Chapter 23
The Plagues of Egypt
[This chapter is based on Exodus 5 to 10.]
AARON, being instructed by angels, went forth to meet his brother, from whom he had been
so long separated; and they met amid the desert solitudes, near Horeb. Here they communed
together, and Moses told Aaron "all the words of the Lord who had sent him, and all
the signs which He had commanded him." Exodus 4:28. Together they journeyed to Egypt;
and having reached the land of Goshen, they proceeded to assemble the elders of Israel.
Aaron repeated to them all the dealings of God with Moses, and then the signs which God
had given Moses were shown before the people. "The people believed: and when they
heard that the Lord had visited the children of Israel, and that He had looked upon their
affliction, then they bowed their heads and worshiped." Verse 31.
Moses had been charged also with a message for the king. The two brothers entered the
palace of the Pharaohs as ambassadors from the King of kings, and they spoke in His name:
"Thus saith Jehovah, God of Israel, Let My people go, that they may hold a feast unto
Me in the wilderness."
"Who is Jehovah, that I should obey His voice to let Israel go?" demanded the
monarch; "I know not Jehovah, neither will I let Israel go."
Their answer was, "The God of the Hebrews hath met with us: let us go, we pray thee,
three days' journey into the desert, and sacrifice unto the Lord our God; lest He fall
upon us with pestilence, or with the sword."
Tidings of them and of the interest they were exciting among the people had already
reached the king. His anger was kindled. "Wherefore do ye, Moses and Aaron, let
[hinder] the people from their works?" he said. "Get you unto your
burdens." Already the kingdom had suffered loss by the interference of these
strangers. At thought of this he added, "Behold, the people of the land now are many,
and ye make them rest from their burdens."
In their bondage the Israelites had to some extent lost the knowledge of God's law, and
they had departed from its precepts. The Sabbath had been generally disregarded, and the
exactions of their taskmasters made its observance apparently impossible. But Moses had
shown his people that obedience to God was the first condition of deliverance; and the
efforts made to restore the observance of the Sabbath had come to the notice of their
oppressors.
The king, thoroughly roused, suspected the Israelites of a design to revolt from his
service. Disaffection was the result of idleness; he would see that no time was left them
for dangerous scheming. And he at once adopted measures to tighten their bonds and crush
out their independent spirit. The same day orders were issued that rendered their labor
still more cruel and oppressive. The most common building material of that country was
sun-dried brick; the walls of the finest edifices were made of this, and then faced with
stone; and the manufacture of brick employed great numbers of the bondmen. Cut straw being
intermixed with the clay, to hold it together, large quantities of straw were required for
the work; the king now directed that no more straw be furnished; the laborers must find it
for themselves, while the same amount of brick should be exacted.
This order produced great distress among the Israelites throughout the land. The Egyptian
taskmasters had appointed Hebrew officers to oversee the work of the people, and these
officers were responsible for the labor performed by those under their charge. When the
requirement of the king was put in force, the people scattered themselves throughout the
land, to gather stubble instead of straw; but they found it impossible to accomplish the
usual amount of labor. For this failure the Hebrew officers were cruelly beaten.
These officers supposed that their oppression came from their taskmasters, and not from
the king himself; and they went to him with their grievances. Their remonstrance was met
by Pharaoh with a taunt: "Ye are idle, ye are idle: therefore ye say, Let us go and
do sacrifice to the Lord." They were ordered back to their work, with the declaration
that their burdens were in no case to be lightened. Returning, they met Moses and Aaron,
and cried out to them, "The Lord look upon you, and judge; because ye have made our
savor to be abhorred in the eyes of Pharaoh, and in the eyes of his servants, to put a
sword in their hand to slay us."
