Horribly socially anxious Moses is my new favorite depiction of him
@firstpersonwinner74048 күн бұрын
It is basically the Biblical account, lol
@Garyckxxx8 күн бұрын
that's the canon Moses hahaha
@crispybacon99178 күн бұрын
It's mostly biblical too, it never says he was anxious but he does say he isn't a good public speaker
@ezrabraman64377 күн бұрын
@@crispybacon9917some sources say he had a lisp also
@chimera98187 күн бұрын
Well he had severe case of stuttering to the point Aharon was the one giving all the speech’s
@David_Jr8 күн бұрын
"Oh, my Ra, no way!" *UNDERRATED LINE!*
@legoking61657 күн бұрын
Cleo DeNile: "I'm glad you think so. I am the one who coined the phrase."
@jennifersilvarodrigues555222 сағат бұрын
2:20 Here is the timing for anyone you want
@MatthewCaunsfield8 күн бұрын
I love how the fact that Pharaoh has actual sorcerers who do real magic is treated as such a mundane thing 😂
@chimera98187 күн бұрын
Well it was stated they were able to do for the first two plagues same stuff just to lesser level in the Tanakh
@kodabear28567 күн бұрын
Yeah it was pretty normal in Egyptian society
@Mrryn7 күн бұрын
@@kodabear2856Right alongside card games.
@angelikaskoroszyn84957 күн бұрын
In most of OT it doesn't seem like Israelites were monotheist the way Christians are nowadays. They acknowledged that other gods exist - just Jahwe was their God (and the best one). As such pharanon's sorcerers obviously had an access to divine. They could do miracles for the same reasons Israelites could. The issue is that their gods were inferior
@ivetterodríguez-j4k7 күн бұрын
It's implied in the OT that other gods exist just that they're not supposed to be worshipped.
@KnightoSea7 күн бұрын
The sorcerers just being ancient Team Rocket is hilarious
@mra45218 күн бұрын
It’s fun to imagine this happening at the same time as the Trojan War.
@mr.outlaw2317 күн бұрын
Zeus, seeing the Egyptian Gods struggle to overpower a single god: Sucks to be them. I'll cheat on my wife in their honor... Who am I kidding? I was planning on doing that anyway!
@mra45217 күн бұрын
@@mr.outlaw231lmao. I like to believe that Zeus’s actual main contribution was convincing the Mesopotamian gods to stay out of the Trojan War. Case point: Aphrodite is based on Ishtar. And there’s that whole scene where Zeus tells her that war isn’t for dainty girls like her, even though Aphrodite is a patron of the Trojans in the war due to Paris and Aeneis. That scene always struck me as a “Well, this was probably told differently in the places where Aphrodite was a war goddess like Sparta, Carthage, and Babylon…”
@theenderdestruction23627 күн бұрын
@@mra4521 i also imagine its more of a case of "i rather he be on them then us cause i aint facing him down" and everyone agreeing cause its funny as fuck to imagine God just being this looming being who sometimes just gives out random advice
@chimera98187 күн бұрын
@@mr.outlaw231being fair according to Ancient Greece the Egyptian and Greek gods were the same
@chimera98187 күн бұрын
@@mra4521we Astarte is also technically god wife (if you go with el being the original god that god originated from) so Aphrodite probably was with her husband in Egypt
@legueu8 күн бұрын
"What do you mean!" Said Moses calmly.
@jasonchen17787 күн бұрын
Dumbledore moment
@AforgiusLaTedraDetra6 күн бұрын
"Did you have to put us on the desert?!" Said Moses while shaking Him as close friend.
@JamieHaDov7 күн бұрын
My favorite part of about the frog plague is that the torah uses the singular. Frog covered the land of egypt. One giant kaiju frog.
@elskaalfhollr47436 күн бұрын
The frog, touches sand, dies of dehydration and intoxication (the poor things are very sensitive)
@RobertGrif8 күн бұрын
I love your Easter egg about how, in the original Biblical Hebrew, the sea that was crossed was called Yam Suph ("Sea of Reeds"). While Yam Suph has traditionally been interpreted as referring to the Red Sea, some modern scholars dispute this.
@clarehidalgo7 күн бұрын
They think it was actually a Marsh ~40 miles north of the Red Sea that had a phenomena where the water drained to one side of the marsh under certain wind conditions. Sadly it was destroyed when they built the Suez Canal
@orbracha257 күн бұрын
Wait, what other sea do they think it could be? The only two major bodies of water between Egypt and Canaan are the Red Sea and the Mediterranean, the latter of which not leading to any desert except the ones already within the land of Canaan. It can't be the Dead Sea or the Sea of Galilee, as they later cross the Jordan River, which connects those two so it would make no sense, and the Great Bitter Lakes weren't filled with water until the 20th century so definitely not those.
@RobertGrif7 күн бұрын
@@orbracha25 The most common alternative I have heard from Biblical scholars is the Gulf of Aqaba, which, to be fair, is still a part of the Red Sea. Other alternatives I've encountered include Lake Timash or Lake Bardawil.
@zachjaeger64017 күн бұрын
@@RobertGrif I've also herd the nile river suggested.
@orbracha257 күн бұрын
@@zachjaeger6401 The Nile river? But it was mentioned under the name Yeor in this very story. Plus it's not on the way out of Egypt, it is the very center of Egypt in every way
@teerat84518 күн бұрын
"it's time for you to exit us" is top level punny.
@andistansbury43668 күн бұрын
Technically, that IS what Exodus is named after, Exodus meaning a large group of people leaving.
