God Bless all who love the unshakable truth of our loving Creator.
WATCHMAN’S
TEACHING LETTER
Monthly Letter #32;
December 2000 By: Teacher Clifton A. Emahiser
1012 N. Vine Street,
Fostoria, Ohio 44830; Ph. (419)-435-2836
ISRAEL Covenant Two Seedline Racial IDENTITY
AN ANGLO-ISAAC-SON
CAUCASIAN CULTURE
AWARENESS TEACHING
LETTER
This is my
thirty-second monthly teaching letter and continues my third year of
publication. In the last teaching letter (#31), we began a study of Egypt. First
we learned what Egyptian history is not. I demonstrated, with archaeological
evidence, how one person’s attempt to shave 1000 years off Egyptian history
simply cannot be correct. With the archaeological evidence I presented, we can
now be more positive than ever about the general time period for the Exodus. If
you don’t have lesson #31, you will need it to bring you up-to-date. As a matter
of fact, you will need several of my later letters to really get a handle on
this important subject. With this lesson, we are going to try to reconcile
Egyptian history with Biblical history. This is not the first attempt to make
such reconciliation, as many a scholar has given it a stab in the past. If you
will check out various references, you will find all kinds of suggestions for
contemporary time comparisons. Thorough Bible research and study is more than
just reading a few verses once in a while.
THE TRIP BACK TO
THEBES
In the last letter,
we learned how an Egyptian Pharaoh by the alias name of Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV)
changed his religion and moved his throne, lock stock and barrel, from Thebes to
an area known today as Tell el-Amarna. With a new name, he built a new city for
his new religion. But, all did not go well in the new city. For some reason this
new city (named Akhet-aton, “the Brilliance of the Sun’s Diskâ€) was suddenly
abandoned en masse. When this city was abruptly deserted, they left behind
unfinished tombs in which no one was ever buried; half finished statues, which
were never completed; supplies and food that were never used or eaten.
Wonders Of The Past edited by Sir J. A. Hammerton, volume 2, page 1127 says
this: “In cold weather a charcoal fire would be lit in a pottery brazier sunk
in the floor; the actual ashes were found in many of these braziers —
evidence of the sudden evacuation of the city.†From the book, The Murder
Of Tutankhamen by Bob Brier, Ph.D., pages 98-100, I quote the following
excerpts: “... Ordinary citizens abandoned Amarna, moving en masse to Thebes,
creating an overnight ghost town ... In 1912 the German expedition to Amarna,
led by Ludwig Borchardt, made a dramatic discovery while clearing debris from
the house and studio of a master sculptor called Tuthmosis. When they entered a
locked storeroom in the sculptor’s house, the excavators found exquisite busts
and heads of statues that Tuthmosis had not completed when the exodus from the
city began. Among these pieces was the famous bust of Nefertiti. That such a
work of art should be left behind can only mean that people did not want to
remember the era they had helped create ... In ancient Egypt, too, there was a
general denial of ever having been part of Akhenaten’s movement. Even names were
changed [before returning to Thebes] to make assimilation possible ... The bust
of Nefertiti was left behind because no one wanted it.†It would appear,
from all of this, there was evidently such a devastating blow directed toward
Amarna that it was imperative for the residents to evacuate the area immediately
and suddenly. People simply do not usually change their religion overnight, such
as stated here.
Another good, short
article on Tel el-Amarna is from Halley’s Bible Handbook, page 53 and
reads thusly:
“The Tell-el-Amarna
Tablets. In
1888 there were found in the ruins of Amarna, halfway between Memphis and
Thebes, about four hundred Clay Tablets which had been a part of the royal
archives of Amenhotep III and Amenhotep IV, who reigned about 1400 B.C. These
Tablets are now mostly in the Museums of London and Cairo. They are from 2 to 3
inches wide, and 3 to 9 inches long, inscribed on both sides. They contain
official correspondence from various kings of Palestine and Syria, written in
Babylonian cuneiform script, to these two Pharaohs of Egypt. Like the Stone
Tablet of Hammurabi, they constitute one of the most important archaeological
discoveries of recent years.â€
Because Garstang read
some of the evidence at Jericho incorrectly, his dates are about 120 to 160
years too early. May I suggest a date in the 1300’s B.C. for the reigns of
Amenhotep III and Amenhotep IV?
