Actual EVIDENCE for the Exodus (with Titus Kennedy)

Dr. Titus Kennedy is to talk about some of his favorite evidences for the Exodus of Moses and the Israelites from Egypt. Join us for some more context, analysis of the historical and cultural setting of the Exodus , and a deeper understanding of the texts. Dr. Titus Kennedy believes a solid historical case can be made that the Bible got it right. We discuss key findings that support the traditional biblical chronology of the exodus.
READ: Unearthing the Bible: 101 Archaeological Evidences that Bring the Bible to Life, by Titus Kennedy (amzn.to/3Ph0lMf)
WATCH: 20 Archaeological Evidences for the Old Testament ( • 20 Archaeological Find... )
READ: A Rebel's Manifesto, by Sean McDowell (amzn.to/3u8s2Oz)
*Get a MASTERS IN APOLOGETICS or SCIENCE AND RELIGION at BIOLA (bit.ly/3LdNqKf)
*USE Discount Code [SMDCERTDISC] for $100 off the BIOLA APOLOGETICS CERTIFICATE program (bit.ly/3AzfPFM)
*See our fully online UNDERGRAD DEGREE in Bible, Theology, and Apologetics: (bit.ly/448STKK)
FOLLOW ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA:
Twitter: / sean_mcdowell
TikTok: @sean_mcdowell
Instagram: / seanmcdowell
Website: seanmcdowell.org

Пікірлер: 1 400

  • @rampartranger7749
    @rampartranger7749 Жыл бұрын

    “ Ancient cultures didn’t record their defeats or embarrassments. “ -except for the Hebrews, whose records seem to, strangely, be a long catalogue of self-criticisms.” Which is something to think about.

  • @kevinshirley9344

    @kevinshirley9344

    Жыл бұрын

    The Hebrews did it too in regards of their battles with those who worshiped the god Mot. The Hebrews tell a different version of events than those of the tribe who worshiped Mot. The Torah itself was written around 586BCE. The Hebrews were henotheist (worshiped many gods but had a supreme) and were anti Babylon. The stories of Abraham and Moses have an anti Babylon and pro Henotheism narratives to them... the issue is that both narratives did NOT exist is Moses's time nor in Abrahams time. This means the stories of Abraham and Moses were likely made up during the religious reformation by the Hebrews in 600BCE when the Torah was written.

  • @ronaldridgardo2564

    @ronaldridgardo2564

    11 ай бұрын

    @@kevinshirley9344 Hebrews did not believe in many gods that’s a false statement.

  • @jamiecamidge2199

    @jamiecamidge2199

    8 ай бұрын

    Egypt was hit by plagues including the death of every first born son and that wasn’t recorded??? BTW the Egyptians catalogued a lot of tragedies including famines and a catastrophic war with the ‘sea people’ (Hittites?). Also at the time of the biblical account of the exodus, the evidence supports Egyptian governance of Canaan! His argument is a mess

  • @protoseargeant

    @protoseargeant

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@ronaldridgardo2564 Of course they did. Idolatry was rampant throughout ancient Israel. That's the main thing God punishes them for throughout the OT. God told them not to have other gods, but they did anyways.

  • @italiansalmonhead

    @italiansalmonhead

    5 ай бұрын

    No true at all. Romans recorded all the battle even wrote poems about the defeat. Any really major empire reported their defeated in their records.

  • @pamgessler5923
    @pamgessler5923 Жыл бұрын

    I love how the two bookworms have so many shelves of books, their backgrounds make it look as if they're in the same room. 🙂

  • @karengoldsmith420
    @karengoldsmith420 Жыл бұрын

    My family and I visited Cairo this past September. Our tour guide, a highly accredited Egyptologist who is also a local, took us to the Egyptian Museum. At one point she took us to a back room with artifacts that were open for the public to see, but also partially in storage. There was a large stone tablet with lists of names of families or lineages in Egypt inscribed in hieroglyphs. She was able to read hieroglyphs and pointed out a section towards the bottom right hand corner of the tablet that says “Israel” and she suggested that it might be some evidence for the Israelites in Egypt. She also mentioned that if this artifact were in Israel, it would be a main attraction. It was in the back room there because it’s not exactly a source of pride for the Egyptians. I would like to ask Dr. Kennedy if this tablet is widely known and studied among the scholarly apologetics community. I thought it was a pretty cool find!

  • @karengoldsmith420

    @karengoldsmith420

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes that’s it! I didn’t realize it was called a stele. Thanks for pointing that out!

  • @gebedzandvoort

    @gebedzandvoort

    Жыл бұрын

    According to Dr. Douglas Petrovich the Ezbet Rushdi Stele may contain the names of Jacob and Joseph. Read his book"Origins of the Hebrews: New Evidence of Israelites in Egypt from Joseph to the Exodus" (2021). Dr. Douglas Petrovich gives solid answers and he comes with evidence for the Exodus during the reign of Amenhotep II in 1446 BC (Early date of the Exodus).

  • @gebedzandvoort

    @gebedzandvoort

    Жыл бұрын

    This is an interview with Dr. Douglas Petrovich the author of "Origins of the Hebrews" kzread.info/dash/bejne/p6KHyNuada7dhLw.html

  • @07mandylynn

    @07mandylynn

    Жыл бұрын

    It was discovered in 1896. Interesting it is not a more popular artifact!

  • @stephengray1344

    @stephengray1344

    Жыл бұрын

    If you want to ask for more information about this, I recommend the weekly Q and A run by Egyptologist Dr David Falk over on his channel Ancient Egypt and the Bible.

  • @DreDredel3
    @DreDredel3 Жыл бұрын

    Many overlook the fact that in the Exodus story, after the Hebrews exited Egypt, they arrived at Mount Sinai. The Sinai Peninsula was always part of Egypt. However the real mount Sinai mentioned in Exodus is located in modern-day Saudi Arabia. Also note that archaeologists used to think the city of Troy was mythical until an archaeologist took the initiative to go to the geographic area where the City of Troy should have been & indeed it was found.

  • @kevinshirley9344

    @kevinshirley9344

    Жыл бұрын

    The Torah (first 5 books of the OT) was written around 500BCE. This was a time during the Levant where the Hebrews were Henotheists and anti babylon (586BCE). The Henotheist and anti babylon did not exist in the Levant prior to the 900BCE. This is significant because the stories of Abraham and Moses were stories that were pro Henotheism and anti bablyon narratives. Moses and Abraham would not have been either, this means the stories are likely made up during the babylon exile rather than actual historical stories. God even refers Himself to Abraham in Genesis in a way that is ONLYL known to people during the babylon exile era, and NOT in Abrahams time!! Keep in mind that in 600BCE the Hebrews had a religious reformation... its too much of a coincidence that the stories of the torah being Henotheist and anti babylon happen to be true during the reformation of Hebrews being Henotheists and anti babylon....Its not a coincidence, it means the stories of Abraham and Moses were not historical.

  • @sakatagintoki4164

    @sakatagintoki4164

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@kevinshirley9344 your statement seems a bit biased towards the postmodern world view. Let me add that the pentateuch was written by Moses according to tradition. So when you say that these 5 books were written by the jews after the fact that there was a law, this would mean that they had no law. When the bible talks about the law of Moses, it would actually be the laws of the jews made by the jews. About Abraham, then the whole things of genealogies would have to be wrong, Issac, Jacob, all would be made up characters which are recorded in the genealogies of Jesus. Meaning that the genealogies of Jesus was complete bogus, and that there was not a Issac that leads to Jacob, and then a Jacob that leads to Abraham, the father of the jews whom God made a nation out of. I would need to ask for your evidence on what made you think these events were recorded hundreds of years after the events occurred, along with the fact the evidence on why you think this was written during the bablyonian exile, where making a religion would be the least of their concerns, and that their top priority is to survive. Please provide evidence and not claims.

  • @kevinshirley9344

    @kevinshirley9344

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sakatagintoki4164 That is not correct... the Torah was NOT written by Moses or anyone who knew Moses for a couple of reasons... one is that the Torah was written around 500BCE that told stories such as Abraham and Moses that reflected the time era of 500BCE rather than the era's Abraham and Moses lived in. This means that the stories of both could not have been passed down by oral traditions as such errors would not be present in oral traditions. Anti Babylon narrative and the pro Henotheism era existed between 800BCE to 200BCE yet both Abraham and Moses's stories are anti babylon and pro Henotheism, they are both suppose to exist before 800BCE.... So it does not makes sense that these are oral traditions but rather newer concepts created as a direct result of the Babylon exile (around 500BCE). The second thing is that no evidence exists of Moses's story despite everything we know of that area in history. The story of Moses bares a striking resemblance to the Babylon exile that cannot be just a coincidence. Moses is also references Henotheism but the Hebrews are not Henotheist during Moses's supposed time era.

  • @SnowAngelfish

    @SnowAngelfish

    5 ай бұрын

    The bible plainly tells us moses went to the land of Midian and that is where the mountain of God was. Midian is in current day saudi Arabia. How the biblical mt sinai was placed far off west of Midian is unclear but another example of how men work to distort truth.

  • @italiansalmonhead

    @italiansalmonhead

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@SnowAngelfishhonetly will make way more send the Sinai to be in arebia then Egypt, phero send moses in exile, off Egypt so could be east off arabia.

  • @jeffofthehillpeople7728
    @jeffofthehillpeople7728 Жыл бұрын

    I’m absolutely fascinated by this stuff. I loved “Patterns of Evidence” and truly appreciate the cautious and careful approach that Dr. Kennedy presents here. Well done!

  • @stephengray1344

    @stephengray1344

    Жыл бұрын

    If you're fascinated by this stuff, I'd recommend the three-part Exodus Rediscovered series on the Inspiring Philosophy channel, and also most of the content on the Ancient Egypt and the Bible channel, run by Egyptologist Dr David Falk. They present a different case for the Exodus from Dr Kennedy, and it's well worth being familiar with both versions.

  • @harrymaurer7984

    @harrymaurer7984

    Жыл бұрын

    The three part series mentioned above makes the case for Ramses the Great being the Pharaoh of the Exodus which I find unconvincing to say the least. I am glad however that the makers of the documentary do believe in the Exodus as an actual event though… that’s good.

