Exodus, Book of

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{{Books of the Old Testament}}
 
{{Books of the Old Testament}}
{{Books of Torah}}
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{{epname|Exodus, Book of}}
'''Exodus''' is the second book of the [[Torah]], the [[Tanakh]], and the [[Old Testament]]. The major events of the book concern [[the Exodus]], a departure of [[Hebrew people|Hebrew]] [[slavery|slaves]] from [[Egypt]] under the [[leadership]] of [[Moses]].  
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'''Exodus''' (meaning: "mass migration or exiting of a people from an area") is the second book of the [[Old Testament]] or [[Hebrew Bible]]. The major events of the book concern the calling of the [[prophet]] [[Moses]] as well as the departure of the [[Israelites]] from [[Egypt]].
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The Book of Exodus presents some of the Bible's most dramatic moments, from the rescue of the infant Moses from the Nile, to the scene of Moses meeting God in the burning bush, Moses and Aaron confronting Pharaoh, the miracles of the plagues visited by God upon Egypt, the [[Passover]], the escape from Egypt, the parting of the sea, the episode of the [[golden calf]], and finally the successful construction of the [[tabernacle]] with its [[Ark of the Covenant]]. Scholars debate the historicity of Exodus, seeing multiple sources and several authors with varying theological outlooks.
  
Jews call the book by its first words ''Ve-eleh shemot'' ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]]: ואלה שמות) (i.e., "And these are the names") or simply "Shemot" (שמות). The Septuagint designates the second book of the Pentateuch as "Exodus" ([[Greek language|Greek]]: ''{{polytonic|Ἔξοδος}}''), meaning "departure" or "out-going". The Latin translation adopted the name, which passed into other languages.
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==Summary==
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===Introduction===
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[[Image:Moses-Bush.jpg|thumb|250px|Moses meets Yahweh in the burning bush.]]
  
The book is generally broken into six sections:
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While Exodus is the name assigned to the book in [[Christian]] tradition, Jews also refer to it by its first words ''Ve-eleh shemot'' (ואלה שמות) (i.e., "And these are the names") or simply "Shemot" (Names). The Greek [[Septuagint]] version of the Hebrew Bible designated this second book of the Pentateuch as "Exodus" ''(Ἔξοδος),'' meaning "departure" or "out-going." The Latin translation adopted this name, which passed into other languages.
*The account of the growth of the Israelites into a people and their enslavement in [[Egypt]]
 
*The birth, exile and call of Moses
 
*Moses' ministry, the plagues, and the Passover
 
*The journey from Egypt to [[Mount Sinai]] (13-18)
 
*The formation of a covenant between [[Tetragrammaton|God]] 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, centered on the episode of the golden calf.  
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The story of the Exodus is both inspiring and fearsome. It is also interspersed with editorial interpretations, genealogies, and long lists of priestly regulations, moral codes, and instructions for building the portable religious sanctuary, or [[tabernacle]], which the Israelites carried through the wilderness. The story of the Exodus does not end with the Book of Exodus, but continues and overlaps with other biblical books including [[Numbers]], [[Leviticus]], and [[Deuteronomy]].  
  
==Summary==
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===Background===
The story of the Exodus is both inspiring and fearsome. It is also interspersed with editorial interpretations, genealogies, and long lists of priestly regulations, moral codes, and building instructions for the portable religious sanctuary, or tabernacle, which the Israelites carried through the wilderness. The basic outline of the story is as follows:
 
  
===The Israelites' enslavement in Egypt===
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The later chapters of [[Book of Genesis|Genesis]] describe a famine in [[Canaan]] and the migration of the sons of [[Jacob]] and their clans to [[Ancient Egypt|Egypt]], where they settle under the protection of their brother [[Joseph]], who had become the prime minister of that land. There, the [[Israelites]] multiply and become strong, "so that the land was filled with them."
The later chapters of Genesis describe a great famine which had struck the Promised Land, causing the Hebrews to relocate to Egypt. Their kinsman [[Joseph (Hebrew Bible)|Joseph]] had risen to a position of great power there. Thanks largely to his administrative skills, food in Egypt remained plentiful. Joseph persuaded his entire extended family to come live under his protection so that he can support them for the duration of the famine. Once the famine ends, however, the Hebrews do not return to the Promised Land. Rather, they proceed to settle down in Egypt and remain there for many generations.
 
  
The Book of Exodus opens as a new [[Pharaoh]], who ''knew not Joseph'', becomes concerned about the military implications of the large increase in the Israelite population. He enslaves them and allows them only manual labour, ordering the Hebrew [[midwife|midwives]] to kill all male babies.
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The Book of Exodus opens as a new [[Pharaoh]], "who knew not Joseph," becomes concerned about the military implications of the large increase in the Israelite population. He enslaves them and allows them only manual labor. He then takes the drastic measure of ordering the Hebrew [[midwife|midwives]] to kill all male babies.
  
 
===The birth, exile, and call of Moses===
 
===The birth, exile, and call of Moses===
A Levite woman, later identified as Jochebed, the wife of Amram (6:20), avoids this fate for her son by placing him in a reed basket that she floats down the [[Nile]]. A daughter of the king of Egypt finds the infant, calling him [[Moses]] (translated as ''drawn out'', from Hebrew but also related to the Egyptian word for "son). [[Image:Moses-Bush.jpg|thumb|300px|Moses meets Yahweh in the burning bush.]] After his own mother serves as [[wet nurse]] to the child, Moses is brought up as an [[Ancient Egypt|Egyptian]] prince. When he becomes a man, he takes sympathy for one of the Hebrew laborers that is being whipped by his overlords. Moses kills the Egyptian oppressor and buries his body in the sand. Worse, the Hebrews themselves view his act as a threat and begin to spread the news of his deed.
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A Levite woman, later identified as Jochebed, the wife of Amram (6:20), avoids this fate for her son by placing him in a reed basket that she floats down the [[Nile]]. A daughter of the king of Egypt finds the infant, calling him [[Moses]] (related to "drawn out," from the Hebrew, but also related to the Egyptian word for "son"). After his own mother serves as wet nurse to the child, Moses is brought up as an [[Ancient Egypt|Egyptian]] prince. When he becomes a man, he takes sympathy for one of the [[Hebrew]] laborers who is being whipped by his overlord. Moses kills the Egyptian oppressor and buries his body in the sand. Worse, the Hebrews themselves view his act as a threat and begin to spread the news of his deed.
  
To escape from Pharaoh, who seeks his life, Moses flees the country. [[Moses' exile]] takes him to [[Midian]], where he becomes shepherd to the priest [[Jethro]] (here called Reuel) and marries his daughter, [[Zipporah]]. As he feeds the sheep on [[Mount Horeb]], God beckons Moses from a [[burning bush]]. In one of the Bible's most memorable scenes, God reveals his true name of [[Yahweh]], and orders Moses to return to Egypt to demand the release of the Israelites from Pharaoh. Moses at first demurs, saying the Israelites will not believe him, but and gives him the power to perform miraculous signs to show his authority. Moses still hesitates, and God's "anger burned against Moses." [[Aaron]], mentioned now for the first time and identified as Moses' older brother, is appointed to assist him. On his return to Egypt, apparently still angry, tries to kill Moses, but Zipporah [[circumcision|circumcises]] Moses' son, thus saving Moses' life.(2-4)
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To escape from Pharaoh, who seeks his life, Moses flees the country. [[Moses]]' exile takes him to [[Midian]], where he becomes shepherd to the priest [[Jethro]] (here called Reuel) and marries his daughter, [[Zipporah]]. As he feeds the sheep on Mount Horeb, God beckons Moses from a [[burning bush]]. In one of the Bible's most memorable scenes, God reveals his true name of [[Yahweh]], and orders Moses to return to Egypt to demand the release of the Israelites from Pharaoh. Moses at first demurs, saying the Israelites will not believe him, but God gives him the power to perform miraculous signs to show his authority. Moses still hesitates, and God's "anger burned against Moses." [[Aaron]], mentioned now for the first time and identified as Moses' older brother, is appointed to assist him. On his return to Egypt, apparently still angry, God tries to kill Moses, but Zipporah [[circumcision|circumcises]] Moses' son, thus saving Moses' life. (2-4)
  
 
===The plagues and the Passover===
 
===The plagues and the Passover===
God calls [[Aaron]] and sends him to meet Moses in the wilderness. Aaron gives God's message to the [[Israelites]] and performs mircales. The people believe.
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God calls [[Aaron]] and sends him to meet [[Moses]] in the wilderness. Aaron gives God's message to the [[Israelites]] and performs [[miracle]]s. The people believe.
[[Image:Moses-Pharaoh.jpg|thumb|350px|Aaron confounds Pharaoh's magicians.]]
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[[Image:Moses-Pharaoh.jpg|thumb|250px|Aaron confounds Pharaoh's magicians.]]
Moses meets with the Egyptian ruler and, in [[Yahweh]]'s name, demands permission to go a on a three-day piligrimage into the desert to hold a sacred feast. The king not onlyl refuses, but oppresses the people still further, accusing them of laziness and ordering them to gather their own straw to make bricks without diminishing the quota. Moses complains to God that his ministry is only resulting in increased suffering for the Israelites. God identifies himself again to Moses, this time explaining that Moses is the first of the Israelites to know his true name, which was unrevealed even to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. God promises that he will redeem Israel "with an outstretched arm and with mighty acts of judgment."
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Moses meets with the Egyptian ruler and, in [[Yahweh]]'s name, demands permission to go on a three-day [[pilgrimage]] into the [[desert]] to hold a sacred feast. The king not only refuses, but oppresses the people still further, accusing them of laziness and ordering them to gather their own straw to make bricks without diminishing the quota. Moses complains to God that his ministry is only resulting in increased suffering for the Israelites. God identifies himself again to Moses, this time explaining that Moses is the first of the Israelites to know his true name, which was unrevealed even to [[Abraham]], [[Isaac]], and [[Jacob]]. God promises that he will redeem Israel "with an outstretched arm and with mighty acts of judgment."
  
