Inside CT: The Last Temptation of Moses Michael G. Maudlin, Managing Editor
September 7, 1998
I remember being surprised in 1995 when Time published its "Is the Bible Myth?" cover story. In it they "reported" on how Abraham, Joseph, and Moses never existed. No new evidence had come to light to question anew traditional interpretations. They just thought the most important news event that week was that there was still no independent confirmation of Israel's "mythic" origins.
But that's not what surprised me. I was surprised because weeks earlier I had lunched with Richard Ostling, Time's senior correspondent and a former CT news editor. In a Chinese restaurant down the street from the Time-Life building, he excitedly told me how he had just reported on the work of Egyptologist James Hoffmeier, from Wheaton College, who in a recent book had marshaled all the evidence consistent with the Hebrews' sojourn in and evacuation from Egypt. It was going to be a cover story.
Surprise! The story morphed after it left his hands. Time's assembly line of editors and writers, acting as the arbiters of what is intellectually acceptable, turned the thesis 180 degrees from what Dick envisioned.
When the makers of the animated film The Prince of Egypt (to be released in December) interviewed the same experts as Time and used similarly educated professionals, the results were very different. God is back in, and not only does Moses exist, but he makes the sea part, turns a stick into a snake, and calls down serial plagues.
Is Hollywood more faithful than New York? I don't think so. Rather, the media companies' goals are different. Instead of wanting to appear intellectually stylish and "daringly" skeptical, the movie studio DreamWorks wants to sell movie tickets. And a nonexistent, or even a de-miracled, Moses does not make the cash registers ...
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