The Gospel of the Pentateuch by Charles Kingsley
page 90 of 186 (48%)
page 90 of 186 (48%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
beautiful, and the most important story of the whole Bible--
excepting of course, the story of our Lord Jesus Christ--the story of how a family grew to be a great nation. You remember that I told you that the history of the Jews, had been only, as yet, the history of a family. Now that family is grown to be a great tribe, a great herd of people, but not yet a nation; one people, with its own God, its own worship, its own laws; but such a mere tribe, or band of tribes as the gipsies are among us now; a herd, but not a nation. Then the Bible tells us how these tribes, being weak I suppose because they had no laws, nor patriotism, nor fellow-feeling of their own, became slaves, and suffered for hundreds of years under crafty kings and cruel taskmasters. Then it tells us how God delivered them out of their slavery, and made them free men. And how God did that (for God in general works by means), by the means of a man, a prophet and a hero, one great, wise, and good man of their race--Moses. It tells us, too, how God trained Moses, by a very strange education, to be the fit man to deliver his people. Let us go through the history of Moses; and we shall see how God trained him to do the work for which God wanted him. Let us read from the account of the Bible itself. I should be sorry to spoil its noble simplicity by any words of my own: 'And the children of Israel were fruitful, and increased abundantly, and |
|