The Ark of the Covenant in its Egyptian Context
David A. Falk April 09, 2023 14 Comments 35166 views Share
The Ark of the Covenant as we know it from the Hebrew Bible is steeped in the culture and context of its time (Late Bronze Age, c. 1500–1200 B.C.E.). The people of that age believed in angelic snake spirits spitting fire, entrapped demons, and gods wandering the land. Into this milieu, Moses introduced the Ark of the Covenant, which takes many of these concepts and flips them on their head to create new religious meaning.
Most readers will be familiar with the ark as a reliquary (a box holding holy relics) that was used by Moses to contain and transport the two tablets of the Ten Commandments. Yet the ark was constructed using a visual language that everyone knew 3,300 years ago but is mostly lost to us today. And although ancient writers said more about the ark than any other artifact from ancient history, little of this information is reliable apart from what is found in the biblical texts. Despite the immense progress in biblical studies over the past 200 years, modern scholars have produced relatively little of a serious nature on this subject. This gap provides an opportunity to ask exciting questions and explore the context of the ark in a new and meaningful way.1
DIGITAL RECONSTRUCTION of the Ark of the Covenant according to its descriptions in the Book of Exodus.
Credit: © David A. Falk
SEE PIC AT THE TOP OF ARTICLE
Even though it might seem obvious, few of us ever consider that the Ark of the Covenant was a piece of furniture. Furniture is defined as a piece of large movable equipment that creates a space suitable for living or working. So if all you have is an empty room, the space in that room is not very useful. Add a chair, and you have a sitting room. Add a bed, and you have a bedroom. Add a religious altar, and now you have created a ritual space. In short: Furniture helps create and change the nature of a space.
In the ancient Near East, furniture was the preeminent status symbol of opulent wealth. Beds, chairs, and boxes were high-end luxury goods that only few could afford. And the best furniture was fit to be used in rituals to the gods. But to make the furniture suitable for the gods, it had to be decorated with sacred iconography. In ancient Egypt, this iconography included friezes of uraeus (cobras) that spat fire, to keep profane things out, and the Nekhbet (vulture) goddess, who made holy the space between her wings. These icons separated sacred space from profane space. And by using different icons, the Egyptians were able to create different kinds of sacredness. They could even intensify sacredness by putting one frieze inside another, creating a holy of holies.
A TEBET BASKET, now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Credit: Photo by David A. Falk
This brings us to ritual furniture used in the Bible. For example, biblical Hebrew uses an Egyptian loanword tebah, meaning a “basket” or a “box.” A tebah (Egyptian: tebet) was the basket that the baby Moses is placed inside and floated among the reeds (Exodus 2:3), but it is also used of Noah’s ark (e.g., Genesis 6:14). With both Moses and Noah’s ark, the tebah was being used to sanctify the contents of the chests to consecrate them for God’s purpose.
A DJESER CHEST of Thuya, who was the mother of Queen Tiye (the principal wife of Amenhotep III) and grandmother of Akhenaten. Discovered in her tomb in the Valley of the Kings, Western Thebes, it is now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Credit: Photo by David A. Falk
However, the Ark of the Covenant is referred to as an aron, not a tebah, which offers different connotations. An aron can be a coffer, chest, or coffin. For the Egyptians, a coffin was more than simply a box for a corpse. A coffin was a proxy body that served as a place to where a spirit could return. Similarly, other chests had parallels to the ark.
A pega chest was a finely crafted piece of furniture that was draped in scarlet cloth, similar to the cloth that was used to cover the ark (Numbers 4:8). A djeser chest (see image [directional]) had tall legs that elevated items off the ground, and it was used for storing holy or sacred things. Yet another type of chest, the pedes chest, was used in a ritual that took profane offerings and sanctified them so that the offerings could be used in temple rituals. The pedes also had a uraeus frieze, which made the space inside it sacred, and carrying poles near the feet of the chest. This is remarkable because of the four pieces of the Israelite Tabernacle furniture, only the ark is said to have its pole rings attached to its feet (Exodus 25:12).