  • @magnificentuniverse3085

    @magnificentuniverse3085

    Жыл бұрын

    @@harrymaurer7984 Why are you unconvinced when the Bible itself says that Israelites made grain silos in the city called Ramesses that was literally built by Ramesses the Great and there wasnt any settlement before Ramesside one on that location ever. Also Pithom is made by none other than you guessed it Ramesses the Great as well, he was the one who built the House of god Atum (literal translation of Pi-thom) in that scarcely populated village and thus made it repopulated again with that new name (ie. Pithom). Grain silos are found in both Pi-ramesses and in Pi-thom that are dated, you guessed it, around the time of Ramesses the Great that fit the description of mud bricks mixed with straw from the Bible. The only real thing thats bothering you is that it doesnt fit 480 years (or 440 according to Septuagint) from the book of kings and dates that are given in the book of Judges. So we have to choose one or the other, either say that Israelites left Egypt before there even was Pithom and Pi-ramesses or that the dates are wrong/metaphorical/exaggerated/symbolical (I mean 480=12*40 sounds familiar? Also there are dozens of ancient near east temple dedication inscriptions that use rounded symbolical numbers like 720=12*60 or 40 or 400 that are also clearly not literal and sometimes off by centuries)

  • @paultalbot6954

    @paultalbot6954

    Жыл бұрын

    I am too! Another great archaeologist on the subject IMO, who takes a similarly measured and minimalist approach, is James Hoffmeier. He has two books "Israel in Egypt" and "Ancient Israel in Sinai" which are both fantastic. A strength he brings is he is both an Egyptologist and Biblical scholar.

  • @harrymaurer7984

    @harrymaurer7984

    Жыл бұрын

    @@magnificentuniverse3085 Hello. Ramses 2 could not possibly have been the Pharaoh of the Exodus for a host of reasons a few of which I will mention here. First it is important to realize that the Bible itself never mentions the name of the Pharaoh of the Exodus. Just because the name is mentioned as a city or land does not mean the Pharaoh was Ramses. One reason Ramses 2 could not have been the Exodus Pharoah is because of the mention of the Israelites in Egyptian records themselves. Ramses 2 son Merneptah mentions them as being a people group in Palestine at that time. They were already an established people group at that time in Cannon. Go read about the “Merneptah Stele”. The mention of Israel in that victory Stele next to other city states means that the Israelites were an established people at that time and did not just wander into the land recently. The “Soleb Temple Cartouche” dated to 1396-1358 BC mentions the “nomads of Yahwehs land” That’s considered the earliest mention of the name Yahweh outside of the Bible and clearly states that the Israelites were considered a Bedouin or non-settled type of people at that time… but that they were located somewhere in Cannon. That inscription is from the reign of Amenhotep III. The Israelites were most likely in the “conquest of the land of Cannon” phase at that time. There are other such mentions of the Israelites as well including the “Amarah West Inscription”. Also you have the fact that nothing in The life of Ramses 2 even remotely mentions or hints at any trouble during his reign. He was the most successful of all Pharaohs. In fact, Ramses is said to restore Egypt to its former glory and bring it back to its rightful place on the world stage… though the Egyptians never mention what exactly happened before him to make them weak. In fact… Egypt has some problems from about the middle of the 18th dynasty all the way until Ramses 2 in the 19th dynasty. There are a bunch of weak rulers who are in power for very short periods of time. The best explanation of why the name Ramses appears in the Bible is that when the Israelites start to settle in the Land of Canon and are making new copies of their history… they use the name of the areas they are from that were in use at that current time!! In other words… when the conquest is over and there is some peace (and shortly thereafter) they use the name Ramses cause that was it was called at that very time in the 1200’s and 1100’s BC. What we are not being told is that the name Ramses was used during the slavery period several hundred years earlier. The cities had all changed names and the Israelites wanted to make sure that people understood where they came from. The strangest use of the name Ramses however is in Genesis 46:28 and 47:11 in reference to when Joseph was alive. There is zero chance that the land was called Ramses in Jospehs time either. But it’s not a problem at all… the writers and copiers of texts in the period of the Judges and possibly early Monarchy just decide to use the name Ramses cause that’s what it was caulked at that time and they want to be clear that the same place ancestor Joseph went to is the exact same place that they eventually are enslaved in and leave miraculously by Gods power.

  • @kwanxin9506
    @kwanxin9506 Жыл бұрын

    Clark Kent as a biblical archaeologist. Can't fool me. 🤣🤣

  • @missthunderstormable

    @missthunderstormable

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol, he s cute

  • @rlpsychology
    @rlpsychology Жыл бұрын

    Excellent discussion on the case for the biblical Exodus, Drs. McDowell and Kennedy. Thanks so much..

  • @bartbannister394

    @bartbannister394

    Жыл бұрын

    Takes a Christian to call bullshit an "excellent discussion."

  • @talithakoum3922

    @talithakoum3922

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bartbannister394 Aw, look at the stunning and brave little atheist trolling in the comments! So cute. 😂

  • @collegepennsylvania837
    @collegepennsylvania837 Жыл бұрын

    “Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you, along with all malice. Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you.” ‭‭Ephesians‬ ‭4:31-32‬ ‭ESV‬‬ Follow the perfect example of Christ. Allow the Spirit to guide you and produce the fruits of the Spirit (love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control). And be reminded of how good God has been to you. Just as He has shown us endless love, grace, mercy, compassion, and forgiveness let us look to show those things to others. And never forget how much we have to be thankful for every day. It is in giving thanks to God that we remind ourselves of who He is and what He has done. Hopefully this helped and encouraged you today. God bless you!

  • @fepeerreview3150
    @fepeerreview3150 Жыл бұрын

    FIRST question for Dr. Kennedy. Biola University is a Christian university with a "statement of faith" required of its faculty. It also has clearly defined theological positions stated on its website. "The Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments are without error or misstatement in their moral and spiritual teaching and record of historical facts." My question - Dr. Kennedy, hypothetically, if you studied the evidence and came to the conclusion that the Old Testament account of Moses and the exodus was completely unsupported by evidence and that it was unlikely such evidence would come to light, and consequently could only conclude that the Bible account was extremely unlikely to be a correct account of history, would you lose your job and income?

  • @noneofyourbusiness7055

    @noneofyourbusiness7055

    Жыл бұрын

    To be fair, finding not only a complete absence of evidence but also large amounts of evidence directly contradicting their position has been failing to deter apologists from their predetermined position for centuries...

  • @dan_gocavs4110

    @dan_gocavs4110

    7 ай бұрын

    @@noneofyourbusiness7055 Watch Exodus Rediscovered by Inspiring Philosophy. There IS compelling evidences, both internal and external.

  • @ChokeArtist411

    @ChokeArtist411

    2 ай бұрын

    Hey now, it’s the secular academics who bring presuppositions and ideological biases to the table!

  • @hockeycowboy10

    @hockeycowboy10

    Ай бұрын

    That scenario is moot: he has found much supporting evidence.

  • @hockeycowboy10

    @hockeycowboy10

    Ай бұрын

    What “large amounts of evidence” do you think have ‘contradicted’ Biblical accounts?

  • @davidfields4981
    @davidfields49818 ай бұрын

    Thanks for doing such great research. It is greatly appreciated.

  • @mereskepticism8548
    @mereskepticism85482 ай бұрын

    This is so absolutely awesome… The ground war of us normal people is often lost in soundbites. This is very helpful.❤

  • @malcolmkirk3343
    @malcolmkirk3343 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the interview. Looks like a great book!

  • @PapaRocks
    @PapaRocks Жыл бұрын

    The times referred to by Dr. Kennedy were punctuated by the Bronze Age collapse which was triggered in part by massive volcanic upheaval all around the Mediterranean. These include earthquakes, accompanying tsunamis and volcanic eruptions like that of Santorini. This disruption would be an ideal time for slaves to escape from Egypt. Moreover, many of the phenomena associated with this tectonic unrest have striking resemblance to the Plagues of the Biblical account. Greatly enjoyed this outstanding presentation!!

  • @conservativemike3768

    @conservativemike3768

    Жыл бұрын

    Precisely!

  • @heavnxbound
    @heavnxbound Жыл бұрын

    Hi! I just wanna say that the sound in your videos has been very low for a while. Gotta turn it up a lot to hear what’s being said. Other than that I love the content you post! :)

  • @konstantinoschristou3701
    @konstantinoschristou3701 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for all. May you be well.

  • @131dyana
    @131dyana Жыл бұрын

    thank you for this information. God bless you for sharing this with us.

  • @zoelle3593
    @zoelle3593 Жыл бұрын

    I always love this kinds of dialogues! love both of these guys!!

  • @MaryAnn_Pimentel
    @MaryAnn_Pimentel Жыл бұрын

    I’m super excited for video! Very rare to see the evidence for the exodus. Praise the Lord! Next time, could you make a video on Gnosticism? I think it’s very hard topic nowadays

  • @SeanMcDowell

    @SeanMcDowell

    Жыл бұрын

    Enjoy! Thanks for the suggestion on Gnosticism.

  • @stephengray1344

    @stephengray1344

    Жыл бұрын

    There's plenty of evidence for the Exodus out there. Just on KZread, Inspiring Philosophy recently released the third and final part in a series of videos outlining evidence for the Exodus (covering the exit from Egypt, the wandering period, and the conquest respectively). He collaborated with Egyptologist Dr David Falk, who has gone into the issue many times on his channel Ancient Egypt and the Bible - and who has appeared on lots of different Christian channels talking about the subject. There is currently a lack of good books on the subject, though.

  • @kathrynknipe6615
    @kathrynknipe6615 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks! Another great conversation.

  • @fushumang1716
    @fushumang1716 Жыл бұрын

    Please also invite Dr. Falk here, he is the resource person on Inspiring Philosophy's docu on Exodus. Really compelling archaeological evidence on the later date and explains the conflict with early date

  • @MarkNOTW

    @MarkNOTW

    Жыл бұрын

    No thanks. Falk is condescending

  • @MarkNOTW

    @MarkNOTW

    Жыл бұрын

    Does Falk have an opinion on who the exodus pharaoh was?

