Saturday, January 10, 2009

THE EXODUS FROM EGYPT in perspective

Important notice and warning:
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As is the case with the rest of this book, any reference to God is intended to be exclusively to the God that man had created in his (man’s) image in the Bible. The “God” in the text therefore refers entirely to the figment of the imagination of primitive man of more than 2 000 years ago. Nothing contained in this book is therefore intended to be blasphemous, or is indeed blasphemous of the true Deity or Theity. ______________________________________________________

It is alleged that in an attempt to get Pharaoh, the king of Egypt, to allow the Israelites to leave Egypt, God exposed the king and his people to some considerable unpleasantness, which inter alia included, frogs, gnats, and flies. When none of that persuaded the king to allow the Israelites to leave, God killed all the “horses, asses, donkeys, camels, cattle, and sheep (some Bibles even add other animals to the list of departed animals.) In that regard the following appears from Exodus. 9:6:

“All the herds of Egypt died but from the herds of the Israelites not one single beast died.”

So, after this last ordeal the Egyptians had no horses.

But when even that did not cause the king of Egypt to allow the Israelites to leave Egypt, God in due course killed all the first-born sons of Egyptians and, also the first-born of all Egyptian livestock. But according to Ex. 9:6 the Egyptian livestock had previously been eradicated. So what animals were there for God to kill?

Nevertheless, Pharaoh, then allowed the Israelites to leave. But soon after they had left, Pharaoh decided that he made a mistake to let his slaves go and according to Exodus 14:6 “put horses to his chariot” and “took six hundred picked chariots” and pursued the Israelites. But the question is: Where did he get the horses to draw his chariot and 600 other chariots. After all, all his horses had already been killed. Twice!

Six hundred thousand men left Egypt (Ex 37:1). An Afrikaans Bible based on the Codex Leningradensis, which is the oldest complete extant manuscript of the Bible, describes the 600 000 men as “weerbare” men. “Weerbaar” translates into “capable of bearing arms” or “able-bodied”. So it could be that there were 600 000 soldiers among the people who left Egypt.

If each of the 600 000 soldiers had a mother, a sister, one wife (or one girlfriend (some may have had a number of wifes, and a number of girlfriends), two minor children, two grandmothers, one aunt, a female cousin, and a female niece, then each of the 600 000 men would have been associated with ten females. The people associated with the men would therefore have been 6 million.

If, as an exercise in conservatism, we limit the people associated with each able-bodied man to a mother, a wife (or girlfriend, but not both), one child, one grandmother, and an aunt, then the number of people who left Egypt calculates to at least 3.6 million

Now if this procession of people that were trekking through the desert walked in rows, each consisting of ten people and if they kept a distance of one metre between rows then the length of the column of people that made their way through the desert would have been 350 kilometres. If the column consisted of rows of 5 people each, then the column’s length would have been 720 kilometres.

Now it is stated in the Bible that there were times when Moses addressed an assembly of the people that he led out of Egypt. If, while he addressed them, they stood before him in rows of 100 people, then the last row of people would have been 35 kilometres away from him. He must therefore have had a thundering voice, or a mighty powerful public address system to get his message to the people in the back row.

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