Finally, there is the Chest of Anubis, a special canopic chest that was used only to carry canopic jars (containing the body’s selected organs) to a tomb. It was covered in gold inside and out (as the ark in Exodus 25:11; 37:2), held sacred objects (as the ark in Deuteronomy 10:2, 5), and had its poles attached to its base. Its lid, which fit over the lip of the chest and was known as the “mercy seat,” bore a statue of Anubis (god who escorted the dead to the afterlife) made in one piece with the lid. These features are markedly similar to the ark.
AN ANUBIS CHEST from the tomb of King Tutankhamun in the Valley of the Kings, Western Thebes, now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Credit: Photo by David A. Falk
As we have just demonstrated, the Ark of the Covenant was similar to ritual chests. But it was also similar to Egyptian shrines. Shrines are important in this analysis because they developed out of Late Bronze Age concepts of divinity. People in the Late Bronze Age believed in localism, the belief that a god could only be in one place at a time. This idea often manifested in idolatry. Like the Egyptian coffin, an idol acted as a physical body where a god maintained its presence, becoming one with the substance of the statue. In Egyptian rituals, this idol was “enthroned” on a standard and placed inside the holy space of a shrine. For small chapels or private worship, that shrine was housed inside a small tent, forming a tabernacle. For larger chapels and temples, the shrine was replaced with a barque.
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A barque was a special shrine that was built as a model boat. It had a hull, rudders, and figureheads like a boat, all of which makes sense since Egypt was a river culture, where daily life and much of the religious beliefs revolved around the Nile River. Since Egypt’s earliest days, barques had been the ritual furniture par excellence. Every major temple in Egypt had a barque at its center, even the funerary temples of kings. And every day, the Egyptian priests fed and clothed their gods and placed them upon their thrones. Then at night, the priests put their gods to bed in naoses at the back of the temple.
SACRED BARQUE OF AMUN-RE being carried by priests in a procession. This model boat with a shrine for the Egyptian god is depicted in low relief in the Great Hypostyle Hall of the Karnak Temple in Luxor. Credit: Photo by David A. Falk
Yet when the Israelites built their tabernacle, they did so without an idol. A sacred shrine without an idol was unprecedented in the ancient Near Eastern world. By excluding idols from the ark, Yahweh flipped the notions and symbols of ancient Near Eastern religion and demonstrated that he was not cared for by human hands, never slept, and was always on the throne. Thus, Yahweh worked within human religious understanding but utterly transformed it.
Furthermore, even though the Ark of the Covenant was a reliquary, the most important part of it was the space above the Mercy Seat, the lid. This is similar to Egyptian palanquin thrones, which incorporated the sacred iconography of barques to create a sacred space where the king (or image of a god) would be seated. Unlike barques, where the sacred space was enclosed and hidden, palanquin thrones had the king or god on full display but still protected in holy space—between a pair of winged goddesses. The Mercy Seat was a lid with a pair of cherubim (angels) whose wings stretched out over the lid of the box (Exodus 25:20). God met with his people from the sacred space between the wings of the cherubim.
WINGED GODDESSES on the corners of the sarcophagus of King Tutankhamun in the newly restored tomb in the Valley of the Kings, Western Thebes. Credit: Photo by David A. Falk
When we look at Egyptian ritual furniture during its 3,000-year history, boxes, biers, shrines, barques, and palanquin thrones develop and change over time, augmented with distinct iconography. Sufficient examples of this iconography survive to allow for typological dating with granularity down to the reigns of specific kings. Likewise, some iconography and furniture types fall out of favor so that they form a terminus ante quem, or the latest possible date a particular object might have been made. This means that, when we consider the stylistic influences relevant for the Ark of the Covenant, the iconography as described above suggests a period no earlier than the reign of Amenhotep III (c. 1389–1351 B.C.E.) and no later than the end of Dynasty 20 (c. 1194–1073 B.C.E.). This means that the Ark of the Covenant is consistent with the kinds of ritual furniture that would be expected from Late Bronze Age Egypt.
Therefore, even though Yahweh is not bound to human limits, he condescended to mankind deferring to human expectations of divinity. The cherubim had wings that stretched out over the Mercy Seat, and the shekinah glory met with man from between the wings of the cherubim above the ark. God did not try to change the beliefs of the people before engaging them, but instead respected human frailty and human notions of the divine, inverting or modifying those beliefs to teach humanity new ideas about himself.
