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The Prophet and the Pharaoh

Robert Feather finds a link between Ezekiel's vision of the Temple and a radical Pharaoh, in an extract from his book Black Holes in the Dead Sea Scrolls - offering solutions to some previously intractable riddles

November 15, 2012 16:08
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Anonymous,

Anonymous

8 min read

Note: Modern-day Armana in Egypt was the site of an ancient city called after the Pharaoh Akhenation, who brought Egypt to the realisation of monotheism

Science works on the principle that any theory has to be repeatable under the same experimental conditions and that a theory which has this characteristic will predict related findings when these are tested.

Not only are the Dead Sea Scrolls full of obvious memories of the Amarna period, as one might expect, but there are entire sections of the Bible itself that reflect life at the time of Akhenaton and the geometry of his holy city. If what I claim is correct, it would be surprising if they did not.

The Book of Ezekiel gives numerous clues that he is not talking about the land of Israel or the Temple at Jerusalem, when he talks about the Holy City and a huge temple:
“The House of Israel and their kings must not again defile my
holy name by their apostasy and by the corpses of their kings
at their death. When they placed their threshold next to my
threshold and their doorposts next to My doorpost with only a
wall between me and them they were defiling my holy name.”
(Ezekiel 43:7–8)

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