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{{Short description|Prophet in Abrahamic religions}} | |||
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{{Other uses}} | |||
{{about|the Biblical figure}} | |||
{{Pp-vandalism|small=yes}} | |||
{{Use American English|date=January 2013}} | |||
{{Infobox religious person | |||
| name = Moses | |||
| image = Rembrandt - Moses with the Ten Commandments - Google Art Project.jpg | |||
| caption = '']'' by ], 1659 | |||
| birth_place = ], ], ] | |||
| death_place = ], ], ] | |||
| nationality = ]<br>] | |||
| known_for = ] and ] under the ]<br />Important prophet in Abrahamic religions: including ], ], ], ], ], ], and ] | |||
| children = {{plainlist| | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
}} | |||
| parents = {{plainlist| | |||
* ] (father) | |||
* ] (mother) | |||
* ] (adoptive mother) | |||
}} | |||
| relatives = {{Plainlist| | |||
* ] (great-grandfather) | |||
* ] (brother) | |||
* ] (sister) | |||
}} | |||
| spouse = ], unnamed ] woman<ref>{{cite web|last1=Filler|first1=Elad|title=Moses and the Kushite Woman: Classic Interpretations and Philo's Allegory|url=https://thetorah.com/moses-and-the-kushite-woman-classic-interpretations-and-philos-allegory/|website=TheTorah.com|access-date=11 May 2019}}</ref> | |||
| native_name = מֹשֶׁה | |||
| native_name_lang = hbo | |||
| religion = | |||
| honorific prefix = ] | |||
}} | |||
In ], '''Moses'''{{efn|{{IPAc-en|ˈ|m|oʊ|z|ᵻ|z|,_|-|z|ᵻ|s}}; {{langx|hbo|מֹשֶׁה|Mōše}}; also known as '''Moshe''' or '''Moshe Rabbeinu''' (]: מֹשֶׁה רַבֵּינוּ, {{lit|Moshe our Teacher}}); {{langx|syr|ܡܘܫܐ|Mūše}}; {{langx|ar|مُوسَىٰ|Mūsā}}; {{langx|grc|Mωϋσῆς|Mōÿsēs}}}} was a ] who led the ] out of slavery in the ].{{efn| | |||
'''Moses''' or '''Moshe''' (]: '''מֹשֶׁ''', <small>]</small> ''{{unicode|Mošə}}'' <small>]</small> ''{{Unicode|Mōšeh}}''; ]: '''موسى''', ''{{unicode|Mūsa}}''; ]: ሙሴ ''Musse'') is a ]ary ] liberator, leader, lawgiver, ], and historian. Moses is considered one of the greatest figures of the Bible. | |||
Descriptions of Moses in various encyclopedias: | |||
* "prophet, teacher, and leader"<ref>{{Cite EBO|title=Moses|url=https://academic.eb.com/levels/collegiate/article/Moses/108742|last=Beegle|first=Dewey M.|access-date=2024-11-23}}</ref> | |||
{{TOCright}} | |||
* "Prophet who led Israelites out of slavery in Egypt"<ref>{{Cite encyclopedia|url=https://www.oxfordreference.com/display/10.1093/acref/9780195125580.001.0001/acref-9780195125580-e-1551|title=Moses|encyclopedia=The Oxford Dictionary of Islam|date=2003-01-01|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-512558-0|edition=1|language=en|doi=10.1093/acref/9780195125580.001.0001}}</ref> | |||
==Moses in the Bible== | |||
* "leader, prophet, and lawgiver"<ref>{{Cite EJ|last1=Abrahams|first1=Israel|author1-link=Israel Abrahams|title=Moses|volume=14|page=522|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopedia-judaica-volume-22/Encyclopedia%20Judaica%2C%20Volume%2014/page/521/mode/2up}}</ref> | |||
According to the ] in the ], Moses was a son of ] and his wife, ], a ]. ] (Moses' mother) is also the sister of Amram's father ]. (Exodus vi 20) ] is Moses' elder brother. According to Genesis 46:11, Amram's father ] immigrates to Egypt with the 70 of Jacob's household. This makes Moses part of the second generation of Israelites born during their time in Egypt. | |||
* "primary leader of the Israelites in their Exodus from Egypt"<ref>{{Cite encyclopedia|last=Hayes|first=John H.|title=Moses|date=1993|encyclopedia=The Oxford Companion to the Bible|url=https://www.oxfordreference.com/display/10.1093/acref/9780195046458.001.0001/acref-9780195046458-e-0502|access-date=2024-11-23|publisher=Oxford University Press|language=en|doi=10.1093/acref/9780195046458.001.0001|isbn=978-0-19-504645-8|editor-last1=Metzger|editor-first1=Bruce M.|editor-last2=Coogan|editor-first2=Michael D.}}</ref> | |||
}} He is considered the most important ] and ], and one of the most important ], ], the ], and ]. According to both the ] and the ], ] dictated the ] to Moses, which he ] in the five books of the ]. | |||
According to the ], Moses was born in a time when his people, the Israelites, an enslaved minority, were increasing in population and, as a result, the ] worried that they might ally themselves with ]'s enemies. Moses' Hebrew mother, ], secretly hid him when Pharaoh ordered all newborn Hebrew boys to be killed in order to reduce the population of the Israelites. Through ], the child was adopted as a ] from the ] and grew up with the Egyptian royal family. After killing an Egyptian slave-master who was beating a Hebrew, Moses fled across the ] to ], where he encountered the ], speaking to him from within a ] on ]. | |||
Moses led the ] out of slavery in ] and into the desert, and received the ] from ] on ]. There are various conjectures and calculations for when this event might have occurred, ranging from the 13th to the 16th centuries BCE (see History section below). Arising in part from his age, but also because 120 is elsewhere stated as the maximum age for Noah's descendants (one interpretation of {{bibleverse||Genesis|6:3|JP}}), "may you live to 120" has become a common blessing among Jews. Jewish extrabiblical tradition holds that his original name was Yekutiel.{{fact}} | |||
] sent Moses back to Egypt to demand the release of the Israelites from slavery. Moses said that he could not speak eloquently,<ref>{{bibleverse|Exodus|4:10|HE}}</ref> so God allowed ], his elder brother,<ref>{{bibleverse|Exodus|7:7|HE}}</ref> to become his spokesperson. After the ], Moses led the ] out of Egypt and ], after which they based themselves at ], where Moses received the ]. After 40 years of wandering in the desert, Moses died on ] at the age of 120, within sight of the ].<ref>{{cite journal|author-last=Kugler|author-first=Gili|date=December 2018|title=Moses died and the people moved on: A hidden narrative in Deuteronomy|editor1-last=Shepherd|editor1-first=David|editor2-last=Tiemeyer|editor2-first=Lena-Sofia|journal=]|publisher=]|volume=43|issue=2|pages=191–204|doi=10.1177/0309089217711030|s2cid=171688935|issn=1476-6728}}</ref> | |||
Moses' legacy was probably expounding the doctrine of ], which was not widely accepted at the time, codifying it in ] ] with the 1st ] and punishing ]. He is considered a prophet in ], ], ] and the ]. | |||
The majority of scholars see the biblical Moses as a ]ary figure, while retaining the possibility that Moses or a Moses-like figure existed in the 13th century BCE.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Nigosian|first1=S.A.|title=Moses as They Saw Him|journal=Vetus Testamentum|date=1993|volume=43|issue=3|pages=339–350|doi=10.1163/156853393X00160|quote="Three views, based on source analysis or historical-critical method, seem to prevail among biblical scholars. First, a number of scholars, such as Meyer and Holscher, aim to deprive Moses all the prerogatives attributed to him by denying anything historical value about his person or the role he played in Israelite religion. Second, other scholars,.... diametrically oppose the first view and strive to anchor Moses the decisive role he played in Israelite religion in a firm setting. And third, those who take the middle position... delineate the solidly historical identification of Moses from the superstructure of later legendary accretions….Needless to say, these issues are hotly debated unresolved matters among scholars. Thus, the attempt to separate the historical from unhistorical elements in the Torah has yielded few, if any, positive results regarding the figure of Moses or the role he played on Israelite religion. No wonder J. Van Seters concluded that "the quest for the historical Moses is a futile exercise. He now belongs only to legend"|issn=0042-4935}}</ref><ref name="Dever2001">{{cite book|first=William G.|last=Dever|title=What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It?: What Archeology Can Tell Us About the Reality of Ancient Israel|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6-VxwC5rQtwC&pg=PA99|year=2001|publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing|isbn=978-0-8028-2126-3|page=99|quote=A Moses-like figure may have existed somewhere in southern Transjordan in the mid-late 13th century s.c., where many scholars think the biblical traditions concerning the god Yahweh arose.}}</ref><ref name="Enclyc Brit Moses">{{cite web|last1=Beegle|first1=Dewey|title=Moses|date=5 July 2023|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Moses-Hebrew-prophet|publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica}}</ref><ref name="Ox1">{{cite web|title=Moses|url=http://www.oxfordbiblicalstudies.com/article/opr/t94/e1284|website=Oxford Biblical Studies Online}}</ref><ref name="Miller">{{cite book|first=Robert D.|last=Miller II|title=Illuminating Moses: A History of Reception from Exodus to the Renaissance|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bXZfAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA21|date=25 November 2013|publisher=BRILL|isbn=978-90-04-25854-9|pages=21, 24|quote=Van Seters concluded, 'The quest for the historical Moses is a futile exercise. He now belongs only to legend.' ... "None of this means that there is not a historical Moses and that the tales do not include historical information. But in the Pentateuch, history has become memorial. Memorial revises history, reifies memory, and makes myth out of history.}}</ref> ] calculated a lifespan of Moses corresponding to 1391–1271 BCE;<ref>'']''{{full citation needed|date=November 2012}}</ref> ] suggested 1592 BCE,<ref>]'s '']'' (4th century) gives 1592 for the birth of Moses</ref> and ] suggested 1571 BCE as his birth year.<ref>The 17th-century ] calculates 1571 BCE (''Annals of the World'', 1658 paragraph 164)</ref>{{efn|group="note"|Saint ] records the names of the kings when Moses was born in the '']'': | |||
In the Exodus account, the birth of Moses occurred at a time when the current Egyptian Pharaoh had commanded that all male children born to Hebrew slaves should be killed by drowning in the ]. The Torah leaves the identity of this Pharaoh unstated, but he is believed by some to be ]. Other, earlier pharaohs have also been suggested, including a ] pharaoh or one who reigned shortly after the Hyksos had been expelled. ] is one such example.<ref>Reference Halley's Bible Handbook</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|When Saphrus reigned as the fourteenth king of ], and Orthopolis as the twelfth of ], and ] as the fifth of ], Moses was born in Egypt,...|<ref>St ]. '']. Book XVIII. Chapter 8 - Who Were Kings When Moses Was Born, And What Gods Began To Be Worshipped Then.''</ref>}} | |||
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Orthopolis reigned as the 12th King of Sicyon for 63 years, from 1596 to 1533 BCE; and Criasus reigned as the 5th King of Argos for 54 years, from 1637 to 1583 BCE.<ref>{{Citation|first=Herman L|last=Hoeh|url=http://cgca.net/coglinks/wcglit/hh_cmpndm1.txt|title=Compendium of World History|volume=1|type=dissertation|publisher=The Faculty of the Ambassador College, Graduate School of Theology, 1962|year=1967}}.</ref>}} The Egyptian name "Moses" is mentioned in ].<ref name="i851">{{cite web|title=Let's Hear It From The Pharaohs: The Egyptian Story of Moses|website=Museum of the Jewish People|date=April 7, 2020|url=https://www.anumuseum.org.il/blog/egyptian-story/|access-date=June 8, 2024}}</ref><ref name="Knohl" /> In the writing of Jewish historian ], ancient Egyptian historian ] is quoted writing of a ] ancient Egyptian priest, ], who renamed himself Moses and led a successful ] against the presiding ], subsequently ruling Egypt for years until the pharaoh regained power and expelled Osarseph and his supporters.<ref name="g777">{{cite journal|last=Gruen|first=Erich S.|title=The Use and Abuse of the Exodus Story|journal=Jewish History|publisher=Springer|volume=12|issue=1|year=1998|issn=0334-701X|jstor=20101326|pages=93–122|doi=10.1007/BF02335457|url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/20101326|access-date=June 8, 2024}}</ref><ref name="z582">{{cite journal|last=Feldman|first=Louis H.|title=Responses: Did Jews Reshape the Tale of the Exodus?|journal=Jewish History|publisher=Springer|volume=12|issue=1|year=1998|issn=0334-701X|jstor=20101327|pages=123–127|doi=10.1007/BF02335458|url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/20101327|access-date=June 8, 2024|ref=z582}}</ref><ref name="t730">{{cite web|title=MOSES IS CURED OF LEPROSY|website=Jewish Bible Quarterly|date=September 12, 2016|url=https://jbqnew.jewishbible.org/jbq-past-issues/2016/443-july-september-2016/moses-cured-leprosy/|access-date=June 8, 2024}}</ref> | |||
Jochebed, the wife of the Levite Amram, bore a son, and kept him concealed for three months. When she could keep him hidden no longer, rather than deliver him to be killed, she set him adrift on the ] river in a small craft of bulrushes coated in pitch. The ] discovered the baby and adopted him as her son, and named him "Moses" (considered to mean "to draw out"). By Biblical account, Moses' sister ] observed the progress of the tiny boat. Miriam then asked Pharaoh's daughter if she would like a Hebrew woman to nurse the baby. Thereafter, Jochebed was employed as the child's nurse, and he grew and was brought to Pharaoh's daughter and became her son. | |||
Moses has often been portrayed in ] and literature, for instance in Michelangelo's '']'' and in works at a number of US government buildings. In the medieval and Renaissance period, he is frequently shown as having ], as the result of a mistranslation in the Latin ] bible, which nevertheless at times could reflect Christian ambivalence or have overtly antisemitic connotations. | |||
After Moses had reached adulthood, he went to see how his brethren who were enslaved to the Egyptians were faring. Seeing an Egyptian beating a Hebrew, he killed the Egyptian and hid his body in the sand, supposing that no one who would be disposed to reveal the matter knew of it. The next day, seeing two Hebrews quarreling, he endeavored to separate them, whereupon the Hebrew who was wronging the other taunted Moses for slaying the Egyptian. Moses soon discovered from a higher source that the affair was known, and that Pharaoh was likely to put him to death for it; he therefore made his escape to the ] and settled with Hobab, or Jethro, priest of Midian, whose daughter ] he in due time married. There he sojourned forty years, following the occupation of a shepherd, during which time his son ] was born. In Numbers 12, Miriam and Aaron taunt Moses for marrying a "Cushite" (literally an ]n). Josephus explains the marriage of Moses to this Ethiopian in the ''Antiquities of the Jews'' (see ] in the later part of this article). | |||
One day, as Moses led his flock to ], he saw a ] that would not be consumed. When he turned aside to look more closely at the marvel, God spoke to him from the bush revealing his name to Moses. <ref>In the time of Emperor ], Mount Horeb was identified with Mount Sinai, but scholars think it was located much farther north.</ref> | |||
==Etymology of name== | |||
God also commissioned him to go to Egypt and deliver his fellow Hebrews from their bondage. He then returned to Egypt. Moses was met on his arrival in Egypt by his elder brother, Aaron, and gained a hearing with his oppressed brethren. It was a more difficult matter, however, to persuade Pharaoh to let the Hebrews depart. This was not accomplished until God sent ] upon the Egyptians. These plagues culminated in the slaying of the Egyptian first-borns whereupon such terror seized the Egyptians that they ordered the Hebrews to leave in ]. | |||
], painting by ], 1904]] | |||
The role of Aaron as a spokesman for Moses has led some to think that Moses was either a ]er (as suggested by some translations of Ex. 4:10), or else an Egyptian who did not speak native Hebrew. | |||
The ] root {{transliteration|egy|]}} ('child of') or ''mose'' has been considered as a possible etymology,{{sfn|Davies|2020|p=181}} arguably an abbreviation of a ] with the god’s name omitted. The suffix mose appears in Egyptian pharaohs’ names like ] ('born of ]') and ] ('born of ]').<ref name="Hays">{{cite book|title=Hidden Riches: A Sourcebook for the Comparative Study of the Hebrew Bible and Ancient Near East|last=Hays|first=Christopher B.|publisher=]|year=2014|isbn=978-0-664-23701-1|page=116|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=r5W7BwAAQBAJ&pg=PA116}}</ref> One of the Egyptian names of ] was ''Ra-mesesu mari-Amon'', meaning “born of Ra, beloved of Amon”. Ms by itself also has multiple attestations as an Engyptian personal name in the New Kingdom <ref name="Ranke">{{cite book|title= Die Ägyptischen Personennamen, Vol. 1|last=Ranke|first=Hermann|publisher=J.J. Augustin|year=1935|page=162}}</ref>. Linguist ], based on the spelling given in the ], argues that it combines "water" or "seed" and "pond, expanse of water," thus yielding the sense of "child of the ]" ({{transliteration|egy|]-]}}).<ref>Ulmer, Rivka. 2009. . ]. p. 269.</ref> | |||
The Torah leaves the identity of this Pharaoh of the Exodus unstated, but some believe him to be ] or ]. | |||
The biblical account of Moses' birth provides him with a ] to explain the ostensible meaning of his name.<ref name="Hays"/><ref>Naomi E. Pasachoff, Robert J. Littman (2005), , Rowman & Littlefield, p. 5.</ref> He is said to have received it from the ]: "he became her son. She named him Moses , saying, 'I drew him out of the water'."<ref>{{bibleverse|Exodus|2:10|HE}}</ref><ref name="Maciá">Maciá, Lorena Miralles. 2014. . pp. 145–175 in C. Cordoni and G. Langer (eds.), ''Narratology, Hermeneutics, and Midrash: Jewish, Christian, and Muslim Narratives from Late Antiquity through to Modern Times''. ].</ref> This explanation links it to the ] root {{lang|sem|משׁה}}, {{transliteration|sem|m-š-h}}, meaning "to draw out".<ref name="Maciá"/>{{sfn|Dozeman|2009|pp=81–82}} The eleventh-century ] ] noted that the princess names him the active participle 'drawer-out' ({{lang|hbo|מֹשֶׁה}}, {{transliteration|hbo|mōše}}), not the passive participle 'drawn-out' ({{lang|hbo|נִמְשֶׁה}}, {{transliteration|hbo|nīmše}}), in effect prophesying that Moses would draw others out (of Egypt); this has been accepted by some scholars.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Riva on Torah, Exodus 2:10:1|url=https://www.sefaria.org/Riva_on_Torah,_Exodus.2.10.1|access-date=2021-03-14|website=Sefaria}}</ref><ref name="Greifenhagen" /> | |||
The long procession moved slowly and found it necessary to encamp three times before passing the Egyptian frontier — some believe at the ], while others propose sites as far south as the northern tip of the ]. Meanwhile, Pharaoh had a change of heart, and was in pursuit of them with a large army. Shut in between this army and the sea, the Israelites despaired, but God ] so that they passed safely across on dry ground. When the Egyptian army attempted to follow, God permitted the waters to return upon them and drown them. | |||
The ] etymology in the Biblical story may reflect an attempt to cancel out traces of Moses' ].<ref name="Greifenhagen" /> The Egyptian character of his name was recognized as such by ancient Jewish writers like ] and ].<ref name="Greifenhagen">Greifenhagen, Franz V. 2003. . Bloomsbury. pp. 60ff n.65. .</ref> Philo linked Moses' name ({{Langx|grc|Μωϋσῆς|translit=Mōysēs|lit=Mōusês}}) to the Egyptian (]) word for 'water' ({{transliteration|cop|môu}}, {{lang|cop|μῶυ}}), in reference to his finding in the Nile and the biblical ].{{efn|{{Verse translation|lang=grc|εἶτα δίδωσιν ὄνομα θεμένη Μωυσῆν ἐτύμως διὰ τὸ ἐκ τοῦ ὕδατος αὐτὸν ἀνελέσθαι· τὸ γὰρ ὕδωρ μῶυ ὀνομάζουσιν Αἰγύπτιοι|"Since he had been taken up from the water, the princess gave him a name derived from this, and called him Moses, for Môu is the Egyptian word for water."|attr1=], ''De Vita Mosis'', I:4:17.|attr2=Colson, F. H., trans. 1935. ''On Abraham. On Joseph. On Moses'', ('']'' 289). Cambridge, Massachusetts: ]. pp. 284–85.}}}} Josephus, in his '']'', claims that the second element, {{transliteration|hbo|-esês}}, meant 'those who are saved'. The problem of how an Egyptian princess (who, according to the Biblical account found in the book of ], gave him the name "Moses") could have known Hebrew puzzled medieval Jewish commentators like ] and ]. Hezekiah suggested she either converted to the ] religion or took a tip from ] (Moses' mother).<ref name="Shurpin">Shurpin, Yehuda. . ].</ref><ref name="Salkin">Salkin, Jeffrey K. (2008). . ]. pp. 47ff .</ref><ref>Harris, Maurice D. 2012. . ]. pp. 22–24.</ref> The Egyptian princess who named Moses is not named in the book of Exodus. However, she was known to Josephus as Thermutis (identified as Tharmuth),<ref name="Maciá"/> and some within Jewish tradition have tried to identify her with a "daughter of Pharaoh" in ] 4:17 named ],<ref name=scolnic>]. 2005. . ]. p. 82.</ref> but others note that this is unlikely since there is no textual indication that this daughter of Pharaoh is the same one who named Moses.<ref name=scolnic /> | |||
When the people arrived at ], the water was bitter, so the people murmured against Moses. Moses cast a tree into the water, and the water became sweet.<ref></ref> Later in the journey the people began running low on supplies and murmured against Moses and Aaron and said they would have preferred to die in Egypt, but God's provision of ] from the sky in the morning and quail in the evening took care of the situation.<ref></ref> | |||
Ibn Ezra gave two possibilities for the name of Moses: he believed that it was either a translation of the Egyptian name instead of a transliteration or that the Pharaoh's daughter was able to speak Hebrew.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Did Pharaoh's Daughter Name Moses? In Hebrew?|url=https://www.thetorah.com/article/did-pharaohs-daughter-name-moses-in-hebrew|access-date=2022-04-18|website=TheTorah.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=What Was Moshe's Real Name?|url=https://www.chabad.org/parshah/article_cdo/aid/627663/jewish/What-Was-Moshes-Real-Name.htm|first=Y. Eliezer|last=Danzinger|work=Chabad.org|date=2008-01-20<!-- Based on YAML metadata -->|access-date=5 May 2022}}</ref> | |||
Amalekite raiders arrived and attacked the Israelites. In response, Moses bid Joshua lead the men to fight while he stood on a hill with the rod of God in his hand. As long as Moses held the rod up, Israel dominated the fighting, but if Moses let down his hands, the tide of the battle turned in favor of the Amalekites. Because Moses was getting tired, Aaron and Hur had Moses sit on a rock. Aaron held up one arm, Hur held up the other arm, and the Israelites routed the Amalekites.<ref></ref> | |||
] argues that the Hebrew etymology is most likely correct, as the sounds in the Hebrew {{transliteration|hbo|m-š-h}} do not correspond to the pronunciation of Egyptian {{transliteration|egy|]}} in the relevant time period.<ref>Kenneth A. Kitchen, ''On the Reliability of the Old Testament'' (2003), pp. 296–97: "His name is widely held to be Egyptian, and its form is too often misinterpreted by biblical scholars. It is frequently equated with the Egyptian word 'ms' (Mose) meaning 'child', and stated to be an abbreviation of a name compounded with that of a deity whose name has been omitted. And indeed we have many Egyptians called Amen-mose, Ptah-mose, Ra-mose, Hor-mose, and so on. But this explanation is wrong. We also have very many Egyptians who were actually called just 'Mose', without omission of any particular deity. Most famous because of his family's long lawsuit in the middle-class scribe Mose (of the temple of Ptah at Memphis), under Ramesses II; but he had many homonyms. So, the omission-of-deity explanation is to be dismissed as wrong ... There is worse. The name of Moses is most likely not Egyptian in the first place! The sibilants do not match as they should, and this cannot be explained away. Overwhelmingly, Egyptian 's' appears as 's' (samekh) in Hebrew and West Semitic, while Hebrew and West Semitic 's' (samekh) appears as 'tj' in Egyptian. Conversely, Egyptian 'sh' = Hebrew 'sh', and vice versa. It is better to admit that the child was named (Exod 2:10b) by his own mother, in a form originally vocalized 'Mashu', 'one drawn out' (which became 'Moshe', 'he who draws out', i.e., his people from slavery, when he led them forth). In fourteenth/thirteenth-century Egypt, 'Mose' was actually pronounced 'Masu', and so it is perfectly possible that a young Hebrew Mashu was nicknamed Masu by his Egyptian companions; but this is a verbal pun, not a borrowing either way."</ref> | |||
Jethro, Moses's father-in-law, came to see Moses and brought Moses's wife and two sons with him. After Moses had told Jethro how the Israelites had been brought from Egypt, Jethro went to offer sacrifices to the Lord, and then ate bread with the elders. The next day Jethro observed how Moses sat from morning to night giving judgement for the people. Jethro suggested that Moses appoint judges for lesser matters, a suggestion Moses heeded.<ref></ref> | |||
==Biblical narrative== | |||
When the Israelites came to Sinai, they pitched camp near the mountain.<ref></ref> Moses commanded the people not to touch the mountain.<ref></ref> Moses received the ten commandments orally (but not yet in tablet form) and other moral laws.<ref></ref> Moses then went up with Aaron, Nadab, Abihu, and seventy of the elders to see the God of Israel.<ref></ref> Before Moses went up the mountain to receive the tablets, he told the elders to direct any questions that arose to Aaron or Hur.<ref></ref> | |||
], a 6th-century miniature from the ]]] | |||
===Prophet and deliverer of Israel=== | |||
]]]While Moses was on Mount Sinai receiving instruction on the laws for the Israelite community, the Israelites went to Aaron and asked him to make gods for them. After Aaron had received the golden earrings from the people, he made a calf of gold and said, "These are your gods, O Israel, who brought you up out of Egypt." A "solemnity of the Lord" was proclaimed for the following day, which began in the morning with sacrifices and was followed by revelry. After Moses had persuaded the Lord not to destroy the people of Israel, he went down from the mountain and was met by Joshua. Moses destroyed the calf and rebuked Aaron for the sin he had brought upon the people. Seeing that the people were uncontrollable, Moses went to the entrance of the camp and said, "Who is on the Lord's side? Let him come unto me." All the sons of Levi rallied around Moses, who ordered them to go from gate to gate slaying the idolaters.<ref></ref> | |||
{{Further|The Exodus}} | |||
The ] had settled in the ] in the time of ] and ], but a new ] arose who oppressed the children of Israel. At this time Moses was born to his father ], son (or descendant) of ] the ], who entered Egypt with Jacob's household; his mother was ] (also Yocheved), who was kin to Kehath. Moses had one older (by seven years) sister, ], and one older (by three years) brother, ].{{refn|According to ] the place of his birth was at the ancient city of ].<ref>{{Cite encyclopedia|author1-link=John McClintock (theologian)|first1=John|last1=McClintock|author2-link=James Strong (theologian)|last2=James|first2=Strong|title=Moses|encyclopedia=Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature|volume=VI. ME-NEV|place=New York|publisher=Harper & Brothers|year=1882|pages=677–87|title-link=Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature}}</ref>}} Pharaoh had commanded that all male Hebrew children born would be drowned in the river ], but Moses' mother placed him in an ] and concealed the ark in the ]es by the riverbank, where ] and adopted by ], and raised as an Egyptian. One day, after Moses had reached adulthood, he killed an Egyptian who was beating a Hebrew. Moses, in order to escape Pharaoh's ], fled to ] (a desert country south of Judah), where he married ].<ref>{{bibleverse|Exodus|2:21|HE}}</ref> | |||
Following this, according to the last chapters of ''Exodus'', the ] was constructed, the priestly law ordained, the plan of encampment arranged both for the Levites and the non-priestly tribes, and the Tabernacle consecrated. Moses was given eight prayer laws that were to be carried out in regards to the Tabernacle. These laws included light, incense and sacrifice. | |||
There, on ], ] appeared to Moses as a ], revealed to Moses his name ] (probably pronounced ])<ref>{{bibleverse|Exodus|3:14|HE}}</ref> and commanded him to return to Egypt and bring his ] (Israel) out of bondage and into the ] (]).<ref>{{bibleverse|Exodus|8:1|HE}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|quote=It was the prophet's call. It was a real ecstatic experience, like that of David under the baka-tree, Elijah on the mountain, Isaiah in the temple, Ezekiel on the Khebar, Jesus in the Jordan, Paul on the Damascus road. It was the perpetual mystery of the divine touching the human.|last=Schmidt|first=Nathaniel|author-link=Nathaniel Schmidt|title=Moses: His Age and His Work. II|journal=The Biblical World|volume=7|number=2|date=February 1896|pages=105–19 |doi=10.1086/471808|s2cid=222445896}}</ref> During the journey, God tried to kill Moses for failing to circumcise his son,<ref>{{bibleverse|Exodus|4:24–26|HE}}</ref> but ]. Moses returned to carry out God's command, but God caused the Pharaoh to refuse, and only after God had subjected Egypt to ] did Pharaoh relent. Moses led the Israelites to the border of Egypt, but their God hardened the Pharaoh's heart once more, so that he could destroy Pharaoh and his army at the ] as a sign of his power to Israel and the nations.<ref>Ginzberg, Louis (1909). ''] '' (Translated by Henrietta Szold) Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society.</ref> | |||
After leaving Sinai, the Israelites camped in Kadesh. After more complaints from the Israelites, Moses struck the stone ''twice'', and water gushed forth. However, because Moses and Aaron had not shown the Lord's holiness, they were not permitted to enter the land to be given to the Israelites.<ref></ref> This was the second occasion Moses struck a rock to bring forth water; however, it appears that both sites were named Meribah after these two incidents. | |||
]'', 1871 painting by ], depicts Moses holding his ], assisted by ] and ], holding up his arms during the battle against ].]] | |||
