Chapter 22
Moses
[This
chapter is based on Exodus 1 to 4.]
THE
people of Egypt, in order to supply themselves with food during the
famine, had sold to the crown their cattle and lands, and had finally
bound themselves to perpetual serfdom. Joseph wisely provided for their
release; he permitted them to become royal tenants, holding their lands of
the king, and paying an annual tribute of one fifth of the products of
their labor.
But the
children of Jacob were not under the necessity of making such conditions.
On account of the service that Joseph had rendered the Egyptian nation,
they were not only granted a part of the country as a home, but were
exempted from taxation, and liberally supplied with food during the
continuance of the famine. The king publicly acknowledged that it was
through the merciful interposition of the God of Joseph that Egypt enjoyed
plenty while other nations were perishing from famine. He saw, too, that
Joseph's management had greatly enriched the kingdom, and his gratitude
surrounded the family of Jacob with royal favor.
But as time
rolled on, the great man to whom Egypt owed so much, and the generation
blessed by his labors, passed to the grave. And "there arose up a new
king over Egypt, which knew not Joseph." Not that he was ignorant of
Joseph's services to the nation, but he wished to make no recognition of
them, and, so far as possible, to bury them in oblivion. "And he said
unto his people, Behold, the people of the children of Israel are more and
mightier than we: come on, let us deal wisely with them; lest they
multiply, and it come to pass, that, when there falleth out any war, they
join also unto our enemies, and fight against us, and so get them up out
of the land."
The
Israelites had already become very numerous; they "were fruitful, and
increased abundantly, and multiplied, and waxed
Page 242
exceeding mighty; and the
land was filled with them." Under Joseph's fostering care, and the
favor of the king who was then ruling, they had spread rapidly over the
land. But they had kept themselves a distinct race, having nothing in
common with the Egyptians in customs or religion; and their increasing
numbers now excited the fears of the king and his people, lest in case of
war they should join themselves with the enemies of Egypt. Yet policy
forbade their banishment from the country. Many of them were able and
understanding workmen, and they added greatly to the wealth of the nation;
the king needed such laborers for the erection of his magnificent palaces
and temples. Accordingly he ranked them with the Egyptians who had sold
themselves with their possessions to the kingdom. Soon taskmasters were
set over them, and their slavery became complete. "And the Egyptians
made the children of Israel to serve with rigor: and they made their lives
bitter with hard bondage, in mortar, and in brick, and in all manner of
service in the field: all their service, wherein they made them serve, was
with rigor." "But the more they afflicted them, the more they
multiplied and grew."
The king and
his counselors had hoped to subdue the Israelites with hard labor, and
thus decrease their numbers and crush out their independent spirit.
Failing to accomplish their purpose, they proceeded to more cruel
measures. Orders were issued to the women whose employment gave them
opportunity for executing the command, to destroy the Hebrew male children
at their birth. Satan was the mover in this matter. He knew that a
deliverer was to be raised up among the Israelites; and by leading the
king to destroy their children he hoped to defeat the divine purpose. But
the women feared God, and dared not execute the cruel mandate. The Lord
approved their course, and prospered them. The king, angry at the failure
of his design, made the command more urgent and extensive. The whole
nation was called upon to hunt out and slaughter his helpless victims.
"And Pharaoh charged all his people, saying, Every son that is born
ye shall cast into the river, and every daughter ye shall save
alive."
While this
decree was in full force a son was born to Amram and Jochebed, devout
Israelites of the tribe of Levi. The babe was "a goodly child;"
and the parents, believing that the time of Israel's release was drawing
near, and that God would raise up a deliverer for His people, determined
that their little one should
Page 243
not be sacrificed. Faith in God strengthened
their hearts, "and they were not afraid of the king's
commandment." Hebrews 11:23.
The mother
succeeded in concealing the child for three months. Then, finding that she
could no longer keep him safely, she prepared a little ark of rushes,
making it watertight by means of slime and pitch; and laying the babe
therein, she placed it among the flags at the river's brink. She dared not
remain to guard it, lest the child's life and her own should be forfeited;
but his sister, Miriam, lingered near, apparently indifferent, but
anxiously watching to see what would become of her little brother. And
there were other watchers. The mother's earnest prayers had committed her
child to the care of God; and angels, unseen, hovered above his lowly
resting place. Angels directed Pharaoh's daughter thither. Her curiosity
was excited by the little basket, and as she looked upon the beautiful
child within, she read the story at a glance. The tears of the babe
awakened her compassion, and her sympathies went out to the unknown mother
who had resorted to this means to preserve the life of her precious little
one. She determined that he should be saved; she would adopt him as her
own.
