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Sunday, October 30, 2011

The Cities of the Bible - Excavated - Mainland Egypt


 

The Bible stories concerning the relationship of God's people with Egypt have been subject to much ridicule.

 

Critics regard Biblical stories, such as the accounts of Joseph and the Exodus, as mythology.

 

 

 

The stones of archaeology were silent witnesses to the dramas of the past, and it was only after 1799, when the Rosetta Stone was discovered, that the ancient records could be deciphered.

 

  

 

(Experts inspecting the Rosetta stone)

 

 It took Jean-François Champollion 20 years to decipher the ancient hieroglyphics from the Rosetta Stone.

 

 The Stone was unique in that three languages were inscribed upon it, each telling the same story. The science of archaeology is thus a fledgling science, and most of its treasures have only been subject to scrutiny in the last century.

 

Today it is possible to not only read hieroglyphics, but also the ancient cuneiform writings.

 

Astoundingly, the ancient relics have succeeded in silencing many of the Biblical critics.

 


 Hieroglyphics                          Demotic  Script                                   Greek

 

 The harmony between Scripture and archaeological findings has shed new light upon the debate. Concerning the story of Joseph, it is known that the Semitic Hyksos overthrew the Egyptian dynasties from the year 1780 BC to 1545 BC, a period of just over a quarter of a century.

 

During this time, it would have been possible for a Semite to reach the position of prestige occupied by Joseph.

 

 In recent times, frescoes have been found in Egyptian tombs depicting fat and thin cows, and inscriptions have been found referring to seven lean and seven opulent years, making this Biblical story more than just a myth.

 

 

 One of the most exciting stories in Scripture, however, is the Exodus.

 

 

According to Biblical chronology, Moses was born in 1530 BC, during the reign of Tutmoses I, who ruled from 1532 to 1508 BC.

 

 Tutmoses I was the third pharaoh of the 18th dynasty. The first pharaoh was Amoses 1570 to 1553 BC, followed by Amenhotep 1553 to 1532 BC, who was the father of Tutmoses I. This is the pharaoh who issued the decree that all the sons born to the Israelites were to be thrown into the river, but that girls were permitted to live (Exodus 1:22).

 

Aaron, the brother of Moses, was born in 1533 BC, prior to the reign of Tutmoses I, and he had thus escaped the vicious decree.

 

According to Biblical chronology, Moses fled Egypt 40 years after his birth in 1490 BC (Remember, we have to calculate backwards, as we are dealing with the time before Christ). Exodus 2:15 tells us about Pharaoh's reaction:

 

"When Pharaoh heard of this, he tried to kill Moses, but Moses fled from Pharaoh, and went to live in Midian" (NIV).

 

    

 

It was here, in Midian of Sinai, that the Lord revealed Himself to Moses. Two pharaohs reigned simultaneously during the exile of Moses. Tutmoses I, who issued the decree to kill the newborn sons of the Israelites, was the father of Hatshepsut, the princess who is the most likely candidate for having found Moses in the Nile. It is probable that Moses grew up as a foster child in the house of Pharaoh.

 

Tutmoses I had no sons, and, upon his death in 1508 BC, Moses could have become the pharaoh, but he declined.

 

Acts 7:20 tells us, "Moses was educated in all the wisdom of the Egyptians, and was powerful in speech and action." In Hebrews 11:24, we are told, "By faith Moses, when he had grown up, refused to be known as the son of Pharaoh's daughter."

 

  

 

After Moses' refusal, Tutmoses II (the husband of Hatshepsut) became pharaoh, but he only ruled from 1508 to 1504 BC, a period of just four years.

 

Again, Moses could have become pharaoh, but again he refused. Hatshepsut herself became the next pharaoh. Her mortuary temple is at Deir el Bahri, and she ruled Egypt from 1504 to 1482 BC; a total of 22 years.

 

The illegitimate son of Hatshepsut's husband became co-regent together with her. He was Tutmoses III, who was favoured by the Egyptian priesthood.

 

The story of Hatshepsut is a sad story.

 

In 1488, six years prior to her death, all official records of Hatshepsut ceased. Her royal wall paintings on the walls of her mortuary temple at Deir el Bahri were defaced, and her statues were destroyed.

 

 

 To this day, only a few small busts have been found. Such drastic action was only taken if pharaohs were disloyal to Egyptian deities. It is probable that Hatshepsut adopted the Hebrew religion in 1488, when Egyptian documentation about her ceased.

