Hebrew Life and Times by Harold B. (Harold Bruce) Hunting
page 32 of 191 (16%)
page 32 of 191 (16%)
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now the order was, "Go yourselves, get straw where you can find it."
So they had to go and hunt through the surrounding fields for old refuse straw, in rotting ricks and compost heaps. Yet the same number of bricks was required as before, with a whipping in case of failure. The granaries in Pa-Tum and Rameses were excavated many years ago from beneath the sands of Egypt, and their ruined walls may still be seen by tourists. It is noticeable that the upper tiers in the walls are made of bricks of a very poor quality as compared to those in the lower tiers. Evidently, the Hebrews got through the work somehow each day, putting very little straw in the clay, or sometimes none at all. But they wished they had never heard of Moses, and they reproached him for "making them hateful in the eyes of Pharaoh." In the first round of the fight Moses and freedom had lost; Pharaoh and slavery had won. But the end was not yet. STUDY TOPICS 1. Look up in any good Bible dictionary, the article on Egypt; or read the summary of Egyptian history in some recent general history. 2. Draw a map of Egypt, locating approximately the place where the Hebrews worked. 3. In what special ways was Moses well trained to be an emancipator for his people? 4. Are there workers to-day who are in any form of slavery which may |
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