INTRODUCTION TO EXODUS
I. NAME OF THE BOOK
A.
In Hebrew (MT) it is the first word of the book, "and these are the words
(names)."
B.
In the LXX translation it is ek ‘odos which means "a way out"
or "a road out."
II.
CANONIZATION
A.
It is part of the first section of the Hebrew Canon called "The
Torah" or "teachings" or "Law."
C.
It is sometimes called "The Five Books of Moses" in English.
D.
It includes a continuous historical account by Moses from creation through
Moses' life, Genesis - Deuteronomy.
III.
GENRE – The book of Exodus includes three types of literary genre.
A.
Historical narrative, Exod. 1-19; 32-34
B.
Poetry, Exodus 15
C.
Specifications for the Tabernacle, Exodus 25-31, and its construction, 35-40
IV. AUTHORSHIP
B.
There are several places in Exodus where it says that Moses wrote:
1.
17:14
2.
24:4, 12
3.
34:27, 28
C.
Joshua 8:31 quotes Exodus 20:25 and attributes it to Moses. Jesus quotes Exod. 20:12,17 and attributes it to Moses, Mark 7:10.
A.
There have been two scholarly opinions on the date of the Exodus:
1.
from I Kings 6:1, which says, "480 years from the Exodus to the building
of Solomon's Temple":
a.
Solomon began to reign in 970 b.c.
This is figured by using the battle of Qarqar (853 b.c.) as a certain starting date.
b.
The Temple was built in his fourth year (965 b.c.),
and the Exodus occurred about 1445/6 b.c.
2.
This would make it occur in the 18th Egyptian Dynasty.
a.
The Pharaoh of the oppression would be Thutmose III (1490-1436 b.c.).
b.
The Pharaoh of the Exodus would be Amenhotep II (1436-1407 b.c.).
(1)
Some believe evidence from Jericho based on the fact that no diplomatic
correspondence occurred between Jericho and Egypt during the reign of Amenhotep
III (1413-1377 b.c.).
(2)
The Amarna texts record diplomatic correspondence written on ostraca
about the Habiru over-running the land of Canaan in the reign of Amenhotep
III. Therefore, the Exodus occurred in the reign of Amenhotep II.
(3)
The period of the Judges is not long enough if the 13th century is
the date of Exodus.
3.
The possible problems with these dates are:
a.
The Septuagint (LXX) has 440 years not 480.
b.
It is possible that 480 years is representative of 12 generations of 40 years
each, therefore, a figurative number.
4.
There are three other texts that mention dates:
a.
Genesis 15:13,16 (cf. Acts 7:6), 400 years of bondage
b.
Exodus 12:40-41 (cf. Gal. 3:17)
(1)
MT – 430 years of sojourn in Egypt
(2)
LXX – 215 years of sojourn in Egypt
c.
Judges 11:26 – 300 years between Jephthah's day and the conquest (supports 1445
date)
d.
Acts 13:19, exodus, wanderings, and conquest – 450 years
5.
The author of Kings used specific historical references and did not round
numbers (Edwin Thiele, A Chronology of the Hebrew Kings, pp. 83-85
B.
The tentative evidence from archaeology seems to point toward a date of 1290 b.c., or the 19th Egyptian
Dynasty.
1.
Joseph was able to visit his father and Pharaoh in this same day. The first
native Pharaoh who began to move the capital of Egypt from Thebes back to the
Nile Delta, to a place called Avaris/Zoan/Tanis which was the old Hyksos
capital, was Seti I (1309-1290). He would be the Pharaoh of the
oppression.
a.
This seems to fit two pieces of information about the Hyksos reign of Egypt.
(2)
The prophecy of Genesis 15:13 speaks of a 400 year oppression
b.
This implies that Joseph's rise to power was under a Hyksos (Semitic)
Pharaoh. The new Egyptian dynasty is referred to in Exod. 1:8.
2.
The Hyksos, an Egyptian word meaning "rulers of foreign
lands," who were a goup of non-Egyptian Semitic rulers, controlled Egypt
during the 15th and 16th Dynasties (1720-1570 b.c.). Some want to relate them to
Joseph's rise to power. If we subtract the 430 years of Exod. 12:40 from 1720 b.c., we get a date of about 1290 b.c.
3.
Seti I's son was Rameses II (1290-1224). This name is mentioned as one of the
store cities built by the Hebrew slaves, Exod. 1:11. Also this same district in
Egypt near Goshen is called Rameses, Gen. 47:11. Avaris/Zoan/Tanis was
known as "House of Rameses" from 1300-1100 b.c.
5.
Rameses II had 47 daughters living in separate palaces.
6.