  • @INFINITUMSPIRIT

    @INFINITUMSPIRIT

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@MarkNOTWYes see "Exodus rediscovered" By Inspiringphilosophy and Egyptologist David Falk

  • @danielstacy1704
    @danielstacy1704 Жыл бұрын

    I didn't realize Clark Kent was a Christian, how cool! I wonder if Superman knows🤔 But seriously thank you for this discussion, I look forward to reading Dr. Kennedy's book!

  • @karenpeterson5780
    @karenpeterson5780 Жыл бұрын

    Love this! Thank you, sirs, for a super informative discussion.

  • @ericphillips8006
    @ericphillips8006 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent content

  • @bosse641
    @bosse641 Жыл бұрын

    Interesting conversation. Enjoyed that. Thanks.

  • @SeanMcDowell

    @SeanMcDowell

    Жыл бұрын

    You bet John!

  • @oltyant
    @oltyant Жыл бұрын

    Hey Sean, Great video! I recently bought Dr. Kennedy's book titled "Excavating the Evidence for Jesus" and reading it now. I am in the middle but so far it's an awesome book! I am glad that you invite him for discussion(s). God bless you both!

  • @SeanMcDowell

    @SeanMcDowell

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s great to hear!

  • @bartbannister394

    @bartbannister394

    Жыл бұрын

    Holy Shite! In 1948 the Israeli government hired the best archeologists to show how Israel became a nation. After 50 years of digging they proved, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that the exodus never happened. Dr. Sean has no shame.

  • @oltyant

    @oltyant

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bartbannister394 How can you prove the existence or non-existence of a 3500 years old historical event? As we go back more and more years in the past, we have less and less materials to prove that smth was true or not true. There are a tons of assumptions and interpretations about those excavated/discovered items. Some of them are implying things seemingly clearly, some of them are not. But ultimately, the interpretation depends on your worldview. A materialist/evolutionist always sees it as how to avoid to explain it without God Almighty (or simply without a creator). The same true of antisemites and semites. History/archeology is a low confidence science so either you believe what they present to you or not... and most probably you will lean to the explanation that is align with your worldview. Me, as a evangelical (biblical) Christian who believes in Our Saviour God Jesus Christ, the book in question reveals the Truth. Again, History is not practical Physics (= high confidence science) so it has much less confidence as you cannot repeat and observe the historical events how they happened, while in Physics eg. the gravity can be observed/examined any time on the Earth. Or in Math eg. the pythagorean theorem was proven for 2500 years and it is not falsifiable while History is written by the winners and interpreted/distorted based on the cultural norm/political powers (ideologies). Today, the materialist/evolutionist doctrines are widespread and it is really really hard to get money for a science which is against it.

  • @bartbannister394

    @bartbannister394

    Жыл бұрын

    @@oltyant Where did you get this crazy idea from? Of course the past is verifiable if there is good evidence. 2500 years ago Thucydides said that 192 soldiers were buried in a mound at Marathon. Sure enough there were 192 skeletal remains found within that mound.

  • @str.77

    @str.77

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bartbannister394 That the past isn't verifiable is a crazy idea. But so is the idea that Israeli archeologists "proved that the Exodus never happened", least of all "beyond a shadow of a doubt". That is indeed shite!

  • @alfonsuskristo1624
    @alfonsuskristo1624 Жыл бұрын

    If the exodus doesn't exist then why would a tribe write a fiction about them getting enslaved by other nations? Then after being freed, they're stuck in the desert for 40 years and not immediately end in happily ever after. Knowing how prideful a tribe can be, they couldn't have made that up unless it's true.

  • @TebogoMotlhale

    @TebogoMotlhale

    8 ай бұрын

    to "WRITE" a fiction about yourself being enslaved, do you have to be "PROUD" of yourself when all you are doing is "WRITE" ? Why must the process of me taking a pen and a piece of paper to WRITE something down (about myself) NECCESSITATE or make it COMPULSTORY for me to now "BE Proud" of that writing (as a PRE-REQUISITE) ? Is it really IMPOSSIBLE for me to WRITE something (about myself) UNLESSS I am PROUD of that thing ? So I MUST BE PROUD of myself in order to WRITE something about myself . . . right ?

  • @TheSulross

    @TheSulross

    7 ай бұрын

    The criteria of embarrassement is actually one that is used by all historical scholars when researching any ancient text. If something is embarrassing to the author or the people (group) that the author is representing, then the appearance of embarrassing material is said to be probably due to it being so widely known that it couldn't be dodged, and sometimes it might be portrayed in a way to soften the embarrassement - or even explain it away. Professional academic scholars certainly do employ this particular criteria in their tool chest of textual criticism. When they see this it tends to bolster probability of historicity per their overall analysis.

  • @travissimpson7829

    @travissimpson7829

    5 ай бұрын

    Nah. People love to fantasize about being oppressed. Just look around at the culture today

  • @danlopez.3592

    @danlopez.3592

    5 ай бұрын

    Why would people write fiction? Hmm. I don’t know😂

  • @kerryholifieldjr6395

    @kerryholifieldjr6395

    Ай бұрын

    Even if you take everything you said as logical and absolutely true the answer becomes more obvious. This is a group of people that are conquered that wrote book that describes how to exist as a conquered people. We use to be great, we will be great again when god returns.

  • @mikhaelmediaofficial
    @mikhaelmediaofficial Жыл бұрын

    INCREDIBLE Interview. 🔥😍🔥

  • @Cate7451
    @Cate7451 Жыл бұрын

    Very well presented.

  • @lampkin9287
    @lampkin9287 Жыл бұрын

    Wonderful Gentleman!

  • @ahhitskatie9094
    @ahhitskatie9094 Жыл бұрын

    Two of my favorite brothers in Christ! Excellent interview, thank you both and God bless!

  • @SeanMcDowell

    @SeanMcDowell

    Жыл бұрын

    Ahh, thanks!

  • @Itsatz0

    @Itsatz0

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SeanMcDowell Here you are thanking the people you are taking on a ride. So buddy, find a way to delete this comment before the cat gets out of the bag.

  • @therayn0
    @therayn0 Жыл бұрын

    Oh man, how much I enjoyed this

  • @askia06
    @askia06 Жыл бұрын

    This was incredible!!!

  • @422systemarty
    @422systemarty Жыл бұрын

    This was a great interview. I would have like to hear his opinion on possible evidence for the Mount Sinai in Saudi Arabia were many claim is evidence were Moses went up to get the ten commandments. I am glad Sean asked about many people saying there is evidence of archeological evidence on the bottom of the Red Sea. Great Interview...

  • @linda0506

    @linda0506

    Жыл бұрын

    I think they need to investigate Petra in Jordan . Moses brother was buried there on Mount Hor. There is a valley there called The Valley of Moses. His brother Aaron is buried on Mount Hor. Petra was a very important city in antiquity. A staff which could be the staff of Moses was found at the Place of the Serpent, it is now in Birmingham Museum in the Egyptian Gallery.

  • @bartbannister394

    @bartbannister394

    Жыл бұрын

    Holy Shite! In 1948 the Israeli government hired the best archeologists to show how Isral became a nation. After 50 years of digging they proved, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that the exodus never happened. Dr. Sean has no shame.

  • @linda0506

    @linda0506

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bartbannister394 It did't happen at the time they thought it had happened, that's all. It doesn't mean it's all a fairy story.

  • @bartbannister394

    @bartbannister394

    Жыл бұрын

    @@linda0506 Archeologist can find absolutely no trace of Moses, nor a large population of Jews living in Egypt, at anytime. They can't find a trace of King Solomon. Nor his great temples. His words of wisdom are copied from the Egyptians. Moses and Solomon are proven fairytales. There is one bit of evidence found in the bible. They found one potsherd with David's name on it. It came from a site belonging to a minor warlord, not the king of a great empire.

  • @linda0506

    @linda0506

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bartbannister394 No evidence of the temples? Isn't the destruction of the second temple documented?

  • @hextoken
    @hextoken Жыл бұрын

    Titus is doing some great work! :)

  • @michaels9985
    @michaels9985 Жыл бұрын

    this is a big revelation thank you for this video!

  • @simonhengle8316
    @simonhengle8316 Жыл бұрын

    Great interview 👍

  • @kenwebster5053
    @kenwebster5053 Жыл бұрын

    David Rohl has shown that the archaeological correlation between the bible & Egypt is wrong due to a mistake by Champollion. Rohl dates the exodus to right before the unopposed Hyksos invasion. This places Juda at Jericho at the correct time. The remains of palace of Joseph is found in Goshen containing the tombs of the patriarchs 2 identical units for his sons & a huge statue of himself. The evidence is extremely compelling. Ramses is not the pharaoh of the exodus but to the pharaoh who destroyed the temple of Solomon. It just so happens that the city or Ramses was built overlapping the ruins of the earlier Judaic settlement in Goshen & scripture amended to uses the current name.

  • @leeshackelford7517

    @leeshackelford7517

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol...more time juggling shit from religious idiots

  • @vladhungrygen
    @vladhungrygen Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Sean. I am in Egypt right now and our tour guides are silent about this. Glad that you did this video.

  • @eugeneoisten9409

    @eugeneoisten9409

    Жыл бұрын

    Because it didn't happen. Hard to talk about something that never happened.

  • @harrycooper5231

    @harrycooper5231

    Жыл бұрын

    You sound like someone who visited NY, and is upset the tour guides were silent about showing you Spiderman's actual home.

  • @thiest1205

    @thiest1205

    8 ай бұрын

    Sarcasm? 😅😅

  • @oramenkamividpro5778

    @oramenkamividpro5778

    6 ай бұрын

    Actually the tour guides would love for this information to be true 😅. They are either Christians or Muslims. Do both believe in this story and they would have been very very happy to talk about it 😁. But as you said they never mentioned it as it's not true 😊

  • @johnvirgilio5323

    @johnvirgilio5323

    5 ай бұрын

    So no one's seen the documentary series Patterns of Evidence? So much evidence there. One example is in the ancient city in Egypt of foreigners called Avaris. There is one area that has twelve small tombs with one much larger with a statue of a ruler upon who's shoulder we see faintly a coat of many colors. One thing on the coral encrusted chariot wheels is that metal is detected at the center. It's also at a under water land bridge of sorts, off of a large beach that could even hold over a million. There's much more. ( Coral makes itself into a wheel shape but only there in the Red Sea... With a metal center. Right.)

