Thinking Exodus: Egyptology and the Bible (James K. Hoffmeier)

Episode Summary

Many modern people, in both the church and the academy, don’t believe that the early narratives of the Hebrew people reflect historical events. Instead of a historical exodus, they might consider the exodus account to be, for example, a collection of inchoate legends, or a 5th-century B.C.E. exilic invention of the Jews.

Others simply regard the historicity of Scripture as a matter of “blind faith.” Does it really matter when Exodus was written, or if the story even took place? Is there evidence from the biblical texts or ancient Near Eastern archaeology that these events occurred?

For some, the answer is a definitive “yes.”

In this episode, Dr. Dru Johnson talks with Dr. James K. Hoffmeier about the history of Israel and the historical exodus. Dr. Hoffmeier has the distinction of being both an Egyptologist and a biblical scholar, skilled in the archaeology, culture, and history of the ancient Near East. After discussing “Egyptianisms” in Hebrew (loan-words), the etymologies of biblical names, and intersections of literature and archaeology, Dr. Hoffmeier argues that the exodus was a historical event.

This perspective, while somewhat unfashionable in contemporary scholarly debates, provides a foundation for the practices and principles of modern-day Jews and Christians.

Chapters

    • 0:00 Introducing James K. Hoffmeier, his work, and his life

    • 5:12 Being a “third-culture kid”

    • 7:29 How studying and living in Egypt informs a reading of Scripture

    • 14:30 Evidence that the Torah contains firsthand experience of Egypt

    • 21:18 Etymologies of the names Moses and Korah

    • 25:45 Cultural contextualization in the Torah and the character of God

    • 32:27 Is the exodus account early Hebraic history or a Persian-era literary invention?

    • 40:25 Why the historical exodus matters for theology and how it informs Hebraic law and rituals

Transcripts are AI generated and are not guaranteed to correctly reflect the content of the podcast.
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Dr. James K. Hoffmeier

Dr. James K. Hoffmeier is Professor Emeritus of Old Testament and Ancient Near Eastern History and Archeology at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. He was born in Egypt and lived there until age sixteen, and returns often for research, excavation, and teaching ministry. He served as Professor of Archaeology and Old Testament at Wheaton College and was chair of Wheaton’s Department of Biblical, Theological, Religious and Archaeological Studies. From 1996 to 1999 he was also director of the Wheaton Archaeology Program.He was an archaeological editor for the English Standard Version Study Bible, and his books include Israel in Egypt: Evidence for the Authenticity of the Exodus Tradition (Oxford University Press, 1997), Ancient Israel in Sinai: The Evidence for the Authenticity of the Wilderness Tradition (Oxford University Press, 2005), and The Archaeology of the Bible (Oxford: Lion, 2008).He directed excavations at Tell el-Borg, Sinai, from 1998-2008, and has appeared in and served as a consultant for television programs on the Discovery, History, Learning, and National Geographic Channels. Dr. Hoffmeier teaches and lectures regularly across the USA and internationally.

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