The Tikvah Podcast

Joshua Berman on How the Exodus Story Turns Egyptian Imagery on Its Head

Mar 27, 2026
Joshua Berman, Bible scholar and Bar-Ilan professor who wrote the Echoes of Egypt Haggadah, explores how the Exodus narrative borrows and flips Egyptian royal imagery. He traces phrases like "mighty hand and outstretched arm," compares tabernacle and Ramses' throne tent, and shows poetic parallels with Kadesh inscriptions. He also explains making archaeology accessible for the seder and why the story sustains communal memory.
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INSIGHT

Torah Reclaims Egyptian Royal Propaganda

  • The Torah intentionally borrows Egyptian royal imagery to repurpose Pharaoh propaganda into praise for God and Jewish liberation.
  • Phrases like "mighty hand and outstretched arm" appear hundreds of times in New Kingdom inscriptions applied to the pharaoh and are reused in Exodus for God.
INSIGHT

Tabernacle Mirrors Ramses II Throne Tent

  • The tabernacle's layout echoes Ramses II's throne tent, using similar two-chamber proportions and cherub-like imagery.
  • Scholars saw this as a deliberate move to place Israel's God inside familiar royal/military imagery, subverting Pharaoh's throne tent.
INSIGHT

Selective Use Of Pharaoh's Catchphrase

  • The phrase 'mighty hand and outstretched arm' appears almost exclusively for the Exodus in the Torah but everywhere in Egyptian royal inscriptions for pharaohs.
  • This selective reuse signals deliberate cultural rivalry: the Torah repurposes royal epithets to praise God.
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