  • @elizabethryan2217
    @elizabethryan2217 Жыл бұрын

    Great talk! Really interesting 👍👏👏

  • @donnaburden.dip.d.analysis2148
    @donnaburden.dip.d.analysis2148 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this great video. Xx

  • @mrshmanckles1463
    @mrshmanckles1463 Жыл бұрын

    It's always a boost to my faith to hear about scientific archeology that upholds the bibles stories aka scriptures.

  • @user-mh5qg5jb7d

    @user-mh5qg5jb7d

    Жыл бұрын

    What about the overwhelming science that disproves what the bible says? We know from geology the Earth is close to 4.5 billion years old. We know Adam and Eve could not have populated Earth from incest. We know Noah's arc could not have repopulated the Earth with only 2 of each species, and we know there hasn't been enough time since Noah's story for all the biological diversity we see today. Would you send your own child to hell for eternity if they didn't love you? Of course not, so why would an all-loving creator do so? I believe God is real but religion is man made. A person must be spiritually blind to believe God cares about our money...

  • @jasonwilloughby1372

    @jasonwilloughby1372

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol

  • @nextworld9176

    @nextworld9176

    Жыл бұрын

    You either have faith, OR you have evidence. If it makes you feel good to see evidence, then you really DON'T have faith, do you? But that's a GOOD thing. Con men and scammers rely on your faith. If there were any gods, they would be really easy to find, don't you think?

  • @adrianseanheidmann4559

    @adrianseanheidmann4559

    9 ай бұрын

    That's ridiculous.

  • @danlopez.3592

    @danlopez.3592

    5 ай бұрын

    Yea. Every time I visit New York City I am assured that Spider-Man really has magic powers. 😂

  • @williambottorff2305
    @williambottorff2305 Жыл бұрын

    I saw Dr. Kennedy's book behind him on his bookshelf and already ordered it. It was fascinating to hear about all of this. I think my favorite parts are the "Point A to Point B" thought process as well as the Yahweh inscritpion in the Soleb temple (someone please correct me on the name of that temple). Also, his use of negative evidence is especially interesting given how Dr. Kennedy mentioned the Egyptians likely wouldn't have recorded and publicized their military defeat like that. Thanks for the great video!

  • @SeanMcDowell

    @SeanMcDowell

    Жыл бұрын

    You bet. Glad you got it!

  • @bartbannister394

    @bartbannister394

    Жыл бұрын

    What's really interesting is how Christianity shows us how much like monkeys human beings can be. When monkeys choose a leader, they do it on faith. It makes them feel safe inside to be behind a protector who can save them. Humans have more imagination, god drowned the entire Egyptian army. And monkeys believe it!

  • @irontaylor9992

    @irontaylor9992

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SeanMcDowell ok sean i dis agree with DR KEnnedy scripture dose not back up what he saus cause clearly in Exdodus it says theu built cities for pharoah pithom and rammses ok if the is right then it cant be amenhotep because that is going against scripture and it cant be updated p;ace names cause if that is what he is saying then how can u say the passage he is using is right and that they didnt change it

  • @langeveldy
    @langeveldy Жыл бұрын

    Interesting presentation of a cumulative case for the historical reality of the exodus from Egypt.

  • @belisariobenites1091
    @belisariobenites1091 Жыл бұрын

    Sean and Titus, what version of the Bible do you prefer to use in your study? Thank you for the great job both of you do.

  • @lionheartapologetics4914
    @lionheartapologetics4914 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for doing this interview! If you haven't seen "Patterns of Evidence: Exodus" it's worth watching for a plausible explanation of the exodus. Titus confirms a lot of the evidence in the film.

  • @donaldcordner1936

    @donaldcordner1936

    Жыл бұрын

    "Mountain of Fire" is also a good short version that Patterns of Evidence was eventually born from: kzread.info/dash/bejne/oHmY0s2dm82ylpM.html

  • @stephengray1344

    @stephengray1344

    Жыл бұрын

    It's not as good as the Exodus Rediscovered series over on the Inspiring Philiosophy channel/

  • @JabberW00kie

    @JabberW00kie

    Жыл бұрын

    I used to buy into the Patterns of Evidence film and even bought David Rohl’s book Pharaohs and Kings. Now I know that David Rohl cherry picks data to fit his theory and conveniently leaves out information that makes it very implausible. What’s sad is that I believe that many Christians lean to the early date because they’ve been told that there is no evidence for a late date. At least, that’s the way Patterns of Evidence presents the situation. However, that is simply not the case. There is actually lots of good evidence to believe in a late date, much more so than an early date. I certainly have no problem changing my mind about that if I see more evidence to the contrary.

  • @lionheartapologetics4914

    @lionheartapologetics4914

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JabberW00kie thanks for sharing your thoughts. I'm happy to hear you're trying to follow the best evidence. The early date (c.1447 BCE) corresponds to 480 years before Solomon built the temple. It also corresponds with the confirmed date of the destruction of Jericho. I've read Garstang's original report of the excavation as the dig Kenyon did later. I have read Dr. Beitak's ongoing reports from Avaris and the early date corresponds with Asiatics' presence there. The best evidence corresponds with the early date of the Exodus. The point about the use of "Rameses" in Exodus 1:11 and Genesis 47:11 is reasonable based on the evidence. I have independently confirmed that the research does not correspond with the later date. That is based purely on when Rameses ruled. All the other evidence corresponds with the early date.

  • @lionheartapologetics4914

    @lionheartapologetics4914

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JabberW00kie The early date also corresponds with Israel's presence in Canaan. The dating of the Merneptah Stele (c.1206 BCE) as well as the archeological evidence of different food and sacrificial habits in Canaan (c. 1100s BCE) corresponds with the early date of the Exodus. The 19th Dynasty does not correspond with the dating of Israel's presence in Canaan.

  • @justingary5322
    @justingary5322 Жыл бұрын

    FIRST COMMENT I'M EARLY ASFLIP AGAIN 👊. AMEN brother McDowell and sister Dougherty I really appreciate your Christ centered and Scripturally accurate content for the furtherance of The Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ 🙏❤️👊. This has nothing and everything to do with the video but please listen if you want to otherwise leave it alone and ignore it. Hello my name is Justin and I'm a fellow Christian and Apologist but I'm also a college student. I'm not a closed minded Theist as I have nothing against Atheists or unbelievers as I speak to them often to understand their reasons for unbelief but we as Christians are convinced of God's Existence due to many real factors). I'm not trying to convert anyone or convince anyone to become Christians as that's The Holy Spirit's job to help people believe but only explain why I believe in Jesus Christ. There's actually evidence of God's Existence in Christianity. First of all there's proof that Jesus of Nazareth existed in history since the writings of Tacitus, Josephus Flavius, Pliny the younger and other historical documents prove that He was living two thousand years ago that even scholars both religious and Atheists agree with historically speaking but not that He's The Divine Son of God because obviously they don't. I'm going to give you historical and archeological evidence for God's Existence as The Scriptures have prophecies that predate the events recorded in them by several millennia including Matthew, Hosea and Zechariah which prophesy accurately of the people of Israel becoming a nation again after over 1900 years of being scattered around the nations since the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 A.D. spoken of by Christ in Matthew 23:29-24:3 and returning to their homeland after The Holocaust with Jerusalem as their capital in 1948 exactly as Jesus The Christ said. The prophets including Daniel spoke of the time where several world empires would arise and fall including the Babylonian kingdom, Medes and Persians, Roman Empire, and Saladin and the Muslims which went in consecutive order for the past few millennia. The people of Israel becoming a nation after The Holocaust in 1948 (ironically the melting point of gold as God compares Israel to gold that's tested in fire in Zechariah 13:8 and Jeremiah 16:15) exactly how Jesus The Christ said would happen since God us everything to come in The Scriptures and not just because people were working towards as Atheists claim which are impossible for any regular man to predict. Just before anyone says Christianity is a white man's religion made to oppress blacks during slavery you obviously aren't aware that the first Christians were Jews in The Middle East and that Christianity just like any religion can be used by evil and corrupt people to oppress others but you forget that the first Abolitionists/Civil Rights activists were Christians who sought to abolish slavery, racism, segregation, injustice and prejudice throughout American history. Jesus The Christ loves you enough not to give you what we all deserve which is God's Wrath by His Own Blood. Charles Darwin didn't originally come up with The Theory of Evolution over 200 years ago as it is mentioned in the writings of Ancient Greeks who believed in Demons that gave knowledge to philosophers. Evolution makes no sense when nothing has evolved after thousands of years of human history and supposedly the first creature came from primordial sludge several millions of years ago funny how they won't believe that God an Eternal Almighty Spirit Being created us from the Earth) which came from a supermassive expansion of matter at high temperature that inexplicably created everything in the known universe that supposedly came from nothing billions of years ago. How did the organs evolve before there were bones, skin, substance and how did any creatures see before eyes evolved? I've studied evolution and abiogenesis in the past and read Darwin's " Origin of The Species" I've studied evolution and abiogenesis in the past and read Darwin's " Origin of The Species" and I'm not convinced of but not macro or micro Evolution because there's no evidence of it nor clear observable examples of it where living creatures evolve into other kinds of species plus the fact that fossils don't show evidence of evolution and genetic entropy rules out evolution. The question begs how did two genders evolve from a common ancestor with a perfectly hospitable and sustainable environment with breathable oxygen and resources to survive on inexplicably? Atheists have the burden of proof to explain how everything came to be and why our existence is possible without the Existence of God from an godless perspective just as Christians have to provide evidence of God's Existence and the validity of His Word. Evolution requires life to already exist in order to take any effect in living organisms so it doesn't account for the existence of Life and reality. Also evolution is impossible because it goes against The Law of entropy and the second Law of thermodynamics because evolution makes things better whereas nothing continues to get better but decays and turns to absolute destruction in the end. Mark Ridley an Evolutionist said "No evolutionist whether gradualist or punctuationist uses the fossil record as evidence in favor of The Theory of Darwinian Evolution as opposed to special Creation". God's Existence is made perfectly known and observable in the universe as demonstrated in His Handiwork in the intelligently designed manner that Creation was made, human consciences and consciousness historical and archaeological evidence of God's Word being valid history, fulfillment of Bible Prophecies God in His Holiness and Righteousness could give us what we deserve in Hell for our since but He's merciful to give us free will to choose to accept or reject His gift of salvation by grace through faith in His Son Jesus. I don't mean this is any condescending manner but if you'd like to discuss The Scriptures with me or have me listen to your view on anything my instagram account is Savage Christian Kombatant.

