| GOD DELIVERS HIS
PEOPLE IN THE very first story of this book we
learned about Godhow wise and powerful he
is. We learned that God made the earth, and the
sun, and the moon, and the stars. We learned,
too, that he made the birds, the fish, and the
animals; also the beautiful rivers, trees, and
flowers.
God is wonderful! He can do
anything he wants to do.
We know that this is so because
it is what the Bible tells us, and we know that
the Bible is true! I am reminding you of all the
wonderful things God can do, because this story
is about some of the things God has done for his
people. It is a true story.
When God spoke to Moses at the
burning bush, as we learned in our last story,
Moses was afraid he wouldnt be able to lead
the Hebrews out of Egypt. He was right too; but
God was planning to help Moses, and with
Gods help Moses could do anything God
wanted him to do. God was good to Moses. He
showed him how great and powerful he was. Moses
had a rod in his hand. It was probably a rod he
needed when taking care of his
father-in-laws sheep. God told Moses to
throw that rod down on the ground, and when he
did so the rod became a serpent! Wasnt that
wonderful?
But Moses was frightened. I
think we would have been frightened, too! Moses
ran away from the serpent, but God told him to
take hold of the serpents tail, and when he
did, it became a rod again in his blind! It was
the power of God that turned Moses rod into
a serpent and then back into a rod again, and
this was a wonderful lesson to Moses. God told
Moses that when he appeared before Pharaoh, the
king of Egypt, to ask the release of the
Israelites, the same thing was to be done with
the rod and that he would get the same results.
This gave Moses courage because it proved that
God would help him.
God did some other wonderful
things for Moses, also.
Then God spoke to Aaron,
Moses brother, who was living in Egypt with
the other Israelites, and told him where he could
find his brother Moses. Probably the family
thought Moses was dead because they hadnt
seen him for forty long years. Aaron was very
happy to meet his brother, and Moses told him
what God wanted them to do.
God arranged, you see, that
Moses and Aaron would work together. Aaron was a
very good talker. Even today some people can talk
better than others. Sometimes very wise men and
women are not able to make speeches. Well,
thats the way it was with Moses. He was
very wise and humble, and he loved God, and was
willing to do anything God wanted him to do, but
he wasnt very capable of making speeches.
But Aaron was a grand speaker, so they worked
together very well.
After Moses and Aaron discussed
what the Lord wanted them to do, they decided
that the first thing they should do was to meet
with the elders of the Israelites. These were
Israelites whom the others looked up to as their
leaders. It was necessary to explain everything
to these elders, so they could let all the
Israelites know that God was planning to deliver
them from their slavery in Egypt. After they
heard of the wonderful way in which God had
spoken to Moses and Aaron, the elders of the
Hebrews were very happy, and told all the others
about it. And they too, were glad.
Then Moses and Aaron arranged
to meet with Pharaoh, the king of Egypt. They
told him that God wanted the Hebrews to leave
Egypt so that they could worship and serve God
without the interference of the Egyptians. God
knew that Pharaoh was very selfish and very
wicked, and that he would not be at all willing
to let the Hebrews go. God told Moses that
Pharaoh would say, No! But there was
more than that to it. Pharaoh wanted to know who
God was that he should obey him.
Poor Pharaoh!
There are many people in the
world who are not acquainted with God, and just
like Pharaoh, they laugh at the idea that there
can be a God who is so very powerful and able to
do anything he wants to do. Dont you feel
sorry for them? Well, some day their eyes will be
opened just as Pharaohs were.
When the king asked Moses and
Aaron about God, Aaron threw his rod down on the
floor and it became a serpent, just as it did
before. In Egypt they had magicians and fortune
tellers, the same as many of the gypsies are
today, and they tried to imitate what God had
done. They managed to cause some serpents to
wiggle around on the floor, but the serpent God
made out of Moses rod swallowed all the
other serpents! Wasnt that strange?
I can imagine that Pharaoh was
quite impressed, but still he wasnt willing
to let the Hebrews go. Instead of letting them
go, he gave orders to the slave drivers that they
should make the Hebrews work harder than ever
before. This made the Hebrews feel very badly. It
made them wish that nothing had been said about
their leaving Egypt.
When Moses heard how badly the
people felt, he was almost sorry himself. You
see, Moses didnt know all that God knew. He
didnt know of all the wonderful things God
would do to make it hard for the Egyptians until
Pharaoh would give his consent for the Hebrews to
leave Egypt. Besides, God wanted the Hebrews to
realize how much better it would be for them when
they did finally get free from Egyptian bondage.
Surely God is wise!
Well, as we would say today,
things soon began to happen. Moses and Aaron
again asked Pharaoh to let the Hebrews go. Of
course, as you know, Aaron did the talking, but
Moses told him what to say. That was the way God
had instructed Moses to do it, and Moses obeyed
God and did it that way. But Pharaoh again said,
No!