After defeating the ] in ],<ref>{{cite journal|author-last=Trimm|author-first=Charlie|date=September 2019|title=God's staff and Moses' hand(s): The battle against the Amalekites as a turning point in the role of the divine warrior|editor1-last=Shepherd|editor1-first=David|editor2-last=Tiemeyer|editor2-first=Lena-Sofia|journal=]|publisher=]|volume=44|issue=1|pages=198–214|doi=10.1177/0309089218778588|doi-access=free|issn=1476-6728}}</ref> Moses ] to ], where he was given the ] from God, written on ]. However, since Moses remained a long time on the mountain, some of the people feared that he might be dead, so they made a statue of a ] and ], thus disobeying and angering God and Moses. Moses, out of anger, broke the tablets, and later ordered the elimination of those who had worshiped the golden statue, which was melted down and fed to the ].<ref>{{Cite book|publisher=James Clarke|isbn=978-0-227-17379-4|last1=Rad|first1=Gerhard von|last2=Hanson|first2=K. C.|last3=Neill|first3=Stephen|title=Moses|location=Cambridge|year=2012}}</ref> God again wrote the ten commandments on a new set of tablets. Later at ], Moses and the elders entered into a covenant, by which Israel would become the people of YHWH, obeying his laws, and YHWH would be their god. Moses delivered the laws of God to Israel, instituted ] under the sons of Moses' brother ], and destroyed those Israelites who fell away from his worship. In his final act at Sinai, God gave Moses instructions for the ], the mobile shrine by which he would travel with Israel to the Promised Land.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ginzberg|first=Louis|year=1909|title=The Legends of the Jews|series=Vol. III: The Symbolical Significance of the Tabernacle|translator-first=Henrietta|translator-last=Szold|location=Philadelphia|publisher=Jewish Publication Society|url=http://www.swartzentrover.com/cotor/e-books/misc/Legends/Legends%20of%20the%20Jews.pdf}}</ref> | |||
From Sinai, Moses led the Israelites to the ] on the border of Canaan. From there he sent ] into the land. The spies returned with samples of the land's fertility but warned that its inhabitants were ]. The people were afraid and wanted to return to Egypt, and some rebelled against Moses and against God. Moses told the Israelites that they were not worthy to inherit the land, and would wander the wilderness for forty years until the generation who had refused to enter Canaan had died, so that it would be their children who would possess the land.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ginzberg|first=Louis|year=1909|url=http://www.swartzentrover.com/cotor/e-books/misc/Legends/Legends%20of%20the%20Jews.pdf|title=The Legends of the Jews|volume=III: Ingratitude Punished|translator-first=Henrietta|translator-last=Szold|location=Philadelphia|publisher=Jewish Publication Society}}</ref> Later on, ] was punished for leading a revolt against Moses. | |||
While the Israelites were making their journey around Edom, they complained about the manna. After many of the people had been bitten by serpents and died, Moses made a ] and mounted it on a pole, and if those who were bitten looked at it, they did not die.<ref></ref> This brass serpent remained in existence until the days of King ].<ref></ref> | |||
When the forty years had passed, Moses led the Israelites east around the ] to the territories of ] and ]. There they escaped the temptation of idolatry, conquered the lands of ] and ] in ], received God's blessing through ] the prophet, and massacred the ]ites, who by the end of the Exodus journey had become the enemies of the Israelites due to their notorious role in ]. Moses was twice given notice that he would die before entry to the Promised Land: in ] 27:13,<ref>{{bibleverse|Numbers|27:13|HE}}</ref> once he had seen the Promised Land from a viewpoint on ], and again in Numbers 31:1<ref>{{bibleverse|Numbers|31:1|HE}}</ref> once battle with the Midianites had been won. | |||
When the Israelites encamped in the plains of Moab, Balak had Balaam come to curse the Israelites, but instead Balaam blessed them.<ref></ref> It appears, however, that Balaam later informed Balak and the Midianites that, if they wished to overcome the Israelites for a short interval, they needed to seduce the Israelites to engage in idolatry.<ref></ref> The Midianites sent beautiful women to the Israelite camp to seduce the young men to partake in idolatry, and the attempt proved successful. ] put an end to the matter by slaying two of the prominent offenders, but by that time a plague inflicted upon the Israelites had already killed about twenty-four thousand persons. Moses was then told that because ] had averted the wrath of God from the Israelites, ] and his descendents were given the pledge of an everlasting priesthood.<ref></ref> | |||
On the banks of the ], in sight of the land, Moses assembled the ]. After recalling their wanderings, he delivered God's laws by which they must live in the land, sang a ] of praise and pronounced a ] on the people, and passed his authority to ], under whom they would possess the land. Moses then went up ], looked over the ] spread out before him, and died, at the age of one hundred and twenty: | |||
After Moses had taken a census of the people, he sent an army to avenge the evil brought upon the Israelites by the Midianites. The expedition was very successful, and among the slain were five Midianite kings: Evi, Rekem, Zur, Hur, and Reba. The Israelites also slew Balaam, the son of Beor, who had apparently been the instigator of the matter.<ref></ref> | |||
{{blockquote| So Moses the servant of the LORD died there in the land of Moab according to the word of the LORD. And He buried him in the valley in the land of Moab, opposite Beth-peor; but no man knows his burial place to this day. (Deuteronomy 34:5–6, ])}} | |||
===Lawgiver of Israel=== | |||
Moses appointed ], son of ], to succeed him.<ref></ref> Moses then died at the age of 120.<ref></ref> | |||
{{Further|Law of Moses|Mosaic authorship|Deuteronomist|Book of Deuteronomy#Deuteronomic code|613 Mitzvot}} | |||
], 16249]] | |||
Moses is honoured among ] today as the "lawgiver of Israel", and he delivers several sets of laws in the course of the four books. The first is the ],<ref>{{bibleverse|Exodus|20:19–23:33|HE}}</ref> the terms of the ] which God offers to the Israelites at Mount Sinai. Embedded in the covenant are the ] (the ], Exodus 20:1–17),<ref>{{bibleverse|Exodus|20:1–17|HE}}</ref> and the Book of the Covenant (Exodus 20:22–23:19).<ref>{{bibleverse|Exodus|20:22–23:19|HE}}</ref>{{sfn|Hamilton|2011|p=xxv}} The entire ] constitutes a second body of law, the ] begins with yet another set, and the ] another.{{citation needed|reason=What is the primary source for this?|date=June 2016}} | |||
Moses has traditionally been regarded as ] and the ], which together comprise the ], the first section of the ].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Robinson|first1=George|title=Essential Torah: A Complete Guide to the Five Books of Moses|date=2008|publisher=Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group|isbn=978-0-307-48437-6|pages=97|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=X54NS-Lc-OcC&q=%22dictated+to+Moshe+by+God%22%22under+the+inspiration+of+God%22&pg=PA97|language=en}}</ref> | |||
==Moses in Jewish thought== | |||
There is a wealth of stories and additional information about Moses in the Jewish genre of ] exegesis known as ], as well as in the primary works of the Jewish ], the ] and the ]. | |||
==Historicity== | |||
==Moses in Christian thought== | |||
]. Painting from ], third century CE]] | |||
For ], Moses -- mentioned more often in the ] than any other ] figure -- is often a symbol of the contrast between traditional ] and the teachings of ]. New Testament writers often made comparison of Jesus' words and deeds with Moses' in order to explain Jesus' mission. In ] 7:39-43,51-53, for example, the rejection of Moses by the Jews that worshipped the golden calf is likened to the rejection of Jesus by the Jews that continued in traditional Judaism. | |||
Scholars hold different opinions on the historicity of Moses.<ref name="Nigo1993">{{cite journal|last1=Nigosian|first1=S. A.|date=1993|title=Moses as They Saw Him|journal=Vetus Testamentum|volume=43|issue=3|pages=339–350|doi=10.1163/156853393X00160|quote=Three views, based on source analysis or historical-critical method, seem to prevail among biblical scholars. First, a number of scholars, such as Meyer and Holscher, aim to deprive Moses all the prerogatives attributed to him by denying anything historical value about his person or the role he played in Israelite religion. Second, other scholars, ... diametrically oppose the first view and strive to anchor Moses the decisive role he played in Israelite religion in a firm setting. And third, those who take the middle position ... delineate the solidly historical identification of Moses from the superstructure of later legendary accretions ... Needless to say, these issues are hotly debated unresolved matters among scholars. Thus, the attempt to separate the historical from unhistorical elements in the Torah has yielded few, if any, positive results regarding the figure of Moses or the role he played on Israelite religion. No wonder J. Van Seters concluded that 'the quest for the historical Moses is a futile exercise. He now belongs only to legend.'}}</ref><ref name="Archaeo" /> For instance, according to ], the modern scholarly consensus is that the biblical person of Moses is largely mythical while also holding that "a Moses-like figure may have existed somewhere in the southern ] in the mid-late 13th century B.C." and that "archeology can do nothing" to prove or confirm either way.<ref name=Archaeo>{{cite journal|last=Dever|first=William G.|title=What Remains of the House That Albright Built?|journal=The Biblical Archaeologist|publisher=University of Chicago Press|volume=56|issue=1|year=1993|issn=0006-0895|doi=10.2307/3210358|pages=25–35|quote=the overwhelming scholarly consensus today is that Moses is a mythical figure|jstor=3210358|s2cid=166003641}}</ref><ref name="Dever2001" /> Some scholars, such as ] and Jens Schröter, consider Moses a historical figure.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Making of the Bible: From the First Fragments to Sacred Scripture|last1=Schmid|first1=Konrad|publisher=Harvard University Press|year=2021|isbn=978-0-674-24838-0|pages=44|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0AlBEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA44|last2=Schröter|first2=Jens|quote=Moses was in all likelihood a historical figure}}</ref> According to Solomon Nigosian, there are actually three prevailing views among biblical scholars: one is that Moses is not a historical figure, another view strives to anchor the decisive role he played in Israelite religion, and a third that argues there are elements of both history and legend from which "these issues are hotly debated unresolved matters among scholars".<ref name="Nigo1993"/> According to Brian Britt, there is divide amongst scholars when discussing matters on Moses that threatens gridlock.<ref name="Britt">{{cite web|last1=Britt|first1=Brian|title=The Moses Myth, Beyond Biblical History|url=https://bibleinterp.arizona.edu/articles/Britt-Moses_Myth|website=The Bible and Interpretation|publisher=University of Arizona|date=2004}}</ref> According to the official Torah commentary for Conservative Judaism, it is irrelevant if the historical Moses existed, calling him "the folkloristic, national hero".<ref name="Lieber Dorff Harlow Dorff 2001 p.">{{cite book|first=Stephen|last=Garfinkel|editor-last1=Lieber|editor-first1=David L.|editor-last2=Dorff|editor-first2=Elliot N.|editor-last3=Harlow|editor-first3=Jules|editor-last4=Dorff|editor-first4=R.P.P.E.N.|editor-last5=Fishbane|editor-first5=Michael A.|editor6=Jewish Publication Society|editor7=United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism|editor8=Rabbinical Assembly|editor-last9=Grossman|editor-first9=Susan | editor-last10=Kushner | editor-first10=Harold S.|editor-last11=Potok|editor-first11=Chaim|title=עץ חיים: Torah and Commentary|publisher=Jewish Publication Society|series=The JPS Bible Commentary Series|year=2001|isbn=978-0-8276-0712-5|chapter=Moses: Man of Israel, Man of God|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i1gKAQAAMAAJ|language=he|access-date=13 January 2022|page=1414|quote=So the question to ask in understanding the Torah on its own terms is not when, or even if, Moses lived, but what his life conveys in Israel's saga. Typical of the folkloristic, national hero, Moses successfully withstands }}</ref><ref name="The New York Times 2002">{{cite web|first=Michael|last=Massing|title=New Torah For Modern Minds|website=The New York Times|date=9 March 2002|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/09/books/new-torah-for-modern-minds.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100327132240/https://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/09/books/new-torah-for-modern-minds.html|archive-date=27 March 2010|url-status=live|access-date=1 September 2022}}</ref> | |||
] argues that it cannot be known if Moses ever lived because there are no traces of him outside tradition.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Assmann|first=Jan|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nJv0oyQ-9_AC|title=Moses the Egyptian|date=1998-10-15|publisher=Harvard University Press|isbn=978-0-674-58739-7|pages=2, 11|quote=We cannot be sure Moses ever lived because there are not traces of his existence outside the tradition ... I shall not even ask the question—let alone, answer it—whether Moses was an Egyptian, or a Hebrew, or a Midianite. This question concerns the historical Moses and thus pertains to history. I am concerned with Moses as a figure of memory. As a figure of memory, Moses the Egyptian is radically different from Moses the Hebrew or the Biblical Moses.}}</ref> Though the names of Moses and others in the biblical narratives are Egyptian and contain genuine Egyptian elements, no extrabiblical sources point clearly to Moses.<ref name="Dever 2008">{{cite web|last1=Dever|first1=William|date=November 17, 2008|title=Archeology of the Hebrew Bible|url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/article/archeology-hebrew-bible/|website=Nova|publisher=PBS|quote="Moses" is an Egyptian name. Some of the other names in the narratives are Egyptian, and there are genuine Egyptian elements. But no one has found a text or an artifact in Egypt itself or even in the Sinai that has any direct connection. That doesn't mean it didn't happen. But I think it does mean what happened was rather more modest. And the biblical writers have enlarged the story.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last1=Moore|first1=Megan Bishop|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Qjkz_8EMoaUC|title=Biblical History and Israel's Past: The Changing Study of the Bible and History|last2=Kelle|first2=Brad E.|date=2011-05-17|publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing|isbn=978-0-8028-6260-0|pages=92–93|quote=... no extrabiblical source point clearly to Moses, ...}}</ref><ref name="Ox1"/> No references to Moses appear in any Egyptian sources prior to the 4th century BCE, long after he is believed to have lived. No contemporary Egyptian sources mention Moses, or the events of Exodus–Deuteronomy, nor has any archaeological evidence been discovered in Egypt or the ] to support the story in which he is the central figure.{{sfn|Meyers|2005|pp=5–6}} ] states that Moses is a mythic hero and the central figure in Hebrew mythology.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Leeming|first1=David|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kQFtlva3HaYC&q=+moses+central+figure|title=The Oxford Companion to World Mythology|date=2005-11-17|publisher=Oxford University Press USA|isbn=978-0-19-515669-0|language=en}}</ref> | |||
Moses also figures into several of Jesus' messages. When he met the ] ] at night in the third chapter of ], he compares Moses' lifting up of the bronze serpent in the wilderness, which any Israelite could look upon and be healed, to his own lifting up (by his death and ]) for the people to look upon and be healed. In the sixth chapter, Jesus responds to the people's claim that Moses provided them '']'' in the wilderness by saying that it was not Moses, but God, who provided. Calling himself the "bread of life", Jesus states that he is now provided to feed God's people. | |||
The ''Oxford Companion to the Bible'' states that the historicity of Moses is the most reasonable (albeit not unbiased) assumption to be made about him as his absence would leave a vacuum that cannot be explained away.<ref>{{cite book|title=Exodus, The Book of|chapter=Exodus, the|url=https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780195046458.001.0001/acref-9780195046458-e-0245?rskey=QKB1cM&result=17|via=www.oxfordreference.com|publisher=Oxford University Press|format=Online|date=2004|isbn=978-0-19-504645-8|quote=The historicity of Moses is the most reasonable assumption to be made about him. There is no viable argument why Moses should be regarded as a fiction of pious necessity. His removal from the scene of Israel's beginnings as a theocratic community would leave a vacuum that simply could not be explained away.}}</ref> ''Oxford Biblical Studies'' states that although few modern scholars are willing to support the traditional view that Moses himself wrote the five books of the ], there are certainly those who regard the leadership of Moses as too firmly based in Israel's corporate memory to be dismissed as ].<ref name="Ox1" /> | |||
The story of Moses' discovery follows a familiar motif in ]ern ] of the ruler who rises from humble origins.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Coogan|first1=Michael David|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4DVHJRFW3mYC&q=michael+d+coogan&pg=PR5|title=The Oxford History of the Biblical World|last2=Coogan|first2=Michael D.|date=2001|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-513937-2|quote=Many of these forms are not, and should not be considered, historically based; Moses’ birth narrative, for example, is built on folkloric motifs found throughout the ancient world.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Text, Artifact, and Image: Revealing Ancient Israelite Religion|last=Rendsburg|first=Gary A.|publisher=Brown Judaic Studies|year=2006|isbn=978-1-930675-28-5|page=204|editor-last=Beckman|editor-first=Gary M.|chapter=Moses as Equal to Pharaoh|editor-last2=Lewis|editor-first2=Theodore J.|chapter-url=https://jewishstudies.rutgers.edu/docman/rendsburg/118-moses-as-equal-to-pharaoh/file}}</ref> For example, in the account of the origin of ] (23rd century BCE): | |||
Moses is also regarded as a symbol of the law. He is presented in all three Gospel accounts of the ] in ] 17, ] 9, and ] 9, respectively. | |||
{{poemquote|My mother, the high priestess, conceived; in secret she bore me | |||
Later Christians found numerous other parallels between the life of Moses and Jesus to the extent that Jesus was likened to a "second Moses." For instance, Jesus' escape from the ] is compared to Moses' escape from Pharaoh's designs to kill Hebrew infants. Such parallels, unlike those mentioned above, are not pointed out within Scripture. See the article on ]. | |||
She set me in a basket of rushes, with bitumen she sealed my lid | |||
She cast me into the river which rose over me.<ref>{{cite book|first=Timothy D.|last=Finlay|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pOigG8qtC8oC&pg=PA236|title=The Birth Report Genre in the Hebrew Bible|series=Forschungen zum Alten Testament|volume=12|publisher=Mohr Siebeck|year=2005|page=236|isbn=978-3-16-148745-3}}</ref>}} | |||
Moses' story, like those of the other ], most likely had a substantial oral prehistory<ref>{{cite book|last=Pitard|first=Wayne T.|date=2001|editor-last=Coogan|editor-first=Michael D.|title=The Oxford History of the Biblical World|publisher=Oxford University Press|page=27|chapter=Before Israel: Syria-Palestine in the Bronze Age|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4DVHJRFW3mYC&pg=PA27|isbn=9780195139372}}</ref>{{failed verification|date=March 2024|reason=source supports this statement for the patriarchs, but doesn't mention Moses}} (he is mentioned in the ]<ref>{{Bibleverse|Jeremiah|15:1|HE}}</ref> and the ]<ref>{{Bibleverse|Isaiah|63:11-12|HE}}</ref>). The earliest mention of him is vague, in the ]<ref>{{bibleverse|Hosea|12:13}}</ref> and his name is apparently ancient, as the tradition found in Exodus gives it a folk etymology.<ref name="Hays"/>{{sfn|Dozeman|2009|pp=81–82}} Nevertheless, the Torah was completed by combining older traditional texts with newly-written ones.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Carr|first1=David M.|last2=Conway|first2=Colleen M.|title=An Introduction to the Bible: Sacred Texts and Imperial Contexts|date=2010|publisher=]|location=New York|isbn=9781405167383|page=193|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dJerjvlxCHsC&pg=PA193}}</ref> ],<ref>{{bibleverse|Isaiah|63:16|HE}}</ref> written during the Exile (i.e., in the first half of the 6th century BCE), testifies to tension between the people of Judah and the returning post-Exilic Jews (the "]"), stating that God is the father of Israel and that Israel's history begins with the Exodus and not with ].{{sfn|Ska|2009|p=44}} The conclusion to be inferred from this and similar evidence (e.g., the ] and the ]) is that the figure of Moses and the story of the Exodus must have been preeminent among the people of Judah at the time of the Exile and after, serving to support their claims to the land in opposition to those of the returning exiles.{{sfn|Ska|2009|p=44}} | |||
==Moses in Muslim Thought== | |||
] | |||
{{main|Islamic view of Moses}} | |||
] developed by ] in 1872, which has proved influential, argued that ] was a ]ite god, introduced to the Israelites by Moses, whose father-in-law ] was a Midianite priest.<ref>{{Bibleverse|Judges|1:16-3:11|HE}}; {{Bibleverse|Numbers|10:29|HE}}; {{Bibleverse|Exodus|6:2-3|HE}}</ref> It was to such a Moses that Yahweh reveals his real name, hidden from the ] who knew him only as ].<ref>{{cite book|first=Mark S.|last=Smith|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1yM3AuBh4AsC&pg=PA34|title=The Early History of God: Yahweh and the Other Deities in Ancient Israel|publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans|year=2002|page=34|isbn=978-0-8028-3972-5}}</ref> Against this view is the modern consensus that most of the Israelites were native to ].<ref>{{cite book|editor-first=Karel|editor-last=van der Toorn|editor2-first=Bob|editor2-last=Becking|editor3-first=Pieter Willem|editor3-last=van der Horst|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yCkRz5pfxz0C&pg=PA912|title=Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible|publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans|edition=2nd|year=1999|page=912|isbn=978-0-8028-2491-2}}</ref><ref name="Grabbe2017">{{cite book|first=Lester L.|last=Grabbe|title=Ancient Israel: What Do We Know and How Do We Know It?: Revised Edition|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4lzyDQAAQBAJ&pg=PA36|date=23 February 2017|publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing|isbn=978-0-567-67044-1|page=36|quote=The impression one has now is that the debate has settled down. Although they do not seem to admit it, the minimalists have triumphed in many ways. That is, most scholars reject the historicity of the 'patriarchal period', see the settlement as mostly made up of indigenous inhabitants of Canaan and are cautious about the early monarchy. The exodus is rejected or assumed to be based on an event much different from the biblical account. On the other hand, there is not the widespread rejection of the biblical text as a historical source that one finds among the main minimalists. There are few, if any, maximalists (defined as those who accept the biblical text unless it can be absolutely disproved) in mainstream scholarship, only on the more fundamentalist fringes.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=The Oxford Handbook of the Historical Books of the Hebrew Bible|last=Killebrew|first=Ann E.|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2020|isbn=978-0-19-007411-1|page=86|editor-last=Kelle|editor-first=Brad E.|chapter=Early Israel’s Origins, Settlement, and Ethnogenesis|editor-last2=Strawn|editor-first2=Brent A.|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=T_kFEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA79}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=The Oxford History of the Holy Land|last=Faust|first=Avraham|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2023|isbn=978-0-19-288687-3|editor-last=Hoyland|editor-first=Robert G.|page=28|chapter=The Birth of Israel|editor-last2=Williamson|editor-first2=H. G. M.|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pyG3EAAAQBAJ&pg=PA5|quote=}}</ref> ] argued that the ] uses the figure of Moses, originally linked to legends of a Transjordan conquest, as a narrative bracket or late redactional device to weld together four of the five, originally independent, themes of that work.<ref name="Coats">{{cite book|last=Coats|first=George W.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bk7_CMIAQOsC&pg=PA10|title=Moses: Heroic Man, Man of God|publisher=A&C Black|year=1988|pages=10ff (p. 11 Albright; pp. 29–30, Noth)|isbn=9780567594204}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first=Eckart|last=Otto|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LtqjahTUkdQC&pg=PA25|title=Mose: Geschichte und Legende|trans-title=Moses: history and legend|publisher=C. H. Beck|year=2006|pages=25–27|isbn=978-3-406-53600-7|language=de}}</ref> {{ill|Manfred Görg|de}}<ref>{{cite book|first=Manfred|last=Görg|chapter=Mose – Name und Namensträger. Versuch einer historischen Annäherung|title=Mose. Ägypten und das Alte Testament|editor-first=E.|editor-last=Otto|publisher=Verlag Katholisches Bibelwerk|location=Stuttgart|year=2000|language=de}}</ref> and {{ill|Rolf Krauss (egyptologist)|de|Rolf Krauss|lt=Rolf Krauss}},<ref>{{cite book|first=Rolf|last=Krauss|title=Das Moses-Rätsel: Auf den Spuren einer biblischen Erfindung|publisher=Ullstein|location=Munich|year=2001|language=de}}</ref> the latter in a somewhat ] manner,<ref>{{cite news|first=Jan|last=Assmann|author-link=Jan Assmann|url=https://www.faz.net/aktuell/feuilleton/buecher/rezension-sachbuch-tagsueber-parliert-er-als-aegyptologe-nachts-reisst-er-die-bibel-auf-11283521.html|title=Tagsüber parliert er als Ägyptologe, nachts reißt er die Bibel auf|newspaper=]|date=2 February 2002|language=de}}</ref> have suggested that the Moses story is a distortion or transmogrification of the historical pharaoh ] ({{c.|1200 BCE}}), who was dismissed from office and whose name was later simplified to {{transliteration|egy|msy}} (Mose). ] regards this hypothesis as "intriguing, but beyond proof".<ref>{{cite book|first=Aidan|last=Dodson|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DBnN9I8EvjsC&pg=PA72|title=Poisoned Legacy: The Fall of the 19th Egyptian Dynasty|publisher=American University in Cairo Press|year=2010|page=72|isbn=978-1-61797-071-9}}</ref> Rudolf Smend argues that the two details about Moses that were most likely to be historical are his name, of Egyptian origin, and his marriage to a Midianite woman, details which seem unlikely to have been invented by the Israelites; in Smend's view, all other details given in the biblical narrative are too mythically charged to be seen as accurate data.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Smend|first=Rudolf|title=Mose als geschichtliche Gestalt|trans-title=Moses as historical figure|journal=Historische Zeitschrift|volume=260|year=1995|pages=1–19|doi=10.1524/hzhz.1995.260.jg.1|s2cid=164459862|url=https://www.historischeskolleg.de/fileadmin/pdf/dokumentationen_pdf/dok11_smend.pdf}}</ref> | |||
In the ], the life of Prophet Moses (Arabic: Musa) is narrated and recounted more than any other ]. The Qur'an narrates much of Moses' life in relation to God. The Qur'an and the Bible are similar on the basic outline of Moses' life. But one of the distinctive accounts which is found in the Qur'an but not the Bible, is the story of Moses and ]. | |||
The name ] of ] has been linked to that of Moses. Mesha also is associated with narratives of an exodus and a conquest, and several motifs in stories about him are shared with the Exodus tale and that regarding Israel's war with Moab (]). Moab rebels against oppression, like Moses, leads his people out of Israel, as Moses does from Egypt, and his first-born son is slaughtered at the wall of ] as the firstborn of Israel are condemned to slaughter in the Exodus story, in what Calvinist theologian ] described as "an infernal Passover that delivers Mesha while wrath burns against his enemies".<ref>{{cite book|first=Peter J.|last=Leithart|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Z_gvin9G7LgC&pg=PA181|title=1 & 2 Kings|publisher=Brazos Press|year=2006|pages=178ff |isbn=9781587431258}}</ref> | |||
== Moses in Mormon thought == | |||
The ] is a text published by ] (a sect of Christianity) and believed by many within ] (a secular "nickname" for the above named religion) to be the translated writings of Moses. It is published today as part of the ]. | |||
An Egyptian version of the tale that crosses over with the Moses story is found in ] who, according to the summary in ], wrote that a certain ], a ] priest, became overseer of a band of ], when ], following indications by ], had all the lepers in Egypt quarantined in order to cleanse the land so that he might see the gods. The lepers are bundled into ], the former capital of the ], where Osarseph prescribes for them everything forbidden in Egypt, while proscribing everything permitted in Egypt. They invite the Hyksos to reinvade Egypt, rule with them for 13 years – Osarseph then assumes the name Moses – and are then driven out.<ref>{{cite book|first=Jan|last=Assmann|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IjUiie30Z9cC&pg=PA33|title=Moses the Egyptian: The Memory of Egypt in Western Monotheism|publisher=Harvard University Press|year=2009|pages=31–34|isbn=978-0-674-02030-6}}</ref> | |||
The first chapter describes an encounter between Moses, ], and ]. This chapter was supposedly prepended to the ] but lost through translation and omission. The encounter describes the magnificence of deity, and Moses' understanding of man's insignificance in comparison. Moses is shown the entirety of the history of the world and all that will come to pass. After this vision God leaves Moses to himself, whereupon Satan comes tempting Moses to worship him. Moses recognizes the weakness of Satan, and drives him away in the name of Jesus. Afterwards, God returns to Moses and shows him the numberless worlds with numberless people that God has created. A prophecy alluding to Joseph Smith is given in the final verses. | |||