  • @Lillaloppan
    @Lillaloppan Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so very much 😊!

  • @ChrisPhoenix
    @ChrisPhoenixАй бұрын

    So interesting!!

  • @sombra6153
    @sombra6153 Жыл бұрын

    I also watches “Patterns of Evidence.” Shifting the actual time line back 350-400 years causes purported evidence that has been discovered to align with the accounts of Exodus. It also shakes the established scholarship of Egyptology.

  • @kristinef.petersen1728
    @kristinef.petersen1728 Жыл бұрын

    I studied theology in lutheran university in Denmark, in Copenhagen: They made most of od testament to myth and some of new testament. They claim, that there's almost no archeological evidence for biblical stories. BUT at the entrance of the university, there's a stone (original stone) where kings of Israel were written. It's ironic. They said it's myth, for example because of numbers of people as Kennedy said.

  • @linda0506

    @linda0506

    Жыл бұрын

    How old is the stone?

  • @fordprefect5304

    @fordprefect5304

    Жыл бұрын

    We are now talking about the 1st Millennium when the Hebrews were settled in Canaan. The Kings of Israel starting with David in Judah and Omri in Israel have been verified to have existed. The stories about them are greatly exaggerated. i.e. David and Goliath, Solomon's temple, etc. Everything before that is considered mythology. The oldest bible books are dated to the 8th century with most of the bile dated to the 5th to 7th century.

  • @midimusicforever
    @midimusicforever8 ай бұрын

    Awesome stuff!

  • @dallasdien
    @dallasdien Жыл бұрын

    Right on Dr Kennedy!

  • @sarahpfeuffer1396
    @sarahpfeuffer1396 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Sean and Dr. Kennedy! I am putting together videos like this in a playlist as gathered evidence for God ❤️😊. Thank you for addressing the "chariot wheels" at the bottom of the red sea.

  • @donaldcordner1936

    @donaldcordner1936

    Жыл бұрын

    "Mountain of Fire" is also a good video that the longer Patterns of Evidence series was eventually born from: kzread.info/dash/bejne/oHmY0s2dm82ylpM.html

  • @sarahpfeuffer1396

    @sarahpfeuffer1396

    Жыл бұрын

    @@donaldcordner1936 thank you! I will check it out

  • @gwentomlinson4205
    @gwentomlinson4205 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much. Although I don’t need proof, I am happy God left enough evidence for those who love and fear Him

  • @glockdookie5231

    @glockdookie5231

    Жыл бұрын

    Its not about fear. Stop with that

  • @gwentomlinson4205

    @gwentomlinson4205

    Жыл бұрын

    @@glockdookie5231 reverence maybe a better word for you

  • @boansy1
    @boansy1 Жыл бұрын

    Good stuff, I really liked the term "Nomads of Yaway", that is very interesting, even in Celtic culture. May your days be driven and guided by the one true God.

  • @toiletseatscholar78
    @toiletseatscholar784 ай бұрын

    I'm going to have to revisit this issue.

  • @anthonyf6417
    @anthonyf6417 Жыл бұрын

    Also important is how this kind of evidence exposes the intransigent thinking behind a lot of scholars in the Exodus denying camp. Just on the basis of that alone I've always thought it was only a matter of time before the Exodus story would get at least some measure of vindication. Great interview.

  • @KingAries85

    @KingAries85

    Жыл бұрын

    Still waiting

  • @lizadowning4389

    @lizadowning4389

    Жыл бұрын

    There's no "denying" been done in the scholarly world about the exodus. Scientists will accept whenever the evidence is there ... but it's not there. Scholars will however "reject" baseless claims and "shady" interpretations of archeology to make a narrative "fit". If you would take the trouble of reading some earnest and unbiased scholars, historians and archeologists on the matter, you'll soon find out there's no "there there". For a "professor" at Biola and fellow of the Discovery Institute that simply won't do of course. They are out to "prove" the bible is accurate to the letter and will perform whatever "sceintific" acrobatics it requires.

  • @damianbennett5329

    @damianbennett5329

    Жыл бұрын

    looking forward to him picking up his Nobel Prize soon...

  • @fordprefect5304

    @fordprefect5304

    Жыл бұрын

    The problem with Exodus is not the lack of evidence it is the evidence. Apologists have moved the biblical date of the Exodus to 1265 BCE. Why? Hyksos (1550 BCE) Egypt drives Hyksos out of Canaan and vassalized the southern city states. Battle of Megiddo (1457 BCE) Egypt defeats the Mitanni and vassalized the rest of Canaan Armana Letters (1360-1330 BCE) Verification showing Egyptian Total Control of Canaan Battle of Kadesh (1274 BCE) Egypt and the Hittites battle to a draw, Egypt still controls Canaan These battles and letters show Egypt had total dominance and control over Canaan. So based on these facts apologists now want to place the Exodus at 1265 BCE. But there are issues with that date also. While some apologists would like to claim that Egypt abandoned Canaan and withdrew their forces back to Egypt there are two major problems. The Hittites were still on the border and were still skirmishing with the Egyptians. Now if the apologist's Exodus was happening and the Egyptian army was destroyed at the red/reed sea the Hittites would have surly noticed swept in and conquered Egypt, the bread basket of the middle east. Hatta was in a major drought and suffering from grain shortages. No, they made a peace treaty with Egypt and bought the grain 5 years later. Also Exodus [14:28] And the waters returned, and covered the chariots, and the horsemen, and all the host of Pharaoh that came into the sea after them; there remained not so much as one of them. Implies the Pharaoh perished, but we know the Pharaoh at this time Ramesses II lived 90 years from 1279 - 1213 BCE. The Egyptians maintained a string of fortress cities from Byblos, Megiddo, Beth Shan,Jaffa to Gaza along with many small garrisons and administrative centers throughout Canaan. Second problem is the Egyptians occupied Gaza (one of the cities Joshua smote [10:41] until they turned it over to the Philistines after 1177BCE. The fortress city of Jaffa did not fall until 1126BCE.(Burke and Peilstöcker have found evidence of two catastrophic blazes, ten years apart, that destroyed Jaffa, the second one occurring in about 1126 B.C. That fire, Burke believes, marked the end of Egypt’s presence not just in Jaffa, but in all of Canaan) Referring to the hills of Canaan Dr William Dever: "We know today, from archeological investigation, that there were more than 300 early villages of the 13th and 12th century in the area. I call these "proto-Israelite" villages". *This has been verified by archeologists* i.e. Mazur, Na'aman, Finkelstein, Faust and Dever courtesy of "thetorah" Dr William Dever, an archaeologist normally associated with the more conservative end of Syro-Palestinian archaeology, has labeled the question of the historicity of Exodus “dead”. Israeli archaeologist Ze’ev Herzog provides his view on the historicity of the Exodus:[7] The Israelites never were in Egypt. They never came from abroad. This whole chain is broken. It is not a historical one. It is a later legendary reconstruction - made in the seventh century [BCE] - of a history that never happened. Verifying Dr Dever is the Merneptah Stele Merneptah stele 1207BCE The Egyptian army rolls through Canaan and the only Israelites they encounter are some people in the highlands that they scatter. No Israelite city states or cities. No great Israelite army to stop them. Just a people the Egyptians called Israel. Shishak (Sheshonq I) 926 BCE Again the Egyptian army rolls through Canaan spends between 10 & 30 years occupying and leaves. No great armies of the United Kingdom to stop them. Interesting is the bible mentions Shishak by name but doesn't know who the pharaoh of the Exodus is. The bible mentions other kings/pharaohs by name also, but again can't name the Pharaoh of the Exodus. *Egypt had total control over Canaan from 1450BCE until 1126BCE* There is no time frame for the Exodus unless you count the return of the Judahites from Babylon and Egypt after Cyrus the great defeated the Babylonians. Around 519 BCE

  • @nextworld9176

    @nextworld9176

    Жыл бұрын

    Israel/Palestine/Judea is a small place. For billions of religious people, it's the most important place on the planet. However, for 2000 years, no one has found anything that is real evidence for god. Nothing. If there were anything found, the Southern Baptist Convention would be driving it all over the South, charging $49 to look at it.

  • @elihinze3161
    @elihinze3161 Жыл бұрын

    "They have an anti-supernatural bias" has to be the funniest thing I've heard all damn year. 😂

  • @christopher7725

    @christopher7725

    Жыл бұрын

    I wonder what an intellectual amount of pro-supernatural bias is according to these professors…

  • @DuelingDaltons

    @DuelingDaltons

    Жыл бұрын

    Having difficulty finding the quote "they have an anti- supernatural bias". Could you help me out with a time code?

  • @redfaux74

    @redfaux74

    Жыл бұрын

    Eli.... It's almost as funny as their belief that "nothing exploded" and here we are with all this complexity billions of years later. Let's see this nothing explode in a lab please. Let's see how every atom in the universe fit into a small dot. Because we know that's impossible by science. Almost as funny as the date of 13.778 billion years for the universe from these atheists. What was their mathematical equation or scientific method for this number? Why not 17.083 billion years as opposed to 23.567 billion years? I'd like to see the evidence for this. Something we can examine, test....

  • @sliglusamelius8578

    @sliglusamelius8578

    Жыл бұрын

    You have an anti-supernatural bias, why would it be funny to say that? If you’re a scientific materialist, then you have that bias. If you’re a religionist, then you have a supernatural bias. But what is supernatural? Can you explain the interaction of atomic particles at a huge distance? No, you can’t. Quantum physics is supernatural, even Einstein said so. (“Spooky interactions” he called them, and he initially rejected them. You need to expand you understanding of our collective ignorance about the nature of matter and energy).

  • @user-uo8kb5rv7n
    @user-uo8kb5rv7n22 сағат бұрын

    Great post. Thanks. Would like to hear Titus' discussion on the city of Ramses scenario.

  • @TheTrinityDelusion
    @TheTrinityDelusion Жыл бұрын

    Very good

  • @debbyleiper8367
    @debbyleiper8367 Жыл бұрын

    Incredibly moving actually. If you consider the late Dr Heiser’s teachings, it all makes sense. Thank you.