Miriam had
been secretly noting every movement; perceiving that the child was
tenderly regarded, she ventured nearer, and at last said, "Shall I go
and call thee a nurse of the Hebrew women, that she may nurse the child
for thee?" And permission was given.
The sister
hastened to her mother with the happy news, and without delay returned
with her to the presence of Pharaoh's daughter. "Take this chid away,
and nurse it for me, and I will give thee thy wages," said the
princess.
God had heard
the mother's prayers; her faith had been rewarded. It was with deep
gratitude that she entered upon her now safe and happy task. She
faithfully improved her opportunity to educate her child for God. She felt
confident that he had been preserved for some great work, and she knew
that he must soon be given up to his royal mother, to be surrounded with
influences that would tend to lead him away from God. All this rendered
her more diligent and careful in his instruction than in that of her other
children. She endeavored to imbue his mind with the fear of God and the
love of truth and justice, and earnestly prayed
Page 244
that he might be preserved
from every corrupting influence. She showed him the folly and sin of
idolatry, and early taught him to bow down and pray to the living God, who
alone could hear him and help him in every emergency.
She kept the
boy as long as she could, but was obliged to give him up when he was about
twelve years old. From his humble cabin home he was taken to the royal
palace, to the daughter of Pharaoh, "and he became her son." Yet
even here he did not lose the impressions received in childhood. The
lessons learned at his mother's side could not be forgotten. They were a
shield from the pride, the infidelity, and the vice that flourished amid
the splendor of the court.
How
far-reaching in its results was the influence of that one Hebrew woman,
and she an exile and a slave! The whole future life of Moses, the great
mission which he fulfilled as the leader of Israel, testifies to the
importance of the work of the Christian mother. There is no other work
that can equal this. To a very great extent the mother holds in her own
hands the destiny of her children. She is dealing with developing minds
and characters, working not alone for time, but for eternity. She is
sowing seed that will spring up and bear fruit, either for good or for
evil. She has not to paint a form of beauty upon canvas or to chisel it
from marble, but to impress upon a human soul the image of the divine.
Especially during their early years the responsibility rests upon her of
forming the character of her children. The impressions now made upon their
developing minds will remain with them all through life. Parents should
direct the instruction and training of their children while very young, to
the end that they may be Christians. They are placed in our care to be
trained, not as heirs to the throne of an earthly empire, but as kings
unto God, to reign through unending ages.
Let every
mother feel that her moments are priceless; her work will be tested in the
solemn day of accounts. Then it will be found that many of the failures
and crimes of men and women have resulted from the ignorance and neglect
of those whose duty it was to guide their childish feet in the right way.
Then it will be found that many who have blessed the world with the light
of genius and truth and holiness, owe the principles that were the
mainspring of their influence and success to a praying, Christian mother.
Page 245
At the court
of Pharaoh, Moses received the highest civil and military training. The
monarch had determined to make his adopted grandson his successor on the
throne, and the youth was educated for his high station. "And Moses
was learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians, and was mighty in words
and in deeds." Acts 7:22. His ability as a military leader made him a
favorite with the armies of Egypt, and he was generally regarded as a
remarkable character. Satan had been defeated in his purpose. The very
decree condemning the Hebrew children to death had been overruled by God
for the training and education of the future leader of His people.
The elders of
Israel were taught by angels that the time for their deliverance was near,
and that Moses was the man whom God would employ to accomplish this work.
Angels instructed Moses also that Jehovah had chosen him to break the
bondage of His people. He, supposing that they were to obtain their
freedom by force of arms, expected to lead the Hebrew host against the
armies of Egypt, and having this in view, he guarded his affections, lest
in his attachment to his foster mother or to Pharaoh he would not be free
to do the will of God.