God then sends a series of miraculous but terrible plagues onto Egypt. First, Aaron throws down his staff, and it becomes a snake. The kings magicians, however, perform the same feat. Aaron's snake swallows the Egyptian serpents, but the king only hardens his heart against the Isralites. Next Aaron turns the Nile to blood, killing its fish. Again, the Egyptian magicians accomplish the same feat, and again Pharaoh refused to relent. Aaron then causes frogs to emerge from the Nile to plague the land. The Egyptian magicians do the same. This time Pharaoh asks Moses to pray to Yahweh to take the frogs away. God responds to Moses' entreaty, but the king again hardens his heart. Aaron now performs a miracle that the Eyptians cannot duplicate: a plague of gnats. The magicians testify, "this is the finger of God," but Pharaoh stubbornly refuses to listen.
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God then sends a series of miraculous but terrible [[plague]]s onto Egypt. First, Aaron throws down his staff, and it becomes a [[snake]]. The kings [[magician]]s, however, perform the same feat. But Aaron's snake swallows the Egyptian serpents, but this only hardens the heart of the king against the Israelites. Next Aaron turns the [[Nile]] to [[blood]], killing its [[fish]]. Again, the Egyptian magicians accomplish the same feat, and again Pharaoh refuses to relent. Aaron then causes [[frog]]s to emerge from the Nile to plague the land. The Egyptian magicians do the same. This time Pharaoh asks Moses to pray to [[Yahweh]] to take the frogs away. God responds to Moses' entreaty, but the king again hardens his heart. Aaron now performs a [[miracle]] that the Egyptians cannot duplicate: a plague of [[gnat]]s. The magicians testify, "this is the finger of God," but Pharaoh stubbornly refuses to listen.
  
The pattern of miracles now shifts away from Aaron. Moses threatens the king with a plague of flies, and God directly brings it about. The country is so devasted by this catastrophe, that Pharaoh finally agrees that the Israelites may make their pilgrimage if Moses will ask Yahweh to take away the flies. Moses accomplishes this task, but Pharaoh, of course, changes his mind and renegs on the deal. Next comes a plague that kills Egyptian livestock but spares the Israelite cattle. Then Moses brings about a plague of boils. Even the Egyptian magicians are affected by the disease, but the king stubborn refuses to give in. Next God tells Moses to threaten a mighty hailstorm. Some of the Egyptians respond to the warning and move their cattle to shelter. The reaminder are devestated by the storm, while the Israelite areas remain untouched. Pharaoah actually admits his sin this time and promises to let the people go, but once again changes his mind when after the hail stops.
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The pattern of miracles now shifts away from Aaron. Moses threatens the king with a plague of [[fly|flies]], and God directly brings it about. The country is so devastated by this catastrophe, that Pharaoh finally agrees that the Israelites may make their pilgrimage if Moses will ask Yahweh to take away the flies. Moses does so, but Pharaoh, of course, changes his mind once again. Next comes a plague that kills Egyptian [[livestock]] but spares the Israelite cattle. Then Moses brings about a plague of [[boils]]. Even the Egyptian magicians are sorely afflicted by the disease, but the king stubbornly refuses to give in. Next God tells Moses to threaten a mighty [[hail]]storm. Some of the Egyptians respond to the warning and move their cattle to shelter. The remainder are devastated by the storm, while the Israelite areas remain untouched. Pharaoh actually admits his sin this time and promises to let the people go, but once again changes his mind after the hail stops.
  
The Egyptian courtiers begin to lobby to let the Israelites have their festival, and the king begins to negotiate with Moses. Suspecting a trick, he agrees to let the men make their pilgrimage to offer sacrifice but not the Israelite women and children. [[Image:Passover-angel.jpg|thumb|450px|left|[[Yahweh]], pictured as an avenging [[angel]], "passes over" an Israelite home.]] God and Moses respond with a plague of locusts that devour the crops not destroyed by the hail. Once again Pharaoh begs for forgiveness, Moses removes the plague and Pharaoah hardness his heart. God then plauges Egypt with three days of darkness. His will now almost broken, Pharaoh agrees that the women and children can join the pilgrimage, but not the cattle. Moses refuses to negotiate, and God hardens the king's heart one last time.
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[[Image:Passover-angel.jpg|thumb|250px|left|[[Yahweh]], as an avenging [[angel]], spares an Israelite home.]] The Egyptian [[courtier]]s lobby to let the Israelites have their festival, and the king begins to negotiate with Moses. Suspecting a trick, Pharaoh agrees to let the men make their pilgrimage but not the Israelite women and children. God and Moses respond with a plague of [[locusts]] that devour the crops not already destroyed by the hail. Once again Pharaoh begs for forgiveness, Moses removes the plague and Pharaoh hardens his heart. God then plagues Egypt with three days of darkness. His will now almost broken, Pharaoh agrees that the women and children can join the pilgrimage, but not the cattle. Moses refuses to negotiate, and God hardens the king's heart one last time.
  
Finally, God send a truly horrendous plague, killing all the Egyptian firstborn. On his way, Yahweh passes over the houses of the Israelites, recognizing them by lamb's blood that Moses has ordered painted on each Hebrew home's door post. The narrator explains that story provides the background for the holiday of [[Passover]]. The king finally truly relents and allows the Israelites to make their three-day pilgrimage. The Egyptians send them on their way with gifts of gold and jewelry. (4-12)
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Finally, God sends a truly horrendous plague, killing all the Egyptian firstborn. On his way to carry out the task, Yahweh passes over the houses of the Israelites, recognizing them by lamb's blood that Moses has ordered painted on each Hebrew home's door post. The narrator explains that this event provides the background for the holiday of [[Passover]], which the Israelites are to commemorate each year. (12:42) The king finally truly relents and allows the Israelites to leave for their supposed three-day pilgrimage. The Egyptians send them on their way with gifts of gold and jewelry. (4-12)
 
 
===The journey to Mount Sinai (13-18)===
 
 
 
[[The Exodus]] thus begins, and Moses tells the Israelites leave that the plan is not just to offer sacrifices and return, but to go all the Canaan, a "land flowing with milk and honey." Paraoh, confirming his suspicion that the Israelite have fled, gathers a large army to persue them. The Israelites, led by a majestic pillar of fire by night and a pillar of cloud by day, have not reached the "Reed Sea" (''Yam Suph'' — often mistranslated as the [[Red Sea]]). [[Image:Miriams-Song.jpg|thumb|250px|Miriam leads the Israelites in song.]] In one of the Bible's most dramatic moments, Moses causes the waters of the sea to part, and the Israelites cross over on dry land. The waters collapse once the Israelites have passed, defeating Pharaoh and drowning his armies. Miriam leads the Israelites joyfully sing the what scholars consider to be one of the oldest verse in the Bible:
 
  
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===The journey to Mount Sinai===
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[[The Exodus]] thus begins, and Moses informs the Israelites that the plan is to go all the way to [[Canaan]], a "land flowing with milk and honey." Pharaoh, confirming his suspicion that the Israelites have fled, gathers a large army to pursue them. The Israelites, led by a majestic pillar of fire by night and a pillar of cloud by day, have now reached the "Reed Sea" (''Yam Suph''—often mistranslated as the [[Red Sea]]). [[Image:Miriams-Song.jpg|thumb|200px|Miriam leads the Israelites in song.]] In one of the Bible's most dramatic moments, Moses causes the waters of the sea to part, and the Israelites cross over on dry land. The waters collapse once the Israelites have passed, defeating Pharaoh and drowning his army. The prophetess [[Miriam]], Moses' sister, leads the Israelites as they joyfully dance and sing what scholars consider to be one of the oldest verses in the Bible:
 
:Sing to the Lord,  
 
:Sing to the Lord,  
 
:for he is highly exalted.  
 