Other Egyptian figures which have been postulated as candidates for a historical Moses-like figure include the princes ] and ], who were sons of pharaoh ], or a figure associated with the family of pharaoh ].<ref>{{cite journal|last=Samaan|first=Marla|title='House of Bondage': Can We Reconcile the Biblical Account of Hebrew Slavery with Egyptian Historical Records?|journal=Senior Research Projects|volume=59|year=2002|url=https://knowledge.e.southern.edu/senior_research/59}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Billauer|first=Barbara|title=Moses, the Tutmoses and the Exodus|journal=SSRN|year=2014|doi=10.2139/ssrn.2429297}}</ref> Israel Knohl has proposed to identify Moses with ], a ] who, according to ] and the Elephantine Stele, took power in Egypt with the support of "Asiatics" (people from the ]) after the death of Queen ]; after coming to power, Irsu and his supporters disrupted Egyptian rituals, "treating the gods like the people" and halting offerings to the Egyptian deities. They were eventually defeated and expelled by the new Pharaoh ] and, while fleeing, they abandoned large quantities of gold and silver they had stolen from the temples.<ref name="Knohl">{{Cite web|title=Exodus: The History Behind the Story - TheTorah.com|url=https://www.thetorah.com/article/exodus-the-history-behind-the-story|access-date=2021-07-01|website=TheTorah.com}}</ref> | |||
==Moses in history== | |||
==Hellenistic literature== | |||
Moses is an Egyptian name-element meaning "-gave birth to him" or "-formed him" and was usually combined with a ] element, as in "Ramose" which had the meaning "child of ]" or "Ra formed him" or as in "Djehutymos" (Tuthmosis) meaning "Thoth's child."<ref>http://www.edofolks.com/html/pub119.htm</ref> "Moshe" is a Hebrew word (meaning "one who draws water"). The Bible asserts that this is the origin of the name because Moses was "drawn out" of the water by the Egyptian princess. It could also be a reference to his role in leading the Israelites out of Egypt. | |||
{{Further|Moses in Judeo-Hellenistic literature}} | |||
], Jordan]] | |||
Non-biblical writings about Jews, with references to the role of Moses, first appear at the beginning of the ], from 323 BCE to about 146 BCE. Shmuel notes that "a characteristic of this literature is the high honour in which it holds the peoples of the East in general and some specific groups among these peoples."{{Sfn | Shmuel | 1976 | p = 1102}} | |||
It has been traditionally assumed that Moses received from God and subsequently transcribed all, or almost all, of the ], and this is still the view of most fundamentalist ] and most of ]. However, many liberal scholars, following the practice of ] have become convinced that this work was edited together from several earlier sources. | |||
In addition to the Judeo-Roman or Judeo-Hellenic historians ], ], ], and ], a few non-Jewish historians including ] (quoted by ]), ], ], ], ], ] and ] also make reference to him. The extent to which any of these accounts rely on earlier sources is unknown.{{Sfn | Shmuel | 1976 | p = 1103}} Moses also appears in other religious texts such as the ] (c. 200 CE) and the ] (200–1200 CE).<ref>{{Citation|last=Hammer|first=Reuven|title=The Classic Midrash: Tannaitic Commentaries on the Bible|publisher=Paulist Press|year=1995|page=15}}.</ref> | |||
Some skeptical historians, generally called ], suggest that Moses never actually existed, and that ] is not historical. On the other hand, historical records are so fragmentary that extra-Biblical records of Moses may have been long lost (or perhaps vaguely referenced, such as many cases that seem to be a sort of example, but are apparently covered up). For example, if ] occurred during the end of the ]-era in Egypt (]), as some scholars believe, then any Hyksos records of Moses would have been deliberately destroyed by victorious Egyptians as they drove the Hyksos out of Egypt. Destruction of unfavorable records by unsympathetic Pharaohs, and even mass obliteration of cartouches from monuments, is known to have occurred at several epochs in Ancient Egyptian history. | |||
The figure of ] in ] is a renegade Egyptian priest who leads an army of ] against the pharaoh and is finally expelled from Egypt, changing his name to Moses.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DPzZTN74jAcC&q=Osarseph|title=The Jewish People in the First Century: Historical Geography, Political History, Social, Cultural and Religious Life and Institutions|first1=Shemuel|last1=Safrai|first2=M.|last2=Stern|first3=David|last3=Flusser|first4=Willem Cornelis|last4=Unnik|date=November 19, 1974|publisher=Uitgeverij Van Gorcum|isbn=9789023214366|via=Google Books}}</ref> | |||
Several professors of ] claim that many stories in the ], including important chronicles about Moses, ], and others, were actually made up for the first time by scribes hired by King ] (]) in order to rationalize monotheistic belief in ].<ref>Anderson, K. (2006). ''The Great Transformation: The Beginning of Our Religious Traditions.'' NY: Knopf. pp. 157-166, ''see esp.'' p. 163.</ref> | |||
===Hecataeus=== | |||
Conflicting with the sources cited in Halley, others claim there is no such surviving written records from Egypt, ], etc., referring to the stories of the Bible or its main characters before ca. ].<ref>''Who Were the Early Israelites?'' by ] (William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, MI, 2003</ref><ref>''The Bible Unearthed'' by ] and ] (Simon and Schuster, New York, 2001</ref> | |||
The earliest existing reference to Moses in Greek literature occurs in the Egyptian history of Hecataeus of Abdera (4th century BCE). All that remains of his description of Moses are two references made by Diodorus Siculus, wherein, writes historian Arthur Droge, he "describes Moses as a wise and courageous leader who left Egypt and colonized ]".{{Sfn|Droge |1989 |p=18}} Among the many accomplishments described by Hecataeus, Moses had founded cities, established a temple and religious cult, and issued laws: | |||
{{Blockquote |After the establishment of settled life in Egypt in early times, which took place, according to the mythical account, in the period of the gods and heroes, the first ... to persuade the multitudes to use written laws was Mneves, a man not only great of soul but also in his life the most public-spirited of all lawgivers whose names are recorded.{{Sfn | Droge | 1989 | p = 18}}}} | |||
Traditionalists point out that many of the details of the ] are consistent with the time period, such as the price of a slave (30 ]s as opposed to around 60 at the time of the ]), the practice of blood covenants and the discovery of what some claim are 'chariot wheels' on the bottom of the ].<ref>See for a history of the 'chariot wheel' finds.</ref> ] view most of these as inconclusive or otherwise inconsequential and point out that the depth of the Red Sea exceeds that of Arizona's ]. | |||
Droge also points out that this statement by Hecataeus was similar to statements made subsequently by Eupolemus.{{Sfn| Droge |1989 |p=18}} | |||
Known extra-Biblical references to Moses date from many centuries after his supposed lifetime, and contain significant departures from the Biblical account. In addition to the Judeo-Roman historians ] and ], a number of gentile historians including ], ] and ] make reference to him. The extent to which any of these accounts rely on earlier sources is unknown. | |||
===Artapanus=== | |||
], a ] Egyptian chronicler and priest writing in the ], mentioned them. | |||
] raising his arms during the battle against the Amalekites]] | |||
The Jewish historian ] (2nd century BCE) portrayed Moses as a cultural hero, alien to the Pharaonic court. According to theologian John Barclay, the Moses of Artapanus "clearly bears the destiny of the Jews, and in his personal, cultural and military splendor, brings credit to the whole Jewish people".<ref>{{cite book|last=Barclay|first=John M. G.|title=Jews in the Mediterranean Diaspora: From Alexander to Trajan (323 BCE – 117 CE)|publisher=University of California Press|year=1996|page=130|isbn=0-520-21843-4}}</ref> | |||
{{Blockquote | Jealousy of Moses' excellent qualities induced Chenephres to send him with unskilled troops on a military expedition to ], where he won great victories. After having built the city of ], he taught the people the value of the ] as a protection against the serpents, making the bird the sacred guardian spirit of the city; then he introduced ]. After his return to ], Moses taught the people the value of oxen for agriculture, and the consecration of the same by Moses gave rise to the cult of ]. Finally, after having escaped another plot by killing the assailant sent by the king, Moses fled to ], where he married the daughter of ] , the ruler of the district.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=830&letter=M&search=moses#3|title=Moses|website=Jewish Encyclopedia|access-date=2010-03-02}}</ref>}} | |||
According to the historian Flavius Josephus, Moses led the Egyptians in a campaign against invading Ethiopians and routed them. While Moses was besieging the city, Tharbis, the daughter of the Ethiopian king, fell in love with Moses and wished to marry him. He agreed to do so if she would procure the deliverance of the city into his power. She did so immediately, and Moses promptly married her.<ref>http://www.gutenberg.org/catalog/world/readfile?pageno=61&fk_files=2359</ref> This marriage is also mentioned in Numbers 12:1 (Cushite meant Ethiopian; Zipporah was Midianite, definitely not Ethiopian). The account of this expedition is also mentioned by ]<ref>http://custance.org/old/hidden/4ch2.html</ref>, and it explains why ] refers to Moses as "mighty in his words and in his deeds" ''before'' Moses slayed the Egyptian.<ref>Acts 7:22</ref> | |||
Artapanus goes on to relate how Moses returns to Egypt with Aaron, and is imprisoned, but miraculously escapes through the name of ] in order to lead the Exodus. This account further testifies that all Egyptian ] of ] thereafter contained a rod, in remembrance of that used for Moses' miracles. He describes Moses as 80 years old, "tall and ruddy, with long white hair, and dignified".<ref>{{cite web|author=Eusebius of Caesarea|title=Praeparatio Evangelica|trans-title=Preparation for the Gospel|translator-first=E. H.|translator-last=Gifford|year=1903|at=Book 9|url=http://www.tertullian.org/fathers/eusebius_pe_09_book9.htm|via=tertullian.org|access-date=30 April 2021}}</ref> | |||
Moses also features prominently in later traditions such as the ], ] and ]; these texts draw on and diverge from Biblical accounts. See the article on ]. | |||
Some historians, however, point out the "] nature of much of Artapanus' work",{{Sfn | Feldman | 1998 | p = 40}} with his addition of extra-biblical details, such as his references to Jethro: the non-Jewish Jethro expresses admiration for Moses' gallantry in helping his daughters, and chooses to adopt Moses as his son.{{Sfn | Feldman | 1998 | p = 133}} | |||
===Moses in Strabo=== | |||
===Strabo=== | |||
The following excerpt comes from the Roman historian ] (c. 24 CE): | |||
]'' by ], c. 1523-1524]] | |||
:'''34''' ''As for Judaea, its western extremities towards Casius are occupied by the '']'' and by the lake. The Idumaeans are ], but owing to a sedition they were banished from there, joined the Judaeans, and shared in the same customs with them. The greater part of the region near the sea is occupied by Lake Sirbonis and by the country continuous with the lake as far as Jerusalem; for this city is also near the sea; for, as I have already said, it is visible from the seaport of Iopê. This region lies towards the north; and it is inhabited in general, as is each place in particular, by mixed stocks of people from Aegyptian and Arabian and Phoenician tribes; for such are those who occupy ] and Hiericus and Philadelphia and ], which last ] surnamed ''Sebastê''. But though the inhabitants mixed up thus, the most prevalent of the accredited reports in regard to the temple at Jerusalem represents the ancestors of the present Judaeans, as they are called, as Aegyptians.'' | |||
], a Greek historian, geographer and philosopher, in his '']'' (c. 24 CE), wrote in detail about Moses, whom he considered to be an Egyptian who deplored the situation in his homeland, and thereby attracted many followers who respected the deity. He writes, for example, that Moses opposed the picturing of the deity in the form of man or animal, and was convinced that the deity was an entity which encompassed everything – land and sea:{{Sfn | Shmuel | 1976 | p = 1132}} | |||
:'''35''' '''''Moses''', namely, was one of the Aegyptian priests, and held a part of Lower Aegypt, as it is called, but he went away from there to Judaea, since he was displeased with the state of affairs there, and was accompanied by many people who worshipped the Divine Being. For he says, and taught, that the Aegyptians were mistaken in representing the Divine Being by the images of beasts and cattle, as were also the ]; and that the Greeks were also wrong in modelling gods in human form; for, according to him, God is this one thing alone that encompasses us all and encompasses land and sea — the thing which we call heaven, or universe, or the nature of all that exists. What man, then, if he has sense, could be bold enough to fabricate an image of God resembling any creature amongst us? Nay, people should leave off all image-carving, and, setting apart a sacred precinct and a worthy sanctuary, should worship God without an image; and people who have good dreams should sleep in the sanctuary, not only themselves on their own behalf, but also others for the rest of the people; and those who live self-restrained and righteous lives should always expect some blessing or gift or sign from God, but no other should expect them.'' | |||
{{blockquote| | |||
:'''36''' ''Now Moses, saying things of this kind, persuaded not a few thoughtful men and led them away to this place where the settlement of Jerusalem now is; and he easily took possession of the place, since it was not a place that would be looked on with envy, nor yet one for which anyone would make a serious fight; for it is rocky, and, although it itself is well supplied with water, its surrounding territory is barren and waterless, and the part of the territory within a radius of sixty stadia is also rocky beneath the surface. At the same time Moses, instead of using arms, put forward as defence his sacrifices and his Divine Being, being resolved to seek a seat of worship for Him and promising to deliver to the people a kind of worship and a kind of ritual which would not oppress those who adopted them either with expenses or with divine obsessions or with other absurd troubles. Now Moses enjoyed fair repute with these people, and organised no ordinary kind of government, since the peoples all round, one and all, came over to him, because of his dealings with them and of the prospects he held out to them.''<ref>, Paragraphs 34-36</ref> | |||
35. An Egyptian priest named Moses, who possessed a portion of the country called the ], being dissatisfied with the established institutions there, left it and came to Judaea with a large body of people who worshipped the Divinity. He declared and taught that the Egyptians and Africans entertained erroneous sentiments, in representing the Divinity under the likeness of wild beasts and cattle of the field; that the ] also were in error in making images of their gods after the human form. For God may be this one thing which encompasses us all, land and sea, which we call heaven, or the universe, or the nature of things.... | |||
36. By such doctrine Moses persuaded a large body of right-minded persons to accompany him to the place where ] now stands.<ref name=Strabo>Strabo. ''The Geography'', , Translated by H. C. Hamilton and W. Falconer in 1854, pp. 177–78.</ref>}} | |||
===Moses in Tacitus=== | |||
In Strabo's writings of the history of ] as he understood it, he describes various stages in its development: from the first stage, including Moses and his direct heirs; to the final stage where "the ] continued to be surrounded by an aura of sanctity". Strabo's "positive and unequivocal appreciation of Moses' personality is among the most sympathetic in all ancient literature."{{Sfn | Shmuel | 1976 | p = 1133}} His portrayal of Moses is said to be similar to the writing of ] who "described Moses as a man who excelled in wisdom and courage".{{Sfn | Shmuel | 1976 | p = 1133}} | |||
The Roman historian ] (ca. 100 CE) mentions several possible origins of the Jews that were taught by those of his time. | |||
:''As I am about to relate the last days of a famous city, it seems appropriate to throw some light on its origin. Some say that the Jews were fugitives from the island of ], who settled on the nearest coast of Africa about the time when Saturn was driven from his throne by the power of Jupiter. Evidence of this is sought in the name. There is a famous mountain in Crete called ''Ida''; the neighbouring tribe, the ''Idaei'', came to be called ''Judaei'' by a barbarous lengthening of the national name. Others assert that in the reign of ] the overflowing population of Egypt, led by Hierosolymus and Judas, discharged itself into the neighbouring countries. Many, again, say that they were a race of ] origin, who in the time of king ] were driven by fear and hatred of their neighbours to seek a new dwelling-place. Others describe them as an ]n horde who, not having sufficient territory, took possession of part of Egypt, and founded cities of their own in what is called the Hebrew country, lying on the borders of Syria. Others, again, assign a very distinguished origin to the Jews, alleging that they were the '']'', a nation celebrated in the poems of ], who called the city which they founded ''Hierosolyma'' after their own name.'' | |||
:''Most writers, however, agree in stating that once a disease, which horribly disfigured the body, broke out over Egypt; that king '']'', seeking a remedy, consulted the oracle of ], and was bidden to cleanse his realm, and to convey into some foreign land this race detested by the gods. The people, who had been collected after diligent search, finding themselves left in a desert, sat for the most part in a stupor of grief, till one of the exiles, '''''Moyses''''' by name, warned them not to look for any relief from God or man, forsaken as they were of both, but to trust to themselves, taking for their heaven-sent leader that man who should first help them to be quit of their present misery. They agreed, and in utter ignorance began to advance at random. Nothing, however, distressed them so much as the scarcity of water, and they had sunk ready to perish in all directions over the plain, when a herd of wild asses was seen to retire from their pasture to a rock shaded by trees. Moyses followed them, and, guided by the appearance of a grassy spot, discovered an abundant spring of water. This furnished relief. After a continuous journey for six days, on the seventh they possessed themselves of a country, from which they expelled the inhabitants, and in which they founded a city and a temple.''<ref>, Paragraphs 2 & 3</ref> | |||
Egyptologist ] concludes that Strabo was the historian "who came closest to a construction of Moses' religion as ] and as a pronounced counter-religion." It recognized "only one divine being whom no image can represent ... the only way to approach this god is to live in virtue and in justice."{{Sfn | Assmann | 1997 | p = 38}} | |||
===Date of the Exodus=== | |||
===Tacitus=== | |||
Dating the Exodus has also proved challenging. Views include: | |||
The Roman historian ] (c. 56–120 CE) refers to Moses by noting that the Jewish religion was monotheistic and without a clear image. His primary work, wherein he describes ], is his '']'' ({{circa|100}}), where, according to 18th-century translator and Irish dramatist ], as a result of the Jewish worship of one God, "] mythology fell into contempt".<ref>Tacitus, Cornelius. ''The works of Cornelius Tacitus: With an essay on his life and genius'' by Arthur Murphy, Thomas Wardle Publ. (1842) p. 499</ref> Tacitus states that, despite various opinions current in his day regarding the Jews' ethnicity, most of his sources are in agreement that there was an Exodus from Egypt. By his account, the Pharaoh ], suffering from a ], banished the Jews in response to an oracle of the god ]-]. | |||
*it occurred around the end of the ] era (1674 - 1548 BCE), as expressed above; | |||
*it occurred about ], since the ], written ca. forty years later to Pharaohs ] and ] (Akhenaten) indicate that ] was being invaded by the "]" — whom some scholars take to mean "Hebrews". However, the Hebrews ], ] and ] are also recorded to have conducted military activities in Canaan some centuries before the Exodus. | |||
*it occurred during the ], as the pharaoh during most of that time, ], is commonly considered to be a pharaoh with whom Moses squabbled - either as the 'Pharaoh of the Exodus' himself, or the preceding 'Pharaoh of the Oppression', who is said to have commissioned the Hebrews to "(build) for Pharaoh treasure cities, ] and ]." These cities were originally thought have been built under both ] and Rameses II, possibly making his successor ] 'Pharaoh of the Exodus.' This is considered plausible by those who view the famed ] of Merneptah's 5th year (ca. ]), claiming that "Israel is wasted, bare of seed", as propaganda covering up his own loss of an army in the sea. However, the cities were later shown to have been built during the reign of ], under supervision of ], later Ramses I, and while a major renovation of ] took place in the reign of Ramses II, only a minor took place for Pithom. | |||
*A more recent and controversial view places Moses as a noble in the court of the Pharaoh ] (See below). Many scholars from ] to ] suggest that Moses may have fled Egypt after Akhenaten's death (ca. ]) when much of the pharaoh's monotheistic reforms were being violently reversed. The principal ideas behind this theory are: the monotheistic religion of Akhenaten being a possible predecessor to Moses' monotheism, and a contemporaneous collection of "]" written by nobles to Akhenaten (] was Akhenaten's capital city) which describe raiding bands of "]" attacking the Egyptian territories in ].<ref>''Transformations of Myth Through Time'', ], p. 87-90, Harper & Row</ref> | |||
*Another theory places the birth and/or adoption of Moses during the reign of Amenhotep III with a minor oppression that was soon lifted, then the real oppression during the reign of ], and finally the Exodus during the reign of ]. This is supported by the ], which suggests that they were oppressed and then re-oppressed quite a few years later by Pharaoh. There is also an inscription from the very beginning of ]'s reign that says upon the death of Ramses I, many of the ] (a word as a collective for many of the nomadic groups of the time) left Egypt, traveled through Sinai, into northern Arabia, and after about forty years, entered Canaan. The Bible, ], and Haggada all suggest that the Pharaoh of the Exodus died in year 2 of his reign, matching Ramses I. Also, as Horemheb and Ramses I were builders of ] and ], more probability is lended to this view. Seti I records that during his reign, the Shasu wared with each other, matching the ] and ]ite wars. Seti's campaigns with the Shasu are also slightly similar to Balaam's exploits. Despite this evidence, mainstream Egyptologists reject this view. | |||
{{Blockquote | A motley crowd was thus collected and abandoned in the desert. While all the other outcasts lay idly lamenting, one of them, named Moses, advised them not to look for help to gods or men, since both had deserted them, but to trust rather in themselves, and accept as divine the guidance of the first being, by whose aid they should get out of their present plight.<ref name=Tacitus />}} | |||
Finally, there is the challenge of interpreting the many ] in the Moses story. Most of them are simply dismissed by scholars as legends, but some can be explained. For example, some of the plagues strongly resemble exaggerated versions of actual pestilences common in the ancient world (see ]), the famous Red Sea crossing may have been a marsh (the "Reed Sea") through which the Egyptian chariots could not penetrate, the ''manna'' which God bestowed on the hungry Israelites may have been the secretion of the ] shrub, and the swallowing of ] (''Numbers'' 16) could have been an earthquake.{{fact}} | |||
In this version, Moses and the Jews wander through the desert for only six days, capturing the ] on the seventh.<ref name=Tacitus>Tacitus, Cornelius. ''Tacitus, The Histories, Volume 2'', Book V. Chapters 5, 6 p. 208.</ref> | |||
There is also a ] interpretation of Moses' life, put forward by ] in his last book, ''],'' in ]. Freud postulated that Moses was an Egyptian nobleman who adhered to the monotheism of ]. Freud also believed that Moses was murdered in the wilderness, producing a collective sense of patricidal guilt which has been at the heart of Judaism ever since. "Judaism had been a religion of the father, Christianity became a religion of the son," he wrote. A recent alternative suggestion resulting from interpreting Biblical and ] (by Egyptologist ]) proposes that Moses and Akhenaten are the same person (''Moses and Akhenaten'', Dec. 2002). Opponents of this view point to the fact that the religion of the Torah seems very different to ] in everything except the central feature of devotion to a single god.{{fact}} | |||
== |
===Longinus=== | ||
], curing the Israelites from poisonous snake bites in a painting by ].]] | |||
]]] | |||
The ], the Greek version of the Hebrew Bible, impressed the pagan author of the famous classical book of literary criticism, '']'', traditionally attributed to ]. The date of composition is unknown, but it is commonly assigned to the late 1st century C.E.<ref>Henry J. M. Day, Cambridge University Press, 2013 p. 12.</ref> | |||
The writer quotes ] in a "style which presents the nature of the deity in a manner suitable to his pure and great being", but he does not mention Moses by name, calling him 'no chance person' ({{lang|grc|οὐχ ὁ τυχὼν ἀνήρ}}) but "the Lawgiver" ({{lang|grc|θεσμοθέτης}}, ]) of the Jews, a term that puts him on a par with ] and ].<ref>Louis H. Felkdman, , Princeton University Press 1996 p. 239.</ref> Aside from a reference to ], Moses is the only non-Greek writer quoted in the work; contextually he is put on a par with ]{{sfn | Feldman | 1998 | p = 133}} and he is described "with far more admiration than even Greek writers who treated Moses with respect, such as ] and ]".{{Sfn | Shmuel | 1976 | p = 1140}} | |||
Exodus 34:29-35 tells that after meeting with God the skin of Moses' face became radiant, frightening the Israelites and leading Moses to wear a veil. ], in his book ''Moses: A Life'', thought that, since he subsequently had to wear a veil to hide it, Moses' face was disfigured by a sort of "divine radiation burn". | |||
===Josephus=== | |||
This story has led to one longstanding tradition that Moses grew ]. This is derived from a mistranslation of the Hebrew phrase "karnu panav" קרנו פניו. The root קרן may be read as either "horn" or "ray", as in "ray of light". "Panav" פניו translates as "his face". | |||
In ]' (37 – c. 100 CE) ''Antiquities of the Jews'', Moses is mentioned throughout. For example, Book VIII Ch. IV, describes ], also known as the First Temple, at the time the ] was first moved into the newly built temple: | |||
{{blockquote |When ] had finished these works, these large and beautiful buildings, and had laid up his donations in the temple, and all this in the interval of seven years, and had given a demonstration of his riches and alacrity therein; ... he also wrote to the rulers and elders of the Hebrews, and ordered all the people to gather themselves together to Jerusalem, both to see the temple which he had built, and to remove the ark of God into it; and when this invitation of the whole body of the people to come to Jerusalem was everywhere carried abroad, ... The ] happened to fall at the same time, which was kept by the Hebrews as a most holy and most eminent feast. So they carried the ark and the tabernacle which Moses had pitched, and all the vessels that were for ministration to the sacrifices of God, and removed them to the temple. ... Now the ark contained nothing else but those two tables of stone that preserved the ten commandments, which God spake to Moses in Mount Sinai, and which were engraved upon them ...<ref>{{Citation|last=Josephus|first=Flavius|title=The works: Comprising the Antiquities of the Jews|others=trans. by William Whiston|year=1854|volume=VIII|chapter=IV|pages=254–55}}.</ref>}} | |||
If interpreted correctly those two words form an expression which means that he was enlightened, and many ] studies explain that the knowledge that was revealed to him made his face metaphorically shine with enlightenment, and not that it suddenly sported a pair of horns. | |||
According to Feldman, Josephus also attaches particular significance to Moses' possession of the "cardinal virtues of wisdom, courage, temperance, and justice". He also includes piety as an added fifth virtue. In addition, he "stresses Moses' willingness to undergo toil and his careful avoidance of bribery. Like ]'s ], Moses excels as an educator."{{Sfn | Feldman | 1998 | p = 130}} | |||
The ] properly translates the Hebrew word קרן as δεδοξασται, 'was glorified', but ] translated it as ''cornuta'', 'horned', and it was the latter image that became the more popular. This tradition survived from the first centuries well into the ]. Many artists, including ] in ], depicted Moses with horns. | |||
===Numenius=== | |||
== Moses in popular media == | |||
], a Greek philosopher who was a native of ], in Syria, wrote during the latter half of the 2nd century CE. Historian Kennieth Guthrie writes that "Numenius is perhaps the only recognized Greek philosopher who explicitly studied Moses, the prophets, and the life of ]".{{Sfn | Guthrie | 1917 | p = 194}} He describes his background: | |||
]. ]] | |||
* Moses appears as the central character in the ] ] movie , '']''. He is played by ]. A ] was shown in 2006. | |||
* Moses is the central character in the ] ] Movie, "Moses". He is played by ]. | |||
* Moses appears as the central character in the ] ] animated movie, ''].'' He is voiced by ]. | |||
*In the play 'Abridged Africa' by English playwright ] the main character Ebert ironically gives a pea he finds floating in the Nile river the name Moses. | |||