MORE ON THE NAME OF
MOSES
You will remember, in
the last lesson, I suggested that Moses got his name from the “Moses†family of
pharaohs of Egypt. In the process of preparing for this lesson, I was pleasantly
surprised to find documentation on this very topic. I can’t imagine what kind of
“evidence†professor Garstang found in Jericho to confirm this, for I came to
the same conclusion. In the book The Story Of Civilization: part 1, “Our
Oriental Heritage†by Will Durant, page 302, in a footnote we read:
“Moses is an Egyptian
rather than a Jewish (Hebrew) name; perhaps it is a shorter form of
Ahmose.
Professor Garstang, of the Marston Expedition of the University of Liverpool,
claims to have discovered, in the royal tombs of Jericho, evidence that Moses
was rescued (precisely in 1527(?) B.C.) by the then Princess, later the Queen
Hatshepsut; that he was brought up by her as a court favorite, and fled from
Egypt upon the accession of her enemy, Thutmose III.
I found more
concerning this same thing in Halley’s Bible Handbook, page 112:
“Thotmes (Tuthmosis)
III. (1500(?) B.C.) Queen Hatshepsut, his half sister, was regent the first 20
years of his reign; and, though he despised her, she completely dominated him.
After her death he ruled alone for 30 years. He was the greatest conqueror in
Egyptian history. Subdued Ethiopia, and ruled to the Euphrates, first Great
Empire in history. Raided Palestine and Syria 17 times. Built a Navy.
Accumulated great wealth. Engaged in vast building enterprises. Recorded his
achievements in detail on walls and monuments. His tomb is at Thebes. His mummy
is at Cairo. Thought to have been the Oppressor of Israel. If so, then Famous
Queen Hatshepsut may have been the Pharaoh’s Daughter who rescued and brought up
Moses.
In Bob Brier’s book
The Murder of Tutankhamen the following questions are asked on the
introduction page:
“X rays of
Tutankhamen’s skull suggest a violent death. Was it accident or murder? ... Why
was the king’s tomb so small and insignificant? Was it intended for someone
else? ... Several members of Tutankhamen’s family died around the same time
— was
it coincidence? ... Why did Tutankhamen’s widow send desperate messages to the
Hittite king, requesting marriage to one of his sons? And who murdered the
Hittite prince on his journey to Egypt? ... Who ordered the removal of
Tutankhamen’s name from all monuments and temples, and thus from Egyptian
history? ... This fascinating, painstakingly researched book is the first to
explore in depth the questionable circumstances of Tutankhamen’s demise —
and to present a shocking scenario of betrayal, ambition, and murder. From one
of our most renowned Egyptologists, this is an exciting journey into ancient
history — and a 3,000-year-old mystery that still compels us today.â€
As you might see,
there were many strange circumstances surrounding Tutankhamen’s death. I
strongly suggest that Tutankhamen was executed by the death angel in the last
plague upon Egypt. Because of the difference of my premise and Bob Brier’s
premise, I will be quoting several excerpts from his book to show a dissimilar
viewpoint, as my conclusions are quite different from some of his. Therefore,
this will be a critical review. I do not criticize his findings or his
expertise, but I believe this incident revolves around Bible history rather than
a political-religious Egyptian intrigue.
LADY PHARAOH DRESSES
AS A MALE,
AND RAISES A MALE
CHILD DRESSED AS A FEMALE
For information
concerning this, I will quote from The Pyramids And Sphinx by Desmond
Stewart, ©1971, pages 52-55:
“Hashepsowe
(Hat-shep-sut) was married to Tuthmosis II, an unimpressive ruler. A court
official has left us a terse account of his death: ‘Having ascended into heaven,
he became united with the gods and his son, having arisen in his place as king
of the Two Lands, ruled upon the throne of his begetter, while his sister, the
god’s wife Hashepsowe
(Hat-shep-sut), governed the country and the Two Lands were under her
control; people worked for her, and Egypt bowed the head.’
“Although Egypt was less male-assertive than some later
societies (and inheritance through the mother was a normal pattern), we must
sense a note of resentment at a female ruler. Part of this resentment may have
been due to primordial associations of the king’s reproductive organs with the
fertility of herds and crops. Hashepsowe (Hat-shep-sut) was aware of such
feelings, hence her desire to be portrayed as a male
— as a kneeling granite statue or a male sphinx. Yet something feminine
affects the beast’s expression.
“This great woman was
more interested in architecture and commerce than foreign conquest. At Deir
el-Bahri she created a mortuary temple that compares with the pyramids for
spectacular scope and rivals them for its imaginative use of landscape...
