Come Follow Me: Notes on Exodus 1-14

As we move into Exodus, time passes suddenly. We move away from the individual novella of Joseph to several hundred years later, just as we often do in the Book of Mormon. Just how long, we don’t actually know. All book links in this post are Amazon Affiliate links.

Depending on how one calculates or what part  of the Bible one reads, it could be 430 years, 400 years, 4 “generations” (whatever that might mean) or much less time; Moses is the great-grandson of Levi, for example. The problem is that the Bible itself isn’t entirely consistent on this point.

The readings today presuppose that enough time has passed for Joseph’s 70 relatives who came down to Egypt to grow large enough to be a threat, and this is the catalyst for these chapters. The anonymous Pharaoh who “knew not Joseph” enslaves his descendants and puts them to work. Only a charismatic and spiritually powerful prophet with ties to both Egypt and Israel is able to deliver them.

“The new pharaoh who came into power (Gen 1:8) apparently did not “know” Joseph, which may mean that he was either wholly ignorant of his own nation’s history, or (more likely) that he simply chose to act in ignorance of Joseph’s wise counsel and how the Egyptians had benefited from it (Gen 41). Verse 8 is also a striking example of a characteristic not only of Exodus in general but of many portions of biblical narrative: The writer does not provide a full, detailed account of what he is reporting.”

-Enns, Exodus

The way Israelites (and Jews today) have come to look at the Exodus story is analogous in some ways to Mormons and Joseph Smith’s First Vision. That is, we assume today’s common understanding and usage of the story is identical to the way it was in the 1820s and 30s. The first vision was told several times, with details that vary somewhat. This is somewhat problematic, but not terribly so, and has long been known and discussed in the Ensign (one example) and lds.org (with links to original documents at the Joseph Smith Papers Project) and elsewhere.

“Critics of Mormonism have delighted in the discrepancies between the canonical [1838] account, and earlier renditions, especially one written in Smith’s own hand in 1832…. Such complaints, however, are much ado about relatively nothing. Any good lawyer or historian would expect to find contradictions in competing narratives written down years apart and decades after the event. And despite the contradictions, key elements abide.”

-Stephen Prothero, American Jesus, 171.

The first vision accounts reflect human memory, audience, and oral retellings, just as the details in Exodus 15 — a much older poetic retelling— differ from those in the prose around it. Today we look to the first vision as the fundamental beginning of the LDS Church and Joseph Smith’s calling as a prophet. Missionaries tell it early and frequently, and it often becomes a sticking point of black-and-white on which everything hinges.

But while Joseph Smith’s understanding of the First Vision shifted from being mainly personal to having much broader scope, he never seems to have conceived of it as the beginning of the Church or his own calling. The vision itself gave him “no sense of mission, no emerging prophetic identity” (Rough Stone Rolling, 43). Early missionaries didn’t refer to it. By contrast,

“if Joseph initially understood the first vision as his conversion, similar to thousands of other evangelical conversions, this vision [of Moroni in 1823] wrenched Joseph out of any ordinary track.”

-Rough Stone, 44.

How we think about the past changes, even if we were the ones to experiences it! There is two-hundred years time between the First Vision and now, and we have very close primary sources, but the significance our tradition attaches to it today differs from its early day. Heck, former Joseph Smith papers editor Steven Harper wrote a whole Oxford Press book about this idea, First Vision: Memory and Mormon Origin

What, then, should we understand of the oral transmission over hundreds of years —or more— of a miraculous account that becomes foundational for Israelite theology and identity? When read closely and carefully, much in these Exodus chapters is a challenge. Numbers don’t add up, the history doesn’t quite match or is ambiguous, etc. What can we say, then, about history here?

First, Richard Clifford, a Catholic priest and Harvard PhD in Old Testament, expresses the truism here that

“there is no single principle of interpretation that covers all cases of disputed historicity. What one says about Adam and Eve or the flood does not necessarily apply to the Abraham stories, the exodus plagues, the miracles of Jesus or the resurrection. Consequently, one need not fear a domino effect.”

I make a similar argument about historicity, Jonah, and the Book of Mormon here.

Second, without going into deep and long arguments, the likely source of our Exodus text is oral tradition, which preserves the past while also shaping and expanding it. Like Genesis, Exodus is largely written in good Hebrew of the 9-6th centuries BC, centuries after the events it depicts. Exodus 15, a poem recounting the destruction of Pharaoh’s army in the sea, is actually older and written in archaic Hebrew. It is likely that this poem predates the prose narrative, and may even serve as a source of the written prose. Baruch Halpern, for example,  argued in Biblical Archaeology Review that Exodus 15 shows evidence of eyewitness testimony, captured in poetry (reprinted here.)

