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1Give thanks to Yahweh! Call on his name!

Make his doings known among the peoples.

2Sing to him, sing praises to him!

Tell of all his marvelous works.

3Glory in his holy name.

Let the heart of those who seek Yahweh rejoice.

4Seek Yahweh and his strength.

Seek his face forever more.

5Remember his marvelous works that he has done:

his wonders, and the judgments of his mouth,

6you offspring of Abraham, his servant,

you children of Jacob, his chosen ones.

7He is Yahweh, our God.

His judgments are in all the earth.

8He has remembered his covenant forever,

the word which he commanded to a thousand generations,

9the covenant which he made with Abraham,

his oath to Isaac,

10and confirmed it to Jacob for a statute;

to Israel for an everlasting covenant,

11saying, “To you I will give the land of Canaan,

the lot of your inheritance,”

12when they were but a few men in number,

yes, very few, and foreigners in it.

13They went about from nation to nation,

from one kingdom to another people.

14He allowed no one to do them wrong.

Yes, he reproved kings for their sakes,

15“Don’t touch my anointed ones!

Do my prophets no harm!”

16He called for a famine on the land.

He destroyed the food supplies.

17He sent a man before them.

Joseph was sold for a slave.

18They bruised his feet with shackles.

His neck was locked in irons,

19until the time that his word happened,

and Yahweh’s word proved him true.

20The king sent and freed him,

even the ruler of peoples, and let him go free.

21He made him lord of his house,

and ruler of all of his possessions,

22to discipline his princes at his pleasure,

and to teach his elders wisdom.

23Israel also came into Egypt.

Jacob lived in the land of Ham.

24He increased his people greatly,

and made them stronger than their adversaries.

25He turned their heart to hate his people,

to conspire against his servants.

26He sent Moses, his servant,

and Aaron, whom he had chosen.

27They performed miracles among them,

and wonders in the land of Ham.

28He sent darkness, and made it dark.

They didn’t rebel against his words.

29He turned their waters into blood,

and killed their fish.

30Their land swarmed with frogs,

even in the rooms of their kings.

31He spoke, and swarms of flies came,

and lice in all their borders.

32He gave them hail for rain,

with lightning in their land.

33He struck their vines and also their fig trees,

and shattered the trees of their country.

34He spoke, and the locusts came

with the grasshoppers, without number.

35They ate up every plant in their land,

and ate up the fruit of their ground.

36He struck also all the firstborn in their land,

the first fruits of all their manhood.

37He brought them out with silver and gold.

There was not one feeble person among his tribes.

38Egypt was glad when they departed,

for the fear of them had fallen on them.

39He spread a cloud for a covering,

fire to give light in the night.

40They asked, and he brought quails,

and satisfied them with the bread of the sky.

41He opened the rock, and waters gushed out.

They ran as a river in the dry places.

42For he remembered his holy word,

and Abraham, his servant.

43He brought his people out with joy,

his chosen with singing.

44He gave them the lands of the nations.

They took the labor of the peoples in possession,

45that they might keep his statutes,

and observe his laws.

Praise Yah!

Biography of Aaron

Biography of Aaron

Biography | Ps 105:26 | Hershel Wayne House

Aaron was the son of Amram and Jochebed, the brother of Moses and Miriam. He was the first priest of the people of Israel. He was appointed by God to be a spokesman for Moses when Moses went before the Pharaoh of Egypt to demand that Pharaoh would release the people of Israel from slavery. When facing Pharaoh, it was Aaron who threw his rod before Pharaoh, which turned into a snake. He also assisted Moses in declaring various judgments on Pharaoh and the Egyptian people until finally the Pharaoh conceded to the demand.

Aaron was also present at Sinai when Moses received the Ten Commandments, but he also conceded to the creation of the Golden Calf by the Israelites during the time that Moses was on the mountain receiving the law of God.

Aaron was important for the development of the priesthood in Israel, and had two sons who died, and Eleazar and Ithamar succeeded him as priests. After his death, he was buried on Mt. Hor.

The preceding information is based on Herbert Lockyer, All the Men of the Bible, (Zondervan: Grand Rapids, MI, 1958) and All the Women of the Bible (Zondervan: Grand Rapids, MI, 1967), Who's Who in the Bible (Bonanza Books, New York, 1981), and Biographies of Bible Characters, People and Characters in the Bible.