As Moses listened to these reproaches he was greatly distressed. The sufferings of the
people had been much increased. All over the land a cry of despair went up from old and
young, and all united in charging upon him the disastrous change in their condition. In
bitterness of soul he went before God, with the cry, "Lord, wherefore hast Thou so
evil entreated this people? why is it that Thou hast sent me? For since I came to Pharaoh
to speak in Thy name, he hath done evil to this people; neither hast Thou delivered Thy
people at all." The answer was, "Now shalt thou see what I will do to Pharaoh:
for with a strong hand shall he let them go, and with a strong hand shall he drive them
out of his land." Again he was pointed back to the covenant which God had made with
the fathers, and was assured that it would be fulfilled.
During all the years of servitude in Egypt there had been among the Israelites some who
adhered to the worship of Jehovah. These were solely troubled as they saw their children
daily witnessing the abominations of the heathen, and even bowing down to their false
gods. In their distress they cried unto the Lord for deliverance from the Egyptian yoke,
that they might be freed from the corrupting influence of idolatry. They did not conceal
their faith, but declared to the Egyptians that the object of their worship was the Maker
of heaven and earth, the only true and living God. They rehearsed the evidences of His
existence and power, from creation down to the days of Jacob. The Egyptians thus had an
opportunity to become acquainted with the religion of the Hebrews; but disdaining to be
instructed by their slaves, they tried to seduce the worshipers of God by promises of
reward, and, this failing, by threats and cruelty.
The elders of Israel endeavored to sustain the sinking faith of their brethren by
repeating the promises made to their fathers, and the prophetic words of Joseph before his
death, foretelling their deliverance from Egypt. Some would listen and believe. Others,
looking at the circumstances that surrounded them, refused to hope. The Egyptians, being
informed of what was reported among their bondmen, derided their expectations and
scornfully denied the power of their God. They pointed to their situation as a nation of
slaves, and tauntingly said, "If your God is just and merciful, and possesses power
above that of the Egyptian gods, why does He not make you a free people?" They called
attention to their own condition. They worshiped deities termed by the Israelites false
gods, yet they were a rich and powerful nation. They declared that their gods had blessed
them with prosperity, and had given them the Israelites as servants, and they gloried in
their power to oppress and destroy the worshipers of Jehovah. Pharaoh himself boasted that
the God of the Hebrews could not deliver them from his hand.
Words like these destroyed the hopes of many of the Israelites. The case appeared to them
very much as the Egyptians had represented. It was true that they were slaves, and must
endure whatever their cruel taskmasters might choose to inflict. Their children had been
hunted and slain, and their own lives were a burden. Yet they were worshiping the God of
heaven. If Jehovah were indeed above all gods, surely He would not thus leave them in
bondage to idolaters. But those who were true to God understood that it was because of
Israel's departure from Him--because of their disposition to marry with heathen nations,
thus being led into idolatry--that the Lord had permitted them to become bondmen; and they
confidently assured their brethren that He would soon break the yoke of the oppressor.
The Hebrews had expected to obtain their freedom without any special trial of their faith
or any real suffering or hardship. But they were not yet prepared for deliverance. They
had little faith in God, and were unwilling patiently to endure their afflictions until He
should see fit to work for them. Many were content to remain in bondage rather than meet
the difficulties attending removal to a strange land; and the habits of some had become so
much like those of the Egyptians that they preferred to dwell in Egypt. Therefore the Lord
did not deliver them by the first manifestation of His power before Pharaoh. He overruled
events more fully to develop the tyrannical spirit of the Egyptian king and also to reveal
Himself to His people. Beholding His justice, His power, and His love, they would choose
to leave Egypt and give themselves to His service. The task of Moses would have been much
less difficult had not many of the Israelites become so corrupted that they were unwilling
to leave Egypt.
The Lord directed Moses to go again to the people and repeat the promise of deliverance,
with a fresh assurance of divine favor. He went as he was commanded; but they would not
listen. Says the Scripture, "They hearkened not . . . for anguish of spirit, and for
cruel bondage." Again the divine message came to Moses, "Go in, speak unto
Pharaoh king of Egypt, that he let the children of Israel go out of his land." In
discouragement he replied, "Behold, the children of Israel have not hearkened unto
me; how then shall Pharaoh hear me?" He was told to take Aaron with him and go before
Pharaoh, and again demand "that he send the children of Israel out of his land."
