record anywhere. Exodus 8:2-13.
  3. Next we have the plague of lice about which very little is said and of course no record was made. To a people who would have been accustomed to lice this would probably have been nothing remarkable. Exodus 8:16-18.
  4. Then the flies. Apart from the land being 'corrupted', whatever that means, there don't appear to have been any ill effects from this and they disappear as quickly as they came a few days later. Nothing worth recording there, obviously. Exodus 8:21-31.
  5. Now the author seems to begin to lose the plot and describes a 'grievous murrain' which kills all the Egyptians' cattle, horses, camels and sheep. They all died - hold that thought. No Egyptian historian or keeper of official records deems it worthy of mention. Exodus 9:3-6.
  6. Next come the boils which afflict everyone and everything, including all the livestock even though they had been killed by the 'grievous murrain' a few days earlier, apparently, and yet no-one thought to write anything down anywhere. Of course, anyone who understood anything about microorganisms and the aeteology of boils would have described this as an infestation with Staphylococcus - the signs of faecal contamination - but the author was obviously unaware of these. Maybe he was just in too much of a muddle by now to care. Exodus 9:8-11.
  7. Now it's hailstones so bad that every plant, every tree, every servant (for servant read slave) and even the livestock (that our story-teller has forgotten already that he killed off in the fifth plague before given them boils in the sixth) were harmed. It looks like our story-teller has learned from his earlier silly mistake with killing all the livestock too soon then having to resurrect them later. He mentions that some plants survive. Do I smell stinking fish again? The greatest hail storm in all Egyptian history, apparently, but not worthy of being recorded. Exodus 9:18-25.
  8. It's the turn of the locusts and it's suddenly obvious why some plants had to survive. How could the locusts turn Egypt into a barren desert if the hail storm had done it earlier? Good thinking there. Shame about the earlier boob! Mysteriously, no Egyptian scribe appears to notice any of this or the inevitable famine and mass starvation which would have ensued. Exodus 10:4-15.
  9. And for the penultimate trick, it's going to be dark for three days. No one makes a record of this, obviously. Exodus 10:21-23.
  10. The last 'plague' is not so much a plague as a ritual genocide. Here our tale takes a nasty turn and the true character of the Hebrew god is revealed in all its glory - a petty, vindictive, homicidal psychopath who has not yet acquired the omniscience he will be granted later. He kills every firstborn Egyptian in a single night, including the firstborn of all the cattle that died in the fifth plague. For some reason he needs the Hebrews to leave a secret sign so he doesn't kill them too. Weirdly, he can't tell his own chosen people from ordinary Egyptians and doesn't even know where they live. And he had been leading up to this, apparently, because after every plague he 'hardens the heart' of Pharaoh so that he wouldn't let the Hebrews go. He had actually been planning this genocide all along just to impress people with his powers. And still no-one thought even this mass killing in a single night worth making a note of in any Egyptian records. Exodus 12:1-30.

And then, of course, Pharaoh could muster up 600 horses to pull the chariots from amongst all the dead livestock from the 5th plague (Exodus 14:7).

This is quite obviously a badly thought through list of various natural disasters, some of which could be connected, most of which have been exaggerated, threaded together and compressed in time in order to justify or excuse something, and here we may have a glimpse of what the Exodus story was really about. To get to the truth we need to understand what was going on in Egypt at about the time, and what was going on tells us something about the origins of monotheism and possibly the Joshua/Jesus myths too.

In 1351 BCE (or 1353 BCE in some sources) King Amenhotep III of Egypt died, leaving his son, Prince Amenhotep to succeed him as Amenhotep IV. Amenhotep's queen was Nefertiti.

Some Egyptologists believe his mother, Queen Tiye, was a Mitanni from Armenia and may have introduced him to the monotheist Zoroastrian religion then popular in Persia - the direct forerunner of Parsi - and possibly one source of Mithraism. Another account says Amenhotep IV had a dream in which he was told there was only one true god out of the entire Egyptian pantheon, and that god was Ra-Horakhty (or Re-Harakhti), the sun god or Aten.

Wherever he got the idea from, Amenhotep IV adopted the name Akhenaten (beloved of Aten) and set about building new temples at Karnak near Thebes (modern Luxor) and redecorating the temple of Amun-Re to show himself worshipping the Aten. He then built a new city and temple complex named Akhet-Aten (modern Amarna). For a while this new religion co-existed alongside that of Amun-Re and of other gods such as Thoth and Horus. Polytheist Egyptian society, like that of later Greece and Rome, was traditionally tolerant of other religions. Towards the end of his reign, however, Akhenaten tried to expunge other religions and transform Egypt into a monotheist state recognising only one god - the Aten.

