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Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Infant Moses of the Hebrews and his adoptive mother, Princess Thermouthis

 Second book of

The Antiquities of the Jews (transl.

by Louis H. Feldman (Brill Publishing,

2000) pages 194 - 200

. . .he (Moses' Hebrew

father) believed that

God would provide

every assurance that there

should be nothing false in

what had been said (God's

promise through Abraham).

Having said this, they (mother,

sister, father of Moses newborn)

devised wicker-work made of

papyrus, similar in shape to

a basket, having made it of

sufficient size so that the 

newborn child might lie in it

in spaciousness; then, having smeared

it with asphalt (to bar the entrance of

water thru leakage), they left the

newborn's welfare in God's hands.

The river received and carried it, and

Mariame (MIRIAM) the sister of the

child, having been bidden by her other, went

along beside him as he was carried to see

where the wicker-work would go.

Then also God showed clearly that human

intelligence is worthless, but that all He

wishes to accomplish attains a good end,

and that those who, for the sake of their

own security, condemn others to ruin

fail utterly, even if they employ much

zeal toward this end. . .(Princess Thermouthis)

bestowed this name on him [mou which means

"water" in Egyptian] and those who have been

saved [ ses ].  By common consent, in

accordance with the production of God,

the newborn was both in greatness of intelligence

and contempt of toils [ GREEK ponon kata

phronesei ] (a typical Stoic phrase)

the best of the Hebrews.  For Habramos

(his 7th ancestral grandfather was ABRAHAM)

was a seventh father to him. . .His

intelligence grew and far exceeded his age,

when he attained the age of three, God gave

him wondrous increase of his stature. . .The

vast and undiluted childish charm that

enveloped him captivated those who saw him.

. . .In his nurture, he received much care

and the Hebrews placed their hope completely

in him but the Egyptians regarded his

upbringing with suspicion.

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