Exodus

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Template:Books of Torah Exodus is the second book of the Torah (the Pentateuch) and also the Tanakh (the Hebrew Bible), and Christian Old Testament. The major events of the book concern the Exodus, a departure of Hebrew slaves from Egypt, under the leadership of Moses.

Jews call the book by its first words Ve-eleh shemoth (i.e., "and these are the names") or simply "Shemoth" שמות. The Septuagint designates the second book of the Pentateuch as "Exodus", meaning "departure" or "out-going". The Latin translation adopted the name, which thence passed into other languages. As a result of the theme of the first half of the book, the term "an exodus" has come to mean a departure of a great number of people.

Contents

Summary

The book is generally broken into six sections:

  • The account of the growth of the Israelites into a peoples, their enslavement in Egypt, and eventual escape (1-12)
  • The journey from Egypt to Mount Sinai (13-18)
  • The formation of a covenant between Yahweh and the people, and its associated laws (19-24)
  • Intricate instructions for the construction of a tabernacle, priestly robes, and other ritual objects (25-31)
  • The episode of the golden calf, and the regiving of the law (32-34)
  • The construction of the tabernacle, priestly robes, and other ritual objects (35-40)

A major Chiastic structure runs throughout the second half of Exodus, centred on the episode of the golden calf.

The Israelites and their escape from slavery (1-14)

A new Pharaoh, who knew not Joseph, becomes concerned about the military implications of the large increase in the Israelite population, and oppresses them with forced labour, ordering the Hebrew midwives to kill all male babies. However, a daughter of Pharaoh finds the male infant of a Levite, calling him Moses (translating as - is born). Moses is brought up as an Egyptian, but eventually sympathises with the suffering Israelites, slaying an Egyptian overseer.

Fleeing the country, Moses' exile takes him to Midian, becoming shepherd to the priest Jethro, and marrying his daughter, Zipporah. As he feeds the sheep on Mount Horeb, God appears to him from a burning bush, which fails to turn to ash. Yahweh orders Moses to demand the release of the Israelites from Pharaoh, and gives him the power to perform two magical signs, to show his authority. Aaron, mentioned for the first time, and identified as Moses' brother, is appointed to assist him. On his return to Egypt, God tries to kill Moses, but Zipporah, at the inn, decides to circumcise Moses, saving his life. (1-4)

The Pharaoh refuses Moses' request, and oppresses the people still further, ordering them to make bricks without straw. Moses subsequently complains to God, announces to him that he will displaying his power to such an extent, that the Pharaoh will be keen to send the Israelites away, even with all the jewelery of the Egyptians. The genealogy of Moses and his family appears at this point, rather than at the beginning of the story. (5-6)

God sends a series of plagues onto Egypt, each time acting through Moses. Since each one has respite, and the Egyptian magicians are capable of duplicating some of them, the pharaoh becomes increasingly stubborn (7-10). Finally, a great plague, killing all the firstborn, occurs, passing over the houses of the Israelites, since they have completed the passover ritual, marking their houses. Pharoah consequently relents and is only too glad to get rid of the Israelites (11-12).

The journey through the wilderness to Mount Sinai (13-18)

The Exodus begins after Pharaoh's consent, and the Israelites leave Rameses to go to Succoth. The nobles of Egypt object to Pharaoh's consent, and so Pharaoh gathers together a large army to chase after the Israelites, who have by this point reached the Red Sea. Fortunately for the Israelites, they are divinely guarded, and are able to escape through the Red Sea, when Moses causes the waters to part. The waters collapse once the Israelites have passed, defeating Pharaoh, and causing the Israelites to joyfully sing the Song of the Sea (13-14).

The Israelites continue their journey into the desert, and once in the Wilderness of Sin, they complain about the lack of food. Listening to their complaint, God sends them a shower of quail, and subsequently provides a daily shower of manna from heaven. Once at Rephidim, the thirst of the people gets to them, so water is miraculously provided from a rock. The Amalekites perform a sneak attack on the Israelites, and although Joshua manages to lead an army to vanquish them, God still orders an eternal war against Amalek (15-17). Jethro hears of Moses' approach, and visits him, advising Moses to appoint judges (18).

The Covenant and its Laws (19-24)

In the third month the Israelites arrive at Mount Sinai, and God announces, via Moses, that the Israelites are God's people, because he has liberated them by his omnipotence. The Israelites accept this call, and so, with thunder and lightning, clouds of smoke, and the noise of trumpets, God appears to them at the top of Mount Sinai (19).

God then announces a summarised moral law, the Ethical Decalogue (20). A more detailed Covenant Code is subsequently provided, concerning both ritual and civil law, and God promises Canaan to the Israelites if they obey, but warns against the paganism of its inhabitants (21-23). God calls Moses up into the mountain to receive a set of stone tablets containing the law, and further instructions (24).

The Instructions for a Tabernacle, vestments, and associated ritual objects (25-31)

Intricate instructions, forming one of the least readable portions of the torah, are then given detailing the construction of a tabernacle, so that God can dwell permanently amongst the Israelites (25-28). These directions provide for a particularly extensive construction:

Instructions are also given for the garments of the priests (28):

  • A shoulder-band (ephod), containing two onyx stones, each engraved with the names of six of the tribes of Israel
  • A breastplate containing Urim and Thummim
  • Golden chains for holding the breastplate set with twelve specific precious stones, in four rows
  • A robe for the ephod, with bells and pomegranates around the seam
  • A coat
  • A mitre
  • A golden mitre plate with the inscription Holiness to the Lord
  • A girdle

Following these instructions are details of the ritual to be used to ordain the priests, including robing, anointing, and seven days of sacrifices. There are also instructions for daily morning and evening offerings of a lamb (29). The specifications for construction of the tabernacle is then continued with directions for making a golden altar of incense, laver, anointing oil, and perfume (30). Bezaleel and Aholiab are identified, by God, as the appointed craftsmen to construct these things (31).

