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Isreal 2.4.02.11 |
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http://wsu.edu/~dee/HEBREWS/WANDER.HTM
However dim and uncertain Hebrew history is in the age of the
patriarchs, there is no question that the migration out of Egypt around 1250 BC
is the single most important event in Hebrew history. More than anything else in
history, this event gave the Hebrews an identity, a nation, a founder, and a
name, used for the first time in the very first line of Exodus , the
biblical account of the migration: "bene yisrael," "the children
of Israel."
How did this happen? How did this diverse set of tribal groups
all worshipping a god they called "god," suddenly cohere into a more
or less unified national group? What happened in Egypt that didn't happen with
other foreigners living there?
Well, we really can't answer that question, for we have almost
no account whatsoever of the Hebrews in Egypt, even in Hebrew history. For all
the momentousness of the events of the migration for the Hebrews and the
dramatic nature of the rescue, including plagues and catastrophes raining down
on Egypt, the Egyptians do not seem to have noticed the Hebrews or to even know
that they were living in their country. While we have several Egyptian records
of foreign groups during the New Kingdom, they are records of actively expelling
groups they feel are threatening or overly powerful. The Hebrews never appear in
these records, nor do any of the events recounted in the Hebrew history of the
event. The Hebrews themselves are only interested in the events directly leading
up to the migration; all the events in the centuries preceding are passed over
in silence.
We can make some guesses about the Hebrews in Egypt, though.
It isn't unreasonable to believe that a sizable Hebrew population lived in the
north of Egypt from about 1500-1250 BC; enormous numbers of tribal groups, most
of them Semitic, had been settling in northern Egypt from about 1800 BC. These
foreigners had grown so powerful that for a short time they dominated Egypt,
ruling the Egyptians themselves; this period is called the Third
Intermediate Period in Egyptian history. When the Egyptians reasserted
dominance over Egypt at the start of the New
Kingdom, they actively expelled as many foreigners as they could. Life got
fairly harsh for these foreigners, who were called "habiru," which was
applied to landless aliens (taken from the word, "apiru," or
foreigner). Is this where the Hebrews got their name? It's a hotly contested
issue. Nevertheless, the New Kingdom kings also began to garrison their borders
in the north and east in order to prevent foreigners from entering the country
in the first place. In particular, the Egyptian king, Seti I (1305-1290), moved
his capital to Avaris at the very north of the Nile delta. This move was a
shrewd move, for it established a powerful military presence right at the
entrance to Egypt.
Garrisoned cities, however, don't pop into existence at a
whim; they are labor intensive affairs. Typically, building projects involved
heavy taxation of local populations; these taxes took the form of labor taxes.
It isn't unreasonable to guess that the heaviest burden of these taxes fell on
the foreigners living in the area, which would include the Hebrews. As best as
we can guess, we believe that these building projects form the substance of the
oppression of the Hebrews described in Exodus.
Nothing, however, should have prevented these oppressed and
miserable foreigners from spilling into the anonymity of history—as so many
had done before and since. One figure, however, changed the course of this
history and united some of these foreigners into a distinct people; he also gave
them a religion and a theology that would forever unite them in a singular
purpose in history. That person was Moses. In spite of the masterful portrayal
of him in Exodus , he is a difficult figure to pin down. Few people
dispute that Moses was a reality in history, whether as an individual or a group
of individuals, but there are several perplexing aspects of the man. First, he
has an Egyptian name (as do many of his relatives). Second, he seems to spend a
large amount of time among a non-Hebrew people, the Midianites, where he marries
and seems to learn the Yahweh religion, and some of its cultic practices, from
the Midianites. Are there two Moses, an Egyptian and a Hebrew? Or an Egyptian
and a Midianite? And are the Midianites the first peoples to worship Yahweh and
who then transmit this religion to the Hebrews? The question is complicated by
the presence of Miriam, Moses' sister, in the migration. For she is the first
individual in the Hebrew bible to be called a "prophet," and seems to
have been an important player in the migration, possibly even being the
principle figure in the climactic battle between the Egyptians and the Hebrews
at the Sea of Reeds. At some point, however, there was a falling out between
Miriam and Moses, and Miriam gets lost to history.
It is equally difficult to pinpoint exactly who participated
in the migration. Although the focus is on the Hebrews, Exodus claims
that a "diverse group of peoples" left Egypt with Moses. Who were
these? Did they include other Semites? Was the migration to Egypt a staggered
affair, or was it a single, heroic migration as indicated in Exodus ?
What resistance did the Egyptians put up? What was the nature of their battle
with the Egyptians at the Sea of Reeds? The account of this battle is vitally
important to Hebrew history, for the deliverance of the Hebrews at the Sea of
Reeds stands as the single most powerful symbol of Yahweh's protection of the
Hebrews. Exodus gives two accounts; in the first, Yahweh blows the water
away to create a ford, and the Egyptians get stuck in the mud and go home. In
the second, Yahweh separates the waters and drowns the Egyptians when they try
to cross. Which is the correct account?
It's difficult to answer any of these questions. In the end,
the only account we have of the migration from Egypt is the Hebrew account.
Several salient aspects give this narrative its foundational role in the Hebrew
view of history. First, Moses is especially chosen by Yahweh to deliver Yahweh's
people. In other words, Yahweh directly intervenes in history in order to bring
about his purposes for his people. Second, the people of Yahweh become a
national entity, identified by the name, "bene yisrael," rather than
simply being a diverse group of tribes. They are united around a specific
leader, Moses. Third, the events in Egypt, including the plagues and the
miraculous deliverance of the Israelites at the Sea of Reeds when pursued by the
king's army, are meant to serve as the primary proof of God's election of the
Hebrews. There's no question that these stories were told and retold among the
Hebrews as the most important events of their history. For in the events leading
up to and involving the migration from Egypt, Yahweh proved once and for all
that he would use and protect the Hebrews as the people, and the only people,
selected by Yahweh. Third, Hebrew religion became the Yahweh religion.
The Hebrews did not worship "Yahweh" before the migration, but learned
the cult, according to Exodus , from Moses during the migration.
This introduction to Yahweh and the Yahweh cult occured in the
southernmost region of the Arabian peninsula, in an area around Mount Sinai.
This area had been occupied by a nomadic, tribal people called Midianites. They
seem to have worshipped a kind of nature god which they believed lived on Mount
Sinai. It is here, living with a priest of the Midianites, called Jethro, that
Moses first encounters Yahweh (on Mount Sinai) and learns his name for the first
time. The name of god, which in Hebrew is spelled YHWH, is difficult to explain.
Scholars generally believe that it derives from the Semitic word, "to
be," and so means something like, "he causes to be."
Nevertheless, when Moses returns to Sinai with the people of Israel and stays in
the area (this period is called the Sinai pericope), Jethro declares that
he has always known Yahweh to be the most powerful of all gods (was the
Midianite religion, then, a religion of Yahweh?). During the Sinai pericope, all
the laws and cultic practices of the new Yahweh religion are set down. The laws
themselves come directly from Yahweh in the Decalogue, or "ten
commandments." The Decalogue is a unique part of the Hebrew Torah in that
it is the only part of Hebrew scriptures which claims to be the words of god written
down on the spot .
Whatever happened in the migration from Egypt to Canaan, it is
clear that somewhere in this period the general laws and cultic practices of the
Hebrews settled down into a definite form. These laws and this new cult of
Yahweh would form the eternal character of the Hebrews down to the present day.
What began as a "diverse group of peoples" has become one people, who
then systematically begin to settle the land of the Canaanites.