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9847_205 | "state ideology" for the Northern Kingdom of Israel. The northern psalms 80 and 81 state that God |
9847_206 | "brought a vine out of Egypt" (Psalm 80:8) and record ritual observances of Israel's deliverance |
9847_207 | from Egypt as well as a version of part of the Ten Commandments (Psalm 81:10-11). The Books of |
9847_208 | Kings records the dedication of two golden calves in Bethel and Dan by the Israelite king Jeroboam |
9847_209 | I, who uses the words "Here are your gods, O Israel, which brought you up out of the land of Egypt" |
9847_210 | (1 Kings 12:28). Scholars relate Jeroboam's calves to the golden calf made by Aaron of Exodus 32. |
9847_211 | Both include a nearly identical dedication formula ("These are your gods, O Israel, who brought you |
9847_212 | up out of the land of Egypt;" Exodus 32:8). This episode in Exodus is "widely regarded as a |
9847_213 | tendentious narrative against the Bethel calves". Egyptologist Jan Assmann suggests that event, |
9847_214 | which would have taken place around 931 BCE, may be partially historical due to its association |
9847_215 | with the historical pharaoh Sheshonq I (the biblical Shishak). Stephen Russell dates this tradition |
9847_216 | to "the eighth century BCE or earlier," and argues that it preserves a genuine Exodus tradition |
9847_217 | from the Northern Kingdom, but in a Judahite recension. Russell and Frank Moore Cross argue that |
9847_218 | the Israelites of the Northern Kingdom may have believed that the calves at Bethel and Dan were |
9847_219 | made by Aaron. Russell suggests that the connection to Jeroboam may have been later, possibly |
9847_220 | coming from a Judahite redactor. Pauline Viviano, however, concludes that neither the references to |
9847_221 | Jeroboam's calves in Hosea (Hosea 8:6 and 10:5) nor the frequent prohibitions of idol worship in |
9847_222 | the seventh-century southern prophet Jeremiah show any knowledge of a tradition of a golden calf |
9847_223 | having been created in Sinai. |
9847_224 | Some of the earliest evidence for Judahite traditions of the exodus is found in Psalm 78, which |
9847_225 | portrays the Exodus as beginning a history culminating in the building of the temple at Jerusalem. |
9847_226 | Pamela Barmash argues that the psalm is a polemic against the Northern Kingdom; as it fails to |
9847_227 | mention that kingdom's destruction in 722 BCE, she concludes that it must have been written before |
9847_228 | then. The psalm's version of the Exodus contains some important differences from what is found in |
9847_229 | the Pentateuch: there is no mention of Moses, there are only seven plagues in Egypt, and the manna |
9847_230 | is described as "food of the mighty" rather than as bread in the wilderness. Nadav Na'aman argues |
9847_231 | for other signs that the Exodus was a tradition in Judah before the destruction of the northern |
9847_232 | kingdom, including the Song of the Sea and Psalm 114, as well as the great political importance |
9847_233 | that the narrative came to assume there. |
9847_234 | A Judahite cultic object associated with the exodus was the brazen serpent or nehushtan: according |
9847_235 | to 2 Kings 18:4, the brazen serpent had been made by Moses and was worshiped in the temple in |
9847_236 | Jerusalem until the time of king Hezekiah of Judah, who destroyed it as part of a religious reform, |
9847_237 | possibly around 727 BCE. In the Pentateuch, Moses creates the brazen serpent in Numbers 21:4-9. |
9847_238 | Meindert Dijkstra writes that while the historicity of the Mosaic origin of the Nehushtan is |
9847_239 | unlikely, its association with Moses appears genuine rather than the work of a later redactor. Mark |
9847_240 | Walter Bartusch notes that the nehushtan is not mentioned at any prior point in Kings, and suggests |
9847_241 | that the brazen serpent was brought to Jerusalem from the Northern Kingdom after its destruction in |
9847_242 | 722 BCE. |
9847_243 | The revelation of God on Sinai appears to have originally been a tradition unrelated to the Exodus. |
9847_244 | Joel S. Baden notes that "[t]he seams [between the Exodus and Wilderness traditions] still show: in |
9847_245 | the narrative of Israel's rescue from Egypt there is little hint that they will be brought anywhere |
9847_246 | other than Canaan—yet they find themselves heading first, unexpectedly, and in no obvious |
9847_247 | geographical order, to an obscure mountain." In addition, there is widespread agreement that the |
9847_248 | revelation of the law in Deuteronomy was originally separate from the Exodus: the original version |
9847_249 | of Deuteronomy is generally dated to the 7th century BCE. The contents of the books of Leviticus |
9847_250 | and Numbers are late additions to the narrative by priestly sources. |
9847_251 | Scholars broadly agree that the publication of the Torah (or Pentateuch) took place in the |
9847_252 | mid-Persian period (the 5th century BCE), echoing a traditional Jewish view which gives Ezra, the |
9847_253 | leader of the Jewish community on its return from Babylon, a pivotal role in its promulgation. Many |
9847_254 | theories have been advanced to explain the composition of the first five books of the Bible, but |
