The Search For The Real Mt. Sinai | Full Movie | Robert Cornuke | Larry Williams

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  • čas přidán 28. 07. 2024
  • Two explorers take an incredible expedition into the blistering Arabian Desert and turn up what many scholars believe to be one of the greatest discoveries in history... The real Mt. Sinai, the holy mountain on which Moses received the Ten Commandments.
    This program tells their amazing story how they crawl into forbidden military installations, and use night vision goggles to avoid being detected as they pursue their mission and discover over a dozen significant remnants still remaining at the site. The explorers embark on a journey that would change their lives forever... Finding remarkable evidence that confirms the Bible as historically accurate.
    Weaving together real life adventure historical research and exclusive never-before-released footage, this exciting adventure leaps off the screen to document a story you'll never forget.
    Director: Steve Greisen
    Writer: Steve Greisen
    Stars: Robert Cornuke, Larry Williams
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Komentáře • 562

  • @rev.randall2292
    @rev.randall2292 Před rokem +33

    RW was the first to bring attention here , and I think he nailed it.

  • @sabrinadawn4112
    @sabrinadawn4112 Před rokem +34

    Spectacular!!! God is so good to allow them this experience, and to share it with us! For such a time as this! I can't wait to share this! 💞

    • @garyoates4142
      @garyoates4142 Před rokem +1

      please bear in mind that this holy site has been protected and known about by the MUSLIMS for 1400 years !
      why would the muslims know where mount sainai is , but the christian holy spirit doesnt know ?
      when the spirit is supposed to be a pert of god ?

    • @theresakeech845
      @theresakeech845 Před rokem +1

      they stole this from ron wyatt god showed him these guys just rewrote it and pretended they found it

  • @cameronrussell2947
    @cameronrussell2947 Před rokem +115

    I was very disappointed that Ron Wyatt wasn’t given the credit. They just mention Jim Irwin the astronaut, but it was Jim who was in contact with Ron Wyatt after he discovered Mt Sinai including the split rock of Horne (not to mention The site of the Ark, etc. These two are acting as if they discovered Mt Sinai with all their rolling out of maps and mentioning Irwin but avoiding any mention of Wyatt

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci +5

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

    • @StevenRetz
      @StevenRetz Před 11 měsíci +4

      Ron is a fruad

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci +2

      The incredulous thing is that everyone is almost deliberately overlooking the stated Biblical maximum of 42 hour travel limit to the crossing point.
      If they can't stay within that limit, then their theories are nonsense, and according to THAT the whole Gulf of Aqaba is out of the question.
      ​From midnight on the 15th Abib to 6am is 6 hours.
      Then from 6am to 6pm is another 12 hours.
      From 6am on the 16th Abib to 6pm is another 12 hours.
      From 6am on the 17th to 6pm is another 12 hours:
      Giving 42 hours in total.
      Don't you find that number Biblically very familiar ?
      Doesn't the reference to 42 months appear seven times in the Bible ?
      Proving the Exodus Gulf of Suez side Reed Sea Crossing:
      FIRST DAY
      “And they departed from Rameses in the first month, on the fifteenth day of the first month; on the morrow after the passover the children of Israel went out with an high hand (“from Rameses”) in the sight of all the Egyptians.” (Numbers 33:3)
      For THREE DAYS they travelled into the wilderness, well within reach of
      Pharaoh’s army:
      The 15th Abib therefore was not then and is not now a weekly Sabbath day.
      The 15th Abib they all travelled and camped at Succoth (see Exodus 12:37).
      SECOND DAY
      The 16th Abib they travelled again until afternoon and camped at Etham (see Exodus 13:20).
      THIRD DAY
      The 17th Abib Yahweh instructed them to turn away from exiting Egypt and to travel further down the within Egypt proper and camp at Pihahiroth (see Exodus 14:2) - against the body of water that Yahweh parted for them after sunset starting the 4th day.
      Only now Pharaoh thought that they had intended to actually try and escape Egypt, but had somehow made a wrong turn (see Exodus 14:3-9).
      Leaving Egypt was never on Pharaoh’s agenda !
      "Entangled" here between the desert mountains and the sea, Pharaoh’s spies told him the Israelites were trapped and he personally lead his army in to guarantee their return to bondage.
      END OF THREE DAYS TRAVEL
      Starting the 4th day 18th Abib NIGHT Yahweh parted the Red Sea and the
      Israelites passed through safely.
      There is a THREE DAY - FOURTH DAY pattern here:
      Three days creation without light upon the earth - light "upon the earth" given on the fourth day.
      Three days in the dark tomb/belly of the earth - resurrection starting the fourth day etc. and other 3x - 4x occurrences in the Bible.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci +1

      Moses asked permission to travel three days into the wilderness to sacrifice.
      See Exodus 3:18; Exodus 5:3 & Exodus 8:27
      Strange that the request for three days is repeated three times - there can be no mistake !
      At midnight on the 15th Abib Pharaoh finally granted him permission to do "as ye have said", and they left immediately. Coincidentally, three seemingly successive daily stops are recorded thereafter - in accordance with Moses' repeated request for three days travel into the wilderness:
      1+1+1=3
      I know all the wonderful "discoveries" out there have to support another timeline, but the Bible text, as it is written, states that Yahweh instructed Moses to ask Pharaoh for three days, and Pharaoh granted his request:
      "let God be true, but every man a liar; as it is written".
      I'm not calling Ron Wyatt a liar - the Bible is !

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      I don't think the three day text can be misinterpreted. It's repeated three times and they made three stops to the crossing on the fourth day.
      Three days after the crossing and finding no water - fourth day finding water at Marah.
      This is reminiscent of the first three days of creation with light given "upon the earth" on the fourth day.
      It foreshadows Jonah's three days in the belly of the whale and emerging on the fourth day, as well as Christ in the belly of the earth for three days and resurrection on the fourth day. There are other three X - fourth X occurrences throughout the Bible. The three day limit to the crossing point is one of the central themes of the Exodus story.
      The total 42 hours travel time over the three days, is also reminiscent of the prophetic 42 months found seven times in the Bible.
      It's just too coincidental to be a translation accident.

  • @travisjones3228
    @travisjones3228 Před rokem +15

    Ron Wyatt did ALL of the heavy lifting on this adventure!! lol.. These guys know it & didn't say anything about him!! Ron Wyatt is the whole reason it's fenced off. Check him out!! He's found all kinds of Bible places.

    • @awakentruth1116
      @awakentruth1116 Před rokem

      💯

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

    • @edenmaddocks5255
      @edenmaddocks5255 Před 7 hodinami

  • @exjwukmusicalescape9241
    @exjwukmusicalescape9241 Před 2 lety +63

    Nice to see another exploration to this site. Definitely worth seeing the Ron Wyatt video the original modern day discovery.

    • @markwarne5049
      @markwarne5049 Před rokem +4

      Did Ron Wyatt find it first?

    • @exjwukmusicalescape9241
      @exjwukmusicalescape9241 Před rokem +6

      @@markwarne5049 In modern times I think Ron was the first 4 years before Cornuke. August 1978 Ron Wyatt claims to discover it and forms his theory then 1979- Ron Wyatt meets with journalist Rene Noorbergen at the crossing site
      Ron told journalist, Rene Noorbergen, about these remains and […] explained his belief that Mount Sinai was most likely Jebel el Lawz. Mr. Noorbergen wrote a detailed explanation of Ron’s theory in his book, “Treasures of the Lost Races”, published by The Bobs-Merrill Co., Inc., Indianapolis/New York, copyright 1982 (see article on Wyatt museum website).

    • @markwarne5049
      @markwarne5049 Před rokem +1

      @@exjwukmusicalescape9241 thanks for explaining.

    • @thedukeofdunhurst6377
      @thedukeofdunhurst6377 Před rokem +5

      @markwarne5049 yes he did alo g with Noah's ark, dead sea crossing crucifixion site the true one, ark of the covenant, possibly, cave of Macapela

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez...

  • @yuben112
    @yuben112 Před rokem +34

    20:34. The Saudis put up those fences and sign only because Ron Wyatt first discovered the real Mt. Sinai. Then Bob and Larry, like the rest of us, learned the real location and then could go to the real Mt. Sinai. Bob and Larry didn't find the real Mt. Sinai, Ron Wyatt found it. Please give credit to where credit's due.

    • @garyoates4142
      @garyoates4142 Před rokem

      credit goes to the muslims for protecting it for the past 1400 years dont you think ?