Notes:
[1] I have recently addressed this subject in my book The Ark of the Covenant in Its Egyptian Context: An Illustrated Journey (Hendrickson Publishers, 2020).
A version of this post first appeared in Bible History Daily in May, 2021
Read more in Bible History Daily:
Site Where Ark of the Covenant Rested to Be Preserved
Read more in the BAS Library:
The Ark of the Covenant: Where It Stood in Solomon’s Temple
Is the Ark of the Covenant in Ethiopia?
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Tags: ancient egypt Ark of the Covenant ark tablet babylonian ark bible ark Chest of Anubis djeser pega Sacred Geometry tebet Tutankhamun
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14 Responses
- aeiuosays:
Dear dr Falk, I’m sorry but your reconstruction is highly erroneous. The cherubim are actually sphinxes with their necks turned at an approx 180 angle. And the supposed ‘poles’ in your model are simply energy conductors, not handles (there was no need for carrying as the ark could levitate by itself OBVIOUSLY). I confirmed this info myself during my visit in ethiopia.
- Tomsays:
Even if the ark could levitate, you can’t ask it to walk. You will still need to move it somehow without touching it. Many churches in Ethiopia claim to house the ark. Which did you visit? Did it levitate? Also, how can you say the cherubim on the mercy seat are sphinxes when the only written description calls them cherubim!
- Samuel Besssays:
It is true that Egyptian mythology has many legends in common with scripture.
That means we must read the OT in it’s context…an ancient document. However, God commanded the Ark of the Covenant be built in a communication with people familiar with Egyptian mythology….so, untrue that “Moses introduced the ark…” since
hewas plased in an Ark of sorts for Pharoah’s daughter to find, and was himself God’s instrument…and not a child of Amun Ra. God always delivers his
communications in context. Today, in this context, the application of mythology is mis-directed when applied to God’s Word without proper emphasis. The science of
of Egyptology never trumps God’s Word for man. Pharoh himself testifies to that fact.
Therefore the emphasis should be upon God to man and not the obverse.
- Joseph L. Thimessays:
I agree with EG Gordon on the instability of the digitized ark. The poles should have been located just below the mercy seat. Moses was raised as an Egyptian prince in the knowledge of ancient Egypt. As such, he would and did use Egyptian influences an the ark and the Tabernacle. On this ark, the cherubs could have been shaped resembling Egyptian sphinxes. Sometimes, Egyptian sphinxes were used to ward off evil. In fact, in the Discovery TV presentation of King Tut Wrapped, when Tut performed a funeral service for one of his fetuses, an white (alabaster?) box was shaped eerily similar to the “ark of the covenant”! Two large cherubs were used in the Holy of Holies of Solomon’s Temple to protect the Ark. The Tabernacle of Moses and Solomon’s Temple both employed the east to west direction of orientation — the same direction as most of the mortuary temples of ancient Egypt and also their mortuary temples of the west bank near Thebes (localized east to east direction).
- Eric L. Ricesays:
In Exodus 25.20, the text describes the orientation of the cherubim; they would face each other with their faces toward the mercy seat, contrary to your “digital reconstruction.” Additionally, the wings of the cherubim were not extensions of the arms but separate from the arms.
- Melissa Butlersays:
The cherubim in the reconstruction ARE facing inward. Also, the passage doesn’t describe the arms of the cherubim. It’s true later Biblical passages describe cherubim in greater detail, but those descriptions are from the iron age, not the late bronze age.
- Dr Eric Ricesays:
Your “digital reconstruction” of what the ark looked like, based on the biblical description and types of arks used in ancient Egypt are flawed. The picture shows an ark with the poles under the ark attached next to the feet. As stated, this idea comes mostly from “furniture” that was carried in ancient Egypt, and and your pictures and drawings. Unforunately there are translations of the biblical text based on these Egyptian artifacts as well. The problem is the biblical text rules out this idea. Exodus 25.10 gives us the subject (the ark, and the making thereof) of the subsquent text; much of the time in Hebrew, this identification of the subject (the ark) is carried through subsequent verses. Verse 12 reads:
and then you will cast/for it/four rings of/gold,
the “it” being the ark. The verse continues:
and then you will set (it)/upon four/feet of it.