* In the ] song "]", ] and Moses' decrees are detailed. The song title refers directly to the "black death" that comes in the night to kill first born males. Clear influence from the ] movie is indicated. | |||
* In the ] episodes "]" and "]," Moses is represented as a three-dimensional figure (a parody of the ] from '']''). He also rather resembles a ]. He demands pictures of macaroni and other pre-school style crafts. | |||
* Moses is also the name of ]'s cat, made famous by the song 'Jesse'. | |||
* Moses is the name of a song by the band ] which was premiered while on the ] Tour (2002-2003). The song was included on the band's DVD, "Live 2003". Moses is also the name of the second child of Coldplay's lead singer ] and his wife, actress ]. | |||
* ] of '']'' was born Moses Horowitz. | |||
* In the ] ] '']'', Moses is portrayed by ]. Moses is shown coming down from ] after receiving the Law from God. When announcing the giving of the reception of the Law to the people, Moses proclaims "I have given unto you Fifteen..." (his proclamation is interrupted by his dropping of one of three tablets) "Oy!... Ten! Ten Commandments! For all to obey!" | |||
{{blockquote |Numenius was a man of the world; he was not limited to ], but talked familiarly of the myths of ]s and ]. It is however his knowledge and use of the Hebrew scriptures which distinguished him from other Greek philosophers. He refers to Moses simply as "the prophet", exactly as for him Homer is the poet. Plato is described as a Greek Moses.{{Sfn | Guthrie | 1917 | p = 101}}}} | |||
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===Justin Martyr=== | ||
The Christian saint and religious philosopher ] (103–165 CE) drew the same conclusion as ], according to other experts. Theologian Paul Blackham notes that Justin considered Moses to be "more trustworthy, profound and truthful because he is ''older'' than the ]."{{Sfn | Blackham | 2005 | p = 39}} He quotes him: | |||
{{commonscat|Moses}} | |||
{{blockquote |I will begin, then, with our first prophet and lawgiver, Moses ... that you may know that, of all your teachers, whether sages, poets, historians, philosophers, or lawgivers, by far the oldest, as the Greek histories show us, was Moses, who was our first religious teacher.{{Sfn | Blackham | 2005 | p = 39}}}} | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
==Abrahamic religions== | |||
*] | |||
{{Infobox saint | |||
*] | |||
|name=Moses | |||
*] | |||
|feast_day= September 4, July 20 and April 14 in ] and ] | |||
*] | |||
|venerated_in=]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>]<br>] | |||
*] | |||
|image=MosesStrikingTheRock GREBBER.jpg | |||
*] | |||
|imagesize=230px | |||
*] | |||
|caption=Moses striking the rock, 1630 by ] | |||
*] | |||
|birth_place= ], ] | |||
|death_place= ], ] | |||
|titles=Prophet, Saint, Seer, Lawgiver, Apostle to Pharaoh, Reformer, God-seer | |||
|attributes= ] (in Christianity and Judaism) | |||
}} | |||
===Judaism=== | |||
{{Main|Moses in rabbinic literature}} | |||
Most of what is known about Moses from the Bible comes from the books of ], ], ], and ].{{sfn |Van Seters |2004|p=194}} The majority of scholars consider the compilation of these books to go back to the ], 538–332 BCE, but based on earlier written and oral traditions.{{sfn|Finkelstein|Silberman|2001|p=68}}{{sfn|Ska|2009|p=260}} There is a wealth of stories and additional information about Moses in the ] and in the genre of ]nical ] known as ], as well as in the primary works of the Jewish ], the ] and the ]. Moses is also given a number of bynames in Jewish tradition. The ] identifies Moses as one of seven biblical personalities who were called by various names.<ref>Midrash Rabbah, Ki Thissa, XL. 3–3, Lehrman, p. 463</ref>{{clarify|Unclear what this source is|date=May 2022}} Moses' other names were Jekuthiel (by his mother), Heber (by ]), Jered (by ]), Avi Zanoah (by Aaron), ] (by ]), Avi Soco (by his wet-nurse), Shemaiah ben Nethanel (by people of Israel).<ref>Yalkut Shimoni, Shemot 166 to Chronicles I 4:18, 24:6; also see Vayikra Rabbah 1:3; Chasidah p. 345</ref> Moses is also attributed the names Toviah (as a first name), and Levi (as a family name) (Vayikra Rabbah 1:3), Heman,<ref>Rashi to Bava Batra 15s, Chasidah p. 345</ref> Mechoqeiq (lawgiver),<ref>Bava Batra 15a on Deuteronomy 33:21, Chasidah p. 345</ref> and Ehl Gav Ish (Numbers 12:3).<ref>Rashi to Berachot 54a, Chasidah p. 345</ref> In another ], Moses had ascended to the first heaven until the ], even visited ] and ] alive, after he saw the ] in Mount Horeb.<ref name="Ginzberg 1909">{{cite book|last=Ginzberg|first=Louis|year=1909|url=http://www.swartzentrover.com/cotor/e-books/misc/Legends/Legends%20of%20the%20Jews.pdf|title=The Legends of the Jews|volume=II: The Ascension of Moses; Moses Visits Paradise and Hell|translator-first=Henrietta|translator-last=Szold|location=Philadelphia|publisher=Jewish Publication Society}}</ref> | |||
Jewish historians who lived at ], such as ], attributed to Moses the feat of having taught the ]ns ],<ref>], '']'' ix. 26</ref> similar to legends of ]. ] explicitly identified Moses not only with Thoth/], but also with the Greek figure ] (whom he called "the teacher of ]") and ascribed to him the division of Egypt into 36 districts, each with its own liturgy. He named the princess who adopted Moses as Merris, wife of Pharaoh Chenephres.<ref>Eusebius, l.c. ix. 27</ref> | |||
Jewish tradition considers Moses to be the greatest prophet who ever lived.<ref name="Ginzberg 1909"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jewfaq.org/moshe.htm|title=Judaism 101: Moses, Aaron and Miriam|website=Jew FAQ|access-date=2010-03-02}}</ref> Despite his importance, Judaism stresses that Moses was a human being, and is therefore not to be worshipped.{{citation needed|date=April 2021}} Only God is worthy of worship in Judaism.{{citation needed|date=April 2021}} | |||
To ], Moses is called ''Moshe Rabbenu, 'Eved HaShem, Avi haNeviim zya"a'': "Our Leader Moshe, Servant of God, Father of all the Prophets (may his merit shield us, amen)". In the orthodox view, Moses received not only the Torah, but also the revealed (written and oral) and the hidden (the ''{{'}}hokhmat nistar'') teachings, which gave Judaism the ] of the ], the Torah of the ] and all that is discussed in the Heavenly Yeshiva between the ] and his masters.{{citation needed|date=April 2021}} | |||
Arising in part from his age of death (120 years, according to Deuteronomy 34:7) and that "his eye had not dimmed, and his vigor had not diminished", the phrase "]" has become a common blessing among Jews (120 is stated as the maximum age for all of ]'s descendants in Genesis 6:3). | |||
===Christianity=== | |||
], at the ], by ], {{circa|1480}}]] | |||
Moses is mentioned more often in the ] than any other ] figure. For ], Moses is often a symbol of ], as reinforced and ] in the teachings of ]. New Testament writers often compared Jesus' words and deeds with Moses' to explain Jesus' mission. In ] 7:39–43, 51–53, for example, the rejection of Moses by the Jews who worshipped the ] is likened to the rejection of Jesus by the Jews that continued in traditional Judaism.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Acts|series=IVP New Testament Commentary Series|last=Larkin|first=William J.|publisher=Intervarsity Press Academic|year=1995|isbn=978-0-8308-1805-1}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts+7&version=NIV|title=Bible Gateway passage: Acts 7 – New International Version|website=Bible Gateway|access-date=2017-01-08}}</ref> | |||
Moses also figures in several of Jesus' messages. When he met the ] ] at night in the third chapter of the ], he compared Moses' lifting up of the ] in the wilderness, which any Israelite could look at and be healed, to his own lifting up (by his death and ]) for the people to look at and be healed. In the sixth chapter, Jesus responded to the people's claim that Moses provided them '']'' in the wilderness by saying that it was not Moses, but God, who provided. Calling himself the "]", Jesus stated that he was provided to feed God's people.<ref>{{cite web|title=John 6:35 (KJV)|url=https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=John+6%3A35&version=KJV|website=www.biblegateway.com|access-date=4 January 2020|quote=And Jesus said unto them, I am the bread of life: he that cometh to me shall never hunger; and he that believeth on me shall never thirst.}}</ref> | |||
Moses, along with ], is presented as meeting with Jesus in all three ] of the ] in ], ], and ]. In ], in what is the first attested use of a phrase referring to this rabbinical usage (the Graeco-Aramaic {{lang|he|קתדרא דמשה}}), Jesus refers to the scribes and the Pharisees, in a passage critical of them, as having seated themselves "on the chair of Moses" ({{langx|el|Ἐπὶ τῆς Μωϋσέως καθέδρας }}, ''epì tēs Mōüséōs kathédras'')<ref>{{bibleverse||Matthew|23:2|HCSB}}</ref><ref name="Tomson2019">{{cite book|first=Peter J.|last=Tomson|title=Studies on Jews and Christians in the First and Second Centuries|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=z1mHDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA501|date=11 February 2019|publisher=Mohr Siebeck|isbn=978-3-16-154619-8|page=517}}</ref> | |||
His relevance to modern Christianity has not diminished. Moses is considered to be a ] by several churches; and is commemorated as a prophet in the respective ] of the ], the ], and the ] churches on September 4. In ] for September 4, Moses is commemorated as the "Holy Prophet and God-seer Moses, on Mount Nebo".<ref>Great ]: {{in lang|el}} ''.'' 4 Σεπτεμβρίου. μεγασ συναξαριστης.</ref><ref>. ''Lives of the Saints''. OCA.</ref>{{efn|According to the Orthodox ], September 4 was the day that Moses saw the ].<ref>"September 4: The Holy God-seer Moses the Prophet and Aaron His Brother". In: ''The Menaion'', Volume 1, The Month of September. Translated from the Greek by the Holy Transfiguration Monastery. Boston, Massachusetts, 2005. p. 67.</ref>|group="note"}} The Orthodox Church also commemorates him on the ], two Sundays before the ].<ref>. St John's Orthodox Church, Colchester, Essex, England.</ref> Moses is also commemorated on July 20 with ], ] (Elijah) and ] (Elisha)<ref>{{Cite web|title=Mojżesz|url=https://deon.pl/imiona-swietych/mojzesz,6365|access-date=2021-09-03|website=DEON.pl|language=pl}}</ref> and on April 14 with all saint ] monks.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Пророк Моисе́й Боговидец|url=https://azbyka.ru/days/sv-moisej-bogovidec|access-date=2021-09-03|website=azbyka.ru|language=ru}}</ref> | |||
The ] commemorates him as one of the Holy Forefathers in their ] on July 30.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.armenianchurch.org/index.jsp?sid=1&id=1904&pid=33|script-title=hy:Տոնական օրեր|language=hy|website=Armenian Church|access-date=31 August 2017}}</ref> | |||
====Catholicism==== | |||
In Catholicism Moses is seen as a ] of ]. ] writes: | |||
{{Blockquote|Through Moses God instituted the Old Law, on which account he is called the mediator of the Old Law. As such, Moses was a striking type of Jesus Christ, who instituted the New Law. Moses, as a child, was condemned to death by a ], and was saved in a wonderful way; Jesus Christ was condemned by Herod, and also wonderfully saved. Moses forsook the king's court so as to help his persecuted brethren; the Son of God left the glory of heaven to save us sinners. Moses prepared himself in the desert for his vocation, freed his people from slavery, and proved his divine mission by great miracles; Jesus Christ proved by still greater miracles that He was the only begotten Son of God. Moses was the advocate of his people; Jesus was our advocate with His Father on the Cross, and is eternally so in heaven. Moses was the law-giver of his people and announced to them the word of God: Jesus Christ is the supreme law-giver, and not only announced God's word, but is Himself the Eternal Word made flesh. Moses was the leader of the people to the ]: Jesus is our leader on our journey to heaven.<ref>{{cite book|chapter=]|title=A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture|year=1910|publisher=B. Herder|first=Friedrich Justus|last=Knecht|author-link=Justus Knecht}}</ref>}} | |||
====Mormonism==== | |||
{{Main|Book of Moses}} | |||
Members of ] (colloquially called ]) generally view Moses in the same way that other Christians do. However, in addition to accepting the biblical account of Moses, Mormons include ] as part of their scriptural canon.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|last=Skinner|first=Andrew C.|author-link=Andrew C. Skinner|title=Moses|contribution-url=http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/EoM/id/3959|pages=958–59|editor1-last=Ludlow|editor1-first=Daniel H.|editor1-link=Daniel H. Ludlow|encyclopedia=]|location=New York|publisher=]|year=1992|isbn=978-0-02-879602-4|oclc=24502140}}</ref> This book is believed to be the translated writings of Moses and is included in the ].<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|last=Taylor|first=Bruce T.|title=Book of Moses|pages=216–217|editor1-last=Ludlow|editor1-first=Daniel H|editor1-link=Daniel H. Ludlow|encyclopedia=]|location=New York|publisher=]|year=1992|isbn=978-0-02-879602-4|oclc=24502140|contribution-url=http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/EoM/id/5555}}</ref> | |||
Latter-day Saints are also unique in believing that Moses was taken to heaven without having tasted death (]). In addition, ] and ] stated that on April 3, 1836, Moses appeared to them in the ] (located in ]) in a glorified, immortal, physical form and bestowed upon them the "keys of the gathering of Israel from the four parts of the earth, and the leading of the ] from the land of the north".<ref>The ] </ref> | |||
===Islam=== | |||
{{Main|Moses in Islam}} | |||
{{See also|Biblical narratives and the Qur'an#Moses (Mūsā موسى)}} | |||
{{Musa}} | |||
Moses is mentioned more in the ] than any other individual and his life is narrated and recounted more than that of any other ].{{Sfn | Keeler | 2005 | pp = 55–66}} Islamically, Moses is described in ways which parallel the Islamic prophet ].{{Sfn | Keeler | 2005 | pp = 55–56 | ps =, describes Moses from the Muslim perspective: | |||
{{blockquote|Among prophets, Moses has been described as the one "whose career as a messenger of God, lawgiver and leader of his community most closely parallels and foreshadows that of Muhammad", and as "the figure that in the Koran was presented to Muhammad above all others as the supreme model of saviour and ruler of a community, the man chosen to present both knowledge of the one God, and a divinely revealed system of law". We find him clearly in this role of Muhammad's forebear in a well-known tradition of the miraculous ascension of the Prophet, where Moses advises Muhammad from his own experience as messenger and lawgiver.}}}} Like Muhammad, Moses is defined in the Quran as both prophet (''nabi'') and messenger ('']''), the latter term indicating that he was one of those prophets who brought a book and law to his people.<ref>{{cite book|last=Azadpur|first=M.|year=2009|chapter=Charity and the Good Life: On Islamic Prophetic Ethics|title=Crisis, Call, and Leadership in the Abrahamic Traditions|pages=153–167|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|location=New York}}</ref>{{Sfn | Keeler | 2005 | p = 55}} | |||
], ]]] | |||
Most of the key events in Moses' life which are narrated in the Bible are to be found dispersed through the different chapters ('']'') of the Quran, with a story about meeting the Quranic figure ] which is not found in the Bible.{{Sfn | Keeler | 2005 | pp = 55–66}} | |||
In the Moses' story narrated by the Quran, Jochebed is commanded by God to place Moses in a coffin<ref>{{qref|20|39|b=y}}</ref> and cast him on the waters of the Nile, thus abandoning him completely to God's protection.{{Sfn | Keeler | 2005 | pp = 55–66}}<ref>{{qref|28|7|b=y}}</ref> The Pharaoh's wife ], not his daughter, found Moses floating in the waters of the Nile. She convinced the Pharaoh to keep him as their son because they were not blessed with any children.<ref>{{qref|28|9|b=y}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Prophets in the Quran: an introduction to the Quran and Muslim exegesis|last=Wheeler|first=Brannon M.|publisher=Continuum|year=2002|isbn=0-8264-4957-3}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Noble Women of Faith: Asiya, Mary, Khadija, Fatima|author=Shahada Sharelle Abdul Haqq|edition=illustrated|publisher=Tughra Books|year=2012|isbn=978-1-59784-268-6}}</ref> | |||
The Quran's account emphasizes Moses' mission to invite the Pharaoh to accept God's divine message<ref>{{qref |79|17-19|b=y}}</ref> as well as give salvation to the Israelites.{{Sfn | Keeler | 2005 | pp = 55–66}}<ref>{{qref |20|47-48|b=y}}</ref> According to the Quran, Moses encourages the Israelites to enter Canaan, but they are unwilling to fight the Canaanites, fearing certain defeat. Moses responds by pleading to Allah that he and his brother Aaron be separated from the rebellious Israelites, after which the Israelites are made to wander for 40 years.<ref>{{qref|5|20|b=y}}</ref> | |||
One of the ], or traditional narratives about Muhammad's life, describes a meeting in heaven between Moses and Muhammad, which resulted in Muslims observing ].<ref>{{Href|bukhari|7517|b=y}}</ref> ] says this was "one of the crucial events in Muhammad's life".<ref>{{Citation|last=Smith|first=Huston|author-link=Huston Smith|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eDMIwLHwKOcC|title=The World's Religions|publisher=Harper Collins|year=1991|page=245|isbn=978-0-06-250811-9}}.</ref> | |||
According to some Islamic tradition, Moses is buried at ], near ].<ref>{{cite book|title=Primitive Semitic Religion Today|author=Samuel Curtiss|year=2005|publisher=Kessinger|isbn=1-4179-7346-3|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qMTRCuk3gD0C&q=%22nebi+musa%22|pages=163–4}}</ref> | |||
===Baháʼí Faith=== | |||
Moses is one of the most important of God's messengers in the ], being designated a ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bahai.org/beliefs/god-his-creation|title=God and His Creation|publisher=Baháʼí International Community}}</ref> An epithet of Moses in Baháʼí scriptures is the "One Who Conversed with God".<ref>{{Cite book|title=Epistle to the Son of the Wolf|author=Bahá'u'lláh|publisher=Baháʼí Publishing Trust|year=1988|isbn=978-0-87743-048-3|location=Wilmette, Illinois|page=104|url=https://www.bahai.org/r/952445237}}</ref> | |||
According to the Baháʼí Faith, ], the founder of the faith, is the one who spoke to Moses from the ].<ref>{{cite letter|author=Universal House of Justice: Department of the Secretariat|recipient=|subject=Issues raised within letter|language=en|date=15 October 1992|url=https://www.bahai.org/library/authoritative-texts/the-universal-house-of-justice/messages/19921015_001/1#202319491|access-date=10 June 2019}}</ref> | |||
] has highlighted the fact that Moses, like ], had none of the makings of a ], but through God's assistance he was able to achieve many great things. He is described as having been "for a long time a shepherd in the wilderness", of having had a ], and of being "much hated and detested" by Pharaoh and the ancient Egyptians of his time. He is said to have been raised in an oppressive household, and to have been known, in Egypt, as a man who had committed murder – though he had done so in order to prevent an act of cruelty.<ref name="Answered Questions">{{Cite book|title=Some Answered Questions|author=ʻAbdu'l-Bahá|author-link=ʻAbdu'l-Bahá|translator-last=Barney|translator-first=Laura Clifford|publisher=Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co. Ltd.|year=1908|location=London|pages=17–18|url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.21877/page/n35/mode/2up}}</ref> | |||
Nevertheless, like Abraham, through the assistance of God, he achieved great things and gained renown even beyond the ]. Chief among these achievements was the freeing of his people, the Hebrews, from bondage in Egypt and leading "them to the Holy Land". He is viewed as the one who bestowed on Israel "the religious and the civil law" which gave them "honour among all nations",<!--"By virtue of that which He established, they so progressed as to be singled outamong all nations" which is essentially what the direct quote is saying but not exactly, so consider rewording.--> and which spread their fame to different parts of the world.<ref name="Answered Questions"/> | |||
Furthermore, through the law, Moses is believed to have led the Hebrews "to the highest possible degree of ] at that period".<!-- This is in the source.--> 'Abdul'l-Bahá asserts that the ancient Greek philosophers regarded "the illustrious men of Israel as models of perfection". Chief among these philosophers, he says, was ] who "visited Syria, and took from the children of Israel the teachings of the Unity of God and of the immortality of the soul".<ref name="Answered Questions"/> | |||
Moses is further seen as paving the way for ] and his ultimate revelation, and as a teacher of truth, whose teachings were in line with the customs of his time.<ref>{{Citation|title=The Baháʼí: The Religious Construction of a Global Identity|page=246|first=Michael|last=McMullen|year=2000}}.</ref> | |||
=== Druze faith === | |||
Moses is considered an important prophet of God in the ], being among the seven prophets who appeared in different periods of history.<ref name="Hitti 1928 37">{{cite book|title=The Origins of the Druze People and Religion: With Extracts from Their Sacred Writings|first=Philip K.|last=Hitti|year=1928|isbn=9781465546623|page=37|publisher=Library of Alexandria}}</ref><ref name="Dana 2008 17">{{cite book|title=The Druze in the Middle East: Their Faith, Leadership, Identity and Status|first=Nissim|last=Dana|year=2008|isbn=9781903900369|page=17|publisher=Michigan University press}}</ref> | |||
==Legacy in politics and law== | |||
{{globalize|date=May 2018}} | |||
]]] | |||
In a metaphorical sense in the Christian tradition, a "Moses" has been referred to as the leader who delivers the people from a terrible situation. Among the ] known to have used the symbolism of Moses were ], ], ], ], ] and ], who referred to his supporters as "the Moses generation".<ref>{{cite book|last=Ifil|first=Gwen|title=The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama|publisher=Random House|year=2009|page=58}}</ref> | |||
In subsequent years, theologians linked the Ten Commandments with the formation of early ]. Scottish theologian ] described them as "the universal foundation of all things ... the law without which ]hood is impossible. ... Our society is founded upon it."<ref>{{cite book|last=Barclay|first=William|title=The Ten Commandments|publisher=Westminster John Knox Press|orig-year=1973|year=1998|page=4}}</ref> ] addressed the ] in 2015 stating that all people need to "keep alive their sense of unity by means of just legislation ... the figure of Moses leads us directly to God and thus to the transcendent dignity of the human being".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.vox.com/2015/9/24/9391549/pope-remarks-full-text|title=Pope Francis addresses Congress|first=Jonathan|last=Allen|work=Vox|date=September 24, 2015|access-date=May 5, 2022}}</ref> | |||
===In United States history=== | |||
====Pilgrims==== | |||
], ], and ], at prayer during their voyage to North America. 1844 painting by ]]] | |||
References to Moses were used by the ], who relied on the story of Moses to give meaning and hope to the lives of ] seeking ] and ] in North America. ] was the first governor of ] and first signer of the ], which he wrote in 1620 during the ship '']'''s three-month voyage. He inspired the Pilgrims with a "sense of earthly grandeur and divine purpose", notes historian ],{{Sfn | Meacham | 2006 | p = 40}} and was called the "Moses of the Pilgrims".<ref>{{Citation|last=Talbot|first=Archie Lee|title=A New Plymouth Colony at Kennebeck|place=Brunswick|year=1930|url=http://catalog.loc.gov/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?DB=local&BBID=7810528&v3=1|publisher=Library of Congress}}.</ref> Early American writer ] noted the similarity of the founding of America by the Pilgrims to that of ] by Moses: | |||
{{blockquote |Next to the fugitives whom Moses led out of Egypt, the little shipload of outcasts who landed at Plymouth are destined to influence the future of the world. The spiritual thirst of mankind has for ages been quenched at Hebrew fountains; but the embodiment in human institutions of truths uttered by the ] eighteen centuries ago was to be mainly the work of Puritan thought and Puritan self-devotion. ... If their municipal regulations smack somewhat of Judaism, yet there can be no nobler aim or more practical wisdom than theirs; for it was to make the law of man a living counterpart of the law of God, in their highest conception of it.<ref name= Lowell>{{Citation|last=Lowell|first=James Russell|title=The Round Table|publisher=Gorham Press|place=Boston|year=1913|pages=217–18}}</ref>}} | |||
Following Carver's death the following year, ] was made governor. He feared that the remaining Pilgrims would not survive the hardships of the new land, with half their people having already died within months of arriving. Bradford evoked the symbol of Moses to the weakened and desperate Pilgrims to help calm them and give them hope: "Violence will break all. Where is the meek and humble spirit of Moses?"<ref>{{cite book|last=Arber|first=Edward|title=The Story of the Pilgrim Fathers|publisher=Houghton Mifflin|year=1897|page=345}}</ref> ] explains the attitude of the Pilgrims: "We considered ourselves the 'New Israel', particularly we in America. And for that reason, we knew who we were, what we believed in and valued, and what our ']' was."{{Sfn | Dever | 2006 | pp = ix, 234}}<ref>{{cite book|quote= animated by the true spirit of the Hebrew prophets and law-givers. They walked by the light of the ], and were resolved to form a Commonwealth in accordance with the social laws and ideas of the ]. ... they were themselves the true descendants of Israel, spiritual children of the prophets.|last=Moses|first=Adolph|title=Yahvism and Other Discourses|publisher=Louisville Council of Jewish Women|year=1903|page=93}}</ref> | |||
====Founding Fathers of the United States==== | |||
] | |||
On July 4, 1776, immediately after the ] was officially passed, the ] asked ], ], and ] to design a seal that would clearly represent a symbol for the new United States. They chose the symbol of Moses leading the Israelites to freedom.{{Sfn | Feiler | 2009 | p = 35}} | |||
After the death of ] in 1799, two thirds of his eulogies referred to him as "America's Moses", with one orator saying that "Washington has been the same to us as Moses was to the Children of Israel."{{Sfn | Feiler | 2009 | p = 102}} | |||
Benjamin Franklin, in 1788, saw the difficulties that some of the newly independent ] were having in forming a government, and proposed that until a new code of laws could be agreed to, they should be governed by "the laws of Moses", as contained in the Old Testament.{{Sfn | Franklin | 1834 |p = 504}} He justified his proposal by explaining that the laws had worked in biblical times: "The ] ... having rescued them from bondage by many miracles, performed by his servant Moses, he personally delivered to that chosen servant, in the presence of the whole nation, a constitution and code of laws for their observance."{{Sfn | Franklin | 1834 | p = 211}} | |||
], 2nd ], stated why he relied on the laws of Moses over ] for establishing the ]: "As much as I love, esteem, and admire the Greeks, I believe the Hebrews have done more to enlighten and civilize the world. Moses did more than all their legislators and philosophers."{{Sfn | Meacham | 2006 | p = 40}} Swedish historian ] credited Moses as the "first to proclaim the ]".<ref name= Shuldiner>{{cite book|last=Shuldiner|first=David Philip|title=Of Moses and Marx|publisher=Greenwood|year=1999|page=35}}.</ref> | |||
====Slavery and civil rights==== | |||
] conductor and ] veteran ] was nicknamed "Moses" due to her various missions in freeing and ferrying escaped enslaved persons to freedom in the free states of the ].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Clinton|first=Catherine|author-link=Catherine Clinton|year=2004|title=Harriet Tubman: The Road to Freedom|location=New York|publisher=Little, Brown and Company|isbn=0-316-14492-4|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/harriettubmanroa00clin}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|first1=Joyce Stokes|last1=Jones|first2=Michele Jones|last2=Galvin|title=Beyond the Underground: Aunt Harriet, Moses of Her People|year=1999–2012|publisher=Sankofa Media|isbn=9780989575508|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2-asngEACAAJ}}</ref> | |||
Historian Gladys L. Knight describes how leaders who emerged during and after the period in which ] was legal often personified the Moses symbol. "The symbol of Moses was empowering in that it served to amplify a need for freedom."<ref>{{cite book|last=Knight|first=Gladys L.|title=Icons of African American Protest|volume=I|publisher=Greenwood|year=2009|page=183}}</ref> Therefore, when ] was ] after the passage of the ], ] said they had lost "their Moses".<ref>{{cite book|first=Martha|last=Hodes|title=Mourning Lincoln|url=https://archive.org/details/mourninglincoln0000hode|url-access=registration|year=2015|publisher=Yale University Press|pages=, 237|isbn=978-0-300-21356-0}}</ref> Lincoln biographer ] writes, "The millions whom Abraham Lincoln delivered from slavery will ever liken him to Moses, the deliverer of Israel."<ref>{{cite book|last=Coffin|first=Charles Carleton|title=Abraham Lincoln|publisher=Ulan Press|type=reprint|orig-year=1893|year=2012|page=534}}</ref> | |||
In the 1960s, a leading figure in the ] was ], who was called "a modern Moses", and often referred to Moses in his speeches: "The struggle of Moses, the struggle of his devoted followers as they sought to get out of Egypt. This is something of the story of every people struggling for freedom."<ref>{{cite book|orig-year=1957, 1968|quote=I want to preach this morning from the subject, 'The Birth of a New Nation' And I would like to use as a basis for our thinking together, a story that has long since been stenciled on the mental sheets of succeeding generations. It is the story of the Exodus, the story of the flight of the Hebrew people from the bondage of Egypt, through the wilderness and finally, to the Promised Land. ... The struggle of Moses, the struggle of his devoted followers as they sought to get out of Egypt.<p>And I've looked over. And I've seen the promised land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land.</p>|last=King|first=Martin Luther Jr.|title=The Papers|publisher=University of California Press|year=2000|page=155}}</ref> | |||