He was informed that the monarch would not yield until God should visit judgments upon
Egypt and bring out Israel by the signal manifestation of His power. Before the infliction
of each plague, Moses was to describe its nature and effects, that the king might save
himself from it if he chose. Every punishment rejected would be followed by one more
severe, until his proud heart would be humbled, and he would acknowledge the Maker of
heaven and earth as the true and living God. The Lord would give the Egyptians an
opportunity to see how vain was the wisdom of their mighty men, how feeble the power of
their gods, when opposed to the commands of Jehovah. He would punish the people of Egypt
for their idolatry and silence their boasting of the blessings received from their
senseless deities. God would glorify His own name, that other nations might hear of His
power and tremble at His mighty acts, and that His people might be led to turn from their
idolatry and render Him pure worship.
Again Moses and Aaron entered the lordly halls of the king of Egypt. There, surrounded by
lofty columns and glittering adornments, by the rich paintings and sculptured images of
heathen gods, before the monarch of the most powerful kingdom then in existence, stood the
two representatives of the enslaved race, to repeat the command from God for Israel's
release. The king demanded a miracle, in evidence of their divine commission. Moses and
Aaron had been directed how to act in case such a demand should be made, and Aaron now
took the rod and cast it down before Pharaoh. It became a serpent. The monarch sent for
his "wise men and the sorcerers," who "cast down every man his rod and they
became serpents: but Aaron's rod swallowed up their rods." Then the king, more
determined than before, declared his magicians equal in power with Moses and Aaron; he
denounced the servants of the Lord as impostors, and felt himself secure in resisting
their demands. Yet while he despised their message, he was restrained by divine power from
doing them harm.
It was the hand of God, and no human influence or power possessed by Moses and Aaron, that
wrought the miracles which they showed before Pharaoh. Those signs and wonders were
designed to convince Pharaoh that the great "I AM" had sent Moses, and that it
was the duty of the king to let Israel go, that they might serve the living God. The
magicians also showed signs and wonders; for they wrought not by their own skill alone,
but by the power of their god, Satan, who assisted them in counterfeiting the work of
Jehovah.
The magicians did not really cause their rods to become serpents; but by magic, aided by
the great deceiver, they were able to produce this appearance. It was beyond the power of
Satan to change the rods to living serpents. The prince of evil, though possessing all the
wisdom and might of an angel fallen, has not power to create, or to give life; this is the
prerogative of God alone. But all that was in Satan's power to do, he did; he produced a
counterfeit. To human sight the rods were changed to serpents. Such they were believed to
be by Pharaoh and his court. There was nothing in their appearance to distinguish them
from the serpent produced by Moses. Though the Lord caused the real serpent to swallow up
the spurious ones, yet even this was regarded by Pharaoh, not as a work of God's power,
but as the result of a kind of magic superior to that of his servants.
Pharaoh desired to justify his stubbornness in resisting the divine command, and hence he
was seeking some pretext for disregarding the miracles that God had wrought through Moses.
Satan gave him just what he wanted. By the work that he wrought through the magicians he
made it appear to the Egyptians that Moses and Aaron were only magicians and sorcerers,
and that the message they brought could not claim respect as coming from a superior being.
Thus Satan's counterfeit accomplished its purpose of emboldening the Egyptians in their
rebellion and causing Pharaoh to harden his heart against conviction. Satan hoped also to
shake the faith of Moses and Aaron in the divine origin of their mission, that his
instruments might prevail. He was unwilling that the children of Israel should be released
from bondage to serve the living God.
