Posted on 04/20/2002 7:55:22 AM PDT by restornu
Brother George Potter has lived in Arabia for 9 years. During the last 6 years he has explored Lehis trail. His discoveries can be viewed at Nephi project
The fear of God and a score of other emotions filled my heart as I started climbing the mountain. It was a hot Arabian afternoon in May 1995. Our destination was the alleged cave where Elijah heard the still small voice of God. The question kept crossing my mind, Are we the first LDS to step onto the real Mount Sinai? If so, Craig Thorsted, Tom Culler and I were ascending the mountain where Moses received his great vision (Moses 1:1, see footnote b), where the prophet received his endowment (Moses 1), where Moses received his calling to return to Egypt and free the children of Israel (Moses 3), and the mountain from whence the Ten Commandments were hewn by the finger of God. I could not help but wonder if we were playing some small, but significant role, in identifying the mountain that some Latter-day Saints believe will play a part in the announcement of the Second Coming (D&C 29:13), while Muslims hold that it is the actual site where Jesus Christ will take the faith when He returns in the Last Days[i].
We were not the first Latter-day Saints to attempt to locate the Arabian candidate for Mount Sinai. Other parties had used the instructions found on, Ron Wyatts Internet site Anchorstone and Larry Williams & Cornukes book, The Mount Sinai Myth, but were unsuccessful in locating the mountain. Indeed the Wyatt, Williams and Cornuke clues were of little help to us either. Using information gleaned from earlier attempts to find the mountain, we were finally able to locate the mountain that today seems to be a better candidate for Mount Sinai than the traditional candidate on the Sinai Peninsula. Although the Arabian Mount Sinais existence has been rumored for nearly 200 years, my companions and I have now visited the mountain on several occasions and have what is probably the most detailed photographic survey of the archaeological monuments on the mountain.
Why is locating the real Mount Sinai important to the LDS community? First, Mount Sinai is the most ancient of all known temples. Given its role in the Latter-days, it appears that it is still a dedicated temple site a House of the Lord. The LDS Bible dictionary states of Temples: In case of extreme poverty or emergency, these (temple) ordinances may sometimes be done on a mountain top (see D&C 37:55). This may be the case with Mount Sinai. Second, it provides the faithful with an actual Biblical site, one that has remained nearly untouched since the time of the Exodus. And third, our exploration of Mount Sinai led to the discovery of several possible Book of Mormon sites, including the Valley of Lemuel and the River of Laman (see our web site )Nephi Project .
What Are The Characteristics of Mount Sinai?
Before exploring the out back of the Arabian wilderness for the mountain, we listed what the scriptures said about it:
1.) It was said to be located in Arabia (not the Sinai Peninsula) (Galatians 4:25), and not in Egypt, (Exodus 2:15,19, 3:8.10,12 the Sinai Peninsula is part of Egypt, and was so at the time of Moses).
2.) It was said to be located in the furthest northwest corner of Arabia called Midian (Exodus 4:19-25 to locate Midian, see your LDS Bible Maps).
3.) The burning bush and subsequently the camp of Israel was said to be on the backside of the mountain, the side away from the homeland of Moses and Jethro (Exodus 3:1-2).
4.) There was an altar built of unhewn stones (Exodus 20:24-26),
5.) Sinai had a brook (Deuteronomy 9:21).
6.) An altar of the Golden Calf was made within sight of the Mount Sinai (Exodus 32:17-19).
7.) Boundary markers were erected to prevent the children of Israel from coming up the mountain (Exodus 19:23).
8.) Twelve pillars were set up for each tribe (Exodus 24:4).
9.) Sinai had a habitable cave that was used by Elijah (1 Kings 19:8-9).
10.) The mountain was exceedingly high (Moses 1:1).
11.) There was room for approximately 3,000,000 Israelites to camp next to the mountain (Exodus 12:37).
12.) From the campsite at the foot of the mountain, the children of Israel could see the presence of God (Exodus 19:17-18).
13.) There was ample grazing for their animals for an extended period of time.