  • @frogpaste
    @frogpaste Жыл бұрын

    Dr. McDowell, I love that you did this interview and I totally understand and respect an early date for the Exodus, as that's the one I grew up learning at home. However, I've recently been convinced by Dr. David Falk, a Christian Egyptologist, that there's more compelling evidence for a later date of the Exodus. Please consider bringing him onto your channel to get an additional perspective on the Exodus, I think it'd be great! His KZread channel is Ancient Egypt and the Bible. Thanks for all you do! *edited to correct a typo

  • @SeanMcDowell

    @SeanMcDowell

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the suggestion!

  • @prestonscott1432

    @prestonscott1432

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, please bring Dr. Falk on!

  • @davidjanbaz7728

    @davidjanbaz7728

    Жыл бұрын

    I asked him last week to Bring Dr. David Faik on his channel: so he does know about Ancient Egypt and the Bible but keep suggesting that! As a Biola Alumni I hope he does !

  • @missthunderstormable
    @missthunderstormable Жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Excellent!

  • @Daniel-ju3ku
    @Daniel-ju3ku Жыл бұрын

    I have really enjoyed the Patterns of Evidence series

  • @bitsyindiga
    @bitsyindiga Жыл бұрын

    LOVE LISTENING TO YOUR VIDEOS ABOUT BIBLE HISTORY. VERY INTERESTING AND I BELIEVE IN THE BIBLE, WHETHER THERE IS PROOF OF SOMETHING OR NOT THAT IS IN IT. THE EVEIDENCE IS REALLY GETTING STRONGER ALL THE TIME, THAT THE BIBLE IS REAL HISTORY

  • @bartbannister394

    @bartbannister394

    Жыл бұрын

    What's really interesting is how Christianity shows us how much like monkeys human beings can be. When monkeys choose a leader, they do it on faith. It makes them feel safe inside to be behind a protector who can save them. Humans have more imagination, god drowned the entire Egyptian army. And monkeys believe it!

  • @jessb9514
    @jessb9514 Жыл бұрын

    I'm surprised there was no mention of Hatshepsut. She held the title King's Daughter at the time Moses was born and was most likely the daughter who found Moses in the water. Her husband died young, and the heir was a very young child, so she ruled in his place for years. She had a very close government official called Senenmut, meaning mother's brother. He was not of noble blood. There are statues of him holding her daughter. There's no record of him marrying. He was carved inside the temple portion of her tomb where only royalty is supposed to appear. He disappeared about the same time Moses would have disappeared, which also happened to be around the time Hatshepsut's step son came to power and the time she fell ill and died. Typically the next pharaoh would be the son of the previous pharaoh's highest ranking wife, but Hatshepsut had no known sons, only a daughter. Could her stepson have been looking for a reason to get rid of Moses out of fear or jealously? Years after her death, Hatshepsut's statues were destroyed, and the noses were intentionally broken off, indicating they wanted her to die in the afterlife. Her name was scratched off monuments. Senenmut received similar treatment. Since she wasn't much hated in her lifetime OR in the lifetime of her stepson, it seems plausible that all this hatred was directed at her after the plagues because she had saved Moses and brought into the royal household, and all the calamity has befallen Egypt, seemingly as a result. There's also an inscription somewhere where Senenmut is talking about how he has studied the history of the world and read everything the Egyptian libraries had on the subject of all the way back to the beginning. If Senenmut was Moses, it seems he had a deep interest in the history of the world even before he wrote Genesis.

  • @Ishidee1
    @Ishidee19 ай бұрын

    Very interesting and informative interview! It would be interesting to know what Titus thinks about the finds in Saudi Arabia that support the idea that Mount Sinai is located there, along with the rocks that have carvings of bulls and cows that were worshipped in Egypt. Plus the fact that the region is very large and could support the vast amount of Israelites that wandered.

  • @johnvirgilio5323

    @johnvirgilio5323

    5 ай бұрын

    The cumulative argument works well for Mt Sinai in Arabia, as Paul said it in Galatians 4:25. Josephus also put the Split Rock in Arabia, saying it was too large to move. It is enormous. Nearby are altars of uncut stones. Then there's the golden calf altar which has a red paint bull, dated in the proper time along with numerous etched Egyptian style bulls. Remarkably, it has a round area at the top where something has been ground down, like the golden calf. Nearby are two long animal shoots and a place at the end where Saudi archeologists found ash and animal parts. Moses Altar it seems. It's near an ancient stream which came from a spring near the top of the mountain. At the top is still the remnant of a beautiful blue sapphire, shiny floor. It's actually a mineral. There's a perfect Elijah's Cave, as well as the twelve springs of Elim from Exodus 15. There's so much more. See the documentaries, Finding the Mountain of Moses, and Patterns of Evidence. The blue mineral was discovered by Andrew Jones recently.

  • @gen2917
    @gen2917 Жыл бұрын

    I’ll be getting this book for my high school boys 🙌🏻

  • @adamodeo9320
    @adamodeo9320 Жыл бұрын

    "propaganda?" how can a bunch of people write about themselves in such an unfavorable light - mainly complaining and disloyalty - and use it as propaganda????

  • @boomboombelle
    @boomboombelle Жыл бұрын

    but if Pharaoh and his army were swallowed up in the Red Sea, then shouldn't there be evidence that something greatly impacted Egypt? I mean, what would that mean for Egypt?

  • @MustAfaalik

    @MustAfaalik

    Жыл бұрын

    @HT.Also where are the physical evidence that would proof of settlement by tens of thousands of inhabitants as they wandered in the wilderness for 40 years.

  • @Morewecanthink

    @Morewecanthink

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MustAfaalik - The footprints and the wholes made by their tents?

  • @Morewecanthink

    @Morewecanthink

    Жыл бұрын

    @HT - The egyptian 'chronology' isn't reliable. Why should they now by any means have proclaimed their defeat by the living God while chastening HIS people?

  • @MustAfaalik

    @MustAfaalik

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Morewecanthink Evidences that archaeologist look for ie artefacts, garbage, burial sites & more than you can think, fool.🙄🙄🙄😁😁

  • @MustAfaalik

    @MustAfaalik

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Morewecanthink You have met all the criteria for a faith that does not require commonsense, only to follow blind, deaf & dumb. SAD indeed!!!

  • @johnrisher3007
    @johnrisher30073 ай бұрын

    Blessed are those who believe and have not seen 🙏

  • @bayareabeardco.3871
    @bayareabeardco.3871 Жыл бұрын

    Of note- the censuses in numbers only record men of fighting age(20-60). It does not account for women, children nor the elderly. While apologists will say the number was much lower to make it seem plausible. The count should have been much higher.

  • @maxmustermann1206
    @maxmustermann1206 Жыл бұрын

    I highly recommend the documentary Patterns of Evidence: The Exodus. I also recommend the other documentaries in the Patterns of Evidence series.

  • @donaldcordner1936

    @donaldcordner1936

    Жыл бұрын

    "Mountain of Fire" is also a good short version that Patterns of Evidence was eventually born from: kzread.info/dash/bejne/oHmY0s2dm82ylpM.html

  • @stephengray1344

    @stephengray1344

    Жыл бұрын

    I'd highly recommend the critiques of Patterns of Evidence found on the Ancient Egypt and the Bible channel - run by Egyptologist Dr David Falk. There are big problems with the case that is presented in the Patterns of Evidence series, and a much more robust case that can be made for the later Exodus date (for a good presentation of that case I recommend the Exodus Rediscovered documentaries over on the Inspiring Philosophy channel).

  • @charliedontsurf334

    @charliedontsurf334

    Жыл бұрын

    Dr. Falk really knows his stuff. I second that.

  • @sigalsmadar4547

    @sigalsmadar4547

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stephengray1344 boo hiss. Tim's documentary puts the standard Egyptology theories to shame.

  • @stephengray1344

    @stephengray1344

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sigalsmadar4547 Patterns of Evidence doesn't even acknowledge most of the problems with the theory it presents - most importantly the fact that the way it changes the chronology contradicts dozens of synchronisms (pieces of evidence that two people lived at the same time). Yes, the case looks impressive if it's the only version of events you ever look into, but Proverbs 18:17 specifically warns us against coming to a conclusion having only heard one side of the argument.

  • @BIBLE-UNBUTCHERED
    @BIBLE-UNBUTCHERED Жыл бұрын

    It would have had to be a sizeable enough Israelite population, for Pharaoh to be concerned about their growth (in comparison to Egyptians)

  • @jaybelle1909

    @jaybelle1909

    Жыл бұрын

    I'd like to hear their interpretation of the word being used for thousand in the bible because every time I hear them make thus argument they never explain it... Bible says they took a census of war capable men that was over 600k thus this would mean the exodus would have to been over 1mil ppl... also what would the birth rate be after 400 years from time of Israel?

