Today's Scripture Reading (March 6, 2025): Deuteronomy 18
I have to admit I did some research on the internet this week because we know everything on the internet is accurate, and I was looking at some videos on the life of Moses. Many of the videos were pretty bad, but the comments attached to these videos really opened my eyes to the truth (yes, I am being sarcastic.) One of the comments that grabbed my attention was from a children's video about Moses, which was part of a Christian series on "Old Testament Prophets." The comment that caught my eye was listed right under the video. Someone commented, "Moses was Muslim, which is much better than a stupid cross." Someone who thought that they knew better than this person had responded, "How could Moses be a Muslim when Moses was before Islam." The response to that question (I am paraphrasing here because the original language was inappropriate) was, "Are you stupid? Islam was from the very beginning, long before Moses." As I sat at my desk looking at the comment, the whole exchange highlighted the problem we often have when we look back at something. We try to give them meaning from a future time and with future ideas of which they, in this case Moses, are entirely unaware.
For those who are a little confused, Moses lived probably somewhere around 12 to 13 hundred years before Christ, depending on whose dating you are using. If Ramses II or Ramses the Great was the Pharoah that Moses did battle with, we can date his reign to 1279 – 1213 B.C.E. If this was Moses's Pharoah, then Moses would have grown up with Ramses. Christ was born a little more than 1200 years after the death of Ramses and Moses. The dating of Islam is really from the life of Muhammad, who lived in the 7th Century C.E. – or just over 600 years after Jesus. So, to say that Moses was a Christian, going back to the comment of the "stupid cross," or of Islam, is wrong. Moses couldn't have imagined either the cross or the revelations of God given to the great prophet Muhammad.
Moses was a Jew, but even that isn't quite right. Moses was a descendant of Jacob who came to be known as Israel, and all of the descendants of Jacob have taken his name as their name; they are the people of Israel, but Judaism, as we understand it today, really didn't exist at the time of Moses. The seeds of Judaism are found in the Law of Moses, which Moses received from God in his early to mid-eighties. All of this means that Moses lived in a world where Judaism didn't exist, not yet. For most of Moses's life, Israel was a race of slaves living in Egypt. They probably had some conception of the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, but he was a distant God who didn't have much to do with their daily lives. Much more in their face would have been the gods of the Egyptians, whose temples and artifacts the Egyptians were busy building. So, to say that Moses was Christian or Muslim is wrong. But to say that Moses was a part of Judaism in many ways isn't right, either. Moses was the great father of all three sister faiths.
Moses storms onto the scene at a time when Israel needed somebody. But the people were already looking past Moses, who would soon die and leave Israel. They wanted someone like Moses to be raised up at the appropriate time. God responds to his people and agrees that this is a good suggestion. When the time was right, God would raise up a leader like Moses. It is here that the difference between the three Abrahamic faiths becomes apparent. In Judaism, the people still wait for someone like Moses to come. In Islam, there is no question that this second Moses was Muhammed, the Prophet. Jesus was a great prophet in his own right, but no one in this created world was higher than Muhammed. However, for Christians, Jesus is the second Moses, the "good idea" God confirmed to the people. He is the Son of God who died on the cross for our sins so that we could finally live for him.
Tomorrow's Scripture Reading: Deuteronomy 19