the book of Deuteronomy
The book of Exodus.
Noah. The Story of Noah and the Flood are found in the book of Gensis where Story of Moses and the Israelites is found in the book of Exodus.
People had lived in the area that became known as Israel for thousands of years before the time of the Israelites. Whether we accept the biblical story of the military conquest of Canaan or the historical account that they were actually dissident Canaanites who left the coastal cities and settled in the sparsely populated mountainous hinterland, they were following in the footsteps of those who were there before them.
The leader of Jabin's army was Sisera, a commander known for his military prowess. Jabin was the king of Canaan, and his forces clashed with the Israelites during the time of the Judges, specifically in the story recounted in the Book of Judges in the Bible. Sisera's defeat came at the hands of the Israelite leader Deborah and the warrior Barak, which ultimately led to a significant victory for the Israelites.
no, they have no record of it in secular history.
A:The Bible says that God had promised the land of the Canaanites to the children of Abraham. After a long sojourn in Egypt, during which they were enslaved, the Israelites escaped in a great Exodus across the Red Sea and then wandered in the wilderness for forty years. Under the great military leader, Joshua, they conquered Canaan and massacred the people, as told in the Book of Joshua. Fragments of another story, in which the conquest took place under Caleb, can also be found in Judges chapter 1. Archaeology tells a different story in which the Israelites emerged from among the local Bronze age Canaanites. It is now the consensus of scholars that there was no Exodus from Egypt, as described in the Bible, and that the Hebrew people were originally Canaanites who left the region of the rich coastal cities to migrate to the hitherto sparsely populated Canaanite hinterland.The Oxford History of the Biblical World says that intensive archaeological research since the 1970s has demonstrated a gradual proliferation of small rural settlements concentrated in the hill country of southern Canaan from around 1200, the beginning of Iron Age I (Carol A. Redmount, Bitter lives).
According to the Book of Joshua, the brilliant military commander, Joshua, led the Israelites to conquer Canaan, with the help of God.The strong consensus of modern historians is that the Israelites never conquered Canaan, that they were themselves rural Canaanites who migrated peacefully from the region of the rich coastal cities into the hitherto sparsely populated hinterland. Lawrence E. Stager says ('Forging an Identity', in The Oxford History of the Biblical World) of the thirty one cities said to be taken by Joshua and the Israelites, twenty have been plausibly identified with excavation sites. Of these, only Bethel and Hazor show evidence of cultural discontinuity consistent with an invasion, and it is even debated whether the destruction of Hazor XIII was as late as that of Late Bronze Age Bethel. There was no conquest of Canaan - the story of Joshua and his military genius evolved centuries later, to provide the Hebrew people with a glorious past.For more information, please visit: http://christianity.answers.com/bible/the-book-of-joshua-explained
There is no evidence at all of the israelites ever being in Egypt. The Egyptians kept detailed records of their everyday lives, but never mentioned the Israelites. There is no archaeological evidence of large-scale Hebrew presence in Egypt, nor of the 40 year sojourn in the desert, nor of the conquest of Canaan. The respected Israeli archaeologist Israel Finkelstein says that over ninety per cent of scholars believe that the slavery and Exodus of the Israelites from Egypt did not really happend as described in the Bible. The Israelites were not enslaved in Egypt, politically, physically or spiritually. The story of Moses and the Exodus arose centuries after the time the events supposedly occurred.
Ehud was a judge in the Bible who played a significant role in the story of the Israelites. He was known for his bravery and cunning tactics. Ehud assassinated the Moabite king Eglon, who had been oppressing the Israelites, and led the Israelites to victory against their enemies.
The Reed Sea is significant in the biblical story of the Israelites' exodus from Egypt because it is where Moses parted the waters, allowing the Israelites to escape from the pursuing Egyptian army. This event is seen as a miraculous demonstration of God's power and protection over the Israelites.
The story of Joseph the Dreamer is set in ancient Egypt and Canaan, during a time when the Hebrews were living as shepherds and Joseph eventually rises to power in Egypt. The story spans different locations, from Joseph's family home to Egypt's palaces and prisons.
The name is Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh. The Israelites' departure from Egypt is in the book of Exodus.