Many people know
the Bible story of Joseph in Egypt, as well
as the Israelites being slaves there for
centuries. Those of us who attended church
school learned about how God miraculously
delivered the Israelites from bondage and
led them to Canaan. But are these Bible
stories true? Did they really happen? If
they did, there should be historical
evidence to support them. So, does such
historical evidence exist? To find the
answer, keep on reading.
For starters,
whatever evidence (external or internal)
there might be, it would have to run along
the lines of showing that Joseph was in
Egypt and that he was governor. External
evidence would be accounts of Joseph’s
actions or mention of him in official
Egyptian government records. The fact is
that no Egyptian records have been found of
Joseph ruling Egypt or even of the
Israelites ever living in Egypt prior to the
Exodus.
One would
immediately assume therefore, seeing that no
records exist in Egypt, that these Bible
stories must be fables. How else can one
explain why no such Egyptian records exist?
Well, it should be noted that there have
been deliberate changes in Egyptian records.
Certain names, and portions of names, had
been defaced from Egyptian monuments, for
one reason or another.1
For many years, Egyptologists assumed that
the deliberate removal of a person's name,
image, and memory would cause them to die a
second, horrible and permanent death in the
afterlife.
However, later studies and theories were
developed that run along the lines of
Egyptian historians and influential people
erasing information that did not harmonize
with what was “ideal.”
For example, King
Akhenaten, who was married to Nefertiti,
changed the religious beliefs of the time.
The priests did not agree with this, and by
their influence, his name is not found among
the listed pharaohs in Egyptian record. It
is believed to have been erased. Another
example is the record of Queen Hatnepshut.
It was uncommon for a woman to be pharaoh,
and soon after her death, Hatshepsut’s
monuments and statues were demolished, and
her image and titles defaced.
With this attitude
and mentality displayed by Egyptian rulers
and historians, it is very possible that the
negative impacts that the Israelites had on
Egypt would be “erased” explaining the
absence of such records in Egypt.
External and Internal Evidence
Based on the internal evidence in the Bible,
external evidence has been found that
correlate with points made in the story of
Joseph being in Egypt. As the story goes,
Joseph, a favored son of Jacob, is sold into
slavery by his jealous brothers, and ends up
in Egypt. The events that transpire result
in Joseph predicting 7 years of plenty and 7
years of drought and suggesting the
necessary steps to survive these years, he
is made governor of Egypt. This internal
evidence from the Bible is supported by
external evidence that there were 7 years of
plenty followed by a devastating famine
around the time of Joseph being in Egypt.
External evidence in Tanzania & Lake Quaran
Studies in 'ice
cores' found in Mount Kilimanjaro, the
mountain which supplies the Nile with
water, in Tanzania have revealed that a
drought took place around 3600 years ago
which is around the time the Bible sets
Joseph's story.
We also know of
another event around the same time. One of
the most fertile areas in ancient Egypt was
the land around Lake Quarun. This lake was
supplied with water from one of the branches
of the Nile. Droughts in Egypt used to cause
this branch to dry up, leaving the land
around the lake destitute. Between 1850 BC
and 1650 BC a canal was built to keep the
branches of the Nile permanently open,
enabling water to fill Lake Quaran and keep
the land fertile. This canal was so
effective that it still successfully
functions today. There is no record of who
built the canal, but for thousands of years
it has been known by one name. In Arabic
it's the “Bahr Yusef.” This translated into
English means the water way of Joseph.2
External Evidence in Yemen
More external
evidence supports that Joseph did exist in
Egypt and that he held a high position. An
ancient inscription reveals that a Yemenite
Arab noble woman made a sincere complaint
that she could not purchase grain from Egypt
with her gold. Here it is:
A Yemenite
Inscription About a Famine During The Time
of Joseph
In thy
name O God, the God of Hamyar,
I Tajah, the daughter of Dzu Shefer,
sent
my steward to Joseph,
And he delayed to return to me, I sent my
hand maid
With a measure of silver, to bring me back a
measure of flour:
And not being able to procure it, I sent her
with a measure of gold:
And not being able to procure it, I sent her
with a measure of pearls:
And not being able to procure it, I
commanded them to be ground:
And finding no profit in them, I am shut up
here.