By the laws
of Egypt all who occupied the throne of the Pharaohs must become members
of the priestly caste; and Moses, as the heir apparent, was to be
initiated into the mysteries of the national religion. This duty was
committed to the priests. But while he was an ardent and untiring student,
he could not be induced to participate in the worship of the gods. He was
threatened with the loss of the crown, and warned that he would be
disowned by the princess should he persist in his adherence to the Hebrew
faith. But he was unshaken in his determination to render homage to none
save the one God, the Maker of heaven and earth. He reasoned with priests
and worshipers, showing the folly of their superstitious veneration of
senseless objects. None could refute his arguments or change his purpose,
yet for the time his firmness was tolerated on account of his high
position and the favor with which he was regarded by both the king and the
people.
"By
faith Moses, when he was come to years, refused to be called the son of
Pharaoh's daughter; choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people
of God, than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season; esteeming the
reproach of Christ greater riches
Page 246
than the treasures in Egypt: for he had
respect unto the recompense of the reward." Hebrews 11:24-26. Moses
was fitted to take pre-eminence among the great of the earth, to shine in
the courts of its most glorious kingdom, and to sway the scepter of its
power. His intellectual greatness distinguishes him above the great men of
all ages. As historian, poet, philosopher, general of armies, and
legislator, he stands without a peer. Yet with the world before him, he
had the moral strength to refuse the flattering prospects of wealth and
greatness and fame, "choosing rather to suffer affliction with the
people of God, than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season."
Moses had
been instructed in regard to the final reward to be given to the humble
and obedient servants of God, and worldly gain sank to its proper
insignificance in comparison. The magnificent palace of Pharaoh and the
monarch's throne were held out as an inducement to Moses; but he knew that
the sinful pleasures that make men forget God were in its lordly courts.
He looked beyond the gorgeous palace, beyond a monarch's crown, to the
high honors that will be bestowed on the saints of the Most High in a
kingdom untainted by sin. He saw by faith an imperishable crown that the
King of heaven would place on the brow of the overcomer. This faith led
him to turn away from the lordly ones of earth and join the humble, poor,
despised nation that had chosen to obey God rather than to serve sin.
Moses
remained at court until he was forty years of age. His thoughts often
turned upon the abject condition of his people, and he visited his
brethren in their servitude, and encouraged them with the assurance that
God would work for their deliverance. Often, stung to resentment by the
sight of injustice and oppression, he burned to avenge their wrongs. One
day, while thus abroad, seeing an Egyptian smiting an Israelite, he sprang
forward and slew the Egyptian. Except the Israelite, there had been no
witness to the deed, and Moses immediately buried the body in the sand. He
had now shown himself ready to maintain the cause of his people, and he
hoped to see them rise to recover their liberty. "He supposed his
brethren would have understood how that God by his hand would deliver
them; but they understood not." Acts 7:25. They were not yet prepared
for freedom. On the following day Moses saw two Hebrews striving together,
Page 247
one of them evidently at fault. Moses reproved the offender, who at once
retaliated upon the reprover, denying his right to interfere, and basely
accusing him of crime: "Who made thee a prince and a judge over
us?" he said. "Intendest thou to kill me, as thou killedst the
Egyptian?"
The whole
matter was quickly made known to the Egyptians, and, greatly exaggerated,
soon reached the ears of Pharaoh. It was represented to the king that this
act meant much; that Moses designed to lead his people against the
Egyptians, to overthrow the government, and to seat himself upon the
throne; and that there could be no security for the kingdom while he
lived. It was at once determined by the monarch that he should die; but,
becoming aware of his danger, he made his escape and fled toward Arabia.
The Lord
directed his course, and he found a home with Jethro, the priest and
prince of Midian, who was also a worshiper of God. After a time Moses
married one of the daughters of Jethro; and here, in the service of his
father-in-law, as keeper of his flocks, he remained forty years.
In slaying
the Egyptian, Moses had fallen into the same error so often committed by
his fathers, of taking into their own hands the work that God had promised
to do. It was not God's will to deliver His people by warfare, as Moses
thought, but by His own mighty power, that the glory might be ascribed to
Him alone. Yet even this rash act was overruled by God to accomplish His
purposes. Moses was not prepared for his great work. He had yet to learn
the same lesson of faith that Abraham and Jacob had been taught--not to
rely upon human strength or wisdom, but upon the power of God for the
fulfillment of His promises. And there were other lessons that, amid the
solitude of the mountains, Moses was to receive. In the school of
self-denial and hardship he was to learn patience, to temper his passions.
