Greek philosophy (see Plato) draws a clear line (a) between belief and knowledge and (b) between false belief and true belief, i.e., belief contradicted and belief corroborated by evidence.
The general consensus among historians, archaeologists, Egyptologists, anthropologists, biblical scholars, and others, is that some key OT events cannot have happened as described in the “official” narrative. (
It is essential to remember that as shown earlier, alternative narratives existed for centuries until the “canonization” of Hebrew scriptures.) To the extent that they are disproved by the evidence, such events belong to the category of false belief.
Obviously, we cannot prove or disprove that God appeared or spoke to any of the OT characters. This must remain a matter of faith, for now. However, we can prove or disprove, for example, the existence of a particular city or state at a particular time and at a particular geographical location.
The OT states:
For he [Solomon] had dominion over all the region on this side of the River [Euphrates] from Tiphsah even to Gaza, namely over all the kings on this side of the River (1 Kings 4:24).
By comparison, Egyptian inscriptions, copies of which have been found in Canaan, describe Pharaoh Amenhotep III as:
A mighty king whose southern boundary is as far as Karoy [in northern Sudan] and northern as far as Naharin [in northern Syria] (Ancient Records of Egypt 2:344-45).
The resemblance is striking. But while we have ample evidence for an Egyptian empire ruled by Amenhotep whom Canaanite and other vassal kings address as “my Sun”, “son of the Sun”, and “my lord, my God, my Sun”, there is nothing to support the belief that an “empire of David and Solomon” stretching from Thapsacus (Hebrew Tipsah) on the Euphrates to Gaza existed in Canaan.
So, the choice is between (a) blindly believing what the OT text says, and (b) looking at the alternative narrative as supported by the evidence.
Very briefly, what the evidence indicates is that the Hebrews were a pastoralist seminomadic
Canaanite group with Canaanite language, culture, and religion. The designations “Hebrew” and “Israelite” may be connected with
Habiru/Apiru, a term originally applied to a social group in the region, and with the Jezreel Valley (Hebrew Yizre'el) in the north of the country.
As the lowlands or coastal plains of Canaan were controlled by other groups and, increasingly, by foreign powers, the Hebrews gradually settled in the central highlands, founding villages, cities and, eventually, kingdoms. As the emergence of Hebrew institutions such as monarchy and organized state religion took place when Canaan was under Egyptian domination, they were naturally influenced by long-established Egyptian traditions.
Indeed, there is plenty of biblical and extrabiblical evidence for Egyptian influence on Hebrew religion and culture.
For starters, according to the OT narrative, Moses:
1. Was born in Egypt.
2. Was adopted by an Egyptian princess.
3. Was brought up at the royal palace.
4. Could not speak Hebrew.
5. Was unfamiliar with Hebrew religion.
In light of this, I think it stands to reason that if “Moses” introduced a religion to a group of Hebrews or Canaanites, this religion would have been Egyptian. Indeed, there is no logical reason why it shouldn’t have been. Nor is it necessary for it to have been a complete religion. It would have been sufficient for “Moses” to introduce elements of the Egyptian royal cult that were relevant to the establishment of a new state. References to God could have been simply part of a suzerainty or vassal treaty in which the vassal group pledged allegiance to the Egyptian God. In fact, the pharaoh himself was regarded as “God” and addressed as “my Lord” and “my God”, especially in official documents and diplomatic correspondence.
If “Moses” was an Egyptian royal (adopted or not) he may have been in a position to offer protection to a Canaanite group inhabiting a small territory like the central highlands, in exchange for submission to his rule. In a world of small warrying tribes and city-states in need of protection by a bigger power, this was common practice.
Extrabiblical sources show that Canaanite religion, which was initially similar or identical to that of Syria, became increasingly Egyptianized. Hebrew kings adopted Egyptian religious symbols (winged sun disk, ankh cross), the Egyptian calendar of three seasons with numbered instead of named months (which was later exchanged for the Babylonian one), Egyptian numerals, etc. Even the Hebrew script is derived from earlier forms of Egyptian writing.