Bust of Akhenaten
His reforms did not survive him, however and his more famous son, Tutankhamun, birthname Tutankhaten, (more famous because he contrived to get buried in a tomb which was never robbed until discovered by Howard Carter) may well have met a violent and untimely death. Akhenaten's temples were defaced and dismantled, the old priesthood and the old religious order was restored. The Eighteenth Dynasty was overthrown and within 12 years of his death Akhenaten was referred to as 'the enemy'.

More to the point so far as the Exodus myth of the Hebrews is concerned, the Atenists, especially the priesthood, were very probably expelled or at least forced to flee from Egypt to escape persecution. In all probability they fled north up the Nile valley from Thebes then East into the Dead Sea/Jordan River area where they merged with the local population and founded the monotheist form of Judaism, creating the Exodus myth as their preferred version of their flight from Egypt. Part of the myth included their anecdotal and highly exaggerated propaganda, blaming the Egyptian rulers for all the natural disasters they could think of for disobeying the Aten, and for which they may have been blamed by the establishment to turn the population against them, and of course nominating themselves as the chosen people of Yahweh, top god of the Hebrew pantheon, and so obviously the Aten.

The Atenists are quite probably the Essenes who are generally credited with introducing monotheism to early Judaism, and of course, claiming their historic right to leadership of the faith, they also had to incorporate tales of being given the 'Laws' during their flight, grafting, not entirely successfully, at least two different versions of how these were given by Yahweh when he was still a volcano god. (See Another Ten Commandments).

I'll conclude this with the following from an Israeli, Ze'ev Herzog:

Biblical scholars suggested a quarter of a century ago that the conquest stories be viewed as etiological legends and no more. But as more and more sites were uncovered and it emerged that the places in question died out or were simply abandoned at different times, the conclusion was bolstered that there is no factual basis for the biblical story about the conquest by Israelite tribes in a military campaign led by Joshua.

The Canaanite cities: The Bible magnifies the strength and the fortifications of the Canaanite cities that were conquered by the Israelites: "great cities with walls sky-high" (Deuteronomy 9:1). In practice, all the sites that have been uncovered turned up remains of unfortified settlements, which in most cases consisted of a few structures or the ruler's palace rather than a genuine city. The urban culture of Palestine in the Late Bronze Age disintegrated in a process that lasted hundreds of years and did not stem from military conquest. Moreover, the biblical description is inconsistent with the geopolitical reality in Palestine. Palestine was under Egyptian rule until the middle of the 12th century BCE. The Egyptians' administrative centers were located in Gaza, Yaffo and Beit She'an. Egyptian findings have also been discovered in many locations on both sides of the Jordan River. This striking presence is not mentioned in the biblical account, and it is clear that it was unknown to the author and his editors.

The archaeological findings blatantly contradict the biblical picture: the Canaanite cities were not "great," were not fortified and did not have "sky-high walls." The heroism of the conquerors, the few versus the many and the assistance of the God who fought for his people are a theological reconstruction lacking any factual basis.

Origin of the Israelites: The fusion of the conclusions drawn from the episodes relating to the stages in which the people of Israel emerged gave rise to a discussion of the bedrock question: the identity of the Israelites. If there is no evidence for the exodus from Egypt and the desert journey, and if the story of the military conquest of fortified cities has been refuted by archaeology, who, then, were these Israelites? The archaeological findings did corroborate one important fact: in the early Iron Age (beginning some time after 1200 BCE), the stage that is identified with the "settlement period," hundreds of small settlements were established in the area of the central hill region of the Land of Israel, inhabited by farmers who worked the land or raised sheep. If they did not come from Egypt, what is the origin of these settlers? Israel Finkelstein, professor of archaeology at Tel Aviv University, has proposed that these settlers were the pastoral shepherds who wandered in this hill area throughout the Late Bronze Age (graves of these people have been found, without settlements). According to his reconstruction, in the Late Bronze Age (which preceded the Iron Age) the shepherds maintained a barter economy of meat in exchange for grains with the inhabitants of the valleys. With the disintegration of the urban and agricultural system in the lowland, the nomads were forced to produce their own grains, and hence the incentive for fixed settlements arose.

The name "Israel" is mentioned in a single Egyptian document from the period of Merneptah, king of Egypt, dating from 1208 BCE: "Plundered is Canaan with every evil, Ascalon is taken, Gezer is seized, Yenoam has become as though it never was, Israel is desolated, its seed is not." Merneptah refers to the country by its Canaanite name and mentions several cities of the kingdom, along with a non-urban ethnic group. According to this evidence, the term "Israel" was given to one of the population groups that resided in Canaan toward the end of the Late Bronze Age, apparently in the central hill region, in the area where the Kingdom of Israel would later be established. [My emphasis]


There is no archaeological or extra-biblical historical evidence for any of the Exodus story for the simple reason that it never happened. The entire thing is a concoction of political propagandists and religious exiles grafted onto the origin myth and tribal genealogies of a band of Bronze-Age Canaanite hill farmers, shepherds and goat-herders with delusions of grandeur.
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8 comments:

  1. it's difficult to decide which of the various folk tales, invented 'histories' and origin myths that have found themselves bound up in the same book and presented as the inerrant word of an omnipotent god is the silliest

    The one about all humans being cursed because a talking snake persuaded a woman made from a man's rib to eat a piece of magic fruit would be my candidate, but I'll grant you the Exodus is a strong contender.

