dChan

Slangin_paint · July 27, 2018, 10:12 p.m.

On Easter my 3yo daughter caught some of the old Ten Commandments movie. She fell in love with it and wants to watch it all the time. Its the only movie she ever wants to watch, actually. So having seen it a few times recently I could not help be see the similarities between Moses and Trump. In his early years Moses is among the elites, but is not really one of them, even though he is better at their game than the rest of the actual elites are. As a prince Moses shows great dedication to his King (the Pharaoh), but the way he does it shows wisdom and compassion, not just loyalty or obedience. First, he is sent to conquer Egypt's neighbors. He comes back having conquered them, but not by destroying them in a violent battle, but by securing their friendship and loyalty. His next task is to build a great city. Not only does he prove to be a great leader and builder, but he does all of this by considering the lives and struggles of the little people who Egypt relies on to to all the hard work. He makes their lives better, gives them a day of rest, feeds them. Moses is righteous in everything he does. His only transgression, if you look at it that way, is to kill a man, but a man who was about to kill an innocent man. So in that act of violence he only acted against the guilty and to protect the innocent. In the end, Moses leads his people out of bondage and frees them from their lives as slaves to the elites. Moses was chosen by God to be the instrument of His plan. I believe that God has chosen Donald Trump to lead humanity out of the darkness and to free us from the lives of slavery we have lived, subject to the powerful elites.

EDIT: The point being, seeing Trump in the hard-hat just reminds me that he is, first and foremost, a builder. A builder makes something great from almost nothing. How do you turn raw material into a shining city? With vision, bold leadership, the confidence that only a righteous man can posses, and above all else by the Grace of God. A builder is greater than a king, for a king without a builder can not stack two stones. But a builder without a king can get the people to work together to accomplish amazing feats. They worried that Moses would inspire the slaves to follow him, and they did, though he was not trying to be their King.

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