摩西出生

有一个利未族人跟他同族的女子结婚。 那女子怀孕,生了一个男婴。她看见孩子可爱,就把他藏了三个月。 后来无法再藏下去,她就拿来一个蒲草篮子,外面涂上防水的沥青和柏油,然后把婴儿放在里面,又把篮子放在尼罗河边的芦苇丛中。 婴儿的姐姐远远地站着,要看看她的弟弟究竟会怎样。

这时,法老的女儿来到河边沐浴,宫女们在河边行走。公主发现了芦苇丛中的篮子,便吩咐一个婢女去把它取来。 公主打开一看,原来是一个男婴。公主看见孩子在哭,就可怜他,说:“他是希伯来人的孩子。” 婴儿的姐姐对公主说:“我去找一个希伯来妇女当奶妈,为你哺养他好吗?” 公主回答说:“好!”那女孩就跑去把婴孩的母亲带来。 公主对那妇女说:“你把孩子抱去,替我哺养他,我会给你工钱。”她便把孩子抱去哺养。 10 孩子渐渐长大,她便把他带到公主那里,孩子就做了公主的儿子。公主给孩子取名叫摩西,意思是“我把他从水中拉了上来”。

11 后来,摩西长大了,他去看望做苦工的希伯来同胞,看见一个埃及人在殴打他的一个希伯来同胞。 12 他左右观望,见四下无人,便下手杀了那埃及人,把尸体埋藏在沙地里。 13 第二天,他又出去,看见两个希伯来人在打架,便过去对理亏的人说:“你为什么打自己的同胞呢?” 14 那人说:“你以为你是谁啊?谁立你做我们的首领和审判官?难道你要杀我,像杀那个埃及人一样吗?”摩西听了,害怕起来,心想:“我做的事一定被人知道了。” 15 法老听说这件事后,便想杀死摩西。摩西为了躲避法老,就逃到米甸居住。一天他坐在一口井旁, 16 米甸祭司的七个女儿来打水,要把水倒进槽里饮她们父亲的羊。 17 这时,来了另外一群牧人要把她们赶走。摩西便起来帮助她们,打水饮她们的羊群。 18 她们回到父亲流珥[a]那里,父亲问她们:“你们今天怎么这么快就回来了?” 19 她们答道:“有一个埃及人救我们免遭牧人的欺负,还帮我们打水饮羊群。” 20 他又问女儿们:“现在那人在哪里?你们怎么可以丢下他不管呢?去请他来吃点东西。” 21 后来,摩西同意住在那人家里。那人把女儿西坡拉许配给他。 22 后来,西坡拉生了一个儿子,摩西给他取名叫革舜,意思是“我成了在异乡寄居的人”。

23 过了多年,埃及王死了。以色列人受尽奴役,就哀叹呼求,声音传到上帝那里。 24 上帝听见他们的哀声,顾念从前跟亚伯拉罕、以撒、雅各所立的约, 25 就垂顾他们,体恤他们。

Footnotes

  1. 2:18 流珥”又名“叶忒罗”。

Chapter 2

Birth and Adoption of Moses. Now a man[a] of the house of Levi married a Levite woman,(A) and the woman conceived and bore a son. Seeing what a fine child he was, she hid him for three months.(B) But when she could no longer hide him, she took a papyrus basket,[b] daubed it with bitumen and pitch, and putting the child in it, placed it among the reeds on the bank of the Nile. His sister stationed herself at a distance to find out what would happen to him.

Then Pharaoh’s daughter came down to bathe at the Nile, while her attendants walked along the bank of the Nile. Noticing the basket among the reeds, she sent her handmaid to fetch it. On opening it, she looked, and there was a baby boy crying! She was moved with pity for him and said, “It is one of the Hebrews’ children.” Then his sister asked Pharaoh’s daughter, “Shall I go and summon a Hebrew woman to nurse the child for you?” Pharaoh’s daughter answered her, “Go.” So the young woman went and called the child’s own mother. Pharaoh’s daughter said to her, “Take this child and nurse him for me, and I will pay your wages.”[c] So the woman took the child and nursed him. 10 When the child grew,[d] she brought him to Pharaoh’s daughter, and he became her son.(C) She named him Moses; for she said, “I drew him out of the water.”

Moses’ Flight to Midian. 11 (D)On one occasion, after Moses had grown up,[e] when he had gone out to his kinsmen and witnessed their forced labor, he saw an Egyptian striking a Hebrew, one of his own kinsmen. 12 Looking about and seeing no one, he struck down the Egyptian and hid him in the sand. 13 The next day he went out again, and now two Hebrews were fighting! So he asked the culprit, “Why are you striking your companion?” 14 But he replied, “Who has appointed you ruler and judge over us? Are you thinking of killing me as you killed the Egyptian?” Then Moses became afraid and thought, “The affair must certainly be known.” 15 When Pharaoh heard of the affair, he sought to kill Moses. But Moses fled from Pharaoh and went to the land of Midian.[f](E) There he sat down by a well.

