Moses: Difference between revisions

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=== Thutmoses ===
=== Thutmoses ===


[[File:tutmosisIII.jpg|right|thumb|Thutmosis III is counted as the sixth [[pharaoh]] of the Eighteenth Dynasty. It is said that Thutmose III ruled Egypt for almost 54 years and his reign is usually dated from 28 April 1479 BC to 11 March 1425 BC. This would mean that he took the throne at 2 years of age. For at least 22 years of his reign, his stepmother and aunt, Hatshepsut, who was named and accepted as the pharaoh by many who loved her seemed to be in control. It is speculated by some that Thutmosis III was an illigitamate Pharaoh of Egypt and at the time usurped the adopted son of Hatshepsut who chose to become Moses to those people who sought liberty under God.<Ref>Ex 2:10  And the child grew, and she brought him unto Pharaoh’s daughter, and he became her son. And she called his name Moses: and she said, Because I drew him out of the water.</Ref>]]
[[File:tutmosisIII.jpg|right|thumb|Thutmosis III is counted as the sixth [[pharaoh]] of the Eighteenth Dynasty. It is said that Thutmose III ruled Egypt for almost 54 years and his reign is usually dated from 28 April 1479 BC to 11 March 1425 BC. This would mean that he took the throne at 2 years of age. For at least 22 years of his reign, his stepmother and aunt, Hatshepsut, who was named and accepted as the pharaoh by many who loved her seemed to be in control. It is speculated by some that Thutmosis III was an illigitamate Pharaoh of Egypt and at the time usurped the adopted son of Hatshepsut who chose to become Moses to those people who sought liberty under God.<Ref>[[Exodus 2]]:10  And the child grew, and she brought him unto Pharaoh’s daughter, and he became her son. And she called his name Moses: and she said, Because I drew him out of the water.</Ref>]]


The name "Thut" was written in hieroglyphics, but the name Moses is written in Hebrew and Greek. He appears to be heir to the throne of [[Egypt]] through adoption. But Moses like Jesus would not rule over the people. His desire was to set them free. They would have to first  [[repent]], think differently.
The name "Thut" was written in hieroglyphics, but the name Moses is written in Hebrew and Greek. He appears to be heir to the throne of [[Egypt]] through adoption. But Moses like Jesus would not rule over the people. His desire was to set them free. They would have to first  [[repent]], think differently.
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* "Thutmose II (1493 or 1492 to 1479 BC). Alfred Edersheim proposes in his "Old Testament Bible History" that Thutmose II is best qualified to be the pharaoh of Exodus based on the fact that he had a brief, prosperous reign and then a sudden collapse with no son to succeed him."  
* "Thutmose II (1493 or 1492 to 1479 BC). Alfred Edersheim proposes in his "Old Testament Bible History" that Thutmose II is best qualified to be the pharaoh of Exodus based on the fact that he had a brief, prosperous reign and then a sudden collapse with no son to succeed him."  


:: Manetho's Epitome<Ref>Manetho, who [[Plutarch]] links to a Ptolemaic cult of Serapis, was a major chronological source for the reigns of the kings of ancient Egypt.</Ref> is a debated topic among Egyptologists because of the small number of surviving documents for his reign of either 13-year or a shorter 3-4 year reign due to the minimal amount of scarabs issued.  
:: Manetho's Epitome<Ref>Manetho, who [[Plutarch]] links to a Ptolemaic cult of Serapis, was a major chronological source for the reigns of the kings of ancient Egypt.</Ref> is a debated topic among Egyptologists because of the small number of surviving documents for his reign of either 13-years or a shorter 3-4 year reign due to the minimal amount of scarabs issued during that period.  


