Fortunately for them, Joseph, who is Jacob's son, invites them into that land and he was a man who had been sold off earlier to an Egyptian person by his jealous brothers earlier. Joseph, being possessed of the extremely uncanny ability to read and interpret dreams, is recognized for that very fact, and is soon promoted into being a prestigious member of the Egyptian Courts. However, one thing must be kept in mind before starting the Exodus, and this is the presence of the three important themes of Abraham being God's alliance and His Promise, Isaac, who is the spared sacrifice, and Jacob, who is doomed to struggle with God, or in other words, Israel. It is at this point that the description of the Exodus begins.
The Exodus is in fact a unique and exceptional account of the Birth of a Religion, and everything that is described within the Exodus alludes to the life of the people who lived in those rough terrains of Israel at that particular time in the History of the World. In fact, it is often noted that the Genesis is in itself a mere introduction to this most important excursion carried out by the people of Israel, in their exodus out of Egypt. This flight or exodus of the people out of Egypt in fact reveals the very origins and the identity of Israel, and the manner in which this journey took place divulges the very essence of the Fathers of the land, and the isolation of the people in the Desert and their journey towards their Promised Land did not, in fact, lead to the development of a stable culture, and maybe it was this very exclusiveness that gave rise to the jealousy and rivalry that Yahweh exhibited. Moses, Yahweh, and Israel thus happened to come together, and this had a great impact on the very nature of Israel.
It has been said that several generations of Hebrews had been living in Egypt from time immemorial, and now, these people were feeling that they were not at all welcome in this, their adoptive land, and, on top of this, the Pharaoh was keen on imposing all types of oppressive conditions on these people. The Hebrew community was a people without a real leader, and Moses was an individual who, despite being a Prince, was without a real Kingdom. God reveals his destiny that was yet to come, on top of the Mount Sinai, and this fact linked him more to these people, and, Israel's very identity as a nation, and as a people and as a religion happened to be shaped and molded by that one single revelation by God to Moses, and the Exodus of the people further into the desert confirms this idea.
Since all the people were isolated and were therefore away from the influences of other Gods and other peoples, and the various other cultures of Egypt, it became possible for Yahweh to start on a new bond, and the desert became an ideal and perfect place for this jealous God to make up and forge his own plan and ideas upon the various alliances that he could possibly bring about. Moses in introduced by God Himself, with a description of his birth, and soon, hierophany comes into the picture, and God reveals His presence by the sound of His voice, and also by the burning of the bush. It is at Mount Sinai, or the Mount Horeb, or the Mountain of the Gods, that the revelation takes place, and it is often stated that this setting was in fact representative of the geographical and the historical context that actually led to the Exodus, and in fact, this is the basis for much of the plot of the Exodus, wherein the spatio-temporal circumstances of the Exodus had to rely on the departure out of Egypt and the quest for the so-called Promised Land by the people.
Now, the parents of Moses belonged, in fact, to the Tribe of Levi, and Levis, interestingly, were also known as Hebrews. Since the Israelites had been domiciled in Egypt for a great many years previously, they had been ever growing in numbers, and this was beginning to scare the Pharaoh. Apart from the Hebrews, there were also a great number of slaves from several different countries within Egypt, who had actually been either prisoners of war, or some other types of slaves, and these people too were living their lives in several different parts of Egypt, and as time went by, they...
While the insurance companies worked to satisfy claims there were so many of them that there were backlogs for months at a time. Clients were left to figure out how to survive without having insurance money in their hands and tempers began to flare on all sides of the crisis (Burr, 2006). As additional natural disasters continued to loom over the sunshine state and wreak havoc, insurance companies won the right
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