The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 23: The Plagues of Egypt
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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 [p. 260] 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, [p. 263] "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. [p. 264]
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.
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