 

 Moses at this time was already in exile, having fled before the wrath of Tutmoses III, who enjoyed the support of the Egyptian priesthood.

 

 

Deir el-Bahri, Hatshepsut's Temple

 

Moses heard about the death of Hatshepsut while he was in exile, and her death is recorded in his writings. Exodus 2:23 states,

 

"During that long period, the king of Egypt died." The sole ruler in Egypt was now Tutmoses III, and with Hatshepsut out of the way, and the protection she probably afforded the Israelites no longer available, Tutmoses suppressed them in a most cruel fashion.

 

"The Israelites groaned in their slavery and cried out, and their cry for help because of their slavery went up to God. God heard their groanings and...looked on the Israelites and was concerned about them" (Exodus 2:23-25).

 

The return of Moses and his fear for Pharaoh is now understandable, particularly since the same pharaoh that induced him to flee became the sole ruler in Egypt.

 

Tutmoses III was one of the greatest pharaohs in history. He was known as the Napoleon of Egypt. He ruled until 1450 BC, which, according to the chronology in 1 Kings 6:1, is the year of the Exodus.

 

According to the Bible, the Exodus took place on March 17, 1450 BC.

 

The precise dates of the Passover and the Exodus are recorded in the Scriptures. The Bible tells us that the pharaoh then ruling (Tutmoses III) followed the Israelites through the Red Sea, and that he was killed in the process.

 

The biography of Tutmoses III, written by Amenemhab says, "Lo, the king completed his lifetime of many years, splendid in valour, in might and triumph: from year 1 to 54."

 

  

 

1504 to 1450, a reign of 54 years, brings us precisely to the date of the Exodus. Amenemhab mentions the month and the day of his death:

 

"The last day of the third month of the second season... He mounted to heaven, he joined the sun: the divine limbs mingled with him who begot him."

 

According to the Egyptologist James Breasted, this translates to March 17, 1450 BC.

 

A mummy of Tutmoses III in the Cairo museum was analyzed by two Egyptologists, Harris and Weeks, in 1973 and found to be a mummy of a young man, whereas Tutmoses III must have been at least 80.

 

 

 

Egyptians had a way of disguising their embarrassments.

 

The pharaoh was probably never recovered from the Red Sea, and to hide this fact, a fake mummy was put in his place. There is more circumstantial evidence from the 18th dynasty to support this argument.

 

Tutmoses III co-reigned with his son, Amenhotep II (after the death of Hatshepsut), and Amenhotep II was not in Egypt at the time of the Exodus, but in Syro-Palestine suppressing an uprising with most of the Egyptian army.

 

 According to Egyptian writings, he returned in June 1450 BC, when he apparently defaced many Egyptian monuments. This act needs an explanation. The Bible tells us that all the first-born in Egypt died in the last plague.

 

 On returning to Egypt, he would have found not only the Israelites gone, but he would have also found his father dead, and his first-born son killed in the plague.

 

One can now understand the emotion felt by Amenhotep that caused such a violent outburst.

 

 

The next pharaoh to rule was Tutmoses IV, who was the second born son of Amenhotep II.

 

According to succession rights, the first-born should have become pharaoh, but he died. To explain this apparent anomaly, there is an inscription on the Sphinx telling the story of how the second-born son became pharaoh in the place of the first-born.

 

 Apparently, Tutmoses IV was resting between the legs of the Sphinx when he heard a voice telling him to clear the sand from between the legs, and the Sphinx would see to it that he, rather than the first-born, would be the next pharaoh. An unlikely story, and another demonstration of attempts to cloud the issue, so that the embarrassment should not be made public to the descendants.

 

Monotheistic worship in Egypt did not die with the death of Hatshepsut.

 

 During the Amarna Period of the 18th dynasty, monotheism again surfaced in Egypt. The pharaoh after Tutmoses IV was Amenhotep III. This son of Tutmoses IV was still an idolater, but during the reign of his son (Amenhotep IV), the religion of Egypt shifted from the worship of Amun to that of Aten.

 

Atenism was the worship of the one Creator God.

 

The symbol of the sun and its rays was used to described Aten's care for mankind. The sun was not worshiped in Atenism, but served merely as a symbol.

 

 There is good evidence that Atenism has its basis in the Hebrew religion.

 

 

 

The Exodus must have left its mark upon the Egyptian people, and many adhered to the God of the Hebrews, rather than to the Egyptian deities.