16 Now the priest of Midian had seven daughters, and they came to draw water and fill the troughs to water their father’s flock. 17 But shepherds came and drove them away. So Moses rose up in their defense and watered their flock. 18 When they returned to their father Reuel,[g] he said to them, “How is it you have returned so soon today?” 19 They answered, “An Egyptian[h] delivered us from the shepherds. He even drew water for us and watered the flock!” 20 “Where is he?” he asked his daughters. “Why did you leave the man there? Invite him to have something to eat.” 21 Moses agreed to stay with him, and the man gave Moses his daughter Zipporah in marriage. 22 She conceived and bore a son, whom he named Gershom;[i] for he said, “I am a stranger residing in a foreign land.”(F)

II. The Call and Commission of Moses

The Burning Bush. 23 A long time passed, during which the king of Egypt died. The Israelites groaned under their bondage and cried out, and from their bondage their cry for help went up to God.(G) 24 God heard their moaning and God was mindful of his covenant(H) with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. 25 God saw the Israelites, and God knew….[j]

Footnotes

  1. 2:1 Now a man: the chapter begins abruptly, without names for the man or woman (in contrast to the midwives of 1:15), who in 6:20 are identified as Amram and Jochebed.
  2. 2:3 Basket: the same Hebrew word is used in Gn 6:14 and throughout the flood narrative for Noah’s ark, but nowhere else in the Bible. Here, however, the “ark” or “chest” was made of papyrus stalks. Presumably the allusion to Genesis is intentional. Just as Noah and his family were preserved safe from the threatening waters of the flood in the ark he built, so now Moses is preserved from the threatening waters of the Nile in the ark prepared by his mother. Among the reeds: the Hebrew noun for “reed” is overwhelmingly used in the phrase “Reed Sea,” traditionally translated “Red Sea.”
  3. 2:9 And I will pay your wages: the idea that the child’s mother will be paid for nursing her child—and by Pharaoh’s own daughter—heightens the narrative’s irony.
  4. 2:10 When the child grew: while v. 9 implies that the boy’s mother cared for him as long as he needed to be nursed (presumably, between two and four years), the same verb appears in v. 11 to describe the attainment of adulthood. And he became her son: Pharaoh’s daughter adopts Moses, thus adding to the irony of the account. The king of Egypt had ordered the killing of all the sons of the Hebrews, and one now becomes the son of his own daughter! Moses: in Hebrew, mosheh. There is a play on words here: Hebrew mosheh echoes meshithihu (“I drew him out”). However, the name Moses actually has nothing to do with that Hebrew verb, but is probably derived from Egyptian “beloved” or “has been born,” preserved in such Pharaonic names as Thutmoses (meaning approximately “Beloved of the god Thoth” or “The god Thoth is born, has given birth to [the child]”). The original meaning of Moses’ name was no longer remembered (if it was Egyptian, it may have contained an Egyptian divine element as well, perhaps the name of the Nile god Hapi), and a secondary explanation was derived from this story (or gave rise to it, if the drawing from the water of the Nile was intended to foreshadow the Israelites’ escape from Egypt through the Red Sea).
  5. 2:11 After Moses had grown up: cf. 7:7, where Moses is said to be eighty years old at the time of his mission to Pharaoh. Striking: probably in the sense of “flogging”; in v. 12, however, the same verb is used in the sense of “killing.”
  6. 2:15 Land of Midian: the territory under the control of a confederation made up, according to Nm 31:8, of five Midianite tribes. According to Gn 25:1–2, Midian was a son of Abraham by Keturah. In view of the extreme hostility in later periods between Israel and Midian (cf. Nm 31; Jgs 6–8), the relationship is striking, as is the account here in Exodus of good relations between Moses and no less than a Midianite priest.
  7. 2:18 Reuel: also called Jethro. Cf. 3:1; 4:18; 18:1.
  8. 2:19 An Egyptian: Moses was probably wearing Egyptian dress, or spoke Egyptian to Reuel’s daughters.
  9. 2:22 Gershom: the name is explained unscientifically as if it came from the Hebrew word ger, “sojourner, resident alien,” and the Hebrew word sham, “there.” Stranger residing: Hebrew ger, one who seeks and finds shelter and a home away from his or her own people or land.
  10. 2:25 God knew: in response to the people’s cry, God, mindful of the covenant, looks on their plight and acknowledges firsthand the depth of their suffering (see 3:7). In vv. 23–25, traditionally attributed to the Priestly writer, God is mentioned five times, in contrast to the rest of chaps. 1–2, where God is rarely mentioned. These verses serve as a fitting transition to Moses’ call in chap. 3.