Mount Sinai in Easton's Bible Dictionary
of Sin (the moon god), called also Horeb, the name of the
mountain district which was reached by the Hebrews
in the third
month after the Exodus. Here they remained encamped
for about a
whole year. Their journey from the Red Sea to this
encampment,
including all the windings of the route, was about
150 miles.
The last twenty-two chapters of Exodus, together
with the whole
of Leviticus and Num. ch. 1-11, contain a record of
all the
transactions which occurred while they were here.
From Rephidim
(Ex. 17:8-13) the Israelites journeyed forward
through the Wady
Solaf and Wady esh-Sheikh into the plain of er-
Rahah, "the
desert of Sinai," about 2 miles long and half a mile
broad, and
encamped there "before the mountain." The part of
the mountain
range, a protruding lower bluff, known as the Ras
Sasafeh
(Sufsafeh), rises almost perpendicularly from this
plain, and is
in all probability the Sinai of history. Dean
Stanley thus
describes the scene:, "The plain itself is not
broken and uneven
and narrowly shut in, like almost all others in the
range, but
presents a long retiring sweep, within which the
people could
remove and stand afar off. The cliff, rising like a
huge altar
in front of the whole congregation, and visible
against the sky
in lonely grandeur from end to end of the whole
plain, is the
very image of the 'mount that might be touched,' and
from which
the voice of God might be heard far and wide over
the plain
below." This was the scene of the giving of the law.
From the
Ras Sufsafeh the law was proclaimed to the people
encamped below
in the plain of er-Rahah. During the lengthened
period of their
encampment here the Israelites passed through a very
memorable
experience. An immense change passed over them. They
are now an
organized nation, bound by covenant engagement to
serve the Lord
their God, their ever-present divine Leader and
Protector. At
length, in the second month of the second year of
the Exodus,
they move their camp and march forward according to
a prescribed
order. After three days they reach the "wilderness
of Paran,"
the "et-Tih", i.e., "the desert", and here they make
their first
encampment. At this time a spirit of discontent
broke out
amongst them, and the Lord manifested his
displeasure by a fire
which fell on the encampment and inflicted injury on
them. Moses
called the place Taberah (q.v.), Num. 11:1-3. The
journey
between Sinai and the southern boundary of the
Promised Land
(about 150 miles) at Kadesh was accomplished in
about a year.
(See MAP facing page 204.)
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