Two men are walking to temple. The older man says to the younger man, "So, do you know why the Jewish people aren't voting for President Bush?" The younger man replies with an inquisitive "No." "Well," says the older man, "the last time the Jewish people followed a Bush they wound up wandering in the Desert."
This recent political joke is in reference to the Exodus story of Moses and the burning bush. As stated in the bible it reads:
"Moses was tending the flock of Jethro, his father in law, the priest of Midian. He led the flock far into the wilderness and came to Horev, the mountain of Elohim. The angel of YHVH appeared to him in a flame of fire out of a bush. He gazed: the bush is blasing fire yet the bush is not consumed!" (Exodus 3:1-2)
Exodus is the second of the five "books of Moses" that tells the story of the Exodus of Israelites from Egypt through the Sinai Desert. When Moses was born, the Israelites were oppressed by the Egyptian Pharaoh and bound to a harsh life of labor taking part in building some of the great public works of Egypt such as the pyramids, fortresses, and installations to regulate the flow of the Nile River. For fear that the Israelite population would continue to increase, the Pharaoh insisted that every male Hebrew child would be killed at birth. Ironically, during this oppressive period, Moses, the "future deliverer of Israel", was born. To protect his life, his mother sent him down the Nile in a specially woven ark. He was found by the Pharaoh's daughter who took him in and, to add to the irony, she hired his mother to be his foster nurse. The baby boy grew up and was adopted into the Pharaoh's household and named Moses. His name is derived from the Egyptian root "mose" mea ...