The Traditional Site for the Mountain of Moses
There seems to have been no rational reason why the St. Catherines mountain on the Sinai Peninsula was labeled Mount Sinai. All we know is that a psychic had convinced Constantine that this remote mountain near the southern end of the Sinai peninsula was the sacred mountain. Tim Sedor and I visited St. Catherines and found it a poor candidate. Williams and Conuke also visited St. Catherines and outlined these reasons why it could not be Mount Sinai. 1) Moses would not have driven Jethros flocks nearly two hundred miles to a land that is almost entirely void of fodder for sheep. 2) There is not enough room for large encampment at the St. Catherines site. Indeed the nearest campsite would have been what is referred to as the wadi of the Rest. This wadi could not have been where the children of Israel camped because the mountain is not visible from the campsite, and we know that the children of Israel were able to see the presence of God on the mountain. 3) The terrain is extremely barren, the flocks of the children of Israel would have starved. 4) Moses, a man of eighty years of age, would have needed to climb a mountain that requires mountaineering equipment, 5) The mountain has no source of drinking water. Why would Moses have led more than 2.5 million people to a place with no water? 6) There is no archeological evidence that there was an encampment of nearly 3,000,000 people. 7) None of the other features described in the Bible are found there (i.e. cave, creek, etc.)
We concluded that the traditional view of Mount Sinai, as found on the southern end of the Sinai Peninsula, is a myth that is promoted mainly by the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism. After visiting the mountain in 2001, I now understand why its credibility has been discounted away over the last hundred years.
So Where is the Mountain of God?
One modern commentary to the Torah contains a map showing eight possible candidates for Mount Sinai. Indeed, the quest to find Mount Sinai has baffled explorers and scholars for millennia, and the scriptures seem to suggest that the mountains real location might never be revealed (Moses 1:42). However, the Apostle Paul seems to have known Sinais location. He placed the Mountain of Moses in Arabia (Galatians 4:25), not in the Sinai Peninsula. Pauls testimony of where the sacred mountain was located seems to have been based on what he saw in that desert land. Paul wrote that, Neither went I up to Jerusalem to them which were apostles before me; but I went into Arabia . (Galatians 1:17) Since Paul spent time in Arabia, it is possible that he actually visited the mountain himself. Regardless, if we are to trust this great Apostle the seven of the eight proposed sites of Mount Sinai should be dismissed. They are not even found in Arabia.
What is most impressive about the only Arabian Mount Sinai candidate are the many archeological artifacts that are found at its base. The mountain is found in a remote place, yet there are man made artifacts that suggest it is Mount Sinai. These include what Williams and Cornuke believed to be the altar of Moses, eleven piles of stones that are found next to the mountain these seem to form boundary markers, a natural rock formation which has had a Petra style high-place-altar cut in its top and which is surrounded with petroglyphs of Egyptian stylized calves (the altar of the golden calve), and semi-buried marble pillars which have been broken in pieces. There is also a dried brook bed that runs next to the altar and a habitable cave that overlooks the archeological monuments.
What The Scriptures Say:
The record of the Jews, the Torah, meaning the Instruction and the Hebrew Old Testament point to Arabia as the land of Mount Sinai. Although 55% of the modern locations of Biblical place-names are still lost to us, there are several key place-names that have been carried down from antiquity[ii]. One of these is Midian were Mount Sinai was located.
The account of Moses reads:
Moses fled from the face of pharaoh, and dwelt in the land of Midian: and he sat down by a well.
Now the priest of Midian had seven daughters: and they came and drew water, and filled the troughs to water their fathers flock.
And the shepherds came and drove them away: but Moses stood up and helped them, and watered their flock. (Exodus 2:15-17)
There is ample scholarly evidence that Midian was both a town and also a land in northwest Arabia. Its western border is the eastern shore of the Gulf of Aqaba. Its capital city, Madyan (Midian), was a major halt of the ancient frankincense trade route from southern Arabia to Egypt, and would have been a good place for Moses to have come upon as he fled along the trail from Egypt to the great desert.[iii] The official name of the town is now al-Badaa. However, modern Arabic maps of northwest Arabia still show the name of the town as Shuayb, the Arabic spelling of Jethro.
