The 10 plagues in ancient egyptian papyrus

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Outsider

The 10 plagues in ancient egyptian papyrus

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Outsider

Re: The 10 plagues in ancient egyptian papyrus

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JohnHurt

Re: The 10 plagues in ancient egyptian papyrus

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Hello Outsider,

The same people who run our universities and insist that all humans came from monkeys, have likewise "made a monkey" out of Egyptology.

Anything that supports the Biblical narrative has been removed from the study of Egypt, and not many Bible scholars study archeology.

One Biblical Archeologist, with pluses and minuses, is Ron Wyatt.

Several of Ron Wyatt's discoveries, like his Noah's Ark and Ark of the Covenant finds, I believe he got them wrong.

But his work on finding that Nuweiba was the site of the Exodus Red Sea crossing makes sense. There are also two pillars that may have been erected by Solomon on the Egyptian and Saudi sides marking the site of the crossing.

Wyatt discovered Jebel El Laws in Arabia as the site of giving of the 10 Commandments. There is a very large rock there that was split in the middle where it appears water ran out of the split and made a water channel.

There are pens made out of rocks for holding animals at the base of the mountain of Jebel El Laws. There are rocks set every few yards as a boundary to limit the approach the mountain.

The top of Jebel El Laws has been burned, as the outside of the rocks above a certain elevation show evidence of all being baked in high heat. There is a cave near the summit that could pass for Elijah's cave.

Even Paul said that Mt Sinai was in Arabia (Gal 4:25), and not where St. Catherine's Monastery is located in the Sinai peninsula.

The leading "experts" don't have a clue, so the most they can do is to ignore whatever facts contradict the mainstream narrative. If they even talked about these topics, they would be fired from their cushy jobs at the university.

I think that Imhotep was Joseph. I understand that the Temple complex at Saqqara has many pits the size of football fields and around 80 feet deep, lined with brick. At the bottom of these pits is a layer of grain, then a layer of sand, which repeats. This is how Joseph or Imhotep preserved the grain that fed the people during the 7 year famine. A huge amount of grain could have been stored at Saqqara.

I tie the Hyksos Shepherd Kings to Israelites, and many other nations from Canaan. The Hyksos were expelled when there arose a Pharoah that knew not Joseph. When this revolution happened, a large part of the Tribe of Dan, but not all, left Egypt for many different places around the Mediterranean.

But you never heard any of this from the "Egyptologists". As Eric Blair said, "he who controls the present, controls the past." The "history" that we have has been written by our current rulers.

There are other things in Egypt that can blow your mind. The shaft of Osiris under the Giza plateau, and how they got the large "coffins" down the shaft, all cut precisely. The Osiris tunnels could date back to as far as 12,000 BC. We don't know.

Or how they cut the blocks for the Pyramids, and moved them from the quarry and then up the side of the Pyramid. We don't know how they did it, we can speculate, but we can't duplicate their works.

There are things in Egypt, like the Sphinx, that are much older than 4004 BC. I think Egypt existed before 4004 BC. And the earth is not 6000 years old, either. God did not bury dinosaur bones in the ground to make the earth "appear" older. The earth is is what it is, and God has given us these puzzles to open our eyes.

There is a beautiful story in the Bible that God gave us and we have to unlock our minds to see it. We have been blinded by the adversary and prejudices of those that came before us. If we could read Genesis 1 and 2 plainly, like a child, we would discover that Adam was created long after the 7 days of creation.

That's enough for now.

Take care, and thanks for the post.

John
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Outsider

Re: The 10 plagues in ancient egyptian papyrus

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Yes, I find Ron Wyatt a mixed bag too. In the exact ways you do.
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