“Hashepsowe (Hat-shep-sut) had first conceived the bold
idea of driving her burrow eastward, straight under the mountain; in this way
her sarcophagus and that of her divine father, Tuthmosis, could lie under the
cliff itself. She planned to transform the sheer face of the escarpment into a
vast temple, imitating on a far grander scale the mortuary temple built by an
Eleventh Dynasty predecessor. But the tunnel collapsed and this part of her
scheme had to be abandoned. Hashepsowe’s (Hat-shep-sut’s) ultimate design
— an ascending sequence of colonnaded courtyards culminating in a rock-hewn
inner shrine — served the same functions as the mortuary temples attached
to the pyramids...
“Egyptian
inscriptions rarely recorded unharmonious facts; they give no indication of how
the queen’s reign may have been terminated by supporters of Tuthmosis III,
Hashepsowe’s (Hat-shep-sut’s) nephew and coregent, now grown to manhood. Whether
Hashepsowe (Hat-shep-sut) died of natural causes, was retired, or was murdered
is still unknown. But some time after the king assumed solitary power he had
every artistic reference to Hashepsowe (Hat-shep-sut) that he could uncover
destroyed.â€
Also on page 55 of
this same book is a picture of a granite statue for which there is considerable
interest concerning Hatshepsut and it is described thusly:
“Hashepsowe’s
(Hat-shep-sut’s) chief minister, Senmut, is portrayed in this block statue with
his royal pupil. The queen’s daughter, on his knees. The two heads emerging from
the confines of the massive granite block convey an aura of tender affection
between tutor and pupil.â€
I believe that, rather than the queen’s daughter, this
was Moses, her adopted son dressed up as a girl in order to protect him during
his childhood years (but check Exodus 2:10-14). That was probably her story when
she saved him from the river. I also believe she was grooming Moses to be the
pharaoh following her as her heir. Hatshepsut was at the end of a pure royal
line. She may even have been of the House of Shem, which would tell us a lot
about the reason for saving Moses in the first place. Tuthmosis III (her
adversary) was born of a minor wife and thus not of royal blood. When we can
understand the circumstances here, we can start to grasp the situation.
To state the
relationship with the other pharaohs at the time, Hatshepsut was the daughter of
Tuthmosis I. She married her brother (possibly half brother) Tuthmosis II. She
then took the throne as king in the stead of Tuthmosis III for which there was
much animosity between her and him. If Hatshepsut was the Egyptian princess who
rescued Moses from the river, then the persecution of the Israelites must have
started under Tuthmosis I or possibly even Hatshepsut’s husband, Tuthmosis II.
To give another view to help clear up this situation, I will now quote from
The Murder Of Tutankhamen by Bob Brier, page 35:
“The only surviving
child of Tuthmosis [I] and his queen was Princess Hatshepsut. There is no word
for ‘queen’ in ancient Egyptian. The phrase we translate as ‘queen’ is actually
‘king’s great wife.’ Had Hatshepsut been a son, the royal crown would have
passed directly to him, but she was a girl and this created a problem. It is not
always clear how the successor to the throne was chosen. It wasn’t as simple as
in England
— where the laws
of primogeniture decreed that the throne was passed down through the king’s
eldest son, with specified contingencies for all possibilities. In Egypt, the
pharaoh had several wives and could also marry his sisters, so the lines of
succession for his children could be rather complex. Overall, the rule known as
the “Heiress Theory†covered most cases: whoever married the eldest, most royal
daughter became pharaoh.
“When Tuthmosis [I]
died, his son Tuthmosis II by a minor wife was married to his half sister
Hatshepsut, the eldest daughter of the pharaoh and his great wife. Marriage to
Hatshepsut established Tuthmosis II’s right to the throne. The couple had a
successful, uneventful twenty-year reign. When Tuthmosis II died he left two
children, a daughter [really probably the adopted son Moses in disguise] by
Hatshepsut, and a young son, Tuthmosis III, by a minor wife. Then, suddenly, one
of the most incredible events in Egypt’s long history occurred: Hatshepsut
changed her royal title from ‘Queen’ to ‘King’ and had herself portrayed in full
male royal regalia, complete with beard. This was unheard of in conservative
ancient Egypt. By wearing the false beard and the royal kilt of the pharaoh,
Hatshepsut was attempting to stay within the traditional boundaries of Egyptian
kingship —
she was the king who happened to be a woman...â€
It would appear,
Hatshepsut was attempting to keep royal blood on the throne. Knowing that
Tuthmosis III was not of royal blood, evidently Hatshepsut took the throne
herself until such time as Moses would be old enough to do so. Probably once
Tuthmosis III did succeed in taking the throne, the persecution of the
Israelites resumed after a lull during Hatshepsut’s reign. If all of this is
true, Princess Hatshepsut had more motivation for rescuing Moses than just
wanting an Israelite adopted son. She seemed to have all the qualities of a
woman knowing exactly what she was doing. If Hatshepsut had no compunction
dressing as a man, she would have had no reservations in dressing Moses like a
girl for a short while.
