Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 16.djvu/893

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MOSES 861 Prsep. Ev., ix. 27) ; she named the boy Mwt o-r/s, not because she used the Hebrew verb nt^Q to express the fact that he was drawn out of the water, but because the Egyptian word for water was /io>, and vo-r/s applies to those who have been delivered from it (Ant., ii. 9, 6 ; comp. Philo, ed. Mangey, ii. 83 ; Euseb., I.e., ix. 28). She took care to have him trained in all the wisdom of the Egyptians (Acts vii. 22) ami in that of the Greeks, Assyrians, and Chaldeans a: well (Philo, ii. 84). To his great intellectual endowments corresponded his personal beauty, of which Josephus speaks in extravagant terms (Ant., ii. 9, 6-7). It was on account of this beauty that, when on one occasion, as a young man, he led an Egyptian army against Meroe, the Ethiopian princess Tharbis opened the gates of the capital to him in order to make him her husband (Ant., ii. 10; comp. Numb. xii, 1). For reasons explained in Exod. ii. 11 $q., Moses left the land of Pharaoh and came to Midian to the Kenite priest Jethro (also called Hobab Ben Raguel and Raguel), whose daughter Zipporah he married, becoming by her the father of two sons, Gershom and Eliezer (Exod. ii. 21 sq.; xviii. 2 /.). During his stay in Midian he received, at the foot of Sinai (Horeb), the divine revelation at the burning bush whereby he was called to become the liberator of Israel from Egyptian bondage. With much reluctance he at last accepted this vocation, and, already expected by his brother Aaron and the elders, returned to his people. 1 Arrived in Egypt, he associated Aaron with him as his interpreter, being himself no orator, but a man of counsel and action, and appeared before Pharaoh to demand of the king in Jehovah s name permission for the people to go with ilocks and herds into the wilderness to celebrate there a festival (the spring festival of the Passover) in honour of their God. Jehovah gave emphasis to the demand by great signs and wonders, the plagues of Egypt, which have their explanation for the most part in evils to which Egypt is periodically liable, but are treated by Israelite tradition as the weapons of Jehovah in his ever-intensifying conflict with the king and the gods of Egypt. At length, by the slaying of the first-born, the stubbornness of Pharaoh was broken, so that he consented to, and even urged, the de parture of the Hebrews. By and by, however, he changed his mind, and, setting out in pursuit of the Hebrews, over took them at the Red Sea ; but Jehovah fought for them, and annihilated Pharaoh s chariots and all his host. In order to present themselves in proper festal array at the celebration for the sake of which they were going into the wilderness, the Hebrew women had borrowed dresses and ornaments from those of Egypt ; the Egyptians could now only blame themselves and their hostile conduct if those articles were not returned. 2 By the miracle wrought at the Red Sea Moses was pointed out to the Hebrews as the man of God, to whom accordingly they now committed the task of caring for their outward life as well as their spiritual guidance. He led them first to Sinai, where the law was revealed and the worship in connexion with the ark of the covenant insti tuted. When he had communed face to face with the Godhead for forty days on the holy mountain, the skin of his face shone so that he had to wear a veil (hence the horns, properly rays, on his forehead). Driven from Sinai in consequence of their worship of the golden calf, the Israelites removed to Kadesh with the view of entering 1 Ou the road occurred the remarkable incident which, in the view of the narrator, led to the circumcision of infants being substituted for that of the bridegroom (Exod. iv. 24, 25 ; V yJHI, to mark the substitution, compare the euphemism in Isa. vii. 20). 2 Quite contrary to the sense of the Biblical narrative, Justin (xxxvi. 2, 13) says, "Sacra ^Egyptiorum furto abstulit ; " and still more per verse is the gloss which Ewald, proceeding upon this expression of Justin, gives. Palestine. But this plan was defeated by their unbelief and faintheartedness, and, as a punishment, they were compelled to sojourn forty years in the wilderness of Kadesh (Paran, Sin). It was here and now that the people went to school with Moses ; here, at the sanctuary of the camp, he declared law and judgment; and here, according to the view of the oldest tradition, the foundations of the Torah were laid (Exod. xviii.). The region of Kadesh was also the scene of almost all the miracles and other cir cumstances we read about Moses. Here he showed himself to be at once the father and mother of the people, their judge, priest, and seer. It was not till towards the very close of his life that he led the Israelites from Kadesh into northern Moab, which he wrested from the Amorite king, Sihon of Heshbon. Here he died on Mount Pisgah or Nebo, after taking leave of the people in the great legisla tive address of Deuteronomy. According to Deuteronomy xxxiv. 6, he " was buried in a valley in the land of Moab, . . . but no man knoweth of his sepulchre unto this day." 3 As his successor in the leadership, Moses had named Joshua ben Nun, but the real heirs to his position and influence were the priests at the sanctuary of the ark of the covenant. Of his personal character the Bible tells us nothing (for UJJ in Numb. xii. 3 means only " heavily burdened ") ; but later Judaism is all the more at liberty on this account to expatiate upon it (see especially Josephus, Ant., iv. 8, 49). Such in brief resumi are the accounts of Moses given in the Bible 4 and the Midrash. In addition to these we have also the statements of Hellenistic writers, preserved chiefly in the Contra Apioncm of Josephus. These are all of an Egyptian complexion, and probably embody no ancient and independent tradition, but, in all that relates to the Hebrews, where they do not rest upon pure conjec ture, merely go back upon obscure rumours of Jewish origin and dress them up after the manner of the Midrash only in a con trary sense, with hatred and not with love and then seek to fit them as well as may be into the Egyptian history and chronology as known from other sources. The great number of new proper names of places and persons which occur in the writings of Manetho and his like cannot be urged against this view, for the Midrash also is full of them. The very name Osarsiph, given to Moses himself, moreover, suggests a suspicion of dependence on the Asaphsuph, "mixed multitude" of Numb. xi. 4 (comp. Exod. xii. 38); what is said in these places is known to have played a great part in the rise of the idle Egyptian tales about the origin of the Jews and of their lawgiver. For literature, see the various commentaries on the Pentateuch, and especially Dillmann on Exodus. (J. WE.) MOSES OF CHORENE was a native of Khor ni 5 in Taron, a district of the Armenian province of Turuberan. Accord ing to the only trustworthy authority the History of Armenia 6 which bears his name he was a pupil of the two fathers of Armenian literature, the patriarch or catho- licos Sahak the Great and the vartabed Mesrob. Shortly after 431 he was sent by these men to Alexandria to study the Greek language and literature, and thus prepare him self for the task of translating Greek writings into Armenian. Moses took his journey by Edessa and the sacred places of Palestine. After finishing his studies in the Egyptian capital he set sail for Greece ; but the ship was driven by contrary winds to Italy, and he seized the opportunity of paying a flying visit to Rome. He then visited Athens, and towards the end of winter (440) arrived in Constantinople, whence he set out on his homeward journey. On his arrival in Armenia he found that his patrons were both dead. The History of Armenia speaks of its author as an old, infirm man, constantly engaged in the work of translating. 7 In the later Armenian tradition 1 The legend of his assumption is of later growth ; see the apocryphal Assumptio May sis (APOCALYPTIC LITERATURE, vol. ii. p. 177), and

ompare Luke ix. 30, 33 ; Jude 9.

4 Outside of the Hexateuch, however, he is almost never mentioned. 5 Cf. Sukias Somal, Quadro della storia letteraria di Armenia, p. 24 sq. ii - 61 sq., 68, 65. 7 On linguistic grounds, the Mechitarists ascribe to him the transla-

iou of Eusebius s Chronicle and of the Pseudo-Callisthenes.