But the prince of evil had a still deeper object in manifesting his wonders through the
magicians. He well knew that Moses, in breaking the yoke of bondage from off the children
of Israel, pre-figured Christ, who was to break the reign of sin over the human family. He
knew that when Christ should appear, mighty miracles would be wrought as an evidence to
the world that God had sent Him. Satan trembled for his power. By counterfeiting the work
of God through Moses, he hoped not only to prevent the deliverance of Israel, but to exert
an influence through future ages to destroy faith in the miracles of Christ. Satan is
constantly seeking to counterfeit the work of Christ and to establish his own power and
claims. He leads men to account for the miracles of Christ by making them appear to be the
result of human skill and power. In many minds he thus destroys faith in Christ as the Son
of God, and leads them to reject the gracious offers of mercy through the plan of
redemption.
Moses and Aaron were directed to visit the riverside next morning, where the king was
accustomed to repair. The overflowing of the Nile being the source of food and wealth for
all Egypt, the river was worshiped as a god, and the monarch came thither daily to pay his
devotions. Here the two brothers again repeated the message to him, and then they
stretched out the rod and smote upon the water. The sacred stream ran blood, the fish
died, and the river became offensive to the smell. The water in the houses, the supply
preserved in cisterns, was likewise changed to blood. But "the magicians of Egypt did
so with their enchantments," and "Pharaoh turned and went into his house,
neither did he set his heart to this also." For seven days the plague continued, but
without effect.
Again the rod was stretched out over the waters, and frogs came up from the river and
spread over the land. They overran the houses, took possession of the bed chambers, and
even the ovens and kneading troughs. The frog was regarded as sacred by the Egyptians, and
they would not destroy it; but the slimy pests had now become intolerable. They swarmed
even in the palace of the Pharaohs, and the king was impatient to have them removed. The
magicians had appeared to produce frogs, but they could not remove them. Upon seeing this,
Pharaoh was somewhat humbled. He sent for Moses and Aaron, and said, "Entreat the
Lord, that He may take away the frogs from me, and from my people; and I will let the
people go, that they may do sacrifice unto the Lord." After reminding the king of his
former boasting, they requested him to appoint a time when they should pray for the
removal of the plague. He set the next day, secretly hoping that in the interval the frogs
might disappear of themselves, and thus save him from the bitter humiliation of submitting
to the God of Israel. The plague, however, continued till the time specified, when
throughout all Egypt the frogs died, but their putrid bodies, which remained, polluted the
atmosphere.
The Lord could have caused them to return to dust in a moment; but He did not do this lest
after their removal the king and his people should pronounce it the result of sorcery or
enchantment, like the work of the magicians. The frogs died, and were then gathered
together in heaps. Here the king and all Egypt had evidence which their vain philosophy
could not gainsay, that this work was not accomplished by magic, but was a judgment from
the God of heaven.
"When Pharaoh saw that there was respite, he hardened his heart." At the command
of God, Aaron stretched out his hand, and the dust of the earth became lice throughout all
the land of Egypt. Pharaoh called upon the magicians to do the same, but they could not.
The work of God was thus shown to be superior to that of Satan. The magicians themselves
acknowledged, "This is the finger of God." But the king was still unmoved.
Appeal and warning were ineffectual, and another judgment was inflicted. The time of its
occurrence was foretold, that it might not be said to have come by chance. Flies filled
the houses and swarmed upon the ground, so that "the land was corrupted by reason of
the swarms of flies." These flies were large and venomous, and their bite was
extremely painful to man and beast. As had been foretold, this visitation did not extend
to the land of Goshen.
Pharaoh now offered the Israelites permission to sacrifice in Egypt, but they refused to
accept such conditions. "It is not meet," said Moses; "lo, shall we
sacrifice the abomination of the Egyptians before their eyes, and will they not stone
us?" The animals which the Hebrews would be required to sacrifice were among those
regarded as sacred by the Egyptians; and such was the reverence in which these creatures
were held, that to slay one, even accidentally, was a crime punishable with death. It
would be impossible for the Hebrews to worship in Egypt without giving offense to their
masters. Moses again proposed to go three days' journey into the wilderness. The monarch
consented, and begged the servants of God to entreat that the plague might be removed.
