The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 22: Moses
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God had heard the mother's prayers; her faith had been rewarded.
It was with deep gratitude that she entered upon her
now safe and happy task. She faithfully improved her opportunity
to educate her child for God. She felt confident that he had been
preserved for some great work, and she knew that he must soon
be given up to his royal mother, to be surrounded with influences
that would tend to lead him away from God. All this rendered
her more diligent and careful in his instruction than in that of
her other children. She endeavored to imbue his mind with the
fear of God and the love of truth and justice, and earnestly prayed [p. 244] that he might be preserved from every corrupting influence. She
showed him the folly and sin of idolatry, and early taught him
to bow down and pray to the living God, who alone could hear
him and help him in every emergency.
She kept the boy as long as she could, but was obliged to give
him up when he was about twelve years old. From his humble
cabin home he was taken to the royal palace, to the daughter of
Pharaoh, "and he became her son." Yet even here he did not lose
the impressions received in childhood. The lessons learned at his
mother's side could not be forgotten. They were a shield from the
pride, the infidelity, and the vice that flourished amid the splendor
of the court.
How far-reaching in its results was the influence of that one
Hebrew woman, and she an exile and a slave! The whole future
life of Moses, the great mission which he fulfilled as the leader of
Israel, testifies to the importance of the work of the Christian
mother. There is no other work that can equal this. To a very
great extent the mother holds in her own hands the destiny of her
children. She is dealing with developing minds and characters,
working not alone for time, but for eternity. She is sowing seed
that will spring up and bear fruit, either for good or for evil. She
has not to paint a form of beauty upon canvas or to chisel it from
marble, but to impress upon a human soul the image of the divine.
Especially during their early years the responsibility rests
upon her of forming the character of her children. The impressions
now made upon their developing minds will remain with
them all through life. Parents should direct the instruction and
training of their children while very young, to the end that they
may be Christians. They are placed in our care to be trained, not
as heirs to the throne of an earthly empire, but as kings unto
God, to reign through unending ages.
Let every mother feel that her moments are priceless; her
work will be tested in the solemn day of accounts. Then it will
be found that many of the failures and crimes of men and women
have resulted from the ignorance and neglect of those whose
duty it was to guide their childish feet in the right way. Then it
will be found that many who have blessed the world with the
light of genius and truth and holiness, owe the principles that
were the mainspring of their influence and success to a praying,
Christian mother. [p. 245]
At the court of Pharaoh, Moses received the highest civil and
military training. The monarch had determined to make his
adopted grandson his successor on the throne, and the youth was
educated for his high station. "And Moses was learned in all
the wisdom of the Egyptians, and was mighty in words and in
deeds." Acts 7:22. His ability as a military leader made him a
favorite with the armies of Egypt, and he was generally regarded
as a remarkable character. Satan had been defeated in his purpose.
The very decree condemning the Hebrew children to death
had been overruled by God for the training and education of the
future leader of His people.
The elders of Israel were taught by angels that the time for
their deliverance was near, and that Moses was the man whom
God would employ to accomplish this work. Angels instructed
Moses also that Jehovah had chosen him to break the bondage of
His people. He, supposing that they were to obtain their freedom
by force of arms, expected to lead the Hebrew host against the
armies of Egypt, and having this in view, he guarded his affections,
lest in his attachment to his foster mother or to Pharaoh
he would not be free to do the will of God.
By the laws of Egypt all who occupied the throne of the
Pharaohs must become members of the priestly caste; and Moses,
as the heir apparent, was to be initiated into the mysteries of the
national religion. This duty was committed to the priests. But
while he was an ardent and untiring student, he could not be induced
to participate in the worship of the gods. He was threatened
with the loss of the crown, and warned that he would be
disowned by the princess should he persist in his adherence to
the Hebrew faith. But he was unshaken in his determination to
render homage to none save the one God, the Maker of heaven
and earth. He reasoned with priests and worshipers, showing the
folly of their superstitious veneration of senseless objects. None
could refute his arguments or change his purpose, yet for the
time his firmness was tolerated on account of his high position
and the favor with which he was regarded by both the king and
the people.
"By faith Moses, when he was come to years, refused to be
called the son of Pharaoh's daughter; choosing rather to suffer
affliction with the people of God, than to enjoy the pleasures of
sin for a season; esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches [p. 246] than the treasures in Egypt: for he had respect unto the recompense
of the reward." Hebrews 11:24-26. Moses was fitted to
take pre-eminence among the great of the earth, to shine in the
courts of its most glorious kingdom, and to sway the scepter of
its power. His intellectual greatness distinguishes him above the
great men of all ages. As historian, poet, philosopher, general of
armies, and legislator, he stands without a peer. Yet with the
world before him, he had the moral strength to refuse the flattering
prospects of wealth and greatness and fame, "choosing rather
to suffer affliction with the people of God, than to enjoy the
pleasures of sin for a season."
Moses had been instructed in regard to the final reward to be
given to the humble and obedient servants of God, and worldly
gain sank to its proper insignificance in comparison. The
magnificent palace of Pharaoh and the monarch's throne were held
out as an inducement to Moses; but he knew that the sinful pleasures
that make men forget God were in its lordly courts. He
looked beyond the gorgeous palace, beyond a monarch's crown,
to the high honors that will be bestowed on the saints of the Most
High in a kingdom untainted by sin. He saw by faith an imperishable
crown that the King of heaven would place on the
brow of the overcomer. This faith led him to turn away from the
lordly ones of earth and join the humble, poor, despised nation
that had chosen to obey God rather than to serve sin.
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