  • @Morewecanthink

    @Morewecanthink

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jaybelle1909 - from 'Die biblische Chronologie der Menschheitsgeschichte', Kurt Wolfgang Becker: Für die Dauer von 215 Jahren spricht 3.): Bei einer Wachstumsrate von 4,91 % (entspricht in etwa der heutigen Wachstumsrate in einzelnen Ländern Afrikas) wären nach 215 Jahren die 70 Menschen zu einem 2 Mio. Volk herangewachsen. Siehe dazu 2.Mose 12,37 bzw. 2.Mose 38,26. ... 2083 Anno Hominem Abraham zieht in Kanaan ein [1Mo 11,32-12,4 und Apg 7,4] 2036 BC Bestätigung der Aussage in Galater 3,17 (ab dem Einzug Abrahams in Kanaan, bis zum Auszug aus Ägypten, zählen die 430 Jahre unter Fremdherrschaft: 2036 - 1606 v. Chr.) Abraham ist zu dieser Zeit 75 Jahre alt. Gottes Bund mit Abraham tritt nun in Kraft. 430 Jahre später (1606 v.Chr.) erfolgt die Gesetzgebung am Sinai [Gal 3,17] 2093 Abraham (85 J.) heiratet Hagar [1Mo 16,3] 2026 Zwischen Abrahams 85. Lebensjahr (wo er im Unglauben eine Beziehung mit Hagar einging - siehe 1Mo 16,3), und seinem 99. Lebensjahr (1Mo 17,24) liegen 14 Jahre, in denen Gott nicht zu Abraham sprach. 2094 Ismael geboren [Hagar & Abraham] 2025 Abraham ist zu dieser Zeit 86 Jahre alt [1Mo 16,16] 2096 Arpaksad stirbt [1Mo 11,13] 2023 2107 Bund mit Abraham bestätigt und präzisiert 2012 Namensänderung, Beschneidung, Verheißung Isaaks [1Mo 17] (Abraham ist zu dieser Zeit 99 Jahre alt, Ismael ist 13 Jahre alt [1Mo 17,25] als beide beschnitten werden) 2108 Isaak geboren [1Mo 21,5] 2011 21. Generation Abraham ist zu dieser Zeit 100 Jahre alt; Sarah 90 Jahre ist alt 2113 Ismael mit Hagar vertrieben [1Mo 21,9-21] 2006 Mit der Vertreibung Ismaels wurde Isaak als "Same" und "Erbe" anerkannt. Von diesem Augenblick an zählen die 400 Jahre, in dem der "Same" Abrahams als Fremdling gilt. Das bedeutet, dass Isaak und seine Nachkommen in einem "fremden Land" zubringen und man seinen Samen "knechten und misshandeln wird" [vgl.1Mo 15,13 und Apg 7,6]. Die 400 Jahre zählen von 2006 - 1606 v.Chr., also ab dem Zeitpunkt, als Isaak als alleiniger Erbe ausgewiesen wurde, bis zu dem Jahr, in dem der Auszug aus Ägypten stattfand. Bestätigung der Aussage in 1Mo 15,13 und in Apg 7,6 (400 Jahre)

  • @robertedwards909
    @robertedwards909 Жыл бұрын

    As a former soldier we had something called litter disapline you pack out what you pack in especially when an enemy was pursuing you also our trash isn't there trash cloth pottery would have been very valuable

  • @geraldpolmateer3255
    @geraldpolmateer3255 Жыл бұрын

    The archaeological evidence lines up with 1446BC which is also what 1 Kings 6:1 declares. I have been able to locate most of the locations on Google Earth. In Tell El-Borg I and II is about the work that James Hoffmeier did. The excavation that Manfred Bietak reveals a time when people quickly died. Rosalie David showed the same thing. David Rohl has written some books and has written about the exodus. He uses the text to show what happened and where the locations are. He also worked with the movie maker who did the "Patterns of Evidence".

  • @ichitoburrito1359
    @ichitoburrito1359 Жыл бұрын

    If people haven't watched Exodus Decoded, they really should. It is done by James Cameron and the Naked Archeologist (Simcha Jacobovici). It explains that the reason scientists can't find evidence of the Exodus is because they are looking at the wrong time for it. It also explains and gives evidence of the timeline Jacobovici has put forth and how he arrived at his conclusions. Very intriguing and is most likely true.

  • @mburrito57939
    @mburrito57939 Жыл бұрын

    Yes!! I happened to study the 10 Plagues account this morning!!! God is good! Early date for Exodus all the way. Let's give God the glory He so richly deserves. The Bible CAN be trusted. Edit: I thought the Sphinx story and Amenhotep II sounded familiar: I was reading about it in the SDA Bible commentary (vol 1) and it's exhilarating to hear more information about this time in history. Can we just stop and appreciate that God cared for the animals as well? When He gave the warning that hail was going to fall (to show that He had power over storms and weather vs the Egyptian gods), He urged people to shelter their animals and servants. God is amazing and considerate & worthy of all praise.

  • @cindychristman8708

    @cindychristman8708

    Жыл бұрын

    How come he didn't care about all the animals that were drowned in the flood?

  • @berenlevia8486

    @berenlevia8486

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cindychristman8708 I guess you didint read what animals God had Noah put on the ark .🤔

  • @cindychristman8708

    @cindychristman8708

    Жыл бұрын

    @@berenlevia8486 Huh?? Are you insinuating that all the animals that were on the ark were all the animals on earth?

  • @berenlevia8486

    @berenlevia8486

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cindychristman8708 i never said that . and its apparent you havent read the Noah account .

  • @cindychristman8708

    @cindychristman8708

    Жыл бұрын

    @@berenlevia8486 Just what are you saying? Genesis 7:21 says "Every living thing that moved on land perished, birds, live stock, wild animals, all the creatures that swarm over the earth, and all mankind." NIV Your god drowned all the humans and animals that weren't on the ark. Why did God punish animals when it was was humankind he repented making? What did the animals do? And why didn't he care about them like he did in the Exodus story?

  • @jamesmorgan2064
    @jamesmorgan2064 Жыл бұрын

    Good job ese

  • @mrs.turnerstreehouse3652
    @mrs.turnerstreehouse3652 Жыл бұрын

    I'm wondering if Dr. Kennedy is familiar with Ron Wyatt and Mary Nell Wyatt's research on this topic. In her book, Battle for the Firstborn, Nell Wyatt proposes dual and overlapping timelines for the rulers of Egypt. For instance, according to her timeline, Thutmose III is the same ruler as Amenhotep II. Amenhotep II ruled when Moses fled, after killing the Egyptian. Her research suggests that Amenhotep III is the Pharoah of the Exodus. I'm interested to know what you think of her research.

  • @williambeckett6336
    @williambeckett6336 Жыл бұрын

    Exodus is complete myth. Just ask one simple question: Where are all the bodies from the 10th plague? For context Egypt's population under Ramses II (the traditional Pharaoh) was between 2.9 to 4 million people. Living in a very restricted 16 mile wide habitable zone along the Nile. Low estimating the death toll b restricting an Egyptian family to say only four people ( they were much larger) a father, mother, first and second born, that's 725,000 people, in a very restricted area SIMULTANEOUSLY DROPPING DEAD. And if the father or mother were first borns they'd die too so you're potentially looking at 3 of 4 dying pushing the number MUCH higher. Yet there's no bodies. No mass mummifications, no mass burial pits, no laments, no records Egyptian or from other nations/empires at the time. nothing. There are no bidies becuasue it never happened.

  • @joinjen3854

    @joinjen3854

    Жыл бұрын

    Mass Graves done in a hurry are there. Like contagion or plague.

  • @mamacojackson9019

    @mamacojackson9019

    16 күн бұрын

    Have you forgotten the countless invasions of the Roman Empire, Babylon, England, Napoleon, Ottomans in Egypt?

  • @Venaloid
    @Venaloid Жыл бұрын

    Any chance you'd be brave enough to interview Israel Finkelstein, who shows quite thoroughly that the Exodus is highly implausible in his book, "The Bible Unearthed"?

  • @chiararomano1818

    @chiararomano1818

    Жыл бұрын

    The Israeli antiquities authority has already weighed in on this and has determined there’s no evidence for Moses, enslavement of hundreds of thousands of Jews, the exodus, Joshua’s conquest of Canaan….

  • @InfoArtistJKatTheGoodInfoCafe

    @InfoArtistJKatTheGoodInfoCafe

    Жыл бұрын

    Are you brave enough to face that Finkelstein's main thesis has been debunked.

  • @KeepsLearning
    @KeepsLearning Жыл бұрын

    Sean should interview Egyptologist Dr David Falk of Ancient Egypt and The Bible

  • @dovonovich
    @dovonovich Жыл бұрын

    Any comments from Dr. Kennedy concerning the recently discovered Curse Tablet? Would that not help the Exodus case?

  • @FamilyHistoriandude

    @FamilyHistoriandude

    Жыл бұрын

    It should at least help with researching the Hebrew language "family tree".

  • @onlyme972
    @onlyme9728 ай бұрын

    The levant is a small area, None of the advanced civilisations noticed anything, even Jewish archaeologists say its a myth.

  • @Rabbinicphilosophyforthewin

    @Rabbinicphilosophyforthewin

    3 ай бұрын

    “Even Jewish archeologists”-if you know anything about Jewish culture, you know many have such a personal grudge against the Torah and G_d, they’ll jump at any chance to diminish it.

  • @Alice-lq5nb
    @Alice-lq5nb Жыл бұрын

    I’m starting to read the book of exodus so I think this will help understand exodus more for me. So this is gonna help. 😄

  • @SeanMcDowell

    @SeanMcDowell

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome, let us know what you think!

  • @Alice-lq5nb

    @Alice-lq5nb

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s nice to know there was more historical evidence even though I believe by faith.

  • @dennischanay7781

    @dennischanay7781

    Жыл бұрын

    What book are you reading? I'm looking for recommendations. Thanks!

  • @nemgyuri

    @nemgyuri

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dennischanay7781 I guess she meant the exodus in the bible

  • @johnelliott5859

    @johnelliott5859

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Alice-lq5nb there is no evidence presented. They even said so. There is only speculation.

  • @GTX1123
    @GTX1123 Жыл бұрын

    The evidence for Israel's sojourn in Egypt and the Exodus in Egyptian records and steles is EXACTLY what we would expect to find according to the Biblical record. Think of it as "hiding in plain sight" in two ways; one is that Egyptian records are not going to be using Hebrew names / cultural nomenclature when describing Egyptian administrators who would fit Jospeh or his two sons Ephraim and Manasseh. So what you're looking for in terms of Joseph as Pharaoh's right hand man, is an Egyptian type of grand vizier / treasurer with an Egytpian name / title and other historical events in the right time frame that would fit the narratives in Genesis. One piece of evidence that points to Joseph's time as Grand Vizier of Egypt, is the shift of power from the Nomarchs back to the Pharaohs between the reigns of Senusret II (Pharaoh whose dreams Joseph interpreted) to Senusret III (Pharaoh who presided over the famine. Egytologists still cannot figure out how or why this massive shift of power happened but the account in Genesis 47 explains to us why; i.e. the famine had become so severe that when the Nomarchs ran out of money and land to pay Joseph for grain, they sold themselves as slaves to Pharaoh just to survive, thus losing all of their power over Pharaoh in the process. Dr. Doug Petrovich has done an incredible about of research into this and has determined that an Egyptian treasurer known as Sobekemhat is none other than Joseph himself. He also presents inscriptional evidence from Serabit el-Khadim in the Sinai that has a direct bearing on the historicity Ephraim, Manasseh and Shechem. There is also FAR MORE evidence that the dig site at Avaris is the actual land of Goshen and not a Hyksos settlement.