As with many colonial ventures before and since, military conquest led to a new cultural order in the occupied lands. Across Israel, archaeologists have found evidence that Canaanites took to Egyptian customs. They created items worthy of tombs on the Nile, including clay coffins modeled with human faces and burial goods such as faience necklaces and decorated pots. They also adopted Egyptian imagery such as sphinxes and scarabs …
Written in Akkadian cuneiform, the diplomatic lingua franca of the day, the [Amarna] letters give a rich sense of how abjectly the Canaanite chieftains obeyed the Egyptian ruler and how they jockeyed for his favor. About 300 of the tablets were addressed directly to the pharaoh. One, written by the ruler of the city of Shechem to Amenhotep III, starts with the Canaanite vassal declaring himself “your servant and the dirt on which you tread. I fall at the feet of the king, my lord and my Sun.” He then offers to send his own wife to the pharaoh if asked …
Egypt’s power wasn’t felt only in mighty sculptures. It also wielded a strong cultural pull on Canaan’s elite, who were attracted to Egypt’s graceful jewelry and symbols. Archaeologists have found hundreds of Egyptian-style objects in Canaanite burials, including alabaster, glass, and carnelian jewelry, scarabs [beetles associated with Sun-God Ra] decorated with sphinxes and hieroglyphs, and clay pots. Wealthy Canaanites liked to stock their tombs with imitations of Egyptian ushabti, figurines of people who would tend to the dead in the afterlife. “There was an Egyptianization, so to speak, of Canaan’s material culture,” says Ben-Tor. “The Canaanites were burying their dead with objects imported from Egypt or with local imitations of them” …
Sometimes the Canaanites added their own twists to Egyptian customs. About 130 clay coffins, some decorated with naturalistic human faces, have been excavated near Beth Shean and Gaza. Such caskets were commonly used in Egypt, but in Canaan they were filled not just with Egyptian-style mortuary goods, but also Canaanite items. Sometimes two people were buried in a single coffin, which was unheard of in Egypt but a common practice in Canaan …
Along with adopting Egyptian burial practices, or their version of them, the Canaanites also came to worship the Egyptian goddess Hathor. Her distinctive look, with almond-shaped eyes, long curls, and the ears of a cow, appears on objects both plain and fine and in archaeological contexts ranging from houses to palaces … (“Egypt’s final redoubt in Canaan”, Archaeology, July/August 2017.
As described in the OT, the Canaanites, of course, were an unruly bunch. Their profession of subservience to Egypt must be read with caution. Lab’ayu, the same ruler of Shechem, above, who offered his wife to the pharaoh and wrote that he would put a bronze dagger into his own heart if the pharaoh so commanded (Letter EA 254), was also accused of being a collaborator of the Habiru. Rebellions, however geographically limited and short-lived, did occur. But the Canaanite use of the formula “my Sun” when addressing the Pharaoh, illustrates the importance of the Sun in both Egyptian and Canaanite culture, and cultural influence of Egypt on Canaan was certainly extensive. See also:
Egyptian culture influenced ancient Israel after Exodus, unearthed antiquities reveal – Jerusalem Post
This is entirely natural, given that Canaan was an Egyptian colony for several centuries, with Canaanite rulers pledging allegiance to Egypt by means of suzerainty treaties (which may have served as models for the Israelite’s covenant), and maintaining close commercial and cultural links with Egypt. After all, neighboring cultures do borrow from one another, and it is clear that ancient peoples had no problem whatsoever with accepting foreign influence in the spheres of culture, technology, and even religion.
While there is no doubt that the Egyptian Goddess Hathor was highly popular in Canaan, it is equally beyond doubt that archaeological evidence has brought to light solar symbols suggesting that a solar cult existed among Canaan’s royal elites. Indeed, Hathor herself was a solar deity, being none other than Sun-God Ra’s consort!
Hathor was a solar deity, a feminine counterpart to sun gods such as Horus and Ra, and was a member of the divine entourage that accompanied Ra. She was commonly called the "Golden One", referring to the radiance of the sun, and texts from her temple at Dendera say "her rays illuminate the whole earth."
At Ra's cult center of Heliopolis, Hathor-Nebethetepet was worshipped as his consort, and the Egyptologist Rudolf Anthes argued that Hathor's name referred to a mythical "house of Horus" at Heliopolis that was connected with the ideology of kingship.