* Hatshepsut was a decedent of Amenhotep I by way of Tutmoses I  as princess Nefure but became known as Queen Hatshepsut<Ref>Hatshepsut means "Foremost of Noble Ladies"</Ref>  who married her half-brother, Thutmose II.<Ref>(1507–1458 BC)</Ref> There was another Neferure (or Neferura) who was also an Egyptian princess of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt and the daughter of two pharaohs, Hatshepsut and Thutmose II.</Ref>
* Hatshepsut was a decedent of Amenhotep I by way of Tutmoses I  as princess Nefure but became known as Queen Hatshepsut<Ref>Hatshepsut means "Foremost of Noble Ladies"</Ref>  married her half-brother, Thutmose II.<Ref>(1507–1458 BC)</Ref> There was another Neferure (or Neferura) who was also an Egyptian princess of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt and the daughter of two pharaohs, Hatshepsut and that Thutmose II.<Ref name="illicit">Hatshepsut and that Thutmose II had no children between them although he may have produced an heir with a commoner and concubine who was propped up as Thutmoses III.</Ref>
:: If Moses was drawn from the water by Hatshepsut and adopted  as her son, and Thutmose III was only the son of Thutmoses II by a concubine, then Moses may have had a better claim to the throne and "let my people go" has a new meaning.
:: If Moses was drawn from the water by Hatshepsut and adopted  as her son, and Thutmose III was only the son of Thutmoses II by a concubine, then Moses may have had a better claim to the throne and "let my people go" has a new more significant meaning.


* "Thutmose III (sometimes read as Thutmosis or Tuthmosis III, Thothmes in older history works, and meaning "Thoth is born") was the sixth pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty."
* "Thutmose III (sometimes read as Thutmosis or Tuthmosis III, Thothmes in older history works, and meaning "Thoth is born") was the sixth pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty." An yet illigitimate.<Ref name="illicit"></Ref>


[[File:hiergtutmosis.jpg|right|thumb|Thutmosis (dhwty-ms possibly pronounced ''Djehuty''), usually translated into something like "Born of the god Thoth".<Ref name="thoth">Often written with a ''bird'' totem, the ''ibis'' on a stand followed by the ''loaf-sign'' (t) and ''two short sloping strokes'' (y) but in the full form it would include the ''cobra'' (dj) and a twisted ''rope'' (h) plus a ''chick'' (w) producing ''DHwty'' which may be pronounced ''Djehuty'' which sounds nothing like Thuth nor Tut. Thutmose could be rendered Thutmoses, Thutmosis, Tuthmose, Tutmosis, Thothmes, Tuthmosis, Djhutmose, Djehutymoses, or even Tuhutymosis. Thutmosis (dhwty-ms), usually translated into something like "Born of the god Thoth"</Ref>]]
[[File:hiergtutmosis.jpg|right|thumb|Thutmosis (dhwty-ms possibly pronounced ''Djehuty''), usually translated into something like "Born of the god Thoth".<Ref name="thoth">Often written with a ''bird'' totem, the ''ibis'' on a stand followed by the ''loaf-sign'' (t) and ''two short sloping strokes'' (y) but in the full form it would include the ''cobra'' (dj) and a twisted ''rope'' (h) plus a ''chick'' (w) producing ''DHwty'' which may be pronounced ''Djehuty'' which sounds nothing like Thuth nor Tut. Thutmose could be rendered Thutmoses, Thutmosis, Tuthmose, Tutmosis, Thothmes, Tuthmosis, Djhutmose, Djehutymoses, or even Tuhutymosis. Thutmosis (dhwty-ms), usually translated into something like "Born of the god Thoth"</Ref>]]

Revision as of 11:52, 5 February 2022

Moses, Jesus, and Elijah seem to have been in agreement and there seems to be a commonality or harmony in the Song of Moses and the Song of the Lamb.

Moses

Moses is a prophet in Abrahamic religions. According to the Hebrew Bible, he was a former Egyptian prince, possibly even the rightful Pharaoh of Egypt who later in life became a religious leader and lawgiver, to whom the authorship of the Torah is traditionally attributed.

The Conflict

The conflict with the rulers like Cain, Nimrod, Pharaoh, and the Caesar's of the world who were the Fathers of the earth was personified in the character of Moses and his teachings.

Christ and his teachings again brought liberty but also a Christian conflict until Rome failed.

The Kingdom of God simply means the right to be ruled by God in heaven through your heart and mind rather than be ruled by men and the gods many men give power to through political systems which use force.