  • @PeteV80
    @PeteV80 Жыл бұрын

    I'm a Catholic with a degree in Egyptology. I haven't yet watched this, but the lack of evidence for the Exodus is troubling to me, such so much of my theology is based on it, and especially Moses. I'll watch with interest.

  • @PeteV80

    @PeteV80

    Жыл бұрын

    The chronology of Amenhotep II, his father and son is interesting. Hadn't made that connection before and the Dream Stela does hint at a need for justification with Tuthmosis IV.

  • @kimhewson201

    @kimhewson201

    3 ай бұрын

    Check the work of David Rohl

  • @TheCheapPhilosophy
    @TheCheapPhilosophy Жыл бұрын

    The problem is that Egyptians liked to brag a lot about their victories, and nowhere is recorded 4 centuries of enslavement for Hebrews. Nowhere in 400 years, dozens of pharaohs, thousands of tablets from that time. Worse still:: it was unearthed an Egyptian stronghold right in the heart of Judah at times of (biblical) judges,, meaning Egypt had a presence where the 40 years stranded slaves, ended the mythological journey. Worse still, evidence points to a progressive settlement from the north, not the south. No way the Exodus was something else than propaganda.

  • @daveperk

    @daveperk

    Ай бұрын

    They weren’t slaves at first… they were wanderers, keepers of livestock, and would sell their workforce (indenture) to Egypt 8n exchange for food and water for their animals. I don’t th8nk they were enslaved until the last generation.

  • @justingary5322
    @justingary5322 Жыл бұрын

    AMEN brother McDowell there's much evidence of The Bible's validity in history and archeology.

  • @SeanMcDowell

    @SeanMcDowell

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep, I think you will enjoy this one!

  • @Morewecanthink

    @Morewecanthink

    Жыл бұрын

    Archeology is well instructed to keep up with the biblical chronology, God's revealed story with mankind, not the other way around. Not man decides truth. God's word, the Bible, is truth.

  • @justingary5322

    @justingary5322

    Жыл бұрын

    ATHEISM AIN'T GOT NOTHING NEW OR BETTER TO OFFER THAN THE VERY RELIGIOUS BELIEFS THEY'RE CRITICAL OF SO IT'S HYPOCRISY AT IT'S FINEST 😂. Hello this is for all you Atheists, unbelievers and skeptics. I'm going to address a few misconceptions and lies about God's Character and His Word. The Bible doesn't support chattel slavery or anything else Immoral. Ok so Atheists and unbelievers say God is either Immoral, incompetent or not responsible so let's see what The Scriptures actually say. God revealed himself and created a nation in a real, historical context. It was a world with a slave-based economy, with city states often at war with each other, with polygamous marriages to ensure the continuation of family lines. The laws of the Old Testament regulate this behaviour. Slaves are to be treated humanely (Exodus 21:11). They are given rights and not seen as mere possessions. Hebrew slaves were able to buy their own freedom. Human trafficking is condemned (Exodus 21:16). In contrast to the law code of Babylon, Old Testament Israel was a light to the nations. The Old Testament law and narratives do not stand alone. Jesus is now the best example of what we read. So the moral teaching of the Bible cannot be summarised by a quote taken out of context from the Old Testament to demonize God and His Word. Slavery was permitted in Old Testament law but it was regulated by God giving the Israelites instructions on how to fairly and humanely treat their slaves (it was like indentured servitude where someone could work for you if they owed debts or needed income not cruel like chattel slavery). God allowed the people of Israel to own slaves since they themselves has already experienced over 400 years of generations of Egyptian slavery and knew how inhumane it was to be beaten, overworked and taxed so God set them apart from other nations and cultures around them by giving them a fair way to treat their slaves since slavery had already existed in the world but it doesn't mean God condoned it just used it for His Will to bring Good And in the light of the whole scriptural teaching, we find the reasons for its ultimate abolition (Ephesians 6:9; Colossians 4:1-3; Philemon 15-16 and Galatians 3:28). The Word of God provided the moral standard against slavery in the Roman Empire and against the slave trade in the New World. But what of genocide or holy war in the book of Joshua? Several things could be pointed out. The use of warfare in the ancient world did not always mean literal total destruction, even when events are described in such terms. Furthermore, the book of Joshua does not describe a genocide. It is not a race who are being wiped out, as in genocide, but a religious practice which was often appalling and degrading. Those who repent (like Rahab from Jericho or Ruth) are not destroyed but become part of Israel. It is not the racial group that is in view but their "detestable practices". However, after all is said, we must still acknowledge that God brought judgment on the nations of Canaan. It is not our place as believers isn't to sugar-coat the Bible. For some skeptics, this is enough to make God a moral monster. But the fact is that Jesus continued to affirm that God is a Judge who will bring a future judgment on all peoples and all nations. God’s judgment will be just. The list of Old Testament stories rejected by critics often leads to a similar dismissal of the New Testament teaching of Jesus on the existence of hell. After all, what was the Flood of Genesis or the conquest of Joshua if not a glimpse of future judgment? Hell does not demonstrate cruelty on God’s part, but it does demonstrate His Holiness and our moral accountability. Perhaps this is the real reason many people rail against the God of the Bible? It is not that they think He is a moral monster, but that they are afraid He is a moral Judge, and that has implications for our behaviour now. God is an Eternal Almighty Spirit Being and we as His creatures have Eternal souls and spirits so the punishment for our sins against Him must therefore also be Eternal but so must the reward for righteousness that's why He sent His Son Jesus to live a perfectly righteous and sinless Life (which none of us could ever possibly expect to do) suffer the humiliating and torturous death of crucifixion to shed His Own Blood willingly so that all who willingly accept His gift of salvation by grace through faith in Him will be saved and given Eternal life because that's what God wants is for us to willingly accept His gift of salvation and choose life. Exodus 21:20-21 literally speaks about capital punishment befalling anyone who mistreats their slaves so yes people are taking Scripture out of context to demonize God who literally promises that slaves who are mistreated under someone else's authority is to be avenged. When we hear the word “slavery” we think of innocent human beings, kept prisoner for life, having no rights under law and so reduced to animals. This is clearly immoral because it is unjust: the slave has done nothing to deserve the treatment. The situation described as “slavery” in the Bible was nothing like this. It is more accurately described as one of indentured servitude. Many “slaves” were indentured servants, working for a term of years Some other “slaves” were prisoners. There were no prisons. Prisoners had to work to live like everyone else. Some had life sentences. Some served a term and were released. People didn't beat their good slaves but treated them well and protected their assets thus. But no matter how rebellious a slave was, you couldn't just beat them to death. And if you knocked out their tooth or damaged their eye then you had to set them free. (Exodus 21:26). God wasn't using what other nations did because He wanted to set His Chosen People of Israel apart from the cruel, inhumane and unjust systems other cultures had so He gave them a fair way to treat their slaves and servants. There is a lot of ignorance on this topic which is understandable given the age we live in but it's not the nefarious set up we think of when we think of modern slavery. The question Atheists must ask themselves is how come the Jews aren't being accused of slavery and human trafficking if they're guilty of it in The Bible and why would white slave owners rip out pages from The Old and New Testament Scriptures to justify their owning blacks as slaves if The Bible already justified slavery?

  • @ariah5093
    @ariah50938 ай бұрын

    So cool

  • @Strutingeagle
    @Strutingeagle Жыл бұрын

    There are a lot of single family camp sites that have been discovered and studied much older than the Exodus time period.

  • @noneofyourbusiness7055
    @noneofyourbusiness7055 Жыл бұрын

    At this rate, with appeals to title-holders from Biola _sign here to affirm every single one of your conclusions will be the one on top of this page_ University, I wouldn't even be surprised if Seanny here would end up citing Ron Wyatt for proof...

  • @racerx4152

    @racerx4152

    2 ай бұрын

    your childish reply shows you to be irrelevant.

  • @noneofyourbusiness7055

    @noneofyourbusiness7055

    2 ай бұрын

    Can't address what I actually said, huh? Oh well, if you're that desperate to be a good little sheep...

  • @aliciabufano-engel3344
    @aliciabufano-engel3344 Жыл бұрын

    Dr. Titus Kennedy looks like a TV actor who has been cast as a professor. Entirely too good looking to be a real professor, lol.

  • @Skudoosch
    @Skudoosch Жыл бұрын

    All right Kal El. Nobody’s falling for the disguise.

  • @ryansprunger9218
    @ryansprunger9218 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Sean. I am a Christian and appreciate the points made in this video; they seem to provide evidence for the Exodus. One counter argument would be the proposition that the exodus narrative is a response to the late bronze age occupation and exploitation of Canaan. Of course there is massive evidence for this occupation, and the timing and type of event would certainly seem to be appropriate to seed just such a work of literature. I am a student of literature, psychology and theology and currently I do not believe that the inclusion of mytho-history in the Bible makes it untrue or unsuitable as communication from a loving God. I would love to hear your thoughts on this idea.

  • @damianbennett5329

    @damianbennett5329

    Жыл бұрын

    yep, when does he pick up his Nobel Prize?

  • @ryansprunger9218

    @ryansprunger9218

    Жыл бұрын

    @@damianbennett5329 Does interacting with this type of comment benefit the person or robot who made it? It seems like this is a troll account.

  • @robertbrown6879
    @robertbrown6879 Жыл бұрын

    He makes a good point that after more than 3,000 years there will not be much physical evidence.

  • @dan_gocavs4110

    @dan_gocavs4110

    7 ай бұрын

    No footprints in the sand? lol (yes, a good argument indeed)

  • @paradisecityX0
    @paradisecityX0 Жыл бұрын

    You shoulda brought David Falk on for this one

  • @gemguy6812
    @gemguy681210 ай бұрын

    We have the mummy of Amenhotep II, well preserved and viewable, how cool is that!

  • @TheUndistinguishedmillenial
    @TheUndistinguishedmillenialАй бұрын

    Iv looked into the evidence of the Red Sea crossing, it’s very compelling. When you look at the coral you can definitely see wheels with spokes and one team went down there with metal detectors and it was hitting as a type of metal. They also have found coralized femur bones 🦴 down there as well.

  • @TheSocratesian

    @TheSocratesian

    Ай бұрын

    LOL!