Before he could govern wisely, he must be trained to obey. His own heart
must be fully in harmony with God before he could teach the knowledge of
His will to Israel. By his own experience he must be prepared to exercise
a fatherly care over all who needed his help.
Man would
have dispensed with that long period of toil and obscurity, deeming it a
great loss of time. But Infinite Wisdom called him who was to become the
leader of his people to spend
Page 248
forty years in the humble work of a
shepherd. The habits of caretaking, of self-forgetfulness and tender
solicitude for his flock, thus developed, would prepare him to become the
compassionate, longsuffering shepherd of Israel. No advantage that human
training or culture could bestow, could be a substitute for this
experience.
Moses had
been learning much that he must unlearn. The influences that had
surrounded him in Egypt--the love of his foster mother, his own high
position as the king's grandson, the dissipation on every hand, the
refinement, the subtlety, and the mysticism of a false religion, the
splendor of idolatrous worship, the solemn grandeur of architecture and
sculpture--all had left deep impressions upon his developing mind and had
molded, to some extent, his habits and character. Time, change of
surroundings, and communion with God could remove these impressions. It
would require on the part of Moses himself a struggle as for life to
renounce error and accept truth, but God would be his helper when the
conflict should be too severe for human strength.
In all who
have been chosen to accomplish a work for God the human element is seen.
Yet they have not been men of stereotyped habits and character, who were
satisfied to remain in that condition. They earnestly desired to obtain
wisdom from God and to learn to work for Him. Says the apostle, "If
any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men
liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him." James 1:5.
But God will not impart to men divine light while they are content to
remain in darkness. In order to receive God's help, man must realize his
weakness and deficiency; he must apply his own mind to the great change to
be wrought in himself; he must be aroused to earnest and persevering
prayer and effort. Wrong habits and customs must be shaken off; and it is
only by determined endeavor to correct these errors and to conform to
right principles that the victory can be gained. Many never attain to the
position that they might occupy, because they wait for God to do for them
that which He has given them power to do for themselves. All who are
fitted for usefulness must be trained by the severest mental and moral
discipline, and God will assist them by uniting divine power with human
effort.
Shut in by
the bulwarks of the mountains, Moses was alone
Page 251
with God. The magnificent
temples of Egypt no longer impressed his mind with their superstition and
falsehood. In the solemn grandeur of the everlasting hills he beheld the
majesty of the Most High, and in contrast realized how powerless and
insignificant were the gods of Egypt. Everywhere the Creator's name was
written. Moses seemed to stand in His presence and to be over-shadowed by
His power. Here his pride and self-sufficiency were swept away. In the
stern simplicity of his wilderness life, the results of the ease and
luxury of Egypt disappeared. Moses became patient, reverent, and humble,
"very meek, above all the men which were upon the face of the
earth" (Numbers 12:3), yet strong in faith in the mighty God of
Jacob.
As the years
rolled on, and he wandered with his flocks in solitary places, pondering
upon the oppressed condition of his people, he recounted the dealings of
God with his fathers and the promises that were the heritage of the chosen
nation, and his prayers for Israel ascended by day and by night. Heavenly
angels shed their light around him. Here, under the inspiration of the
Holy Spirit, he wrote the book of Genesis. The long years spent amid the
desert solitudes were rich in blessing, not alone to Moses and his people,
but to the world in all succeeding ages.
"And it
came to pass in process of time, that the king of Egypt died: and the
children of Israel sighed by reason of the bondage, and they cried, and
their cry came up unto God by reason of the bondage. And God heard their
groaning, and God remembered His covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and
with Jacob. And God looked upon the children of Israel, and God had
respect unto them." The time for Israel's deliverance had come. But
God's purpose was to be accomplished in a manner to pour contempt on human
pride. The deliverer was to go forth as a humble shepherd, with only a rod
in his hand; but God would make that rod the symbol of His power. Leading
his flocks one day near Horeb, "the mountain of God," Moses saw
a bush in flames, branches, foliage, and trunk, all burning, yet seeming
not to be consumed. He drew near to view the wonderful sight, when a voice
from out of the flame called him by name. With trembling lips he answered,
"Here am I." He was warned not to approach irreverently:
"Put off thy shoes from off thy feet; for the place whereon thou
standest is holy ground. . . . I am the God
Page 252
of thy father, the God of
Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob." It was He who, as
the Angel of the covenant, had revealed Himself to the fathers in ages
past. "And Moses hid his face; for he was afraid to look upon
God."
