Moses
Moses
The Old Testament prophet Moses (ca. 1392-ca. 1272 B.C.) was the emancipator of Israel. He created Israel's nationhood and founded its religion.
Moses was the son of Amram and Yochebed of the tribe of Levi. He was born in Egypt during the period in which the Pharaoh had ordered that all newborn male Hebrew children be cast into the Nile. Rescued by the daughter of the Pharaoh, he was brought up in the splendor of the Egyptian court as her adopted son. Grown to manhood, aware of his Hebraic origin, and with deep compassion for his enslaved brethren, he became enraged while witnessing an Egyptian taskmaster brutally beating a Hebrew slave. Impulsively he killed the Egyptian. Fearing the Pharaoh's wrath and punishment, he fled into the desert of Midian, becoming a shepherd for Jethro, a Midianite priest whose daughter Zipporah he later married. While tending the flocks on Mt. Horeb far in the wilderness, he beheld a bush burning that was not consumed. In the revelation that followed, he was informed that he had been chosen to serve as the liberator of the children of Israel. He was also told to proclaim the unity of God to his entire people, which doctrine heretofore had been known only to certain individuals.
The tremendous responsibility of his task, his innate humility, and his own feeling of unworthiness evoked a hesitancy and lack of confidence in Moses. He was assured, however, that Aaron, his more fluent brother, would serve as his spokesman both to the children of Israel and to the Pharaoh.
Moses returned to Egypt and persuaded the Hebrews to organize for a hasty departure from the land of bondage. Together with Aaron, he informed the Pharaoh that the God of the Hebrews demanded that he free His people. The Pharaoh refused to obey, bringing upon himself and his people nine terrible plagues that Moses wrought upon Egypt by using the miraculous staff he had received as a sign of his authority. The tenth plague, the killing of the firstborn sons of the Egyptians, broke the Pharaoh's resistance and compelled him to grant the Hebrews permission to depart immediately. Moses thus found himself the leader of an undisciplined collection of slaves, Hebrew as well as non-Hebrew, escaping from Egyptian territory to freedom.
Moses' immediate goal was Mt. Horeb, called Mt. Sinai, where God had first revealed Himself to him. The Hebrews came to the sacred mountain fired by the inspiration of their prophetic leader. Summoned by God, Moses ascended the mountain and received the tablets of stone while the children of Israel heard the thundering forth of the Ten Commandments. Inspired, the people agreed to the conditions of the Covenant.
Through 40 years in the wilderness of Sinai, overcoming tremendous obstacles, Moses led the horde of former slaves, shaping them into a nation. He selected and set them apart for a divine purpose and consecrated them to the highest ethical and moral laws. Only a man with tremendous will, patience, compassion, humility, and great faith could have forged the bickering and scheming factions who constantly challenged his wisdom and authority into an entity.
Moses supplemented the Ten Commandments by a code of law regulating the social and religious life of the
people. This collection of instructions, read to and ratified by the people, was called the Book of the Covenant.
Under his leadership, most of the land east of the Jordan was conquered and given to the tribes of Reuben and Gad and to half of the tribe of Menashe. Moses, however, was not permitted to lead the children of Israel into Canaan, the Promised Land, because he had been disobedient to God during the period of wandering in the desert. When the people were in need of water, God told Moses to speak to a rock and water would spring from it. Instead he had struck the rock with his staff. From the heights of Nebo he surveyed the land promised to his forefathers, which would be given to their children. Moses, 120 years old, died in the land of Moab and was buried opposite Bet Peor.
Further Reading
No single work on Moses is satisfactory. One full study is Martin Buber, Moses (1946; new ed. 1958). Mordecai Roshwald and Miriam Roshwald, Moses: Leader, Prophet, Man (1969), draws from legend, fiction, drama, and poetry as well as from the Bible. The best short essays on Moses are in Rudolph Kittel, Great Men and Movements in Israel (1929), and Fleming James, Personalities of the Old Testament (1939). For archeological and historical background consult Max L. Margolis and Alexander Marx, A History of the Jewish People (1927); Robert H. Pfeiffer, Introduction to the Old Testament (1941; rev. ed. 1948); William F. Albright, The Archaeology of Palestine (1949; rev. ed. 1956); Harry M. Orlinsky, Ancient Israel (1954); and Martin Noth, The History of Israel (1958; rev. ed. 1960). □
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Vetus Latina: Die Reste der altlateinischen Bibel nach Petrus Sabatier neugesammelt und in Verbindung mit der Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften herausgegeben von der Erzabtei...
Magazine article from: The Catholic Biblical Quarterly; 10/1/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...NT outside the Gospels was produced by Rufinus the Syrian, a teacher of Pelagius in Rome, but he knows that Rufinus the Syrian often quotes I Corinthians...away by arguing, per analogiam, that Rufinus the Syrian may have felt free not to...