:for he is highly exalted.  
 
:The horse and its rider  
 
:The horse and its rider  
 
:he has hurled into the sea. (15:21)
 
:he has hurled into the sea. (15:21)
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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 large quantity of low-flying [[quail]], and subsequently provides a daily ration of [[Manna|manna]]. Once at [[Rephidim]], thirst torments the people, and water is miraculously provided from a rock. However, a troubling pattern has emerged, as the Israelites display a lack of trust in Moses and seek to "put God to the test." (17:2)
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Soon a tribe known as the [[Amalekites]] attack. The newly emergent military hero [[Joshua]] manages to vanquish them, and God orders an eternal war against Amalek until they are utterly obliterated. (Indeed, the Amalekites are a tribe unknown to history outside of the Bible.)
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In [[Midian]], [[Zipporah]]'s father [[Jethro]] hears of Moses' approach and visits him. Although not an Israelite, but a Midanite priest, he "offers sacrifices to God" and eats a sacred meal with "elders of Israel in God's presence." (18:12) Jethro also advises Moses to appoint [[judges]] to assist in the administration of tribal affairs, and "Moses listened to his father-in-law and did everything that he said to do. (18:24)
  
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 large quantify of low-flying [[quail]], and subsequently provides a daily ration of [[Manna|manna]]. Once at [[Rephidim]], thirst torments the people, and water is miraculously provided from a rock. However, a troubling pattern has emerged, as the Israelites display a lack of trust in Moses and seek to "put God to the test." (17:2)
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===The Covenant and its Laws===
 
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In the third month, the Israelites arrive at [[Mount Sinai]], and God declares, via Moses, that the Israelites are ''God's people,'' as He has liberated them by His power. The Israelites agree to a [[covenant]] of obedience with Yahweh, and so, with [[thunder]] and [[lightning]], clouds of smoke, and the noise of a mighty [[trumpet]], God appears to them in a cloud at the top of the mountain. (19)
Soon a tribe know as the [[Amalekites]] attack. The newly emergent military hero [[Joshua]] manages to vanquish them, and God orders an eternal war against Amalek until they are utterly obliterated. (Indeed, the Amalekites are a tribe unknown to history outside of the Bible.)
 
 
 
In [[Midian]], [[Zipporah]]'s father [[Jethro]] hears of Moses' approach and visits him. Although not an Israelite, he "offers sacrifices to God" and eats a sacred meal with "elders of Israel in God's presence." (18:12) Jethro also advises Moses to appoint [[judges]] to assist in the administration tribal affairs, and "Moses listend to his father-law and did everythng that he said to do. (18:24)
 
  
===The Covenant and its Laws (19-24)===
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God then declares a version of the [[Ten Commandments]], sometimes referred to as the [[Moral Decalogue]] (20). A series of laws governing the rights and limits of [[slavery]] follow this. [[Capital punishment]] is enacted for murder, kidnapping, and attacking or cursing one's parents. Other personal injury and property laws are also enacted. (21-22) The death sentence is also imposed on women convicted of [[sorcery]]. Bestiality likewise is punishable by death, as is the offering of sacrifices to gods other than Yahweh.
[[Image:Moses and the elders see God.jpg|thumb|left|200px|God appears to Moses and the Israelites.]]
 
In the third month the Israelites arrive at [[Mount Sinai]], and God declares, via Moses, that the Israelites are ''God's people'', because he has liberated them by his [[omnipotence]]. The Israelites agree to a covenant of obiedience with Yahweh, and so, with [[thunder]] and [[lightning]], clouds of smoke, and the noise of a mighty [[trumpet]], God appears to them in a cloud at the top of Mount Sinai (19).
 
  
God then declared a verions of the Ten Commandments, sometime referred to as the [[Moral Decalogue]](20). A serious of laws governing the rights and limits of slavery follow this. Capital punishment is declared to be the punishment for murder, kidnapping, attacking or cursing one's parents. Other personal injury  and property laws are also enacted. (21-22)
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Aliens and orphans, however, are to be protected. Usury, blasphemy, and the cursing of one's ruler are prohibited. God requires that first-born sons and cattle be offered to Him on the eighth day after their birth. Cattle that die after being attacked by wild beasts must not be eaten. False witness and bribery are prohibited. Every seventh year, a field must be left uncultivated by their owner so that the poor may gain food from it. The [[sabbath]] must be observed every seventh day, and both slaves and livestock must be allowed to rest then as well. Various [[festival]] and [[ritual]] laws are enacted, including the prohibition against cooking a young goat in its mother's milk, the root of the later [[Jewish]] tradition of ''[[Kashrut]],'' which involves never mixing milk and meat dishes.
  
The death sentence is required for women convicted of sorcery. Bestiality likewise is punishable by death, as is the offering of sacrifes to gods other than Yahweh. Aliens and orphans, however, are to be protected. Usury, blamphemy, and the cursing of one's ruler are prohibted. God requires that first-born sons and cattle be offered to him on the eighth day after their birth. Cattle that die from being attacked by wild beasts must not be eaten. False witness and bribery are prohibited. Every seventh year, a field must be left uncultivated by their owner so that the poor may gain food from it. The [[sabbath]] must be observed every seventh day, and both slaves and livestock must be allowed to rest then as well. Various festival and ritual laws are enacted, including the prohibition against cooking a young goat in its mother's milk, the root of the Jewish tradition of never mixing milk and meat dishes.
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Finally, God promises the Israelites if they obey, he will fight for them against the [[Canaan]]ites, establishing their borders "from the ''Yam Suph'' to the Sea of the [[Philistines]] (the [[Mediterranean]]), and from the desert to the ([[Euphrates]]) River." Covenants and coexistence with the Canaanites are prohibited. (23)
[[Image:Moses-covenant-confirmed.jpg|thumb|350px|Moses prepares to seal the covenant bewteen Yahweh and Israel.]]
 
Finally, God promises Israelites if they obey, he will fight for them against the [[Canaan]]ites, establishing their borders "from the ''Yam Suph'' to the Sea of the [[Philistines]] (the [[Mediterranean]]), and from the desert to the ([[Euphrates]]) River." Covenants and coexistence with the Canaanites are prohibited. (23)
 
  
Moses then erects twelve stone pillars at the base of the [[sacred mountain]], representing each of the [[Tribes of Israel]]. He seals the Israelites' covenant by sprinkling the congegation with the blood of a bull calf he has sacrficed to God. He them reads to them what he is written thus far in the "Book of the Covenant," and the people swear to obey its commandments.
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Moses then erects 12 stone [[pillar]]s at the base of the [[sacred mountain]], representing each of the [[Tribes of Israel]]. He seals the Israelites' covenant with Yahweh by sprinkling the congregation with the blood of a bull calf he has [[animal sacrifice|sacrificed]]. He then reads to them what he has written thus far in the "Book of the Covenant," and the people swear to obey its commandments.
  
Setting out with Joshua, Moses then ascended the mountain again, leaving Aaron and Hut in charge of the those remaining behind. He would be on the mountain for 40 days.(24)
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Setting out with [[Joshua]], Moses then ascends the mountain again, leaving Aaron and Hur in charge of those remaining behind. He would be on the mountain for 40 days. (24)
  
 
===The Tabernacle, vestments, and ritual objects (25-31)===
 
===The Tabernacle, vestments, and ritual objects (25-31)===
While Moses is on the mountain, [[Yahweh]] gives him detailed instructions regardomg the construction of a the [[tabernacle]], a potrable sanctuary in which God can dwell permanently among the Israelites. Elements include:
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While Moses is on the mountain, [[Yahweh]] gives him detailed instructions regarding the construction of the [[tabernacle]], a portable sanctuary in which God can dwell permanently among the Israelites. Elements include:
 
*The [[Ark of the Covenant]], to contain the tablets of the [[Ten Commandments]]
 
*The [[Ark of the Covenant]], to contain the tablets of the [[Ten Commandments]]
*A ''[[mercy seat]]'', with two golden [[cherubim]] on either side, serving as a throne for Yahweh.
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*A ''[[mercy seat]],'' with two golden [[cherubim]] on either side, serving as a throne for Yahweh.
 
*A [[menorah]], never to be extinguished.
 
*A [[menorah]], never to be extinguished.
*A tent-like structure to contain these things.
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*A portable structure to contain these things.
 
*An outer court, involving [[column|pillars]] on bronze [[pedestal]]s.
 
*An outer court, involving [[column|pillars]] on bronze [[pedestal]]s.
 