    • @noWoodsman
      @noWoodsman Před rokem +2

      Ron Wyatt didn't find it, the arabs already knew, he just discovered it later that it was Mt. Sinai

    • @cameronrussell2947
      @cameronrussell2947 Před rokem +7

      Exactly! So disappointed that these two did not credit Ron

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez..

    • @Kalicdire
      @Kalicdire Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@Michael-pn5lp how do explain the Egyptian army drowning on a dry river bed

  • @anatomyconspiracy9416
    @anatomyconspiracy9416 Před rokem +33

    Ron Wyatt already found everything.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez..

    • @turtlegrams6582
      @turtlegrams6582 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@Michael-pn5lp, chariots and camels Are a huge difference

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 3 měsíci

      @@turtlegrams6582 chariot's getting from Ramses to anywhere on the Gulf of Aqaba in less than twelve hours ? I don't think so.......

    • @turtlegrams6582
      @turtlegrams6582 Před 3 měsíci

      @@Michael-pn5lp ; awh, i see you're a fixer of ALMIGHTY INFALLIBLE AUTHORITY GOD JESUS CHRIST WORD ALONE (Torah + 450,000 copies of the INSPIRED Disciples letters in multiple languages and 47 lifelong 👆 believers/scholars, 7 years working on KJVB, ) instead of a believer (by FAITH OF JESUS CHRIST) of ALMIGHTY INFALLIBLE AUTHORITY GOD JESUS CHRIST WORD ALONE .

  • @anitakelly4270
    @anitakelly4270 Před rokem +21

    Gods word will never steer us wrong!! 🙌🏻🙌🏻

    • @awakentruth1116
      @awakentruth1116 Před rokem +4

      Heaven and earth will pass away but God's Word will never pass away! 🙌🏻

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

    • @turtlegrams6582
      @turtlegrams6582 Před 3 měsíci +2

      ​@@Michael-pn5lp; ALMIGHTY INFALLIBLE AUTHORITY GOD had the Egyptians give HIS Children everything, from gold to wagons & HE PUT A PILLER CLOUD BY DAY = shade & coolness and PILLER OF FIRE AT NIGHT = light & warmth BOTH GUIDING their way . Purer bodies,air, food,water and they were larger than humans today = longer stride . O , how humans underestimate ALMIGHTY INFALLIBLE AUTHORITY GOD

  • @RedbaronKA
    @RedbaronKA Před rokem +10

    I have met Bob Cornuke.. Bob is the real deal searching for truth.. Bob has a heart for God and truth.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez..

  • @CASmith-xp8so
    @CASmith-xp8so Před rokem +12

    Haha, all they needed to do to find it was ask Ron Wyatt who already had... not to mention Ron discovered the location of the Red Sea crossing, Noah's Ark, Sodom & Gomorrah, Golgotha, Christ's tomb and Jeremiah's Grotto where he found the Ark of the Covenant. All of these are chronicled in videos still available. All these characters followed Ron.

    • @Mr1gladiatore
      @Mr1gladiatore Před 5 dny

      Ron was an amateur archaeologist who has been debunked several times by real archaeologists. He didn't find Noah's Ark. He found a rock formation that he claimed was Noah's Ark but what he didn't tell you was that there are many other very similar rock formations up there. He also has not one shred of evidence that he found the Ark Of The Covenant, not a picture, sample, nothing. If he had found it the Jews would have dug it up and placed it somewhere considering how important that is to their history. He didn't discover the real Mt. Sinai he was just the first outsider and because of this, the Saudi government fenced it off to keep hordes of people from coming over and destroying it. The Saudis already knew what it was and they also knew to just leave it alone.

  • @mikescheibler7230
    @mikescheibler7230 Před 2 lety +25

    Well done Steve !! A few new snippets they found to add to yrs of discoveries done earlier by Jim and Peggy Caldwell and their 2 children ! They made MANY trips there on behalf of Ron Wyatt after they made contact with each other , after Ron and his team were arrested and all their footage seized and expelled out of the country !! Love those 2 brave guys though and their reliance on scripture ONLY !! Learned a few more things from them so TKS !! GOD BLESS YOU ALL !!! (Bearman)

    • @Turt51278
      @Turt51278 Před rokem +2

      It’s hard to watch these guys take credit for Ron’s and Caldwell families work.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez..

  • @therodofmichael5724
    @therodofmichael5724 Před rokem +33

    I was there with my wife in 2018. We made a video of the entire area. We saw the split mountain and all the other things of bible. The area was fenced in and guarded by the Saudis but we managed to get in without any problems.

    • @jhartmac100
      @jhartmac100 Před rokem

      So now drone footage, didn't take not ONE rock sample to bring back??

    • @daledorsett9791
      @daledorsett9791 Před rokem

      From the Saudi aspect, keep the world from knowing. Hey, giants are taken by the Smithsonian, dinosaurs (one now found with gums) are placated as super old when history records them, election fraud is covered up, truth is suppressed, what is new??? Remember the videos that Tucker found and showed on TV to the dismay of the Dems, RINO's, and J6 Committee showing the Shaman dressed guy not a terrorist but escorted by the police. LIES and DECEPTION are in to lead all away from truth and into global control. IT IS TRUTH KNOWN AND RECEIVED AS TRUTH that changes the world and shows evil.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci +1

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez..

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 10 měsíci

      The Bible clearly states in Exodus that the Israelites started trekking soon after midnight on the 15th Abib, and got to the crossing point on the afternoon of the 17th Abib.
      Pharaohs spies told him they were entangled in the land between the mountains and the sea sometime on the 17th Abib, and they reached them in their chariots by sunset on that same 17th Abib. That's all impossible for anywhere on the Gulf of Aqaba - it can only have been a Gulf of Suez crossing.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 10 měsíci

      Proving the Exodus Gulf of Suez Crossing:
      “And they departed from Rameses in the first month, on the fifteenth day of the first month; on the morrow after the passover the children of Israel went out with an high hand (“from Rameses”) in the sight of all the Egyptians.” (Numbers 33:3)

      For THREE DAYS they travelled into the wilderness, well within reach of
      Pharaoh’s army:

      The 15th Abib therefore was not then and is not now a weekly Sabbath day.
      1st day
      2nd day
      3rd day
      The 15th Abib they all travelled and camped at Succoth (see Exodus 12:37).
      The 16th Abib they travelled again until afternoon and camped at Etham (see Exodus 13:20). The 17th Abib Yahweh instructed them to turn away from exiting Egypt eastwards above the top end of the Red Sea (Gulf of Suez), and to travel further down the west side within Egypt proper and camp at Pihahiroth (see Exodus 14:2). Only now Pharaoh thought that they were going to actually try and escape Egypt, but had somehow made a wrong turn (see Exodus 14:3-9).
      Leaving Egypt was never on Pharaoh’s agenda !
      Enclosed here between the desert mountains and the sea, Pharaoh’s spies told him the Israelites were trapped and he personally lead his army in to guarantee their return to bondage.

      Starting the 4th day 18th Abib NIGHT Yahweh parted the Red Sea and the
      Israelites passed through safely:

      “And the angel of God, which went before the camp of Israel, removed and went behind them; and the pillar of the cloud went from before their face, and stood behind them:” (Exodus 14:19).

      This “angel of God” was Christ Himself:

      “Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant, how that all our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea;
      And were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea; And did all eat the same spiritual meat; And did all drink the same spiritual drink: for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them: and that Rock was Christ” (1 Corinthians 10:1-4).

      He is our Shepherd - the Stone of Israel - see Genesis 49:24 !
      “And Moses STRECHED FORTH HIS HAND OVER THE SEA, and the sea
      returned to his strength when the morning appeared; and the Egyptians fled against it; and Yahweh overthrew the Egyptians in the midst of the sea. And the waters returned, and covered the chariots, and the horsemen, and all the host of Pharaoh that came into the sea after them; there remained not so much as one of them.
      But the children of Israel walked upon dry land in the midst of the sea; and the waters were a wall unto them on their right hand, and on their left.
      THUS Yahweh saved Israel THAT DAY out of the hand of the Egyptians;
      and Israel saw the Egyptians dead upon the sea shore.
      And Israel saw that great work which Yahweh did upon the Egyptians: and the people feared Yahweh, and believed Yahweh, and his servant Moses” (Exodus 14:27-31).

      “Then sang Moses and the children of Israel this song unto Yahweh…
      And Miriam the prophetess, the sister of Aaron, took a timbrel in her hand; and all the women went out after her with timbrels and with dances.
      And Miriam answered them, Sing ye to Yahweh, for he hath triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider hath he thrown into the sea.” (Exodus 15:1-21).

