Does This Rock Explain Why Egyptians Are Biblical Villains?
For
nearly a century, historians have argued about whether or not the
events in Exodus actually took place, A new find in Israel may hold the
key to a new explanation.
When it comes to the prototypical
villains of ancient literature, the Egyptians are right up there.
Nobody, it seemed, really liked the ancient superpower. Ancient Greek
romance novels routinely portray them as cunning and duplicitous. The
Romans found Cleopatra to be equal parts captivating and conniving and,
in the Bible, the Israelites were enslaved by the Pharaohs for
centuries.
A new discovery at Tel Hazor, a UNESCO World Heritage
Site and one of the largest Biblical-era archaeological sites in Israel,
may change how we think about the Egyptians. During excavations last
week, archeologists discovered a 4,000-year-old fragment of a large
limestone statue of an Egyptian official. Only the lower section of the
statue survives, but it includes the official’s foot and a few lines in
Egyptian hieroglyphic script.
The preliminary study of the
artifact has not yet been completed, so archaeologists do not even know
the official’s name. Professor Amnon Ben-Tor of Hebrew University’s
Institute of Archaeology, who has worked at the site for over 27 years,
told the Jerusalem Post that it is likely that the statue was originally
placed at the official’s tomb or in a temple.
So far Tel Hazor is
the only archaeological site in the Levant to have yielded any large
Egyptian statues from the second millennium BCE. The only other is a
sphinx fragment of the Egyptian Pharaoh Menkaure (known to the Greeks as
Mycerinus) that dates to the 25th century BCE. In the Amarna period—a
period of Egyptian history when the royal residence shifted to Akhetaten
and Egyptian religion temporarily shifted towards monotheistic worship
of the sun god Aten—most of Canaan (what would later be Israel) was
under Egyptian control. The latest finds are especially interesting
because historians were unaware that Hazor was one of the Egyptian
strongholds in this period or that there was ever an Egyptian official
there.
What’s interesting about the Egyptian presence in Canaan in
the second millennium is that it may make sense of one of the biggest
mysteries of the Bible: Why does the Hebrew Bible highlight the
oppression of the Israelites by Egypt when there is so little evidence
for their enslavement there?
The story, as told in the book of
Exodus and Prince of Egypt, is that the Israelites came to Egypt because
of famine. They initially prospered (think Joseph and his technicolor
dreamcoat) only to be enslaved by later generations of Egyptians. There
they remained until the birth of Moses, the 10 plagues, and the eventual
emancipation of the Hebrews.
Scholars have been skeptical about
the historicity of the Exodus for over 70 years. In the first place the
Egyptians, who were fairly remarkable record keepers, never refer to a
mass exodus of slaves or even a large group of runaway slaves. To this
we might add the lack of evidence for either a slaughter of Hebrew
infant boys or the 10 plagues that befell the Egyptian people (during
which the eldest son of every Egyptian family dies overnight). There’s
also no mention of Moses, even though his name is Egyptian in origin.
Finally there’s no archaeological evidence to support the idea of a mass
exodus of people. When large groups of people traveled in the
pre-eco-friendly age they left behind trash, and a lot of it. But
there’s no archaeological evidence for mass migration from Egypt to
Israel: no pottery shards or Hebrew carvings.
All of which is to
say that if there was a historical enslavement in and subsequent exodus
from Egypt it is highly unlikely that it was on the scale of the
Biblical account. Perhaps small groups escaped slavery and came to the
land that would become Israel, but certainly not 600,000 men (plus wives
and children). Modern scholars like David Wolpe have been strongly
attacked for making this argument, but, as Wolpe himself notes, this
evidence doesn’t negate the claims of modern Jews to the land of Israel.
But
it does raise an interesting historical question: If the Exodus didn’t
take place on an epic Charlton Heston scale, how does Egyptian
oppression come to feature so prominently in the biblical narrative?
When the story of the exodus was written down in the first millennium,
the Israelites wouldn’t have had any direct experience of Egyptian power
for hundreds of years; in the meantime, the great empires of Assyria
and Babylonia had come to power, drastically overshadowing any threat
from Egypt. Why make the Egyptians the villains of the piece?
Perhaps
the biblical description of dominance by Egyptians actually has very
little to do with enslavement and more to do with the cultural memory of
the more distant Amarna period in Canaan. The Israelites were never
subject to national enslavement in Egypt; but, as this new discovery
reminds us, the land of Canaan was under the foot of Pharaonic
authority. The long shadows of that experience might help explain why—in
the absence of a historical Exodus—the biblical authors made the
Egyptians the villains of their national epic.
Monday, August 1, 2016
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