9847_255 | two have been especially influential. The first of these, Persian Imperial authorisation, advanced |
9847_256 | by Peter Frei in 1985, holds that the Persian authorities required the Jews of Jerusalem to present |
9847_257 | a single body of law as the price of local autonomy. Frei's theory was demolished at an |
9847_258 | interdisciplinary symposium held in 2000, but the relationship between the Persian authorities and |
9847_259 | Jerusalem remains a crucial question. The second theory, associated with Joel P. Weinberg and |
9847_260 | called the "Citizen-Temple Community", proposes that the Exodus story was composed to serve the |
9847_261 | needs of a post-exilic Jewish community organized around the Temple, which acted in effect as a |
9847_262 | bank for those who belonged to it. The books containing the Exodus story served as an "identity |
9847_263 | card" defining who belonged to this community (i.e., to Israel), thus reinforcing Israel's unity |
9847_264 | through its new institutions. |
9847_265 | Hellenistic Egyptian parallel narratives |
9847_266 | Writers in Greek and Latin record several Egyptian tales of the expulsion of a group of foreigners |
9847_267 | that were connected to the Exodus in the Ptolemaic period. These tales often include elements of |
9847_268 | the Hyksos period and most are extremely anti-Jewish. The earliest non-biblical account is that of |
9847_269 | Hecataeus of Abdera (c. 320 BCE), as preserved in the first century CE Jewish historian Josephus in |
9847_270 | his work Against Apion and in a variant version by the first-century BCE Greek historian Diodorus. |
9847_271 | Hecataeus tells how the Egyptians blamed a plague on foreigners and expelled them from the country, |
9847_272 | whereupon Moses, their leader, took them to Canaan. In this version, Moses is portrayed extremely |
9847_273 | positively. Manetho, as preserved in Josephus's Against Apion, tells how 80,000 lepers and other |
9847_274 | "impure people", led by a priest named Osarseph, join forces with the former Hyksos, now living in |
9847_275 | Jerusalem, to take over Egypt. They wreak havoc until the pharaoh and his son chase them out to the |
9847_276 | borders of Syria, where Osarseph gives the lepers a law-code and changes his name to Moses. The |
9847_277 | identification of Osarseph with Moses in Manetho's account may be an interpolation or may come from |
9847_278 | Manetho. Other versions of the story are recorded by first-century BCE Egyptian grammarian |
9847_279 | Lysimachus of Alexandria, who sets the story in the time of Pharaoh Bakenranef (Bocchoris), the |
9847_280 | first-century CE Egyptian historian Chaeremon of Alexandria, and the first-century BCE Gallo-Roman |
9847_281 | historian Gnaeus Pompeius Trogus. The first century CE Roman historian Tacitus includes a version |
9847_282 | of the story that claims that the Hebrews worshiped a donkey as their god in order to ridicule |
9847_283 | Egyptian religion, while the Roman biographer Plutarch claims that the Egyptian god Seth was |
9847_284 | expelled from Egypt and had two sons named Juda and Hierosolyma. |
9847_285 | It is possible that the stories represent a polemical Egyptian response to the Exodus narrative. |
9847_286 | Egyptologist Jan Assmann proposes that the story comes from oral sources that "must [...] predate |
9847_287 | the first possible acquaintance of an Egyptian writer with the Hebrew Bible." Assmann suggests that |
9847_288 | the story has no single origin but rather combines numerous historical experiences, notably the |
9847_289 | Amarna and Hyksos periods, into a folk memory. There is general agreement that the stories |
9847_290 | originally had nothing to do with the Jews. Erich S. Gruen suggests that it may have been the Jews |
9847_291 | themselves that inserted themselves into Manetho's narrative, in which various negative actions |
9847_292 | from the point of view of the Egyptians, such as desecrating temples, are interpreted positively. |
9847_293 | Religious and cultural significance
In Judaism |
9847_294 | Commemoration of the Exodus is central to Judaism, and Jewish culture. In the Bible, the Exodus is |
9847_295 | frequently mentioned as the event that created the Israelite people and forged their bond with God, |
9847_296 | being described as such by the prophets Hosea, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel. The Exodus is invoked daily |
9847_297 | in Jewish prayers and celebrated each year during the Jewish holidays of Passover, Shavuot, and |
9847_298 | Sukkot. The fringes worn at the corners of traditional Jewish prayer shawls are described as a |
9847_299 | physical reminder of the obligation to observe the laws given at the climax of Exodus: "Look at it |
9847_300 | and recall all the commandments of the Lord" (Numbers). The festivals associated with the Exodus |
9847_301 | began as agricultural and seasonal feasts but became completely subsumed into the Exodus narrative |
9847_302 | of Israel's deliverance from oppression at the hands of God. |
9847_303 | For Jews, Passover celebrates the freedom of the Israelites from captivity in Egypt, the settling |
9847_304 | of Canaan by the Israelites and the "passing over" of the angel of death during the death of the |
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