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Moses Great Lives Series: Volume 4 | 
| Author: Charles R. Swindoll Publisher: Thomas Nelson Category: Book
List Price: $22.99 Buy New: $5.98 You Save: $17.01 (74%)
New (38) Used (39) from $5.89
Avg. Customer Rating: 11 reviews Sales Rank: 49977
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 400 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.2 x 1.4
ISBN: 0849913853 Dewey Decimal Number: 222.1092 UPC: 020049013854 EAN: 9780849913853 ASIN: 0849913853
Publication Date: April 16, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Excellent Condtion. Brand New Hardback. Mimimal shelf wear. ***Customer Satisfaction Guaranteed. ***Ships in 24 hours.
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Product Description
Charles Swindoll presents the Bible's real Moses-the Moses who tried to decline his assignment from God; the Moses who dazzled Pharoh; the Moses who received the Ten Commandments; the Moses who was disobedient and weak; the Moses who was the greatest leader of God's people in all of history. Through his faith and selfless dedication, Moses continually chose to follow God's will through difficult and seemingly impossible situations. This is the fourth volume of Swindoll's "Great Lives" series.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 6 more reviews...
Moses, Great Lives from God's Word August 9, 2008 Excellent book that every Christian should read. Dr. Swindoll does an excellent job of sharing the life of Moses and comparing it to what happens in our lives; our impatience and how it affects us verses waiting for God's timing.
Moses: A True Hall of Famer February 8, 2008 Chuck Swindoll beautifully brings Moses to life. One has a common picture of Moses in the "10 Commandments" by Cecil Demille in their minds. Through this book, one will truly begin to see why Moses is listed in Hebrews in the "Hall of Faith Hereos."
A Pencil in the Hand of God: Moses March 17, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Mother Theresa of Calcutta used that phrase to describe her work. Moses was a reflection of that statement.
You cannot outwit God. Herod tried to kill all the toddlers but Moses was saved by a warning in a dream. The Court of Egypt banished him into the desert but he returned to set the Israelites free. Pharoah's magicians tried to avert the 10 plagues but God's will won.
Moses was a pencil in the writing of Exodus. Christianity and Islam both acknowledge him for the great mission he played.
I agree with another reviewer, Michael Taylor, on whom God uses and why. God will use anyone and anything in his Divine plan.
God Teaches Through Hard Times February 24, 2007 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I have both this book and his study guide on Moses. I found these books to be instructional to me because God uses hard times of the school of experience to teach us things. "Endure hardship as discipline; God is treating you as sons. For what son is not disciplined by his father?" (Heb. 12:7, NIV) Further Paul says: "No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, however, it produces a harvest in righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it." (Heb. 12:11, NIV) Moses was miraculously delivered from a genocide against the male Hebrew babies living in Egypt when they were slaves. Moses exprienced the best of Egyptian life as he was adopted by Pharaoh's daughter. But when Moses had felt sympathy for a fellow Hebrew who was being beaten by the cruel Egyptain slavedriver, he killed the man: and in so doing this the act backfired on him. He must have thought he was causing a revolution against the Egyptians, but instead found himself running for his life out of the country. He was reduced to working as a shepherd in Midian. He married the priest's daughter and worked as a shepherd for him for 40 years!@ "Can you believe it? A man with advanced knowledge in hieroglyphics, science, literature, and military tactics was now eking out his existence on the backside of the desert, living with his father-in-law, raising a couple of boys and watching over little flocks of sheep." There were groupings of 40 year periods of time in Moses'life-40 years in the Pharahoah's household, 40 years "living on the lam" in Midian and his 40 years leading the Hebrews throuth the desert to the land of Canann in the Exodus. God wished to humble Moses, a former murderer and fugitive so as to make him into a suitable vessel or conduit of God's miraculous power which he would used in his confrontations with the Pharaoh and during the Exodus. God appeared to Moses in the burning bush and sent him to his people and to the Pharaoh with the ultimatum LET MY PEOPLE GO! God worked mighty miracles through Moses and his brother Aaron to make the Pharaoh obey God. What I did notice was how at first the Pharaoh was conviced to obey God's command. Yet God himself with harden the Pharaoh's heart (make it hostile towards God and Moses again_ so that God had more moral justification to inflict more damage on Egypt. God had "stacked the deck" with Pharaoh, so to speak. Finally, it took the Destroying Angel killing all the firstborn of Egypt to make Pharaoh let his people go. The last thing I found of interest in Chuck's study of the life of Moses was that when the Hebrews rebelled against God that God simply wanted to wipe them out and make Moses the new father of Israel. Then at Midian when Moses stuck the rock to make water gush from it instead of speaking to it, Moses disobeyed God and lost his right to enter Canaan. I think if I were in Moses' shoes I think I would have just let God wipe the whole ungrateful nation out! Moses was the greatest prophet of the Bible, short of Jesus Christ, of couse. What I like about some Chuck Swindol books is that you realize that the heroes of the Bible are some rough men who are at odds with society at times. Some have been to prison for their beliefs, too. Some have been executed for what they stood for. Some of the churches and teachings I have heard from some, make me think that the church in the suburbs is like some postive-thinking suburban girl's finishing school! That is sooo-unbiblical!
Selfless Leader Serves As Example April 13, 2006 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Swindoll takes references to Moses from both the Old and New Testaments and weaves them together with observations and reflections into a relational, nonacademic read that gives the reader a grip on not just what Moses did, but on who Moses was as a person--and how he became that person by God's grooming. Through his conversational, anecdotal style, Swindoll invites the reader to personally take note of and apply divine principles as fleshed out by Moses--for ex, total surrender to God's will and timing, enablement for service, challenges of opposition from without and within, standing alone with God, passing on the baton, etc.
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