Exodus Tales of Prophet Moses (Musa) & Prophet Haron (Aaron)

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Education & Teaching, History, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Historical, Fantasy, Epic Fantasy
Cover of the book Exodus Tales of Prophet Moses (Musa) & Prophet Haron (Aaron) by Muhammad Vandestra, Dragon Promedia
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Muhammad Vandestra ISBN: 9781370688739
Publisher: Dragon Promedia Publication: November 26, 2017
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Muhammad Vandestra
ISBN: 9781370688739
Publisher: Dragon Promedia
Publication: November 26, 2017
Imprint:
Language: English

The pharaoh who ruled Egypt was a tyrant who oppressed the descendants of Prophet Jacob (pbuh), known as the children of Israel (Bani Israel). He used every means to demean and disgrace them. They were kept in bondage and forced to work for him for small wages or nothing. Under this system the people obeyed and worshipped the pharaoh, and the ruling class carried out his orders, thereby authorizing his tyranny and crazy whims.

The pharaoh wanted the people to obey him only, and to believe in the gods of his invention. Perhaps, during that time, there were many classes of people who did not believe in or practice polytheism; however, they kept this to themselves and outwardly did as they were expected to do, without revolting or revealing themselves to anyone.

Thus, successive dynasties came to Egypt and assumed that they were gods or their representative or spokesmen. Years passed, and a despotic king, who was adored by the Egyptians, ruled Egypt. His king saw the children of Israel multiplying and prospering. He heard them talking about a vague vision that one of Israel' s sons would dethrone the pharaoh of Egypt. Perhaps this vision was only a daydream that persisted within the hearts of the persecuted minority, or perhaps it was a prophecy from their books.

Another tradition states that it was Pharaoh himself who had the vision. Ibn 'Abbas narrated: "Pharaoh saw in his vision a fire, which came from Jerusalem and burned the houses of the Egyptians, and all Copts, and did not do harm to the children of Israel. When he woke up, he was horrified. He then gathered his priests and magicians and asked them about this vision. They said: "This means a boy will be born of them and the Egyptian people will perish at his hands.' That is why Pharaoh commanded that all male children of the children of Israel be killed."

Either way, this vision reached the ears of the Pharaoh. He then issued a decree to slay any male child that would be born to the children of Israel. This was carried out until the experts of economics said to Pharaoh: "The aged of the children of Israel die and the young are slaughtered. This will lead to their annihilation. As a result, Pharaoh will lose the manpower of those who work for him, those whom he enslaves, and their women whom he exploits. It is better to regulate this procedure by initiating the following policy: males should be slaughtered in one year but spared to live the next year." Pharaoh found that solution to be safer economically.

Moses's mother was pregnant with Prophet Aaron (pbuh) in a year that boys were spared; thus she gave birth to the child publicly and safely. During a year in which boys were to be slain, she gave birth to Prophet Moses (pbuh); thus his birth caused her much terror. She was afraid he would be slain, so she nursed him secretly. No sooner had the divine revelation finished that she obeyed the sacred and merciful call. She was commanded to make a basket for Moses. She nursed him, put him into the basket, then went to the shore of the Nile and threw it into the water. Her mother's heart, the most merciful one in the world, grieved as she threw her son into the Nile. However, she was aware that Allah was much more merciful to Moses than to her, that He loved him more than her. Allah was his Lord and the Lord of the Nile.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The pharaoh who ruled Egypt was a tyrant who oppressed the descendants of Prophet Jacob (pbuh), known as the children of Israel (Bani Israel). He used every means to demean and disgrace them. They were kept in bondage and forced to work for him for small wages or nothing. Under this system the people obeyed and worshipped the pharaoh, and the ruling class carried out his orders, thereby authorizing his tyranny and crazy whims.

The pharaoh wanted the people to obey him only, and to believe in the gods of his invention. Perhaps, during that time, there were many classes of people who did not believe in or practice polytheism; however, they kept this to themselves and outwardly did as they were expected to do, without revolting or revealing themselves to anyone.

Thus, successive dynasties came to Egypt and assumed that they were gods or their representative or spokesmen. Years passed, and a despotic king, who was adored by the Egyptians, ruled Egypt. His king saw the children of Israel multiplying and prospering. He heard them talking about a vague vision that one of Israel' s sons would dethrone the pharaoh of Egypt. Perhaps this vision was only a daydream that persisted within the hearts of the persecuted minority, or perhaps it was a prophecy from their books.

Another tradition states that it was Pharaoh himself who had the vision. Ibn 'Abbas narrated: "Pharaoh saw in his vision a fire, which came from Jerusalem and burned the houses of the Egyptians, and all Copts, and did not do harm to the children of Israel. When he woke up, he was horrified. He then gathered his priests and magicians and asked them about this vision. They said: "This means a boy will be born of them and the Egyptian people will perish at his hands.' That is why Pharaoh commanded that all male children of the children of Israel be killed."

Either way, this vision reached the ears of the Pharaoh. He then issued a decree to slay any male child that would be born to the children of Israel. This was carried out until the experts of economics said to Pharaoh: "The aged of the children of Israel die and the young are slaughtered. This will lead to their annihilation. As a result, Pharaoh will lose the manpower of those who work for him, those whom he enslaves, and their women whom he exploits. It is better to regulate this procedure by initiating the following policy: males should be slaughtered in one year but spared to live the next year." Pharaoh found that solution to be safer economically.

Moses's mother was pregnant with Prophet Aaron (pbuh) in a year that boys were spared; thus she gave birth to the child publicly and safely. During a year in which boys were to be slain, she gave birth to Prophet Moses (pbuh); thus his birth caused her much terror. She was afraid he would be slain, so she nursed him secretly. No sooner had the divine revelation finished that she obeyed the sacred and merciful call. She was commanded to make a basket for Moses. She nursed him, put him into the basket, then went to the shore of the Nile and threw it into the water. Her mother's heart, the most merciful one in the world, grieved as she threw her son into the Nile. However, she was aware that Allah was much more merciful to Moses than to her, that He loved him more than her. Allah was his Lord and the Lord of the Nile.

More books from Dragon Promedia

Cover of the book Free Opensource Video Editor For Beginner & Youtube Creator by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book Kisah Hikayat Nabi Adam AS Utusan Allah SWT Yang Pertama by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book Panduan Cara Menginstall Windows 10 Untuk Pemula Lengkap Dengan Gambar by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book Islam Folklore Tales of Prophet Adam (Pbuh) & Iblis (Lucifer) From Jinn Race by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book The Etiquette of Eating & Personal Hygiene from Islamic Perspective by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book Ayat Al-Quran & Hadist Rasul Spesial Untuk Wanita Muslimah by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book Japanese Folklore Tales of The Beautiful Weaving Maiden by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book Hikayat Islami Cinta Pertama Nabi Muhammad SAW by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book Kisah Kehidupan Nabi Musa AS & Nabi Harun AS by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book Mitos Yang Salah & Keliru Tentang Bangsa Jin by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book List Anti Rootkit & AntiVirus For Ubuntu, Linux & BSD (Edition 2018) by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book Guide How To Install Windows Xp Sp3 For Beginner (Edition 2018) by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book Islam Folklore Prophet Jesus (Isa) Son of Mary & The Bird from Clay by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book Tales of Prophet Idris (Пророк Идрис) Bilingual Edition English & Russian by Muhammad Vandestra
Cover of the book The Story of Prophet Ishmael (Ismail) In Islam by Muhammad Vandestra
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy