
In an era dominated by scientific claims that often contradict sacred texts, it’s crucial to reclaim history through truth. History Through Truth: We must trust the Torah over science. The unchanging word of Hashem is revealed in the Torah. Trust Torah over science to find spiritual guidance amidst such contradictions.
The scientific timeline, riddled with inconsistencies and influenced by secular agendas, crumbles under scrutiny. This occurs when compared to the Bible’s precise chronology. From the creation of Adam to the Exodus and beyond, archaeological discoveries and genetic evidence increasingly affirm the Torah’s narrative. They also expose science’s flaws, further emphasizing why we should trust Torah over science.
This second installment in our series on Hebrew, Chemistry, and Torah wisdom explores why we must prioritize the divine account. It emphasizes its importance over human conjecture. Trusting the Torah over science helps clarify truths obscured by secular perspectives. As descendants of Adam with a living chain of tradition spanning millennia, the Jewish people embody this truth. Our migrations, like the ships that brought our families to the USA, echo ancient journeys of faith and survival.

The Broken Scientific Timeline: Agendas Over Evidence
Mainstream science posits a timeline stretching billions of years, with human history emerging gradually from primitive origins. Yet, this framework is built on assumptions that ignore or suppress evidence aligning with the Torah’s 6,000-year chronology. Placing trust in Torah over science allows us to uncover the full historical context.
Rabbi Palanov’s teachings, drawing on Torah scholars like Rabbi Ginsburgh and Dr. Gerald Schroeder, highlight how Hebrew encodes scientific truths. Yet, secular timelines distort them to fit evolutionary biases.
Why Trust Science?
For instance, the Ebla Tablets, discovered in the 1970s at Tell Mardikh in Syria, date to around 2400 BCE. They contain linguistic parallels to Genesis, such as “adamu” mirroring “Adam” (אָדָם), the first man with neshama.
These tablets, with references to biblical-like names (Eber, Ishmael) and a creation hymn echoing Bereishit, challenge late-dating theories. Such theories claim Genesis was composed post-Exile. Scientists initially hailed the find but later backpedaled amid political pressure in Syria. They suppressed biblical connections to avoid validating Israelite history and encouraged trust in Torah over science.

This agenda-driven suppression extends to the Exodus. Archaeologists, like those in the minimalist school, claim there is no evidence for the biblical event around 1446 BCE. However, as filmmaker Tim Mahoney demonstrates in Patterns of Evidence:
The Exodus, when shifted to the Middle Bronze Age, provides abundant evidence. This includes massive Semitic settlements in Avaris (ancient Goshen) and sudden abandonments matching the plagues. There are also inscriptions like the Ipuwer Papyrus describing chaos akin to the ten plagues.
Mahoney interviews pro-Exodus experts, including Egyptologists David Rohl and Manfred Bietak. They point to a 12th Dynasty “Joseph’s Canal” and to evidence of Asiatic slave labor predating Ramses II. Ramses II is the wrong pharaoh according to secular dating.
The Bible’s internal chronology (1 Kings 6:1) places the Exodus 480 years before the construction of Solomon’s temple. The temple was built circa 966 BCE. This aligns perfectly with these finds. Yet, science clings to a later date to dismiss the miracles. The evidence compels us to place our trust in Torah over the science narratives.
Archaeological Affirmations: From Ebla to Exodus. Torah over Science
The Ebla archives, with over 1,800 tablets, reveal a sophisticated empire. They had trade, kings, and dictionaries that equate Eblaite—a Semitic tongue—with Sumerian. This aids our understanding of Hebrew roots. Terms like “melum” (queen, cf. Hebrew “melech,” king) and the five cities of the plain (Genesis 14) in biblical order underscore Genesis’s historicity.
Controversial claims by Giovanni Pettinato, like a “Deoud” linking to David, were debated. However, the tablets’ preservation via a palace fire around 2250 BCE mirrors divine providence, preserving evidence against skeptics.
Pro-Exodus archaeologists further dismantle scientific doubt. Dr. Bryant Wood argues for Jericho’s fall around 1400 BCE, with fallen walls and unplundered grain stores matching Joshua 6. The Merneptah Stele (1208 BCE) mentions “Israel” as a defeated people, proving their presence in Canaan post-Exodus. Choose to trust Torah over science in light of such evidence
Titus Kennedy and Stephen Meyer highlight how archaeology confirms the Patriarchs. They point to camel domestication by 2000 BCE, which contradicts earlier claims. They also mention Semitic names in Egyptian records. These align with the Torah’s timeline, not science’s extended one. Science ignores superposition principles that yield deeper layers of older artifacts supporting biblical events.
Post-Flood Population: DNA and the Torah’s Precision
Dr. Nathaniel Jeanson’s analysis of Y-chromosome DNA traces lineages back to Noah’s sons—Shem, Ham, Japheth—post-Flood around 2450 BCE. Starting from eight survivors, populations grew exponentially. There were 1,000 individuals at Babel circa 2400 BCE. This number grew to 17 million during Joseph’s famine around 1700 BCE.
This model, rooted in Genesis 10’s Table of Nations, explains genetic diversity through mutations post-sin (Romans 5:12). It does not propose millions of years. Lineages like IJ (Europeans/Turks) split around 1800 BCE, matching biblical dispersions. Science’s evolutionary clock, assuming constant rates, inflates ages, hiding the Flood’s reset.
Yet, genetic unity (99.9% shared DNA) affirms Adam as progenitor. Rapid adaptations (e.g., skin tones) can occur in generations, countering racist pseudo-science.
Challenging American Settlement: Echoes of Global Migrations
Even in the Americas, science falters. The Rimrock Draw site in Oregon yields tools and camel bones dated 18,250 years ago. This predates the Clovis horizon, which is 13,000 years old and also the ice-free corridors. This supports coastal migrations by boat but contradicts uniformitarian timelines that assume slow, land-based progress. For Jews, this resonates with our own journeys to the USA. We traveled by ship, fleeing pogroms and seeking refuge. It is much like ancient dispersions.
The Torah’s global view—from Adam’s descendants scattering post-Babel—explains such finds as remnants of early post-Flood explorers, not evolutionary outliers. Opt to trust Torah over science instead, as science hides this by extending timelines, ignoring biblical floods that reshaped geography.
Hazan Gavriel ben David. Synagogue Beit Hashoavah. YouTube Channel Gavriel ben David.




