    I'd forgotten that it took them a quarter century to cross Sinai, which is only about the size of Scotland. That pillar of smoke must have had the worst navigation skills ever. And obviously if anything like the Nile turning to blood or the deaths of so many domestic animals had really happened, these would have been among the most noteworthy events in Egyptian history, and recorded in detail in Egyptian records.

    The idea that the Atenists went to Israel and taught monotheism to the Israelites is a fascinating one. An obvious test would be to look for words of possible Egyptian origin in ancient Israelite religious terminology. I've studied Hebrew and ancient Egyptian just a little, but nowhere near well enough to look for such correspondences, unfortunately.

    Thanks for another enlightening post.

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  2. Oh, how I enjoyed reading this blog article, in which you debunk all the Exodus story/bullshit. But tell me, Rosa, what do you mean by writing this sentence: "We are expected to believe that some three million people spent a quarter of a century wandering about in Sinai..."?

    Isn't "a quarter of a century" the equivalent of 25 years or so?

    Then your figure of "three million people". wandering in the desert. What's your source for that number? Anyhow, it doesn't really matter if the estimated number is too high, even half of that sum would be totally absurd, if you look at it from a logistic viewpoint (not to mention your own arguments against the reliability and credibility, Rosa).

    In this article the population at the Exodus is discussed in detail: http://www.askelm.com/secrets/sec107.htm . He suggests the number was around two and a half million.

    I've read in another article that the Sinai desert should take around 11 days to pass through under normal circumstances (bigger than that isn't the desert). Notwithstanding it took 40 years according to the Bible. One can believe that God must have blindfolded His chosen people.

    Another interesting fact you mention, Rosa, is that both Joshua and Jesus are the same name. In this article - see: Jesus as the Reincarnation of Joshua - the question if the Jesus in the NT was seen as a reincarnation of Joshua is discussed.at length.

    A quote from that article: Joshua lived between 1500-1390 BCE, or sometime in the late Bronze Age. There [are] several identical characteristics between Joshua and Jesus including: having the same name Hebrew name "Yehoshua" which means "Yahweh is salvation," having the same role as leader of Israel, having the same mission of peace, having the same number of appointed men (twelve), and having the same representations of twelve stones for the appointed twelve.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Exodus 12:37 states 600,000 men. Allowing for women and children, say 2-4 children per couple (probably conservative estimate), this easily adds up to about 3,000,000.

      You're right about it being 40 years not 25 - which makes it even harder to understand why they remained undiscovered and left no trace. To take that long they must have remained in the same place for long periods of time and should have left evidence.

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    2. I'll correct the 25 year error. :-)

      Delete
  3. I forgot the URL to the Joshua-Jesus article. Here it is: http://www.near-death.com/experiences/origen044.html . But then I must at the same time say that that article seems to have a high woo factor. Notwithstanding there are speculations "out there" that Joshua, contemporary of Moses, must have been a previous incarnation of Jesus. If so, much in the Bible has to be rewritten and edited, especially the gospels.

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  4. I now see that Infidel753 writes here above that the Sinai desert is "about the size of Scotland". That can't be correct - or?

    I googled the question "How many miles are the Sinai desert?" and found this answer:

    The Sinai Peninsula appears as roughly an inverted triangle between Egypt and Israel. Its greatest east-west extent is approximately the line from Suez eastward to the Israeli border, a distance of about 132 miles. The distance from its southernmost point northward to El Arish on the Mediterranean coast is about 233 miles. Virtually all of the peninsula, eastward from the Suez Canal, is harsh desert, extending across Israel's Negev and into Jordan and Saudi Arabia. This is really rough country. Even along the seacoast, with water visible in all directions, there isn't a drop to drink. The surface in many places is hard, crushed stone, making for difficult walking. Nothing grows. There is no wood to burn or build with, and no water to mix cement. When the dry wind blows, the sand in the air creates static electricity that often zaps the unwary tourist out of thin air. A day spent there changes one's whole understanding of the Hebrews' exodus from Egypt.

    233 miles = 375 kilometers. And of course Moses must have known how to navigate with the help of the sun. It's totally unbelievable that he wandered in that relatively small desert for forty years.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Indeed. Basically, the entire area across the whole of North Africa across into Arabia is desert, apart from in river valleys like the Nile and the coastal strip is arid desert. This is why the 'fertile crescent' was such an important migration route for peoples throughout history because it linked the Tigris/Euphrates with the Mediterranean coast and so Asia Minor and Europe and North Africa and the Nile. The idea of about 3 million people living in Sinai for 40 years is idiotic.

      Delete

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