They promised to do this, but warned him against dealing deceitfully with them. The plague
was stayed, but the king's heart had become hardened by persistent rebellion, and he still
refused to yield.
A more terrible stroke followed--murrain upon all the Egyptian cattle that were in the
field. Both the sacred animals and the beasts of burden--kine and oxen and sheep, horses
and camels and asses--were destroyed. It had been distinctly stated that the Hebrews were
to be exempt; and Pharaoh, on sending messengers to the home of the Israelites, proved the
truth of this declaration of Moses. "Of the cattle of the children of Israel died not
one." Still the king was obstinate.
Moses was next directed to take ashes of the furnace, and "sprinkle it toward heaven
in the sight of Pharaoh." This act was deeply significant. Four hundred years before,
God had shown to Abraham the future oppression of His people, under the figure of a
smoking furnace and a burning lamp. He had declared that He would visit judgments upon
their oppressors, and would bring forth the captives with great substance. In Egypt,
Israel had long languished in the furnace of affliction. This act of Moses was an
assurance to them that God was mindful of His covenant, and that the time for their
deliverance had come.
As the ashes were sprinkled toward heaven, the fine particles spread over all the land of
Egypt, and wherever they settled, produced boils "breaking forth with blains upon
man, and upon beast." The priests and magicians had hitherto encouraged Pharaoh in
his stubbornness, but now a judgment had come that reached even them. Smitten with a
loathsome and painful disease, their vaunted power only making them contemptible, they
were no longer able to contend against the God of Israel. The whole nation was made to see
the folly of trusting in the magicians, when they were not able to protect even their own
persons.
Still the heart of Pharaoh grew harder. And now the Lord sent a message to him, declaring,
"I will at this time send all My plagues upon thy heart, and upon thy servants, and
upon thy people; that thou mayest know that there is none like Me in all the earth. . . .
And in very deed for this cause have I raised thee up, for to show in thee My power."
Not that God had given him an existence for this purpose, but His providence had overruled
events to place him upon the throne at the very time appointed for Israel's deliverance.
Though this haughty tyrant had by his crimes forfeited the mercy of God, yet his life had
been preserved that through his stubbornness the Lord might manifest His wonders in the
land of Egypt. The disposing of events is of God's providence. He could have placed upon
the throne a more merciful king, who would not have dared to withstand the mighty
manifestations of divine power. But in that case the Lord's purposes would not have been
accomplished. His people were permitted to experience the grinding cruelty of the
Egyptians, that they might not be deceived concerning the debasing influence of idolatry.
In His dealing with Pharaoh, the Lord manifested His hatred of idolatry and His
determination to punish cruelty and oppression.
God had declared concerning Pharaoh, "I will harden his heart, that he shall not let
the people go." Exodus 4:21. There was no exercise of supernatural power to harden
the heart of the king. God gave to Pharaoh the most striking evidence of divine power, but
the monarch stubbornly refused to heed the light. Every display of infinite power rejected
by him, rendered him the more determined in his rebellion. The seeds of rebellion that he
sowed when he rejected the first miracle, produced their harvest. As he continued to
venture on in his own course, going from one degree of stubbornness to another, his heart
became more and more hardened, until he was called to look upon the cold, dead faces of
the first-born.
God speaks to men through His servants, giving cautions and warnings, and rebuking sin. He
gives to each an opportunity to correct his errors before they become fixed in the
character; but if one refuses to be corrected, divine power does not interpose to
counteract the tendency of his own action. He finds it more easy to repeat the same
course. He is hardening the heart against the influence of the Holy Spirit. A further
rejection of light places him where a far stronger influence will be ineffectual to make
an abiding impression.
He who has once yielded to temptation will yield more readily the second time. Every
repetition of the sin lessens his power of resistance, blinds his eyes, and stifles
conviction. Every seed of indulgence sown will bear fruit. God works no miracle to prevent
the harvest. "Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap." Galatians 6:7.