 

 The essence of the Egyptian religion was that of sun worship, but numerous gods played secondary roles in their belief system. Amenhotep IV changed his name to Akhenaton, symbolizing the change from Amun worship to Aten worship (Amenhotep means "Amun is pleased").

 

 Further evidence of Akhenaton's break with the old religion is that he shifted his capital from Luxor to a new capital Akhetaten.

 

In a song written by Akhenaton to his god, there are 17 verses corresponding with Psalm 104.

 

 

Under Akhenatan's influence, Egyptian culture experienced a period of realism.

 

In statues of pharaohs and their families, pharaohs were no longer depicted as larger than life, but statues of Akhenaton and his family portray him with all his defects, and his wife and children are portrayed in a loving bonding relationship with the pharaoh.

 

 His wife was the famous Nefertiti, whose name means "maiden of joy."

 

 

 They had six daughters, of which one was engaged to a young man by the name of Tutankaten. The daughter's name was Ankensenpaaten. Note that the names end in "aten," portraying their mode of worship.

 

Upon the death of Akhenaton, Tutankaten was to become the next pharaoh.

 

 However, his change of name to Tutankamun indicates that his pharaohship was subject to the change of his religion.

 

The greatest archaeological finds concern this pharaoh, and tell the story of a short but splendid reign.

 

 

 

Was it worth giving up the truth for the sake of earthly glory?

 

The defacing of the statues associated with the reign of Akhenaton again demonstrates the hatred and rivalry between idolatry and the worship of the Creator God.

 

http://amazingdiscoveries.org/S-deception_archaeology_Egypt_Moses

 


---------- Forwarded ----------
From: Samuel Machado

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Mount Sinai - Discovery Proving Bible's Authenticity


The Bible tells us that after Moses brought the Israelites across the Red Sea, the Angel of God led them to a mountain named Mt. Sinai (a.k.a Mt. Nebo) in the land of Midian, where God descended on the mountain "in fire". 

It says, "the smoke billowed up from the mountain like smoke from a furnace".  So then we should find a mountain with a black top somewhere in Midian.

Real Mount Sinai with blackened top






Photo Aaron Sen www.wyattarchaeology.com
Mr. Wyatt is the original modern-day discoverer of the real Mount Sinai (the man in the photo is not Ron Wyatt).  The upper 200 feet of Jebel el Lawz is burned black, as we see in the photos above. 

The Saudi Government will confiscate any photographs of the mountain and will not allow any tourists into the country, but satellite photos and a few private photos smuggled out of the country reveal the secret mountain by its unique blackened peak. 

 Unlike the traditional site, there are thousands of acres in which to encamp at the base of this mountain, while clearly being visible from the mountain top.
       "Moses fled from the face of Pharaoh and dwelt in the land of Midian; and he sat down by a well"  Ex. 2:15 NKJV.   Maps indicate Midian is near the border of the Gulf of Aqaba in Northwest Saudi Arabia, in the area shown on the map above.

       "And she [Zipporah] bore him a son, and he called his name Gershom; for he said, "I have been a stranger in a foreign land"  Ex. 2:22.  Moses was in a different country, away from any Egyptians in Saudi Arabia.  He could not have been in the Sinai Peninsula, as that area was Egyptian controlled territory, full of Egyptian mines and communication towers.  Moses would have been easily captured in that area.

       "Now Moses kept the flock of Jethro his father-in-law, the priest of Midian.  And he led the flock to the back of the desert, and came to Horeb, the mountain of God"  Ex. 3:1.  Jethro lived in the vicinity of Mount Sinai.  Jethro was the leader of the Midianites who were found in this area, "East of the Gulf of Aqaba in the northwestern regions of the Arabian Desert" Britanica.  When researching the location of Mt. Sinai in Saudi Arabia that Mr. Wyatt proposed, I went to the East Tennessee State University Library and found two extremely detailed maps of Saudi Arabia.  On BOTH maps I found the name "Jethro" next to the town of Al Bad, which is near Jebel el Lawz, the correct Mt. Sinai!  See maps below.  Jethro was Moses' father-in-law as we saw in the texts above.  He was from the town of Al Bad, according to the local people who live there today, which is only about 15 miles from Jebel el Lawz.  The local people there today told Ron Wyatt that Jethro was from that area.