My take is that something like the Exodus happened, but probably on a much  smaller scale than depicted, and less dramatic. This is not because I reject miracles or lack faith, but because of my understanding of the nature of the text, the historical context, and close reading. In any case, if you’d  like to get a good summary of the arguments, I recommend picking up Shanks, ed. Ancient Israel, which is a balanced introductory history. (The 3rd edition is on Amazon, the 4th edition is available direct from the publisher.)  We’re now getting into parts of the Bible that reading history can really help us understand, so this is doubly important.

What of the general narrative? As will often be my lament, we’re trying to cover so much ground, it’s hard to know where to focus our time. There is Moses, the prophet who murders (though for a good cause); the revelation of the name Yahweh/Jehovah (wait, except we’ve been seeing it the whole time, since Genesis 2 in fact); the temple symbolism in Moses’ vision on the mountain; the various plagues; “magic”; God hardening hearts; prophets and honesty; prophets and failure;  the nature of revelation and the crisis at the Red Sea; the problem with the Red Sea (or should it be Reed Sea, or Mythological Sea?); Jethro, the high priest and Moses’ father-in-law being a descendant of Cain,1Thanks to the irregular spellings in the KJV (and tradition), it is not obvious that Kenite= Cain-it, and that Canaanite is NOT AT ALL RELATED to Cain. and the Kenite hypothesis… There’s just too much.

Let’s focus on Moses, who, after being raised royally in some regard, eventually comes to identify with his own people and kills an overseer beating an Israelite. Commentators are split on whether the episode casts Moses in a positive light (deliverer, wakening egalitarianism) or a negative light (impulsive, disregard for law, secrecy).

Others view the encounter with the Egyptian simply as a plot point, a device necessary for getting Moses out of Egypt and into the desert, where he meets Jethro/Reuel/Hobab his father-in-law.

I wrote a paper my first year of grad school that my advisor thought had potential. I never developed it further, but the main idea is that this episode constitutes literary foreshadow. Moses stands in for God (Exodus 7:1), and the Egyptian stands in for Egypt and/or Pharaoh.

  1. Moses sees the Egyptians smiting a Hebrew (Exodus 2:11-12); Yahweh sees Egypt smiting Israel (Exodus 3:7-9, Exodus 5:16).
  2. Moses smites the Egyptian to death (Exodus 2:12); Yahweh smites Egypt (Exodus 3:20).
  3. Moses buries the Egyptian under sand (Exodus 2:12); Yahweh buries the army under water (Exodus 14:28, 15:5).
  4. In spite of deliverance, the Hebrew(s) resent(s)s Moses (Exodus 2:14, . In spite of deliverance, Israelites rebel against Yahweh in the wilderness.(Exodus 14:11-12, Exodus 32:1-8, Numbers 11:1-5, others)
  5. Lastly, they ask Moses “who made you a prince and a ruler over us?” (Exodus 2:14)  As it turns out, God does. Moses is named as a judge and appoints “princes” in Exodus 18:13, 21.

That’s my take on that short episode.

Moses rescued from the nile— Nicolas Poussin, 1638

As for the name Moses, it is not a Hebrew name, though a folk etymology is put in the mouth of the Egyptian princess who names him. (Why Egyptian royalty would know the language of slaves well enough to pun is not explained.)

She named him Moses (Heb. mosheh), “because,” she said, “I drew him [Heb. mashati] out of the water.”

-Exo 2:10

Moses is a shortened Egyptian name that we’ve seen elsewhere, in fact, as Ahmose, Kamose, Tuthmose, and Ramses, all well-known Egyptian kings.The suffix in those names, the second half of the word, means “son” or “begotten by” and was usually accompanied by the name of an Egyptian deity. Ramses means “begotten by Ra” and Moses would presumably have had a similar Egyptian divine name attached.

