Posted on 12/18/2006 5:49:10 PM PST by SJackson
Scientists are still baffled about how all those Akkadians ended up here in Louisiana, and why they first began to eat crawfish....
It's just a common misconception, and it's often given as evidence that the Hebrews are mentioned in other Egyptian texts. Since Solomon's official is portrayed in Hatshepsut's account -- which is earlier than the Amarna archive -- that is in itself evidence that the Habiru are not Joshua's Israelites.
In his last letter to the pharaoh Abimilki changed the manner he had used... He used to tell the pharaoh that he, the august overlord, 'thundereth in the heavens like Adad.' It should be noted here that this was the same attribute that Shalmaneser in his inscriptions applied to himself... Bizarre conjectures were published to explain the meaning of that perplexing name Shalmaiati... Abimilki's last letter is not yet ended. What should we like to read in it? ...Abimilki wrote that he would desert his rocky island and evacuate the population of Tyre... [I]n the time of Shalmaneser III (in the ninth century) there lived a prince called Suppiluliuma (Sapalulme), to whom Shalmaneser referred in his annals. He could have been the author of the letter in the el-Amarna collection signed with his name. In a short and broken text from Ugarit referring to donations made to the goddess of the city of Arne, Prince Nikmed of Ugarit-Ras Shamra as well as Suppiluliuma are mentioned... Arne was not far from Ugarit and was captured by Shalmaneser III... [I. Velikovsky, Ages In Chaos, pp 318-323]The el-Amarna letters don't date to the time of King David as David Rohl claims. As Velikovsky showed -- in 1952 -- they are a century and more thereafter. Turns of phrase, the sequence of events, and even the players on the stage are one after the other identical. But in the conventional pseudochronology, they are separated by six hundred years. As he concluded:
Can one accept such a series of coincidences? And if it is accepted, is it only to have the old difficulties present themselves again? If the Habiru were the Israelites, why, then, in the Book of Joshua, which records the conquest of Canaan, and in the letters of el-Amarna are no common name and no common event preserved? [I. Velikovsky, Ages In Chaos, p 335]
Let me get this straight: you're going to let a Hollyweird actor (Gibson), two commentators who look to me like a couple of barroom drunks (Buchanan and Novak) and a bunch of money-grubbing TV preachers push you away from beliefs you've held in your heart since childhood?
Fix your eyes and your heart on Jesus Christ and forget these fools.
For what it's worth, I have relatives who are bigoted asses too. I ignore them!
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Just updating the GGG info, not sending a general distribution. |
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