Archaeology has shown that most of the large walled cities of Canaan (Hazor,
Debir, Lachish) were destroyed and rapidly rebuilt around 1250 b.c. In allowing for a 38 year
wilderness wandering period this fits a date of 1290 b.c.
7.
Archaeology has found a reference to the Israelis being in southern Canaan on a
memorial stele of Rameses' successor Merneptah (1224-1214 b.c. [cf. The Stele of Merneptah, dated
1220 b.c.]).
8.
Edom and Moab seem to have attained strong national identity in the late 1300's
b.c. These countries were not
organized in the 15th century (Glueck).
9.
The book entitled Redating the Exodus and Conquest by John J. Bimson,
published by the University of Sheffield, 1978, argues against all of the
archaeological evidence for an early date.
C.
There is a new possible date even earlier than 1445 b.c. See the History Channel, "The Exodus
Decoded," which asserts a northern route in the Hyksos period.
VI.
OTHER UNCERTAINTIES RELATED TO THE EXODUS
A.
The number of people to leave in the Exodus is in doubt
1.
Numbers 1:46; 26:51 report that there were 600,000 men of fighting age (20-50
yrs. of age, cf. Exod. 38:26). Therefore, if one estimates women, children, and
old men, a number of 1.5 to 2.5 million is possible.
2.
However, the Hebrew term for thousand, Eleph, can mean:
a.
a family or clan unit, Josh. 22:14; Jdgs. 6:15; I Sam. 23:23, Zech. 9:7
c.
a literal thousand, Gen. 20:16; Exod. 32:28
d.
used symbolically, Gen. 24:60; Exod. 20:6 (Deut. 7:9); 34:7; Jer. 32:18
e.
from the Ugaritic (a cognate of Semitic language), the same consonants is alluph
which means "chieftain" (cf. Gen. 36:15). This would mean that for
Num. 1:39 there were 60 chieftains and 2700 men from Dan. The problem comes
when there are obviously too many chieftains for the number of men in some
tribes.
f.
There is a good discussion in the NIV Study Bible, p. 186.
3.
Archaeology has estimated the size of the armies of Egypt and Assyria during
this period in the tens of thousands. Some passages in Joshua seem to imply
that Israel had an army of about 40,000, (cf. Josh. 4:13; 7:3; 8:3,11,12).
B.
The route of the Exodus is in doubt
1.
The location of:
a.
the Egyptian cities
b.
bodies of water
c.
early Hebrew camp sites
are
all uncertain
2.
The term "Red Sea" is literally Yam Suph (see Special Topic:
Red Sea), which:
a.
means, "sea of weeds" or "sea of reeds." It can refer to
salt water, Jonah 2:5; I Kgs. 9:26 or fresh water, Exod. 2:3; Isa. 19:26. The
LXX first translated it as "Red Sea," followed by the Vulgate and
then the King James Version.
c.
had several usages in the OT (cf. Num. 33:8,10).
3.
There are three possible routes involving three different bodies of water:
a.
A northern route – this was along the Mediterranean coast, following the
commercial highway known as "the way of the Philistines." This would
have been the shortest way to the Promised Land. The body of water that they
would have encountered would have been one of the shallow, marshy areas called:
Lake Sirbonis or Lake Menzalch. However, one must take into account Exod. 13:17
which seems to negate this option. Also the presence of Egyptian fortresses
along this route militates against this option.
b.
A middle route – this would involve the central lakes called:
(1)
"The Bitter Lakes"
(2)
"Lake Balah"
(3)
"Lake Timsah"
This
would also have been following a caravan route through the wilderness of Shur.
(1)
Mitigating against this is the absence of reeds in this body of water.
(2)
Pointing toward this is that I Kgs. 9:26 says Ezion-Geber is on the Yam-Suph.
This would be the Gulf of Aqaba or part of the Red Sea (cf. Num. 21:4; Deut.
27; Jdgs. 11:16; Jer. 49:12).
d.
Numbers 33 clearly shows the problem. In v. 8a they "pass through the
sea," then in v. 10 they camped by the "Red Sea," a different
body of water.
e.
Whichever body of water was crossed, it was a miracle of God. Israel was
provided weaponry from the dead Egyptian soldiers who floated to their side of
the body of water, another miracle, Exod. 14:30; 15:4-5.
f.
It is possible from other literature that "the yam suph" was
the uncharted, mysterious body of water to the south. In some literature the
Indian Ocean or the bay of Bengeli is called "yam suph."
4.
The location of Mt. Sinai is also in doubt
a.
