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Bible People - Moses |
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Extra Websites Reworking
the Ten Commandments for the modern world Ten
ways to ruin your life: the Ten Commandments reversed The
story of Shiprah and Puah: midwives save babies like Moses Graphic
(well, gross really) photographs of the Ten Plagues The
Stone Tablets of Moses - were they stelae? The
story of Miriam, Moses' sister Paintings
of Moses (and some scantily-clad women) Miriam
and the Princess save Moses God: I AM WHO AM
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The Story of Moses Leader, Lawgiver, Legend
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Born into Danger
Moses' mother hid her new baby for three months and then put him in a papyrus basket and pushed the little Ark out onto the Nile river. She could do no more for him, she decided, and God would decide his fate. The little basket floated for a while, then lodged in the shallows of the river. The baby's sister Miriam had been following, and saw that it was not far from a bathing party - one of the Pharaoh's daughters was there with her retinue. The women saw the basket and investigated, finding not some flotsam but a live baby, probably crying with hunger. Pharaoh's Daughter Adopts the Baby
The little baby was then adopted by the royal women. Moses was brought up in the court - thereby receiving an excellent education and gaining the sort of social contacts that would give him the confidence he would need later in life. Moses grew up. Did he have any inkling of his cultural roots? Probably yes. The princess who adopted him would have had a good idea of why a healthy baby had been cast out onto the river in the first place, and Moses probably resembled his Jewish forebears rather than the Egyptians he lived with. Moses Leaves the Safety of the Palace
One day Moses sided with a Hebrew being beaten by an Egyptian, and in his anger he killed the Egyptian. The penalty for this crime was severe, so Moses avoided capture and headed out into the desert, where he lived as a shepherd. He married and became a father, his father-in-law being the priest Jethro. The historical background of what happened next is unclear, since it is virtually impossible to date the story accurately in Egyptian history. In any event, there was a mass movement of the Jewish people out of Egypt - caused, the text suggests, by impossibly difficult working condition imposed on the Hebrews by the Egyptians. According to the Bible story, it was Moses who led this movement. God Tells Moses What To Do
In a vision, Moses saw God in the form of a burning bush. God commanded Moses to 'bring my people out of Egypt'. When Moses pointed out that this might not be easy, God revealed his identity - 'I Am Who I Am' and gave instructions on how Moses should proceed. He also gave Moses the power to perform miracles, and the one thing that Moses knew he truly lacked - eloquence. Thus fortified, Moses returned to confront Pharaoh. Pharaoh did not acquiesce, so in a final confrontation Moses imposed ten plagues on the Egyptians:
(go to Bible Plagues for some rather ghastly images of the Ten Plagues.)
During this last plague, the death of every firstborn, the first Passover was celebrated by the Hebrews. It is seen as a seminal moment in Jewish, and biblical, history. Under the barrage of misfortune and plague, Pharaoh conceded defeat and agreed to let the Hebrews go. They left Egypt, following a pillar of cloud - God in earthly form. The pillar appeared as a cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night. They were led by Moses and his brother and sister, Aaron and Miriam.
But Pharaoh regained his composure and pursued them, triggering another disaster - the drowning of his army in the Red (Reed) Sea. The Songs of Moses and Miriam are triumphal chants composed around this event. Then began the long wandering in the desert, where the Hebrews became what they had been originally - nomadic herdsmen. The Ten Commandments Eventually they came to Mount Sinai, where Moses received the inspiration to formulate the Ten Commandments, a set of laws that gave shape and direction to the people (see How To Get To Heaven for a modern reworking of the Ten Commandments). He also codified laws around Hebrew worship and ritual, the treatment of slaves, property, restitution, violence, social and religious laws, the annual festivals and the sabbatical year. This complex system of laws would serve the Hebrews throughout their history. The Golden Calf - A False God Moses was focused on the God he had found (or who had found him) but the people were not. They remained loyal to many of the ancient gods of fertility and agriculture, and were reluctant to abandon them. In the desert they continued to worship a god of plenty who they imaged as a a young calf.
While Moses was away in the mountains they designed and made a golden image of this god, probably Baal, and worshipped it with orgiastic rituals. When Moses discovered what they had done, he was furious. He smashed the image and forbad them ever to worship in this way again. He also commanded the people who had remained loyal to 'I Am' to slaughter those who had reverted to worship of the Calf - which they did. The Covenant between God and his people was now sealed in blood. The authority of Moses' brother Aaron now declined, and he was replaced by Joshua. He was a military leader and excellent judge of people, and he was eventually consecrated as Moses' successor. Mission Accomplished
Moses was not to see this happen. He died on the borders of the new land, in the land of Moab - but his work and faith produced a people who remembered not only slavery in Egypt, but freedom under God.
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Bible Stories: People of
the Old Testament - Bible Study Resource
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