 
Instructions are also given for the garments of the priests:
 
Instructions are also given for the garments of the priests:
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*An [[ephod]] of gold, attached to two ornate shoulder-pieces. It is to contain two [[onyx]] stones, each engraved with the names of six of the tribes of Israel.
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*A breastplate containing ''[[Urim and Thummim]]'' for [[divination]].
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*Golden chains for holding the breastplate set with 12 specific [[gem|precious stones]], in four rows.
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*A blue cloth robe with [[pomegranate]]-shaped tassels and bells around its seams.
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*A coat, girdle, tunic, sash, headband, and linen undergarments.
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*A [[mitre]] with a golden plate with the inscription ''Holy to the Lord.''
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Following these instructions God specifies the ritual to be used to ordain the [[priest]]s, including [[robing]], [[anointing]], and seven days of [[sacrifice]]s. Instructions are also provided for morning and evening offerings of a lamb (29). Additional tabernacle instructions follow, involving the making of a golden altar of [[incense]], [[laver (basin)|laver]], [[chrysm|anointing oil]], and [[perfume]]. A half-shekel offering is required by God of rich and poor alike as a "ransom" for their lives. (30) [[Bezaleel]] and [[Aholiab]] are identified as the craftsmen to construct these things. The sabbath is again emphasized, with the death penalty specified as the [[punishment]] for anyone convicted of working on this sacred day of rest. (31) Finally:
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:When the Lord finished speaking to Moses on [[Mount Sinai]], he gave him the two tablets of the Testimony, the tablets of stone inscribed by the finger of God. (31:18)
  
*A [[ephod] of gold, attached to two ornate shoulder-pieces. It is to contain two [[onyx]] stones, each engraved with the names of six of the tribes of Israel.
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===The golden calf===
*A breastplate containing ''[[Urim'' and ''Thummim]]'' for divination.
 
*Golden chains for holding the breastplate set with twelve specific precious stones, in four rows.
 
*A blue cloth robe with [[pomegranate]]-shaped tassels and bells around the seam.
 
*A coat and girdle, tunic, sash, headband, and linen undergarments.
 
*A [[mitre]] with a golden plate with the inscription ''Holy to the Lord''.
 
 
 
Following these instructions God specifies that ritual to be used to ordain the priests, including [[robing]], [[anointing]], and seven days of [[sacrifice]]s. Instructions are also provided for morning and evening offerings of a lamb (29). Additional tabernacle instruction follow, involving the making of a golden altar of [[incense]], [[laver (basin)|laver]], [[chrysm|anointing oil]], and [[perfume]] (30). [[Bezaleel]] and [[Aholiab]] are identified by God as the craftsmen to construct these things(31).
 
 
 
===The golden calf (32-34)===
 
  
[[Image:Golden-calf2.jpg|thumb|left|400px|The Israelites celebrate after offering sacrifices to the golden bull-calf.]]  
+
While [[Moses]] is up the mountain, however, the people become impatient and urge Aaron to fashion an [[icon]] for their worship. He collects their golden jewelry and fashions a bull-calf, proclaiming "Here is God,''([[el]]ohim)'' who brought you out of Egypt." (''Elohim'', is normally translated as God, but here is usually translated as "gods.") The Israelites offer sacrifice, followed by a feast and joyous celebration.
While Moses is up the mountain, however, the people become impatient and urge Aaron fashion an icon for their worship. He collects their golden jewelry and fashions a bull-calf, proclaimingh "Here is God, who brought you out of Egypt." (The word used is ''elohim'', normally translated as God, but here often translated as "gods.") The Israelites offer sacrifice, followed by a feast and joyous celebration.
 
  
Yahweh, however, is offended and informs Moses that the people have become [[idolatry|idolatrous]]. He intends to destroy the Israelites, but promises He will of Moses a "great nation." Moses appeals to God's reputation among the Egyptians and his promise to the Hebrew partriarchs, and God relents. However, when Moses comes down from the mountain and sees the revelry, he become enraged and smashes the two sacred tablets of the Law, which had been inscribed with "the writing of God." Grinding the golden bull-calf to dust, mixing this with water, and making the people drink of it, and strongly reprimanded Aaron. He then rallied his fellow Levites to his said and instituted a slaughter of the rebels, with a reported 3,000 of them killed. Moses then implores God to forgive the people but wins for them only a temporary reprieve. God stikes the congregation with a plague, and promises even heavier punishment in the future.(32). The strained relationship between God and his people is apparent. With the tabernacle as yet unconstructed, Moses builds a tent in which he meets God "face to face, as a man speaks with his friend." Joshua would stay on vigil in the tent when Moses returned to the camp.
+
[[Yahweh]], however, is offended and informs Moses that the people have become [[idolatry|idolatrous]]. He intends to destroy the Israelites, but promises He will make of Moses a "great nation." Moses appeals to God's reputation among the Egyptians and His promise to the Hebrew patriarchs, and God relents. However, when Moses comes down from the mountain and sees the revelry, he becomes enraged and smashes the two sacred tablets of the Law, which had been inscribed with "the writing of God." Grinding the golden bull-calf to dust, mixing this with water, and making the people drink of it, Moses strongly reprimands Aaron. He then rallies his fellow [[Levite]]s to his side and institutes a slaughter of the rebels, with a reported 3,000 of them killed. Moses then implores God to forgive the remaining people but wins for them only a temporary reprieve. God strikes the congregation with a plague, and promises even heavier punishment in the future.(32)
  
Moses consequently is commanded to make two new tablets and ascend the mountain once again. God appears to Moses again, saying:
+
The strained relationship between God and his people is apparent. With the [[tabernacle]] as yet unconstructed, Moses builds a tent in which he meets God "face to face, as a man speaks with his friend." [[Joshua]] stays on vigil in the tent when Moses returns to the camp.
  
 +
Moses consequently is commanded to make two new tablets and ascend the mountain once again. God appears to Moses in dramatic fashion there, saying:
 
:Yahweh! Yahweh! The compassionate and gracious God, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, maintaining love to thousands, and forgiving wickedness, rebellion and sin. Yet he does not leave the guilty unpunished; he punishes the children and their children for the sin of the fathers to the third and fourth generation. (34:6-7)
 
:Yahweh! Yahweh! The compassionate and gracious God, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, maintaining love to thousands, and forgiving wickedness, rebellion and sin. Yet he does not leave the guilty unpunished; he punishes the children and their children for the sin of the fathers to the third and fourth generation. (34:6-7)
  
Moses intecedes again on behalf of the people and God renews his covenant with them, once again giving the ''Ten Commandments''. This version is sometimes called the [[Ritual Decalogue]] because it adds a number of specifications regarding the celebration of [[Passover]], other holidays, and sacrificial offerings. Moses then returns to the people, his blindingly radiant, and conveys the words of the coventant to them once again. (34)
+
Moses intercedes again on behalf of the people and God renews his [[covenant]] with them, once again giving the ''Ten Commandments.'' This version is sometimes called the [[Ritual Decalogue]] because it adds a number of specifications regarding the celebration of [[Passover]], other holidays, and sacrificial offerings. Moses then returns to the people, his face blindingly radiant, and conveys the words of the covenant to them once again. (34)
  
===The Construction of the tabernacle (35-40)===
+
===Construction of the tabernacle===
Moses collects the [[congregation (worship)|congregation]], enjoins upon them the keeping of the sabbath, and requests gifts for the sanctuary. The entire people respond willingly.
+
Moses collects the [[congregation (worship)|congregation]], impresses upon them the crucial importance of keeping the [[sabbath]], and requests gifts for the [[tabernacle]] sanctuary. The entire people respond willingly.
[[Image:Tabernacle-constructed.jpg|thumb|400px|Aaron (now in priestly garments) consults with Moses, while construction of the tabernacle nears completion.]]
 
  
Under the direction of the master craftsmen Bezaleel and Aholiab, they complete all the instructions for making the tabernacle and its contents, including the sacred [[Ark of the Covenant]]. As in the earlier description of the tabernacle and its contents, no detail is spared. Indeed chapters 35-40 appear to be largely copied from the earlier section with many details repeated verbatim.
+
Under the direction of the master craftsmen Bezaleel and Aholiab, they complete all the instructions for making the tabernacle and its contents, including the sacred [[Ark of the Covenant]]. As in the earlier description of the tabernacle and its contents, no detail is spared. Indeed, chapters 35-40 appear to be largely rehearsed from the earlier section. The tabernacle, far from being a mere tent which housed the Ark, is described as a richly ornate structure with secure but portable foundations of pure [[silver]], collected from the required half-shekel offerings of 603,000 men, making the total number of people probably more than two million.(38)
  
Preistly themes come to the fore, and the sin of Aaron seems to be completely forgotten as he and his sons are clothes in the rich sacred garments painstakeningly prepared to confer honor and holiness upon them. The Book of Exodus thus ends on a high note, with the people finally having united faithfully to accomplish God's will centering on Moses, Aaron, and the tabernacle. God leads them directly, and all seems, for the moment, to be right with the world:
+
The sin of Aaron seems to be completely forgotten as he and his sons are solemnly consecrated as priests, clothed in the rich sacred garments painstakingly prepared to confer honor and holiness upon them. Then, "the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle."
  