He who manifests an infidel hardihood, a stolid indifference to divine truth, is but
reaping the harvest of that which he has himself sown. It is thus that multitudes come to
listen with stoical indifference to the truths that once stirred their very souls. They
sowed neglect and resistance to the truth, and such is the harvest which they reap.
Those who are quieting a guilty conscience with the thought that they can change a course
of evil when they choose, that they can trifle with the invitations of mercy, and yet be
again and again impressed, take this course at their peril. They think that after casting
all their influence on the side of the great rebel, in a moment of utmost extremity, when
danger compasses them about, they will change leaders. But this is not so easily done. The
experience, the education, the discipline of a life of sinful indulgence, has so
thoroughly molded the character that they cannot then receive the image of Jesus. Had no
light shone upon their pathway, the case would have been different. Mercy might interpose,
and give them an opportunity to accept her overtures; but after light has been long
rejected and despised, it will be finally withdrawn.
A plague of hail was next threatened upon Pharaoh, with the warning, "Send therefore
now, and gather thy cattle, and all that thou hast in the field; for upon every man and
beast which shall be found in the field, and shall not be brought home, the hail shall
come down upon them, and they shall die." Rain or hail was unusual in Egypt, and such
a storm as was foretold had never been witnessed. The report spread rapidly, and all who
believed the word of the Lord gathered in their cattle, while those who despised the
warning left them in the field. Thus in the midst of judgment the mercy of God was
displayed, the people were tested, and it was shown how many had been led to fear God by
the manifestation of His power.
The storm came as predicted--thunder and hail, and fire mingled with it, "very
grievous, such as there was none like it in all the land of Egypt since it became a
nation. And the hail smote throughout all the land of Egypt all that was in the field,
both man and beast; and the hail smote every herb of the field, and brake every tree of
the field." Ruin and desolation marked the path of the destroying angel. The land of
Goshen alone was spared. It was demonstrated to the Egyptians that the earth is under the
control of the living God, that the elements obey His voice, and that the only safety is
in obedience to Him.
All Egypt trembled before the awful outpouring of divine judgment. Pharaoh hastily sent
for the two brothers, and cried out, "I have sinned this time: the Lord is righteous,
and I and my people are wicked. Entreat the Lord (for it is enough) that there be no more
mighty thunderings and hail; and I will let you go, and ye shall stay no longer." The
answer was, "As soon as I am gone out of the city, I will spread abroad my hands unto
the Lord; and the thunder shall cease, neither shall there be any more hail; that thou
mayest know how that the earth is the Lord's. But as for thee and thy servants, I know
that ye will not yet fear the Lord God."
Moses knew that the contest was not ended. Pharaoh's confessions and promises were not the
effect of any radical change in his mind or heart, but were wrung from him by terror and
anguish. Moses promised, however, to grant his request; for he would give him no occasion
for further stubbornness. The prophet went forth, unheeding the fury of the tempest, and
Pharaoh and all his host were witnesses to the power of Jehovah to preserve His messenger.
Having passed without the city, Moses "spread abroad his hands unto the Lord: and the
thunders and hail ceased, and the rain was not poured upon the earth." But no sooner
had the king recovered from his fears than his heart returned to its perversity.
Then the Lord said unto Moses, "Go in unto Pharaoh: for I have hardened his heart,
and the heart of his servants, that I might show these My signs before him; and that thou
mayest tell in the ears of thy son, and of thy son's son, what things I have wrought in
Egypt, and My signs which I have done among them; that ye may know how that I am
Jehovah." The Lord was manifesting His power, to confirm the faith of Israel in Him
as the only true and living God. He would give unmistakable evidence of the difference He
placed between them and the Egyptians, and would cause all nations to know that the
Hebrews, whom they had despised and oppressed, were under the protection of the God of
heaven.
Moses warned the monarch that if he still remained obstinate, a plague of locusts would be
sent, which would cover the face of The earth and eat up every green thing that remained;
they would fill the houses, even the palace itself; such a scourge, he said, as
"neither thy fathers, nor thy fathers' fathers have seen, since the day that they
were upon the earth unto this day."