      “And they remembered that God was their rock, and the high God their redeemer . . .
      And smote all the firstborn in Egypt; the chief of their strength in the tabernacles of Ham: But made his own people to go forth like sheep, and guided them in the wilderness like a flock. And he led them on safely, so that they feared not: but the sea overwhelmed their enemies.” (Psalms 78:35,51-53)

      This 18th was a great “day of gladness”, salvation, celebration and thanksgiving !
      This 18th according to the Dead Sea Scrolls solar calendar, was the weekly Sabbath day ! This 18th Sabbath day, Christ our Shepherd/Stone/Rock herded the whole flock of Israel out of the Egyptian pit ! (N.B. see Matthew 12:8-13).
      This 18th was the weekly Sabbath day on Yahweh's Heavenly Calendar, and so they would not have travelled any further that day, because they were already out of the Egyptian pit and it was fitting to celebrate and praise Yahweh, as they did for the rest of that day on the opposite shore of the Red Sea !

      After three days journey across Egypt to the Red Sea - this 4th day 18th Abib Sabbath day salvation of Israel is also that 18th Abib Sabbath Day Resurrection of Christ - Lord of the Sabbath Day - after three full nights and three full days in the dark tomb:
      “He will swallow up death in victory; and the Lord GOD will wipe away tears from off all faces; and the rebuke of his people shall he take away from off all the earth: for Yahweh hath spoken it.” (Isaiah 25:8)

      So Moses and Yahweh didn’t lie - they did travel THREE DAYS into the Egyptian wilderness
      to sacrifice, and by the end of the third days travel they encamped at the Red Sea:

      That 18th NIGHT starting the 4th day, Pharaoh, his chariots, horses and army were all sacrificed in the Red Sea. Death for Israel was literally swallowed up.
      Pharaoh had no idea that he himself and his oppressive army were to be Yahweh’s sacrifice (sacrificial Red Sea slaughter/feast in divine judgment) The Red Sea Gulf of Suez, "tongue of the Egyptian sea", as the Bible calls it, literally swallowed them up and the fowls of the air and monsters of the deep had a great feast !
      Now there was no Pharaoh to return to and Israel was free to go !

  • @shipmanfam
    @shipmanfam Před 2 lety +18

    Loved this so much! Thank you for sharing!

  • @Jamie_jj
    @Jamie_jj Před 4 měsíci +1

    Thank you for all of you who contributed to making this video! Hope to get any chance to visit those places at some point in the future.

  • @C-o-r-y
    @C-o-r-y Před rokem +11

    Ron Wyatt - the guy who found the real mount Sinai

    • @awakentruth1116
      @awakentruth1116 Před rokem +2

      And these guys gave Ron no credit whatsoever. Ron was the one who had the relationship with James Irwin

    • @C-o-r-y
      @C-o-r-y Před rokem +1

      @@awakentruth1116 yeah i know,
      Ron Wyatt Discoveries
      According to the aforementioned book, Wyatt discovered or identified some ninety-two relics or sites (HRR, 7-10). These include:
      * Noah’s Home and a Flood-inscription at that site,
      * Fences from Noah’s farm,
      * Anchor Stones from Noah’s Ark,
      * laminated Deck Timber from the Ark,
      * Noah’s Altar,
      * Tombs with Tombstones of Noah and his wife,
      * the precise location of the Red Sea Crossing,
      * Wheels from Egyptian Chariots involved in the pursuit of the Israelites from Egypt,
      * the Book of the Law written by Moses on Animal Skins,
      * Gold from the Golden Calf fashioned by Aaron,
      * the Ark of the Covenant,
      * Tables of the Ten Commandments,
      * the Tabernacle’s Table of the Showbread,
      * Goliath’s Sword,
      * Jesus’ Tomb and the Stone Seal of the Tomb,
      * a sampling of Christ’s Dried Blood, proving the doctrine of the Virgin Birth by means of a “chromosome count,” etc.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

  • @mrappe51
    @mrappe51 Před rokem +7

    Should have mentioned Ron Wyatt

    • @awakentruth1116
      @awakentruth1116 Před rokem

      Yep, they took all the credit for his discoveries

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

  • @jamescollins4208
    @jamescollins4208 Před 2 lety +9

    Larry Williams and Bob Cornuke were earlier, as of the late 1990s given proper credit for being the first Westerns to climb to the top of Mt. Sinai. But as well, actually proved with video and photography evidence the 14 elements which all have to be in the exact order and sequence, as clearly referenced in the Exodus Biblical text, to verify the exact and precision location of the Real Mt Sinai.
    But many have also made false claims that others ‘discovered’ Mt. Sinai when it is completely clear from Larry Williams and Bob Cornuke’s documentary that the local Bedouins knew exactly where the Mountain of Moses was for centuries, as did for several decades, the middle eastern archeologists Larry and Bob interviewed, long before any westerns ever saw the mountain. And this is also completely true of the past and present kings and government officials in Saudi Arabia, who have known, also for centuries, where Mt. Sinai has been. Since it has special significance in the religion of Islam, also noted in Willams and Cornke’s film.

    • @Turt51278
      @Turt51278 Před rokem +7

      Ron Wyatt and Caldwell family found all of this in the 80’s. Before any fences was put up. It’s well documented. These guys found nothing

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci +1

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez..

    • @appliedcommonsense4735
      @appliedcommonsense4735 Před 10 měsíci

      Ron wyatt found it first. Something fishy here! Probably to do with Tutankhamen & his father Akhenaten who died in RED sea crossing which is marked on both sides of the water since the days it happened.

  • @friguy4444
    @friguy4444 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I appreciate Bob Cornuke and his heart and work. However I'm a little taken aback when most everyone that has been curious or even just loves archeology has seen at least one if not two or three videos of different people covering this story and covering it very well for the most part I must ad. Of course in the days of Ron Wyatt and his sons friends and others it was far more difficult to come here and investigate the area. In the last ten years many travel here in air conditioned comfort following the outline that is now quite well known and proven that WITHOUT a DOUBT is the very path the Israelite's took while wandering in the desert all those years. The evidence is far far to large for any question to reasonable be even put forth. It is AMAZING!!

  • @byrdsdoityourselfgarage7330

    Congratulations you found the same stuff that Ron Wyatt found years before

    • @awakentruth1116
      @awakentruth1116 Před rokem

      They were aware of Ron... certainly James Irwin told them. It's ashamed they gave him no credit

  • @RUGRAF-rf8fi
    @RUGRAF-rf8fi Před rokem +5

    What a spectacular journey!! Such a beautiful blessing ❤❤🙌🏼🔥

    • @awakentruth1116
      @awakentruth1116 Před rokem +2

      While I agree it was a spectacular journey, I believe they should have given credit to the one who they do not name in the film... Ron Wyatt. Ron not only discovered the real Mt Sinai back in the 80s, he discovered the Noah's ark, the Ark of the Covenant and much more

  • @uwantsun
    @uwantsun Před 2 lety +32

    Ron Wyatt discovered it in 1978. Not Cornuke.

    • @awakeningfaith2290
      @awakeningfaith2290 Před 2 lety +1

      I gove ron credit for making it known, but I personally believe Ronn was an absolute fraud. Let me ask you something that I ask everyone who believes his claims. Why do you believe he was telling the truth ?

    • @andrewvidler6693
      @andrewvidler6693 Před 2 lety +6

      @@awakeningfaith2290 because I met Ron on several occasions. I spoke to him personally and I saw the tears running down his cheeks as he talked about how the Lord led them to discover many Biblical sites (he wept as he spoke of the Blood of Christ) - most of all he was used by God to discover the Ark of the Covenant. He was no fraud!

    • @awakeningfaith2290
      @awakeningfaith2290 Před 2 lety

      @@andrewvidler6693 watch "Ron wyatts ark of the covenant fraud" its in 2 parts. I have no doubt he believed, or wanted to believe what he was saying. Maybe believed half and embellished the rest. Or, maybe was telling the 100% truth. My problem is every one of his claims come with some big elaborate conspiracy as to why he couldn't back any of it up. Other than that he probably had many of the sites right.

    • @thisissparta8884
      @thisissparta8884 Před 2 lety +4

      @@awakeningfaith2290Because he found the real mountain, Noahs ark, and the ark of the covenant. Let me ask you a question. How would he know the mercy seat and ark were under Christ when he was crucified? Only someone who had the truth would know that.

