The dramatic discovery of a large biblical quotation on an ancient Egyptian stele. When compared to the Biblical equivalent, the text appears to be two separate accounts, from both the Egyptian and the Israelite perspective, of a conference in Egypt discussing the way in which the Biblical exodus should be organized. The quotation thus has fundamental implications for both history and theology because it explains why the Tabernacle and the Ark of the Covenant were constructed, why the exodus started, where Mt. Sinai was located, who the God of the Israelites was—it even explains exactly who the Israelites really were and, thus, why the Torah, Bible and Koran were written. This sequel to Jesus, Last of the Pharaohs also explains * the secret name of God * the location of Mt. Ararat * illustrations of Noah s Ark
This is probably the worst book I have ever read. Reading through makes it clear to me it’s a pseudoscience. The writer declares he isn’t a scientist makes him free of the constraints of mainstream academia. But it also made him free of the safeguards of the scientific methods as follows:
1. The writer follows very trivial details here and there and connects them to leap on tremendously big conclusions that the foundations he uses aren’t strong enough to support.
2. As a consequence of that, he gets distracted by so much details that by the second paragraph of a certain topic I forget what he was talking about earlier.
3. Interestingly, he’s SOOO OBSESSED by advertising for his different books over and over and over throughout the book. He does this in a clever sales tactic. He gives you an incomplete piece of information, then directs you to a different book of his to read about it.! Something that doesn’t really tell me he’s after the truth but rather after flashy stories to make people buy his books.
* For this interested to know more about the link between the Israelites and Hyksos, I highly recommend reading for David Rohl and his theory about the alternative Egyptian chronology against the conventional chronology. David Rohl follows a way more scientific approach to tackle a theory that goes against the mainstream academia.
Very good and well researched. Ralph talks about two exodus's from Egypt that occured and he dicusses the plagues that occured which make much more sense.