TIMING
At this juncture,
there is a hodgepodge of dates from different sources to consider. The problem
is fitting Moses’ life into this time period. Basically, Moses’ life is broken
down into three forty-year periods: (1) From his birth until he fled Egypt after
killing an Egyptian. (2) His forty years in Midian and his return to Egypt to
face down the pharaoh to let the Israelites have their freedom, and, (3) His 40
years wandering with the Israelites in the wilderness until his death. This can
be verified by Acts 7:23, but doesn’t agree with Jasher 71:1; 72:23 & 76:3, The
first 80 years is what concerns us, as we must fit it into the period from
Hatshepsut until the Amarna period. I checked first with a time-chart in the
book The Pyramid And Sphinx by Desmond Stewart, page 54, and the dates
are about 60-70 years too long to fit Moses’ 80 years in Egypt. I continued to
search other books such as Mummies Myth And Magic by Christine El Mahdy;
Historical Atlas of Ancient Egypt by Bill Manley; The Boehm Journey To
Egypt, Land Of Tutankhamun by Frank J. Cosentino; The Zondervan Pictorial
Encyclopedia of the Bible in five volumes along with many other books.
Finally, in The Interpreter’s Dictionary Of The Bible in four volumes I
found in volume E-J pages 48-49, figures which fit Moses’ 80 years in Egypt.
This reference places the Hatshepsut period 1486-1468 B.C., and the
Amarna period 1375-1300 B.C. If we take a starting point of 1468 B.C., and
subtract 40 years, we will come to 1428 B.C. By subtracting another 40 years,
one will come to 1388 B.C., which is getting close to our objective. No doubt,
there are still some further overlapping of time-periods, which could be
subtracted from these figures. We have to remember; too, these dates are
probably generally off by a hundred years or so.
To show you we are on the right track, I will quote from
the book The Bible And Archaeology by J. A. Thompson, pages 55-56:
“When Did The Exodus
Take Place? It
has been widely held that the Exodus took place about 1440 B.C. One reason for
this has been found in I Kings 6:1, where we have the statement: ‘And it came to
pass in the four hundred and eightieth year after the children of Israel were
come out of the land of Egypt, in the fourth year of Solomon’s reign over Israel
... that he began to build the house of the Lord.’
“We have good reason
to believe that Solomon began to reign about the middle of the tenth century
B.C., that is, about 950 B.C. It would follow from this that the Exodus took
place about 1430 B.C., in the time of the Eighteenth Dynasty which ruled Egypt
from 1570 to 1310 B.C.â€
If all of this is
true, this places us within one hundred years of the Amarna period. There is
another position, which should be taken into account concerning this
time-period. I will now quote from this same book, page 62:
“What, then, are we
to say of the date implied by the statement in 1 Kings 6:1? A comparison with
the Greek Septuagint shows that there was a difference of opinion in the minds
of the translators in the time when this text was prepared; say in the period
between 300 and 100 B.C. The Septuagint gives a period of four hundred and forty
years as the time lapse between the Exodus and Solomonâ€
Another important
aspect of the Exodus period is mentioned on page 56 of this same book:
“In the first place,
if we are to take the Bible narrative seriously (and there is every reason that
we should), we are bound to notice that the picture in the Bible is easiest to
interpret if we regard the residence of the Pharaoh as being in the region of
the delta at the time of the Exodus...â€
This is an important
observation, as Akhenaten’s move to his new city placed him much father north in
Egypt than before. While not actually in the Delta area, the Amarna site is much
closer than Thebes. No doubt, many of the Israelite slaves were moved the short
distance from the so-called Goshen area to the Amarna site to serve as a labor
force. (More on the location of Goshen later.) Unearthed at Tell-el-Amarna are
the living quarters of a workman’s suburb. Pictured is an area for a cottage
living room, large water jar along with a food bowl and hearth, sunken brick
receptacles for grain and even bathroom facilities. In viewing these ruins, one
can even imagine the Passover lamb being prepared over the open charcoal hearth
in the kitchen area.
