Sinai, Or Sinai
(thorny). Nearly in the centre of the peninsula which stretches between the horns of the Red Sea lies a wedge of granite,
grunstein and porphyry rocks rising to between 8000 and 9000 feet above the sea. Its shape resembles st scalene triangle.
These mountains may be divided into two great masses-that of Jebel Serbal (8759 feet high), in the northwest above Wady Feiran,
and the central group, roughly denoted by the general name of Sinai. This group rises abruptly from the Wady es-Sheikh at
its north foot, first to the cliffs of the Ras Sufsafeh, behind which towers the pinnacle of Jebel Musa (the Mount of Moses),
and farther back to the right of it the summit of Jebel Katerin (Mount St. Catherine, 8705 feet) all being backed up and.
overtopped by Um Shamer (the mother of fennel, 9300 feet), which is the highest point of the whole peninsula.
- Names .—These mountains are called Horeb, and sometimes Sinai. Some think that Horeb is the name of the whole range, and Sinai
the name of a particular mountain; others, that Sinai is the range and Horeb the particular mountain; while Stanley suggests
that the distinction is one of usage, and that both names are applied to the same place.
- The mountain from which the law was given .—Modern investigators have generally come to the conclusion that of the claimants
Jebel Serba, Jebel Musa and Ras Sufsafeh, the last the modern Horeb of the monks—viz. the northwest and lower face of the
Jebel Musa, crowned with a range of magnificent cliffs, the highest point called Ras Sufsafeh, as overlooking the plain er
Rahah—is the scene of the giving of the law, and that peak the mountain into which Moses ascended. (But Jebel Musa and Ras
Sufsafeh are really peaks of the Same mountain, and Moses may have received the law on Jebel Musa, but it must have been proclaimed
from Ras Sufsafeh. Jebel Musa is the traditional mount where Moses received the law from God. It is a mountain mass two miles
long and one mile broad, The southern peak is 7363 feet high; the northern peak, Ras Sufsafeh is 6830 feet high. It is in
full view of the plain er Rahah, where the children of Israel were encamped. This plain is a smooth camping-ground, surrounded
by mountains. It is about two miles long by half a mile broad, embracing 400 acres of available standing round made into a
natural amphitheatre by a low semicircular mount about 300 yards from the foot of the mountain. By actual measurement it contains
over 2,000,000 square yards, and with its branches over 4,000,000 square yards, so that the whole people of Israel, two million
in number, would find ample accommodations for seeing and hearing. In addition to this, the air is wonderfully clear, both
for seeing and hearing. Dean Stanley says that “from the highest point of Ras Sufsafeh to its lower peak, a distance of about
60 feet, the page of a book distinctly but not loudly read was perfectly audible.” It was the belief of the Arabs who conducted
Niebuhr that they could make themselves heard across the Gulf of Akabah,—a belief fostered by the great distance to which
the voice can actually be carried. There is no other place known among all these mountains so well adapted for the purpose
of giving and receiving the law as this rocky pulpit of Ras Sufsafeh and the natural amphitheatre of er Rahah.