In the Kingdom of God man has access to his natural God given rights but he can only maintain those rights through diligent practice[1] of Fervent Charity toward others. In other words he must care about the rights of his neighbor as much as himself.

Moses said we were to love our neighbor as ourselves and we were not to oppress the people in our midst. We were even to give drink to our enemy.

Moses and Jesus were in agreement and are seen together with Elijah in the New Testament. Jesus told the pharisees if they had known Moses they would have known Him.

Over the centuries some Jews altered and distorted the teachings of Moses through their twisted translations, sophistry, and false religion.

By the time of John the Baptist and Jesus arrived the pharisees and Herod were making the word of God to none effect through their scheme of Corban which no longer was exclusively freewill offerings as intended by Moses.

The people of Israel had rejected God back in the days of Samuel when they elected to have a man rule over them like the other nations of the world. Hundreds of years later the Romans would through off the Tarquinian kings and establish a Republic in some ways similar to early Israel. They would both eventually return to the idea of a Ruler, or Emperor, a chief executive officer, whose power would grow over time as the people degenerated through their dependence upon social welfare programs like the Corban of the Pharisees and a plethora of benefits offered by the state.

Throughout history the people of the world have sought to elect politicians like Cain, Nimrod, Pharaoh, and the Caesar who call themselves as benefactors but became the Fathers of the earth.

Through their own sloth they follow the Covetous Practices that makes men nothing more than Human Resources and a surety for debt. That debt grows until it curses their children with a bondage they cannot escape and all hope would be lost accept for the strategy of seeking the Kingdom of God and His righteousness. You cannot be biting one another and expect not to be devoured one of another, especially in a social democracy.

Moses the man

"The history of the birth of freedom... Are men to be ruled by God's law, or the whims of dictator..? Are men property of the state? Or are they free souls under God? This same battle continues throughout the world today. " The 1956 movie “The Ten Commandments.” -Cecil B. DeMille (Producer/Director). Time 2:10


Moses was a real individual. He is hard to identify in history because of the false understanding of the ancient text due to sophistry and false religion. But also due to modern archaeology's confusions concerning the historic time lines which have been distorted through an entrenched academia.


Hatshepsut

  • "Hatshepsut was the first female pharaoh of Egypt. She reigned between 1473 and 1458 B.C. Her name means “foremost of noblewomen.” Her rule was relatively peaceful and she was able to launch a building program that would see the construction of a great temple at Deir el-Bahari at Luxor.Apr 5, 2013"

There are numerous theories that give reasonable and plausable scenarios.

Some assert that they "are able to precisely pinpoint the Exodus of 1446 with the 18th year of Pharaoh Thutmoses III."

"16 reasons why Thutmoses III is the Exodus Pharaoh." using the Low Egyptian chronology as proposed by A. K. Kitchen:

This would mean Thutmoses I, the father of Hatshepsut, named Moses and not anyone in the 19th dynasty era of Rameses II. Because archeologists generally dismiss the exodus as a Bible myth, they actually chose any variant of the correct,

Thutmoses

Thutmosis III is counted as the sixth pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty. It is said that Thutmose III ruled Egypt for almost 54 years and his reign is usually dated from 28 April 1479 BC to 11 March 1425 BC. This would mean that he took the throne at 2 years of age. For at least 22 years of his reign, his stepmother and aunt, Hatshepsut, who was named and accepted as the pharaoh by many who loved her seemed to be in control. It is speculated by some that Thutmosis III was an illigitamate Pharaoh of Egypt and at the time usurped the adopted son of Hatshepsut who chose to become Moses to those people who sought liberty under God.[2]

The name "Thut" was written in hieroglyphics, but the name Moses is written in Hebrew and Greek. He appears to be heir to the throne of Egypt through adoption. But Moses like Jesus would not rule over the people. His desire was to set them free. They would have to first repent, think differently.


