Was Mount Sinai in Arabia? The book you’ve been waiting for answers this question!
The PDF and hardcover versions are available in the STORE.
“The Exodus Mysteries: of Midian, Sinai & Jabal al-Lawz”
An eclectic, comprehensive work, written by someone who’s been there! No other work presents this volume of data and degree of detail concerning the route of the Exodus.
Published as both a hardcover and a PDF download version with 576 pages (8.5” x 11”). Profusely illustrated with 350 maps, photos, diagrams, and images. The hardcover is a hefty six-pound book; beautifully and durably bound. The interior is printed on heavy, semi-gloss paper.
Here is a link for a video overview of the Exodus Mysteries.
An author interview about the book is HERE
Click this link to see a preview of the book contents: Exodus Mysteries preview 1-23!
Summary:
This work presents an in-depth geographical analysis and exposé of the route of the biblical Exodus between the “Red Sea” crossing and Mount Sinai. Based on the author’s previous research, the Hebrew Bible places Yam Suph, the Red Sea of the Exodus, at the Gulf of Aqaba. This finding negates the underpinnings for a Mount Sinai in the Sinai Peninsula and pushes its likely locale into northwest Arabia.
In order to reconstruct the route to an Arabian Mount Sinai, the mountain’s position must be ascertained. This process requires an estimation of the domain of ancient Midian due to its historical geography links with the mountain, starting with Moses’ Exodus 3:1 excursion to it. The topography neighboring this Midian region can then be used as a framework for plotting pertinent historical and geographical data, including the proposed meanings of the Horeb and Sinai terms.
This systematic analysis does point to the Jabal al-Lawz range, which has been suspected as a potential Mount Sinai site for several decades. The proposition that Jabal al-Maqla within the Lawz range hosted the Exodus activity is evaluated relative to geography, historical travel patterns, topography, hydrology, and archaeology. The claim that the Jabal al-Maqla peak was blackened by supernatural heating during the Exodus is also assessed geologically and biblically.
This array of historical and geographical data is applied to the biblical Exodus itinerary to reconstruct the most feasible route between the sea and the projected Mount Sinai. The work concludes with an epilogue summarizing the travels beyond Mount Sinai, with an emphasis on the location of Kadesh Barnea at the southern border of Canaan.