She was one of many goddesses to take the role of the Eye of Ra, a feminine personification of the disk of the sun and an extension of Ra's own power. Ra sends Hathor as the Eye of Ra to punish humans for plotting rebellion against his rule. She becomes the lioness goddess Sekhmet and massacres the rebellious humans …
Hathor - Wikipedia
As shown by cult figurines from Ancient Canaanite temples, the Goddess Hathor was worshiped alongside a male deity. While the Goddess wears her hair styled in Egyptian fashion, the God wears a headdress or crown (
Hedjet) associated with Egyptian deities and kings. Like Egyptian Gods (and pharaohs), the Canaanite God is depicted with a raised arm poised to smite his enemies, which later appears as a central feature of the OT God El/Yahweh or Yahweh-El. The God’s original name seems to have been El, his various forms or aspects being known as “El-Shaddai”, “El-Elyon”, “Yahweh-El” (Exodus 34:6, Psalm 10:12), etc., which are later replaced by the abbreviated epithet of “Yahweh” (which refers to his function of creator god). In any case, like his Egyptian and Canaanite counterparts, the Hebrew God El/Yahweh seems to have had a female consort referred to as Asherah both in the literature and in the OT:
Between the tenth century BC and the beginning of their Babylonian exile in 586 BC, polytheism was normal throughout Israel. Worship solely of Yahweh became established only after the exile, and possibly, only as late as the time of the Maccabees (2nd century BC). That is when monotheism became universal among the Jews. Some biblical scholars believe that Asherah at one time was worshipped as the consort of Yahweh, the national god of Israel – Wikipedia
The OT itself claims that “King Solomon” was married to Pharaoh’s daughter in addition to other women, and was persuaded by them to worship other Gods:
For it came to pass, when Solomon was old, that his wives turned away his heart after other gods. For Solomon went after Ashtoreth the goddess of the Zidonians, and after Milcom the abomination of the Ammonites … Then did Solomon build an high place for Chemosh, the abomination of Moab, in the hill that is before Jerusalem, and for Molech, the abomination of the children of Ammon. And likewise did he for all his strange wives, which burnt incense and sacrificed unto their gods (1 Kings 11: 4-8).
What seems clear from this is that:
1. Hebrew kings were not opposed to foreign influence.
2. Foreign, including Egyptian, influence was common.
3. If Solomon built a shrine or temple for his Egyptian wife, its deity may have been the Sun-God Amun-Ra, as corroborated by the OT statement to the effect that the kings of Judah had chariots and horses dedicated to the Sun:
And he [Josiah] took away the horses that the kings of Judah had given to the Sun, at the entering in of the house of the LORD, by the chamber of Nathanmelech the chamberlain, which was in the suburbs, and burned the chariots of the Sun with fire. And the altars that were on the top of the upper chamber of Ahaz, which the kings of Judah had made … (2 Kings 23:11-12).
So, it wasn’t just Solomon but all (or most) kings of Judah and Israel. As shown by Finkelstein (The Bible Unearthed), Smith (The Early History of God), Taylor (Yahweh and the Sun), and other leading scholars, this is corroborated by the archaeological, epigraphical, and other evidence. Horse figurines with a sun disk above their head (that may be miniaturized representations of the originals), have been discovered at Iron Age levels at Lachish, Hazor, and Jerusalem.
Incidentally, Finkelstein is one of Israel’s top archaeologists and winner of several academic and writing awards including the Dan David Prize for his revision of the history of Israel in the 10th and 9th centuries BC. He revolutionized not only Israel’s archaeology by introducing the most accurate methods and technologies, but also its history. This doesn’t mean he is infallible, but it does mean that he has far more specialized knowledge and experience than the average person. The same is true of Smith whose book is extremely well researched and sourced, and Taylor. Their opinion and, above all, the evidence they are presenting, cannot be ignored.
Moreover, OT verses specifically refer to the Hebrew God as the
Sun of righteousness (Shemesh sadaqah) with healing in his wings, i.e., WINGED SUN (Malachi 4:1-3), as well as “covering himself with light as with a garment”, and “riding on the clouds as on a chariot” (Psalm 104:2-3), and generally employ solar language in connection with the deity, such as “dawn”, “rise”, and “light”.
