God allowed the enslavement of His Israeli people to continue for hundreds of years, for it was His covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,that their people would, in the end, be granted vast lands and the right to roam as they pleased. God did not appear to Moses to convince him that the enslavement of the Israeli was justified, that because they born under this enslavement that they were meant to stay there, to never prosper, to never fight for their freedom. No, God says “I have seen the oppression with which the Egyptians are oppressing them.” and commands that Moses, confront the Pharaoh himself in His name and in the end grants Moses the power to part the Red Sea and cross safely with the sons of Israel, to the land in which they would be free, and vicariously summon enough power from the Lord to have the Sea collapse on the Egyptians who had wished to come and recapture them as …show more content…
All the power He would wield, that which would rival His Father’s, He would employ not to simply do as He pleased but to follow through with His Father’s will. Demonstrating to all that had the opportunity to witness, His ability to heal and salvage all things ill, in His Father’s name. People came to Jesus, not only to hear the words and commandments of God, but to beg Him to salvage and cure those who needed Him. He, Himself, not only relieved those in physical pain but cured all people who in them had demons and darkness in them; He would grant sight to those without it; bring those back to life, who had already been dead; and even granted His disciples the power to the same in His name as well. Jesus was not sent forth by God to boast of His power or to yield misfortunes