I was reading through some interesting texts yesterday and came across some fun stuff. It is often asserted that the story of the Exodus is fallacious because there is no record of it anywhere in Egyptian history. Many arguments are made for both sides, but the main theme is that, apparently, nothing has been produced to prove the Hebrews were ever in Egypt. I invite the cynics to debate the evidence I will shortly provide. As a side note - I call you "skeptics" cynics because I don't believe you're skeptical of anything at all. A skeptic examines evidence objectively before accepting anything. Most of the people who engage in debates here have no intention of examining anything at all. They seek out evidence that supports their own preconceived notions and dismiss all other evidence as unfounded. I will cite references here and I invite all those who disagree with my conclusion to do the same.
I will begin with record keeping. How much of what you do is recorded? I will be extremely generous and say about 5%. The real number is between 1-2% (Dr. Gee), but I'll give you the benefit of the doubt here. OK. How much of that 5% of what you did as a child has survived to today? It's about the same. We'll give you 5%. How much of that has been read and published? Very little of it. An Egyptologist told me yesterday morning that about 10% of the Egyptian texts we have found have been READ! There are so few Egyptologists in the world that we have thousands and thousands of papyri sitting in shoe boxes that have never been looked at! A professor of Mesoamerica at my university says their field is even worse. The few scholars there are have so much work to do in their own specific field that they can't search them. I'm told that a lot of the texts are just receipts anyway. No one wants to invest the time. Check out the Society of Biblical Literature the next time it rolls through town. It will fascinate you. The point is that 5% of what is done is recorded. Much less than 5% of that has survived the 4,000 years since the purported incident. Around 5% of that has been discovered, and less than 10% of THAT has actually been read. Drawing any kind of conclusion on whether or not something like the Exodus actually happened based on those numbers is ridiculous.
Another statement is that something like the Exodus would have definitely been recorded. It would have been too important to ignore. Seemingly a valid point, except for the way that conclusion ignores the reticence of Egyptians to record anything that makes them look less than god-like. Look at a creation story. One shows Heliopolis as the center of creation (K. Sethe, Die altagyptischen Pyramidentexten, Leipzig, 1910). When another city becomes the capital (Memphis, for example) the story is changed so as to avoid admitting another city is better than yours. Check it out - J.H. Breasted, ZAeS, XXXIX (1901), or A. Erman, Ein Denkmal memphitischer Theologie (SPAW, 1911). Another place is Thebes - C. Leemans, Monumens egyptiens de musee d'antiquites des Pays-Bas a Leide (Leyden, 1841). Egyptians can never admit defeat. Ramses II is a perfect example. This is the Pharoah assumed to be the Pharoah of the Exodus. Wouldn't he have recorded something that important? The answer is no.
Look at the battle of Kadesh. Ramses II got stomped by the Hittites, and yet the Egyptian accounts call it a victory. These websites will show you just how much the history was changed just to uphold the image of Egyptian dominance:
http://nefertiti.iwebland.com/ramseskadeshcampaign.htm
http://nefertiti.iwebland.com/kadeshaccounts.htm
http://nefertiti.iwebland.com/kadesh_battle_picture.htm
Should we even expect to find writings about a slave race that escaped Egypt and killed all the Egyptian first-born along the way? Not if we know anything about Egypt. But we have found some interesting stuff. I'll share what I came across the other day. I was reading an account of the taking of Joppa by Thoth. Its from around 1400 B.C. (corresponding with approximations of Hebrew enslavement). The manuscript is number 10060 in the British Museum. It was published by H.P. Blok in De beide Volksverhalen van Papyrus Harris 500 Verso (Leyden, 1925). One passage reads, "Have the maryanu bring in the horses and give them feed, or an apir may pass by them..." 'Apiru were foreigners, and they served the Egyptians. In cuneiform they are Habiru. This is assumed by many to be the origin of the word "Hebrew." Check out J.A. Wilson, AJSL, XLIX (1933). The text I was reading came from J.B. Pritchard's Ancient Near Eastern Texts (Princeton University Press, USA, 1992), and don't worry, Hugh Nibley has nothing to do with any of this.