If Moses was speaking literally and not figuratively of the three day journey
he requested of Pharaoh (3:18; 5:3; 8:27), that was not a long enough time to
get to the traditional site in the southern Sinai peninsula. Therefore, some
scholars place the mountain near the oasis of Kadesh-Barnea.
b.
The traditional site called "Jebel Musa," in the Wilderness of Sin,
has several things in its favor:
(1)
a large plain before the mountain
(2)
Deut. 1:2 says it was an eleven day journey from Mt. Sinai to Kadesh-Barnea
(4)
Mt. Sinai has been the traditional site since the 4th century a.d. It is in the "land of
Midian," which included a large area of the Sinai peninsula and Arabia.
(5)
it seems that archaeology has confirmed the location of some of the cities
mentioned in the Exodus account (Elim, Dophkah, Rephidim) as being on
the western side of the Sinai Peninsula.
c.
The traditional site of Mt. Sinai was not established until Pilgrimage of
Silvia, written about a.d.
385-8 (cf. F. F. Bruce, Commentary on the Book of the Acts, p. 151).
d.
History Channel, "Decoding the Exodus," makes it on the northern
caravan route to Canaan (i.e., the shortest route to the Promised Land).
VII.
SOURCES CORROBORATING THE HISTORICAL SETTING:
A.
There is no written evidence from Egypt at all about the Exodus. This is not
unusual in light of 1. YHWH's total defeat of the Egyptian gods
2.
the literary nature of Egyptian writings (i.e., royal propaganda)
B.
There are some cultural examples of laws similar to the Decalog:
1.
The Laws of Lipit-Ishtar (Sumerian), from the king of Isin (1934-1924 b.c.)
2.
The Laws of Eshnunna (old Babylonian), dating about 1800 b.c. from the reign of Dadusha, king of
Ashnunna
3.
The Code of Hammurabi (old Babylon) from the king of Babylon, Hammurabi
(1728-1686 b.c.)
4.
The law codes of the Hittite kings Mupsilis I or Hattusilis I, from about 1650 b.c.
6. Alt in Essays on Old Testament History and Religion, Oxford,
1966, pp. 81-132, has identified two types of laws:
a.
casuistic, which uses conditional clauses. It is characterized by an "if.
. .then" structure. It does not appeal to religious or societal norms but
states a prohibition and consequence.
b.
apodictic, which does not use conditional clauses.
(1)
Exodus 21 and Deut. 27:15-26 use the third person and relate to individual,
specific cases
(2)
Lev. 18:7-17 and Exodus 20/Deuteronomy 5 use the second person and are more
general in scope.
c.
Mesopotamian law is primarily casuistic, while Israelite law is primarily
apodictic.
C.
As to the old liberal argument that Moses could not have known how to write,
archaeology has confirmed the existence of an early Canaanite alphabet which
was used in Egypt in Moses' day.
1.
Correspondence from 1400 b.c. has
been found concerning the Semitic slaves in the Egyptian mines of Sinai (cf.
Albright, BASOR, #110 [1948], p 12-13).
2.
The ostracon (broken pottery used to receive writing) from the Valley of Queens
has been found at Thebes, Albright, BASOR, #110 (1948), p 12.
VIII.
LITERARY UNITS (CONTEXT)
A.
Brief Outline
2.
Israel leaves Egypt (the Exodus), 12-18
3.
Israel at Mt. Sinai, 19-40
a.
Laws of covenant at Mt. Sinai, 19-24
b.
Laws of worship at Mt. Sinai, 25-40
(1)
Tabernacle design, 25-31
(2)
Rebellion and covenant renewal, 32-34
(3)
Tabernacle built, 35-40
B.
The Plagues
1.
They show God's judgement on the gods of Egypt (as Genesis 1 shows the
depreciation of Mesopotamian gods). They seem to have occurred over an 18 month
period. They involve natural events, yet with:
a.
supernatural timing
b.
supernatural intensity
c.
supernatural location
2.
Brief outline of the 10 plagues
a.
Nile turned to blood, 7:14-25 f. boils, 9:8-12
b.
frogs, 8:1-15 g. hail, 9:13-35
c.
lice, gnats, 8:16-19 h. locusts, 10:1-20
d.
flies, 8:20-32 i. darkness, 10:21-29
e.
disease of cattle, 9:1-7 j. death angel, death of first born, 11:1-8
C.
List of feast/fast days of chapter 23:
1.
weekly Sabbath, 23:3
3.
Unleavened Bread (15th-21st of Nisan), 23:6-8; Deut.
16:1-8
4.
First Fruits (22nd of Nisan), 23:9-14
5.
Pentecost or Feast of Weeks (50 days after 21st of Nisan, 6th
Sivan), 23:15-21; Deut. 16:9-12
6.