The king himself is compared to the rising Sun exactly as in Egyptian tradition:
And he shall be like the light of the morning when the sun rises, A morning without clouds … (2 Samuel 23:4).
As noted by many scholars, all this suggests a royal Sun cult followed by Israelite kings. Smith writes:
Solar imagery for Yahweh developed during the period of the monarchy, perhaps through the influence of monarchic religious ideology. It may be argued, however, that the “idolatry” was an indigenous form of Yahwistic cult. Psalm 84 and other evidence for solar language predicated of Yahweh militates against interpreting solar worship in the temple as non-Yahwistic. The theopolitical function of Yahwistic solar language may be further understood in the context of solar language predicated of the monarchy, both in Judah and elsewhere.
To summarize, solar language for Yahweh apparently developed in two stages. First, it originated as part of the Canaanite, and more generally Near Eastern, heritage of divine language as an expression of general theophanic luminosity. Yahweh could be rendered in either solar or storm terms or both together. Second, perhaps under the influence of the monarchy, in the first millennium the sun became one component of the symbolic repertoire of the chief god in Israel just as it did in Assur, Babylon, and Ugarit. This form of solarized Yahwism may have appeared to the authors of Ezekiel 8 and 2 Kings 23 as an idolatrous solar cult incompatible with their notions of Yahweh.
However, solar Yahwism is consistent with “Moses’” religion being a form of royal Egyptian cult that he would have been familiar with from his time at the Egyptian palace, and later criticism may be an attempt to cover up the Egyptian origin of the royal cult as a result of nationalist, anti-Egyptian polemic.
Tensions may have first arisen between an educated elite concerned with centralized state authority appealing to a male deity on one hand, and the general population concerned with fertility, birth, health, and other every-day issues, and focusing on a female deity, on the other.
Growing centralization of power next led to tensions between the political elite adhering to a monarchic theology and the priestly class which sought to impose its own ideology on the Jewish state. Thanks to the backing of the authorities, El/Yahweh or Yahweh-El became the dominant and, eventually sole, deity whose original solar character was subsequently replaced with a purely anthropomorphic one.
So, basically, the OT narrative is built on a Canaanite background to which Egyptian and other elements were later added.
This is why the OT should be re-written in order to bring it more into line with historical truth, especially in light of the fact that its authors themselves re-wrote it time and again for many centuries, and that their primary concern – as observed by numerous scholars - seems to have been not religious and spiritual but political.
If not monotheism, but nationalism, was the motivational factor behind the OT narrative, this would support the view that the true origins of the biblical belief in one divine being are to be found in Egypt, not in Canaan. This is consistent with the Egyptian connections described by ancient authors like Hecataeus, Manetho, and Strabo, and alluded to in the OT, NT, and Talmud.
Indeed, though Ancient Egyptians had no single codified account of creation, there are numerous texts referring to a self-created deity who at the beginning of time created all things and beings, including the Gods, by proclaiming their name and thus bringing them into existence, i.e., by
verbal fiat.
In about 2000 BC Egyptian texts mention a solar Creator-God who makes humans in his own image along with plants and animals to nourish them, who watches over them by day and by night, listens to their prayers, and punishes them for rebelling against him. The same Creator-God (named as Amun-Ra) is later referred to as “sole King among the Gods, without his equal, who made all things that exist”. By the time of Akhenaten, the deity is described as “sole God, with no other beside him”.
Clear parallels occur in the OT where the Hebrew God is first described as “without equal among the Gods” (Exodus 15:11-12), later as having “no other God beside him” (Isaiah 44:6) and, eventually, as being “one” (Deuteronomy 6:4).
Thus we can see that, in spite of its apparent “polytheism”, Egyptian religion developed the concept of a supreme Creator-God long before Akhenaten introduced the cult of Aten, and many centuries before the Hebrews adopted monotheism proper. By the time of Moses, the religion found in the OT complete with covenant, ark, law tablets, and rules of conduct, was established Egyptian royal cult. Even the story of the Ten Plagues seems to be based on existing Egyptian tradition going back many centuries before Moses.