:In all the travels of the Israelites, whenever the cloud lifted from above the tabernacle, they would set out; but if the cloud did not lift, they did not set out —- until the day it lifted. So the cloud of the Lord was over the tabernacle by day, and fire was in the cloud by night, in the sight of all the house of Israel during all their travels. (40:36-38)
+
The Book of Exodus thus ends on a high note, with the people finally having united faithfully to accomplish God's will, and Yahweh descended to earth to dwell among His people in the tabernacle. God leads them directly, and all seems, for the moment, to be right with the world:
 +
<blockquote>In all the travels of the Israelites, whenever the cloud lifted from above the tabernacle, they would set out; but if the cloud did not lift, they did not set out—- until the day it lifted. So the cloud of the Lord was over the tabernacle by day, and fire was in the cloud by night, in the sight of all the house of Israel during all their travels. (40:36-38)</blockquote>
  
 
== Authorship ==
 
== Authorship ==
 +
As with the other books of the [[Torah]], both Orthodox [[Judaism]] and [[Christianity]] hold that the text of Exodus was dictated to Moses by God Himself. Modern biblical scholarship, however, regards the text as being compiled either during the [[Kingdom of Judah]] (seventh c. B.C.E.) or during [[Babylonian captivity|post-exilic]] times (sixth or fifth century B.C.E.). However, it is generally agreed that much of the material in Exodus is older than this, some of it probably reflecting authentic, if exaggerated, memories.
 +
[[Image:Modern documentary hypothesis.png|thumb|400px|Chart of the [[documentary hypothesis]]. "E" stands for the Elohist; "J" for the Yahwist, and "P" for the Priestly sources prevalant in the Book of Exodus.]]
 +
The [[documentary hypothesis]] postulates that there were several, post-Moses, authors of the written sources in Exodus, whose stories have been intertwined by a later editor/compiler. The three main authors of the work are said, in this hypothesis, to be the [[Yahwist]] (J), [[Elohist]] (E), and [[Priestly source]] (P). In addition, the poetic [[Song of the Sea]] and the prose [[Covenant Code]] are thought to have been originally independent works that one of the above writers included in his saga.
  
As with for the other books of the [[Torah]], both Orthodox Judaism and Christianity hold that the text of Exodus was dictated to Moses by God Himself. Modern biblical scholarship, however, regards the text as being compiled either the [[Kingdom of Judah]] (7th c. B.C.E.) or [[Babylonian captivity|post-exilic]] times (6th or 5th c. BCE). This does not preclude the possibility, scholars admit, that some of the material in Exodus is quite old.
+
Evidence for multiple authors can be seen in such facts as [[Zipporah]]'s father being called "Ruel" in come chapters and "Jethro" in others, as well as the sacred mountain of God being called "Horeb" by one putative source and "Sinai" by another. Moreover, God's calling of Moses appears to happen several times in the story, as we have it. Several repetitions and false starts appear. A [[genealogy]], clearly written long after Moses' death, suddenly appears in chapter 6, breaking up the flow of the story. There are even two different versions of the [[Ten Commandments]], with a third version appearing in Deuteronomy, all supposedly written by God through Moses.
  
The [[documentary hypothesis]] postulates that there were several, post-Moses, authors, whose stories have been intertwined by [[Torah redactor|a later redactor]]. The three main authors of the work are said, in this hypothesis, to be the [[Yahwist]], [[Elohist]], and [[Priestly source]]. In addition, the poetic [[Song of the Sea]] and the prose [[Covenant Code]] are thought to have been originally independent works one of the above writers included.
+
Regarding the latter, the Priestly source is credited with the ''Ethical Decalogue,'' and the Yahwist with the ''Ritual Decalogue,'' and the [[Deuteronomist]], fittingly receives credit for the version in his particular book.
  
A particularly interesting episodes is the revelation of God's name, Yahweh, to Moses for the first time in Edodus --------. This story, thought to be from "P," contradicts the earlier Yahwist affirmation that the patriarchs called about "the name of Yahweh." Some scholars speculate that the two versions of the 10 commandments included in Exodus....
+
Many parts of Exodus are believed to have been constructed by intertwining the Yahwist, Elohist, and Priestly versions of the various stories. Deconstructions of the stories into these sources identify heavy variations between stories. For example, the "P"" never provides a warning to Pharaoh about the plagues and always involves Aaron—the archetype of priesthood. The Elohist (E) always provides a warning to Pharaoh and hardly ever portrays [[Aaron]] in a positive light. The Yahwist (J) portrays God as a mercurial deity prone to fits of anger, needing the wise counsel of Moses to see the correct course. The Elohist is the likely author of the story of God meeting face to face with Moses in the tent of meeting (33). In the same chapter, the Yahwist quotes the Lord as declaring to Moses: "you cannot see my face, for no one may see me and live." (33:19)
  
The Elohist is identified as uniquely responsible for the episode of the [[golden calf]], and the priestly source as uniquely responsible for the instructions about creating the tabernacle, vestments, and ritual objects. The Elohist with the Covenant Code, the Priestly source with the Ethical Decalogue, and the Yahwist with the Ritual Decalogue.
+
The Elohist, being the least friendly toward Aaron, is identified as responsible for the episode of the [[golden calf]]. A question also exists as to whether this episode was truly historical or represents a propandistic attack on a later era's "idolatrous" shine featuring a bull calf at [[Bethel]]. It is seen as more than mere coincidence that King [[Jeroboam I]], at Bethel, is represented as declaring the exact blasphemous words that Aaron utters: "here is ''[[el]]ohim''." Scholars also marvel at the apparent double standard of God in forbidding graven images in one chapter (20:4), while commanding the creation of two solid gold [[cherubim]] statues in another (25:18), not to mention ordering the creation of a [[bronze]] [[serpent]] in the [[Book of Numbers]] (28:8-9).  
  
The other parts of the book are believed to have been constructed by intertwining the Yahwist, Elohist, and Priestly, versions of each of the stories. Deconstructions of the stories into these sources identify heavy variations between stories. For example, the Priestly Source never provides a warning to Pharaoh about the plagues and always involves Aaron — the archetype of priesthood. The Elohist always provides a warning to Pharoah and hardly ever portarys Aaron in a positive light.
+
The Yahwist, in contrast to the Elohist's criticism of Aaron, portrays God as so angry with Moses as to attempt to murder him. The heroine in this episode being [[Zipporah]]—together with the Yahwist's many other strong female characters—has led some to speculate that the author of "J" may have herself been a woman, probably living in the ninth century B.C.E. (Bloom 2005).
 +
 +
A particularly interesting episode is the revelation of God's name, Yahweh, to Moses for the first time in Exodus 6:3. This story, thought to be from "P" and designed to explain why God has also been called "El Shaddai" or "Elohim" in previous writings, contradicts several earlier Yahwist affirmations in the [[Book of Genesis]] (4:6, 12:8, etc.) that the patriarchs called on "the name of Yahweh."
  
==Historicity==
+
The Priestly source, of course, is seen as responsible for the instructions about creating the tabernacle, vestments, and ritual objects. The final chapters of Exodus, in which Aaron is uplifted and God descends to dwell in the tabernacle, thus reflect the viewpoint of the Temple scribes who ultimately committed the story to writing.
{{main|the Exodus}}
 
  
The time-span in this book, from the death of [[Joseph (Hebrew Bible)|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).
+
The historicity of the events in the Book of Exodus are discussed in the article on [[The Exodus]].
  
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
+
==See also==
*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 dynasties are usually suggested:
 
*[[Ramses II]] or [[Merneptah]] of the 19th Dynasty, around 1290 B.C.E., favoured by the large majority of both religious and secular scholars, although this contradicts several key aspects of the biblical account, and neglects several recent archaeological discoveries in Tel el-Dab'a and Jericho.  See [[Ramesses II#Pharaoh of Exodus.3F]].
 
*[[Thutmose III]] or [[Amenhotep II]] of the 18th Dynasty, around 1444 B.C.E., favoured by a large minority of mostly religious scholars, since it precedes the destruction of Jericho, although some doubt surrounds the archaeological evidence supporting the Exodus and Canaanite conquest dating. However it should be noted that Egypt still dominated the Canaan at that period in history [http://www.ancient-egypt-online.com/ancient-egypt-map.html], making such a date less plausible.  The carbon-dating tests at Jericho are also disputed in age.
 
* [[Akhenaton]] of the 18th Dynasty, around 1340 B.C.E.  The link to Akhenaton is that, like [[Moses]], this pharaoh was struggling to convert the people to monotheism. The brother of Akhenaton was named Tuth-Moses, and while it is often assumed that this Tuth-Moses died young Professor [[Cyril Aldred]] shows that he was the commander of the king's chariot forces. <ref>Cyril Aldred, ''Akhenaton, King of Egypt''  p.259.</ref> The Jewish historian [[Josephus Flavius]] similarly records that [[Moses]] was an Egyptian prince and army commander (Antiquities 2:232, 2:241). <ref>Ralph Ellis,  ''Jesus, Last of the Pharaohs''  p.131.</ref>
 
*Many others have been suggested, such as [[Dudimose]], the Hyksos expulsion, and others.  See [[Dudimose]] and [[The Exodus Decoded]].
 
