There Once Was a Prophet from Judah. Jeff Carter

There Once Was a Prophet from Judah - Jeff Carter


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dream that sent shivers down his spine.

      He saw something vile

      come up from the Nile:

      those cannibalistic river kine.

      Genesis 41:1–4 (KJV)

      Kine is the only plural form in the English language that does not share a single letter with its singular—Cow.

      The First Socialist

      Evangelical apologists

      must be well confirmed capitalists

      for there are very few

      who will admit to you

      that Joseph was the first socialist.

      Genesis 41

      Carry up My Bones from Here

      Prince Joseph from his deathbed intones:

      “Make for me in Egypt no headstones.

      You should do this instead,

      when I am cold and dead,

      go to the Promised Land with my bones.”

      Genesis 50:24–25

      Exodus

      Hebrew Women Are not Like Egyptian Women

      Pharaoh instructed all the midwives:

      let no Hebrew boys be born alive,

      “But our women are strong,

      and it never takes long;

      they give birth before we arrive.”

      Exodus 1:15–19

      Seriously Understaffed Midwives

      It’s no wonder that when the Hebrews

      came to the time their babies were due

      the midwives weren’t around,

      there were few to be found;

      in all Egypt there were only two.

      Exodus 1:15, 19

      Strike!

      What’s the book of Exodus about?

      Why, it’s a labor story, no doubt:

      Pharaoh cruelly abused

      and exploited the Jews

      so they all went on strike and walked out.

      Exodus 2–12

      No Excuse for Papyrus

      That Jochabed did use papyrus

      to make an ark for her son Moses

      is not a good excuse

      for the continued use

      of that foul font by the rest of us.

      Exodus 2:3

      They’ll Take the Credit, but Will they Accept the Blame?

      The rulers will take credit, no doubt

      for good that happens under their clout:

      Pharaoh’s daughter sent her

      maid into the river

      then made the claim, “I drew Moses out.”

      Exodus 2:5, 10

      Slow of Speech and Tongue

      The flames in the bush were aflutter

      when Moses first heard God’s voice utter

      the command to go speak,

      but Moses said, “I’m weak

      and I st- st- st- st-. . . can’t speak well.”

      Exodus 3:2; 4:10

      First! Or Maybe not. . .

      In the time of Adam, so they say,

      people began to call on Yahweh,

      and right up to Moses,

      who wrongly supposes,

      he was first to use the name that way.

      Exodus 6:2–3; Genesis 4:26; 15:7; 27:20

      Do Not Have Sexual Relations with your Father’s Sister

      Hey, hey wait! There’s something amiss here:

      Amram married his father’s sister,

      but by Torah you can’t

      copulate with your aunt,

      even to conceive Moses, mister!

      Exodus 6:20; Leviticus 18:12

      Not Helping

      Egyptian magicians served their king

      by each of the plagues reproducing,

      snakes and blood, frogs as well

      which caused Pharaoh to yell,

      “Dammit, you guys! This isn’t helping!”

      Exodus 7:11–12, 22; 8:3

      Pull My Finger

      It is rare that the phrase is invoked,

      but when “the finger of God’s” provoked

      lice is formed up from dust,

      the law in stone is thrust,

      and demons of Beelzebub get poked.

      Yam Suph

      On this point I’d like to intercede,

      make the correction the Bible needs;

      in Hebrew it’s Yam Suph,

      but a translator’s goof

      changed the Sea to Red instead of Reeds.

      Exodus 10:19

      To Roast or To Boil?

      The priestly author insists, madam,

      that we roast and not boil the lamb,

      but Deuteronomy’s

      author quite disagrees,

      ‘boil it,’ he says, ‘roasting be damned.’

      Exodus 12:9; Deuteronomy 16:7

      The verb used in Deuteronomy 16:7 is translated in most every other instance as “boiled” but is deliberately changed by some translations to “cooked” or even “roasted” in this verse to bring it into line with the explicit prohibition on boiling the Passover lamb found in Exodus 12: 9. Meanwhile, 2 Chronicles 35: 13 sees King Josiah roasting and boiling the Passover lamb in order to keep both forms of the command, and the Greek Septuagint translation of Deuteronomy 16: 7 has both, “you shall boil and roast and eat it.”

      Flesh Pots

      Their flight to the desert was complete

      but the Hebrews had nothing to eat,

      so they wept and they cried,

      “If only we had died

      in Egypt where we had potted meat!”

      Exodus 16:3

      Maybe it’s Better not To Know

      Manna came at night, but what was it?

      No one really knows, we must admit,

      but


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