Humility and
reverence should characterize the deportment of all who come into the
presence of God. In the name of Jesus we may come before Him with
confidence, but we must not approach Him with the boldness of presumption,
as though He were on a level with ourselves. There are those who address
the great and all-powerful and holy God, who dwelleth in light
unapproachable, as they would address an equal, or even an inferior. There
are those who conduct themselves in His house as they would not presume to
do in the audience chamber of an earthly ruler. These should remember that
they are in His sight whom seraphim adore, before whom angels veil their
faces. God is greatly to be reverenced; all who truly realize His presence
will bow in humility before Him, and, like Jacob beholding the vision of
God, they will cry out, "How dreadful is this place! This is none
other but the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven."
As Moses
waited in reverent awe before God the words continued: "I have surely
seen the affliction of My people which are in Egypt, and have heard their
cry by reason of their taskmasters; for I know their sorrows; and I am
come down to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians, and to bring
them up out of that land unto a good land and a large, unto a land flowing
with milk and honey. . . . Come now therefore, and I will send thee unto
Pharaoh, that thou mayest bring forth My people the children of Israel out
of Egypt."
Amazed and
terrified at the command, Moses drew back, saying, "Who am I, that I
should go unto Pharaoh, and that I should bring forth the children of
Israel out of Egypt?" The reply was, "Certainly I will be with
thee; and this shall be a token unto thee, that I have sent thee: When
thou hast brought forth the people out of Egypt, ye shall serve God upon
this mountain."
Moses thought
of the difficulties to be encountered, of the blindness, ignorance, and
unbelief of his people, many of whom were almost destitute of a knowledge
of God. "Behold," he said, "when I come unto the children
of Israel, and shall say unto
Page 253
them, The God of your fathers hath sent me
unto you; and they shall say to me, What is His name? what shall I say
unto them?" The answer was--
"I Am
That I Am." "Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, I
Am hath sent me unto you."
Moses was
commanded first to assemble the elders of Israel, the most noble and
righteous among them, who had long grieved because of their bondage, and
to declare to them a message from God, with a promise of deliverance. Then
he was to go with the elders before the king, and say to him--
"The
Lord God of the Hebrews hath met with us: and now let us go, we beseech
thee, three days' journey into the wilderness, that we may sacrifice to
the Lord our God."
Moses was
forewarned that Pharaoh would resist the appeal to let Israel go. Yet the
courage of God's servant must not fail; for the Lord would make this the
occasion to manifest His power before the Egyptians and before His people.
"And I will stretch out My hand, and smite Egypt with all My wonders
which I will do in the midst thereof: and after that he will let you
go."
Direction was
also given concerning the provision they were to make for the journey. The
Lord declared, "It shall come to pass, that, when ye go, ye shall not
go empty: but every woman shall borrow of her neighbor, and of her that
sojourneth in her house, jewels of silver, and jewels of gold, and
raiment." The Egyptians had been enriched by the labor unjustly
exacted from the Israelites, and as the latter were to start on the
journey to their new home, it was right for them to claim the reward of
their years of toil. They were to ask for articles of value, such as could
be easily transported, and God would give them favor in the sight of the
Egyptians. The mighty miracles wrought for their deliverance would strike
terror to the oppressors, so that the requests of the bondmen would be
granted.
Moses saw
before him difficulties that seemed insurmountable. What proof could he
give his people that God had indeed sent him? "Behold," he said,
"they will not believe me, nor hearken unto my voice: for they will
say, The Lord hath not appeared unto thee." Evidence that appealed to
his own senses was now given. He was told to cast his rod upon the ground.
As he did so, "it became a serpent; and Moses fled from before
it." He was commanded to seize it, and in his hand it became a rod.
Page 254
He was bidden to put his hand into his bosom. He obeyed, and "when he
took it out, behold, his hand was leprous as snow." Being told to put
it again into his bosom, he found on withdrawing it that it had become
like the other. By these signs the Lord assured Moses that His own people,
as well as Pharaoh, should be convinced that One mightier than the king of
Egypt was manifest among them.
But the
servant of God was still overwhelmed by the thought of the strange and
wonderful work before him. In his distress and fear he now pleaded as an
excuse a lack of ready speech: "O my Lord, I am not eloquent, neither
heretofore, nor since Thou hast spoken unto Thy servant; but I am slow of
speech, and of a slow tongue." He had been so long away from the
Egyptians that he had not so clear knowledge and ready use of their
language as when he was among them.