The counselors of Pharaoh stood aghast. The nation had sustained great loss in the death
of their cattle. Many of the people had been killed by the hail. The forests were broken
down and the crops destroyed. They were fast losing all that had been gained by the labor
of the Hebrews. The whole land was threatened with starvation. Princes and courtiers
pressed about the king and angrily demanded, "How long shall this man be a snare unto
us? let the men go, that they may serve the Lord their God: knowest thou not yet that
Egypt is destroyed?"
Moses and Aaron were again summoned, and the monarch said to them, "Go, serve the
Lord your God: but who are they that shall go?"
The answer was, "We will go with our young and with our old, with our sons and with
our daughters, with our flocks and with our herds will we go; for we must hold a feast
unto the Lord."
The king was filled with rage. "Let the Lord be so with you," he cried, "as
I will let you go, and your little ones: look to it; for evil is before you. Not so: go
now ye that are men, and serve the Lord; for that ye did desire. And they were driven out
from Pharaoh's presence." Pharaoh had endeavored to destroy the Israelites by hard
labor, but he now pretended to have a deep interest in their welfare and a tender care for
their little ones. His real object was to keep the women and children as surety for the
return of the men.
Moses now stretched forth his rod over the land, and an east wind blew, and brought
locusts. "Very grievous were they; before them there were no such locusts as they,
neither after them shall be such." They filled the sky till the land was darkened,
and devoured every green thing remaining. Pharaoh sent for the prophets in haste, and
said, "I have sinned against the Lord your God, and against you. Now therefore,
forgive, I pray thee, my sin only this once, and entreat the Lord your God, that He may
take away from me this death only." They did so, and a strong west wind carried away
the locusts toward the Red Sea. Still the king persisted in his stubborn resolution.
The people of Egypt were ready to despair. The scourges that had already fallen upon them
seemed almost beyond endurance, and they were filled with fear for the future. The nation
had worshiped Pharaoh as a representative of their god, but many were now convinced that
he was opposing himself to One who made all the powers of nature the ministers of His
will. The Hebrew slaves, so miraculously favored, were becoming confident of deliverance.
Their taskmasters dared not oppress them as heretofore. Throughout Egypt there was a
secret fear that the enslaved race would rise and avenge their wrongs. Everywhere men were
asking with bated breath, What will come next?
Suddenly a darkness settled upon the land, so thick and black that it seemed a
"darkness which may be felt." Not only were the people deprived of light, but
the atmosphere was very oppressive, so that breathing was difficult. "They saw not
one another, neither rose any from his place for three days: but all the children of
Israel had light in their dwellings." The sun and moon were objects of worship to the
Egyptians; in this mysterious darkness the people and their gods alike were smitten by the
power that had undertaken the cause of the bondmen. Yet fearful as it was, this judgment
is an evidence of God's compassion and His unwillingness to destroy. He would give the
people time for reflection and repentance before bringing upon them the last and most
terrible of the plagues.
Fear at last wrung from Pharaoh a further concession. At the end of the third day of
darkness he summoned Moses, and consented to the departure of the people, provided the
flocks and herds were permitted to remain. "There shall not an hoof be left
behind," replied the resolute Hebrew. "We know not with what we must serve the
Lord, until we come thither." The king's anger burst forth beyond control. "Get
thee from me," he cried, "take heed to thyself, see my face no more; for in that
day thou seest my face thou shalt die."
The answer was, "Thou hast spoken well, I will see thy face again no more."
"The man Moses was very great in the land of Egypt, in the sight of Pharaoh's
servants, and in the sight of the people." Moses was regarded with awe by the
Egyptians. The king dared not harm him, for the people looked upon him as alone possessing
power to remove the plagues. They desired that the Israelites might be permitted to leave
Egypt. It was the king and the priests that opposed to the last the demands of Moses.
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