Blowing of Trumpets (1st Tishri), 23:23-25; Num. 29:1-6
7.
Day of Atonement (10th Tishri), 23:26-32; Num. 29:7-11
8.
Feast of Booths (15th Tishri), 23:33-44; Num. 29:12-40; Deut.
16:13-17
D.
Detailed outline
1.
see R. K. Harrison, Introduction to the OT, p 560-562
2.
see E. J. Young, An Introduction to the OT, p 63-72
3.
see NIV Study Bible, p 85-87
IX.
MAIN TRUTHS
A.
It continues the history begun in Genesis. It documents the development of the
chosen family into a chosen nation. Though they are enslaved in Egypt, they
will possess the Promised Land (Gen. 12:1-3; 15:16).
B.
It records the covenant laws at Mt. Sinai (Horeb)
1.
How should we live! (Decalog and supplements)
2.
How should we worship! (Tabernacle, priests, procedures, time, and rituals)
C.
It documents God's great acts of love and mercy toward Israel which were
prophesied to Abraham, Gen. 15:16.
D.
God's dealing with Pharaoh shows the balance between God's sovereignty and
mankind's free will:
1.
God hardened Pharaoh's heart
a.
7:3, 13 d. 11:10
b.
9:12 e. 14:4, 8
c.
10:1, 20, 27
2.
Pharaoh hardened his own heart
a.
8:15, 32
b.
9:34
X.
TERMS AND/OR PHRASES AND PERSONS TO BRIEFLY DEFINE
A.
Terms and Phrases
1.
birthstool, 1:16 (NIV, delivery stool)
2.
remove your sandals, 3:5 (NASB & NIV)
3.
"a three day journey," 3:18; 5:3; 8:27 (NASB & NIV)
4.
"I will harden his heart," 4:21; 7:3, 13; 9:12, 35; 10:1, 20, 27
(NASB & NIV)
5.
magicians, 7:11, 22 (NASB & NIV)
6.
unblemished, 12:5 (NIV, without defect)
7.
pillar of cloud, 13:21-22 (NASB & NIV)
8.
prophetess, 15:20 (NASB & NIV)
9.
bread (manna), 16:4, 8, 14-15, 31 (NASB & NIV)
10.
kingdom of priests, 19:4-6 (NASB & NIV)
12.
sacred pillars, 23:24 (NIV, sacred stones)
13.
ephod, 25:7 (NASB & NIV)
14.
mercy seat, 25:17 (NIV, atonement cover)
15.
Urim and Thummin, 28:30 (NASB & NIV)
16.
the book, 32:32-33 (NASB & NIV)
17.
bread of the Presence, 35:13 (NASB & NIV)
B.
Persons to briefly identify
1.
Hyksos, 1:8
2.
angel of the Lord, 3:1,4
3.
I Am (YHWH), 3:14; 6:3 (NIV, I Am Who I Am)
4.
Reuel, 2:18; Jethro, 3:1; 18:11-12
5.
Phinehas, 6:25
6.
the destroyer, 12:23
7.
Nadab & Abihu, 24:1
8.
Amalek, 17:8-16
XI.
MAP LOCATIONS (by number)
1.
Pithom, 1:11
2.
Rameses, 1:11
3.
Midian, 2:15
4.
Mt. Horeb, 3:1
5.
Goshen, 8:22
6.
Yam Suph, 10:19 (NIV, Red Sea)
7.
Wilderness of Shur
8.
Wilderness of Sin
9.
Wilderness of Paran
10.
The Way of the Sea (Philistines), 13:17
11.
Gulf of Agaba
XII.
STUDENT CONTENT QUESTIONS
1.
Why was Pharaoh afraid of the Hebrews? 1:7-10
2.
Why were the male children to be cast into the Nile? Why did Pharaoh's family
bathe in the Nile? Why was the Nile's turning to blood so significant?
3.
Why did Moses flee to Midian?
5.
What does 3:22 say about the conflict between YHWH and the gods of Egypt?
6.
How do we explain Exod. 6:3 in light of YHWH's appearing in Genesis 4:26?
7.
How do the plagues impact the religion of Egypt?
8.
Does God's hardening Pharaoh's heart take away his free choice?
9.
What is the significance of the death of the first-born?
10.
Where did the Hebrews get their military weapons?
11.
In what ways does Moses' action toward Jethro in chap. 18 imply he is a
believer in YHWH?
12.
What is the implication of Israel's being a kingdom of priests?
13.
List the Ten Words.
14.
List the feast days of chapter 23.
15.
Draw a picture of the Tabernacle and its furniture.
16.
What did the Golden Calf of chapter 32 symbolize?
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