This doesn’t mean that there is no truth in the OT narrative. However, given that Israelite religion emerged in an Egyptianized environment, the truth can be discerned only when we are familiar with Egyptian history, culture, and religion, and we realize that political reasons led to historical fact being distorted and covered up by anti-Egyptian rhetoric.
Interestingly, the idea of an Egyptian origin also occurs among the Greeks. Herodotus states that the Egyptians introduced temples, processions, statues, ceremonies, even the names of the Gods, and that “the Greeks learned all that from them” (Histories 2.5, 2.58). While this may seem exaggerated, there is no doubt that the earliest forms of Greek religion entailed sacred groves, stones, caves, springs, and open-space altars. Cult statues and temple buildings made of wood and stone appeared later. Some Egyptian influence may be seen in temple architecture, and Egyptian concepts such as a supreme Creator-God who imposes order on the universe and is described as “Craftsman of the world” appear in Greek religion and philosophy.
After the decline of Egypt, Assyria, and Babylon, Persia became the dominant power in Canaan, followed by Greece. Due to Alexander’s empire that stretched from Macedonia and Egypt in the west to northwest India in the east, Greece became the main source of influence on language, culture, and religion throughout the region. This is precisely why Hellenistic Judaism (which is totally different from present-day Rabbinic Judaism) emerged in the 300’s BC and lasted into the 500’s AD.
Palestine at the time of Jesus was a Hellenized Roman province. King Herod I (72 BC – 4 BC) himself had been thoroughly Hellenized. He attended the Greek elementary school in Jerusalem, in which the sons of the Jewish aristocracy were instructed, and later pursued philosophical, rhetorical and historical studies under the direction of his friend and adviser, the Peripatetic philosopher Nicolaus of Damascus. Herod also had his sons and successors, including Herod Antipas (who sent Jesus to Pilate’s court) and Philip, brought up completely in the Greek style.
In addition to renovating and expanding the Jerusalem Temple, Herod also built large Pagan temples at Caesarea, Sebaste, and Omrit (or Caesarea Philippi, according to Josephus), as well as theaters and hippodromes, and introduced games and spectacles. He bore the Greek title of
basileus and minted coins with Greek inscriptions and symbols including sunburst.
Under Herod, the high priests and the Sanhedrin lost much of their traditional power and influence, and even more so when Judea came under direct Roman rule in 6 AD, which is why they later resorted to inciting the crowds in order to get Pilate to execute Jesus. As the NT relates, Pilate offered to release Jesus from prison and execute a notorious prisoner of the name Barabbas instead. But the crowds, incited by the chief priests and members of the Sanhedrin, demanded that Barabbas be released and Jesus crucified (Matthew 27:20). It was not Jewish society in general, and even less the political rulers, that were hostile to Jesus and his teachings, but radical elements within the religious leadership.
At any rate, it is clear that Christianity emerged within the cosmopolitan, Hellenistic culture of first-century Roman Palestine, which is why it was a combination of various cultural and religious strands, including Jewish, Greek, and Egyptian, as is evident from the NT.
Though parallels may be found in other traditions, all the elements that are central to NT teachings will be instantly recognized as Hellenistic by the perceptive reader:
God as Truth, Light, Wisdom, Goodness, Justice.
God as Father.
God as Judge.
Divine Judgment.
Son of God.
Virgin birth.
Divine Family.
Resurrection (Anastasis).
Heaven (Paradeisos) and hell (Hades).
Eternal life in paradise a.k.a. Salvation (Soteria).
Cultivation of moral and spiritual perfection (Teleiotes) as a means to achieve eternal life in heaven, etc.
The fact is that Jesus is recorded as saying “I am the Way and the Truth” (
Ego eimi he Odos kai he Aletheia) (John 14:6) and there is no evidence that his teachings are not the way to Truth. Of course, lower levels of truth may differ from person to person, and the above statement may have been understood differently, then and thereafter, by people of different religious persuasion, educational level, or intellectual/spiritual capacity. But there seems to be little doubt that at the highest level, Truth or Ultimate Reality is one and, therefore, identical with the Truth of the philosophers.
See also:
M. Smith, The Early History of God – Internet Archive
S. Smoot, Ancient Egyptian Monotheism
G. Rendsburg, “Moses the Magician” - Rutgers