A Hellenized Moses in the Early Jewish Imagination
Moses, the great leader, lawgiver, and champion of justice in the Bible, fascinated ancient authors, Jewish and non-Jewish alike. Moses’ story, like Joseph’s, has the motif of a Hebrew in a non-Jewish court, but Moses’ trajectory is the inverse of Joseph’s. Whereas Joseph is raised as a Hebrew and ascends to power in the Egyptian court, Moses is raised in the Pharaoh’s house and only later comes to champion the cause of the Israelite slaves.
Artapanus’ account of Moses, which is preserved in the writings of Eusebius, is notable for its presentation of Moses as resembling a Greco-Roman teacher and political leader. Philo, too, depicts Moses as an intellectual as well as a man of tremendous integrity.