"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

Please note: All my writings and comments appear in bold italics in this colour
Showing posts with label the Bible. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the Bible. Show all posts

Friday, August 8, 2025

Biblical Archeology > The El Arish Stone: Pharaoh’s Forgotten Account of the Exodus

 



The El Arish Stone: Pharaoh’s Forgotten Account of the Exodus
Tucked away in a modest museum in Isma’ilya, northeast of Cairo, lies a remarkable artifact known as the El Arish Stone. Made of black granite and weighing nearly two tons, this stone measures four feet long and two and a half feet wide. Its discovery dates back to 1887, when it was found on a farm in El Arish. At the time, it was being used as nothing more than a water trough for cattle. It wasn’t until archaeologist Frances Llewellyn Griffith examined it that its historical significance was uncovered. The stone bore inscriptions in hieroglyphics, which Griffith dated to the 30th Dynasty (circa 380–360 BC) during the Ptolemaic period. However, the content of the inscriptions appears to reference events from around 1500 BC, aligning closely with the biblical timeline of the Exodus.
What sets the El Arish Stone apart is that it seems to recount a version of the Exodus narrative—from an Egyptian point of view. The stone describes a series of disasters: a violent storm, prolonged darkness, and even the parting of a sea. One hieroglyph is especially striking: three waves and two knives, which Egyptologist James Hoffmeier suggests could be interpreted literally as the “parting of the sea.”
Despite some erosion caused by its years of use as a watering trough, 74 lines of the inscription remain legible, primarily on the stone’s right and back sides. One figure mentioned in the text may correspond to Moses, who is referred to as the “Prince of the Desert,” while the Israelites are called “evildoers.”
The narrative even recounts that Pharaoh pursued a woman—likely Queen Tefnut, thought to be the Egyptian princess who raised Moses—as she fled with the departing Hebrews. This matches a Talmudic tradition (Sotah 12a), which claims that Pharaoh’s daughter joined the Israelites and later married Caleb, the son of Yefuneh.
The El Arish Stone also appears to reference some of the biblical plagues, such as darkness and fierce storms. It even names a location called “Pekharti,” which is remarkably similar to “Pi-Hahiroth”, mentioned in Exodus 14:2 and 14:9—the exact place where the Israelites camped before the miraculous parting of the Red Sea.
One of the most fascinating elements comes from a linguistic parallel between the stone’s inscription and the Book of Genesis. When Jacob blesses Joseph’s sons in Genesis 48:16, he prays that they “increase like fish in the land,” coining a unique Hebrew word—“Idgu” (meaning “fishify”). Later, in Exodus 13:19, the Israelites carry Joseph’s bones with them during the Exodus. Interestingly, the El Arish Stone states that when the “evildoers” left Egypt, they took “Dagai” with them—a name that closely resembles the Hebrew word used for Joseph’s descendants. This surprising detail may reflect a shared cultural memory preserved both in Egyptian and Hebrew traditions.
The El Arish Stone stands as a largely forgotten, yet potentially significant artifact that corroborate the Exodus narrative. It recounts a sea parting, plagues, a desert prince, and the departure of a group labeled “evildoers”—parallels too striking to ignore. Whether viewed as hard evidence or cultural memory, the stone offers a rare glimpse into what may be the Egyptian version of one of the Bible’s most dramatic events.





Friday, October 6, 2023

Biblical Archeology > Fascinating discoveries in the field of Genetics - including Adam's rib

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We carry DNA from extinct cousins like Neanderthals.

Science is now revealing their genetic legacy

John Gurche helps people understand what ancient humans looked like by creating lifelike models based on archaeological finds. The work requires a mix of artistic skill and scientific knowledge.

(Sept. 24) (AP Video: Michael Hill)

These ancient human cousins, and others called Denisovans, once lived alongside our early Homo sapiens ancestors. They mingled and had children. So some of who they were never went away — it’s in our genes. And science is starting to reveal just how much that shapes us.

Using the new and rapidly improving ability to piece together fragments of ancient DNA, scientists are finding that traits inherited from our ancient cousins are still with us now, affecting our fertility, our immune systems, even how our bodies handled the COVID-19 virus.

“We’re now carrying the genetic legacies and learning about what that means for our bodies and our health,” said Mary Prendergast, a Rice University archeologist.

In the past few months alone, researchers have linked Neanderthal DNA to a serious hand diseasethe shape of people’s noses and various other human traits. They even inserted a gene carried by Neanderthals and Denisovans into mice to investigate its effects on biology, and found it gave them larger heads and an extra rib.


In the Biblical story of Creation, God took a rib from Adam to make Eve. Man has been missing this rib ever since. Isn't that curious?