  
==See also==
 
{{portal|Bible}}
 
 
* [[The Exodus]]
 
* [[The Exodus]]
 
* [[Moses]]
 
* [[Moses]]
 
* [[Tabernacle]]
 
* [[Tabernacle]]
* [[parsha|Torah portions]] in Exodus: [[Shemot (parsha)|Shemot]], [[Va'eira]], [[Bo (parsha)|Bo]], [[Beshalach]], [[Yitro (parsha)|Yitro]], [[Mishpatim]], [[Terumah (parsha)|Terumah]], [[Tetzaveh]], [[Ki Tisa]], [[Vayakhel]], and [[Pekudei]]
+
* [[Aaron]]
* [[List of films based on the Bible#Moses and the 40 years in the Desert|Film adaptations of the Book of Exodus]]
+
* [[Documentary hypothesis]]
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
* Colin J. Humphreys, ''The Miracles of Exodus: A Scientist’s Discovery of the Extraordinary Natural Causes of the Biblical Stories'' 2003, HarperSanFrancisco
+
* Albright, W.F. 2006. ''Archaeology and the Religion of Israel.'' Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0664227425.
* W. F. Albright ''From the Stone Age to Christianity'' (2nd edition) Doubleday/Anchor
+
* Bloom, Harold. 2005. ''The Book of J.'' New York: Grove Press. ISBN 0802141919
* W. F. Albright ''Archaeology and the Religion of Israel'' (5th edition) 1969, Doubleday/Anchor
+
* Dever, William. 2006. ''Who Were the Early Israelites and Where Did They Come From?'' Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans. ISBN 9780802844163
* ''Encyclopedia Judaica'', Keter Publishing, entry on "Population", volume 13, column 866.
+
* Finkelstein, Israel. 2002.  ''The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts.'' New York: Free Press. ISBN 0684869136
* Y. Shiloh, "The Population of Iron Age [[Palestine (region)|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
+
* Humphreys Colin J. 2006. ''The Miracles of Exodus: A Scientist’s Discovery of the Extraordinary Natural Causes of the Biblical Stories.'' London: Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0826480262
* ''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".
+
* Sabbah, Messod, et al. 2004. ''Secrets of the Exodus: The Egyptian Origins of the Hebrew People.'' New York, NY: Allworth Press. ISBN 978-1581153194.
* "[http://www.infidels.org/library/magazines/tsr/1995/1/1num95.html Those Amazing Biblical Numbers: Taking Stock of the Armies of Ancient Israel]" William Sierichs, Jr.
+
* Sarna, Nahum. 1996. ''Exploring Exodus: The Origins of Biblical Israel.'' Shocken Books/Random House. ISBN 978-0805210637.
* "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
 
* ''Secrets of the Exodus: The Egyptian Origins of the Hebrew People", by Messod Sabbah, Roger Sabbath, Helios Press, 2004
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
===Online versions and translations of Exodus===
+
All links retrieved November 17, 2023.
==== Arabic translations ====
 
*[http://st-takla.org/pub_oldtest/01_gen.html Exodus in Arabic language]) from http://St-Takla.org
 
 
 
====Jewish translations====
 
*[http://www.mechon-mamre.org/e/et/et0201.htm Exodus at Mechon-Mamre] (Jewish Publication Society translation)
 
*[http://bible.ort.org/books/pentd2.asp?ACTION=displaypage&BOOK=2&CHAPTER=1 Exodus (The Living Torah)] Rabbi [[Aryeh Kaplan]]'s translation and commentary at Ort.org
 
*[http://www.chabad.org/article.asp?aid=8161 Shemot - Exodus (Judaica Press)] translation with [[Rashi]]'s commentary at Chabad.org
 
*[http://www.mechon-mamre.org/p/pt/pt0201.htm ''Shmot''] (Original [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] - English at Mechon-Mamre.org)
 
 
 
====Christian translations====
 
*[http://www.drbo.org/book/02.htm Exodus] Douay-Rheims Bible
 
*[http://www.usccb.org/nab/bible/#exodus Exodus] New American Bible
 
*[http://www.gospelhall.org/bible/bible.php?passage=Exodus+1 ''Online Bible'' at GospelHall.org]
 
*[http://www.anova.org/sev/htm/hb/02_exodus.htm ''Exodus'' at The Great Books] (New Revised Standard Version)
 
*[http://exodus-king-james-bible.publicliterature.org/ Exodus] King James Version (English)
 
*[http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Bible%2C_King_James%2C_Exodus ''Exodus'' at Wikisource] (Authorized King James Version)
 
  
===Translations identifying sources===
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* [http://www.chabad.org/article.asp?aid=8161 Shemot - "Judaica Press Complete Tanach Shemot - Exodus"], ''Chabad.org Library''.
*[http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=551&letter=E&search=Exodus ''Book of Exodus'' article] (Jewish Encyclopedia)
 
  
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{{Books of the Bible}}
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[[Category:Bible]]
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[[category:philosophy and religion]]
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[[category:religion]]
  
 
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Latest revision as of 07:28, 17 November 2023

Books of the

Hebrew Bible

Exodus (meaning: "mass migration or exiting of a people from an area") is the second book of the Old Testament or Hebrew Bible. The major events of the book concern the calling of the prophet Moses as well as the departure of the Israelites from Egypt.

The Book of Exodus presents some of the Bible's most dramatic moments, from the rescue of the infant Moses from the Nile, to the scene of Moses meeting God in the burning bush, Moses and Aaron confronting Pharaoh, the miracles of the plagues visited by God upon Egypt, the Passover, the escape from Egypt, the parting of the sea, the episode of the golden calf, and finally the successful construction of the tabernacle with its Ark of the Covenant. Scholars debate the historicity of Exodus, seeing multiple sources and several authors with varying theological outlooks.

Summary

Introduction

Moses meets Yahweh in the burning bush.

While Exodus is the name assigned to the book in Christian tradition, Jews also refer to it by its first words Ve-eleh shemot (ואלה שמות) (i.e., "And these are the names") or simply "Shemot" (Names). The Greek Septuagint version of the Hebrew Bible designated this second book of the Pentateuch as "Exodus" (Ἔξοδος), meaning "departure" or "out-going." The Latin translation adopted this name, which passed into other languages.

The story of the Exodus is both inspiring and fearsome. It is also interspersed with editorial interpretations, genealogies, and long lists of priestly regulations, moral codes, and instructions for building the portable religious sanctuary, or tabernacle, which the Israelites carried through the wilderness. The story of the Exodus does not end with the Book of Exodus, but continues and overlaps with other biblical books including Numbers, Leviticus, and Deuteronomy.

Background

The later chapters of Genesis describe a famine in Canaan and the migration of the sons of Jacob and their clans to Egypt, where they settle under the protection of their brother Joseph, who had become the prime minister of that land. There, the Israelites multiply and become strong, "so that the land was filled with them."

The Book of Exodus opens as a new Pharaoh, "who knew not Joseph," becomes concerned about the military implications of the large increase in the Israelite population. He enslaves them and allows them only manual labor. He then takes the drastic measure of ordering the Hebrew midwives to kill all male babies.

The birth, exile, and call of Moses

A Levite woman, later identified as Jochebed, the wife of Amram (6:20), avoids this fate for her son by placing him in a reed basket that she floats down the Nile. A daughter of the king of Egypt finds the infant, calling him Moses (related to "drawn out," from the Hebrew, but also related to the Egyptian word for "son"). After his own mother serves as wet nurse to the child, Moses is brought up as an Egyptian prince. When he becomes a man, he takes sympathy for one of the Hebrew laborers who is being whipped by his overlord. Moses kills the Egyptian oppressor and buries his body in the sand. Worse, the Hebrews themselves view his act as a threat and begin to spread the news of his deed.

To escape from Pharaoh, who seeks his life, Moses flees the country. Moses' exile takes him to Midian, where he becomes shepherd to the priest Jethro (here called Reuel) and marries his daughter, Zipporah. As he feeds the sheep on Mount Horeb, God beckons Moses from a burning bush. In one of the Bible's most memorable scenes, God reveals his true name of Yahweh, and orders Moses to return to Egypt to demand the release of the Israelites from Pharaoh. Moses at first demurs, saying the Israelites will not believe him, but God gives him the power to perform miraculous signs to show his authority. Moses still hesitates, and God's "anger burned against Moses." Aaron, mentioned now for the first time and identified as Moses' older brother, is appointed to assist him. On his return to Egypt, apparently still angry, God tries to kill Moses, but Zipporah circumcises Moses' son, thus saving Moses' life. (2-4)

The plagues and the Passover

God calls Aaron and sends him to meet Moses in the wilderness. Aaron gives God's message to the Israelites and performs miracles. The people believe.