    • @awakeningfaith2290
      @awakeningfaith2290 Před 2 lety +2

      @@thisissparta8884 Heres my question back, how do you know that it is? Its not biblical, he never produced any proof of it, and there are 0 legends that say anything like that. We are 100% going on his word and his alone. It would be awesome if it is true, but I personally don't believe him because I have no proof of his claims.

  • @JLSULev
    @JLSULev Před 5 měsíci +1

    Very convinced that this could be true. The Bible is not myth but Gods word! Praise God!

  • @MichelleYvonne59
    @MichelleYvonne59 Před rokem +8

    This was AMAZING! 5 stars!! ⭐️

    • @awakentruth1116
      @awakentruth1116 Před rokem +2

      If you think this was amazing, just wait until you find out about Ron Wyatt and all of his discoveries. He's actually the one who originally discovered all that these guys claim they discovered. Sadly they have him no credit in this film

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

  • @thedukeofdunhurst6377
    @thedukeofdunhurst6377 Před rokem +11

    Give Ron Wyatt his do. God showed him before you guys .

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

  • @susenstpeter5803
    @susenstpeter5803 Před rokem +3

    Inspiring and faith building. Thank you.

  • @jackhopkins4679
    @jackhopkins4679 Před rokem +1

    This is such a great thing thank you for putting on youtube

  • @homebusinessdad
    @homebusinessdad Před rokem +1

    Fantastic documentary!!! Amazing!!!!! 🔥🔥🔥🔥 "Gods hand in history....is revealed in Archaeology"

  • @BleachedWheat
    @BleachedWheat Před 6 měsíci +10

    God bless the family and memory of Ron Wyatt.

  • @brettchristensen7382
    @brettchristensen7382 Před 29 dny +1

    The Saudis should run tours of these places. It would be hugely popular.

  • @Watchman-At-The-Gate
    @Watchman-At-The-Gate Před 10 měsíci +3

    Ron Wyatt, been there done that

  • @AkaKbgz
    @AkaKbgz Před 8 měsíci

    Love this video, bought several copies, watched many times and shared also. Thank you for your bravery in doing this great work no matter who did it before or after. 🤗✝️☝️

  • @BloodBoughtMinistries
    @BloodBoughtMinistries Před 2 lety +18

    Give Ryan Wyatt the credit due to him.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez...

    • @ReformedJon75
      @ReformedJon75 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@Michael-pn5lpcut n paste troll.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 10 měsíci

      @@ReformedJon75 can't I cut and paste my own work ?

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 10 měsíci

      @@ReformedJon75 are you able to prove me wrong ?

  • @theworldisavampire3346
    @theworldisavampire3346 Před 6 měsíci

    What gets me are all of the artifacts. I feel a deep knowing in my soul. My stomach literally felt whoops when i watched footage.

  • @kateumphrey391
    @kateumphrey391 Před 3 měsíci

    This is an amazing film that contains lots of information. It makes perfect sense if you follow scripture.

  • @edbutzwiggle4227
    @edbutzwiggle4227 Před rokem

    Amazing !

  • @ronjoe9347
    @ronjoe9347 Před 2 lety +53

    Ron Wyatt......God's true Indiana Jones......thanks Ron

    • @ashleewebster_
      @ashleewebster_ Před rokem +10

      Exactly!!! It was Ron Wyatt who did all the research.. I’ve never heard of these two clowns taking credit for Ron’s painstaking research!

    • @ericmatthews6735
      @ericmatthews6735 Před rokem +4

      @@ashleewebster_ Got to respect Ron Wyatt work for sure, Ron found the remains of the Egyptian army and the real mount sinei but got the wrong crossing site!

    • @zellerized
      @zellerized Před rokem

      Seems pretty lame to praise a guy that clearly wasnt the first to find a giant mountain or know what happened there. Anyway, whatever

    • @ericmatthews6735
      @ericmatthews6735 Před rokem +2

      @@zellerized those two guy’s found the right crossing site, Ron Wyatt found the remains of the égyptien army and the mount sanei and the caldwell familly found a lot of clues everywere around it! They all deserve credit!

    • @thedukeofdunhurst6377
      @thedukeofdunhurst6377 Před rokem

      @@ericmatthews6735 which was the crossing site

  • @Jondsmusic
    @Jondsmusic Před rokem +4

    I absolutely love this documentary! More proof that Gods word is unfailing and unchanging. Furthermore, we need to live by faith and not merely by sight. And that God did speak every word in the Bible is real, unchanging and quite literal indeed.
    Praise you Yeshua!

    • @noWoodsman
      @noWoodsman Před rokem

      The new testament has all kinds of contradictions so it's clearly not fully the word of God, but man made manipulated, the real Gospels/Injil is credible, not the bible. Also Jesus (PBUH) never said to abolish the law, he came to fulfill it aka follow what has been given by Moses and other prophets (PBUH), when all the Christians think he did LOL. Read the Old testament and New testament.

    • @Jondsmusic
      @Jondsmusic Před rokem

      @@noWoodsman firstly I never said read one or the other. I read both daily. Yea the Bible is incomplete and originally had eighty eight books. But that doesn’t mean the New Testament isn’t true or is devoid of validity. Paul or Saul was highly accurate in his teachings.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez..

  • @evelisisdavis7242
    @evelisisdavis7242 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for talking about!!!!

  • @hornplayer1228
    @hornplayer1228 Před 6 měsíci +6

    These guys were so busy duplicating Ron Wyatt's work from 30 years earlier that they missed the most important find of all - the metal casting smelter on the top of a small hill with 5 furnaces and casting formers carved into the nearby rock for casting ornaments, rings, and curtain clips for the sanctuary. Best of all is the former for one of the the cherub wings used to hammer the gold plate into shape which was discovered by Ron Wyatt's associates in 2023. The indentations of the wing feathers can still be clearly traced today. Christians are searching all over the world trying to convince themselves that their precious OT accounts are true - when everything recorded is all hiding in plain sight throughout Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey. Nobody wants to accept the discoveries of the Wyatt Foundation due to the stigma associated with the thought that God would never use a humble Seventh Day Adventist like Ron to reveal the physical evidence associated with the history of His special people. The silence from pulpits throughout the world regarding these discoveries is deafening and painful to bear.

  • @greysonbelew1666
    @greysonbelew1666 Před 2 lety +2

    This is an amazing truth!

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez...

  • @baconlon888
    @baconlon888 Před 2 lety +2

    This is grouse Bob, thanks mate, and Larry, God bless

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci +1

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez...

    • @baconlon888
      @baconlon888 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Michael-pn5lp thankyou I've studied this much, good day

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      @@baconlon888 The Gulf of Suez extended further north in antiquity - it's been mapped out well into the fresh water marshy lake reed area that drained into it.
      Proving the three day journey to the crossing point, the fourth day crossing during the night and celebration on the opposite shore for the rest of the fourth day:
      Proving the Exodus Gulf of Suez Crossing:
      “And they departed from Rameses in the first month, on the fifteenth day of the first month; on the morrow after the passover the children of Israel went out with an high hand (“from Rameses”) in the sight of all the Egyptians.” (Numbers 33:3)

      For THREE DAYS they travelled into the wilderness, well within reach of
      Pharaoh’s army:

      The 15th Abib therefore was not then and is not now a weekly Sabbath day.
      1st day
      2nd day
      3rd day
      The 15th Abib they all travelled and camped at Succoth (see Exodus 12:37).
      The 16th Abib they travelled again until afternoon and camped at Etham (see Exodus 13:20). The 17th Abib Yahweh instructed them to turn away from exiting Egypt eastwards above the top end of the Red Sea (Gulf of Suez), and to travel further down the west side within Egypt proper and camp at Pihahiroth (see Exodus 14:2). Only now Pharaoh thought that they were going to actually try and escape Egypt, but had somehow made a wrong turn (see Exodus 14:3-9).
      Leaving Egypt was never on Pharaoh’s agenda !
      Enclosed here between the desert mountains and the sea, Pharaoh’s spies told him the Israelites were trapped and he personally lead his army in to guarantee their return to bondage.

      Starting the 4th day 18th Abib NIGHT Yahweh parted the Red Sea and the
      Israelites passed through safely:

      “And the angel of God, which went before the camp of Israel, removed and went behind them; and the pillar of the cloud went from before their face, and stood behind them:” (Exodus 14:19).

      This “angel of God” was Christ Himself:

      “Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant, how that all our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea;
      And were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea; And did all eat the same spiritual meat; And did all drink the same spiritual drink: for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them: and that Rock was Christ” (1 Corinthians 10:1-4).

