Study disproves the Bible's claim that the ancient Canaanites were wiped out
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Study disproves the Bible's claim that the ancient Canaanites were wiped out
The ancient Canaanites were not wiped out, as the Bible claims, but went on to become modern-day Lebanese, a study has found. Living between 3,000 and 4,000 years ago, the holy text suggests things did not end well for the people living in the Middle East.
According to a passage in Deuteronomy, God had ordered the Israelites to exterminate the Canaanites. “You shall not leave alive anything that breathes. But you shall utterly destroy them ... so that they may not teach you to do according to all their detestable things which they have done for their gods.”
It seems they didn't destroy them all, though. Examining the DNA of the region's ancient and modern inhabitants, the scientists found more than 90 per cent of the ancestry of modern-day Lebanese derived from the Canaanites.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2017/07/28/study-disproves-bibles-claim-ancient-canaanites-wiped/
According to a passage in Deuteronomy, God had ordered the Israelites to exterminate the Canaanites. “You shall not leave alive anything that breathes. But you shall utterly destroy them ... so that they may not teach you to do according to all their detestable things which they have done for their gods.”
It seems they didn't destroy them all, though. Examining the DNA of the region's ancient and modern inhabitants, the scientists found more than 90 per cent of the ancestry of modern-day Lebanese derived from the Canaanites.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2017/07/28/study-disproves-bibles-claim-ancient-canaanites-wiped/
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Re: Study disproves the Bible's claim that the ancient Canaanites were wiped out
Moses could get excited when he wrote. He was a vindictive personality.
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Re: Study disproves the Bible's claim that the ancient Canaanites were wiped out
Original Quill wrote:Moses could get excited when he wrote. He was a vindictive personality.
Moses is no doubt based on a historical character from Egyptian history.
As Mose is an Egyptian name.
The best fit for this is Prince Tuthmose. The elder brother of the Pharaoh Akhenaten. Who went onto form the first Monotheistic faith. With the Aten worship.
Prince Tuthmose was a Commander of the armies against the Ethiopians and later turned to religious life, becoming high Priest. He then for no reason resigned and disappeared from the history books.
What is interesting here is how inaccurate this article is based on the bible. Even though the bible is poor historically. The Israelite's never invaded Sidon.
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Re: Study disproves the Bible's claim that the ancient Canaanites were wiped out
Thorin wrote:Original Quill wrote:Moses could get excited when he wrote. He was a vindictive personality.
Moses is no doubt based on a historical character from Egyptian history.
As Mose is an Egyptian name.
The best fit for this is Prince Tuthmose. The elder brother of the Pharaoh Akhenaten. Who went onto form the first Monotheistic faith. With the Aten worship.
Prince Tuthmose was a Commander of the armies against the Ethiopians and later turned to religious life, becoming high Priest. He then for no reason resigned and disappeared from the history books.
Yes, I saw that show on the History Channel. Fascinating how they weave Moses into the the history of Akhenaten:
Bible History Daily wrote:Akhenaten and Moses
Did the monotheism of Egyptian Pharaoh Akhenaten influence Moses?
Robin Ngo • 05/29/2017
Defying centuries of traditional worship of the Egyptian pantheon, Egyptian Pharaoh Akhenaten decreed during his reign in the mid-14th century B.C.E. that his subjects were to worship only one god: the sun-disk Aten. Akhenaten is sometimes called the world’s first monotheist. Did his monotheism later influence Moses—and the birth of Israelite monotheism?
In “Did Akhenaten’s Monotheism Influence Moses?” in the July/August 2015 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review, University of California, Santa Barbara, emeritus professor of anthropology Brian Fagan discusses this tantalizing question.
Egyptian King Akhenaten, meaning “Effective for Aten”—his name was originally Amenhotep IV, reigned from about 1352 to 1336 B.C.E. In the fifth year of his reign, he moved the royal residence from Thebes to a new site in Middle Egypt, Akhetaten (“the horizon of Aten,” present-day Tell el-Amarna), and there ordered lavish temples to be built for Aten. Akhenaten claimed to be the only one who had access to Aten, thus making an interceding priesthood unnecessary.
In the BAR article “The Monotheism of the Heretic Pharaoh,” Donald B. Redford, who excavated Akhenaten’s earliest temple at Karnak (in modern Thebes), describes how Akhenaten instituted worship of Aten:
The cult of the Sun-Disk emerged from an iconoclastic “war” between the “Good God” (Akhenaten), and all the rest of the gods. The outcome of this “war” was the exaltation of the former and the annihilation of the latter. Akhenaten taxed and gradually closed the temples of the other gods; the images of their erstwhile occupants were occasionally destroyed. Cult, ritual and mythology were anathematized, literature edited to remove unwanted allusions. Names were changed to eliminate hateful divine elements; and cities where the old gods had been worshipped, were abandoned by court and government.
Akhenaten destroyed much, he created little. No mythology was devised for his new god. No symbolism was permitted in art or the cult, and the cult itself was reduced to the one simple act of offering upon the altar. Syncretism was no longer possible: Akhenaten’s god does not accept and absorb—he excludes and annihilates.
Did Egyptian Pharaoh Akhenaten’s adamant worship of one deity influence the Biblical Moses, leader of the Israelite Exodus? Was Akhenaten’s monotheism the progenitor of Israelite monotheism? According to BAR author Brian Fagan, we are talking about two different kinds of monothesisms:
“Israelite monotheism developed through centuries of discussion, declarations of faith and interactions with other societies and other beliefs,” Fagan writes. “In contrast, Akhenaten’s monotheism developed very largely at the behest of a single, absolute monarch presiding over an isolated land, where the pharaoh’s word was divine and secular law. It was an experiment that withered on the vine.”
When Tutankhaten—the second son of Akhenaten; we know him as the famous King Tut—ascended to the throne, he, working with his advisers, restored worship of the traditional Egyptian pantheon and its chief god, Amun. Tutankhaten also changed his name to Tutankhamun, meaning “the living image of Amun.”
To learn more about the monotheism of Egyptian King Akhenaten, read the full article “Did Akhenaten’s Monotheism Influence Moses?” by Brian Fagan in the July/August 2015 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review.
(This Bible History Daily feature was originally published in 2015.—Ed.)
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