Much of the human journey remains a mystery. But Dr. Hugo Zeberg of the Karolinska Insitute in Sweden said new technologies, research and collaborations are helping scientists begin to answer the basic but cosmic questions: “Who are we? Where did we come from?”

And the answers point to a profound reality: We have far more in common with our extinct cousins than we ever thought.

NEANDERTHALS WITHIN US

Until recently, the genetic legacy from ancient humans was invisible because scientists were limited to what they could glean from the shape and size of bones. But there has been a steady stream of discoveries from ancient DNA, an area of study pioneered by Nobel Prize winner Svante Paabo who first pieced together a Neanderthal genome.

Advances in finding and interpreting ancient DNA have allowed them to see things like genetic changes over time to better adapt to environments or through random chance.

It’s even possible to figure out how much genetic material people from different regions carry from the ancient relatives our predecessors encountered.

Research shows some African populations have almost no Neanderthal DNA, while those from European or Asian backgrounds have 1% to 2%. Denisovan DNA is barely detectable in most parts of the world but makes up 4% to 6% of the DNA of people in Melanesia, which extends from New Guinea to the Fiji Islands.

That may not sound like much, but it adds up. “Half of the Neanderthal genome is still around, in small pieces scattered around modern humans,” said Zeberg, who collaborates closely with Paabo.

It’s also enough to affect us in very real ways. Scientists don’t yet know the full extent, but they’re learning it can be both helpful and harmful.

For example, Neanderthal DNA has been linked to auto-immune diseases like Graves’ disease and rheumatoid arthritis. When Homo sapiens came out of Africa, they had no immunity to diseases in Europe and Asia, but Neanderthals and Denisovans already living there did.

“By interbreeding with them, we got a quick fix to our immune systems, which was good news 50,000 years ago,” said Chris Stringer, a human evolution researcher at the Natural History Museum in London. “The result today is, for some people, that our immune systems are oversensitive, and sometimes they turn on themselves.”

Similarly, a gene associated with blood clotting believed to be passed down from Neanderthals in Eurasia may have been helpful in the “rough and tumble world of the Pleistocene,” said Rick Potts, director of the human origins program at the Smithsonian Institution. But today it can raise the risk of stroke for older adults. “For every benefit,” he said, “there are costs in evolution.”

In 2020, research by Zeberg and Paabo found that a major genetic risk factor for severe COVID-19 is inherited from Neanderthals. “We compared it to the Neanderthal genome and it was a perfect match,” Zeberg said. “I kind of fell off my chair.”

The next year, they found a set of DNA variants along a single chromosome inherited from Neanderthals had the opposite effect: protecting people from severe COVID.

The list goes on: Research has linked Neanderthal genetic variants to skin and hair colorbehavioral traitsskull shape and Type 2 diabetes. One study found that people who report feeling more pain than others are likely to carry a Neanderthal pain receptor. Another found that a third of women in Europe inherited a Neanderthal receptor for the hormone progesterone, which is associated with increased fertility and fewer miscarriages.

Much less is known about our genetic legacy from Denisovans – although some research has linked genes from them to fat metabolism and better adaptation to high altitudes. Maanasa Raghavan, a human genetics expert at the University of Chicago, said a stretch of Denisovan DNA has been found in Tibetans, who continue to live and thrive in low-oxygen environments today.

Scientists have even found evidence of “ghost populations” — groups whose fossils have yet to be discovered — within modern humans’ genetic code.

SO WHY DID WE SURVIVE?

In the past, the tale of modern humans’ survival “was always told as some success story, almost like a hero’s story,” in which Homo sapiens rose above the rest of the natural world and overcame the “insufficiencies” of their cousins, Potts said.

“Well, that simply is just not the correct story.”

Neanderthals and Denisovans had already existed for thousands of years by the time Homo sapiens left Africa. Scientists used to think we won out because we had more complex behavior and superior technology. But recent research shows that Neanderthals talked, cooked with fire, made art objects, had sophisticated tools and hunting behavior, and even wore makeup and jewelry.

Several theories now tie our survival to our ability to travel far and wide.

“We spread all over the world, much more than these other forms did,” Zeberg said.

While Neanderthals were specially adapted to cold climates, Potts said, Homo sapiens were able to disperse to all different kinds of climates after emerging in tropical Africa. “We are so adaptable, culturally adaptable, to so many places in the world,” he said.

Meanwhile, Neanderthals and Denisovans faced harsh conditions in the north, like repeated ice ages and ice sheets that likely trapped them in small areas, said Eleanor Scerri, an archeologist at Germany’s Max Planck Institute for Geoanthropology. They lived in smaller populations with a greater risk of genetic collapse.

Plus, we had nimble, efficient bodies, Prendergast said. It takes a lot more calories to feed stocky Neanderthals than comparatively skinny Homo sapiens, so Neanderthals had more trouble getting by, and moving around, especially when food got scarce.