      He is our Shepherd - the Stone of Israel - see Genesis 49:24 !
      “And Moses STRECHED FORTH HIS HAND OVER THE SEA, and the sea
      returned to his strength when the morning appeared; and the Egyptians fled against it; and Yahweh overthrew the Egyptians in the midst of the sea. And the waters returned, and covered the chariots, and the horsemen, and all the host of Pharaoh that came into the sea after them; there remained not so much as one of them.
      But the children of Israel walked upon dry land in the midst of the sea; and the waters were a wall unto them on their right hand, and on their left.
      THUS Yahweh saved Israel THAT DAY out of the hand of the Egyptians;
      and Israel saw the Egyptians dead upon the sea shore.
      And Israel saw that great work which Yahweh did upon the Egyptians: and the people feared Yahweh, and believed Yahweh, and his servant Moses” (Exodus 14:27-31).

      “Then sang Moses and the children of Israel this song unto Yahweh…
      And Miriam the prophetess, the sister of Aaron, took a timbrel in her hand; and all the women went out after her with timbrels and with dances.
      And Miriam answered them, Sing ye to Yahweh, for he hath triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider hath he thrown into the sea.” (Exodus 15:1-21).

      “And they remembered that God was their rock, and the high God their redeemer . . .
      And smote all the firstborn in Egypt; the chief of their strength in the tabernacles of Ham: But made his own people to go forth like sheep, and guided them in the wilderness like a flock. And he led them on safely, so that they feared not: but the sea overwhelmed their enemies.” (Psalms 78:35,51-53)

      This 18th was a great “day of gladness”, salvation, celebration and thanksgiving !
      This 18th according to the Dead Sea Scrolls solar calendar, was the weekly Sabbath day ! This 18th Sabbath day, Christ our Shepherd/Stone/Rock herded the whole flock of Israel out of the Egyptian pit ! (N.B. see Matthew 12:8-13).
      This 18th was the weekly Sabbath day on Yahweh's Heavenly Calendar, and so they would not have travelled any further that day, because they were already out of the Egyptian pit and it was fitting to celebrate and praise Yahweh, as they did for the rest of that day on the opposite shore of the Red Sea !

      After three days journey across Egypt to the Red Sea - this 4th day 18th Abib Sabbath day salvation of Israel is also that 18th Abib Sabbath Day Resurrection of Christ - Lord of the Sabbath Day - after three full nights and three full days in the dark tomb:
      “He will swallow up death in victory; and the Lord GOD will wipe away tears from off all faces; and the rebuke of his people shall he take away from off all the earth: for Yahweh hath spoken it.” (Isaiah 25:8)

      So Moses and Yahweh didn’t lie - they did travel THREE DAYS into the Egyptian wilderness
      to sacrifice, and by the end of the third days travel they encamped at the Red Sea:

      That 18th NIGHT starting the 4th day, Pharaoh, his chariots, horses and army were all sacrificed in the Red Sea. Death for Israel was literally swallowed up.
      Pharaoh had no idea that he himself and his oppressive army were to be Yahweh’s sacrifice (sacrificial Red Sea slaughter/feast in divine judgment) The Red Sea Gulf of Suez, "tongue of the Egyptian sea", as the Bible calls it, literally swallowed them up and the fowls of the air and monsters of the deep had a great feast !
      Now there was no Pharaoh to return to and Israel was free to go !

    • @baconlon888
      @baconlon888 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Michael-pn5lp blah blah blah blah

  • @shield707
    @shield707 Před rokem +1

    I've watched this 5 X now... So Awesome...Thanks Be to God 🙏💯🙏
    Tho all shall perish and decay The Word of God Will Remain... Amen

  • @Talalansardeen33
    @Talalansardeen33 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you! Nice sightings..

  • @vinoobo
    @vinoobo Před rokem

    thnaks for your courage !!! Munay to you all ;-)

  • @jeanclaudepatrick6730
    @jeanclaudepatrick6730 Před 3 měsíci

    Jahuah reveals the truth to whom He pleases whether it be these 2 gentlemen or the late Ron Wyatt, bless his soul. It is all revealed for His glory. Its reassuring to know that those who believe in the Bible being the word of God have not misplaced their faith in it representing truth in all matters of mans history. After all our history is actually His story. Proverbs 25:2 "It is the glory of God to conceal a thing, but the honor of kings is to search out a matter." Praise Jahuah my God in the name of my King Jehoshua

  • @fredcato6534
    @fredcato6534 Před 4 měsíci

    Wow😮This is an amazing Discovery 👏 ❤❤

  • @crystalh733
    @crystalh733 Před rokem

    So so so so so so cool ❤

  • @craigrobbins3540
    @craigrobbins3540 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Obvious they knew of Ron Wyatt. He should’ve been mentioned here .

  • @ElvisAaronpresleybyRustyMartin

    The most gratifying video I've seen in my lifetime ? Do they have more?

  • @billwilkerson2415
    @billwilkerson2415 Před rokem

    This is such a discovery

  • @lauraschroeder8177
    @lauraschroeder8177 Před rokem +6

    The archaeological evidence incredible. Does anyone know if there was further research done?

    • @ClearCallMinistries
      @ClearCallMinistries Před rokem +2

      There definitely has been a number of other Bible explorers who have been seeing and uncovering the evidence on this. Ron Wyatt also has documented footage on this. And I think some others, too. So praise God that the truth is getting out!

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

  • @gregm55mullen62
    @gregm55mullen62 Před rokem +16

    There is a family that said they found the real Mt Sinai and made a documentary long before these two guys. I saw the incredible video they made. They also said they found the rock that Moses spoke to and it stands about 12ft high overlooking a plain..

    • @gordonteats298
      @gordonteats298 Před rokem +1

      Yes, a couple found it before Bob and Larry

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci +1

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

    • @jda5457
      @jda5457 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@Michael-pn5lp I find what you explain very interesting. One question, how do you explain what Paul says in Galatians 4:25 "for Hagar is Mount Sinai in Arabia..."?

    • @voiceofreason162
      @voiceofreason162 Před 8 měsíci +1

      A bit bigger than 12ft. It's 6 storeys high. Massive volumes of water spurted out of the tip and wore a groove through it 65ft deep.

    • @Kalicdire
      @Kalicdire Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@Michael-pn5lp exodus 13 says they stopped at succoth which is halfway down the sinai peninsular and camped in etham which is at the tip of the Sinai peninsular already well passed the reed sea just south of goshen. You also quote Josephus saying this all occurred in a few days but there is atleast 7 days of unleavened bread before they begin sacrificing lambs for food on the journey. There is no biblical time that matches with what you are stating. As well as the fact that the entire Egyptian army was destroyed when the water returned. Pretty big miracle to drown an army in chariots on dry land crossing the reed sea.

  • @kjoysedlmairsedlmair6404
    @kjoysedlmairsedlmair6404 Před 2 lety +6

    God, the Lord Jesus bless you brothers, Mount Sinai and bitter water of Mara, and the Rock in the wilderness was Christ. (1 Co. 10:4) etc... all of these you have seen and touched for us. I am amazed by such a great exploration, and discovery, that the Word of God is "the. Truth!" Maranatha, Lord Jesus come soon...

    • @reynalaguna4732
      @reynalaguna4732 Před 2 lety

      Like okk já

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez...

  • @Bernie2011
    @Bernie2011 Před rokem +1

    Wow! Thank you for sharing! Amazing journey and I believe this is correct! The Holy Bible (KJV) is God's true word... inspired by the Holy Spirit.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez..

  • @desireepeters7520
    @desireepeters7520 Před rokem +2

    I really appreciate and enjoy your video, amazing journey .
    God bless both of you and your families 🇺🇸✝️👍🏼💕☺️

  • @BiblicalArchaeologyAR
    @BiblicalArchaeologyAR Před rokem +3

    Great film! Can you upload the English CC/Subs for the documentary .. In order to translate it into Arabic? Thank you!

  • @jennyburkhart
    @jennyburkhart Před rokem

    This is the shorter version. So good tho!

  • @anitakelly4270
    @anitakelly4270 Před rokem +1

    I have some good friends that went there in October, 2022 and they said it was amazing!!!

    • @awakentruth1116
      @awakentruth1116 Před rokem

      Did they have a guide?