The golden calf, and regiving of the law (32-34)

Whilst Moses is up the mountain, the people become impatient and urge Aaron to make them a golden calf, which they worship with joy. God informs Moses that they have become idolatrous, threatening to abandon Israel, but Moses intercedes for them. However, when he comes down, he sees what they have done, and in anger smashes the two tablets of the law. After pronouncing judgment upon Aaron and the people Moses again ascends to God to implore forgiveness, and is successful (32-33). Moses consequently is commanded to make two new tablets on which God will personally write the commandments. God then gives the Ritual Decalogue, writing the ten commandments onto the tablets. Moses then returns to the people, who listen to him in respectful silence (34).

The Construction of a Tabernacle, vestments, and associated ritual objects (35-40)

Moses collects the congregation, enjoins upon them the keeping of the Sabbath, and requests gifts for the sanctuary. The entire people respond willingly, and under the direction of Bezaleel, and Aholiab, they complete all the instructions, for making the tabernacle, its contents, and the priestly robes, and the Israelites put it together on the first day of the second month (35-40). This section is almost, but not completely, a word for word copy of Chapters 25-31.

Dating

The time-span in this book, from the death of Joseph to the erection of the tabernacle in the wilderness, covers about one hundred and forty-five years, on the supposition that one computes the four hundred and thirty years (12:40) from the time of the promises made to Abraham (Gal. 3:17).

There have been several attempts to fix the date of the events in the book to a precise point on the Gregorian Calendar. These attempts generally rest on three considerations

  • Who the unnamed pharaoh was
  • The dates for non-biblical accounts of large numbers of semitic people leaving Egypt
  • The date that archaeology implies Jericho was destroyed

Generally, fixing the identification of the Pharaoh is considered the key, and two names are usually suggested:

  • Amenhotep II, around 1444 BC, favoured by religious scholars, since it preceeds the destruction of Jericho, although it fails to identify the Israelites
  • Ramses II, around 1290 BC, favoured by a large minority of secular scholars, since it is able to identify the Israelites as the Hyksos, although this contradicts some aspects of the biblical account, and occurs after Jericho was destroyed.

Authorship

Like the remainder of the torah, traditional and religious attitudes are that the book is the work of Moses himself. Also like the remainder of the torah, a large majority (90%) of modern scholarship disagrees, and instead supports the documentary hypothesis, which asserts that there were several, post-Moses, authors, whose stories have been intertwined by a later redactor. The three main authors of the work are said, in this hypothesis, to be the Jahwist, Elohist, and Priestly source. In addition, the poetic Song of the Sea, and the prose Covenant Code, are thought to have been originally independant works which the associated author, of these three, chose to embed in their works.

Of these, in the hypothesis, the Elohist is identified as uniquely responsible for the episode of the golden calf, and the priestly source as uniquely responsible for the chiastic, and monotonous, instructions for creating the tabernacle, vestments, and ritual objects, and the account of their creation. Notable, the three main authors are also each uniquely associated with one part of the law code - the Elohist with the Covenant Code, the Priestly source with the Ethical Decalogue, and the Jahwist with the Ritual Decalogue.

The other parts of the book are believed to have been constructed by intertwining the Jahwist, Elohist, and Priestly, versions of each of the stories. Deconstructions of the stories into these sources, applying the hypothesis, identify heavy variations between stories, for example, the Priestly Source never warning Pharaoh about the plagues, but instead presenting the plagues as a test of his magicians, and always involving Aaron, wheras the Elohist always provides a warning, the Pharaoh is always described as giving in, but then hardening when Moses undoes the plageu, and hardly ever includes Aaron in a positive light.

See also

References

  • Colin J. Humphreys, The Miracles of Exodus: A Scientist’s Discovery of the Extraordinary Natural Causes of the Biblical Stories 2003, HarperSanFrancisco
  • W. F. Albright From the Stone Age to Christianity (2nd edition) Doubleday/Anchor
  • W. F. Albright Archaeology and the Religion of Israel (5th edition) 1969, Doubleday/Anchor
  • Encyclopedia Judaica, Keter Publishing, entry on "Population", volume 13, column 866.
  • Y. Shiloh, "The Population of Iron Age Palestine in the Light of a Sample Analysis of Urban Plans, Areas and Population Density." Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (BASOR), 1980, 239:25-35
  • Exploring Exodus: The Origins of Biblical Israel Nahum Sarna, Shocken Books, 1986 (first edition), 1996 (reprint edition), chapter 5, "Six hundred thousand men on foot".
  • "Those Amazing Biblical Numbers: Taking Stock of the Armies of Ancient Israel" William Sierichs, Jr.
  • "The Rise of Ancient Israel : Symposium at the Smithsonian Institution October 26, 1991" by Hershel Shanks, William G. Dever, Baruch Halpern and P. Kyle McCarter, Biblical Archaeological Society, 1992.
  • The Biblical Exodus in the Light of Recent Research: Is There Any Archaeological or Extra-Biblical Evidence?, Hershel Shanks, Editor, Biblical Archaeological Society, 1997

External links

Online versions and translations of Exodus

Jewish translations

Christian translations

Translations identifying sources

Related article

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