Description
The life of Moses, the greatest prophet of the Old Testament, has always been shrouded in mystery. The Bible mentions no witnesses to Moses' death, no funeral and no indication of his burial place and the story of Exodus paints a very contradictory picture of this man so important to both Judaism and Christianity. At times, he is depicted as a meek, stuttering figure and, at others, his tyrannical commands and fits of rage terrorise the children of Israel. And, for the last years of his life, he chose to hide behind a veil. What is the explanation for these extreme shifts in character? Was Moses mentally ill? As Rand and Rose Flem-Ath reveal, the evidence points to something much more sinister - Moses was murdered and replaced by an impostor.
The result of a decade-long investigation, this book continues and builds upon the research of Goethe, Christopher Marlowe and Sigmund Freud - who spent the last 40 years of his life obsessed with solving Moses' murder - and reaches a startling, but well-substantiated, conclusion that Moses was deceived and murdered by his father-in-law, Reuel. The authors show how Reuel was a skilled magician trained at Egypt's prestigious House of Life and they reveal his motive - he was the son of Esau, from whom Jacob stole his birthright - the leadership of the Hebrew people - a role that Moses was now assuming.
The authors explain how the magician Reuel used his sophisticated skills of manipulation and illusion to fake the Burning Bush that spoke to Moses, as well as conceal his assumption of Moses' identity after the murder. They reveal how the early scribes of the Old Testament inserted lags of time into the Exodus story to cover Moses' assassination and replacement, fabricated Moses' place of origin and changed the location of the “Mountain of God” from Edom, where Reuel was a prince, to Sinai.
Unveiling the enigma of Moses' real story - and his murder and replacement - the Flem-Aths dramatically challenge the time line and details of biblical history, exposing a cover-up at the very origins of Western religion.
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