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

    • @anitakelly4270
      @anitakelly4270 Před 11 měsíci

      @@awakentruth1116 yes Joel Richardson arranged everything

  • @jeandukes1842
    @jeandukes1842 Před rokem +1

    One thing that makes me believe the this is the real Mt. Sinai (Horeb), is Exodus 3:1, which connects to Exodus 3:12, where God promises Moses "When you bring the people out of Egypt, you will worship God on this mountain," which is Mt. Horeb...

    • @awakentruth1116
      @awakentruth1116 Před rokem

      Yes!

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

  • @lawoflife4kids
    @lawoflife4kids Před 7 měsíci

    Praise God that He uses many to share truth!!!
    Praise God that He has used Robert Cornuke and Larry as well as Ron Wyatt too! Praise God He uses many to affirm his truth!
    Praise God!!!

  • @rjhinnj
    @rjhinnj Před 5 měsíci

    The last thing believers need are relics. It is why it is so hard to even find any, because if anything is found, it will be worshipped! Nothing can be confirmed except general places.

  • @cboud
    @cboud Před 3 měsíci +1

    This is so strange that there is not one mention of Ron Wyatt or any of the other people that were there before they were. I'm not a big Ron Wyatt fanboy but saying that there were other men there but they were arrested and not saying who they were is just weird. They also seem like they would need to find all these things to show that this was the place that Moses was. When they already knew what they would find because of what all the other people who were there before them had found. Very strange like they discovered everything. When all this was already known previously.

  • @m1nd0fmichael96
    @m1nd0fmichael96 Před rokem

    Amen

  • @rickhorejsi1121
    @rickhorejsi1121 Před rokem +1

    The next Qwest of the Holy Bible for me is The Return of JESUS CHRIST ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ , AMEN AND GOD BLESS YOU ALL!!!!!!!

  • @abedejong6799
    @abedejong6799 Před 9 dny

    We read clearly about the geographic place of mount Sinai/ Horeb through the Amalekites present south of Kades-Barnea on the Sinai peninsula.
    At Rafidem close to Mount Sinai Amalek and Israel had a battle.... on the Sinai peninsula near the desert of Sin.

  • @Rafaelberrio777
    @Rafaelberrio777 Před rokem +2

    Traducirlo al español por favor 🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻

  • @rickraybourn7456
    @rickraybourn7456 Před rokem

    Larry Williams is from Kalispell, MT, I was born there

  • @tommywarren4633
    @tommywarren4633 Před rokem +5

    The Bible plainly tells you in the book of Galatians the Mount Sinai is in Arabia the same place where Midian is on the other side of the Gulf of aquaba

    • @joyfullyshout
      @joyfullyshout Před rokem +1

      I am going to visit Egypt and climb Mt. Sinai with a Bible Study tour. Where in Galatians can I read that Mt. Sinai is in Arabia? Perhaps God intended to keep things hidden (example, Noah's Ark) or not allowed the masses to trek upon the real location to be revealed in His time. Thank you GOD BLESS

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci +2

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez..

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      I can also drop a lot of artifacts overboard in the Gulf of Aqaba, return two years later when they are full of barnacles and call it 'evidence' - that proves nothing !
      Has this 'evidence' been examined and verified by experts ? NO !

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Proving the Exodus Gulf of Suez Crossing:
      “And they departed from Rameses in the first month, on the fifteenth day of the first month; on the morrow after the passover the children of Israel went out with an high hand (“from Rameses”) in the sight of all the Egyptians.” (Numbers 33:3)

      For THREE DAYS they travelled into the wilderness, well within reach of
      Pharaoh’s army:

      The 15th Abib therefore was not then and is not now a weekly Sabbath day.
      1st day
      2nd day
      3rd day
      The 15th Abib they all travelled and camped at Succoth (see Exodus 12:37).
      The 16th Abib they travelled again until afternoon and camped at Etham (see Exodus 13:20). The 17th Abib Yahweh instructed them to turn away from exiting Egypt eastwards above the top end of the Red Sea (Gulf of Suez), and to travel further down the west side within Egypt proper and camp at Pihahiroth (see Exodus 14:2). Only now Pharaoh thought that they were going to actually try and escape Egypt, but had somehow made a wrong turn (see Exodus 14:3-9).
      Leaving Egypt was never on Pharaoh’s agenda !
      Enclosed here between the desert mountains and the sea, Pharaoh’s spies told him the Israelites were trapped and he personally lead his army in to guarantee their return to bondage.

      Starting the 4th day 18th Abib NIGHT Yahweh parted the Red Sea and the
      Israelites passed through safely:

      “And the angel of God, which went before the camp of Israel, removed and went behind them; and the pillar of the cloud went from before their face, and stood behind them:” (Exodus 14:19).

      This “angel of God” was Christ Himself:

      “Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant, how that all our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea;
      And were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea; And did all eat the same spiritual meat; And did all drink the same spiritual drink: for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them: and that Rock was Christ” (1 Corinthians 10:1-4).

      He is our Shepherd - the Stone of Israel - see Genesis 49:24 !
      “And Moses STRECHED FORTH HIS HAND OVER THE SEA, and the sea
      returned to his strength when the morning appeared; and the Egyptians fled against it; and Yahweh overthrew the Egyptians in the midst of the sea. And the waters returned, and covered the chariots, and the horsemen, and all the host of Pharaoh that came into the sea after them; there remained not so much as one of them.
      But the children of Israel walked upon dry land in the midst of the sea; and the waters were a wall unto them on their right hand, and on their left.
      THUS Yahweh saved Israel THAT DAY out of the hand of the Egyptians;
      and Israel saw the Egyptians dead upon the sea shore.
      And Israel saw that great work which Yahweh did upon the Egyptians: and the people feared Yahweh, and believed Yahweh, and his servant Moses” (Exodus 14:27-31).

      “Then sang Moses and the children of Israel this song unto Yahweh…
      And Miriam the prophetess, the sister of Aaron, took a timbrel in her hand; and all the women went out after her with timbrels and with dances.
      And Miriam answered them, Sing ye to Yahweh, for he hath triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider hath he thrown into the sea.” (Exodus 15:1-21).

      “And they remembered that God was their rock, and the high God their redeemer . . .
      And smote all the firstborn in Egypt; the chief of their strength in the tabernacles of Ham: But made his own people to go forth like sheep, and guided them in the wilderness like a flock. And he led them on safely, so that they feared not: but the sea overwhelmed their enemies.” (Psalms 78:35,51-53)

      This 18th was a great “day of gladness”, salvation, celebration and thanksgiving !
      This 18th according to the Dead Sea Scrolls solar calendar, was the weekly Sabbath day ! This 18th Sabbath day, Christ our Shepherd/Stone/Rock herded the whole flock of Israel out of the Egyptian pit ! (N.B. see Matthew 12:8-13).
      This 18th was the weekly Sabbath day on Yahweh's Heavenly Calendar, and so they would not have travelled any further that day, because they were already out of the Egyptian pit and it was fitting to celebrate and praise Yahweh, as they did for the rest of that day on the opposite shore of the Red Sea !

      After three days journey across Egypt to the Red Sea - this 4th day 18th Abib Sabbath day salvation of Israel is also that 18th Abib Sabbath Day Resurrection of Christ - Lord of the Sabbath Day - after three full nights and three full days in the dark tomb:
      “He will swallow up death in victory; and the Lord GOD will wipe away tears from off all faces; and the rebuke of his people shall he take away from off all the earth: for Yahweh hath spoken it.” (Isaiah 25:8)

      So Moses and Yahweh didn’t lie - they did travel THREE DAYS into the Egyptian wilderness
      to sacrifice, and by the end of the third days travel they encamped at the Red Sea:

      That 18th NIGHT starting the 4th day, Pharaoh, his chariots, horses and army were all sacrificed in the Red Sea. Death for Israel was literally swallowed up.
      Pharaoh had no idea that he himself and his oppressive army were to be Yahweh’s sacrifice (sacrificial Red Sea slaughter/feast in divine judgment) The Red Sea Gulf of Suez, "tongue of the Egyptian sea", as the Bible calls it, literally swallowed them up and the fowls of the air and monsters of the deep had a great feast !
      Now there was no Pharaoh to return to and Israel was free to go !

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      The Great Bitter Lake is also bordered on the west side by desert and mountains 150-200 meters high, and the Gulf of Suez possibly extended into this lake - I no longer have the evidence of it's ancient shoreline. So this scenario is definitely within the THREE day travel limit to the crossing point.