Janet Young, curator of physical anthropology at the Canadian Museum of History, pointed to another intriguing hypothesis – which anthropologist Pat Shipman shared in one of her books –- that dogs played a big part in our survival. Researchers found the skulls of domesticated dogs in Homo sapiens sites much further back in time than anyone had found before. Scientists believe dogs made hunting easier.

By around 30,000 years ago, all the other kinds of hominins on Earth had died off, leaving Homo sapiens as the last humans standing.

‘INTERACTION AND MIXTURE’

Still, every new scientific revelation points to how much we owe our ancient cousins.

Human evolution was not about “survival of the fittest and extinction,” said John Hawks, a paleoanthropologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. It’s about “interaction and mixture.”

Researchers expect to learn more as science continues to advance, allowing them to extract information from ever-tinier traces of ancient lives. Even when fossils aren’t available, scientists today can capture DNA from soil and sediment where archaic humans once lived.

And there are less-explored places in the world where they hope to learn more. Zeberg said “biobanks” that collect biological samples will likely be established in more countries.

As they delve deeper into humanity’s genetic legacy, scientists expect to find even more evidence of how much we mixed with our ancient cousins and all they left us.

“Perhaps,” Zeberg said, “we should not see them as so different.”

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Wednesday, February 16, 2022

Christian Witness > Satanist turns Christian; Jordan Peterson The Bible is the bedrock of civilization; Teen leads whole tribe of Muslims to Jesus

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'I Feel Completely Whole': Ex-Satanist Shares

How God Changed His Life

Milton Quintanilla | 
Contributor for ChristianHeadlines.com | 
Thursday, January 27, 2022

A testimony of a former Satanist went viral after he shared how God saved his life.

Carl Sartor, 35, explained how he came to Jesus Christ after years of running away from Him. He previously lived as an atheist for 15 years and a Satanist for five years.

"I've never been a spiritual person. I believed when you die, you was dead. That was it. I've been running from God since I was about five. I would argue you tooth and nail that he did not exist," Sartor wrote on Facebook Sunday.

"I was living in a vicious cycle of drugs and alcohol. I had a severe anger problem," he continued. "I blamed everyone and everything. I also blamed God."

It's amazing how many people don't believe in God but blame Him whenever something bad happens.

Last November, however, Sartor started attending Cross Church in Parkersburg, West Virginia, after hitting rock bottom in his life and almost committing suicide. He noted that Minister Rich Walters had invited him to the church over a year ago, but Sartor wanted nothing to do with God at the time.

"He said, 'I'd love to have you for service.' I said, 'I walk a different path, buddy," Sartor told CBN News. "You'd never catch me there. It will be a cold day in hell before you see me in church.'"

That invitation, however, would ultimately lead Sartor to Christ.

"We didn't even get to the preaching yet because we were still singing, praising, and worshipping. We didn't even make it 15 minutes in that service before he ran to that baptismal tank," Walters shared on Facebook.

"Today, he's a worshipper. Today, he's a believer. Today, he's my brother in Christ. It's like the old song says…'  There's just no telling what you're gonna do, in that moment Jesus gets a hold of you!!!!' Praise God!!!" the minister said.


Walter's post included two photos of Sartor taken just several weeks apart. The first photo shows him wearing a "Saved by Satan" shirt, and the latter shows him being baptized at church. The testimony went viral, and the Facebook post has 34,000 likes, 8,500 comments and 11,000 shares.

"I feel completely whole. I feel at peace with myself. There is no longer a void," Sartor told CBN News. "Everything has changed about me."

"I'm spiritually alive now, and that happened when He wrapped His arms around me...and I felt that love," he continued.

Now that Sartor's life has been transformed, he hopes that others will be able to experience the same kind of transformation he underwent.

"For the first time in life, I had a spiritual experience. God is real, and I will continue to walk this path with him beside me. By his grace, I'm by far the best version of me I have ever been. My God is an awesome God, and I pray that everyone gets to experience his love as I have," he concluded his Facebook post.




Jordan Peterson: 'The Bible is more than just true,'

it's the bedrock of civilization

By Ryan Foley, 
Christian Post Reporter| 
Thursday, January 27, 2022


Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson appears on “The Joe Rogan Experience,” Jan. 25, 2022. | Screenshot: YouTube/PowerfulJRE


World-renowned Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson said the Bible is “way more than just true,” it's the bedrock of Western civilization. 

Peterson appeared on “The Joe Rogan Experience” Tuesday, where he lamented that “the culture is dissolving" as he detailed his experience touring the Museum of the Bible in Washington, D.C., and his reflections on society. 

“Roughly speaking, we have a bedrock of agreement,” he said. “That’s the Bible, by the way.” 