JOSEPH AND THE
HYKSOS
We will be placing
Joseph with the Hyksos period, but not in the way most so-called authorities
cast him. In order to learn something of the Hyksos period, I will quote from
The Bible As History by Werner Keller, pages 86-88:
“Something incredible
and frightful befell the Nile country about 1730 B.C. suddenly as a bolt from
the blue, warriors in chariots drove into the country like arrows shot from a
bow, endless columns of them in clouds of dust. Day and night horses’ hooves
thundered past the frontier posts, rang through city streets, temple squares and
the majestic courts of Pharaoh’s palaces. Even before the Egyptians realized it,
it had happened; their country was taken by surprise, overrun and vanquished.
The giant of the Nile, who never before in his history had seen foreign
conquerors, lay bound and prostrate.
“The rule of the
victors began with a bloodbath. The Hyksos, Semitic tribes from Canaan and
Syria, knew no pity. With the fateful year 1730 B.C. the thirteen-hundred-year
rule of the dynasties came to an abrupt end. The Middle Kingdom of the Pharaohs
was shattered under the onslaught of these Asian peoples, the ‘rulers of foreign
lands.’ That is the meaning of the name Hyksos. The memory of their political
disaster remained alive among the Nile people, as a striking description by the
Egyptian historian Manetho testified: ‘We had a king called Tutimaeus. In his
reign, it happened. I do not know why God was displeased with us. Unexpectedly
from the regions of the East, came men of unknown race. Confident of
victory they marched against our land. By force they took it, easily, without a
single battle. Having overpowered our rulers, they burned our cities without
compassion, and destroyed the temples of the gods. All the natives were treated
with great cruelty, for they slew some and carried off the wives and children of
others into slavery. Finally they appointed one of themselves as king. His name
was Salitis and he lived in Memphis and made Upper and Lower Egypt pay tribute
to him, and set up garrisons in places which would be most useful to him ... and
when he found a city in the province of Sais which suited his purpose (it lay
east of the Bubastite branch of the Nile and was called Avaris) he rebuilt it
and made it very strong by erecting walls and installing a force of 240,000 men
to hold it. Salitis went there every summer partly to collect his corn and pay
his men their wages, and partly to train his armed troops and terrify
foreigners.â€
At their height, the
Hyksos occupied the land of the Hurrians, Carchemish, Syria, Palestine and much
of the northern part of Egypt. By inhabiting the Delta area of Egypt, they were
in control of all commerce on the Nile. This cut Egypt off almost entirely from
commercial trade and the rest of the then known world. The Hyksos could sit in
their fortress at Avaris and call all the shots up and down the Nile. These
Hyksos were a very strange people, desiring to set up a government like that of
the Egyptians. It makes one wonder why they didn’t set up a government like they
had wherever they came from, wherever that was. They seem to be a kind of
chameleon type of people, adapting themselves to their surroundings. We have a
chameleon type of people today living in the United States, pretending to be of
the white race, and passing themselves off as such; changing their names to fit
the territory. Some students believe the Hyksos came from the Caucasus or even
Central Asia. At least, as far as the Egyptians were concerned, the Hyksos were
an Asiatic people. The Hyksos seem to have been active merchants. They
introduced into Egypt a new system of weights and balances. Does this seem to
ring a bell of any kind? It kind of makes one wonder who the Hyksos people were.
We can be quite sure they were not Egyptian or Israelite, though.
After 108 years of
domination by the Hyksos, the last pharaoh of the 17th Dynasty, Kamose, and the
first pharaoh of the 18th Dynasty, Amosis, rose up against these intruders, and
over a period of about 20 years drove them northward out of the Delta area.
JOSEPH IMPOSES A 20%
INCOME TAX
If you are unfamiliar
with the income tax which Joseph imposed on certain people, it is found in
Genesis 47:26. Not only did Joseph impose a 20% income tax, but he used the
advantage of the seven years of famine to buy up all the land for the Pharaoh. I
will quote from verses 20 to 26:
20 And Joseph bought
all the land of Egypt for Pharaoh; for the Egyptians sold every man his field,
because the famine prevailed over them; so the land became Pharaoh’s. 21 And as
for the people, he removed them to the cities from
one
end of the borders of Egypt even to the
other
end thereof. 22 Only the land of the priests bought he not; for the priests had
a portion
assigned them
of Pharaoh, and did eat their portion which Pharaoh gave them: wherefore they
sold not their lands. 23 Then Joseph said unto the people, Behold, I have bought
you this day and your land for Pharaoh,
lo here
is seed for you, and ye shall sow the land. 24 And it shall come to pass in the
increase, that ye shall give the fifth part unto Pharaoh, and four parts shall
be your own, for seed of the field, and for your food, and for them of your
households, and for food for your little ones. 25 And they said, Thou hast saved
our lives: let us find grace in the sight of my lord, and we will be Pharaoh’s
servants.
