Difference between revisions of "Duration of the Egyptian Exile/1/en"
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<page type="Introduction"> | <page type="Introduction"> | ||
<h1>The Duration of the Egyptian Exile</h1> | <h1>The Duration of the Egyptian Exile</h1> | ||
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+ | What was the length of the Children of Israel's stay in Egypt? This question has ramifications for understanding the Egyptian bondage and its backdrop, as well as the development of the Israelite nation. | ||
+ | </div> | ||
<h2 name="Explicit Verses">Explicit Verses – 400 or 430 Years</h2> | <h2 name="Explicit Verses">Explicit Verses – 400 or 430 Years</h2> | ||
<p>The Torah explicitly addresses this issue in two places, first when the slavery is originally foretold and a second time upon its conclusion:</p> | <p>The Torah explicitly addresses this issue in two places, first when the slavery is originally foretold and a second time upon its conclusion:</p> | ||
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<h2 name="Paternal Lineage">Moshe's Paternal Lineage – Three Generations From Levi</h2> | <h2 name="Paternal Lineage">Moshe's Paternal Lineage – Three Generations From Levi</h2> | ||
− | <p>Additionally, <a href="Shemot6-16" data-aht="source">Shemot 6</a> and <a href="Bemidbar26-59" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 26</a> provide Moshe's lineage from both his paternal and maternal sides, and each of these appears to support a much shorter time frame. On Moshe's paternal side, his grandfather Kehat lived for 133 years and his father Amram lived to be 137 years old. As Kehat was one of the seventy souls who came down to Egypt with Yaakov,<fn>See <a href="Bereshit46-8" data-aht="source">Bereshit 46:11</a>.</fn> taking the sum of his and Amram's entire lifespans together with Moshe's own age of 80 at the time of the Exodus,<fn>See <a href="Shemot7-7" data-aht="source">Shemot 7:7</a> that Moshe was eighty when he came to Paroh. This number can also be calculated by subtracting the forty years in the desert from Moshe's age of 120 at his death (see <a href="Devarim31-2" data-aht="source">Devarim 31:2</a>, <a href="Devarim34-7" data-aht="source">34:7</a>).</fn> we arrive at a maximum total of only 350 years from the descent to Egypt until the Exodus.<fn>See <multilink><a href="SederOlamRabbah3" data-aht="source">Seder Olam Rabbah</a><a href="SederOlamRabbah3" data-aht="source">Ch. 3</a><a href="Seder Olam Rabbah" data-aht="parshan">About Seder Olam Rabbah</a></multilink>. This maximum computation of 350 would also require one to assume that Kehat was a newborn when the Israelites went down to Egypt, and that both he and Amram fathered their children in the year in which they died. Given the implausibility of these assumptions, the total was probably far less than 350 years. See <multilink><a href="Rashi6-18" data-aht="source">Rashi</a><a href="RashiBereshit15-13" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15:13</a><a href="Rashi6-18" data-aht="source">Shemot 6:18-20</a><a href="Rashi12-40" data-aht="source">Shemot 12:40</a><a href="RashiMegillah9a" data-aht="source">Megillah 9a</a><a href="R. Shelomo Yitzchaki (Rashi)" data-aht="parshan">About Rashi</a></multilink> “והרבה שנים נבלעים לבנים בשני האבות”.</fn></p> | + | <p>Additionally, <a href="Shemot6-16" data-aht="source">Shemot 6</a> and <a href="Bemidbar26-59" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 26</a> provide Moshe's lineage from both his paternal and maternal sides, and each of these appears to support a much shorter time frame. On Moshe's paternal side, his grandfather Kehat lived for 133 years and his father Amram lived to be 137 years old. As Kehat was one of the seventy souls who came down to Egypt with Yaakov,<fn>See <a href="Bereshit46-8" data-aht="source">Bereshit 46:11</a>.</fn> taking the sum of his and Amram's entire lifespans together with Moshe's own age of 80 at the time of the Exodus,<fn>See <a href="Shemot7-7" data-aht="source">Shemot 7:7</a> that Moshe was eighty when he came to Paroh. This number can also be calculated by subtracting the forty years in the desert from Moshe's age of 120 at his death (see <a href="Devarim31-2" data-aht="source">Devarim 31:2</a>, <a href="Devarim34-7" data-aht="source">34:7</a>).