Edict 45
An ultra realistic cinematic adventure titled "The Complete Saga of Moses" is to be made.
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5/30/2025 at 5:21pm shortly before the sabbath day began:
I'm thinking of writing about the scene where Moses is infront of Pharoah. God tells him he could put his hand in his bossom and it would turn snow white but he never did it thus bringing me to suppose that this was done to inspire confidence. asumming this is true then please write a small short description of what moses might feel like in the presence of pharoah. and for the story please do recall that pharoah is the head of the land and he knows who moses is. thanks
ChatGPT said:
Of course — let’s immerse carefully in the scene, true to Scripture but also breathing into the inner world of Moses.
📝 Moses Before Pharaoh — A Short Description
The marble hall was colder than the desert wind, and Moses stood beneath its towering columns like a reed before a storm. Pharaoh — lord of the land, god in the eyes of men — sat draped in gold, his gaze sharp as carved obsidian. He knew Moses. Not as the ragged shepherd returned from exile, but as the once-prince who had vanished into the sands of Midian.
Moses felt the weight of a thousand memories pressing against him — the palace corridors he had once walked, the power he had once tasted. But now he stood not as a prince of Egypt, nor as a fugitive. He stood as a messenger.
His hand, once firm on the staff of royalty, now clenched the shepherd’s rod. God had told him of the signs — the serpent, the leprous hand — but Moses did not reach for them. Not yet. Not now. Confidence was not in displays of wonder. It was in obedience. It was in presence. It was in standing where he had once fled, speaking words not his own.
The court watched in silence, waiting for Pharaoh to sneer, to laugh, to command his guards. Moses' heart thundered beneath his ribs. Yet, he did not bow. He did not stumble. He spoke with the voice given to him, the words pressed like fire on his tongue:
"Thus says the Lord, the God of Israel: Let my people go."
And for the first time, Pharaoh’s unshakable certainty faltered — not because of signs, but because a man dared speak to him not with fear, but with authority from the invisible God.
Would you like a slightly longer version — perhaps imagining the moment Moses considers putting his hand to his bosom but chooses not to, silently trusting that the real sign needed was his presence and his faith?
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