| EXODUS FROM
EGYPT
and
THE DROWNING OF PHARAOH IN THE SEA
There is a limit to the revelations a nation is to receive. God warns
people through His books, His messengers or His faithful servants. All
humans are invited to believe in the existence and oneness of our Lord,
and to obey our True Protector and Creator. This communication may last
for many years. However, in the sight of God, there is always a predetermined
limit to this process. To those who persist in denial, there will be a
torment while here in this world, and which extends into eternity in the
hereafter.
Pharaoh and his inner circle, a perversely self-interested troupe, who
resisted the message for years, deserved punishment. They rebelled against
God, accusing the messenger of insanity as well as of being a liar. Because
of their denial, God prepared for them a humiliating end.
Before this affliction began, God commanded Musa to lead the children
of Israel out of Egypt:
We revealed to Musa: "Travel with Our servants by night.
You will certainly be pursued." (Qur'an, 26: 52)
In compliance with the command of God, Musa and his people secretly left
Egypt.
The flight of the children of Israel was entirely unacceptable to Pharaoh,
who considered himself to be their Lord. He saw himself as the sole master
of all the children of Israel. In addition, it would mean a loss of manpower,
that would ultimately contribute to the diminishment of his authority.
Therefore, he mobilized his soldiers and set out after the children of
Israel:

The picture above shows the procession of Egyptians carrying the dead
Pharaoh to its tomb. |
Pharaoh sent marshals into the cities: "These people are a small group
and they are agitating against us and we constitute a vigilant majority."
We expelled them (Pharaoh and his people) from gardens
and springs, from treasures and a splendid situation. So it was! And We
bequeathed them to the tribe of Israel. So they (Pharaoh and his troops)
pursued them towards the east. (Qur'an, 26: 53-60)
By the time the children of Israel had reached a shore, Pharaoh and his
soldiers had caught up with them. Panic and despair engulfed the people
of Musa when they saw Pharaoh and his soldiers approaching. Pharaoh and
his soldiers were within just a short distance. There was no room to escape.
They thought they were trapped:
And when the two hosts came into sight of one another
Musa's companions said, "We will surely be overtaken!" (Qur'an, 26: 61)
At that very moment, the way Musa conducted himself is an example for
all believers. He remembered that he need never lose faith in the help
of God:
He said, "Never! My Lord is with me and He will guide
me." (Qur'an, 26: 62)
Then, he followed the revelation he received from God, "Strike
the sea with your staff" (Qur'an, 26: 63). Miraculously, God divided
the waters of the sea leaving a dry path in the middle, which the children
of Israel immediately followed. Pharaoh and his soldiers went so audacious
as to chase the children of Israel into the sea. Here was an apparent
miracle; without question, God's help and support was with Musa and his
followers. Nevertheless, this miracle did not suffice to convince Pharaoh.
Together with his soldiers, he blindly entered the path that divided the
sea. However, after the children of Israel had safely crossed to the other
side, the waters suddenly began to close in on Pharaoh and his soldiers
and they all drowned. Though, at the last moment, Pharaoh tried to repent,
his repentance was not accepted:
We brought the tribe of Israel across the sea and Pharaoh
and his troops pursued them out of tyranny and enmity. Then, when he was
on the point of drowning, he (Pharaoh) said, "I believe that there is
no god but Him in whom the tribe of Israel believe. I am one of the Muslims."
What, now! When previously you rebelled and were one of the corrupters?
Today we will preserve your body so you can be a Sign for people who come
after you. Surely many people are heedless of Our Signs. (Qur'an, 10:
90-92)
There is a very important lesson to draw from Pharaoh's repentance at
the very last moment of his life and its rejection by God. God grants
sufficient time and opportunity to everybody to ponder over the reason
for their existence on earth, to understand that they are here to be servants
to God and the way they are to serve Him. God's messengers, divine revelations,
and believers, convey the commandments of God to mankind. There is enough
time to consider these messages and reminders, and finally, to seek refuge
in God's mercy. If, however, a man wastes the time he has been allotted
and attempts to repent only at the moment he meets his death-unless otherwise
willed by God-his repentance is worthless. Because, at the moment of death,
a person can clearly sense the reality and proximity of the hereafter,
and bears witness to this truth when he confronts the angels of death.
At that point, a person can no longer reject the truth. What is important,
however, is to exercise one's conscience and be sincere while one is still
living in this world, that is, while he is being tested. Throughout his
trial period, Pharaoh conducted himself disrespectfully and insolently
towards God. Therefore, his repentance, which was founded on fear, did
not bring him salvation.
This should act as an especially important warning to all those who believed
in "living it up," and postponed their performance of religious responsibilities
to their later years in life. The fulfilment of religious obligations,
however, should in no way be postponed. Except for those for whom God
wills otherwise, people who postpone forming a religious consciousness
when they are young, will ultimately reach the last stages of their lives
when faith and repentance no longer have the same value. God informs us
about this fact as follows:
God only accepts the repentance of those who do evil
in ignorance and then quickly repent after doing it. God will pardon them.
God is All-Knowing, All-Wise. There is no repentance for people who persist
in doing evil until death comes to them and who then say, "Now I repent,"
nor for people who die unbeliever. We have prepared for them a painful
punishment. (Qur'an, 4: 17-18)
Certainly, Pharaoh's embracing faith at the very last moment, and his
asking for forgiveness, were not accepted by God. God conveys to us the
condition of Pharaoh and his companions in hell as follows:
The Fire, morning and night, to which they are exposed;
and on the Day the Hour takes place: "Admit Pharaoh's people to the harshest
punishment!" When they are squabbling with one another in the Fire, the
weak will say to those deemed great, "We were your followers, so why do
you not relieve us of a portion of the Fire?" Those deemed great will
say, "All of us are in it. God has clearly judged between His servants."
(Qur'an, 40: 46-48)
In the hereafter, by the Will of God, we will all see the torment that
will be inflicted on Pharaoh and his inner circle who had sought to torment
Musa and the believers who followed him. In the mean time, we should pray
to God to make us of those who will see Pharaoh's grievous punishment
not as those with him in Hell, but as among the righteous servants of
God in Paradise.
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