. The Bible and its . ii#. BY J. JAMES TISSOT. REPRODUCED BY THE COURTESY OF THE AMERICAN TISSOT SOCIETY OF NEW YORK. + Then Moses stood in the gate of the camp, and said,Who is on the Lords side? Let him come unto me.—Ex., 32, 2G. THAT sudden outbreak in which Moses destroyedthe divinely given tablets, is nowhere chargedagainst him as a sin. Rather God seems to haveviewed the anger with appro\al as a righteous , the protector, the savior of his people, becomessuddenly transformed into the avenger, the flaming swordof a God of Wrath. Furiously he strode among the people, hur


. The Bible and its . ii#. BY J. JAMES TISSOT. REPRODUCED BY THE COURTESY OF THE AMERICAN TISSOT SOCIETY OF NEW YORK. + Then Moses stood in the gate of the camp, and said,Who is on the Lords side? Let him come unto me.—Ex., 32, 2G. THAT sudden outbreak in which Moses destroyedthe divinely given tablets, is nowhere chargedagainst him as a sin. Rather God seems to haveviewed the anger with appro\al as a righteous , the protector, the savior of his people, becomessuddenly transformed into the avenger, the flaming swordof a God of Wrath. Furiously he strode among the people, hurled down theidol, ground it into powder, and made the surroundingmultitude drink down in water the thing they had terrified Aaron shrank away from him as from adestroying fire; the people cowered at his feet. Butthe idolatry was so widespread that he could not reachall in the entire nation with his own bare hands. Hecould not call on God for a stroke of vengeance, he whohad already secured Gods promise of pardon for t


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