Tidbits

  • Pyramids— Our word “pyramid” is of Greek origin, meaning something like “grain pile.” The Greeks apparently called them “pyramids” either because they resembled heaps of grain or in the mistaken belief that they functioned as granaries. While the great pyramids at Giza that are not the only Egyptian pyramids, they are the ones we tend to imagine. They were not really built by slaves, Israelite or not. How do we know? First, the Biblical text depicts the Israelites making mud-bricks, but the pyramids are constructed out of stone. Second, that stone is finely carved and engineered. Slave labor may have moved it into place, but skilled labor was required to carve, cut, design, and place. Lastly, the pyramids at Giza predate any potential dating of the Exodus by 1000 years. The last one was finished around 2500 BC, far before any dating of the Exodus.
  • Hyksos— Egypt has been ruled by different groups at different times, though all tended to adopt Egyptian language and culture. One of these groups consisted of “Asiatics” (the Egyptian term)  who apparently came from Canaan (so, a Semitic group), and established a capital at Avaris. They ruled Egypt in the 15th Dynasty, from c. 1650-1550 BC. They were eventually kicked out by “native” Egyptians, and driven back to Canaan. While this has some obvious affinities with the Joseph story, it is the opposite of Exodus. The Israelites weren’t driven out like the Hyksos, they fled. Nevertheless, it’s possible the Joseph story and Exodus reflect a memory of the Hyksos.  Most histories of Israel will get into this, so again let me recommend  Shanks,  Ancient Israel (links above).
  • Moses and Sargon— A young boy whose life is threatened is placed in a basket and set in a river, but he ends up growing into a great ruler of the land. Moses? No, it’s actually the story of Sargon, a Mesopotamian king.
    The Legend of Sargon tells of his rise to power around 2300 B.C. The story may have been written well after Sargon’s lifetime, though it is nearly impossible to arrive at a precise date for the composition of the text. It begins

    Sargon, strong king, king of Agade (Akkad), am I.
    My mother was a high priestess, my father I do not know.
    My paternal kin inhabit the mountain region.
    My city of birth is Azupiranu, which lies on the bank of the Euphrates.
    My mother, a high priestess, conceived me, in secret she bore me.
    She placed me in a reed basket, with bitumen she caulked my hatch.
    She abandoned me to the river from which I could not escape.
    The river carried me along; to Aqqi, the water drawer, it brought me.
    Aqqi, the water drawer, when immersing his bucket lifted me up.
    Aqqi, the water drawer, raised me as his adopted son.

    Like Moses’ mother, Sargon’s mother places her baby in a reed basket, seals it, and sets it adrift on a river. Like Moses, Sargon is then taken from the water by the one who eventually adopts him. Determining the relationship between such accounts is not an easy problem to solve. Could the authors of some of these stories have borrowed the idea from others? Possibly. There is evidence, however, to suggest that it was not uncommon for a child to be abandoned…. While the Moses narrative likely does not depend on the Sargon legend, it may well be that the biblical story attempts to describe the events in Moses’ life in such a way that an astute reader in the ancient world would recognize the “abandoned child” theme and foresee that great achievements are in store for this lonely infant afloat on the river.- Zondervan Illustrated Bible Backgrounds Commentary.

  • Pharaoh– Pharaoh means “the big house,” referring to the king by metonymy, a figure of speech substituting an associated noun for the actual noun.  When “Pharaoh” says this or does that, we should understand it to be analogous to “The White House said today…”  Whether the Hebrew authors understood that metonymy is another question.

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5 Comments

  1. Don’t waste a lot of time on the Exodus. For more than 100 years, people have been looking for evidence of it without success. They have found no large numbers of latrines, garbage pits, burial sites, animal or human skeletons, evidence of cooking fires or anything else that would indicate a very large number of people crossed the Sinai Peninsula together. Even the anthropology department of the University of Tel Aviv, which you would think would want to confirm the biblical tale, says it never happened.

  2. This is excellent! Dare I ask for more? I was just asked to sub on Sunday and would love to know more about Moses (and his murder) and the “introduction” of Yahweh? Though probably in the reverse order and I am likely asking far, far, too much.

    Regardless, this makes Sunday School much better – many thanks!

    • Thanks for the comment, Ellie, and apologies for not responding quicker. I’m reluctant to post my paper. In retrospect, it’s pretty primitive and a little embarrassing, though the ideas may be good.
      As for the introduction of Yahweh, most commenters see this as a split between competing traditions. Jehovah first appears in Genesis 2, and the patriarchs call him by name. On the other hand, the passage here seems to clearly say that they did not know him by name (in which case, previous references are an editorial update/translation of sorts.) The JST cleverly gets around this potential contradiction by turning it into a question, “was I not known to them?” That way of resolving, however, is probably not historically accurate as much as trying to reconcile or harmonize the two traditions.

  3. Thanks Ben. Quick question/clarification: You mentioned “tutMoSe (or King Tut)”. But wasn’t King Tut actually Tutankhamun (born Tutankhaten), while Thutmose (or Thutmosis or Tuthmosis, meaning Born of Thoth) a different pharoah?