  • "Thutmose II (1493 or 1492 to 1479 BC). Alfred Edersheim proposes in his "Old Testament Bible History" that Thutmose II is best qualified to be the pharaoh of Exodus based on the fact that he had a brief, prosperous reign and then a sudden collapse with no son to succeed him."
Manetho's Epitome[3] is a debated topic among Egyptologists because of the small number of surviving documents for his reign of either 13-years or a shorter 3-4 year reign due to the minimal amount of scarabs issued during that period.
  • Hatshepsut was a decedent of Amenhotep I by way of Tutmoses I as princess Nefure but became known as Queen Hatshepsut[4] married her half-brother, Thutmose II.[5] There was another Neferure (or Neferura) who was also an Egyptian princess of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt and the daughter of two pharaohs, Hatshepsut and that Thutmose II.[6]
If Moses was drawn from the water by Hatshepsut and adopted as her son, and Thutmose III was only the son of Thutmoses II by a concubine, then Moses may have had a better claim to the throne and "let my people go" has a new more significant meaning.
  • "Thutmose III (sometimes read as Thutmosis or Tuthmosis III, Thothmes in older history works, and meaning "Thoth is born") was the sixth pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty." An yet illigitimate.[6]
Thutmosis (dhwty-ms possibly pronounced Djehuty), usually translated into something like "Born of the god Thoth".[7]

Thoth is an approximation used by the Greeks. A modern Egyptologist might say Djehuty. In hieroglyphs scribes might write the name in full or in an abbreviated form.[7]

Senmut (or Senenmut) has been a candidate for the Biblical Moses. Senenmut was an 18th dynasty ancient Egyptian architect, ancient astronomer and government official. His name translates literally as "mother's brother" referring to his close relationship to Hatshepsut.

There is speculation that Senenmut as a trusted servant of Hatshepsut, since there was no "brother", but it is also possible based on some of his extensive knowledge and accomplishments[8] that he was actually Moses the trusted servant of God and mankind. There is evidence that Senenmut disappeared from Egypt at the same time as Moses went into the desert.[9] Or possibly Senenmut, who was clearly a genius,[10] was a mentor to Moses whose political policies would have been compatible with Hatshepsut.

Names were titles with meanings and could change as your status or relationships changes. Darius, Caesar, Pharaoh, even Nimrod are titles or offices rather than proper names.

His memorials were heavily vandalized during the reign of Thutmose III during his latter campaigns to eradicate all trace of Hatshepsut's memory.

Thutmose III was not of royal blood but the son of a concubine of an unfairhful husband. He was put into power by ambitions of men who sought power in the absence of a male heir.

He had despised and opposed Hatshepsut whose humanitarian policies differed greatly from his his military desire of conquest.

Was Moses the rightful heir, the righteous TuthMosis to the throne of Egypt who came to set the people free if the would repent and seek to serve the LORD by caring for one another in charity rather than the Corban of Pharaoh in the Bondage of Egypt?

  • The message of the prophets was for all who have ears to hear. They have desired that we seek the kingdom of God and His righteousness through voluntary government of love by charity alone. Those who hear and act upon that spiritual revelation of the Christ, the anointing King, are Israel because God and His kingdom "prevails" within them.

Two Wives

Did Moses have more than one wife?

Numbers 12:1 ¶ And Miriam and Aaron spake against Moses because of the Ethiopian woman whom he had married: for he had married an Ethiopian woman. 2 And they said, Hath the LORD indeed spoken only by Moses? hath he not spoken also by us? And the LORD heard [it].

Nothing in the Bible suggests that Moses was married to these two women simultaneously. We do not know the name of the Cushite, or Ethiopian, women and the word we see translated "married"[11] is not the normal Hebrew word for married.

Moses and Zipporah had been married for 40 years or more so why were his siblings suddenly protesting? The complaint was from Mary and Aaron who were vying for power in the assembly.

But there were no kings in Israel. If Moses did take a second wife at that time there is no reason to be sure that Zipporah was still alive since she would have been in her sixties or older. Marriage in those days was often about survival.

Yalkut Shimoni[12] says that Moses fled from Egypt first to Cush where he married and became king. Later he moved to Midia where he married Zipporah. We see in Exodus 4:20 "Moses took his wife and his sons, and set them upon an ass, and he returned to the land of Egypt: and Moses took the rod of God in his hand."

The word wife in this text is singular. If there had been another Cush wife from 40 years earlier there is no reason to believe she was still alive and why don't we know her name?

