Good Evening Yamon Ki Yesepar;

Exodus 10:23: “They saw not one another, neither rose any from his place for three days: but all the children of Israel had light in their dwellings.”

You remember the story about the plagues that came upon Egypt? One plague was darkness.  This so unnerved Pharaoh that he agreed to let the people of Israel go.  Is it just me or has any one else ever thought: “What? Didn’t Pharaoh have candles, torches, oil lamps?    What was so unnerving about total darkness, it only lasted three days and when the lights came on you find a willing Pharaoh ready to let the people go.

To get total darkness it meant God had to extinquish the lights of the sun, moon and stars for three days. The Egyptians worshipped the sun, moon and stars.  It was the constellations that told them when to plant their crops,  when to harvest, when the Nile would overflow it banks it irrigate the land.  God Jehovah was doing a real number on their so called deities.  Then they looked toward the community of Hebrews and saw light.  That would be even more unnerving because of where the light came from.

The Talmud teaches that this light literally came from the people themselves. But is was not through them, it was reflected off of them.  The light in the Hebrew community was the Light of God reflected off  His people.  The people of God literally had a light shining from their countenance.  Now that would really unnerve the Egyptians.  The Hebrew says in this verse that there was “‘or bemoshevotham.”  This light (‘or) is a divine light.  This is the light of Genesis 1:3 when God said: “Let there be light.”   Where did that light come from? He had not yet created the sun, moon or stars?   This was Divine light.  Now what the sages do is take the preposition and pronoun away from the in bemoshovotam  and you have Moshev. This is a play on the word Moshiach or Messiah.  It was not the light coming from the people but reflected off the people. The Shechinah glory was present in each household and the light of the Messiah (Jesus) was reflecting off the people.  The word Moshovotam  spells out  moshav  tam, or a complete resting place. Where you find the light of God you will find a complete resting place.

The Bible tells us Jesus is the light of the world.  He is the light of God and so in Him, we can find moshav tam.  What must it had been like in those Hebrew household for three days basking in the light of the Messiah, the light of God? Not only that but to look around and see that light reflected off the people around you.  That must have been some three days of worship and praise for the people of Israel.

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