The LDS Bible (1979 Edition), Map #6, The Ancient World at the Time of the Patriarchs, agrees with the early Islamic geographers, i.e. Midian, was located in Arabia next to the Gulf of Aqaba. The first Western explorers in the area agreed that the northwest corner of Arabia was Midian (Beke (1834), Burton (1878)[iv], Wallhausen (1886), Sayce (1894), Moore (1895), Shede (1897), Gall (1898), Gunket (1903), Meyer (1906), Schmidt (1908), Gressmann (1913), Haupt (1914) and Musil (1911).[v]
Over a thousand years ago, the early Islamic geographer Al-Hauqal wrote that there was a well in Midian from which Moses watered the flocks of Jethro (Shuaib). He explained, even then, that the name of the town was derived from the tribe of Jethro.[vi] Writing in the same period, Al-Muqqaddasi wrote Here may be seen the stone which Moses removed when he gave water to the flocks of Shuaib. Water here is abundant.[vii]
Arab geographers place the land of Midian west of the city of Tabuk[viii], which infers that the land Midian only reached a short distance into the interior of Arabia. Tabuk is less than 150 miles east of the Gulf of Aqaba. Abdulla Al-Wohaibi who compiled the writing of the Arab geographers between 900-1100 A.D. noted, The attention that Madyan [Midian] has always attracted from the Arab geographers is due to the fact that it is mentioned in the Quran in connection with the story of the prophet Shuaib [Jethro].[ix]
Some try to justify the myth that Mount Sinai was in Egypts Sinai Peninsula by suggesting that Midian might have included the Sinai Peninsula during the time of Moses. Biblical scholar James Montgomery dismisses this: the land west of a line from the Wady of Egypt to the Elanitic Gulf [the Gulf of Aqaba] has always belonged to the Egyptian political sphere, and actually that is the present boundary of Egypt the South-Arabians called the same region, Msr, i.e. Misraim, Egypt[x]. The remains of the ancient Egyptian copper mines near St. Catherines support the idea that Egypt controlled the Sinai.
Although local traditions can be misleading, the local habitants of Midian (al-Badaa) have a rich tradition of Moses and his father-in-law Jethro. Besides the traditional name of the town being Jethro, the locals will ready show you the caves of Moses, the wells of Jethro, the wadi Horeb, the wadi Moses, and the Waters of Moses. The renowned Arabia explorer H. St. John Philby wrote on his visit to Midian: From here my guide and I climbed up the cliffs to visit the circles of Jethro on the summit of Musalla ridge, from which we climbed down quite easily to our camp on the far side A cairn marked the spot where Jethro is supposed to have prayed, and all around it are numerous circles, from here I had a magnificent view of the whole of Midian mountain range, with Lauz [Jebel al-Lawz] and its sister peaks in the northeast .[xi]
In Exodus we read of the place where Moses saw the burning bush:
Now Moses kept the flock of Jethro his father in law, the priest of Midian: and he led the flock to the backside of the desert, and came to the mountain of God, even to Horeb.(Exodus 3:1)
As Philby described, the Mount al-Lawz is visible from al-Badaa (town of Midian) and is to its northeast. The Bible seems to suggest that this is the location of Mount Sinai. First, Moses took Jethros flocks there, which implies that the mountain is in the vicinity of Al-Badaa. Second, since Arabia has long been known as the desert or the wilderness, its backside would be the interior or east not the shoreline. This would further imply that the burning bush was on the eastside of the mountains, the opposite side of the mountain from the town of al-Badaa (Midian). Since Jethros home in the valley where the major settlements existed was on the west side of the mountain, the backside would be the side of the mountain away from Jethros home and the town of Midian.
This describes exactly the location where we found the monuments and petroglyphs. Not only is the mountain northeast of Al-Badaa, the monuments we found are on the east side of the mountain. The exodus story in the Quran appears to supports the notion that the backside of Sinai was indeed the eastward side. Facing the mountain from Jethros home, the mount is on the northeast, or ones right side. The Quran states that the Lord appeared to Moses on the right side of the mountain. (Quran 19:52, see Abdullah Yusuf Alis translation, footnote 2601 which implies that the right side was the east side.)
Although these arguments are straight-forward and consistent with the Biblical account, there are still those who hold that Mount Sinai was on the Sinai Peninsula. They argue that there are Biblical accounts of herdsmen taking the flocks to far off lands. Perhaps, they argue Moses took Jethros flocks on a long search for food and ended up in the southern region of the Sinai Peninsula.
This seems very unlikely, especially if one realizes that the entire region around the St. Catherine site is unsuitable for grazing. Britains governor of the Sinai after World War I, became acquainted with the peninsula during this long tenure there as perhaps no other westerner before him. Writing in Yesterday and Today in Sinai, C.S. Jarvis asserted that there was no way the Israelite multitudes and their livestock could have traveled through-much less sustained themselves for more than a year-in the tumbled mass of pure granite of the southern Sinai. Besides, what would Mosess reason be for taking Jethros flocks out of Arabia and into Egypts Sinai Peninsula where the pasture is inferior and Moses was a wanted man? It should be remembered that Egyptian garrisons protected the copper mines near St. Catherines mountain.