The Lord said
unto him, "Who hath made man's mouth? or who maketh the dumb, or
deaf, or the seeing, or the blind? have not I the Lord?" To this was
added another assurance of divine aid: "Now therefore go, and I will
be with thy mouth, and teach thee what thou shalt say." But Moses
still entreated that a more competent person be selected. These excuses at
first proceeded from humility and diffidence; but after the Lord had
promised to remove all difficulties, and to give him final success, then
any further shrinking back and complaining of his unfitness showed
distrust of God. It implied a fear that God was unable to qualify him for
the great work to which He had called him, or that He had made a mistake
in the selection of the man.
Moses was now
directed to Aaron, his elder brother, who, having been in daily use of the
language of the Egyptians, was able to speak it perfectly. He was told
that Aaron was coming to meet him. The next words from the Lord were an
unqualified command:
"Thou
shalt speak unto him, and put words in his mouth: and I will be with thy
mouth, and with his mouth, and will teach you what ye shall do. And he
shall be thy spokesman unto the people: and he shall be, even he shall be
to thee instead of a mouth, and thou shalt be to him instead of God. And
thou shalt take this rod in thine hand, wherewith thou shalt do
signs." He could make no further resistance, for all ground for
excuse was removed.
Page 255
The divine
command given to Moses found him self-distrustful, slow of speech, and
timid. He was overwhelmed with a sense of his incapacity to be a
mouthpiece for God to Israel. But having once accepted the work, he
entered upon it with his whole heart, putting all his trust in the Lord.
The greatness of his mission called into exercise the best powers of his
mind. God blessed his ready obedience, and he became eloquent, hopeful,
self-possessed, and well fitted for the greatest work ever given to man.
This is an example of what God does to strengthen the character of those
who trust Him fully and give themselves unreservedly to His commands.
A man will
gain power and efficiency as he accepts the responsibilities that God
places upon him, and with his whole soul seeks to qualify himself to bear
them aright. However humble his position or limited his ability, that man
will attain true greatness who, trusting to divine strength, seeks to
perform his work with fidelity. Had Moses relied upon his own strength and
wisdom, and eagerly accepted the great charge, he would have evinced his
entire unfitness for such a work. The fact that a man feels his weakness
is at least some evidence that he realizes the magnitude of the work
appointed him, and that he will make God his counselor and his strength.
Moses
returned to his father-in-law and expressed his desire to visit his
brethren in Egypt. Jethro's consent was given, with his blessing, "Go
in peace." With his wife and children, Moses set forth on the
journey. He had not dared to make known the object of his mission, lest
they should not be allowed to accompany him. Before reaching Egypt,
however, he himself thought it best for their own safety to send them back
to the home in Midian.
A secret
dread of Pharaoh and the Egyptians, whose anger had been kindled against
him forty years before, had rendered Moses still more reluctant to return
to Egypt; but after he had set out to obey the divine command, the Lord
revealed to him that his enemies were dead.
On the way
from Midian, Moses received a startling and terrible warning of the Lord's
displeasure. An angel appeared to him in a threatening manner, as if he
would immediately destroy him. No explanation was given; but Moses
remembered that he had disregarded one of God's requirements; yielding to
the
Page 256
persuasion of his wife, he had neglected to perform the rite of
circumcision upon their youngest son. He had failed to comply with the
condition by which his child could be entitled to the blessings of God's
covenant with Israel; and such a neglect on the part of their chosen
leader could not but lessen the force of the divine precepts upon the
people. Zipporah, fearing that her husband would be slain, performed the
rite herself, and the angel then permitted Moses to pursue his journey. In
his mission to Pharaoh, Moses was to be placed in a position of great
peril; his life could be preserved only through the protection of holy
angels. But while living in neglect of a known duty, he would not be
secure; for he could not be shielded by the angels of God.
In the time
of trouble just before the coming of Christ, the righteous will be
preserved through the ministration of heavenly angels; but there will be
no security for the transgressor of God's law. Angels cannot then protect
those who are disregarding one of the divine precepts.
Preparing For Eternity
©1999-2024
All Rights Reserved
Home
Devotional
Our Beliefs
Site Search
Links
Videos
Contact Us