Is There Actual Evidence for the Books of Moses? - Tim Mahoney (Interview)

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  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024
  • Josh interviews film maker Tim Mahoney at the National Religious Broadcaster's Conference, 2023 on the subject of the archeological evidence that supports the book of Exodus.
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Комментарии • 3

  • @kennyreck
    @kennyreck Год назад +1

    Amen 🙏🙏🙏

  • @ninikihwanung
    @ninikihwanung Год назад

    Around 1550 BC, according to the victory stele of the native Egyptian leader 'Kamose', it is mentioned that almost no one remains in the Hyksos capital, Avaris.
    Moreover, the name of the Hyksos king at that time was 'Apophis'. However, in the list of Hyksos kings recorded by Manetho, it is written as 'Apepi'.
    The victory stele of Kamose mentions the Hyksos king as 'the Prince of Retenu, Apophis'.
    At that time, Kamose continuously attacked the Hyksos.
    Feeling the sense of crisis, the Prince of Retenu sent a letter to the king of Kush, asking for help, as documented on the stele.
    The Santorini Thera volcanic eruption occurred around 1600 BC. At this time, the Hyksos began to decline, and the capital Avaris became a place hard to live in, with most of its inhabitants seemingly having fled Egypt.
    Around 1550 BC, Ahmose I, a subordinate of the native Egyptian leader and brother of Kamose, captured Avaris. The records of this time state that the number of slaves captured did not even reach ten.
    Furthermore, it mentions that the battle for the capture of Avaris was a naval battle, suggesting that the area might have been inundated with water.
    It's conjectured that the lingering after-effects of the huge tsunami brought about by the Santorini Thera volcanic eruption might have hit Avaris.
    According to the records of Manetho cited in Josephus' "Antiquities of the Jews", when the Hyksos were destroyed, the residents of Hyksos fled Egypt and went to Palestine, where they founded Jerusalem and became the ancestors of Israel.