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Introductory Matters. Exams back by Thursday Psalm 51. Israel in Egypt:. History and Chronology, Preparation and Call of Moses. Questions. What lessons have we learned from the patriarchal narratives? Matters of chronology of the Ancient Near East Assyrian king lists Egyptian chronology
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Introductory Matters • Exams back by Thursday • Psalm 51
Israel in Egypt: History and Chronology, Preparation and Call of Moses
Questions • What lessons have we learned from the patriarchal narratives? • Matters of chronology of the Ancient Near East • Assyrian king lists • Egyptian chronology • Why is there no record of Israel in Egypt? • Possible answers: • Delta region is mud-flats, no preserved dwellings • All documents of papyrus would have disintegrated • Pharaohs never wrote about defeat • Egyptian philosophy of words: they were from the gods and powerful; if written down, the event could recur; if not written, it was as if an event had never occurred • It is unlikely that such a demeaning narrative for the origin of Israel would be made up
Dating the Exodus: Overview of the Early Dynasties of Egypt Early Dynastic Period (I-II – ca. 3100-2700) union of Upper and Lower Egypt Old Kingdom (III-VIII – ca. 2700-2150) pyramid building First Intermediate Period (IX-XI – ca. 2150-2050) division and weakness Middle Kingdom (XII – ca. 2050-1800) prosperity and expansion Second Intermediate Period (XIII-XVII – ca. 1800-1550) – influx of Asiatics; Hyksos New Kingdom (XVIII-XX – ca. 1550-1100)
Focus on New Kingdom • 18th Dynasty’s early Pharaohs: • Ahmose – 1570-1545 • Amenhotep I – 1545-1526 • Thutmose I – 1526-1513 [possibly birth of Moses] • Thutmose II – 1513-1505 • Hatshepsut (sister and wife of TII) – 1505-1480 • Thutmose III – 1504-1451 (part co-regency Hatshepsut) • Amenhotep II – 1450-1426 – Exodus if early date • Thutmose IV – 1426-1417 • Later Pharaohs included Amenhotep IV (Akhnaton) 1369-1353
Focus on New Kingdom (cont.) • 19th Dynasty (selective) • Seti I – 1312-1290 • Ramses II – 1290-1224 [oppression and Exodus if late date] • Merenptah – 1224-1214
Biblical Data Connected with the Exodus • Oppression in Egypt – the king who did not know Joseph; harsh taskmasters; building cities Pithom and Ramses; field work (Exod 1:13-14); Pharaoh’s fear that people would leave • Moses had to flee Egypt because of the Egyptian he killed; did not return until after death of Pharaoh
Early Date Proposal • 1 Kings 6:1 – 966 (building temple) + 480 = 1446 • 1 Chr 6:33-37 presents 18 generations between Korah (who lived at the time of the Exodus) and Heman, who lived in David’s time). At approximately 25 years per generation, this fits the 480 years. • Judges 11:26 – ca. 1100 + 300 = ca. 1400 • The Pharaoh under whom Moses fled was Thutmose III and the one under whom he returned was Amenhotep II (Pharaoh of the Exodus)
Late Date Evidence • Exodus 1:11 – mention of Ramses • 18th dynasty resided farther south • 480 read symbolically – “12 generations” of “40 years” – stock numbers • [a generation is really about 25 years = 300 years] • Nelson Glueck’s surface surveys of Transjordan indicated no evidence of “Edom and Moab” • Apparent general destruction level of cities in Israel late 1200’s/early 1100’s • Increase in hill country settlement around 1200 • Merenptah’s stele dated to 1220 (or 1209) • Objections: oppression would have started 80 years prior to the Exodus (under Ramses II) which puts it prior to the 19th dynasty; no change in ruling Pharaoh between Moses’ birth and return from Midian; archaeological data – argument from silence; and the data in the OT do not require destruction (only three cities were burned)
Preparation and Call of Mosesand the Sovereignty of God • Birth and preservation • Role of midwives • The tevah • Moses’ sister, Pharaoh’s daughter, and his mother • Education – at home and in the court • Flight from Egypt – to Midian • Call • Burning bush – holiness and humility • God’s revelation of Himself – 3:1-15 – He is eternally self-existent God of the covenant (Yahweh) • Moses’ objections • Return to Egypt