</fn> we arrive at a maximum total of only 350 years from the descent to Egypt until the Exodus.<fn>See <multilink><a href="SederOlamRabbah3" data-aht="source">Seder Olam Rabbah</a><a href="SederOlamRabbah3" data-aht="source">Ch. 3</a><a href="Seder Olam Rabbah" data-aht="parshan">About Seder Olam Rabbah</a></multilink>. This maximum computation of 350 would also require one to assume that Kehat was a newborn when the Israelites went down to Egypt, and that both he and Amram fathered their children in the year in which they died. Given the implausibility of these assumptions, the total was probably far less than 350 years. See <multilink><a href="Rashi6-18" data-aht="source">Rashi</a><a href="RashiBereshit15-13" data-aht="source">Bereshit 15:13</a><a href="Rashi6-18" data-aht="source">Shemot 6:18-20</a><a href="Rashi12-40" data-aht="source">Shemot 12:40</a><a href="RashiMegillah9a" data-aht="source">Megillah 9a</a><a href="R. Shelomo Yitzchaki (Rashi)" data-aht="parshan">About Rashi</a></multilink> who notes: “והרבה שנים נבלעים לבנים בשני האבות”.</fn></p> |
<h2 name="Maternal Lineage">Moshe's Maternal Lineage – Two Generations From Levi</h2> | <h2 name="Maternal Lineage">Moshe's Maternal Lineage – Two Generations From Levi</h2> |
Latest revision as of 09:47, 30 July 2019
The Duration of the Egyptian Exile
Introduction
Explicit Verses – 400 or 430 Years
The Torah explicitly addresses this issue in two places, first when the slavery is originally foretold and a second time upon its conclusion:
- Bereshit 15:13 – “וַיֹּאמֶר לְאַבְרָם יָדֹעַ תֵּדַע כִּי גֵר יִהְיֶה זַרְעֲךָ בְּאֶרֶץ לֹא לָהֶם וַעֲבָדוּם וְעִנּוּ אֹתָם אַרְבַּע מֵאוֹת שָׁנָה”
- Shemot 12:40 – “וּמוֹשַׁב בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל אֲשֶׁר יָשְׁבוּ בְּמִצְרָיִם שְׁלֹשִׁים שָׁנָה וְאַרְבַּע מֵאוֹת שָׁנָה”
These verses seem to imply that the duration of the exile in Egypt was either 400 or 430 years.
Four Generations
Other scriptural evidence, however, points to a much shorter period of time. The subsequent verse in Bereshit 15:16 states that already the fourth generation will return to the land of Israel, and four generations rarely span 400 years.1
Moshe's Paternal Lineage – Three Generations From Levi
Additionally, Shemot 6 and Bemidbar 26 provide Moshe's lineage from both his paternal and maternal sides, and each of these appears to support a much shorter time frame. On Moshe's paternal side, his grandfather Kehat lived for 133 years and his father Amram lived to be 137 years old. As Kehat was one of the seventy souls who came down to Egypt with Yaakov,2 taking the sum of his and Amram's entire lifespans together with Moshe's own age of 80 at the time of the Exodus,3 we arrive at a maximum total of only 350 years from the descent to Egypt until the Exodus.4
Moshe's Maternal Lineage – Two Generations From Levi
Moshe's maternal lineage creates even greater difficulties, as the Torah records that his mother Yocheved was a daughter of Levi, thereby implying that the three generations of Levi, Yocheved, and Moshe spanned the entire sojourn in Egypt. However, since Levi was approximately 43 years of age when the tribes came down to Egypt,5 even granting that Yocheved might have been born to Levi in the year of his death (at the age of 137), her birth would have occurred after the Israelites had been in Egypt at most 94 years. On the other hand, we also know that Moshe was born exactly 80 years before the Exodus. Thus, in order to reach a total of 400 (or 430) years in Egypt, one would need to assume that Yocheved was at least 226 (or 256) years old(!) when she gave birth to Moshe.
In Exegetical Approaches we will explore how various commentators resolve the larger contradiction between the explicit 400/430 numbers and the much lower figures indicated by Moshe and Aharon's lineage, as well as the smaller discrepancy between the 400 and 430 numbers themselves.