Moses was for a long time a shepherd in the wilderness.
Regarded outwardly, He was a Man brought up in a tyrannical
household, and was known among men as One Who had committed a
murder and become a shepherd. By the government and the people
of Pharaoh He was much hated and detested.
It
was such a Man as this that freed a great nation from the
chains of captivity, made them contented, brought them out
from Egypt, and led them to the Holy Land.
This
people from the depths of degradation were lifted up to the
height of glory. They were captive; they became free. They
were the most ignorant of peoples; they became the most wise.
As the result of the institutions that Moses gave them, they
attained a position which entitled them to honor among all
nations, and their fame spread to all lands, to such a degree
indeed that among surrounding nations if one wished to praise
a man one said, "Surely he is an Israelite." Moses
established laws and ordinances; these gave life to the people
of Israel, and led them to the highest possible degree of
civilization at that period.
To
such a development did they attain that the philosophers of
Greece would come and acquire knowledge from the learned men
of Israel. Such an one was Socrates, who visited Syria, and
took from the children of Israel the teachings of the Unity of
God and of the immortality of the soul. After his return to
Greece, he promulgated these teachings. Later the people of
Greece rose in opposition to him, accused him of impiety,
arraigned him before the Areopagus, and condemned him to death
by poison.
Now, how
could a Man Who was a stammerer, Who had been brought up in
the house of Pharaoh, Who was known among men as a murderer,
Who through fear had for a long time remained in concealment,
and Who had become a shepherd, establish so great a Cause,
when the wisest philosophers on earth have not displayed one
thousandth part of this influence? This is indeed a prodigy.
A
Man Who had a stammering tongue, Who could not even converse
correctly, succeeded in sustaining this great Cause! If He had
not been assisted by divine power, He would never have been
able to carry out this great work. These facts are undeniable.
Materialist philosophers, Greek thinkers, the great men of
Rome became famous in the world, each one of them having
specialized in one branch of learning only. Thus Galen and
Hippocrates became celebrated in medicine, Aristotle in logic
and reasoning, and Plato in ethics and theology. How is it
that a shepherd could acquire all of this knowledge? It is
beyond doubt that He must have been assisted by an omnipotent
power.
Consider also
what trials and difficulties arise for people. To prevent an
act of cruelty, Moses struck down an Egyptian and afterward
became known among men as a murderer, more notably because the
man He had killed was of the ruling nation. Then He fled, and
it was after that that He was raised to the rank of a Prophet!
In
spite of His evil repute, how wonderfully He was guided by a
supernatural power in establishing His great institutions and
laws!
-`Abdu'l-Bahá