At this point we find the atnach denoting that this phrase is complete. The “it” is implied by the subject and proved by the use of “natatah” which is a singular verb (qal perf 2 masc sing consec: to give, put, set), so that it does not refer to rings (which would require a plural verb with a plural pronominal suffix), but directly to the ark itself.
Reading thus: “And then you will set the ark upon its four feet.”
The subsequent verses speaking of putting the rings on the sides of the ark. This would be entirely necessary due to the weight of Mercy Seat. Remember this is made of pure solid gold (heavier than lead) and would have been at least a half inch thick (probably 5/8 to a full inch thick) to keep the gold from bending when it was handled simply because of it’s own weight (gold is also soft like lead). This would mean that the top alone would weigh somewhere between 300 to 400 lbs (136-180 kg); another reason why the rings could not have been near the feet or even mounted underside the ark.
This also makes the idea that the ark was carried by only four men a bit difficult over any distance in sand or rocky ground. Actually there is no number specified in the text. I do have an interesting thought here however, 12 men were used to transport Pharaoh the king of Egypt, who most likely weighed less than ark. For Israel to transport their King and God, 12 men repesenting the twelve tribes makes some sense. Additionally, the length needed to employ six men for each pole, would allow for the ark, while sitting in the middle of the Holy of Holies, would have it’s poles touching the dividing curtain, or at the least would be long enough were they could be moved in the rings to a position of touching the dividing curtain. Thus your idea of the poles moving in the rings rather than being removed would easily plausible.
- Douglassays:
When you come at things from a purely archaeological standpoint and not a Biblical standpoint, you miss so much. I could not disagree with this article more. I suggest the author read more about how Moses was given a vision of the Heavenly furniture and told to make copies on the earth. The fact that Lucifer & his fallen angels would have known about this furniture and perhaps could have given the idea to ancient civilizations such as the Egyptians is lost here.
- Makaneeksays:
What might be easily missed is that originality isn’t the point, that’s why there’s nothing harmful or unbiblical about admitting that the Egyptians made ritual furniture first. Teaching in ancient contextual terms for the purpose of being understood by ancient people is a very normal aspect of God’s word. For example, Proverbs 23:16 uses a Semitic figure of speech to say “my kidneys will rejoice”, but the message isn’t to say the surrounding pagans were right about emotions being felt in the kidneys, it is simply to praise the Most High. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6EK8Ma83g5g
- EG Gordonsays:
The digital reconstruction of the Ark of the Covenant as depicted in the article and credited to David A. Falk is absurd. In the photo, the position of the carrying rods is underneath the center of gravity, and thus, too unwieldy for two or even ten people to carry.
- Joseph L. Thimessays:
Your view of the digitized ark is correct in that the poles should have been placed higher up. As it is shown, the ark would be unwieldy. Also, I believe that the cherubs may have had an Egyptian sphinx image as well. Egyptian sphinxes sometimes were to ward off evil. Also, Moses had extensive Egyptian training. His Tabernacle (as well as Solomon’s Temple) faced from east to west — the same direction as most of the pyramid mortuary temples and of the mortuary temples of the west bank across from Thebes. Eerily, in the Discovery Channel version of King Tut unwrapped, a white alabaster ark like box with “sphinxes” was briefly shown when Tutankhamen was burying one of the fetuses.
- Melissa Butlersays:
The Anubis chest had poles near the base. Was it too unwieldy to carry?
- Lynne R Hornsays:
Josh Gates on Discovery did a lot of research about the location of the Ark. Do you have any work to suggest if still exists, but we don’t know where it is?
- Stephen Funcksays:
Excellent. I have wondered if the cherubim and wings were bas- reliefs instead of the statutes usually portrayed?
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I appreciate how hard it is to accept one can be wrong! But this nonsense is a whole load of wrong!
The answer is straightforward, either the exodus happened or it did not?
All the quibbling in the world will not change a single thing!
Archaeology has not revealed a thing about the exodus – sorry, got that wrong, it has revealed that the exodus never happened! And in simple words No Exodus – No Judaism!
So none of this actually happened – it is a myth perpetrated by the Hebrew scribes to make themselves important with a glorious history! The notion of being chosen by god is a fanciful myth – borrowed from other near East religions.