26 And Joseph made it a law over the land of Egypt unto this day,
that
Pharaoh should have the fifth
part; except the land of the priests only,
which
became not Pharaoh’s.
We know, according to
Biblical Law, that it is unlawful for Adam-Israelites to charge other
Adam-Israelites an income tax. It is also unlawful to take the lands from the
Adam-Israelites in the manner just described. It is, therefore, obvious that
this income tax and confiscation of land was not directed toward or to be paid
by the Israelites living in the land of Goshen, wherever Goshen was located. If
we can connect this income tax historically, would it not identify the Joseph
period in Egypt? I am sure, when Frank J. Cosentino wrote his book The Boehm
Journey To Egypt, Land Of Tutankhamun, he had no idea he was making such
identification, but on page 37 he makes the following statement:
“Amosis I, now a
great hero of Egypt, was in a position to eliminate the feudal system, and he
did. He confiscated the lands and properties of the lords he defeated and
stripped them of their peerage. Those who supported him during the long Hyksos
war also turned their estates over to the pharaoh in return for retention of
their old titles and offices. All of Egypt once again was the personal property
of the pharaoh.â€
From this short
statement, we can comprehend, not only does this match up with Scripture, but
also establishes, with little doubt, that the reign of Amosis I is contemporary
with Joseph of the Bible. If what we surmise is true, when Joseph’s brothers
sold him to the Ishmaelites (possibly a mistranslation for Midianites), they
must have bypassed the Hyksos in the Delta area and entered into Egypt by the
backdoor, from Sawu on the Red Sea, across the desert to the Nile (Test. of
Zebulun 1:30).
This brings up some
questions: Did Abraham and Sarah, when they went to Egypt to escape a famine,
come into contact with the Hyksos? Were Isaac and Rebekah warned not to go to
Egypt because the Hyksos were in power there at the time?
No doubt, it was the
actions of Joseph that started the weakening of the Hyksos. We have no evidence
that Joseph ever warned them of the coming famine, and they were totally
unprepared for it. They, too, probably had to go to Amosis and Joseph for
something to eat. What better time to start taking advantage of the Hyksos in
charging them an income tax and trading them food for land? We can be quite sure
that Joseph didn’t charge the Israelites an income tax or confiscate their land
for Genesis 47:27 says:
And Israel dwelt in
the land of Egypt, in the country of Goshen; and
they had possessions
therein, and
grew, and multiplied exceedingly.
You will notice it
doesn’t say anything about charging the Israelites an income tax or taking away
their land. Some read this account of Joseph in Genesis 47 and condemn him, but
it is a matter of figuring out who he was doing this to. As just quoted from
Cosentino, “He (Amosis) confiscated the lands and properties of the lords he
defeated and stripped them of their peerage.†It was the Hyksos that Amosis
defeated.
Again, I wish to
stress there are problems with the dates. Due to Garstang’s misreading of the
evidence at Jericho, there is a 120 to 160 year differentiation of time between
Egyptian and Israelite history. I am sure, when all is said and done, there will
be a simple explanation for all of this and all the pieces of the puzzle will
fit nicely into place.
The problem is
expressed in the book The Bible And Archaeology by J. A. Thompson, pages
61-62:
“More recent work
carried out by the British archaeologist Dr. Kathleen Kenyon has shown that the
wall of Jericho fell at various times in its history. The town was burned
several times, and the features mentioned by Garstang could have been discovered
for a number of the cities of Jericho. Moreover, pottery found in the graves
showed that there was occupation in this area rather later than 1400 B.C.
There were, in fact, traces of a still later city to be found on top of the
ruins that Garstang had found. He had observed this but had interpreted
these as belonging to the city of Hiel referred to in 1 kings 16:34. the net
result of Miss Kenyon’s work is that we cannot accept the excavation of
Garstang as proving beyond all doubt that the Exodus took place as early as 1440
B.C.â€
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