==Cultural portrayals and references== | |||
===Art=== | |||
]'', ], by ], 1513–1515, ], Rome]] | |||
Moses often appears in Christian art, and the Pope's private chapel, the ], has a ]s of the ''life of Moses'' on the southern wall, opposite a set with the '']''. They were painted in 1481–82 by a group of mostly Florentine artists including ] and ]. | |||
Because of an ambiguity in the Hebrew word קֶרֶן (keren) meaning both horn and ray or beam, in ]'s ] translation of the Bible Moses' face is described as {{lang|la|cornutam}} ("horned") when descending from Mount Sinai with the tablets, Moses is usually shown in Western art until the Renaissance ], which at least served as a convenient identifying attribute.<ref>{{cite book|last=Hall|first=James|title=Hall's Dictionary of Subjects and Symbols in Art|page=213|year=1996|edition=2nd|publisher=John Murray|isbn=0-7195-4147-6}}</ref> In at least some of these depictions, an antisemitic meaning is likely to have been intended,<ref>{{cite book|first1=Ruth|last1=Mellinkoff|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=44DCt8_1QCAC|title=The Horned Moses in Medieval Art and Thought|series=California Studies in the History of Art|volume=14|publisher=University of California Press|date=1970|isbn=0520017056|pages=136–7}}</ref> for example on the ].<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Strickland|first1=Debra Higgs|title=Edward I, Exodus, and England on the Hereford World Map|journal=]|url=https://eprints.gla.ac.uk/130830/1/130830.pdf|date=2018|volume=93|issue=2|doi=10.1086/696540|pages=436–7}}</ref> | |||
With the prophet ], he is a necessary figure in the ], a subject with a long history in Eastern Orthodox art. It appears in the art of the Western Church from the 10th century, and was especially popular between about 1475 and 1535.<ref>{{cite book|last=Schiller|first=Gertud|title=Iconography of Christian Art|volume=I|pages=146–152|year=1971|publisher=Lund Humphries|location=London|isbn=0-85331-270-2}}</ref> | |||
====Michelangelo's statue==== | |||
{{main|Moses (Michelangelo)}} | |||
]'s ] (1513–1515), in the Church of ], ], is one of the most familiar statues in the world. The horns the sculptor included on Moses' head are the result of a mistranslation of the Hebrew Bible into the Latin ] with which Michelangelo was familiar. The Hebrew word taken from ''Exodus'' means either a "horn" or an "irradiation". Experts at the ] show that the term was used when Moses "returned to his people after seeing as much of the Glory of the Lord as human eye could stand", and his face "reflected radiance".<ref>{{cite book|editor-last=MacLean|editor-first=Margaret|title=Art and Archaeology|volume=VI|publisher=Archaeological Institute of America|year=1917|page=97}}</ref> In early ], moreover, Moses is often "shown with rays coming out of his head".<ref>{{cite book|last=Devore|first=Gary M.|title=Walking Tours of Ancient Rome: A Secular Guidebook to the Eternal City|publisher=Mercury Guides|year=2008|page=126|isbn=978-0-615-19497-4}}</ref> | |||
====Depiction on U.S. government buildings==== | |||
]]] | |||
Moses is depicted in several U.S. government buildings because of his legacy as a lawgiver. In the ] stands a large statue of Moses alongside a statue of ]. Moses is one of the twenty-three lawgivers depicted in ] ]s in the ] of the ] in the ]. The plaque's overview states: "Moses (c. 1350–1250 B.C.) Hebrew prophet and lawgiver; transformed a wandering people into a nation; received the Ten Commandments."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aoc.gov/capitol-hill/relief-portrait-plaques-lawgivers/moses|title=Moses, Relief Portrait|publisher=Architect of the Capitol|access-date=May 5, 2022}}</ref> | |||
The other 22 figures have their profiles turned to Moses, which is the only forward-facing bas-relief.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aoc.gov/cc/art/lawgivers/moses.cfm|title=Relief Portraits of Lawgivers: Moses|publisher=Architect of the Capitol|date=2009-02-13|access-date=2010-03-02|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100302060556/http://www.aoc.gov/cc/art/lawgivers/moses.cfm|archive-date=2010-03-02}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Courtroom Friezes: North and South Walls: Information Sheet|publisher=Supreme Court of the United States|url=https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/north%26southwalls.pdf|access-date=2015-09-29|archive-date=2010-06-01|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100601113942/http://www.supremecourt.gov/about/north%26southwalls.pdf|url-status=dead}}.</ref> | |||
Moses appears eight times in carvings that ring the ] ceiling. His face is presented along with other ancient figures such as ], the Greek god ], and the Roman goddess of wisdom, ]. The Supreme Court Building's east pediment depicts Moses holding two tablets. Tablets representing the Ten Commandments can be found carved in the oak courtroom doors, on the support frame of the courtroom's bronze gates, and in the library woodwork. A controversial image is one that sits directly above the ]' head. In the center of the 40-foot-long Spanish marble carving is a tablet displaying ] I through X, with some numbers partially hidden.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.christianindex.org/1087.article|title=In the Supreme Court itself, Moses and his law on display|newspaper=Religion News Service|publisher=Christian Index|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091207024525/http://www.christianindex.org/1087.article|archive-date=2009-12-07}}</ref> | |||
===Literature=== | |||
* ], in his last book, '']'' in 1939, postulated that Moses was an Egyptian nobleman who adhered to the ] of ]. Following a theory proposed by a contemporary ], Freud believed that Moses was murdered in the wilderness, producing a collective sense of ] guilt that has been at the heart of Judaism ever since. "Judaism had been a religion of the father, Christianity became a religion of the son", he wrote. The possible Egyptian origin of Moses and of his message has received significant scholarly attention.{{Sfn | Assmann | 1997}}{{Page needed |date=September 2015}}<ref>{{cite book|first=Y.|last=Yerushalmi|type=monograph|title=Freud's Moses}}</ref>{{full citation needed|reason=publisher? date?|date=May 2022}} Opponents of this view observe that the religion of the Torah seems different from ] in everything except the central feature of devotion to a single god,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.atenism.org/|publisher=Atenism|title=Order of the Aten Temple|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060901060412/http://atenism.org/|archive-date=2006-09-01}}</ref> although this has been countered by a variety of arguments, e.g. pointing out the similarities between the ] and ].{{Sfn | Assmann | 1997}}{{Page needed |date=September 2015}}<ref>{{cite journal|first=James E.|last=Atwell|title=An Egyptian Source for Genesis 1|journal=]|year=2000|volume=51|issue=2|pages=441–77|doi=10.1093/jts/51.2.441}}</ref> Freud's interpretation of the historical Moses is not well accepted among ]s, and is considered ] by many.<ref>{{cite book|title=Freud and the Legacy of Moses|author-link=Richard J. Bernstein|first=Richard J.|last=Bernstein|location=New York|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=1998|isbn=978-0-521-63096-2|url=https://archive.org/details/freudlegacyofmos00bern}}</ref>{{Page needed |date=September 2015}} | |||
* ]'s novella '']'' (1944) is a retelling of the story of the Exodus from Egypt, with Moses as its main character.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ch0SyirgZDgC&q=%22The+Tables+of+the+Law+depicts%22|title=Rewriting Moses: The Narrative Eclipse of the Text|first=Brian|last=Britt|year=2004|page=28|publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing|via=Google Books|isbn=978-0-567-38116-3}}</ref> | |||
* ]'s novel ''All the Trumpets Sounded'' (1942) tells a fictionalized life of Moses.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1942/07/26/archives/moses-reconstructed-all-the-trumpets-sounded-by-wg-hardy-501-pp-new.html|title=Moses Reconstructed; All the Trumpets Sounded. By W. G. Hardy|last=Cournos|first=John|date=July 26, 1942|work=The New York Times|access-date=2019-12-22}}</ref> | |||
*]'s novel '']'' (1997) is a novelization of the life of Moses.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Books By Orson Scott Card – Stone Tables|url=http://www.hatrack.com/osc/books/stonetables.shtml|access-date=2021-03-23|website=Hatrack}}</ref> | |||
===Film and television=== | |||
{{refimprove section|reason=Decent secondary source needed, existing is not enough|date=September 2024}} | |||
] in '']'', 1956]] | |||
* Moses was portrayed by ] in ]'s 1923 ] '']''. Moses also appeared as the central character in the 1956 remake, also directed by DeMille and called '']'', in which he was portrayed by ], who had a noted resemblance to Michelangelo's statue. A ] was produced in 2006.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/09/AR2006040901298.html|newspaper=The Washington Post|title='The Ten Commandments': Exodus Comes to ABC|first=Tom|last=Shales|date=April 10, 2006|access-date=May 25, 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Ross|first1=Steven J.|title=Hollywood Left and Right: How Movie Stars Shaped American Politics|date=1 August 2011|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-972048-4|page=277|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-OHQCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA277|language=en}}</ref> | |||
* ] played ''Moses'' in the 1975 television ] '']''.<!-- see article for sources. IMDb is not reliable --> | |||
* In the 1981 ] '']'', Moses was portrayed by ].<!-- see article for sources. IMDb is not reliable --> | |||
*In 1995, Sir ] portrayed Moses in the 1995 TV film ], produced by British and Italian production companies. | |||
* Moses appeared as the central character in the 1998 ] animated film '']''. His speaking voice was provided by ], with American gospel singer and tenor ] providing his singing voice. | |||
* ] was the narrator of the 2007 animated film '']''.<!-- see article for sources. IMDb is not reliable --> | |||
* In the 2009 ] '']'', Moses was portrayed by ].<!-- see article for sources. IMDb is not reliable --> | |||
* In the 2013 television miniseries '']'', Moses was portrayed by ].<!-- see article for sources. IMDb is not reliable --> | |||
* In ], the 2018 animated film by ], Moses appears as one of the key characters in the reinterpretation the ].<ref>{{Cite web|date=2019-07-14|title=Seder-Masochism – A new animated feature from the creator of Sita Sings the Blues|url=https://sedermasochism.com/|access-date=2023-12-21|language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
* ] portrayed Moses in ]'s 2014 film '']''<!-- see article for sources. IMDb is not reliable --> which portrayed Moses and ] as being raised by ] as cousins.<!-- see article for sources. IMDb is not reliable --> | |||
* The 2016 Brazilian Biblical telenovela '']'' features Brazilian actor ] portraying Moses. | |||
==Criticism of Moses== | |||
] {{circa|1900}}]] | |||
In the late eighteenth century, the deist ] commented at length on Moses' Laws in '']'' (1794, 1795, and 1807). Paine considered Moses to be a "detestable ]", and cited ] as an example of his "unexampled atrocities".<ref>Paine, Thomas (1796) ''], part II''.</ref> In the passage, after the Israelite army returned from ], Moses orders the killing of the Midianites with the exception of the virgin girls who were to be kept for the Israelites. | |||
{{blockquote |Have ye saved all the women alive? behold, these caused the children of Israel, through the counsel of ], to commit trespass against the Lord in the matter of ], and there was a plague among the congregation of the Lord. Now, therefore, kill every male among the little ones, and kill every woman that hath known a man by lying with him; but all the women-children, that ], keep alive for yourselves.|author=|title=|source=Numbers 31<ref>{{bibleverse ||Numbers|31:13–18|KJV}}</ref>}} | |||
Rabbi Joel Grossman argued that the story is a "powerful ] of ] and ]", and that Moses' execution of the women was a symbolic condemnation of those who seek to turn sex and desire to evil purposes.<ref name=":0">Grossman, Joel (2008), {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304101001/http://libraryminyan.org/divreitorah/Jole%20Grossman%20-%20Matot.htm|date=2016-03-04}}. Temple Beth Am Library Minyan.</ref> He says that the Midianite women "used their sexual attractiveness to turn the Israelite men away from God and toward the worship of Baal Peor ".<ref name=":0"/> Rabbi Grossman argues that the genocide of all the Midianite non-virgin women, including those that did not seduce Jewish men, was fair because some of them had sex for "improper reasons".<ref name=":0"/> Alan Levin, an educational specialist with the ] movement, has similarly suggested that the story should be taken as a ], to "warn successive generations of Jews to watch their own idolatrous behavior".<ref>Levin, Alan J. . My Jewish Learning.</ref> ] emphasizes that this war was not fought at Moses' behest, but was commanded by God as an act of revenge against the Midianite women,<ref>{{Citation|url=http://www.ou.org/torah/tt/5763/matmas63/aliya.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030802230201/http://www.ou.org/torah/tt/5763/matmas63/aliya.htm|url-status=dead|archive-date=2003-08-02|title=Aliya-by-Aliya Sedra Summary|series=Torah Tidbits|publisher=OU}}.</ref> who, according to the Biblical account, had seduced the Israelites and led them to sin. Linguist ] remarked: "God's work or not, this is military behaviour that would be tabooed today and might lead to a ]s trial."<ref>Allan, Keith (2019). ''The Oxford Handbook of Taboo Words and Language''. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 15. {{ISBN|9780198808190}}. Retrieved 14 March 2021.</ref> | |||
Moses has also been the subject of much feminist criticism. ] scholar ] has argued that Moses can be the object of feminist inquiry.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Sherwood|first=Yvonne|title=The Bible and Feminism: Remapping the Field|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2017|isbn=978-0-19-103419-0|pages=228}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ], according to ], a wife of Moses | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
{{Notelist}} | |||
<div class="references-small"><references/></div> | |||
== |
==References== | ||
{{Reflist}} | |||
* | |||
* | |||
===Sources=== | |||
* | |||
* {{JewishEncyclopedia|article=Moses|url=http://jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=830&letter=M}} | |||
* | |||
* {{Citation|last=Assmann|first=Jan|author-link=Jan Assmann|year=1997|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IjUiie30Z9cC|title=Moses the Egyptian: The Memory of Egypt in Western Monotheism|publisher=Harvard University Press|isbn=978-0-674-58738-0}}. | |||
* The entire context of the cited chapter of Strabo's work | |||
* {{Citation|last=Blackham|first=Paul|editor-first=Paul Louis|editor-last=Metzger|title=Trinitarian Soundings in Systematic Theology|type=essay|contribution=The Trinity in the Hebrew Scriptures|publisher=Continuum International|year=2005}}. | |||
* {{Citation|title=Exodus 1-18: A Critical and Exegetical Commentary: Volume 1: Chapters 1-10|last=Davies|first=Graham I.|publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing|year=2020|isbn=978-0-567-68869-9|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mkzODwAAQBAJ&pg=PA181|series=International Critical Commentary}} | |||
* {{Citation|last=Dever|first=William G|title=Who Were the Early Israelites, and Where Did They Come From?|publisher=William B. Eerdmans|year=2006|orig-year=2003|author-mask=3|place=Grand Rapids, MI}} | |||
* {{Citation|last=Dozeman|first=Thomas B|title=Commentary on Exodus|publisher=William B Eerdmans|year=2009|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fRXjfa6RWPwC&pg=PA81|isbn=978-0-8028-2617-6}} | |||
* {{Citation|last=Droge|first=Arthur J|title=Homer or Moses?: Early Christian Interpretations of the History of Culture|publisher=Mohr Siebeck|year=1989}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last=Feiler|first=Bruce|title=America's Prophet: Moses and the American Story|publisher=William Morrow|year=2009}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last=Feldman|first=Louis H|title=Josephus's Interpretation of the Bible|publisher=University of California Press|year=1998}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last1=Finkelstein|first1=Israel|author1-link=Israel Finkelstein|last2=Silberman|first2=Neil Asher|author2-link=Neil Asher Silberman|title=The Bible Unearthed|place=New York|publisher=Free Press|year=2001|isbn=978-0-684-86912-4}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last1=Franklin|first1=Benjamin|editor-last=Franklin|editor-first=William Temple|title=Memoirs|volume=2|publisher=McCarty & Davis|place=Philadelphia|type=ebook|year=1834}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last=Guthrie|first=Kenneth Sylvan|title=Numenius of Apamea: The Father of Neo-Platonism|publisher=George Bell & Sons|year=1917}} | |||
* {{Citation|last=Hamilton|first=Victor|title=Exodus: An Exegetical Commentary|publisher=Baker Books|year=2011|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vUry0cGNR_IC|isbn=978-1-4412-4009-5}}. | |||
* {{Citation|first=Annabel|last=Keeler|contribution=Moses from a Muslim Perspective|editor1-last=Solomon|editor1-first=Norman|editor2-last=Harries|editor2-first=Richard|editor3-last=Winter|editor3-first=Tim|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9A4JZ8CSJJwC&pg=PA55|title=Abraham's Children: Jews, Christians, and Muslims in Conversation|publisher=T&T Clark|year=2005|pages=55–66|isbn=978-0-567-08171-1}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last=Meacham|first=Jon|title=American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, and the Making of a Nation|publisher=Random House|year=2006}}. | |||
* {{Cite book|last=Meyers|first=Carol|author-link=Carol Meyers|title=Exodus|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2005|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0QHHITXsyskC&q=Carol+Meyers+Exodus|isbn=978-0-521-00291-2}} | |||
* {{Citation|last=Shmuel|first=Safrai|editor-first=M|editor-last=Stern|title=The Jewish People in the First Century|publisher=Van Gorcum Fortress Press|year=1976}} | |||
* {{Citation|last=Ska|first=Jean Louis|title=The Exegesis of the Pentateuch: Exegetical Studies and Basic Questions|year=2009|publisher=Mohr Siebeck|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7g4yqsv0S0cC&pg=PA260|isbn=978-3-16-149905-0|pages=30–31, 260}} | |||
* {{Citation|last=Van Seters|first=John|chapter=Moses|editor1-last=Barton|editor1-first=John|title=The Biblical World|publisher=Taylor & Francis|year=2004|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LtD4Xomh4XgC&pg=PA194|isbn=978-0-415-35091-4}} | |||
==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
{{Refbegin|40em}} | |||
*] ''Moses''. New York: Putnam, 1951. ISBN 999740629X {{Please check ISBN|999740629X }} | |||
* {{Citation|last=Asch|first=Sholem|author-link=Sholem Asch|year=1958|title=Moses|place=New York|publisher=Putnam|isbn=978-0-7426-9137-7}}. | |||
*] ''Moses: The Revelation and the Covenant.'' New York: Harper, 1958. | |||
* Peter Barenboim, , {{ISBN|5-94381-123-0}}, | |||
*] ''Moses: The Man and his Vision.'' New York: Praeger, 1975. | |||
* {{Citation|last=Barzel|first=Hillel|contribution=Moses: Tragedy and Sublimity|title=Literary Interpretations of Biblical Narratives|editor1-first=Kenneth RR|editor1-last=Gros Louis|editor2-first=James S|editor2-last=Ackerman|editor3-first=Thayer S|editor3-last=Warshaw|pages=120–40|place=Nashville|publisher=Abingdon Press|year=1974|isbn=978-0-687-22131-8}}. | |||
*] ''Moses and Monotheism.'' New York: Vintage, 1967. ISBN 0-394-70014-7 | |||
* {{Citation|last=Buber|first=Martin|author-link=Martin Buber|year=1958|title=Moses: The Revelation and the Covenant|place=New York|publisher=Harper}}. | |||
*Kirsch, Jonathan. ''Moses: A Life.'' New York: Ballantine, 1998. | |||
* {{Citation|author-link=Orson Scott Card|last=Card|first=Orson Scott|title=Stone Tables|publisher=Deseret Book Co|year=1998|isbn=978-1-57345-115-4|url=https://archive.org/details/stonetablesnovel00card}}. | |||
*] "Thou Shalt Have No Other Gods Before Me" in ''The Ten Commandments'', 3-70. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1943. | |||
* {{Citation|last=Chasidah|first=Yishai|contribution=Moses|title=Encyclopedia of Biblical Personalities: Anthologized from the Talmud, Midrash and Rabbinic Writings|pages=340–99|place=Brooklyn|publisher=Shaar Press|year=1994}}. | |||
*] ''Moses and Akhenaten. The Secret History of Egypt at the Time of the Exodus.'' Bear & Co., 2002. ISBN 1-59143-004-6 | |||
* {{Citation|last=Cohen|first=Joel|title=Moses: A Memoir|place=Mahwah, NJ|publisher=Paulist Press|year=2003|isbn=978-0-8091-0558-8}}. | |||
*Werding, Hans. ''Moses war Tutenchamun'' ISBN 3-9803892-1-9 | |||
* {{Citation|url=https://www.nationalchurchillmuseum.org/blog/winstonwednesdays-moses/|publisher=National Churchill Museum|last=Churchill|first=Winston|date=November 8, 1931|title=Moses|newspaper=Sunday Chronicle|at=Thoughts, 205}}. | |||
*] "Moses: Portrait of a Leader" in ''Messengers of God'', 174-205. New York: Random House, 1976. ISBN 0-671-54134-X | |||
* {{Citation|author-link=David Daiches|last=Daiches|first=David|title=Moses: The Man and his Vision|place=New York|publisher=Praeger|year=1975|isbn=978-0-275-33740-7|url=https://archive.org/details/mosesmanhisvisio00daic}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last=Dever|first=William G|title=What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It?|publisher=William B. Eerdmans|year=2002|isbn=978-0-8028-2126-3|author-link=William G. Dever}}. | |||
* {{Citation|author-link=Howard Fast|last=Fast|first=Howard|title=Moses, Prince of Egypt|place=New York|publisher=Crown|year=1958}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last1=Finkelstein|first1=Israel|author1-mask=3|last2=Silberman|first2=Neil Asher|author2-mask=3|title=The Bible Unearthed|place=New York|publisher=Simon & Schuster|year=2001b}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last=Freud|first=Sigmund|author-link=Sigmund Freud|year=1967|title=Moses and Monotheism|place=New York|publisher=Vintage|isbn=978-0-394-70014-4}}. | |||
* {{Citation|author=Gregory of Nyssa|author-link=Gregory of Nyssa|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wAJ6fwFAligC|title=The Life of Moses|others=Transl. Abraham J. Malherbe and Everett Ferguson. Preface by ]|series=The Classics of Western Spirituality|publisher=Paulist Press|year=1978|isbn=978-0-8091-2112-0}}. 208 pp. | |||
* {{Citation|author-link=Marek Halter|last=Halter|first=Marek|title=Zipporah, Wife of Moses|place=New York|publisher=Crown|year=2005|isbn=978-1-4000-5279-0|url=https://archive.org/details/zipporahwifeofmo00halt_0}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last=Hoffmeier|first=James K|contribution=Moses and the ''Exodus''|title=Israel in Egypt: The Evidence for the Authenticity of the Exodus Tradition|pages=135–63|place=New York|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1996}}. | |||
* {{Citation|author-link=Joseph Holt Ingraham (writer)|last=Ingraham|first=Joseph Holt|title=The Pillar of Fire: Or Israel in Bondage|orig-year=New York: ], 1859|type=reprint|place=Ann Arbor, MI|publisher=Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library|year=2006|isbn=978-1-4255-6491-9}}. | |||
* ]. ''Moses: A Life.'' New York: Ballantine, 1998. {{ISBN|0-345-41269-9}}. | |||
* Kohn, Rebecca. ''Seven Days to the Sea: An Epic Novel of the Exodus''. New York: Rugged Land, 2006. {{ISBN|1-59071-049-5}}. | |||
* {{Citation|others=Lehman, S.M. (translator)|editor-last=Freedman|editor-first=H|title=Midrash Rabbah|type=10 volumes|publisher=The Soncino Press|place=London|year=1983}}. | |||
* {{Citation|author-link=Thomas Mann|last=Mann|first=Thomas|contribution=Thou Shalt Have No Other Gods Before Me|title=The Ten Commandments|pages=3–70|place=New York|publisher=Simon & Schuster|year=1943}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last=Salibi|first=Kamal|title=The Bible Came from Arabia|place=London|work=Jonathan Cape|year=1985}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last=Sandmel|first=Samuel|title=Alone Atop the Mountain|place=Garden City, NY|publisher=Doubleday|year=1973|isbn=978-0-385-03877-5|url=https://archive.org/details/aloneatopmountai00sand}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last=Van Seters|first=John|title=The Life of Moses: The Yahwist as Historian in Exodus-Numbers|publisher=Peeters Publishers|year=1994|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qOOZgbPQlxUC|author-mask=3|isbn=978-90-390-0112-7}}. | |||
* {{Citation|last=Smith|first=Huston|author-link=Huston Smith|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eDMIwLHwKOcC|title=The World's Religions|publisher=Harper Collins|year=1991|isbn=978-0-06-250811-9}} | |||
* {{Citation|author-link=Arthur Eustace Southon|last=Southon|first=Arthur Eustace|title=On Eagles' Wings|orig-year=London: Cassell & Co., 1937|type=reprint|place=New York|publisher=McGraw-Hill|year=1954}}. | |||
* {{Citation|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yCkRz5pfxz0C|first1=K.|last1=van der Toorn|first2=Bob|last2=Becking|first3=Pieter Willem|last3=van der Horst|title=Dictionary of deities and demons in the Bible|isbn=978-0-8028-2491-2|year=1999|publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans}}. | |||
* {{Citation|author-link=Elie Wiesel|last=Wiesel|first=Elie|contribution=Moses: Portrait of a Leader|title=Messengers of God: Biblical Portraits & Legends|pages=|place=New York|publisher=Random House|year=1976|isbn=978-0-394-49740-2|url=https://archive.org/details/messengersofgodb00wies/page/174}}. | |||
* {{Citation|author-link=Aaron Wildavsky|last=Wildavsky|first=Aaron|title=Moses as Political Leader|place=Jerusalem|publisher=Shalem Press|year=2005|isbn=978-965-7052-31-0}}. | |||
* {{Citation|author-link=Dorothy Clarke Wilson|last=Wilson|first=Dorothy Clarke|title=Prince of Egypt|place=Philadelphia|publisher=]|year=1949}}. | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
==External links== | |||
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Latest revision as of 14:31, 25 December 2024
Prophet in Abrahamic religions For other uses, see Moses (disambiguation).
ProphetMoses | |
---|---|
מֹשֶׁה | |
Moses Breaking the Tablets of the Law by Rembrandt, 1659 | |
Born | Goshen, Lower Egypt, Ancient Egypt |
Died | Mount Nebo, Moab, Transjordan |
Nationality | Israelite Egyptian |
Known for | Mosaic covenant and law under the Torah Important prophet in Abrahamic religions: including Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Baháʼí Faith, Druze Faith, Rastafari, and Samaritanism |
Spouse(s) | Zipporah, unnamed Cushite woman |
Children | |
Parents |
|
Relatives |
In Abrahamic religions, Moses was a prophet who led the Israelites out of slavery in the Exodus. He is considered the most important prophet in Judaism and Samaritanism, and one of the most important prophets in Christianity, Islam, the Baháʼí Faith, and other Abrahamic religions. According to both the Bible and the Quran, God dictated the Mosaic Law to Moses, which he wrote down in the five books of the Torah.
According to the Book of Exodus, Moses was born in a time when his people, the Israelites, an enslaved minority, were increasing in population and, as a result, the Egyptian Pharaoh worried that they might ally themselves with Egypt's enemies. Moses' Hebrew mother, Jochebed, secretly hid him when Pharaoh ordered all newborn Hebrew boys to be killed in order to reduce the population of the Israelites. Through Pharaoh's daughter, the child was adopted as a foundling from the Nile and grew up with the Egyptian royal family. After killing an Egyptian slave-master who was beating a Hebrew, Moses fled across the Red Sea to Midian, where he encountered the Angel of the Lord, speaking to him from within a burning bush on Mount Horeb.
God sent Moses back to Egypt to demand the release of the Israelites from slavery. Moses said that he could not speak eloquently, so God allowed Aaron, his elder brother, to become his spokesperson. After the Ten Plagues, Moses led the Exodus of the Israelites out of Egypt and across the Red Sea, after which they based themselves at Mount Sinai, where Moses received the Ten Commandments. After 40 years of wandering in the desert, Moses died on Mount Nebo at the age of 120, within sight of the Promised Land.
The majority of scholars see the biblical Moses as a legendary figure, while retaining the possibility that Moses or a Moses-like figure existed in the 13th century BCE. Rabbinical Judaism calculated a lifespan of Moses corresponding to 1391–1271 BCE; Jerome suggested 1592 BCE, and James Ussher suggested 1571 BCE as his birth year. The Egyptian name "Moses" is mentioned in ancient Egyptian literature. In the writing of Jewish historian Josephus, ancient Egyptian historian Manetho is quoted writing of a treasonous ancient Egyptian priest, Osarseph, who renamed himself Moses and led a successful coup against the presiding pharaoh, subsequently ruling Egypt for years until the pharaoh regained power and expelled Osarseph and his supporters.
Moses has often been portrayed in Christian art and literature, for instance in Michelangelo's Moses and in works at a number of US government buildings. In the medieval and Renaissance period, he is frequently shown as having small horns, as the result of a mistranslation in the Latin Vulgate bible, which nevertheless at times could reflect Christian ambivalence or have overtly antisemitic connotations.
Etymology of name
The Egyptian root msy ('child of') or mose has been considered as a possible etymology, arguably an abbreviation of a theophoric name with the god’s name omitted. The suffix mose appears in Egyptian pharaohs’ names like Thutmose ('born of Thoth') and Ramose ('born of Ra'). One of the Egyptian names of Ramesses was Ra-mesesu mari-Amon, meaning “born of Ra, beloved of Amon”. Ms by itself also has multiple attestations as an Engyptian personal name in the New Kingdom . Linguist Abraham Yahuda, based on the spelling given in the Tanakh, argues that it combines "water" or "seed" and "pond, expanse of water," thus yielding the sense of "child of the Nile" (mw-š).
