Archaeologists practice a very inexact science of conjecture of possibility based on the known. Over the course of time as we know it, billions of people have lived and died in the region, yet the human remains found anywhere have been few and far between outside of maintained burial sites. Why? Because of the method of disposal used. I'm no archeologist and I know that. Nomadic people don't leave much anywhere until permanent cities are established.
So you're now discrediting scientist who do actual research for the purpose of trying to uphold a book that's based on mere "faith"? You may be an educator Dacon, but would you encourage your students to use such tactics when conducting their research on their assignments?
Like I said, it takes religion for one to throw logic completely out the window in spite of the evidence staring them right in the face.
Logic would show that 2-3 million people have artifacts and materials they woud HAVE to leave behind as evidence. There's no documented history of 2-3 million people roaming in the desert by contemporary historians inneighboring nations and cultures.
It's not like these persons that we read about in the Exodus did not exist. Non-Jewish cultures (i.e. non-biblical) acknowledge their presence and activities. This did not happen in a vacuum.
You say non-Jewish, non-biblical sources, but those sources have little to no credibility when they've been investigated and researched.
There CAN BE some scientific validity in archeology. I do find it ironic that you now point to the opinion and conjecture of a rabbi and some number of Christians as fact. I'll 4000 years of perspective against the latter anyday.
Which is it? You just said archaeology wasn't an exact science, now you're saying it can be scientific?
Rabbi Wolpe is an "expert" of Old Testament writings and a famous and dedicated Jew dedicated to his people and culture.
The Christians I mentioned know the Old Testament and are "experts". If you were one, I'd have chosen you as a reference.
My point is that if these people can finally come to an objective conclusion, in spite of what they've been taught in their synogogues and seminaries, I would think there's hope for those like you who seem to be in stark denial.
I produced no video. You initiated the thread asking for support of the Exodus and I pointed to a video for you to assess for your self - taking my opinion of it out of the way.
I think you know that's what I meant. I didn't ask for that specific video. You brought up the video all on your own as "evidence" of a biblical exodus. I simply pointedout that the authors were investigated and found to be fraudulent, so your evidence really wasn't evidence at all.
The history as recorded is all of the production that I need. Artifacts would be nice but are not necessary for me.
And this is the huge flaw. All you require is a mere "belief" with nothing to support it. Christianity is based on faith. Without it, you couldn't please your god, no matter how wild and outlandish the miracles might be.
All you have is a belief system, in this case, supported by nothing.
Real investigators call that "hearsay", and a real judge would throw it out of his court.
As for the film, the persons documenting what they found made no claims of being archeologists. They were just guys who put together some facts and followed them to reach a conclusion. No excavation. No carbon dating. Merely observation. You accept/reject it at whatever level you are pleased.
But people like you took it and ran with it. You even paid money for it, so you must have believed it to be of some substance.
The film authors may not have "said" they were archaeologists or legit geologists, they still implied that the investigation they began and their findings were accurate and legit. Come to find out, their findings were highly flawed and had very little substance, even to the point where "Christian" archaeologists deserted them.
There was no investigation of the plagues, excavation of the Red Sea, etc. It simply pointed to the accuracy of the place where Moses was instructed to return after the Israelites were freed from Egypt. Have archeologists investigated the site and subsequent routes the Israelites would have taken as a result? Have the Muslim-based governments and regimes excavated such sites and paths for the purpose of removing all the of the artifacts therewith? Why is this site fenced-off but surrounding areas are not? I would not even begin to speculate, nor do I espouse any conspiracy theories. We simply do not know. I am okay with that. You and others won't be. We are entitled to those positions.
Dacon, if you wanted to know the answer to those questions, you could. As far as the excavation of the Red Sea where the Israelites supposedly crossed, in the film the men were in the sea at high tide and the water only reached their waste. How could perhaps thousands of chariots and men have sunk and drowned in such shallow water?
Again, most of those questions you posed have been addressed for years. Like I said, you can find the answers to them if you want to.
Until we have more detail, you and I have nothing to prove and neither does anyone else.
We have details, details that there was no exodus. Please don't link me with what you don't have and what you perhaps don't want to know for fear that it might go against the grain of what you believe. The evidence is there. Archaeologists have dug and dug and dug, yet have found nothing.
More importantly, you can't produce any documents or writings from other cultures existing at that time showing that an exodus ever occurred.
We have evidence of the cultures of the Hittites and Canaanites, but nothing about a group of 2-3 million people roaming in the desert for forty years around the same time as the aforementioned existing cultures. The reason there's no documentation is because it never happened.