       "So He [God] said, 'I will certainly be with you.  And this shall be a sign to you that I have sent you:  When you have brought the people out of Egypt, you shall serve God on this mountain'" Exodus 3:12.  Moses was to bring the children of Israel from Egypt to this same mountain in Midian, near Jethro's home, in a foreign land.

       "For this Hagar is Mount Sinai in Arabia"  Galatians 4:25.  Here we are clearly told where the mountain should be located, in Arabia.  But where is Arabia?  "...It is bordered on the West by the Gulf of Aqaba and the Red Sea" Britanica.  This clearly rules out the Sinai Peninsula, but it does include Saudi Arabia of course.

       "Then, at this saying, Moses fled and became a sojourner in the land of Midian, where he had two sons.  And when forty years had passed, an Angel of the Lord appeared to him in a flame of fire in a bush, in the wilderness of Mount Sinai."  Acts 7:29,30.  All historically accurate maps, such as some produced by secular companies like National Geographic (see map at top of page), show Midian in Saudi Arabia.  Unfortunately, maps placed in Bibles by the publishers may have Midian in the Sinai Peninsula in order to fit tradition, but not the Bible or the historical record.
Josephus said that Mt. Sinai "was the highest of mountains in the city of Midian" which is just outside the town of Al Bad. Jebel el Lawz is the highest mountain in the upper two thirds of the country.

Also, Philo said Mt. Sinai was located east of the Sinai Peninsula and south of Palestine.


Photo Aaron Sen www.wyattarchaeology.com
After Mr Wyatt found this site in 1984, and visited it again a year later, the Saudi government erected a fence and a guard house preventing access to the Holy Precinct area at the foot of the mountain on the eastern side.

 The sign above states, "Archaeological area...unlawful to trespass, subject to penalty."

 When Ron and his two sons made their fist trip into Saudi Arabia, they were accused of being spies and were held prisoner for two months, awaiting execution. After Ron helped to heal many sick prisoners, the authorities listened to his story and accompanied him to the column at the Saudi beach, then to Mt. Sinai. It was then they believed him, but they had to confiscate his photographs before letting him go.
The Golden Calf Alter
This altar is located east of the holy precinct - in fact, from the top of the mountain, looking down toward the sacred area, this altar is almost directly straight ahead. But it is perhaps a mile or more from the base of the mountain. As we read the Biblical account of the event, we can see that this site fits the description given perfectly

This petroglyph, found on the altar, is the evidence which caused the Saudi archaeologist to say that this was a major archaeological discovery

The Rock at Horeb

Behold, I will stand before you there on the rock in Horeb. You shall strike the rock, and water will come out of it, that the people may drink." Moses did so in the sight of the elders of Israel.

The Rock at Horeb from which Flowed Forth Water




On the western or back side of the mountain is Rephidim where Moses and the Children of Israel first encamped before reaching Mt. Sinai.

 It was here that Moses struck the rock, above, which gushed forth large quantities of water. The giant 60 foot rock is on a 300 foot tall hill, and has obvious signs of water erosion, yet it is located in this desert region.

 The fissure in the rock is so large that you can walk easily through it.

 A square 20 foot altar is also at this site, which was built after the Children of Israel defeated the Amalakites. The Amalakite territory covered "south of Judah and probably extended into northern Arabia" --Britannica.


Altar "Jehovah Nissi" near the Rock at Horeb "And Moses built an altar..." Exodus 17:15


They came to Elim, where there were twelve springs of water, and seventy palm trees: and they encamped there by the waters.  Ex 15:27


Folks, everything in the Exodus account is there just as the Bible describes. 

 We can read the Bible with confidence, knowing that God doesn't lie and his Word is completely reliable.  It is unfortunate for the world that Saudi Arabia is a closed country.

 Imagine if this place and others like Noah's Ark were easily accessible for tourists and pilgrims to come and see?
Watch the Video
Watch 17 minute segment on Mt. Sinai ArkDiscovery.com DVD
The Exodus Case
Besides the video available from www.arkdiscovery.com, a new book is available covering this discovery that you may order from www.anchorstone.com Written by a Swedish scientist, Dr. Lennart Moller, who has extensively researched the material first hand.

The book has over 550 color illustrations including topics of Sodom and Gomorrah, the Red Sea Crossing, the real Mount Sinai, and Joseph's grain storage complex.
Please visit these other sites for more photographs and other evidences.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Don't Jump to Conclusions



'I will guard my ways that I may not sin with my tongue...' Psalm 39:1 NAS

We all fail from time to time, even the best of us.

