and the author just happens to use language eerily similar to what we find in Exodus. They insist that despite the parallels (they usually only cite one or two), it just isn’t relevant to the Exodus narrative, and that it’s a poetic/metaphoric lament about how the city/country is coming to ruin. It’s rather humorous to me that so many critics insist that this papyrus doesn’t refer to the Ten Plagues. Consume your goods in gladness and unhindered, for it is good for a man to eat his food God commands it for him whom He has favored.”
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