Then Moses held up his rod over
the river, the same river from which the
kings daughter had rescued him when he was
a baby, and what do you suppose happened? Why,
all the water in that great wide river turned
into blood! Because of this, the fish in the
river died. Not only the water in the river, but
the water in the basins and other dishes of the
Egyptians turned into blood. Wasnt that
awful?
Finally there just wasnt
any water for the Egyptians to drink, and they
dug wells near the river and managed to get a
little water in that way. God can do things to
make people think when he wants to.
This was certainly a great
plague upon Egypt.
After a while it was lifted,
yet Pharaoh was not even then willing to give the
Hebrews their liberty. He was very bad hearted,
and when the plague was lifted he probably
thought there wouldnt be any more trouble,
and then he became even more hardhearted.
But Pharaoh was mistaken, for
there were other plagues to follow. Soon the
river was filled with frogs! There were so many
of them that they came right onto the land, and
even into the houses of the people. The frogs
became so thick that they crawled into the dough
when the women were making bread! Who would want
to eat bread with frogs baked in it?
Now, you can see that this made
the Egyptians feel very badly. The Egyptians were
heathen people, and they worshiped frogs, but
they must have been very angry with them this
time. Dont you think so?
Then Pharaoh began to think
things over. He sent for Moses and Aaron, and
agreed to let the Hebrews go if they would rid
the country of the frogs. But when the frogs were
gone, he changed his mind again.
Then followed the third plague
from God. This was a terrible one. The ground in
Egypt is very sandy, something like our American
desert. Moses stretched out his rod over the
ground, and the first thing the Egyptians knew
the sand was filled with lice. It must have been
almost as though all the sand turned into lice.
Can you imagine that? Those nasty lice just
crawled around everywhere and onto everything.
Life for the Egyptians must have been almost
unbearable while the plague of lice lasted.
But when this plague was
removed, Pharaoh hardened his heart still more.
And then God brought another
plague, which was a plague of flies. The
wonderful thing about this plague was that the
flies did not cover that part of the country
where the Hebrews lived. This seemed to make
Pharaoh realize that God was helping the Hebrews,
so he sent for Moses and Aaron again, and told
them to take the Israelites out of the country,
but not to take them very far away. But when God
caused the plague of flies to cease, Pharaoh
changed his mind again, and would not let the
people go.
Then a great plague came upon
all the cattle of the Egyptians, causing them to
die. This was the fifth plague.
Next the Egyptians broke out
with boils.
Then there was a plague of
hail.
After that came the eighth
plague. The whole land was filled with locusts.
What an experience that must have been! These
were large insects, probably somewhat larger than
our grasshoppers. To have them flying and
crawling around everywhere and into everything
must have been terrible. And they ate every green
thing in sight, so that the land was made bare.
You would think that by this
time Pharaoh would have been very glad to let the
Hebrews go, but he wasnt. Each time he made
Moses think he would let them go, but when the
plague was removed he would change his mind,
which shows how very wicked he was.
That is a very good way to tell
a good man from a wicked man. A good man will
always try to keep his promises, but a wicked man
breaks his promises. Pharaoh kept breaking his
promises, so each time another plague came upon
Egypt from God.
The ninth was a plague of
darkness. There was no light in Egypt, not even
in the daytime. It was just as dark in the middle
of the day as it was in the middle of the night.
And it remained this way for three whole days, so
that nobody could do anything. But it wasnt
that way where the Hebrews lived. This was very
easy for God to do, for he makes the darkness as
well as the light! You see, it wasnt
possible for Moses to bring all these plagues
upon Egypt. It was God who helped him to do it.
Pharaoh continued to harden his
heart, until finally it became necessary for God
to send another plague. This was the tenth and
last plague, and what do you suppose it was? Why,
the firstborn or oldest child in every Egyptian
family died! The firstborn of the cattle also
died. Pharaohs own firstborn son died. That
made him think he had better change his mind
about letting the Hebrews go, and he did.
He sent for Moses and Aaron
again, and told them to lead the Israelites out
of Egypt just as quickly as possible. Pharaoh had
had enough trouble. He and the Egyptians became
afraid that they would all die if they refused
longer to let Gods people go. So Pharaoh
told Moses and Aaron that all the Hebrews could
go, and could take their cattle and other
belongings with them.
The Egyptians were so eager for
them to leave that they gave them all the help
possible. They even gave them gold and silver
jewelry. That was a wonderful victory for God. It
surely must have made Moses and Aaron believe
more than ever that God was with them and was
helping them. We, too, know that God will help us
to do anything he wants us to do!
QUESTIONS
Who was Aaron, and how did
he help Moses do what God asked him to do?
Did the ruler of Egypt
consent to let the Israelites leave Egypt?
What were the ten plagues,
and why were they brought upon the Egyptian
people by God?
How many times did the ruler
of Egypt give his consent for the Israelites to
leave, and later change his mind?
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