In contrast, we have observed large Bedouin camps in and around the mountains of Midian. Historian Abdulla Al-Wohaibi indicates that Midian was a flourishing ancient town with numerous wells and permanently flowing springs whose water had a good taste. There are farms, gardens and groves of palm trees.[xii] In ancient times there appears to have been more than enough fodder for sheep in Midian. The Greek Agatharkides of Cnidos wrote of Midian the country is full of wild camels, as well as of flocks of deer, gazelles, sheep, mules, and oxen. As a result he also noted that the game attracts numerous lions, wolves, and panthers.[1]
If Mount Sinai is in Midian, then where is it? A bluntly naïve thing to do is to just pick up a modern road map and follow it. The most widely used road maps in Arabia are published by Eng. Zaki M.A. Farsi. His map guide to Tabuk[xiii] covers the land of Midian. The modern roadmap shows a trail leading east from the wadi Ifal, about ten miles north of Al-Badaa. The trail heads directly towards a towering V shaped mountain that towers into the sky. The name of the valley is wadi Musa, meaning the valley of Moses. The wadi Moses ends at the western base of the V shaped mountain. On the backside or eastside of this very peak is where we found the monuments that suggest that it is the real Mount Sinai.
There are many other reasons for believing that the peak nine miles south of Jebel al-Lawz is the best candidate for Mount Sinai. My companions and I have discovered more information concerning this candidate for the Mountain of Moses. Richard Wellington and I plan to author a book that discusses the mountain, the trail of the children of Israel to it, the place where they crossed the Red Sea, and the campsites they stayed in prior to reaching Mount Sinai.
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[1] Burton, 108.
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[i] Hadith, Riyadh-US-Saleheen, Imam Adu Zakariya Yahya Bin Sharaf An-Nawawi, Vol. II (Riyadh, International Islamic Publishing House), p. 873.
[ii] Yohanan Aharoni, The Land of the Bible: A Historical Geography, trans. A. F. Rainey, 2d ed. (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1979), 129.
[iii] Abdulla Al-Wohabi, The Northern Hijaz In The Writings of The Arab Geographers 800-1150 B.C. p. 142
[iv] Burton, Richard, Sir, The Gold-Mines of Midian, and the ruined Midianite cities (1878) (Cambridge, England: Oleander, 1979).
[v] www.anchorstone.com
[vi] Abdulla Al-Wohabi, The Northern Hijaz In The Writings of The Arab Geographers 800-1150 B.C. p. 142.
[vii] Al-Wohabi, p. 142.
[viii] Burton, p. 169.
[ix] Al-Wohaibi, 140.
[x] Montgomery, James A, (University of Pennsylvania, 1934), p. 31.
[xi] Philby, H. St. John, The Land of Midian (London: Ernest Bean Limited), p. 222.
[xii] Al-Wohaibi, p. 141.
[xiii] Farsi, Eng. Zaki M.A., Map and Guide of Tabuk, (Jeddah: Farsi).
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© 2002Meridian Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
We LDS are a picular people so it is hard for us to fit in on the various theology discussions and the Lord has taught us to study the many wonderful books of his Word. This topic I have taken this from the "Access to the Ancients" Archive, in Meridan Mag. archives.
I hope we can followship often. Others are welcome to join in, if your purpose is to discuss scriptures. If you have another agenda please take it to another thread.
Our Purpose is to study the doctrine of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
This was the 1st post-
WHY READ THE LEAST UNDERSTOOD BOOK MERIDIAN MAGAZINE | 2002 AD | by Melissa Proctor
Rest
I hope we can followship often.
I noticed you used the same word "followship" in your keywords. In Christian circles we use the word "fellowship". Do the LDS define "followship" differently from "fellowship"?
At the risk of finding myself in at least partial agreement with CCW [what's wrong with that picture? ;-)], I'm not sure I see the importance of figuring out where the real Mt. Sinai might be. Seems like a "nice to know" kind of thing, but to each his own, I guess.
This has always been known in Kabbalistic Judaism, but one cannot have a big crowd going out there and disturbing the evidence, and it is currently sealed off by the Saudi regime from prying eyes.
Even before that, Israeli surveillance has been a fact of life there since the independence of the latter, or even before.
restornu isn't able to express everything with perfect spelling and grammer for reasons beyond his (her?) control, so please be forgiving of typo's like that.
I agree, but I find it ironic that some people who insist on knowing the exact location of Zarahemla would say the same thing as CCW said.
Now, Zarahemla would be a real find, given that the mainstream Christian world denies that it ever existed, except in Joseph Smith's imagination. The existence of Mt. Sinai, on the other hand, is accepted and assumed by Bible-believers, even if they don't know it's exact location.
At any rate, BofM geography (in the western hemisphere, at least) has never held any special fascination with me.
Thanks
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