This proves nothing, but those who would spout the litany that nothing has ever been produced that could corroborate the Exodus claim would do well to actually look into it. These studies are mostly from almost a hundred years ago, as well. I know it's hard, but try to keep up.
I will begin with record keeping. How much of what you do is recorded? I will be extremely generous and say about 5%. The real number is between 1-2% (Dr. Gee), but I'll give you the benefit of the doubt here. OK. How much of that 5% of what you did as a child has survived to today? It's about the same. We'll give you 5%. How much of that has been read and published? Very little of it. An Egyptologist told me yesterday morning that about 10% of the Egyptian texts we have found have been READ! There are so few Egyptologists in the world that we have thousands and thousands of papyri sitting in shoe boxes that have never been looked at! A professor of Mesoamerica at my university says their field is even worse. The few scholars there are have so much work to do in their own specific field that they can't search them. I'm told that a lot of the texts are just receipts anyway. No one wants to invest the time. Check out the Society of Biblical Literature the next time it rolls through town. It will fascinate you. The point is that 5% of what is done is recorded. Much less than 5% of that has survived the 4,000 years since the purported incident. Around 5% of that has been discovered, and less than 10% of THAT has actually been read. Drawing any kind of conclusion on whether or not something like the Exodus actually happened based on those numbers is ridiculous.
Another statement is that something like the Exodus would have definitely been recorded. It would have been too important to ignore. Seemingly a valid point, except for the way that conclusion ignores the reticence of Egyptians to record anything that makes them look less than god-like. Look at a creation story. One shows Heliopolis as the center of creation (K. Sethe, Die altagyptischen Pyramidentexten, Leipzig, 1910). When another city becomes the capital (Memphis, for example) the story is changed so as to avoid admitting another city is better than yours. Check it out - J.H. Breasted, ZAeS, XXXIX (1901), or A. Erman, Ein Denkmal memphitischer Theologie (SPAW, 1911). Another place is Thebes - C. Leemans, Monumens egyptiens de musee d'antiquites des Pays-Bas a Leide (Leyden, 1841). Egyptians can never admit defeat. Ramses II is a perfect example. This is the Pharoah assumed to be the Pharoah of the Exodus. Wouldn't he have recorded something that important? The answer is no.
Look at the battle of Kadesh. Ramses II got stomped by the Hittites, and yet the Egyptian accounts call it a victory. These websites will show you just how much the history was changed just to uphold the image of Egyptian dominance:
http://nefertiti.iwebland.com/ramseskadeshcampaign.htm
http://nefertiti.iwebland.com/kadeshaccounts.htm
http://nefertiti.iwebland.com/kadesh_battle_picture.htm
Should we even expect to find writings about a slave race that escaped Egypt and killed all the Egyptian first-born along the way? Not if we know anything about Egypt. But we have found some interesting stuff. I'll share what I came across the other day. I was reading an account of the taking of Joppa by Thoth. Its from around 1400 B.C. (corresponding with approximations of Hebrew enslavement). The manuscript is number 10060 in the British Museum. It was published by H.P. Blok in De beide Volksverhalen van Papyrus Harris 500 Verso (Leyden, 1925). One passage reads, "Have the maryanu bring in the horses and give them feed, or an apir may pass by them..." 'Apiru were foreigners, and they served the Egyptians. In cuneiform they are Habiru. This is assumed by many to be the origin of the word "Hebrew." Check out J.A. Wilson, AJSL, XLIX (1933). The text I was reading came from J.B. Pritchard's Ancient Near Eastern Texts (Princeton University Press, USA, 1992), and don't worry, Hugh Nibley has nothing to do with any of this.
This proves nothing, but those who would spout the litany that nothing has ever been produced that could corroborate the Exodus claim would do well to actually look into it. These studies are mostly from almost a hundred years ago, as well. I know it's hard, but try to keep up.