Whosoever may hear it, let him commiserate
me;
And should any woman adorn herself with an
ornament
From my ornaments, may she die with no other
than my death.3
It is no
coincidence that the water way of Joseph,
used to prevent the drying of the lake
Quaran, exists under that name, and that the
famine predicted by him did indeed take
place. It is significant that the Yemenite
Arab woman addressed her complaint to
Joseph, showing that he held the high
position that the Bible tells us about.
Internal Evidence in Egypt
Joseph was good to
Egypt, he saved it from famine. If no
obvious mention of him is made in Egyptian
records, it should come as no surprise that
there is no record of the Israelites
dwelling or leaving Egypt. According to the
Bible, the events that took place prior to
the Israelites departure from Egypt
devastated the land and the people. Knowing
the attitude of ancient Egyptians in
recording negative historical facts, we
should expect to not find any record of the
Israelites ever being there. However, there
is one poetic eulogy that mentions Israel.
It was written to Pharaoh Merneptah who
ruled Egypt after Rameses the Great, between
1212-1202 BC.
There is a short section at the end of the
poem describing a campaign to Canaan by
Merneptah in the first few years of his
reign around 1210 BC. One line mentions
Israel: "Israel is laid waste, its seed is
not." This is the earliest mention of Israel
outside the Bible, and the only mention of
Israel in Egyptian records.
It was discovered in 1896 in Merneptah's
mortuary temple in Thebes, by Flinders
Petrie.4
|
 |
|
Detail
from the inscription of the
Merneptah Stele: the
hieroglyphic symbols for
"Israel". (Adapted from
Laughlin 2000, p.
89). |
Significance of a specific Bible detail
Another point to
consider is the Bible’s account that when
Joseph was originally sold into Egypt as a
slave, he was bought by a man named Potiphar.
Genesis 39:1 says, “And Joseph was
brought down to Egypt; and Potiphar, an
officer of Pharaoh, captain of the guard, an
Egyptian, bought him of the hands of the
Ishmeelites, which had brought him down
thither.” The name Potiphar (Pa-di-Ra)
means “that given by the god Ra” and was a
common Egyptian name, its use here, in the
ancient language that this is recorded in,
places emphasis on pointing out that this
man was an Egyptian in high power. The
specification of the name Potiphar being
Egyptian suggests that foreign rule must
have been instituted.
Effect of Foreign rule in Egypt
Scholars suggest
that Joseph may have entered Egypt during
the unusual time when the nation was being
ruled (1730 to 1580 B.C.) by the foreigners
called the Hyksos, who were the ones who
introduced chariots, horses, and certain
types of weapons to the Egyptians.5
When the Hyksos were driven out of Egypt
through war, their monuments and records
were destroyed by the Egyptians. The names
of their kings, a few sarcastic remarks
about them, and a few brief episodes from
the war of liberation are all that remain in
Ancient Egyptian history. This is probably
why no obvious mention of Joseph is made.
Conclusion
When discussing
Bible stories in relation to history, one
should never argue before looking at what
facts are present, what facts are not
present, and why they are not present. It is
understandable why there is not much
internal evidence supporting the presence of
Joseph ruling Egypt or the Israelites being
there because of the prideful and
egotistical attitude of ancient Egyptian
historians and scholars. However, the
external evidence bears weight, as
apparently seen in the above.
The lack of
evidence does not suggest that these Bible
stories were not true, and the evidence that
does exist strongly supports their truth. As
in all fields and aspects of knowledge,
valid opinions are based on educated
backgrounds. Empty opinions that argue
against the Bible stories of Joseph in Egypt
and the Israelites apparently reflect a lack
of knowledge that you, the reader, have just
been briefly associated with.
In conclusion, we
should form our opinions based on our own
efforts to educate ourselves with
appropriate and valid facts. A man by the
name of Bill Beattie said, “The aim of
education should be to teach us rather how
to think, than what to think—rather to
improve our minds, so as to enable us to
think for ourselves, than to load the memory
with thoughts of other men.”
References
1.
“On the
Defacement of Divine and royal Names on
Egyptian Monuments.” Edward Hincks.
The Transactions of the Royal Irish
Academy,
Vol. 21, (1846), pp. 105-113. Published
by: Royal Irish Academy. Stable URL:
http://www.jstor.org/stable/30079011
2.
Encyclopedia Britannica
3.
Reported in Niebuhr's
Voyage en Arabie,
PL. LIX Translation by Rev. Charles
Forster
4.
Adapted from the following link:
http://bibleprobe.com/proof1200.htm
(January 19, 2008)
5.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/judaism/history/joseph.shtml
(January 18, 2008)