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Restoration of quake-shattered churches is underway at Assisi; 700-year-old image of saint now just a dusty puzzle.(TRAVEL)
Newspaper article from: Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN); 5/17/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...beloved churches in Christendom, Saint Rufinus has been reduced to a kitty litter box...tray's end is a close-up photo of Rufinus as he looked during the long centuries...eyes, ruddy cheeks and golden halo. Rufinus and several other ceiling frescoes in...
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A lady waiting in nowhere.(News)
Newspaper article from: The Journal (Newcastle, England); 5/9/2005; 504 words
; ...commissioned a tombstone to her husband Rufinus, who was the fort commander. The stone...posts," says Lindsay Allason-Jones. Rufinus had been sub-curator of the Flaminian...Julia's life. An altar was dedicated to Rufinus and Julia by Eutychus, who describes...
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Origen and the History of Justification: The Legacy of Origen's Commentary on Romans.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Church History; 3/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...of America Press, 2001]) opened up Rufinus's version of Origen's Romans commentary...Scheck argues that from the point when Rufinus's translation became available, through...reliance on Origen, and notes the impact of Rufinus's translation newly printed in 1506...
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PROBLEMATIZING WOMEN AND HOLY LAND PILGRIMAGE IN LATE ANTIQUITY
Magazine article from: Magistra; 1/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...virgin, sister-in-law of Flavius Rufinus, from Jerusalem to Egypt.(11) It...Silvania, the virgin, sister-in-law of Rufinus the ex-prefect. Among the party there...As a member of the family of Flavius Rufinus, and thus associated with the imperial...
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L'Apologie de Jerome contre Rufin: Un commentaire.(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Theological Studies; 9/1/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...commentary on Jerome's Apology against Rufinus. As the editor of the critical text of...ostensibly) over the writings of Origen (Rufinus had produced a Latin translation of Origen...material on friendship, Jerome's and Rufinus's "scientific" sources pertaining...
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Italia ascetica atque monastica: Das Asketen- und Monchtum in Italien von den Anfangen bis zur Zeit der Langobarden (ca. 150/250-604)
Magazine article from: The Catholic Historical Review; 10/1/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...his erstwhile friend on these pages as much as possible) of Rufinus, resistance to monasticism (and in a separate essay, monasticism...the other hand, the patient elucidation of Jerome's and Rufinus's ideas and their influence constitutes the most important...
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St. Jerome's Lost Diaries.(Poem)
Magazine article from: Prairie Schooner; 12/22/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...my first Greek renderings with my beloved, sharp-tongued Rufinus. On Sundays my friends and I often toured the tombs of the...that I might banish it from my thoughts. No one, not even Rufinus, knew of them, for I hid my confessions under a loose stone...
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Grammar and Christianity in the Late Roman World
Magazine article from: The Catholic Historical Review; 10/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...grammar by authors such as Macrobius, Ausonius, Augustine, Rufinus, and Jerome). The book proceeds in six chapters.The first...a religious, as well as literary, context. By looking at Rufinus, Jerome, and Augustine, Chin shows how these authors see...
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An Ancient Jewish Christian Source on the History of Christianity: Pseudo-Clementine Recognitions 1.27-71
Magazine article from: Journal of Biblical Literature; 10/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...issue of reexamining the current source-critical consensus. In chapter 2, Jones offers a new perspective on the work of Rufinus as a translator of the Latin version. In chapter 3, the author notes that his rendering of the Latin version is based on...
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Rufinus
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography
RUFINUS ( fl . Italy, second half of thirteenth...botany, medicine . All that is known of Rufinus is what can be gleaned from his only known...fifth of the text. however, consists of Rufinus ’ own contributions, which are...
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Rufinus, Tyrannius
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
Rufinus, Tyrannius or Turranius ( c. 345...Though he was also an original writer, Rufinus is important mainly as a translator of...vindicate Origen's orthodoxy. It involved Rufinus in bitter controversy with St Jerome who...
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Galen
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography
...that city for “ four years already ” along with Rufinus, the founder of the Asclepeum in Pergamum. In all probability this Rufinus is Lucius Cuspius Rufinus, who had been consul in the year 142. (The date Galen gives could...
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Flavius Stilicho
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...Arcadius coming under the control of Stilicho's archenemy Rufinus, it became actually hostile. The major area of contention...recruiting ground for soldiers. Stilicho arranged the murder of Rufinus but even then did not succeed in dominating the East. After...
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Clementine Literature
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
...dated from the early 3rd cent. The ‘Homilies’ belong to the 4th cent. and betray Arian sympathies. The ‘Recognitions’ appear to be later; they survive mainly in a Latin translation by Rufinus .
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