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Thursday, 9 August 2018

Tracing A Map Of The Exodus From Egypt

By Harold Watson


Religion is an organized set of spiritual beliefs. There will usually be a central figure, a spiritual founder. Now, there will be places of worships, usually churches or temples of some sort. There will also be some behavioral guidelines that the believers are expected to follow every day in their lives. The thing about the night sky is that it is so vast. Throughout its inky blackness, there are so many stars that twinkle against it, it can make a person wonder if there was someone who crafted it, who put it all together. Such musings then formed the basis for religion. Some of these musings can be done over a map of the Exodus from Egypt.

First things first. The Exodus. If pop culture is to be believed, Egypt had slaves. They were the ones who built the pyramids. Now, while it is true that the pyramids did not come into the world by magic, it is likely that slavery had different connotation back then than it does in the modern world. Regardless, those slaves were eventually set free.

The events that preceded the Exodus are well documented, both in written and oral tradition. Eventually, it was translated into a visual medium. The basic gist was that a whole bunch of plagues were visited upon Egypt. That was enough to convince the head honcho over there to let his slaves go.

Once they were free, to former slaves wandered around the desert. No, while it is rather difficult to tell how long that wandering went on for, it supposedly went on for about forty years. In that time, they were sustained by bread from Heaven.

Tracing the exact route taken can be rather difficult. The names which these lands had has undoubtedly changed. Not to mention there really is not an exact log of where they wandered. Just a few places. A story, in essence, but one lacking details.

Of course, there is still a way to get an idea of where they went. Maps are available online. They should mostly be reliable, since many of them were sketched out by religious scholars. So, to find them, just go on to the internet and that should do the trick.

The option to go older is always there. Religion has fascinated people for thousands of years. It only makes sense that there are Exodus maps from well before the age of industrialization. These surviving maps will probably fetch a pretty penny on the open market, but they would look so good mounted on a wall.

There really is no reason to have one. But maps can be put on walls. Not for any real purpose other than to be decorations. It just looks good. It looks classy, plus having one of the exodus just adds a spiritual dimension to the aesthetic.

Now, people are different from each other. While they are not all entirely unique, there is enough distinction that no two individuals are totally the same. Which is why even faith has many interpretations.




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