The Rashi[13] interprets this verse as Zipporah and the Cushite woman was the same person. Rishi asserts that Zipporah was called "the Cushite" because of her beauty.

Others such as Ezekiel the Tragedian said that Zipporah and her father were only recent arrivals to Midia in a play dated to the second century BCE. (Exagoge 60-65).

The Himyarite Kingdom of Southern Arabia was described by Syrian writers of the fifth century as Cushites and Ethiopians. And we also know that the Beja people who inhabit the Sahara and Sudan claim descent from Cush and speak a Cushitic language. Eighteenth-century scholar Johann David Michaelis agrees with the idea that Cush was a term used to describe both sides of the Red Sea.

While every place in the Bible where polygamy was practiced there were severe consequences due to rivalry and jealousy. Moses was about giving birth to freedom where society provided charity in time of want. This is what Christ was doing too with his Kingdom of God.


"The history of the birth of freedom... Are men to be ruled by God's law, or the whims of dictator..? Are men property of the state? Or are they free souls under God? This same battle continues throughout the world today. " The 1956 movie “The Ten Commandments.” -Cecil B. DeMille (Producer/Director).

What makes you property of the State is your covetous practices through forms of socialism and the sloth, Wantonness and self-righteousness it feeds in you. What sets you free os to be born again in The Way of Christ. That is to heed His word and repent, seek the kingdom of God and His righteousness by coming together as He commanded, in His name through charitable sacrifice in the love of one another to attend to the weightier matters.

Government | Governments | Civil Government |
Government and Liberty Described |
Social contract | Covenants of the gods |
Contracts, Covenants and Constitutions |
Nationalism | Republic | Democracy | Minarchism | Statism |
Fascism | Tyranny | Despotism | Federation
Communism | Anarcho communism | Communist Manifesto |
Communist Altruism | Primitive Communism | Karl Marx Marriage |
Collectivism | Altruism | Saul Syndrome | Foolishly |
Anarchist | Capitalism | Socialism | Rules For Radicals | Atheist |
Viable republic | Republican form | Titular |
The Way | Perfect law of liberty | NAP |
Taxation | Tribute | Tithe | Tithing | Pay tribute |
Legal charity | Social Security | Corban | Hierarchy |
Imperial Cult of Rome | The Democracy Cult |
Employ | Bondage | Mammon | Temples |
Cain | Nimrod | Pharaoh | Caesar | Law |
Mystery Babylon | Saving Babylon | Exiting Babylon |
Supreme being | gods many | Ideological subversion |
Schools as Tools | Roots of the Welfare State |
Covetous Practices | Consent not | Withdraw consent |
Come out | Put out | Cry out | Voice |
Kingdom of God | Church legally defined |
Pure Religion | Christian conflict |

Consent | Consent not | Contract | Social contract | Withdraw consent | Assent |
Marriage | Permanency of marriage | Employ | Vows | Swear not | Oath of Naturalization |
Religion | Corban | Private welfare | Welfare | Welfare types | Titular |
One purse | Golden calf | Covet | Merchandise | Benefactors | Sovereign |
Government | Governments | Civil Government |
Government and Liberty Described |
Social contract | Covenants of the gods |
Contracts, Covenants and Constitutions |
Nationalism | Republic | Democracy | Minarchism | Statism |
Fascism | Tyranny | Despotism | Federation
Communism | Anarcho communism | Communist Manifesto |
Communist Altruism | Primitive Communism | Karl Marx Marriage |
Collectivism | Altruism | Saul Syndrome | Foolishly |
Anarchist | Capitalism | Socialism | Rules For Radicals | Atheist |
Viable republic | Republican form | Titular |
The Way | Perfect law of liberty | NAP |
Taxation | Tribute | Tithe | Tithing | Pay tribute |
Legal charity | Social Security | Corban | Hierarchy |
Imperial Cult of Rome | The Democracy Cult |
Employ | Bondage | Mammon | Temples |
Cain | Nimrod | Pharaoh | Caesar | Law |
Mystery Babylon | Saving Babylon | Exiting Babylon |
Supreme being | gods many | Ideological subversion |
Schools as Tools | Roots of the Welfare State |
Covetous Practices | Consent not | Withdraw consent |
Come out | Put out | Cry out | Voice |
Kingdom of God | Church legally defined |
Pure Religion | Christian conflict |
Road closings | Right to disobey | Adhocracy | Righteousness | The Way |
Law | Divers lusts | Wantonness‎ | Goats and Sheep | Brooking | Robots |
1 Samuel 8 | Proverbs 1 | Proverbs 23 | David Crockett | Self Defense‏‎


