Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Joseph

Some scholars like to claim that as few of the events described in the Bible actually happened. It isn't at all rare to find people who say that Biblical history starts at about the time of Hezekiah (2 Kings) or David (2 Samuel), and that the earlier stuff is all myth. There are even some people who claim that the history starts in Ezra.

Of course, I don't agree with them, and I think it's a very cavalier approach to history to ignore the only documents we have that describe much of the earlier history. But outside the Bible, there isn't much evidence either way for events before David - Israel wasn't settled then in a way that produces much in the way of archaeology. There's some from the time of Joshua, but that's contested because it isn't clear and could be made to fit half a dozen very different scenarios.

And then something like this comes along. They've found some coins in Egypt from the right sort of time which seem to refer to Joseph. That's Joseph the son of Jacob (as in Genesis) rather than Joseph the husband of Mary. If these are real, they blow massive amounts of liberal Biblical scholarship out of the water. I believe the previous record for the oldest Biblical character referred to in an archaeological inscription was David (c. 1000 BC), but that was from a while later referring to the kings of Jerusalem as "sons of David". If this is the same Joseph, it pushes it right back to about 1600BC...

5 comments:

Casey said...

Assuming the coins are genuine (I think that's beyond contention) and from that time period, then is it really even possible that it could be another Joseph? Would that have been a name common among Egyptians? It seems almost certain to me that it has to be the Joseph of the Bible.

John said...

Generally agreed. But it's always wise when writing about academia to put appropriate academic caution in.

Speaker for the Dead said...

http://blog.bibleplaces.com/2009/09/josephs-coins.html

I'm not sure.

Greg Melia said...

Interestinger and interestinger. I've posted this on my blog too.

John said...

There are all kinds of questions here. One of them is that Egypt isn't exactly the world leader in academic archaeology. If they'd published hi-res photos of the coins / charms in question, that would be a lot more helpful...