Aaron confounds Pharaoh's magicians.

Moses meets with the Egyptian ruler and, in Yahweh's name, demands permission to go on a three-day pilgrimage into the desert to hold a sacred feast. The king not only refuses, but oppresses the people still further, accusing them of laziness and ordering them to gather their own straw to make bricks without diminishing the quota. Moses complains to God that his ministry is only resulting in increased suffering for the Israelites. God identifies himself again to Moses, this time explaining that Moses is the first of the Israelites to know his true name, which was unrevealed even to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. God promises that he will redeem Israel "with an outstretched arm and with mighty acts of judgment."

God then sends a series of miraculous but terrible plagues onto Egypt. First, Aaron throws down his staff, and it becomes a snake. The kings magicians, however, perform the same feat. But Aaron's snake swallows the Egyptian serpents, but this only hardens the heart of the king against the Israelites. Next Aaron turns the Nile to blood, killing its fish. Again, the Egyptian magicians accomplish the same feat, and again Pharaoh refuses to relent. Aaron then causes frogs to emerge from the Nile to plague the land. The Egyptian magicians do the same. This time Pharaoh asks Moses to pray to Yahweh to take the frogs away. God responds to Moses' entreaty, but the king again hardens his heart. Aaron now performs a miracle that the Egyptians cannot duplicate: a plague of gnats. The magicians testify, "this is the finger of God," but Pharaoh stubbornly refuses to listen.

The pattern of miracles now shifts away from Aaron. Moses threatens the king with a plague of flies, and God directly brings it about. The country is so devastated by this catastrophe, that Pharaoh finally agrees that the Israelites may make their pilgrimage if Moses will ask Yahweh to take away the flies. Moses does so, but Pharaoh, of course, changes his mind once again. Next comes a plague that kills Egyptian livestock but spares the Israelite cattle. Then Moses brings about a plague of boils. Even the Egyptian magicians are sorely afflicted by the disease, but the king stubbornly refuses to give in. Next God tells Moses to threaten a mighty hailstorm. Some of the Egyptians respond to the warning and move their cattle to shelter. The remainder are devastated by the storm, while the Israelite areas remain untouched. Pharaoh actually admits his sin this time and promises to let the people go, but once again changes his mind after the hail stops.

Yahweh, as an avenging angel, spares an Israelite home.

The Egyptian courtiers lobby to let the Israelites have their festival, and the king begins to negotiate with Moses. Suspecting a trick, Pharaoh agrees to let the men make their pilgrimage but not the Israelite women and children. God and Moses respond with a plague of locusts that devour the crops not already destroyed by the hail. Once again Pharaoh begs for forgiveness, Moses removes the plague and Pharaoh hardens his heart. God then plagues Egypt with three days of darkness. His will now almost broken, Pharaoh agrees that the women and children can join the pilgrimage, but not the cattle. Moses refuses to negotiate, and God hardens the king's heart one last time.

Finally, God sends a truly horrendous plague, killing all the Egyptian firstborn. On his way to carry out the task, Yahweh passes over the houses of the Israelites, recognizing them by lamb's blood that Moses has ordered painted on each Hebrew home's door post. The narrator explains that this event provides the background for the holiday of Passover, which the Israelites are to commemorate each year. (12:42) The king finally truly relents and allows the Israelites to leave for their supposed three-day pilgrimage. The Egyptians send them on their way with gifts of gold and jewelry. (4-12)

The journey to Mount Sinai

The Exodus thus begins, and Moses informs the Israelites that the plan is to go all the way to Canaan, a "land flowing with milk and honey." Pharaoh, confirming his suspicion that the Israelites have fled, gathers a large army to pursue them. The Israelites, led by a majestic pillar of fire by night and a pillar of cloud by day, have now reached the "Reed Sea" (Yam Suph—often mistranslated as the Red Sea).

Miriam leads the Israelites in song.

In one of the Bible's most dramatic moments, Moses causes the waters of the sea to part, and the Israelites cross over on dry land. The waters collapse once the Israelites have passed, defeating Pharaoh and drowning his army. The prophetess Miriam, Moses' sister, leads the Israelites as they joyfully dance and sing what scholars consider to be one of the oldest verses in the Bible:

Sing to the Lord,
for he is highly exalted.
The horse and its rider
he has hurled into the sea. (15:21)

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 large quantity of low-flying quail, and subsequently provides a daily ration of manna. Once at Rephidim, thirst torments the people, and water is miraculously provided from a rock. However, a troubling pattern has emerged, as the Israelites display a lack of trust in Moses and seek to "put God to the test." (17:2) Soon a tribe known as the Amalekites attack. The newly emergent military hero Joshua manages to vanquish them, and God orders an eternal war against Amalek until they are utterly obliterated. (Indeed, the Amalekites are a tribe unknown to history outside of the Bible.) In Midian, Zipporah's father Jethro hears of Moses' approach and visits him. Although not an Israelite, but a Midanite priest, he "offers sacrifices to God" and eats a sacred meal with "elders of Israel in God's presence." (18:12) Jethro also advises Moses to appoint judges to assist in the administration of tribal affairs, and "Moses listened to his father-in-law and did everything that he said to do. (18:24)

The Covenant and its Laws

In the third month, the Israelites arrive at Mount Sinai, and God declares, via Moses, that the Israelites are God's people, as He has liberated them by His power. The Israelites agree to a covenant of obedience with Yahweh, and so, with thunder and lightning, clouds of smoke, and the noise of a mighty trumpet, God appears to them in a cloud at the top of the mountain. (19)

God then declares a version of the Ten Commandments, sometimes referred to as the Moral Decalogue (20). A series of laws governing the rights and limits of slavery follow this. Capital punishment is enacted for murder, kidnapping, and attacking or cursing one's parents. Other personal injury and property laws are also enacted. (21-22) The death sentence is also imposed on women convicted of sorcery. Bestiality likewise is punishable by death, as is the offering of sacrifices to gods other than Yahweh.

Aliens and orphans, however, are to be protected. Usury, blasphemy, and the cursing of one's ruler are prohibited. God requires that first-born sons and cattle be offered to Him on the eighth day after their birth. Cattle that die after being attacked by wild beasts must not be eaten. False witness and bribery are prohibited. Every seventh year, a field must be left uncultivated by their owner so that the poor may gain food from it. The sabbath must be observed every seventh day, and both slaves and livestock must be allowed to rest then as well. Various festival and ritual laws are enacted, including the prohibition against cooking a young goat in its mother's milk, the root of the later Jewish tradition of Kashrut, which involves never mixing milk and meat dishes.

Finally, God promises the Israelites if they obey, he will fight for them against the Canaanites, establishing their borders "from the Yam Suph to the Sea of the Philistines (the Mediterranean), and from the desert to the (Euphrates) River." Covenants and coexistence with the Canaanites are prohibited. (23)

Moses then erects 12 stone pillars at the base of the sacred mountain, representing each of the Tribes of Israel. He seals the Israelites' covenant with Yahweh by sprinkling the congregation with the blood of a bull calf he has sacrificed. He then reads to them what he has written thus far in the "Book of the Covenant," and the people swear to obey its commandments.

Setting out with Joshua, Moses then ascends the mountain again, leaving Aaron and Hur in charge of those remaining behind. He would be on the mountain for 40 days. (24)

The Tabernacle, vestments, and ritual objects (25-31)

While Moses is on the mountain, Yahweh gives him detailed instructions regarding the construction of the tabernacle, a portable sanctuary in which God can dwell permanently among the Israelites. Elements include:

  • The Ark of the Covenant, to contain the tablets of the Ten Commandments
  • A mercy seat, with two golden cherubim on either side, serving as a throne for Yahweh.
  • A menorah, never to be extinguished.
  • A portable structure to contain these things.
  • An outer court, involving pillars on bronze pedestals.

Instructions are also given for the garments of the priests:

  • An ephod of gold, attached to two ornate shoulder-pieces. It is to contain two onyx stones, each engraved with the names of six of the tribes of Israel.
  • A breastplate containing Urim and Thummim for divination.
  • Golden chains for holding the breastplate set with 12 specific precious stones, in four rows.
  • A blue cloth robe with pomegranate-shaped tassels and bells around its seams.
  • A coat, girdle, tunic, sash, headband, and linen undergarments.
  • A mitre with a golden plate with the inscription Holy to the Lord.