  • @voiceofreason162
    @voiceofreason162 Před 8 měsíci +1

    This is just a respin of the 1978 discovery. All these details were pretty well established by the 1990s. Including the route, archaeological findings and such. It's slick with it's musical score and a professional narration, but still a remake of existing works, and no credit afforded.

  • @janetwilde6803
    @janetwilde6803 Před 2 měsíci +1

    What about Todd M. Fink's findings?

  • @elimprastowo4223
    @elimprastowo4223 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi can u make indonesian subtitle available again?

  • @garyhormell9685
    @garyhormell9685 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank You Bob and Larry for all your time, money, and effort to bring the Truth to so many people that otherwise may have never known.

  • @thecrew777
    @thecrew777 Před rokem +1

    Following the historical record in the Bible with those stops: the bitter waters, the 70 palms, the altar to the calf god, the altar made by Moses of uncut stones, and finally those burned peaks: that's the way to do it! Not just "Oh, look at this mountain, what do you think?" This convinces me.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

    • @thecrew777
      @thecrew777 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Michael-pn5lp "The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point" you stated. That wouldn't be hard for Pharaoh's army to go around the tip and hem them in on the other side. That is just not enough. The crossing of the Red Sea was such an impossible thing it was rumored all the way to the land of Canaan and beyond. The "lands end" where there is a bridge only 30 feet down that goes all the way across? That would be rumored for generations all over the land. Remember: God's point in doing all this was to make a name for Himself among the nations.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      @@thecrew777 why would Pharaoh try block them in from the other side ? He thought they were already blocked in. How would he knows they were going to walk through the Red Sea !

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      @@thecrew777 The Gulf of Suez extended further north in antiquity - it's been mapped out well into the fresh water marshy lake reed area that drained into it.
      Proving the three day journey to the crossing point, the fourth day crossing during the night and celebration on the opposite shore for the rest of the fourth day:
      Proving the Exodus Gulf of Suez Crossing:
      “And they departed from Rameses in the first month, on the fifteenth day of the first month; on the morrow after the passover the children of Israel went out with an high hand (“from Rameses”) in the sight of all the Egyptians.” (Numbers 33:3)

      For THREE DAYS they travelled into the wilderness, well within reach of
      Pharaoh’s army:

      The 15th Abib therefore was not then and is not now a weekly Sabbath day.
      1st day
      2nd day
      3rd day
      The 15th Abib they all travelled and camped at Succoth (see Exodus 12:37).
      The 16th Abib they travelled again until afternoon and camped at Etham (see Exodus 13:20). The 17th Abib Yahweh instructed them to turn away from exiting Egypt eastwards above the top end of the Red Sea (Gulf of Suez), and to travel further down the west side within Egypt proper and camp at Pihahiroth (see Exodus 14:2). Only now Pharaoh thought that they were going to actually try and escape Egypt, but had somehow made a wrong turn (see Exodus 14:3-9).
      Leaving Egypt was never on Pharaoh’s agenda !
      Enclosed here between the desert mountains and the sea, Pharaoh’s spies told him the Israelites were trapped and he personally lead his army in to guarantee their return to bondage.

      Starting the 4th day 18th Abib NIGHT Yahweh parted the Red Sea and the
      Israelites passed through safely:

      “And the angel of God, which went before the camp of Israel, removed and went behind them; and the pillar of the cloud went from before their face, and stood behind them:” (Exodus 14:19).

      This “angel of God” was Christ Himself:

      “Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant, how that all our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea;
      And were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea; And did all eat the same spiritual meat; And did all drink the same spiritual drink: for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them: and that Rock was Christ” (1 Corinthians 10:1-4).

      He is our Shepherd - the Stone of Israel - see Genesis 49:24 !
      “And Moses STRECHED FORTH HIS HAND OVER THE SEA, and the sea
      returned to his strength when the morning appeared; and the Egyptians fled against it; and Yahweh overthrew the Egyptians in the midst of the sea. And the waters returned, and covered the chariots, and the horsemen, and all the host of Pharaoh that came into the sea after them; there remained not so much as one of them.
      But the children of Israel walked upon dry land in the midst of the sea; and the waters were a wall unto them on their right hand, and on their left.
      THUS Yahweh saved Israel THAT DAY out of the hand of the Egyptians;
      and Israel saw the Egyptians dead upon the sea shore.
      And Israel saw that great work which Yahweh did upon the Egyptians: and the people feared Yahweh, and believed Yahweh, and his servant Moses” (Exodus 14:27-31).

      “Then sang Moses and the children of Israel this song unto Yahweh…
      And Miriam the prophetess, the sister of Aaron, took a timbrel in her hand; and all the women went out after her with timbrels and with dances.
      And Miriam answered them, Sing ye to Yahweh, for he hath triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider hath he thrown into the sea.” (Exodus 15:1-21).

      “And they remembered that God was their rock, and the high God their redeemer . . .
      And smote all the firstborn in Egypt; the chief of their strength in the tabernacles of Ham: But made his own people to go forth like sheep, and guided them in the wilderness like a flock. And he led them on safely, so that they feared not: but the sea overwhelmed their enemies.” (Psalms 78:35,51-53)

      This 18th was a great “day of gladness”, salvation, celebration and thanksgiving !
      This 18th according to the Dead Sea Scrolls solar calendar, was the weekly Sabbath day ! This 18th Sabbath day, Christ our Shepherd/Stone/Rock herded the whole flock of Israel out of the Egyptian pit ! (N.B. see Matthew 12:8-13).
      This 18th was the weekly Sabbath day on Yahweh's Heavenly Calendar, and so they would not have travelled any further that day, because they were already out of the Egyptian pit and it was fitting to celebrate and praise Yahweh, as they did for the rest of that day on the opposite shore of the Red Sea !

      After three days journey across Egypt to the Red Sea - this 4th day 18th Abib Sabbath day salvation of Israel is also that 18th Abib Sabbath Day Resurrection of Christ - Lord of the Sabbath Day - after three full nights and three full days in the dark tomb:
      “He will swallow up death in victory; and the Lord GOD will wipe away tears from off all faces; and the rebuke of his people shall he take away from off all the earth: for Yahweh hath spoken it.” (Isaiah 25:8)

      So Moses and Yahweh didn’t lie - they did travel THREE DAYS into the Egyptian wilderness
      to sacrifice, and by the end of the third days travel they encamped at the Red Sea:

      That 18th NIGHT starting the 4th day, Pharaoh, his chariots, horses and army were all sacrificed in the Red Sea. Death for Israel was literally swallowed up.
      Pharaoh had no idea that he himself and his oppressive army were to be Yahweh’s sacrifice (sacrificial Red Sea slaughter/feast in divine judgment) The Red Sea Gulf of Suez, "tongue of the Egyptian sea", as the Bible calls it, literally swallowed them up and the fowls of the air and monsters of the deep had a great feast !
      Now there was no Pharaoh to return to and Israel was free to go !

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      The Great Bitter Lake is also bordered on the west side by desert and mountains 150-200 meters high, and the Gulf of Suez possibly extended into this lake - I no longer have the evidence of it's ancient shoreline. So this scenario is definitely within the THREE day travel limit to the crossing point.

  • @leahwilliams38
    @leahwilliams38 Před 2 lety

    How do you buy this

    • @explorationfilms
      @explorationfilms  Před 2 lety

      You can buy a DVD at www.explorationfilms.com/THE_SEARCH_FOR_THE_REAL_MT_SINAI.php or stream it digitally at www.exploreflix.world

  • @highdesertfarm5067
    @highdesertfarm5067 Před rokem +1

    Who would have thought, the scholars were wrong and the word of God is right

  • @karinareich
    @karinareich Před rokem

    Can we watch in spanish?

  • @heavennits674
    @heavennits674 Před 12 dny

    The crossing was at Nuweiba Beach, not in the south of aqaba. Credit to Ron Wyatt

  • @jameserickson6469
    @jameserickson6469 Před rokem +3

    Okay, I like that the guys followed the logistical clues from the biblical accounts, used local lore, and found some similarities in what they were looking for. However, I found flaws in the presentation. The first alleged altar, looked like just a big pile of rocks, but I found the petroglyphs interesting. Would have liked to see a lot more on the second site they located. As to the “melted” rock that made up the whole upper third of the mountain. Where’s the picture, and why didn’t one of them stick a sample rock in their backpack? The rest of video just kinda lost its steam for me after that.

    • @Turt51278
      @Turt51278 Před rokem

      I have seen many videos the black rocks are not black underneath or inside. Only the tops and sides are chared.

    • @natepeaslee4582
      @natepeaslee4582 Před rokem

      ​@jasonmessenger3162 can you give directions on where to watch these videos you're talking about?

