Chronology and Mysticism

Chronology and Mysticism April 16, 2013

Exodus says that Israel was in Egypt 430 years, Genesis says 400. Can we just round them off to make them coincide?

Tyconius ( The Book of Rules ) isn’t satisfied with that. Perhaps, he suggests, “they were not in slaver for the whole time? We need to find out, therefore, when the slavery began: and this is easy to learn.” He points out that slavery began after Joseph’s death, and says: “if the people’s slavery began after Joseph’s death, then we subtract 80 years of Joseph’s reign – he reigned from the age of 30 to the age of 110 – from the 430 years of their stay in Egypt; and there remain, for Israel’s slavery, 350 years – which God called 400.” The extra fifty years arise from the fact that here a whole (100) represents a part (50 actual years).

What’s intriguing about this is that Tyconius also writes a good bit about the symbolism of biblical numbers, discussing 7, 10, and 12 at length. Like other early writers, Tyconius sees no conflict at all between chronological and mystical interpretation.


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