The biblical account of Moses' birth provides him with a folk etymology to explain the ostensible meaning of his name. He is said to have received it from the Pharaoh's daughter: "he became her son. She named him Moses , saying, 'I drew him out of the water'." This explanation links it to the Semitic root משׁה, m-š-h, meaning "to draw out". The eleventh-century Tosafist Isaac b. Asher haLevi noted that the princess names him the active participle 'drawer-out' (מֹשֶׁה, mōše), not the passive participle 'drawn-out' (נִמְשֶׁה, nīmše), in effect prophesying that Moses would draw others out (of Egypt); this has been accepted by some scholars.
The Hebrew etymology in the Biblical story may reflect an attempt to cancel out traces of Moses' Egyptian origins. The Egyptian character of his name was recognized as such by ancient Jewish writers like Philo and Josephus. Philo linked Moses' name (Ancient Greek: Μωϋσῆς, romanized: Mōysēs, lit. 'Mōusês') to the Egyptian (Coptic) word for 'water' (môu, μῶυ), in reference to his finding in the Nile and the biblical folk etymology. Josephus, in his Antiquities of the Jews, claims that the second element, -esês, meant 'those who are saved'. The problem of how an Egyptian princess (who, according to the Biblical account found in the book of Exodus, gave him the name "Moses") could have known Hebrew puzzled medieval Jewish commentators like Abraham ibn Ezra and Hezekiah ben Manoah. Hezekiah suggested she either converted to the Jewish religion or took a tip from Jochebed (Moses' mother). The Egyptian princess who named Moses is not named in the book of Exodus. However, she was known to Josephus as Thermutis (identified as Tharmuth), and some within Jewish tradition have tried to identify her with a "daughter of Pharaoh" in 1 Chronicles 4:17 named Bithiah, but others note that this is unlikely since there is no textual indication that this daughter of Pharaoh is the same one who named Moses.
Ibn Ezra gave two possibilities for the name of Moses: he believed that it was either a translation of the Egyptian name instead of a transliteration or that the Pharaoh's daughter was able to speak Hebrew.
Kenneth Kitchen argues that the Hebrew etymology is most likely correct, as the sounds in the Hebrew m-š-h do not correspond to the pronunciation of Egyptian msy in the relevant time period.
Biblical narrative
Prophet and deliverer of Israel
Further information: The ExodusThe Israelites had settled in the Land of Goshen in the time of Joseph and Jacob, but a new Pharaoh arose who oppressed the children of Israel. At this time Moses was born to his father Amram, son (or descendant) of Kehath the Levite, who entered Egypt with Jacob's household; his mother was Jochebed (also Yocheved), who was kin to Kehath. Moses had one older (by seven years) sister, Miriam, and one older (by three years) brother, Aaron. Pharaoh had commanded that all male Hebrew children born would be drowned in the river Nile, but Moses' mother placed him in an ark and concealed the ark in the bulrushes by the riverbank, where the baby was discovered and adopted by Pharaoh's daughter, and raised as an Egyptian. One day, after Moses had reached adulthood, he killed an Egyptian who was beating a Hebrew. Moses, in order to escape Pharaoh's death penalty, fled to Midian (a desert country south of Judah), where he married Zipporah.
There, on Mount Horeb, God appeared to Moses as a burning bush, revealed to Moses his name YHWH (probably pronounced Yahweh) and commanded him to return to Egypt and bring his chosen people (Israel) out of bondage and into the Promised Land (Canaan). During the journey, God tried to kill Moses for failing to circumcise his son, but Zipporah saved his life. Moses returned to carry out God's command, but God caused the Pharaoh to refuse, and only after God had subjected Egypt to ten plagues did Pharaoh relent. Moses led the Israelites to the border of Egypt, but their God hardened the Pharaoh's heart once more, so that he could destroy Pharaoh and his army at the Red Sea Crossing as a sign of his power to Israel and the nations.
After defeating the Amalekites in Rephidim, Moses led the Israelites to Mount Sinai, where he was given the Ten Commandments from God, written on stone tablets. However, since Moses remained a long time on the mountain, some of the people feared that he might be dead, so they made a statue of a golden calf and worshipped it, thus disobeying and angering God and Moses. Moses, out of anger, broke the tablets, and later ordered the elimination of those who had worshiped the golden statue, which was melted down and fed to the idolaters. God again wrote the ten commandments on a new set of tablets. Later at Mount Sinai, Moses and the elders entered into a covenant, by which Israel would become the people of YHWH, obeying his laws, and YHWH would be their god. Moses delivered the laws of God to Israel, instituted the priesthood under the sons of Moses' brother Aaron, and destroyed those Israelites who fell away from his worship. In his final act at Sinai, God gave Moses instructions for the Tabernacle, the mobile shrine by which he would travel with Israel to the Promised Land.
From Sinai, Moses led the Israelites to the Desert of Paran on the border of Canaan. From there he sent twelve spies into the land. The spies returned with samples of the land's fertility but warned that its inhabitants were giants. The people were afraid and wanted to return to Egypt, and some rebelled against Moses and against God. Moses told the Israelites that they were not worthy to inherit the land, and would wander the wilderness for forty years until the generation who had refused to enter Canaan had died, so that it would be their children who would possess the land. Later on, Korah was punished for leading a revolt against Moses.
When the forty years had passed, Moses led the Israelites east around the Dead Sea to the territories of Edom and Moab. There they escaped the temptation of idolatry, conquered the lands of Og and Sihon in Transjordan, received God's blessing through Balaam the prophet, and massacred the Midianites, who by the end of the Exodus journey had become the enemies of the Israelites due to their notorious role in enticing the Israelites to sin against God. Moses was twice given notice that he would die before entry to the Promised Land: in Numbers 27:13, once he had seen the Promised Land from a viewpoint on Mount Abarim, and again in Numbers 31:1 once battle with the Midianites had been won.
On the banks of the Jordan River, in sight of the land, Moses assembled the tribes. After recalling their wanderings, he delivered God's laws by which they must live in the land, sang a song of praise and pronounced a blessing on the people, and passed his authority to Joshua, under whom they would possess the land. Moses then went up Mount Nebo, looked over the Promised Land spread out before him, and died, at the age of one hundred and twenty:
So Moses the servant of the LORD died there in the land of Moab according to the word of the LORD. And He buried him in the valley in the land of Moab, opposite Beth-peor; but no man knows his burial place to this day. (Deuteronomy 34:5–6, Amplified Bible)
Lawgiver of Israel
Further information: Law of Moses, Mosaic authorship, Deuteronomist, Book of Deuteronomy § Deuteronomic code, and 613 MitzvotMoses is honoured among Jews today as the "lawgiver of Israel", and he delivers several sets of laws in the course of the four books. The first is the Covenant Code, the terms of the covenant which God offers to the Israelites at Mount Sinai. Embedded in the covenant are the Decalogue (the Ten Commandments, Exodus 20:1–17), and the Book of the Covenant (Exodus 20:22–23:19). The entire Book of Leviticus constitutes a second body of law, the Book of Numbers begins with yet another set, and the Book of Deuteronomy another.
Moses has traditionally been regarded as the author of those four books and the Book of Genesis, which together comprise the Torah, the first section of the Hebrew Bible.
Historicity
Scholars hold different opinions on the historicity of Moses. For instance, according to William G. Dever, the modern scholarly consensus is that the biblical person of Moses is largely mythical while also holding that "a Moses-like figure may have existed somewhere in the southern Transjordan in the mid-late 13th century B.C." and that "archeology can do nothing" to prove or confirm either way. Some scholars, such as Konrad Schmid and Jens Schröter, consider Moses a historical figure. According to Solomon Nigosian, there are actually three prevailing views among biblical scholars: one is that Moses is not a historical figure, another view strives to anchor the decisive role he played in Israelite religion, and a third that argues there are elements of both history and legend from which "these issues are hotly debated unresolved matters among scholars". According to Brian Britt, there is divide amongst scholars when discussing matters on Moses that threatens gridlock. According to the official Torah commentary for Conservative Judaism, it is irrelevant if the historical Moses existed, calling him "the folkloristic, national hero".
Jan Assmann argues that it cannot be known if Moses ever lived because there are no traces of him outside tradition. Though the names of Moses and others in the biblical narratives are Egyptian and contain genuine Egyptian elements, no extrabiblical sources point clearly to Moses. No references to Moses appear in any Egyptian sources prior to the 4th century BCE, long after he is believed to have lived. No contemporary Egyptian sources mention Moses, or the events of Exodus–Deuteronomy, nor has any archaeological evidence been discovered in Egypt or the Sinai wilderness to support the story in which he is the central figure. David Adams Leeming states that Moses is a mythic hero and the central figure in Hebrew mythology. The Oxford Companion to the Bible states that the historicity of Moses is the most reasonable (albeit not unbiased) assumption to be made about him as his absence would leave a vacuum that cannot be explained away. Oxford Biblical Studies states that although few modern scholars are willing to support the traditional view that Moses himself wrote the five books of the Torah, there are certainly those who regard the leadership of Moses as too firmly based in Israel's corporate memory to be dismissed as pious fiction.
The story of Moses' discovery follows a familiar motif in ancient Near Eastern mythological accounts of the ruler who rises from humble origins. For example, in the account of the origin of Sargon of Akkad (23rd century BCE):
My mother, the high priestess, conceived; in secret she bore me
She set me in a basket of rushes, with bitumen she sealed my lid
She cast me into the river which rose over me.
Moses' story, like those of the other patriarchs, most likely had a substantial oral prehistory (he is mentioned in the Book of Jeremiah and the Book of Isaiah). The earliest mention of him is vague, in the Book of Hosea and his name is apparently ancient, as the tradition found in Exodus gives it a folk etymology. Nevertheless, the Torah was completed by combining older traditional texts with newly-written ones. Isaiah, written during the Exile (i.e., in the first half of the 6th century BCE), testifies to tension between the people of Judah and the returning post-Exilic Jews (the "gôlâ"), stating that God is the father of Israel and that Israel's history begins with the Exodus and not with Abraham. The conclusion to be inferred from this and similar evidence (e.g., the Book of Ezra and the Book of Nehemiah) is that the figure of Moses and the story of the Exodus must have been preeminent among the people of Judah at the time of the Exile and after, serving to support their claims to the land in opposition to those of the returning exiles.
A theory developed by Cornelis Tiele in 1872, which has proved influential, argued that Yahweh was a Midianite god, introduced to the Israelites by Moses, whose father-in-law Jethro was a Midianite priest. It was to such a Moses that Yahweh reveals his real name, hidden from the Patriarchs who knew him only as El Shaddai. Against this view is the modern consensus that most of the Israelites were native to Palestine. Martin Noth argued that the Pentateuch uses the figure of Moses, originally linked to legends of a Transjordan conquest, as a narrative bracket or late redactional device to weld together four of the five, originally independent, themes of that work. Manfred Görg [de] and Rolf Krauss [de], the latter in a somewhat sensationalist manner, have suggested that the Moses story is a distortion or transmogrification of the historical pharaoh Amenmose (c. 1200 BCE), who was dismissed from office and whose name was later simplified to msy (Mose). Aidan Dodson regards this hypothesis as "intriguing, but beyond proof". Rudolf Smend argues that the two details about Moses that were most likely to be historical are his name, of Egyptian origin, and his marriage to a Midianite woman, details which seem unlikely to have been invented by the Israelites; in Smend's view, all other details given in the biblical narrative are too mythically charged to be seen as accurate data.
The name King Mesha of Moab has been linked to that of Moses. Mesha also is associated with narratives of an exodus and a conquest, and several motifs in stories about him are shared with the Exodus tale and that regarding Israel's war with Moab (2 Kings 3). Moab rebels against oppression, like Moses, leads his people out of Israel, as Moses does from Egypt, and his first-born son is slaughtered at the wall of Kir-hareseth as the firstborn of Israel are condemned to slaughter in the Exodus story, in what Calvinist theologian Peter Leithart described as "an infernal Passover that delivers Mesha while wrath burns against his enemies".
An Egyptian version of the tale that crosses over with the Moses story is found in Manetho who, according to the summary in Josephus, wrote that a certain Osarseph, a Heliopolitan priest, became overseer of a band of lepers, when Amenophis, following indications by Amenhotep, son of Hapu, had all the lepers in Egypt quarantined in order to cleanse the land so that he might see the gods. The lepers are bundled into Avaris, the former capital of the Hyksos, where Osarseph prescribes for them everything forbidden in Egypt, while proscribing everything permitted in Egypt. They invite the Hyksos to reinvade Egypt, rule with them for 13 years – Osarseph then assumes the name Moses – and are then driven out.
Other Egyptian figures which have been postulated as candidates for a historical Moses-like figure include the princes Ahmose-ankh and Ramose, who were sons of pharaoh Ahmose I, or a figure associated with the family of pharaoh Thutmose III. Israel Knohl has proposed to identify Moses with Irsu, a Shasu who, according to Papyrus Harris I and the Elephantine Stele, took power in Egypt with the support of "Asiatics" (people from the Levant) after the death of Queen Twosret; after coming to power, Irsu and his supporters disrupted Egyptian rituals, "treating the gods like the people" and halting offerings to the Egyptian deities. They were eventually defeated and expelled by the new Pharaoh Setnakhte and, while fleeing, they abandoned large quantities of gold and silver they had stolen from the temples.
Hellenistic literature
Further information: Moses in Judeo-Hellenistic literatureNon-biblical writings about Jews, with references to the role of Moses, first appear at the beginning of the Hellenistic period, from 323 BCE to about 146 BCE. Shmuel notes that "a characteristic of this literature is the high honour in which it holds the peoples of the East in general and some specific groups among these peoples."
In addition to the Judeo-Roman or Judeo-Hellenic historians Artapanus, Eupolemus, Josephus, and Philo, a few non-Jewish historians including Hecataeus of Abdera (quoted by Diodorus Siculus), Alexander Polyhistor, Manetho, Apion, Chaeremon of Alexandria, Tacitus and Porphyry also make reference to him. The extent to which any of these accounts rely on earlier sources is unknown. Moses also appears in other religious texts such as the Mishnah (c. 200 CE) and the Midrash (200–1200 CE).
The figure of Osarseph in Hellenistic historiography is a renegade Egyptian priest who leads an army of lepers against the pharaoh and is finally expelled from Egypt, changing his name to Moses.
Hecataeus
The earliest existing reference to Moses in Greek literature occurs in the Egyptian history of Hecataeus of Abdera (4th century BCE). All that remains of his description of Moses are two references made by Diodorus Siculus, wherein, writes historian Arthur Droge, he "describes Moses as a wise and courageous leader who left Egypt and colonized Judaea". Among the many accomplishments described by Hecataeus, Moses had founded cities, established a temple and religious cult, and issued laws:
After the establishment of settled life in Egypt in early times, which took place, according to the mythical account, in the period of the gods and heroes, the first ... to persuade the multitudes to use written laws was Mneves, a man not only great of soul but also in his life the most public-spirited of all lawgivers whose names are recorded.
Droge also points out that this statement by Hecataeus was similar to statements made subsequently by Eupolemus.
Artapanus
The Jewish historian Artapanus of Alexandria (2nd century BCE) portrayed Moses as a cultural hero, alien to the Pharaonic court. According to theologian John Barclay, the Moses of Artapanus "clearly bears the destiny of the Jews, and in his personal, cultural and military splendor, brings credit to the whole Jewish people".
Jealousy of Moses' excellent qualities induced Chenephres to send him with unskilled troops on a military expedition to Ethiopia, where he won great victories. After having built the city of Hermopolis, he taught the people the value of the ibis as a protection against the serpents, making the bird the sacred guardian spirit of the city; then he introduced circumcision. After his return to Memphis, Moses taught the people the value of oxen for agriculture, and the consecration of the same by Moses gave rise to the cult of Apis. Finally, after having escaped another plot by killing the assailant sent by the king, Moses fled to Arabia, where he married the daughter of Raguel , the ruler of the district.
Artapanus goes on to relate how Moses returns to Egypt with Aaron, and is imprisoned, but miraculously escapes through the name of YHWH in order to lead the Exodus. This account further testifies that all Egyptian temples of Isis thereafter contained a rod, in remembrance of that used for Moses' miracles. He describes Moses as 80 years old, "tall and ruddy, with long white hair, and dignified".
Some historians, however, point out the "apologetic nature of much of Artapanus' work", with his addition of extra-biblical details, such as his references to Jethro: the non-Jewish Jethro expresses admiration for Moses' gallantry in helping his daughters, and chooses to adopt Moses as his son.
Strabo
Strabo, a Greek historian, geographer and philosopher, in his Geographica (c. 24 CE), wrote in detail about Moses, whom he considered to be an Egyptian who deplored the situation in his homeland, and thereby attracted many followers who respected the deity. He writes, for example, that Moses opposed the picturing of the deity in the form of man or animal, and was convinced that the deity was an entity which encompassed everything – land and sea:
35. An Egyptian priest named Moses, who possessed a portion of the country called the Lower Egypt, being dissatisfied with the established institutions there, left it and came to Judaea with a large body of people who worshipped the Divinity. He declared and taught that the Egyptians and Africans entertained erroneous sentiments, in representing the Divinity under the likeness of wild beasts and cattle of the field; that the Greeks also were in error in making images of their gods after the human form. For God may be this one thing which encompasses us all, land and sea, which we call heaven, or the universe, or the nature of things....
36. By such doctrine Moses persuaded a large body of right-minded persons to accompany him to the place where Jerusalem now stands.
In Strabo's writings of the history of Judaism as he understood it, he describes various stages in its development: from the first stage, including Moses and his direct heirs; to the final stage where "the Temple of Jerusalem continued to be surrounded by an aura of sanctity". Strabo's "positive and unequivocal appreciation of Moses' personality is among the most sympathetic in all ancient literature." His portrayal of Moses is said to be similar to the writing of Hecataeus who "described Moses as a man who excelled in wisdom and courage".
Egyptologist Jan Assmann concludes that Strabo was the historian "who came closest to a construction of Moses' religion as monotheistic and as a pronounced counter-religion." It recognized "only one divine being whom no image can represent ... the only way to approach this god is to live in virtue and in justice."
Tacitus
The Roman historian Tacitus (c. 56–120 CE) refers to Moses by noting that the Jewish religion was monotheistic and without a clear image. His primary work, wherein he describes Jewish philosophy, is his Histories (c. 100), where, according to 18th-century translator and Irish dramatist Arthur Murphy, as a result of the Jewish worship of one God, "pagan mythology fell into contempt". Tacitus states that, despite various opinions current in his day regarding the Jews' ethnicity, most of his sources are in agreement that there was an Exodus from Egypt. By his account, the Pharaoh Bocchoris, suffering from a plague, banished the Jews in response to an oracle of the god Zeus-Amun.
A motley crowd was thus collected and abandoned in the desert. While all the other outcasts lay idly lamenting, one of them, named Moses, advised them not to look for help to gods or men, since both had deserted them, but to trust rather in themselves, and accept as divine the guidance of the first being, by whose aid they should get out of their present plight.
In this version, Moses and the Jews wander through the desert for only six days, capturing the Holy Land on the seventh.
Longinus
The Septuagint, the Greek version of the Hebrew Bible, impressed the pagan author of the famous classical book of literary criticism, On the Sublime, traditionally attributed to Longinus. The date of composition is unknown, but it is commonly assigned to the late 1st century C.E.
The writer quotes Genesis in a "style which presents the nature of the deity in a manner suitable to his pure and great being", but he does not mention Moses by name, calling him 'no chance person' (οὐχ ὁ τυχὼν ἀνήρ) but "the Lawgiver" (θεσμοθέτης, thesmothete) of the Jews, a term that puts him on a par with Lycurgus and Minos. Aside from a reference to Cicero, Moses is the only non-Greek writer quoted in the work; contextually he is put on a par with Homer and he is described "with far more admiration than even Greek writers who treated Moses with respect, such as Hecataeus and Strabo".
Josephus
In Josephus' (37 – c. 100 CE) Antiquities of the Jews, Moses is mentioned throughout. For example, Book VIII Ch. IV, describes Solomon's Temple, also known as the First Temple, at the time the Ark of the Covenant was first moved into the newly built temple:
When King Solomon had finished these works, these large and beautiful buildings, and had laid up his donations in the temple, and all this in the interval of seven years, and had given a demonstration of his riches and alacrity therein; ... he also wrote to the rulers and elders of the Hebrews, and ordered all the people to gather themselves together to Jerusalem, both to see the temple which he had built, and to remove the ark of God into it; and when this invitation of the whole body of the people to come to Jerusalem was everywhere carried abroad, ... The Feast of Tabernacles happened to fall at the same time, which was kept by the Hebrews as a most holy and most eminent feast. So they carried the ark and the tabernacle which Moses had pitched, and all the vessels that were for ministration to the sacrifices of God, and removed them to the temple. ... Now the ark contained nothing else but those two tables of stone that preserved the ten commandments, which God spake to Moses in Mount Sinai, and which were engraved upon them ...
According to Feldman, Josephus also attaches particular significance to Moses' possession of the "cardinal virtues of wisdom, courage, temperance, and justice". He also includes piety as an added fifth virtue. In addition, he "stresses Moses' willingness to undergo toil and his careful avoidance of bribery. Like Plato's philosopher-king, Moses excels as an educator."
Numenius
Numenius, a Greek philosopher who was a native of Apamea, in Syria, wrote during the latter half of the 2nd century CE. Historian Kennieth Guthrie writes that "Numenius is perhaps the only recognized Greek philosopher who explicitly studied Moses, the prophets, and the life of Jesus". He describes his background:
Numenius was a man of the world; he was not limited to Greek and Egyptian mysteries, but talked familiarly of the myths of Brahmins and Magi. It is however his knowledge and use of the Hebrew scriptures which distinguished him from other Greek philosophers. He refers to Moses simply as "the prophet", exactly as for him Homer is the poet. Plato is described as a Greek Moses.
Justin Martyr
The Christian saint and religious philosopher Justin Martyr (103–165 CE) drew the same conclusion as Numenius, according to other experts. Theologian Paul Blackham notes that Justin considered Moses to be "more trustworthy, profound and truthful because he is older than the Greek philosophers." He quotes him:
I will begin, then, with our first prophet and lawgiver, Moses ... that you may know that, of all your teachers, whether sages, poets, historians, philosophers, or lawgivers, by far the oldest, as the Greek histories show us, was Moses, who was our first religious teacher.
Abrahamic religions
Moses | |
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Moses striking the rock, 1630 by Pieter de Grebber | |
Prophet, Saint, Seer, Lawgiver, Apostle to Pharaoh, Reformer, God-seer | |
Born | Goshen, Lower Egypt |
Died | Mount Nebo, Moab |
Venerated in | Christianity Islam Judaism Baháʼí Faith Druze Faith Rastafari Samaritanism |
Feast | September 4, July 20 and April 14 in Eastern Orthodox Church and Catholic Church |
Attributes | Ten Commandments (in Christianity and Judaism) |
Judaism
Main article: Moses in rabbinic literatureMost of what is known about Moses from the Bible comes from the books of Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. The majority of scholars consider the compilation of these books to go back to the Persian period, 538–332 BCE, but based on earlier written and oral traditions. There is a wealth of stories and additional information about Moses in the Jewish apocrypha and in the genre of rabbinical exegesis known as Midrash, as well as in the primary works of the Jewish oral law, the Mishnah and the Talmud. Moses is also given a number of bynames in Jewish tradition. The Midrash identifies Moses as one of seven biblical personalities who were called by various names. Moses' other names were Jekuthiel (by his mother), Heber (by his father), Jered (by Miriam), Avi Zanoah (by Aaron), Avi Gedor (by Kohath), Avi Soco (by his wet-nurse), Shemaiah ben Nethanel (by people of Israel). Moses is also attributed the names Toviah (as a first name), and Levi (as a family name) (Vayikra Rabbah 1:3), Heman, Mechoqeiq (lawgiver), and Ehl Gav Ish (Numbers 12:3). In another exegesis, Moses had ascended to the first heaven until the seventh, even visited Paradise and Hell alive, after he saw the divine vision in Mount Horeb.
Jewish historians who lived at Alexandria, such as Eupolemus, attributed to Moses the feat of having taught the Phoenicians their alphabet, similar to legends of Thoth. Artapanus of Alexandria explicitly identified Moses not only with Thoth/Hermes, but also with the Greek figure Musaeus (whom he called "the teacher of Orpheus") and ascribed to him the division of Egypt into 36 districts, each with its own liturgy. He named the princess who adopted Moses as Merris, wife of Pharaoh Chenephres.
Jewish tradition considers Moses to be the greatest prophet who ever lived. Despite his importance, Judaism stresses that Moses was a human being, and is therefore not to be worshipped. Only God is worthy of worship in Judaism.
To Orthodox Jews, Moses is called Moshe Rabbenu, 'Eved HaShem, Avi haNeviim zya"a: "Our Leader Moshe, Servant of God, Father of all the Prophets (may his merit shield us, amen)". In the orthodox view, Moses received not only the Torah, but also the revealed (written and oral) and the hidden (the 'hokhmat nistar) teachings, which gave Judaism the Zohar of the Rashbi, the Torah of the Ari haQadosh and all that is discussed in the Heavenly Yeshiva between the Ramhal and his masters.
Arising in part from his age of death (120 years, according to Deuteronomy 34:7) and that "his eye had not dimmed, and his vigor had not diminished", the phrase "may you live to 120" has become a common blessing among Jews (120 is stated as the maximum age for all of Noah's descendants in Genesis 6:3).
Christianity
Moses is mentioned more often in the New Testament than any other Old Testament figure. For Christians, Moses is often a symbol of God's law, as reinforced and expounded on in the teachings of Jesus. New Testament writers often compared Jesus' words and deeds with Moses' to explain Jesus' mission. In Acts 7:39–43, 51–53, for example, the rejection of Moses by the Jews who worshipped the golden calf is likened to the rejection of Jesus by the Jews that continued in traditional Judaism.
Moses also figures in several of Jesus' messages. When he met the Pharisee Nicodemus at night in the third chapter of the Gospel of John, he compared Moses' lifting up of the bronze serpent in the wilderness, which any Israelite could look at and be healed, to his own lifting up (by his death and resurrection) for the people to look at and be healed. In the sixth chapter, Jesus responded to the people's claim that Moses provided them manna in the wilderness by saying that it was not Moses, but God, who provided. Calling himself the "bread of life", Jesus stated that he was provided to feed God's people.
Moses, along with Elijah, is presented as meeting with Jesus in all three Synoptic Gospels of the Transfiguration of Jesus in Matthew 17, Mark 9, and Luke 9. In Matthew 23, in what is the first attested use of a phrase referring to this rabbinical usage (the Graeco-Aramaic קתדרא דמשה), Jesus refers to the scribes and the Pharisees, in a passage critical of them, as having seated themselves "on the chair of Moses" (Greek: Ἐπὶ τῆς Μωϋσέως καθέδρας, epì tēs Mōüséōs kathédras)
His relevance to modern Christianity has not diminished. Moses is considered to be a saint by several churches; and is commemorated as a prophet in the respective Calendars of Saints of the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Roman Catholic Church, and the Lutheran churches on September 4. In Eastern Orthodox liturgics for September 4, Moses is commemorated as the "Holy Prophet and God-seer Moses, on Mount Nebo". The Orthodox Church also commemorates him on the Sunday of the Forefathers, two Sundays before the Nativity. Moses is also commemorated on July 20 with Aaron, Elias (Elijah) and Eliseus (Elisha) and on April 14 with all saint Sinai monks.
The Armenian Apostolic Church commemorates him as one of the Holy Forefathers in their Calendar of Saints on July 30.
Catholicism
In Catholicism Moses is seen as a type of Jesus Christ. Justus Knecht writes:
Through Moses God instituted the Old Law, on which account he is called the mediator of the Old Law. As such, Moses was a striking type of Jesus Christ, who instituted the New Law. Moses, as a child, was condemned to death by a cruel king, and was saved in a wonderful way; Jesus Christ was condemned by Herod, and also wonderfully saved. Moses forsook the king's court so as to help his persecuted brethren; the Son of God left the glory of heaven to save us sinners. Moses prepared himself in the desert for his vocation, freed his people from slavery, and proved his divine mission by great miracles; Jesus Christ proved by still greater miracles that He was the only begotten Son of God. Moses was the advocate of his people; Jesus was our advocate with His Father on the Cross, and is eternally so in heaven. Moses was the law-giver of his people and announced to them the word of God: Jesus Christ is the supreme law-giver, and not only announced God's word, but is Himself the Eternal Word made flesh. Moses was the leader of the people to the Promised Land: Jesus is our leader on our journey to heaven.
Mormonism
Main article: Book of MosesMembers of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (colloquially called Mormons) generally view Moses in the same way that other Christians do. However, in addition to accepting the biblical account of Moses, Mormons include Selections from the Book of Moses as part of their scriptural canon. This book is believed to be the translated writings of Moses and is included in the Pearl of Great Price.