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

    • @WideAwakeJones1
      @WideAwakeJones1 Před 10 měsíci

      Read Galatians! He tells Mt Sinai is in Arabia! Exodus - Moses in Midian- at the burning bush - After you redeemed the children of Israel, come back and worship Me on THIS mountain!’

    • @WideAwakeJones1
      @WideAwakeJones1 Před 10 měsíci

      Don’t let your unbelief overrule you common sense!

  • @1thess523
    @1thess523 Před 2 lety +25

    It's no coincidence that BOB & LARRY 😉 found the mountain of God

    • @garyoates4142
      @garyoates4142 Před rokem

      they were the first christians to find it ....
      the muslims have been aware of it for 1400 years
      why do you think that is ?
      how do the muslims know whee it is but the christians with their " holy spirit " didnt know ?

    • @alejandrogaricia2252
      @alejandrogaricia2252 Před rokem

      Amen

    • @cameronrussell2947
      @cameronrussell2947 Před rokem +4

      Ron Wyatt was the true discoverer. These two failed to credit him - only Jim Irwin who passed on the info to them (friend of Ron)

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez...

  • @wehvgirlpwr
    @wehvgirlpwr Před 2 lety +10

    You’re a little late to the party, Bob. This area was already discovered and pegged as Mt Sinai years ago by Ron Wyatt not you, that’s why there is a fence around it already.

    • @ryanthurman92
      @ryanthurman92 Před rokem

      Source

    • @jadeolin8514
      @jadeolin8514 Před rokem

      @@ryanthurman92 you gave you the name of the man, you have a search function, it's not hard.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez...

  • @ReformedJon75
    @ReformedJon75 Před 10 měsíci

    "what are we doing here Larry?"
    "we're stealing history Bob".
    Naughty boys.

  • @carlwalker3557
    @carlwalker3557 Před rokem +1

    It’s too obvious for the devil’s comfort, so those who are not of God keep it guarded.

  • @racheldunstone5147
    @racheldunstone5147 Před 2 lety +1

    Praise God 🙏

  • @joseamilcarsalgadolainez3586
    @joseamilcarsalgadolainez3586 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Ron Wyatt

  • @kishetamara2851
    @kishetamara2851 Před měsícem

    When was this discovered?

  • @ryanborghini2975
    @ryanborghini2975 Před 4 měsíci

    Glory to Jesus ❤

  • @edwardkmicheal218
    @edwardkmicheal218 Před rokem

    Stay Blessed Bob, kdagAug2022

  • @theresakeech845
    @theresakeech845 Před rokem +3

    ron wyatt is the real

  • @erikboreel8047
    @erikboreel8047 Před rokem

    Who's the shepherd who leads us through the valley of darkness ? One who can separate himself from the herd, meaning a leader to read the land

  • @daveweiss5647
    @daveweiss5647 Před rokem

    This is Amazing, someone needs to pressure the Saudis to allow real archeological exploration, the evidence points to it being legitimate!

  • @zeuszoos8386
    @zeuszoos8386 Před 17 dny

    Confused: The etchings of the calves/bulls/etc., why did they talk about Egyptians making the altar and etchings, when it was the Israelites?

  • @aggabus
    @aggabus Před rokem

    What year ??
    these are actors ??

  • @Michael-pn5lp
    @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci +1

    Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
    Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
    So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
    Thinking logically:
    Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
    18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
    19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
    Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
    The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
    This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
    The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
    i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
    On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
    The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
    After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
    The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
    It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
    The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

  • @billwilkerson2415
    @billwilkerson2415 Před rokem

    I need to get in touch with the men

  • @ralphowen3367
    @ralphowen3367 Před rokem

    It sounds like you do not take the Nuweiba Beach crossing as the correct sight.

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez..

    • @ralphowen3367
      @ralphowen3367 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Michael-pn5lp Gal. 4:25 says that Mt. Sinai was in Arabia. The miraculous working of God in redeeming Israel from Egypt and harnessing them up to Himself in taking them across the Pennensula between the two tongues of the Red Sea (Gulf of Suez and the Gulf of Aquaba) defies logic and sensible Ness. While a few of the biblical locations were on that Egyption Pennensula, many other of the locations were to the east of the Gulf of Aquaba where Arabia was, unless Arabia was partly to the west of the Gulf of Aquaba. If tradition, even biblical tradition had got it wrong for so many centuries, the map makers were also deceived. The place where Moses ascended the mountain of God was near where his father in law lived--to the east of the Gulf of Aquaba in Arabia proper. The children of Israel could not have crossed at the Sea of Reeds much nearer to Goshen, because there are no depths there into which the armies of Pharaoh were drowned in the Red Sea. Pihirohoth (sp) near where they crossed is also apparently near the Straits of Tiran and Baalzephon is in the waters of the Gulf of Aquaba. The mountain where Moses received the Law and saw the burning bush has by tradition been called the Mt. of Moses by the Arabs, and the split rock at Horeb where the waters flowed out is also on the east side of the Gulf of Aquaba. The wilderness of Shur is there as well the place where the quails came down as food for the Israelis who were none of them sick on their trek and whose shoes did not wear out. The pursuing Egyptians were on horses, which explains how they could catch up with the Hebrews on a day's ride.

  • @7uciano
    @7uciano Před 7 dny

    Has anyone found any one of these places on Google Maps?

  • @aggabus
    @aggabus Před rokem

    Speak no strike
    Is reenact doc ??

  • @razony
    @razony Před rokem

    2022 and peoples are still searching for truth.

  • @RM-dx6tm
    @RM-dx6tm Před rokem

    Mt. Sinai is in Egypt. Sinai is the area between the golf of Aqaba and golf of Sues . its a Holy place where ancient St. Catharine Monastery was built about 1500 years ago to worship God.

    • @awakentruth1116
      @awakentruth1116 Před rokem

      You're wrong... Read the Bible

    • @Michael-pn5lp
      @Michael-pn5lp Před 11 měsíci

      Comparing traveling men in the prime of their lives and/or on camels, to a huge mixed multitude of men, women, children and elderly with flocks and herds of livestock, doesn't seem sensible to me.
      Pharaoh and his chariots caught up with them at the Red Sea crossing point in LESS than one day - probably in only a few hours from when the spies reported they were entangled in the land on the wrong side of the Red Sea ! This also establishes a certain travel limit to the crossing point !
      So what would take Laurence of Arabia on camels four days to the Gulf of Aqaba crossing point, only took Pharaoh and his chariots a few hours ? That is the clincher ! It could only have been the top of the Gulf of Suez !
      Thinking logically:
      Three days travel to the Red Sea crossing 15th,16th,17th Abib.
      18th Abib weekly Sabbath taken out of the Egyptian pit through the Red Sea and celebrating on the opposite shore.
      19th, 20th, 21st and arriving during 22nd Abib at the bitter waters of Marah.
      Note the 3 day - 4th day pattern !
      The three day distance they travelled before the crossing, should be three quarters of the four day distance they travelled after the crossing to get to Marah.
      This should help eliminate incorrect proposed Red Sea crossing points.
      The north end of the Gulf of Suez is still the most likely crossing point - possibly in the area that is now dried up, since the Gulf of Suez is proven to have extended much further north in antiquity.
      i.e. travelling 9 days distance in three days to get to the crossing, and then travelling 4 days distance in 4 days to Marah after the crossing, doesn't make sense. The same applies to other proposed crossing sites !
      On the first day of the 15th they left soon after midnight and travelled to Succoth, giving a maximum of 18 hours travel. They must have rested overnight after 18 hours travel.
      The second afternoon they "encamped" in Etham.
      After turning away from leaving Egypt, the third afternoon they got to Pihahiroth where the crossing took place.
      The Straits of Tiran are about 500 kilometers from Rameses - it just can't be done !
      It's about 400km to the top of the Gulf of Aqaba, which is just as unlikely a three day journey for a multitude of men, women and children with herds of livestock. So the whole Gulf of Aqaba is ruled out, leaving only the top of the Gulf of Suez as the likely site - probably the dry bed of the sea that is proven to have extended further north in antiquity.
      The Bible shows that the Israelites got to the Red Sea crossing point in three days walking, and Pharaoh and his chariots got there in less than one day. This is IMPOSSIBLE for any Gulf of Aqaba crossing, but quite plausible for a crossing at the top of the Gulf of Suez

  • @Vonnies1929
    @Vonnies1929 Před rokem

    😭😭😭😭😭