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Let my people go
From Timeless Themes by Gowdy, Moore, & Skwire
Moses was reluctant to be the one to free his people, and
the job was by no means an easy one. When Moses first went to the Pharaoh
to ask him to let the Hebrews go, the Pharaoh responded by telling his
overseers to make the Hebrews work harder. This made the Hebrews angry
at Moses. It looked as if they were never going to escape the hardships
in Egypt. But God was persistent and didn't let Moses give up.
Moses and his brother, Aaron, went back to the Pharaoh. Aaron threw down
his staff before the Pharaoh, and it turned into a snake. The Pharaoh
summoned his magicians, who threw down their staffs, which also became
snakes. And the Pharaoh still would not listen.
Because of the Pharaoh's hardheartedness, ten plagues were inflicted on
the Egyptians. In the first plague, Moses and Aaron went to the Pharaoh
again, as he was going to bathe in the Nile. Moses said, "God sent
me to say, 'By this you shall know that I am the Lord. See, with the staff
that is in my hand I will strike the water that is in the Nile, and it
shall be turned to blood. The fish in the river shall die, the river itself
shall stink, and the Egyptians shall be unable to drink water from the
Nile."
When the staff struck the water, all the water in Egypt turned to blood.
But the Pharaoh's magicians did the same, so the Pharaoh's heart remained
hardened.
Seven days later, Moses again went to the Pharaoh. "Let my people
go," he said. "If you refuse to let them go, I will plague your
whole country with frogs; the river shall swarm with frogs; they shall
come up into your palace, and into the houses of your servants and of
your people, and into your ovens and your kneading bowls; the frogs shall
come up on you and your people and on all your officials."
The Pharaoh refused to listen, so Moses let loose the plague of frogs.
The Pharaoh's magicians did the same, and the Pharaoh did not know what
to do with all these frogs; so he promised to let the Hebrews go if Moses
would get rid of the frogs. Moses promised the frogs would all die the
next day. After the frogs were dead, they were gathered into huge piles,
and the land stank.
Once the frogs were dead, the Pharaoh went back on his promise, so in
the third plague Moses caused gnats to swarm over all of Egypt, on both
the people and the animals. The Pharaoh's magicians told him that this
was beyond their magic, but still the Pharaoh would not listen.
As a fourth plague, Moses caused great swarms of flies to cover the Egyptians,
but the Hebrew people were not affected. The Pharaoh begged Moses to pray
to God to make the flies go away. Moses said he would if the Pharaoh would
let them go and not trick them this time. The Pharaoh promised, but as
soon as the flies were gone he changed his mind again.
The fifth plague caused all of the Egyptian cattle, horses, sheep, and
camels to die, but not one of the cattle of the Hebrews died. Still the
heart of the Pharaoh was hardened, and he did not let the people go.
For the sixth plague, before the Pharaoh, Moses threw soot from the ovens
up in the air, which caused boils to break out on people and animals.
Even the Pharaoh's magicians were afflicted with the boils; but still
Pharaoh would not listen.
The seventh plague was hail, which ruined most of the crops. Next came
the ou and your people eighth plague, locusts, which ate the remaining
crops. The ninth plague brought darkness over the land for three days.
But still the Pharaoh was not willing to let the Hebrew people leave Egypt
with their flocks and herds. Then God announced the tenth and final plague,
and Moses reported to his people, "Thus says the Lord: about midnight
I will go out through Egypt; every firstborn in the land of Egypt shall
die, from the firstborn of the Pharaoh who sits upon his throne to the
firstborn of the female slave who is behind the handmill, and all the
firstborn of the livestock." So that the plague would not affect
the He- brews, they sacrificed a lamb and spread its blood on their doorposts.
In this way, God would know to pass over that household and let the Hebrew
firstborn live.
Finally, all the Egyptians rose up and cried out to the Pharaoh to let
the Hebrews go. He agreed, and about 600,000 men, women, and children
and all of their livestock set out. But once more the Pharaoh changed
his mind. When he saw that all of his Hebrew slaves were gone, he and
his army set out after them in chariots.
As the Hebrew people were camped by the Reed Sea, they saw the Egyptians
coming, and they were very much dry ground afraid. Moses told them not
to be afraid, and he stretched out his hand, with his staff, and divided
the sea on dry ground. Once Moses and his people were across, Moses again
stretched out his hand, and the sea closed in upon the horses, chariots,
and chariot drivers who were pursuing them.
Moses and his people were now free from the Egyptians, but they had many
years of wandering in the wilderness yet before them. Eventually, however,
they found Canaan, the land that had been promised to them.
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