 

When John D Rockefeller ran the Standard Oil Company one of his senior executives made a mistake that cost over $2 million.

 

 The other executives thought Rockefeller would come down heavy on him and probably fire him. But he didn't.

 

 Before he called the man in, he sat down, took a notepad and wrote across the top of it:

 

 'Points in favour of this man'.

 

 Then he listed the man's strengths, including how he'd once helped the company make the right decision and earn them millions of dollars.

 

 

 One of the senior executives who witnessed it later said,

 

 'Whenever I am tempted to rip into someone, I force myself to sit down and compile a list of the good qualities they have. By the time I have finished, I have the right perspective. And best of all, my anger is under control. I can't tell you how many times this habit has prevented me from committing one of life's costliest mistakes-losing my temper. I recommend it to anyone who must deal with people.'

 

So before you jump to conclusions about someone, stop and ask God for wisdom, then sit down and make a list of their best qualities.

 

 If you do you'll often come to a different conclusion.

 

 One thing is for sure, you'll approach them with the right attitude and you won't say things you'll later regret. Obviously the Psalmist had learned that lesson:

 

 'I will guard my ways that I may not sin with my tongue.'

 

 

http://www.thewordfortoday.com.au/

 


Sunday, October 16, 2011

The Profile of Mother Teresa




He is the Life that I want to live,
He is Light that I want to radiate.
He is the Way to the Father.
He is the Love with which I want to love.
He is the Joy that I want to share.
He is the Peace that I want to sow
Jesus is Everything to me.
Without Him, I can do nothing.


I am Albanian by birth. Now I am a citizen of India

 I am also a Catholic nun.  In my work, I belong to the whole world.  But in my heart, I belong to Christ.

I was very young, no more than twelve years old, when, in the heart of my family, I first experienced the desire to belong completely to God. I thought and prayed about it for six years.

It was at the feet of our Lady of Letnice (in Skopje) where I first heard the divine call, convincing me to serve God and to devote myself to His service.  I remember the afternoon of her feast of the Assumption. 

 I was praying with a lighted candle in my hands and singing in my heart, full of joy inside, when I took the decision to wholly devote myself to God religious life.


Mine was a very happy and united family. Following my vocation was a sacrifice which Christ asked of me and my people. When I was eighteen, I went to the mother house of the Loreto Sisters in Rathfarnham. I left Rathfarnham after only six weeks.

 I had joined in October 1928 and in January 1929, I went to India to do the noviciate.

I did my noviciate in Darjeeling and took the vows with the Loreto Sisters. For twenty years, I was at work in education in the St. Mary's High School, which was mostly for middle class children. I loved teaching, and in Loreto I was the happiest nun in the world.

On September 10, 1946, while I was going by train to Darjeeling for my spiritual retreat, I experienced a call to renounce everything and to follow Christ into the slums, to serve the poorest of the poor.


  In a quiet, intimate prayer with our Lord, I heard distinctly, a call within a call.

 The message was quite clear:

I was to leave the convent and help the poor whilst living among them.  It was an order.

I left the Loreto Sisters in 1948. Leaving was my greatest sacrifice, and the most difficult thing I have ever done.  It was much more difficult than to leave my family and country to enter religious life. 

 But I had the inner command to renounce Loreto to go to serve the poor in the streets, and I had the blessing of obedience.

After leaving Loreto, I was on the street, with no shelter, no company, no helper, no money, no employment, no promise, no guarantee, no security.

  I prayed,

 "God, You, only You.  I trust in Your call, Your inspiration. You will not let me down." 

 I needed a roof to shelter the abandoned, so I started to search.

Soon, young girls, former students of mine from Loreto, began to join me. They took off their expensive saris with great satisfaction in order to put on our humble cotton ones. This first group was about twelve, by the time the congregation was established.

In 1950, the Holy Father approved of the new congregation of the Missionaries of Charity. I didn't choose this name. It came from the call.  It is what we are meant to be: carriers of God's love.  Since then, girls from all over the world have been joining.

I am nothing. He is all.
I do nothing of my own. He does it.
I am God's pencil.  
A tiny bit of pencil with which He writes what He likes. 
God writes through us,
and
however imperfect instruments we may be,
He writes beautifully.

These autobiographical extracts are from, "My Life for the Poor", edited by Jose Luis Gonzalez-Balado and Janet N. Playfoot, Ballentine Books, 1985.