Today, I am reading and commenting on Exodus 7-9.
When Aaron’s staff turned into a snake, the Pharaoh’s magicians were able to do the same thing, and Pharaoh was not impressed. I suspect that some of the magicians took the fact that Aaron’s staff swallowed their staffs as a bad omen. Then when Aaron and Moses turned the water in the Nile to blood, Pharaoh’s magicians turned some water into blood. I have long assumed that Pharaoh’s magicians accomplished this using something that Penn & Teller would do, some kind of trick. However, when Aaron and Moses summoned frogs and then gnats, Pharaoh’s magicians recognized that something was going on that they could not duplicate, but Pharaoh refused to listen to them. By this point, Pharaoh had become committed to his position and was unwilling to admit that he had been wrong and his people were willing to stand with him on that. However, when Egyptian livestock suffered, but Israelite livestock did not followed by Egyptians breaking out with boils, but Israelites did not, the minds of the Egyptian people began to change. Such that when Moses predicted that hail would soon fall killing every animal and every person who remained outside, many of the Egyptian nobles believed him and took action to protect their possessions. We see in the account of the Plagues a lesson in how God deals with humanity. The Egyptians, in the form of the Pharaoh, were doing wrong. God warned them in small ways at first, but in steadily increasing disasters. Pharaoh could have, at any point along the way, chosen to do the right thing, but he did not. When we do wrong, God acts similarly. He puts minor problems into our lives to call us to change our ways. Those problems will get ever worse, but at any point we can turn to God, away from our sin, and things will stop getting worse, but if we do not change our ways we will experience calamity.
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.