Peterson elaborated on how he came across this realization as he walked through the museum, noting that one floor is dedicated to the “history of the book.” 

“For a while, literally, there was only one book and that book was the Bible,” he said. After a while, there were “all sorts of books that anybody could buy,” he added, stressing that “all those books in some sense emerged out of that underlying book [the Bible].” 

Later in the discussion, Peterson spoke more about Western civilization, characterizing “fundamental texts” as “the texts upon which most other texts depend.” He cited the work of William Shakespeare as one of several “texts that influenced more other texts” before identifying the Bible as the ultimate source of all “linguistic production.” 

“It isn’t that the Bible is true. It’s that the Bible is the precondition for the manifestation of truth, which makes it way more true than just true. It’s a whole different kind of truth. And I think this is not only literally the case. Factually, I think it can’t be any other way. It’s the only way we can solve the problem of perception.”

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Teenager Leads His Entire Tribe to Salvation in One of the World’s

Worst Countries for Christians

February 15, 2022

Martinmssp, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons


Pakistan is one of the world’s most antagonizing nations for Christians, and yet the witness of a single teenager reportedly turned an entire tribe to Christ in an incredible story of the power of the Gospel to save.

According to Mission Network News, a teenager referred to by the pseudonym Rehan was working at a restaurant when he met a Christian truck driver and missionary who shared the Gospel with him and gave him an audio Bible.

“Rehan said, ‘How is your attitude towards a waiter so gentle? Have you joined some other sect than Islam?’ Safdar gave him an audio Bible,” Nehemia, of Forgotten Ministries International, told the outlet. “Rehan took it home and began listening. Then Safdar suggested Rehan take off from his work and spend time together to answer his queries and questions at the FMI Discipleship center.”

The 17-year-old began to listen to the Bible and kept up a rapport with the truck driver and was eventually baptized as a Christian.

The story of salvation doesn’t end there, however.

The bold, young, newly-baptized Christian began to witness to members of his family, and then his whole tribe, in spite of the immense risk faced by Pakistanis who convert from Islam to Christianity.

Nehemia brought along fellow missionary workers with him to speak with the members of the tribe about Jesus.

“One evening, he gathered all the tribe’s members under one big tent. First, Rehan showed a movie about Jesus,” he explained.

“Then an FMI partner shared a 15-minute devotion about new hope in Christ. That day, a 17-year-old-boy led his whole tribe to the Lord Jesus Christ. They quit their regular practice of offering Muslim prayers.”

The roughly 60 tribe members all accepted Christ as a result of this one young man’s bold witness.

Nehemia urges Christians to pray for the tribe, as well as missionary workers among similar populations in Pakistan, which is ranked by Open Doors USA as the eighth most dangerous country in the world to follow Christ.

And much worse to convert from Islam to Christianity. This will not be the last we hear of this story, I'm afraid.





Monday, October 8, 2018

European Nation Microchips National ID Cards For Banking, Voting, Insurance

Revelations 13:16-18 - And he causes all, the small and the great, and the rich and the poor, and the free men and the slaves, to be given a mark on their right hand or on their forehead, and he provides that no one will be able to buy or to sell, except the one who has the mark, either the name of the beast or the number of his name. Here is wisdom. Let him who has understanding calculate the number of the beast, for the number is that of a man; and his number is six hundred and sixty-six.


By RYAN SAAVEDRA

The small European nation of Estonia has started embedding microchips into their citizens' national ID cards for the purpose of giving their citizens a "digital identity."

"Since the turn of the 21st century, Estonia has offered each citizen a government-issued 'digital identity' — including a chip-embedded national ID card that can be used for social security, health insurance, voter registration, banking and much more," the Los Angeles Times reported. "It also now offers 'e-residency' for people around the world who want to be part of its digital revolution, allowing them to register a business in Estonia, which is part of the European Union."

Estonian President Kersti Kaljulaid told the Times last week that Estonia is "the first digital society that has its own state," meaning that "all Estonian digital developments operate as a single society."

"We have a single backbone, based on which everybody builds their services," Kaljulaid said. "And this applies for the public sector and the private sector equally. Because of course all of us globally use very many online services, digital services, but they come on platforms without any security, simply because you don’t have a digital identity to verify who is doing what to whom on the internet."

"We do have it, and we’ve had it since the turn of the century, which means we now have one generation which has grown up knowing that the government is at their fingertips," Kaljulaid continued. "And all the banking services like you have here are at our fingertips as well. But what they also have, as an additional asset, is the security of an internet passport, a digital identity, which makes provision and use of these services safe and secure."

Kaljulaid claimed that the system has never been hacked but added that Estonia is under the same threat from Russia that other nations are in terms of being a target for cyber hackers.