Following these instructions God specifies the ritual to be used to ordain the priests, including robing, anointing, and seven days of sacrifices. Instructions are also provided for morning and evening offerings of a lamb (29). Additional tabernacle instructions follow, involving the making of a golden altar of incense, laver, anointing oil, and perfume. A half-shekel offering is required by God of rich and poor alike as a "ransom" for their lives. (30) Bezaleel and Aholiab are identified as the craftsmen to construct these things. The sabbath is again emphasized, with the death penalty specified as the punishment for anyone convicted of working on this sacred day of rest. (31) Finally:

When the Lord finished speaking to Moses on Mount Sinai, he gave him the two tablets of the Testimony, the tablets of stone inscribed by the finger of God. (31:18)

The golden calf

While Moses is up the mountain, however, the people become impatient and urge Aaron to fashion an icon for their worship. He collects their golden jewelry and fashions a bull-calf, proclaiming "Here is God,(elohim) who brought you out of Egypt." (Elohim, is normally translated as God, but here is usually translated as "gods.") The Israelites offer sacrifice, followed by a feast and joyous celebration.

Yahweh, however, is offended and informs Moses that the people have become idolatrous. He intends to destroy the Israelites, but promises He will make of Moses a "great nation." Moses appeals to God's reputation among the Egyptians and His promise to the Hebrew patriarchs, and God relents. However, when Moses comes down from the mountain and sees the revelry, he becomes enraged and smashes the two sacred tablets of the Law, which had been inscribed with "the writing of God." Grinding the golden bull-calf to dust, mixing this with water, and making the people drink of it, Moses strongly reprimands Aaron. He then rallies his fellow Levites to his side and institutes a slaughter of the rebels, with a reported 3,000 of them killed. Moses then implores God to forgive the remaining people but wins for them only a temporary reprieve. God strikes the congregation with a plague, and promises even heavier punishment in the future.(32)

The strained relationship between God and his people is apparent. With the tabernacle as yet unconstructed, Moses builds a tent in which he meets God "face to face, as a man speaks with his friend." Joshua stays on vigil in the tent when Moses returns to the camp.

Moses consequently is commanded to make two new tablets and ascend the mountain once again. God appears to Moses in dramatic fashion there, saying:

Yahweh! Yahweh! The compassionate and gracious God, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, maintaining love to thousands, and forgiving wickedness, rebellion and sin. Yet he does not leave the guilty unpunished; he punishes the children and their children for the sin of the fathers to the third and fourth generation. (34:6-7)

Moses intercedes again on behalf of the people and God renews his covenant with them, once again giving the Ten Commandments. This version is sometimes called the Ritual Decalogue because it adds a number of specifications regarding the celebration of Passover, other holidays, and sacrificial offerings. Moses then returns to the people, his face blindingly radiant, and conveys the words of the covenant to them once again. (34)

Construction of the tabernacle

Moses collects the congregation, impresses upon them the crucial importance of keeping the sabbath, and requests gifts for the tabernacle sanctuary. The entire people respond willingly.

Under the direction of the master craftsmen Bezaleel and Aholiab, they complete all the instructions for making the tabernacle and its contents, including the sacred Ark of the Covenant. As in the earlier description of the tabernacle and its contents, no detail is spared. Indeed, chapters 35-40 appear to be largely rehearsed from the earlier section. The tabernacle, far from being a mere tent which housed the Ark, is described as a richly ornate structure with secure but portable foundations of pure silver, collected from the required half-shekel offerings of 603,000 men, making the total number of people probably more than two million.(38)

The sin of Aaron seems to be completely forgotten as he and his sons are solemnly consecrated as priests, clothed in the rich sacred garments painstakingly prepared to confer honor and holiness upon them. Then, "the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle."

The Book of Exodus thus ends on a high note, with the people finally having united faithfully to accomplish God's will, and Yahweh descended to earth to dwell among His people in the tabernacle. God leads them directly, and all seems, for the moment, to be right with the world:

In all the travels of the Israelites, whenever the cloud lifted from above the tabernacle, they would set out; but if the cloud did not lift, they did not set out—- until the day it lifted. So the cloud of the Lord was over the tabernacle by day, and fire was in the cloud by night, in the sight of all the house of Israel during all their travels. (40:36-38)

Authorship

As with the other books of the Torah, both Orthodox Judaism and Christianity hold that the text of Exodus was dictated to Moses by God Himself. Modern biblical scholarship, however, regards the text as being compiled either during the Kingdom of Judah (seventh c. B.C.E.) or during post-exilic times (sixth or fifth century B.C.E.). However, it is generally agreed that much of the material in Exodus is older than this, some of it probably reflecting authentic, if exaggerated, memories.

Chart of the documentary hypothesis. "E" stands for the Elohist; "J" for the Yahwist, and "P" for the Priestly sources prevalant in the Book of Exodus.

The documentary hypothesis postulates that there were several, post-Moses, authors of the written sources in Exodus, whose stories have been intertwined by a later editor/compiler. The three main authors of the work are said, in this hypothesis, to be the Yahwist (J), Elohist (E), and Priestly source (P). In addition, the poetic Song of the Sea and the prose Covenant Code are thought to have been originally independent works that one of the above writers included in his saga.

Evidence for multiple authors can be seen in such facts as Zipporah's father being called "Ruel" in come chapters and "Jethro" in others, as well as the sacred mountain of God being called "Horeb" by one putative source and "Sinai" by another. Moreover, God's calling of Moses appears to happen several times in the story, as we have it. Several repetitions and false starts appear. A genealogy, clearly written long after Moses' death, suddenly appears in chapter 6, breaking up the flow of the story. There are even two different versions of the Ten Commandments, with a third version appearing in Deuteronomy, all supposedly written by God through Moses.

Regarding the latter, the Priestly source is credited with the Ethical Decalogue, and the Yahwist with the Ritual Decalogue, and the Deuteronomist, fittingly receives credit for the version in his particular book.

Many parts of Exodus are believed to have been constructed by intertwining the Yahwist, Elohist, and Priestly versions of the various stories. Deconstructions of the stories into these sources identify heavy variations between stories. For example, the "P"" never provides a warning to Pharaoh about the plagues and always involves Aaron—the archetype of priesthood. The Elohist (E) always provides a warning to Pharaoh and hardly ever portrays Aaron in a positive light. The Yahwist (J) portrays God as a mercurial deity prone to fits of anger, needing the wise counsel of Moses to see the correct course. The Elohist is the likely author of the story of God meeting face to face with Moses in the tent of meeting (33). In the same chapter, the Yahwist quotes the Lord as declaring to Moses: "you cannot see my face, for no one may see me and live." (33:19)

The Elohist, being the least friendly toward Aaron, is identified as responsible for the episode of the golden calf. A question also exists as to whether this episode was truly historical or represents a propandistic attack on a later era's "idolatrous" shine featuring a bull calf at Bethel. It is seen as more than mere coincidence that King Jeroboam I, at Bethel, is represented as declaring the exact blasphemous words that Aaron utters: "here is elohim." Scholars also marvel at the apparent double standard of God in forbidding graven images in one chapter (20:4), while commanding the creation of two solid gold cherubim statues in another (25:18), not to mention ordering the creation of a bronze serpent in the Book of Numbers (28:8-9).

The Yahwist, in contrast to the Elohist's criticism of Aaron, portrays God as so angry with Moses as to attempt to murder him. The heroine in this episode being Zipporah—together with the Yahwist's many other strong female characters—has led some to speculate that the author of "J" may have herself been a woman, probably living in the ninth century B.C.E. (Bloom 2005).

A particularly interesting episode is the revelation of God's name, Yahweh, to Moses for the first time in Exodus 6:3. This story, thought to be from "P" and designed to explain why God has also been called "El Shaddai" or "Elohim" in previous writings, contradicts several earlier Yahwist affirmations in the Book of Genesis (4:6, 12:8, etc.) that the patriarchs called on "the name of Yahweh."

The Priestly source, of course, is seen as responsible for the instructions about creating the tabernacle, vestments, and ritual objects. The final chapters of Exodus, in which Aaron is uplifted and God descends to dwell in the tabernacle, thus reflect the viewpoint of the Temple scribes who ultimately committed the story to writing.

The historicity of the events in the Book of Exodus are discussed in the article on The Exodus.

See also

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Albright, W.F. 2006. Archaeology and the Religion of Israel. Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0664227425.
  • Bloom, Harold. 2005. The Book of J. New York: Grove Press. ISBN 0802141919
  • Dever, William. 2006. Who Were the Early Israelites and Where Did They Come From? Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans. ISBN 9780802844163
  • Finkelstein, Israel. 2002. The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts. New York: Free Press. ISBN 0684869136
  • Humphreys Colin J. 2006. The Miracles of Exodus: A Scientist’s Discovery of the Extraordinary Natural Causes of the Biblical Stories. London: Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0826480262
  • Sabbah, Messod, et al. 2004. Secrets of the Exodus: The Egyptian Origins of the Hebrew People. New York, NY: Allworth Press. ISBN 978-1581153194.
  • Sarna, Nahum. 1996. Exploring Exodus: The Origins of Biblical Israel. Shocken Books/Random House. ISBN 978-0805210637.

External links

All links retrieved November 17, 2023.

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