Latter-day Saints are also unique in believing that Moses was taken to heaven without having tasted death (translated). In addition, Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery stated that on April 3, 1836, Moses appeared to them in the Kirtland Temple (located in Kirtland, Ohio) in a glorified, immortal, physical form and bestowed upon them the "keys of the gathering of Israel from the four parts of the earth, and the leading of the ten tribes from the land of the north".
Islam
Main article: Moses in Islam See also: Biblical narratives and the Qur'an § Moses (Mūsā موسى)Part of a series on |
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Moses is mentioned more in the Quran than any other individual and his life is narrated and recounted more than that of any other Islamic prophet. Islamically, Moses is described in ways which parallel the Islamic prophet Muhammad. Like Muhammad, Moses is defined in the Quran as both prophet (nabi) and messenger (rasul), the latter term indicating that he was one of those prophets who brought a book and law to his people.
Most of the key events in Moses' life which are narrated in the Bible are to be found dispersed through the different chapters (suwar) of the Quran, with a story about meeting the Quranic figure Khidr which is not found in the Bible.
In the Moses' story narrated by the Quran, Jochebed is commanded by God to place Moses in a coffin and cast him on the waters of the Nile, thus abandoning him completely to God's protection. The Pharaoh's wife Asiya, not his daughter, found Moses floating in the waters of the Nile. She convinced the Pharaoh to keep him as their son because they were not blessed with any children.
The Quran's account emphasizes Moses' mission to invite the Pharaoh to accept God's divine message as well as give salvation to the Israelites. According to the Quran, Moses encourages the Israelites to enter Canaan, but they are unwilling to fight the Canaanites, fearing certain defeat. Moses responds by pleading to Allah that he and his brother Aaron be separated from the rebellious Israelites, after which the Israelites are made to wander for 40 years.
One of the hadith, or traditional narratives about Muhammad's life, describes a meeting in heaven between Moses and Muhammad, which resulted in Muslims observing 5 daily prayers. Huston Smith says this was "one of the crucial events in Muhammad's life".
According to some Islamic tradition, Moses is buried at Maqam El-Nabi Musa, near Jericho.
Baháʼí Faith
Moses is one of the most important of God's messengers in the Baháʼí Faith, being designated a Manifestation of God. An epithet of Moses in Baháʼí scriptures is the "One Who Conversed with God".
According to the Baháʼí Faith, Bahá'u'lláh, the founder of the faith, is the one who spoke to Moses from the burning bush.
ʻAbdu'l-Bahá has highlighted the fact that Moses, like Abraham, had none of the makings of a great man of history, but through God's assistance he was able to achieve many great things. He is described as having been "for a long time a shepherd in the wilderness", of having had a stammer, and of being "much hated and detested" by Pharaoh and the ancient Egyptians of his time. He is said to have been raised in an oppressive household, and to have been known, in Egypt, as a man who had committed murder – though he had done so in order to prevent an act of cruelty.
Nevertheless, like Abraham, through the assistance of God, he achieved great things and gained renown even beyond the Levant. Chief among these achievements was the freeing of his people, the Hebrews, from bondage in Egypt and leading "them to the Holy Land". He is viewed as the one who bestowed on Israel "the religious and the civil law" which gave them "honour among all nations", and which spread their fame to different parts of the world.
Furthermore, through the law, Moses is believed to have led the Hebrews "to the highest possible degree of civilization at that period". 'Abdul'l-Bahá asserts that the ancient Greek philosophers regarded "the illustrious men of Israel as models of perfection". Chief among these philosophers, he says, was Socrates who "visited Syria, and took from the children of Israel the teachings of the Unity of God and of the immortality of the soul".
Moses is further seen as paving the way for Bahá'u'lláh and his ultimate revelation, and as a teacher of truth, whose teachings were in line with the customs of his time.
Druze faith
Moses is considered an important prophet of God in the Druze faith, being among the seven prophets who appeared in different periods of history.
Legacy in politics and law
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In a metaphorical sense in the Christian tradition, a "Moses" has been referred to as the leader who delivers the people from a terrible situation. Among the Presidents of the United States known to have used the symbolism of Moses were Harry S. Truman, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama, who referred to his supporters as "the Moses generation".
In subsequent years, theologians linked the Ten Commandments with the formation of early democracy. Scottish theologian William Barclay described them as "the universal foundation of all things ... the law without which nationhood is impossible. ... Our society is founded upon it." Pope Francis addressed the United States Congress in 2015 stating that all people need to "keep alive their sense of unity by means of just legislation ... the figure of Moses leads us directly to God and thus to the transcendent dignity of the human being".
In United States history
Pilgrims
References to Moses were used by the Puritans, who relied on the story of Moses to give meaning and hope to the lives of Pilgrims seeking religious and personal freedom in North America. John Carver was the first governor of Plymouth colony and first signer of the Mayflower Compact, which he wrote in 1620 during the ship Mayflower's three-month voyage. He inspired the Pilgrims with a "sense of earthly grandeur and divine purpose", notes historian Jon Meacham, and was called the "Moses of the Pilgrims". Early American writer James Russell Lowell noted the similarity of the founding of America by the Pilgrims to that of ancient Israel by Moses:
Next to the fugitives whom Moses led out of Egypt, the little shipload of outcasts who landed at Plymouth are destined to influence the future of the world. The spiritual thirst of mankind has for ages been quenched at Hebrew fountains; but the embodiment in human institutions of truths uttered by the Son of Man eighteen centuries ago was to be mainly the work of Puritan thought and Puritan self-devotion. ... If their municipal regulations smack somewhat of Judaism, yet there can be no nobler aim or more practical wisdom than theirs; for it was to make the law of man a living counterpart of the law of God, in their highest conception of it.
Following Carver's death the following year, William Bradford was made governor. He feared that the remaining Pilgrims would not survive the hardships of the new land, with half their people having already died within months of arriving. Bradford evoked the symbol of Moses to the weakened and desperate Pilgrims to help calm them and give them hope: "Violence will break all. Where is the meek and humble spirit of Moses?" William G. Dever explains the attitude of the Pilgrims: "We considered ourselves the 'New Israel', particularly we in America. And for that reason, we knew who we were, what we believed in and valued, and what our 'manifest destiny' was."
Founding Fathers of the United States
On July 4, 1776, immediately after the Declaration of Independence was officially passed, the Continental Congress asked John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and Benjamin Franklin to design a seal that would clearly represent a symbol for the new United States. They chose the symbol of Moses leading the Israelites to freedom.
After the death of George Washington in 1799, two thirds of his eulogies referred to him as "America's Moses", with one orator saying that "Washington has been the same to us as Moses was to the Children of Israel."
Benjamin Franklin, in 1788, saw the difficulties that some of the newly independent American states were having in forming a government, and proposed that until a new code of laws could be agreed to, they should be governed by "the laws of Moses", as contained in the Old Testament. He justified his proposal by explaining that the laws had worked in biblical times: "The Supreme Being ... having rescued them from bondage by many miracles, performed by his servant Moses, he personally delivered to that chosen servant, in the presence of the whole nation, a constitution and code of laws for their observance."
John Adams, 2nd President of the United States, stated why he relied on the laws of Moses over Greek philosophy for establishing the United States Constitution: "As much as I love, esteem, and admire the Greeks, I believe the Hebrews have done more to enlighten and civilize the world. Moses did more than all their legislators and philosophers." Swedish historian Hugo Valentin credited Moses as the "first to proclaim the rights of man".
Slavery and civil rights
Underground Railroad conductor and American Civil War veteran Harriet Tubman was nicknamed "Moses" due to her various missions in freeing and ferrying escaped enslaved persons to freedom in the free states of the United States.
Historian Gladys L. Knight describes how leaders who emerged during and after the period in which slavery was legal often personified the Moses symbol. "The symbol of Moses was empowering in that it served to amplify a need for freedom." Therefore, when Abraham Lincoln was assassinated in 1865 after the passage of the amendment to the Constitution outlawing slavery, Black Americans said they had lost "their Moses". Lincoln biographer Charles Carleton Coffin writes, "The millions whom Abraham Lincoln delivered from slavery will ever liken him to Moses, the deliverer of Israel."
In the 1960s, a leading figure in the civil rights movement was Martin Luther King Jr., who was called "a modern Moses", and often referred to Moses in his speeches: "The struggle of Moses, the struggle of his devoted followers as they sought to get out of Egypt. This is something of the story of every people struggling for freedom."
Cultural portrayals and references
Art
Moses often appears in Christian art, and the Pope's private chapel, the Sistine Chapel, has a large sequence of six frescos of the life of Moses on the southern wall, opposite a set with the Life of Christ. They were painted in 1481–82 by a group of mostly Florentine artists including Sandro Botticelli and Pietro Perugino.
Because of an ambiguity in the Hebrew word קֶרֶן (keren) meaning both horn and ray or beam, in Jerome's Latin Vulgate translation of the Bible Moses' face is described as cornutam ("horned") when descending from Mount Sinai with the tablets, Moses is usually shown in Western art until the Renaissance with small horns, which at least served as a convenient identifying attribute. In at least some of these depictions, an antisemitic meaning is likely to have been intended, for example on the Hereford Mappa Mundi.
With the prophet Elijah, he is a necessary figure in the Transfiguration of Jesus in Christian art, a subject with a long history in Eastern Orthodox art. It appears in the art of the Western Church from the 10th century, and was especially popular between about 1475 and 1535.
Michelangelo's statue
Main article: Moses (Michelangelo)Michelangelo's statue of Moses (1513–1515), in the Church of San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome, is one of the most familiar statues in the world. The horns the sculptor included on Moses' head are the result of a mistranslation of the Hebrew Bible into the Latin Vulgate Bible with which Michelangelo was familiar. The Hebrew word taken from Exodus means either a "horn" or an "irradiation". Experts at the Archaeological Institute of America show that the term was used when Moses "returned to his people after seeing as much of the Glory of the Lord as human eye could stand", and his face "reflected radiance". In early Jewish art, moreover, Moses is often "shown with rays coming out of his head".
Depiction on U.S. government buildings
Moses is depicted in several U.S. government buildings because of his legacy as a lawgiver. In the Library of Congress stands a large statue of Moses alongside a statue of Paul the Apostle. Moses is one of the twenty-three lawgivers depicted in marble bas-reliefs in the chamber of the U.S. House of Representatives in the United States Capitol. The plaque's overview states: "Moses (c. 1350–1250 B.C.) Hebrew prophet and lawgiver; transformed a wandering people into a nation; received the Ten Commandments."
The other 22 figures have their profiles turned to Moses, which is the only forward-facing bas-relief.
Moses appears eight times in carvings that ring the Supreme Court Great Hall ceiling. His face is presented along with other ancient figures such as Solomon, the Greek god Zeus, and the Roman goddess of wisdom, Minerva. The Supreme Court Building's east pediment depicts Moses holding two tablets. Tablets representing the Ten Commandments can be found carved in the oak courtroom doors, on the support frame of the courtroom's bronze gates, and in the library woodwork. A controversial image is one that sits directly above the Chief Justice of the United States' head. In the center of the 40-foot-long Spanish marble carving is a tablet displaying Roman numerals I through X, with some numbers partially hidden.
Literature
- Sigmund Freud, in his last book, Moses and Monotheism in 1939, postulated that Moses was an Egyptian nobleman who adhered to the monotheism of Akhenaten. Following a theory proposed by a contemporary biblical critic, Freud believed that Moses was murdered in the wilderness, producing a collective sense of patricidal guilt that has been at the heart of Judaism ever since. "Judaism had been a religion of the father, Christianity became a religion of the son", he wrote. The possible Egyptian origin of Moses and of his message has received significant scholarly attention. Opponents of this view observe that the religion of the Torah seems different from Atenism in everything except the central feature of devotion to a single god, although this has been countered by a variety of arguments, e.g. pointing out the similarities between the Hymn to Aten and Psalm 104. Freud's interpretation of the historical Moses is not well accepted among historians, and is considered pseudohistory by many.
- Thomas Mann's novella The Tables of the Law (1944) is a retelling of the story of the Exodus from Egypt, with Moses as its main character.
- W. G. Hardy's novel All the Trumpets Sounded (1942) tells a fictionalized life of Moses.
- Orson Scott Card's novel Stone Tables (1997) is a novelization of the life of Moses.
Film and television
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- Moses was portrayed by Theodore Roberts in Cecil B. DeMille's 1923 silent film The Ten Commandments. Moses also appeared as the central character in the 1956 remake, also directed by DeMille and called The Ten Commandments, in which he was portrayed by Charlton Heston, who had a noted resemblance to Michelangelo's statue. A television remake was produced in 2006.
- Burt Lancaster played Moses in the 1975 television miniseries Moses the Lawgiver.
- In the 1981 comedy film History of the World, Part I, Moses was portrayed by Mel Brooks.
- In 1995, Sir Ben Kingsley portrayed Moses in the 1995 TV film Moses, produced by British and Italian production companies.
- Moses appeared as the central character in the 1998 DreamWorks Pictures animated film The Prince of Egypt. His speaking voice was provided by Val Kilmer, with American gospel singer and tenor Amick Byram providing his singing voice.
- Ben Kingsley was the narrator of the 2007 animated film The Ten Commandments.
- In the 2009 miniseries Battles BC, Moses was portrayed by Cazzey Louis Cereghino.
- In the 2013 television miniseries The Bible, Moses was portrayed by William Houston.
- In Seder-Masochism, the 2018 animated film by Nina Paley, Moses appears as one of the key characters in the reinterpretation the Book of Exodus.
- Christian Bale portrayed Moses in Ridley Scott's 2014 film Exodus: Gods and Kings which portrayed Moses and Rameses II as being raised by Seti I as cousins.
- The 2016 Brazilian Biblical telenovela Os Dez Mandamentos features Brazilian actor Guilherme Winter portraying Moses.
Criticism of Moses
In the late eighteenth century, the deist Thomas Paine commented at length on Moses' Laws in The Age of Reason (1794, 1795, and 1807). Paine considered Moses to be a "detestable villain", and cited Numbers 31 as an example of his "unexampled atrocities". In the passage, after the Israelite army returned from conquering Midian, Moses orders the killing of the Midianites with the exception of the virgin girls who were to be kept for the Israelites.
Have ye saved all the women alive? behold, these caused the children of Israel, through the counsel of Balaam, to commit trespass against the Lord in the matter of Peor, and there was a plague among the congregation of the Lord. Now, therefore, kill every male among the little ones, and kill every woman that hath known a man by lying with him; but all the women-children, that have not known a man by lying with him, keep alive for yourselves.
— Numbers 31
Rabbi Joel Grossman argued that the story is a "powerful fable of lust and betrayal", and that Moses' execution of the women was a symbolic condemnation of those who seek to turn sex and desire to evil purposes. He says that the Midianite women "used their sexual attractiveness to turn the Israelite men away from God and toward the worship of Baal Peor ". Rabbi Grossman argues that the genocide of all the Midianite non-virgin women, including those that did not seduce Jewish men, was fair because some of them had sex for "improper reasons". Alan Levin, an educational specialist with the Reform movement, has similarly suggested that the story should be taken as a cautionary tale, to "warn successive generations of Jews to watch their own idolatrous behavior". Chasam Sofer emphasizes that this war was not fought at Moses' behest, but was commanded by God as an act of revenge against the Midianite women, who, according to the Biblical account, had seduced the Israelites and led them to sin. Linguist Keith Allan remarked: "God's work or not, this is military behaviour that would be tabooed today and might lead to a war crimes trial."
Moses has also been the subject of much feminist criticism. Womanist Biblical scholar Nyasha Junior has argued that Moses can be the object of feminist inquiry.
See also
- Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses
- Table of prophets of Abrahamic religions
- Tharbis, according to Josephus, a wife of Moses
- Jewish mythology
- Children of Moses
- Slavery in ancient Egypt
Notes
- /ˈmoʊzɪz, -zɪs/; Biblical Hebrew: מֹשֶׁה, romanized: Mōše; also known as Moshe or Moshe Rabbeinu (Mishnaic Hebrew: מֹשֶׁה רַבֵּינוּ, lit. 'Moshe our Teacher'); Syriac: ܡܘܫܐ, romanized: Mūše; Arabic: مُوسَىٰ, romanized: Mūsā; Ancient Greek: Mωϋσῆς, romanized: Mōÿsēs
-
Descriptions of Moses in various encyclopedias:
- "prophet, teacher, and leader"
- "Prophet who led Israelites out of slavery in Egypt"
- "leader, prophet, and lawgiver"
- "primary leader of the Israelites in their Exodus from Egypt"
- Saint Augustine records the names of the kings when Moses was born in the City of God:
When Saphrus reigned as the fourteenth king of Assyria, and Orthopolis as the twelfth of Sicyon, and Criasus as the fifth of Argos, Moses was born in Egypt,...
—Orthopolis reigned as the 12th King of Sicyon for 63 years, from 1596 to 1533 BCE; and Criasus reigned as the 5th King of Argos for 54 years, from 1637 to 1583 BCE.
-
εἶτα δίδωσιν ὄνομα θεμένη Μωυσῆν ἐτύμως διὰ τὸ ἐκ τοῦ ὕδατος αὐτὸν ἀνελέσθαι· τὸ γὰρ ὕδωρ μῶυ ὀνομάζουσιν Αἰγύπτιοι
"Since he had been taken up from the water, the princess gave him a name derived from this, and called him Moses, for Môu is the Egyptian word for water."
—Philo of Alexandria, De Vita Mosis, I:4:17. —Colson, F. H., trans. 1935. On Abraham. On Joseph. On Moses, (Loeb Classical Library 289). Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 284–85. - According to the Orthodox Menaion, September 4 was the day that Moses saw the Land of Promise.
References
- Filler, Elad. "Moses and the Kushite Woman: Classic Interpretations and Philo's Allegory". TheTorah.com. Retrieved 11 May 2019.
- Beegle, Dewey M. "Moses". Britannica Online. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica. ISSN 1085-9721. Retrieved 2024-11-23.
- "Moses". The Oxford Dictionary of Islam (1 ed.). Oxford University Press. 2003-01-01. doi:10.1093/acref/9780195125580.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-512558-0.
- Abrahams, Israel (2007). "Moses". In Berenbaum, Michael; Skolnik, Fred (eds.). Encyclopaedia Judaica. Vol. 14 (2nd ed.). Detroit: Macmillan Reference. p. 522. ISBN 978-0-02-866097-4.
- Hayes, John H. (1993). "Moses". In Metzger, Bruce M.; Coogan, Michael D. (eds.). The Oxford Companion to the Bible. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acref/9780195046458.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-504645-8. Retrieved 2024-11-23.
- Exodus 4:10
- Exodus 7:7
- Kugler, Gili (December 2018). Shepherd, David; Tiemeyer, Lena-Sofia (eds.). "Moses died and the people moved on: A hidden narrative in Deuteronomy". Journal for the Study of the Old Testament. 43 (2). SAGE Publications: 191–204. doi:10.1177/0309089217711030. ISSN 1476-6728. S2CID 171688935.
- Nigosian, S.A. (1993). "Moses as They Saw Him". Vetus Testamentum. 43 (3): 339–350. doi:10.1163/156853393X00160. ISSN 0042-4935.
Three views, based on source analysis or historical-critical method, seem to prevail among biblical scholars. First, a number of scholars, such as Meyer and Holscher, aim to deprive Moses all the prerogatives attributed to him by denying anything historical value about his person or the role he played in Israelite religion. Second, other scholars,.... diametrically oppose the first view and strive to anchor Moses the decisive role he played in Israelite religion in a firm setting. And third, those who take the middle position... delineate the solidly historical identification of Moses from the superstructure of later legendary accretions….Needless to say, these issues are hotly debated unresolved matters among scholars. Thus, the attempt to separate the historical from unhistorical elements in the Torah has yielded few, if any, positive results regarding the figure of Moses or the role he played on Israelite religion. No wonder J. Van Seters concluded that "the quest for the historical Moses is a futile exercise. He now belongs only to legend
- ^ Dever, William G. (2001). What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It?: What Archeology Can Tell Us About the Reality of Ancient Israel. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 99. ISBN 978-0-8028-2126-3.
A Moses-like figure may have existed somewhere in southern Transjordan in the mid-late 13th century s.c., where many scholars think the biblical traditions concerning the god Yahweh arose.
- Beegle, Dewey (5 July 2023). "Moses". Encyclopædia Britannica.
- ^ "Moses". Oxford Biblical Studies Online.
- Miller II, Robert D. (25 November 2013). Illuminating Moses: A History of Reception from Exodus to the Renaissance. BRILL. pp. 21, 24. ISBN 978-90-04-25854-9.
Van Seters concluded, 'The quest for the historical Moses is a futile exercise. He now belongs only to legend.' ... "None of this means that there is not a historical Moses and that the tales do not include historical information. But in the Pentateuch, history has become memorial. Memorial revises history, reifies memory, and makes myth out of history.
- Seder Olam Rabbah
- Jerome's Chronicon (4th century) gives 1592 for the birth of Moses
- The 17th-century Ussher chronology calculates 1571 BCE (Annals of the World, 1658 paragraph 164)
- St Augustine. The City of God. Book XVIII. Chapter 8 - Who Were Kings When Moses Was Born, And What Gods Began To Be Worshipped Then.
- Hoeh, Herman L (1967), Compendium of World History (dissertation), vol. 1, The Faculty of the Ambassador College, Graduate School of Theology, 1962.
- "Let's Hear It From The Pharaohs: The Egyptian Story of Moses". Museum of the Jewish People. April 7, 2020. Retrieved June 8, 2024.
- ^ "Exodus: The History Behind the Story - TheTorah.com". TheTorah.com. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
- Gruen, Erich S. (1998). "The Use and Abuse of the Exodus Story". Jewish History. 12 (1). Springer: 93–122. doi:10.1007/BF02335457. ISSN 0334-701X. JSTOR 20101326. Retrieved June 8, 2024.
- Feldman, Louis H. (1998). "Responses: Did Jews Reshape the Tale of the Exodus?". Jewish History. 12 (1). Springer: 123–127. doi:10.1007/BF02335458. ISSN 0334-701X. JSTOR 20101327. Retrieved June 8, 2024.
- "MOSES IS CURED OF LEPROSY". Jewish Bible Quarterly. September 12, 2016. Retrieved June 8, 2024.
- Davies 2020, p. 181.
- ^ Hays, Christopher B. (2014). Hidden Riches: A Sourcebook for the Comparative Study of the Hebrew Bible and Ancient Near East. Presbyterian Publishing Corp. p. 116. ISBN 978-0-664-23701-1.
- Ranke, Hermann (1935). Die Ägyptischen Personennamen, Vol. 1. J.J. Augustin. p. 162.
- Ulmer, Rivka. 2009. Egyptian Cultural Icons in Midrash. de Gruyter. p. 269.
- Naomi E. Pasachoff, Robert J. Littman (2005), A Concise History of the Jewish People, Rowman & Littlefield, p. 5.
- Exodus 2:10
- ^ Maciá, Lorena Miralles. 2014. "Judaizing a Gentile Biblical Character through Fictive Biographical Reports: The Case of Bityah, Pharaoh's Daughter, Moses' Mother, according to Rabbinic Interpretations". pp. 145–175 in C. Cordoni and G. Langer (eds.), Narratology, Hermeneutics, and Midrash: Jewish, Christian, and Muslim Narratives from Late Antiquity through to Modern Times. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.
- ^ Dozeman 2009, pp. 81–82.
- "Riva on Torah, Exodus 2:10:1". Sefaria. Retrieved 2021-03-14.
- ^ Greifenhagen, Franz V. 2003. Egypt on the Pentateuch's Ideological Map: Constructing Biblical Israel's Identity. Bloomsbury. pp. 60ff n.65. .
- Shurpin, Yehuda. Is Moses a Jewish or Egyptian Name?. Chabad.org.
- Salkin, Jeffrey K. (2008). Righteous Gentiles in the Hebrew Bible: Ancient Role Models for Sacred Relationships. Jewish Lights. pp. 47ff .
- Harris, Maurice D. 2012. Moses: A Stranger Among Us. Wipf and Stock. pp. 22–24.
- ^ Scolnic, Benjamin Edidin. 2005. If the Egyptians Drowned in the Red Sea where are Pharaoh's Chariots?: Exploring the Historical Dimension of the Bible. University Press of America. p. 82.
- "Did Pharaoh's Daughter Name Moses? In Hebrew?". TheTorah.com. Retrieved 2022-04-18.
- Danzinger, Y. Eliezer (2008-01-20). "What Was Moshe's Real Name?". Chabad.org. Retrieved 5 May 2022.
- Kenneth A. Kitchen, On the Reliability of the Old Testament (2003), pp. 296–97: "His name is widely held to be Egyptian, and its form is too often misinterpreted by biblical scholars. It is frequently equated with the Egyptian word 'ms' (Mose) meaning 'child', and stated to be an abbreviation of a name compounded with that of a deity whose name has been omitted. And indeed we have many Egyptians called Amen-mose, Ptah-mose, Ra-mose, Hor-mose, and so on. But this explanation is wrong. We also have very many Egyptians who were actually called just 'Mose', without omission of any particular deity. Most famous because of his family's long lawsuit in the middle-class scribe Mose (of the temple of Ptah at Memphis), under Ramesses II; but he had many homonyms. So, the omission-of-deity explanation is to be dismissed as wrong ... There is worse. The name of Moses is most likely not Egyptian in the first place! The sibilants do not match as they should, and this cannot be explained away. Overwhelmingly, Egyptian 's' appears as 's' (samekh) in Hebrew and West Semitic, while Hebrew and West Semitic 's' (samekh) appears as 'tj' in Egyptian. Conversely, Egyptian 'sh' = Hebrew 'sh', and vice versa. It is better to admit that the child was named (Exod 2:10b) by his own mother, in a form originally vocalized 'Mashu', 'one drawn out' (which became 'Moshe', 'he who draws out', i.e., his people from slavery, when he led them forth). In fourteenth/thirteenth-century Egypt, 'Mose' was actually pronounced 'Masu', and so it is perfectly possible that a young Hebrew Mashu was nicknamed Masu by his Egyptian companions; but this is a verbal pun, not a borrowing either way."
- McClintock, John; James, Strong (1882). "Moses". Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature. Vol. VI. ME-NEV. New York: Harper & Brothers. pp. 677–87.
- According to Manetho the place of his birth was at the ancient city of Heliopolis.
- Exodus 2:21
- Exodus 3:14
- Exodus 8:1
- Schmidt, Nathaniel (February 1896). "Moses: His Age and His Work. II". The Biblical World. 7 (2): 105–19 . doi:10.1086/471808. S2CID 222445896.
It was the prophet's call. It was a real ecstatic experience, like that of David under the baka-tree, Elijah on the mountain, Isaiah in the temple, Ezekiel on the Khebar, Jesus in the Jordan, Paul on the Damascus road. It was the perpetual mystery of the divine touching the human.
- Exodus 4:24–26
- Ginzberg, Louis (1909). The Legends of the Jews Vol III : Chapter I (Translated by Henrietta Szold) Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society.
- Trimm, Charlie (September 2019). Shepherd, David; Tiemeyer, Lena-Sofia (eds.). "God's staff and Moses' hand(s): The battle against the Amalekites as a turning point in the role of the divine warrior". Journal for the Study of the Old Testament. 44 (1). SAGE Publications: 198–214. doi:10.1177/0309089218778588. ISSN 1476-6728.
- Rad, Gerhard von; Hanson, K. C.; Neill, Stephen (2012). Moses. Cambridge: James Clarke. ISBN 978-0-227-17379-4.
- Ginzberg, Louis (1909). The Legends of the Jews (PDF). Vol. III: The Symbolical Significance of the Tabernacle. Translated by Szold, Henrietta. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society.
- Ginzberg, Louis (1909). The Legends of the Jews (PDF). Vol. III: Ingratitude Punished. Translated by Szold, Henrietta. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society.
- Numbers 27:13
- Numbers 31:1
- Exodus 20:19–23:33
- Exodus 20:1–17
- Exodus 20:22–23:19
- Hamilton 2011, p. xxv.
- Robinson, George (2008). Essential Torah: A Complete Guide to the Five Books of Moses. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. p. 97. ISBN 978-0-307-48437-6.
- ^ Nigosian, S. A. (1993). "Moses as They Saw Him". Vetus Testamentum. 43 (3): 339–350. doi:10.1163/156853393X00160.
Three views, based on source analysis or historical-critical method, seem to prevail among biblical scholars. First, a number of scholars, such as Meyer and Holscher, aim to deprive Moses all the prerogatives attributed to him by denying anything historical value about his person or the role he played in Israelite religion. Second, other scholars, ... diametrically oppose the first view and strive to anchor Moses the decisive role he played in Israelite religion in a firm setting. And third, those who take the middle position ... delineate the solidly historical identification of Moses from the superstructure of later legendary accretions ... Needless to say, these issues are hotly debated unresolved matters among scholars. Thus, the attempt to separate the historical from unhistorical elements in the Torah has yielded few, if any, positive results regarding the figure of Moses or the role he played on Israelite religion. No wonder J. Van Seters concluded that 'the quest for the historical Moses is a futile exercise. He now belongs only to legend.'