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Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 12:24 "The hand of the diligent shall bear rule: but the Slothful shall be under Tribute."
  2. Exodus 2:10 And the child grew, and she brought him unto Pharaoh’s daughter, and he became her son. And she called his name Moses: and she said, Because I drew him out of the water.
  3. Manetho, who Plutarch links to a Ptolemaic cult of Serapis, was a major chronological source for the reigns of the kings of ancient Egypt.
  4. Hatshepsut means "Foremost of Noble Ladies"
  5. (1507–1458 BC)
  6. 6.0 6.1 Hatshepsut and that Thutmose II had no children between them although he may have produced an heir with a commoner and concubine who was propped up as Thutmoses III.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Often written with a bird totem, the ibis on a stand followed by the loaf-sign (t) and two short sloping strokes (y) but in the full form it would include the cobra (dj) and a twisted rope (h) plus a chick (w) producing DHwty which may be pronounced Djehuty which sounds nothing like Thuth nor Tut. Thutmose could be rendered Thutmoses, Thutmosis, Tuthmose, Tutmosis, Thothmes, Tuthmosis, Djhutmose, Djehutymoses, or even Tuhutymosis. Thutmosis (dhwty-ms), usually translated into something like "Born of the god Thoth"
  8. Moses was educated in all the wisdom of the Egyptians, and was powerful in speech and action. (Acts 7:22).
  9. Scott Alan Roberts’ essay The Senenmut Connection points out that Senenmut disappeared from Egypt in 1486BC with in a timeline some say Moses left Egypt.
  10. There at least 26 hard stone statues of Senenmut have been identified, including a very young Senenmut holding the princess as a child, His unfinished tomb filled with Astronomical charts and other artifacts, which causes Egyptologists to wonder who was this uncommon common man given such status.
  11. 03947 ^חקל^ laqach LamedKufChet \@law-kakh’\@ a primitive root; v; {See TWOT on 1124} AV-take 747, receive 61, take away 51, fetch 31, bring 25, get 6, take out 6, carry away 5, married 4, buy 3, misc 26; 965
    1) to take, get, fetch, lay hold of, seize, receive, acquire, buy, bring, marry, take a wife, snatch, take away
    1a) (Qal)
    1a1) to take, take in the hand
    1a2) to take and carry along
    1a3) to take from, take out of, take, carry away, take away
    1a4) to take to or for a person, procure, get, take possession of,
    select, choose, take in marriage, receive, accept
    1a5) to take up or upon, put upon
    1a6) to fetch
    1a7) to take, lead, conduct
    1a8) to take, capture, seize
    1a9) to take, carry off
    1a10) to take (vengeance)
    1b) (Niphal)
    1b1) to be captured
    1b2) to be taken away, be removed
    1b3) to be taken, brought unto
    1c) (Pual)
    1c1) to be taken from or out of
    1c2) to be stolen from
    1c3) to be taken captive
    1c4) to be taken away, be removed
    1d) (Hophal)
    1d1) to be taken unto, be brought unto
    1d2) to be taken out of
    1d3) to be taken away
    1e) (Hithpael)
    1e1) to take hold of oneself
    1e2) to flash about (of lightning)
  12. The Yalkut Shimoni, or simply Yalkut is a compilation of older interpretations and explanations of Biblical passages, arranged according to the sequence of those portions of the Bible to which they referred.
  13. Rashi was the author of rabbinic commentary on the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh) and the Talmud. Rashi script is a semi-cursive typeface for the Hebrew alphabet which is customarily used for printing his commentaries, and others'.