- ^ Dever, William G. (1993). "What Remains of the House That Albright Built?". The Biblical Archaeologist. 56 (1). University of Chicago Press: 25–35. doi:10.2307/3210358. ISSN 0006-0895. JSTOR 3210358. S2CID 166003641.
the overwhelming scholarly consensus today is that Moses is a mythical figure
- Schmid, Konrad; Schröter, Jens (2021). The Making of the Bible: From the First Fragments to Sacred Scripture. Harvard University Press. p. 44. ISBN 978-0-674-24838-0.
Moses was in all likelihood a historical figure
- Britt, Brian (2004). "The Moses Myth, Beyond Biblical History". The Bible and Interpretation. University of Arizona.
- Garfinkel, Stephen (2001). "Moses: Man of Israel, Man of God". In Lieber, David L.; Dorff, Elliot N.; Harlow, Jules; Dorff, R.P.P.E.N.; Fishbane, Michael A.; Jewish Publication Society; United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism; Rabbinical Assembly; Grossman, Susan; Kushner, Harold S.; Potok, Chaim (eds.). עץ חיים: Torah and Commentary. The JPS Bible Commentary Series (in Hebrew). Jewish Publication Society. p. 1414. ISBN 978-0-8276-0712-5. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
So the question to ask in understanding the Torah on its own terms is not when, or even if, Moses lived, but what his life conveys in Israel's saga. Typical of the folkloristic, national hero, Moses successfully withstands
- Massing, Michael (9 March 2002). "New Torah For Modern Minds". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 27 March 2010. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
- Assmann, Jan (1998-10-15). Moses the Egyptian. Harvard University Press. pp. 2, 11. ISBN 978-0-674-58739-7.
We cannot be sure Moses ever lived because there are not traces of his existence outside the tradition ... I shall not even ask the question—let alone, answer it—whether Moses was an Egyptian, or a Hebrew, or a Midianite. This question concerns the historical Moses and thus pertains to history. I am concerned with Moses as a figure of memory. As a figure of memory, Moses the Egyptian is radically different from Moses the Hebrew or the Biblical Moses.
- Dever, William (November 17, 2008). "Archeology of the Hebrew Bible". Nova. PBS.
"Moses" is an Egyptian name. Some of the other names in the narratives are Egyptian, and there are genuine Egyptian elements. But no one has found a text or an artifact in Egypt itself or even in the Sinai that has any direct connection. That doesn't mean it didn't happen. But I think it does mean what happened was rather more modest. And the biblical writers have enlarged the story.
- Moore, Megan Bishop; Kelle, Brad E. (2011-05-17). Biblical History and Israel's Past: The Changing Study of the Bible and History. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. pp. 92–93. ISBN 978-0-8028-6260-0.
... no extrabiblical source point clearly to Moses, ...
- Meyers 2005, pp. 5–6.
- Leeming, David (2005-11-17). The Oxford Companion to World Mythology. Oxford University Press USA. ISBN 978-0-19-515669-0.
- "Exodus, the". Exodus, The Book of (Online). Oxford University Press. 2004. ISBN 978-0-19-504645-8 – via www.oxfordreference.com.
The historicity of Moses is the most reasonable assumption to be made about him. There is no viable argument why Moses should be regarded as a fiction of pious necessity. His removal from the scene of Israel's beginnings as a theocratic community would leave a vacuum that simply could not be explained away.
- Coogan, Michael David; Coogan, Michael D. (2001). The Oxford History of the Biblical World. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-513937-2.
Many of these forms are not, and should not be considered, historically based; Moses' birth narrative, for example, is built on folkloric motifs found throughout the ancient world.
- Rendsburg, Gary A. (2006). "Moses as Equal to Pharaoh". In Beckman, Gary M.; Lewis, Theodore J. (eds.). Text, Artifact, and Image: Revealing Ancient Israelite Religion. Brown Judaic Studies. p. 204. ISBN 978-1-930675-28-5.
- Finlay, Timothy D. (2005). The Birth Report Genre in the Hebrew Bible. Forschungen zum Alten Testament. Vol. 12. Mohr Siebeck. p. 236. ISBN 978-3-16-148745-3.
- Pitard, Wayne T. (2001). "Before Israel: Syria-Palestine in the Bronze Age". In Coogan, Michael D. (ed.). The Oxford History of the Biblical World. Oxford University Press. p. 27. ISBN 9780195139372.
- Jeremiah 15:1
- Isaiah 63:11–12
- Hosea 12:13
- Carr, David M.; Conway, Colleen M. (2010). An Introduction to the Bible: Sacred Texts and Imperial Contexts. New York: Wiley. p. 193. ISBN 9781405167383.
- Isaiah 63:16
- ^ Ska 2009, p. 44.
- Judges 1:16–3:11; Numbers 10:29; Exodus 6:2–3
- Smith, Mark S. (2002). The Early History of God: Yahweh and the Other Deities in Ancient Israel. Wm. B. Eerdmans. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-8028-3972-5.
- van der Toorn, Karel; Becking, Bob; van der Horst, Pieter Willem, eds. (1999). Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible (2nd ed.). Wm. B. Eerdmans. p. 912. ISBN 978-0-8028-2491-2.
- Grabbe, Lester L. (23 February 2017). Ancient Israel: What Do We Know and How Do We Know It?: Revised Edition. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-567-67044-1.
The impression one has now is that the debate has settled down. Although they do not seem to admit it, the minimalists have triumphed in many ways. That is, most scholars reject the historicity of the 'patriarchal period', see the settlement as mostly made up of indigenous inhabitants of Canaan and are cautious about the early monarchy. The exodus is rejected or assumed to be based on an event much different from the biblical account. On the other hand, there is not the widespread rejection of the biblical text as a historical source that one finds among the main minimalists. There are few, if any, maximalists (defined as those who accept the biblical text unless it can be absolutely disproved) in mainstream scholarship, only on the more fundamentalist fringes.
- Killebrew, Ann E. (2020). "Early Israel's Origins, Settlement, and Ethnogenesis". In Kelle, Brad E.; Strawn, Brent A. (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of the Historical Books of the Hebrew Bible. Oxford University Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-19-007411-1.
- Faust, Avraham (2023). "The Birth of Israel". In Hoyland, Robert G.; Williamson, H. G. M. (eds.). The Oxford History of the Holy Land. Oxford University Press. p. 28. ISBN 978-0-19-288687-3.
- Coats, George W. (1988). Moses: Heroic Man, Man of God. A&C Black. pp. 10ff (p. 11 Albright, pp. 29–30, Noth). ISBN 9780567594204.
- Otto, Eckart (2006). Mose: Geschichte und Legende [Moses: history and legend] (in German). C. H. Beck. pp. 25–27. ISBN 978-3-406-53600-7.
- Görg, Manfred (2000). "Mose – Name und Namensträger. Versuch einer historischen Annäherung". In Otto, E. (ed.). Mose. Ägypten und das Alte Testament (in German). Stuttgart: Verlag Katholisches Bibelwerk.
- Krauss, Rolf (2001). Das Moses-Rätsel: Auf den Spuren einer biblischen Erfindung (in German). Munich: Ullstein.
- Assmann, Jan (2 February 2002). "Tagsüber parliert er als Ägyptologe, nachts reißt er die Bibel auf". Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German).
- Dodson, Aidan (2010). Poisoned Legacy: The Fall of the 19th Egyptian Dynasty. American University in Cairo Press. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-61797-071-9.
- Smend, Rudolf (1995). "Mose als geschichtliche Gestalt" [Moses as historical figure] (PDF). Historische Zeitschrift. 260: 1–19. doi:10.1524/hzhz.1995.260.jg.1. S2CID 164459862.
- Leithart, Peter J. (2006). 1 & 2 Kings. Brazos Press. pp. 178ff . ISBN 9781587431258.
- Assmann, Jan (2009). Moses the Egyptian: The Memory of Egypt in Western Monotheism. Harvard University Press. pp. 31–34. ISBN 978-0-674-02030-6.
- Samaan, Marla (2002). "'House of Bondage': Can We Reconcile the Biblical Account of Hebrew Slavery with Egyptian Historical Records?". Senior Research Projects. 59.
- Billauer, Barbara (2014). "Moses, the Tutmoses and the Exodus". SSRN. doi:10.2139/ssrn.2429297.
- Shmuel 1976, p. 1102.
- Shmuel 1976, p. 1103.
- Hammer, Reuven (1995), The Classic Midrash: Tannaitic Commentaries on the Bible, Paulist Press, p. 15.
- Safrai, Shemuel; Stern, M.; Flusser, David; Unnik, Willem Cornelis (November 19, 1974). The Jewish People in the First Century: Historical Geography, Political History, Social, Cultural and Religious Life and Institutions. Uitgeverij Van Gorcum. ISBN 9789023214366 – via Google Books.
- ^ Droge 1989, p. 18.
- Barclay, John M. G. (1996). Jews in the Mediterranean Diaspora: From Alexander to Trajan (323 BCE – 117 CE). University of California Press. p. 130. ISBN 0-520-21843-4.
- "Moses". Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2010-03-02.
- Eusebius of Caesarea (1903). "Praeparatio Evangelica" [Preparation for the Gospel]. Translated by Gifford, E. H. Book 9. Retrieved 30 April 2021 – via tertullian.org.
- Feldman 1998, p. 40.
- ^ Feldman 1998, p. 133.
- Shmuel 1976, p. 1132.
- Strabo. The Geography, 16.2.35–36, Translated by H. C. Hamilton and W. Falconer in 1854, pp. 177–78.
- ^ Shmuel 1976, p. 1133.
- Assmann 1997, p. 38.
- Tacitus, Cornelius. The works of Cornelius Tacitus: With an essay on his life and genius by Arthur Murphy, Thomas Wardle Publ. (1842) p. 499
- ^ Tacitus, Cornelius. Tacitus, The Histories, Volume 2, Book V. Chapters 5, 6 p. 208.
- Henry J. M. Day, Lucan and the Sublime: Power, Representation and Aesthetic Experience, Cambridge University Press, 2013 p. 12.
- Louis H. Felkdman, Jew and Gentile in the Ancient World: Attitudes and Interactions from Alexander to Justinian, Princeton University Press 1996 p. 239.
- Shmuel 1976, p. 1140.
- Josephus, Flavius (1854), "IV", The works: Comprising the Antiquities of the Jews, vol. VIII, trans. by William Whiston, pp. 254–55.
- Feldman 1998, p. 130.
- Guthrie 1917, p. 194.
- Guthrie 1917, p. 101.
- ^ Blackham 2005, p. 39.
- Van Seters 2004, p. 194.
- Finkelstein & Silberman 2001, p. 68.
- Ska 2009, p. 260.
- Midrash Rabbah, Ki Thissa, XL. 3–3, Lehrman, p. 463
- Yalkut Shimoni, Shemot 166 to Chronicles I 4:18, 24:6; also see Vayikra Rabbah 1:3; Chasidah p. 345
- Rashi to Bava Batra 15s, Chasidah p. 345
- Bava Batra 15a on Deuteronomy 33:21, Chasidah p. 345
- Rashi to Berachot 54a, Chasidah p. 345
- ^ Ginzberg, Louis (1909). The Legends of the Jews (PDF). Vol. II: The Ascension of Moses, Moses Visits Paradise and Hell. Translated by Szold, Henrietta. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society.
- Eusebius, Praeparatio evangelica ix. 26
- Eusebius, l.c. ix. 27
- "Judaism 101: Moses, Aaron and Miriam". Jew FAQ. Retrieved 2010-03-02.
- Larkin, William J. (1995). Acts. IVP New Testament Commentary Series. Intervarsity Press Academic. ISBN 978-0-8308-1805-1.
- "Bible Gateway passage: Acts 7 – New International Version". Bible Gateway. Retrieved 2017-01-08.
- "John 6:35 (KJV)". www.biblegateway.com. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
And Jesus said unto them, I am the bread of life: he that cometh to me shall never hunger; and he that believeth on me shall never thirst.
- Matthew 23:2
- Tomson, Peter J. (11 February 2019). Studies on Jews and Christians in the First and Second Centuries. Mohr Siebeck. p. 517. ISBN 978-3-16-154619-8.
- Great Synaxaristes: (in Greek) Ὁ Προφήτης Μωϋσῆς. 4 Σεπτεμβρίου. μεγασ συναξαριστης.
- "Holy Prophet and God-seer Moses". Lives of the Saints. OCA.
- "September 4: The Holy God-seer Moses the Prophet and Aaron His Brother". In: The Menaion, Volume 1, The Month of September. Translated from the Greek by the Holy Transfiguration Monastery. Boston, Massachusetts, 2005. p. 67.
- The Sunday of the Holy Forefathers. St John's Orthodox Church, Colchester, Essex, England.
- "Mojżesz". DEON.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2021-09-03.
- "Пророк Моисе́й Боговидец". azbyka.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-09-03.
- Տոնական օրեր. Armenian Church (in Armenian). Retrieved 31 August 2017.
- Knecht, Friedrich Justus (1910). "XXXVII. The Golden Calf" . A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture. B. Herder.
- Skinner, Andrew C. (1992). "Moses". In Ludlow, Daniel H. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Mormonism. New York: Macmillan Publishing. pp. 958–59. ISBN 978-0-02-879602-4. OCLC 24502140.
- Taylor, Bruce T. (1992). "Book of Moses". In Ludlow, Daniel H (ed.). Encyclopedia of Mormonism. New York: Macmillan Publishing. pp. 216–217. ISBN 978-0-02-879602-4. OCLC 24502140.
- The Doctrine and Covenants 110:11
- ^ Keeler 2005, pp. 55–66.
- Keeler 2005, pp. 55–56, describes Moses from the Muslim perspective:
Among prophets, Moses has been described as the one "whose career as a messenger of God, lawgiver and leader of his community most closely parallels and foreshadows that of Muhammad", and as "the figure that in the Koran was presented to Muhammad above all others as the supreme model of saviour and ruler of a community, the man chosen to present both knowledge of the one God, and a divinely revealed system of law". We find him clearly in this role of Muhammad's forebear in a well-known tradition of the miraculous ascension of the Prophet, where Moses advises Muhammad from his own experience as messenger and lawgiver.
- Azadpur, M. (2009). "Charity and the Good Life: On Islamic Prophetic Ethics". Crisis, Call, and Leadership in the Abrahamic Traditions. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 153–167.
- Keeler 2005, p. 55.
- Quran 20:39
- Quran 28:7
- Quran 28:9
- Wheeler, Brannon M. (2002). Prophets in the Quran: an introduction to the Quran and Muslim exegesis. Continuum. ISBN 0-8264-4957-3.
- Shahada Sharelle Abdul Haqq (2012). Noble Women of Faith: Asiya, Mary, Khadija, Fatima (illustrated ed.). Tughra Books. ISBN 978-1-59784-268-6.
- Quran 79:17-19
- Quran 20:47-48
- Quran 5:20
- Sahih al-Bukhari 7517
- Smith, Huston (1991), The World's Religions, Harper Collins, p. 245, ISBN 978-0-06-250811-9.
- Samuel Curtiss (2005). Primitive Semitic Religion Today. Kessinger. pp. 163–4. ISBN 1-4179-7346-3.
- "God and His Creation". Baháʼí International Community.
- Bahá'u'lláh (1988). Epistle to the Son of the Wolf. Wilmette, Illinois: Baháʼí Publishing Trust. p. 104. ISBN 978-0-87743-048-3.
- Universal House of Justice: Department of the Secretariat (15 October 1992). "Issues raised within letter". Letter to . Retrieved 10 June 2019.
- ^ ʻAbdu'l-Bahá (1908). Some Answered Questions. Translated by Barney, Laura Clifford. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co. Ltd. pp. 17–18.
- McMullen, Michael (2000), The Baháʼí: The Religious Construction of a Global Identity, p. 246.
- Hitti, Philip K. (1928). The Origins of the Druze People and Religion: With Extracts from Their Sacred Writings. Library of Alexandria. p. 37. ISBN 9781465546623.
- Dana, Nissim (2008). The Druze in the Middle East: Their Faith, Leadership, Identity and Status. Michigan University press. p. 17. ISBN 9781903900369.
- Ifil, Gwen (2009). The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama. Random House. p. 58.
- Barclay, William (1998) . The Ten Commandments. Westminster John Knox Press. p. 4.
- Allen, Jonathan (September 24, 2015). "Pope Francis addresses Congress". Vox. Retrieved May 5, 2022.
- ^ Meacham 2006, p. 40.
- Talbot, Archie Lee (1930), A New Plymouth Colony at Kennebeck, Brunswick: Library of Congress.
- Lowell, James Russell (1913), The Round Table, Boston: Gorham Press, pp. 217–18
- Arber, Edward (1897). The Story of the Pilgrim Fathers. Houghton Mifflin. p. 345.
- Dever 2006, pp. ix, 234.
- Moses, Adolph (1903). Yahvism and Other Discourses. Louisville Council of Jewish Women. p. 93.
animated by the true spirit of the Hebrew prophets and law-givers. They walked by the light of the Scriptures, and were resolved to form a Commonwealth in accordance with the social laws and ideas of the Bible. ... they were themselves the true descendants of Israel, spiritual children of the prophets.
- Feiler 2009, p. 35.
- Feiler 2009, p. 102.
- Franklin 1834, p. 504.
- Franklin 1834, p. 211.
- Shuldiner, David Philip (1999). Of Moses and Marx. Greenwood. p. 35..
- Clinton, Catherine (2004). Harriet Tubman: The Road to Freedom. New York: Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 0-316-14492-4.
- Jones, Joyce Stokes; Galvin, Michele Jones (1999–2012). Beyond the Underground: Aunt Harriet, Moses of Her People. Sankofa Media. ISBN 9780989575508.
- Knight, Gladys L. (2009). Icons of African American Protest. Vol. I. Greenwood. p. 183.
- Hodes, Martha (2015). Mourning Lincoln. Yale University Press. pp. 164, 237. ISBN 978-0-300-21356-0.
- Coffin, Charles Carleton (2012) . Abraham Lincoln (reprint). Ulan Press. p. 534.
- King, Martin Luther Jr. (2000) . The Papers. University of California Press. p. 155.
I want to preach this morning from the subject, 'The Birth of a New Nation' And I would like to use as a basis for our thinking together, a story that has long since been stenciled on the mental sheets of succeeding generations. It is the story of the Exodus, the story of the flight of the Hebrew people from the bondage of Egypt, through the wilderness and finally, to the Promised Land. ... The struggle of Moses, the struggle of his devoted followers as they sought to get out of Egypt.
And I've looked over. And I've seen the promised land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land.
- Hall, James (1996). Hall's Dictionary of Subjects and Symbols in Art (2nd ed.). John Murray. p. 213. ISBN 0-7195-4147-6.
- Mellinkoff, Ruth (1970). The Horned Moses in Medieval Art and Thought. California Studies in the History of Art. Vol. 14. University of California Press. pp. 136–7. ISBN 0520017056.
- Strickland, Debra Higgs (2018). "Edward I, Exodus, and England on the Hereford World Map" (PDF). Speculum. 93 (2): 436–7. doi:10.1086/696540.
- Schiller, Gertud (1971). Iconography of Christian Art. Vol. I. London: Lund Humphries. pp. 146–152. ISBN 0-85331-270-2.
- MacLean, Margaret, ed. (1917). Art and Archaeology. Vol. VI. Archaeological Institute of America. p. 97.
- Devore, Gary M. (2008). Walking Tours of Ancient Rome: A Secular Guidebook to the Eternal City. Mercury Guides. p. 126. ISBN 978-0-615-19497-4.
- "Moses, Relief Portrait". Architect of the Capitol. Retrieved May 5, 2022.
- "Relief Portraits of Lawgivers: Moses". Architect of the Capitol. 2009-02-13. Archived from the original on 2010-03-02. Retrieved 2010-03-02.
- "Courtroom Friezes: North and South Walls: Information Sheet" (PDF). Supreme Court of the United States. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-01. Retrieved 2015-09-29..
- "In the Supreme Court itself, Moses and his law on display". Religion News Service. Christian Index. Archived from the original on 2009-12-07.
- ^ Assmann 1997.
- Yerushalmi, Y. Freud's Moses (monograph).
- "Order of the Aten Temple". Atenism. Archived from the original on 2006-09-01.
- Atwell, James E. (2000). "An Egyptian Source for Genesis 1". Journal of Theological Studies. 51 (2): 441–77. doi:10.1093/jts/51.2.441.
- Bernstein, Richard J. (1998). Freud and the Legacy of Moses. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-63096-2.
- Britt, Brian (2004). Rewriting Moses: The Narrative Eclipse of the Text. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 28. ISBN 978-0-567-38116-3 – via Google Books.
- Cournos, John (July 26, 1942). "Moses Reconstructed; All the Trumpets Sounded. By W. G. Hardy". The New York Times. Retrieved 2019-12-22.
- "Books By Orson Scott Card – Stone Tables". Hatrack. Retrieved 2021-03-23.
- Shales, Tom (April 10, 2006). "'The Ten Commandments': Exodus Comes to ABC". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 25, 2010.
- Ross, Steven J. (1 August 2011). Hollywood Left and Right: How Movie Stars Shaped American Politics. Oxford University Press. p. 277. ISBN 978-0-19-972048-4.
- "Seder-Masochism – A new animated feature from the creator of Sita Sings the Blues". 2019-07-14. Retrieved 2023-12-21.
- Paine, Thomas (1796) The Age of Reason, part II.
- Numbers 31:13–18
- ^ Grossman, Joel (2008), "Matot" Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine. Temple Beth Am Library Minyan.
- Levin, Alan J. "Some messages are hard to deliver". My Jewish Learning.
- Aliya-by-Aliya Sedra Summary, Torah Tidbits, OU, archived from the original on 2003-08-02.
- Allan, Keith (2019). The Oxford Handbook of Taboo Words and Language. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 15. ISBN 9780198808190. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
- Sherwood, Yvonne (2017). The Bible and Feminism: Remapping the Field. Oxford University Press. p. 228. ISBN 978-0-19-103419-0.
Sources
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Singer, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "Moses". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.
- Assmann, Jan (1997), Moses the Egyptian: The Memory of Egypt in Western Monotheism, Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-58738-0.
- Blackham, Paul (2005), "The Trinity in the Hebrew Scriptures", in Metzger, Paul Louis (ed.), Trinitarian Soundings in Systematic Theology (essay), Continuum International.
- Davies, Graham I. (2020), Exodus 1-18: A Critical and Exegetical Commentary: Volume 1: Chapters 1-10, International Critical Commentary, Bloomsbury Publishing, ISBN 978-0-567-68869-9
- ——— (2006) , Who Were the Early Israelites, and Where Did They Come From?, Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans
- Dozeman, Thomas B (2009), Commentary on Exodus, William B Eerdmans, ISBN 978-0-8028-2617-6
- Droge, Arthur J (1989), Homer or Moses?: Early Christian Interpretations of the History of Culture, Mohr Siebeck.
- Feiler, Bruce (2009), America's Prophet: Moses and the American Story, William Morrow.
- Feldman, Louis H (1998), Josephus's Interpretation of the Bible, University of California Press.
- Finkelstein, Israel; Silberman, Neil Asher (2001), The Bible Unearthed, New York: Free Press, ISBN 978-0-684-86912-4.
- Franklin, Benjamin (1834), Franklin, William Temple (ed.), Memoirs (ebook), vol. 2, Philadelphia: McCarty & Davis.
- Guthrie, Kenneth Sylvan (1917), Numenius of Apamea: The Father of Neo-Platonism, George Bell & Sons
- Hamilton, Victor (2011), Exodus: An Exegetical Commentary, Baker Books, ISBN 978-1-4412-4009-5.
- Keeler, Annabel (2005), "Moses from a Muslim Perspective", in Solomon, Norman; Harries, Richard; Winter, Tim (eds.), Abraham's Children: Jews, Christians, and Muslims in Conversation, T&T Clark, pp. 55–66, ISBN 978-0-567-08171-1.
- Meacham, Jon (2006), American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, and the Making of a Nation, Random House.
- Meyers, Carol (2005). Exodus. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-00291-2.
- Shmuel, Safrai (1976), Stern, M (ed.), The Jewish People in the First Century, Van Gorcum Fortress Press
- Ska, Jean Louis (2009), The Exegesis of the Pentateuch: Exegetical Studies and Basic Questions, Mohr Siebeck, pp. 30–31, 260, ISBN 978-3-16-149905-0
- Van Seters, John (2004), "Moses", in Barton, John (ed.), The Biblical World, Taylor & Francis, ISBN 978-0-415-35091-4
Further reading
- Asch, Sholem (1958), Moses, New York: Putnam, ISBN 978-0-7426-9137-7.
- Peter Barenboim, "Biblical Roots of Separation of Powers", Moscow, 2005, ISBN 5-94381-123-0,
- Barzel, Hillel (1974), "Moses: Tragedy and Sublimity", in Gros Louis, Kenneth RR; Ackerman, James S; Warshaw, Thayer S (eds.), Literary Interpretations of Biblical Narratives, Nashville: Abingdon Press, pp. 120–40, ISBN 978-0-687-22131-8.
- Buber, Martin (1958), Moses: The Revelation and the Covenant, New York: Harper.
- Card, Orson Scott (1998), Stone Tables, Deseret Book Co, ISBN 978-1-57345-115-4.
- Chasidah, Yishai (1994), "Moses", Encyclopedia of Biblical Personalities: Anthologized from the Talmud, Midrash and Rabbinic Writings, Brooklyn: Shaar Press, pp. 340–99.
- Cohen, Joel (2003), Moses: A Memoir, Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, ISBN 978-0-8091-0558-8.
- Churchill, Winston (November 8, 1931), "Moses", Sunday Chronicle, National Churchill Museum, Thoughts, 205.
- Daiches, David (1975), Moses: The Man and his Vision, New York: Praeger, ISBN 978-0-275-33740-7.
- Dever, William G (2002), What Did the Biblical Writers Know and When Did They Know It?, William B. Eerdmans, ISBN 978-0-8028-2126-3.
- Fast, Howard (1958), Moses, Prince of Egypt, New York: Crown.
- ———; ——— (2001b), The Bible Unearthed, New York: Simon & Schuster.
- Freud, Sigmund (1967), Moses and Monotheism, New York: Vintage, ISBN 978-0-394-70014-4.
- Gregory of Nyssa (1978), The Life of Moses, The Classics of Western Spirituality, Transl. Abraham J. Malherbe and Everett Ferguson. Preface by John Meyendorff, Paulist Press, ISBN 978-0-8091-2112-0. 208 pp.
- Halter, Marek (2005), Zipporah, Wife of Moses, New York: Crown, ISBN 978-1-4000-5279-0.
- Hoffmeier, James K (1996), "Moses and the Exodus", Israel in Egypt: The Evidence for the Authenticity of the Exodus Tradition, New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 135–63.
- Ingraham, Joseph Holt (2006) , The Pillar of Fire: Or Israel in Bondage (reprint), Ann Arbor, MI: Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library, ISBN 978-1-4255-6491-9.
- Kirsch, Jonathan. Moses: A Life. New York: Ballantine, 1998. ISBN 0-345-41269-9.
- Kohn, Rebecca. Seven Days to the Sea: An Epic Novel of the Exodus. New York: Rugged Land, 2006. ISBN 1-59071-049-5.
- Freedman, H, ed. (1983), Midrash Rabbah (10 volumes), Lehman, S.M. (translator), London: The Soncino Press.
- Mann, Thomas (1943), "Thou Shalt Have No Other Gods Before Me", The Ten Commandments, New York: Simon & Schuster, pp. 3–70.
- Salibi, Kamal (1985), "The Bible Came from Arabia", Jonathan Cape, London.
- Sandmel, Samuel (1973), Alone Atop the Mountain, Garden City, NY: Doubleday, ISBN 978-0-385-03877-5.
- ——— (1994), The Life of Moses: The Yahwist as Historian in Exodus-Numbers, Peeters Publishers, ISBN 978-90-390-0112-7.
- Smith, Huston (1991), The World's Religions, Harper Collins, ISBN 978-0-06-250811-9
- Southon, Arthur Eustace (1954) , On Eagles' Wings (reprint), New York: McGraw-Hill.
- van der Toorn, K.; Becking, Bob; van der Horst, Pieter Willem (1999), Dictionary of deities and demons in the Bible, Wm. B. Eerdmans, ISBN 978-0-8028-2491-2.
- Wiesel, Elie (1976), "Moses: Portrait of a Leader", Messengers of God: Biblical Portraits & Legends, New York: Random House, pp. 174–210, ISBN 978-0-394-49740-2.
- Wildavsky, Aaron (2005), Moses as Political Leader, Jerusalem: Shalem Press, ISBN 978-965-7052-31-0.
- Wilson, Dorothy Clarke (1949), Prince of Egypt, Philadelphia: Westminster Press.
External links
- Book XVI, Chapter II in Geographica by Strabo, 1st century, 1932 translation. Moses is mentioned
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