@erdood32357 күн бұрын
In Hebrew it's literally exit of Egypt.
@Tuna_20147 күн бұрын
Title drop.
@thomasrinschler67837 күн бұрын
@@erdood3235 It's actually Greek for "the road out" ("ex" = out of, and "hodos" = road). The actual Hebrew name of the book is "שְׁמוֹת Šəmōṯ," meaning "names". Genesis ("beginnings") and Deuteronomy ("second law") are also Greek names.
@erdood32357 күн бұрын
@@thomasrinschler6783 I'm from Israel. I meant that the name of the *event* known in English as exodus is in Hebrew "Egypt exist"
@aliasfakename31597 күн бұрын
Imagine being that one Egyptian who took a vacation to Cyprus or something just before Moses returned to Egypt. You come back and the economy is in shambles, the firstborn are dead, and a good chunk of the slaves are gone
@ianmcnicol80598 күн бұрын
3:01 Looks like the Egyptian priests figured out how to reverse the blood plague
@JakeDoubleyoo8 күн бұрын
oops teehee
@ciciinho39687 күн бұрын
@@JakeDoubleyoo i thought that was a pond and not the nile
@dauntless54867 күн бұрын
right moses
@desrochessimon30447 күн бұрын
Must be the algae.
@Potterhead_738 күн бұрын
Moses looks ready to die on that thumbnail. Edit: Oh, my Ra! Thanks for all these likes!
@luvstimetosleep8 күн бұрын
Or angry
@WarriorcatGerda7 күн бұрын
Melissa?
@velstadtvonausterlitz23385 күн бұрын
Death is sometimes a mercy.
@gabrielrussell55318 күн бұрын
2:17 "And the Horus puts it in the salad" One of my favorite bits of Egyptian myth. This is a vital part of Horus defeating his uncle, which makes it even more hilarious that it's something that feels out of a bad 2000s comedy. Did Jake do a video on Set's lettuce?
@Brian-tn4cd8 күн бұрын
No but he referenced it before
@CircusClownCarnival7 күн бұрын
For people who dont know horus poured milk on then lettuce to make it icky yicky
@Brian-tn4cd7 күн бұрын
@@CircusClownCarnival just say semen, like make it flashy so people have a reason to look it up XD
@CircusClownCarnival7 күн бұрын
@@gabrielrussell5531 horus is also inbred squared
@Tupadre976 күн бұрын
And set got his revenge for that this video iykyk
@LucasBenderChannel8 күн бұрын
It's genuinely an event whenever you upload :D The Pharao's magicians had a lot of personality! Great job!
@ektran42057 күн бұрын
michael jackson as moses
@IltizioNic8 күн бұрын
I expect some high level visuals of a old guy walking between 2 walls of water
@Kekatronic8 күн бұрын
An*
@The_EB_Consortium_Arc8 күн бұрын
I have played Pokémon for many years, and I can say with certainty that the move swallow is much cooler in its effect here than in the actual games.
@wolframite1257 күн бұрын
As someone else who has played pokemon for years I can confirm, swallow is way more cool here
@LevelUpLeo7 күн бұрын
Moses really had a “WHERE IS YOUR GOD NOW?” moment with the Pharaoh.
@Yuric_INC.8 күн бұрын
I love the designs of the Magicians you made
@NintendoFan---4817 күн бұрын
I'm subscribed to your channel @Yuri_INC And Your channel entertain me the most in year of 2022
@JakeDoubleyoo6 күн бұрын
hey everyone subscribe to this guy.
@NintendoFan---4816 күн бұрын
@@JakeDoubleyooI'm already sub to his channel
@SupiSuki8 күн бұрын
Me when the local water supply turns into a body fluid in the circulatory system of humans and other vertebrates that delivers necessary substances such as nutrients and oxygen to the cells, and transports metabolic waste products away from those same cells:
@filippvarelis19997 күн бұрын
"Advance political strategy called lying"😂
@Dungeon_Dunce20117 күн бұрын
that sounds familiar. I can think of a certain pesron who feels that way.
@ego83305 күн бұрын
@@Dungeon_Dunce2011 Perhaps Big D from Hunter: The Parenting
@ego83305 күн бұрын
Big D from Hunter: The Parenting?
@Dungeon_Dunce20114 күн бұрын
@@ego8330 yes
@funloop8 күн бұрын
when I was younger, I was uncomfortable that every time the Pharoah was on the verge of releasing the Israelites God would harden his heart. But it wasn't until much later, and especially this video, that it occurred to me that the Plauges weren't meant to just torment the Egyptians but also send a message to both the Israelites and the people of the desert, which...unfortunately, didn't pan out so well...
@crispybacon99178 күн бұрын
Actually this is not quite correct, since earlier in the bible pharaoh hardened his heart and God wasn't mentioned. It's not magic that hardened Pharaoh's heart but God's actions, essentially every time God told pharaoh what to do pharaoh did that thing kids do when you tell them to tidy their rooms: "well I'm not doing it now"
@crazyfroster94897 күн бұрын
So God "hardening" Pharaoh's heart isn't meant to be seen as the active hand of God making Pharaoh say no, but more that Pharaoh became hardened at the power of the Lord due to his own pride. God hardened Pharaoh's heart the same way that sunlight hardens clay, it's moreso the clays natural response to sunlight than the active decision of the sunlight to make the clay harder.
@hearts2857 күн бұрын
@@crispybacon9917"earlier in the bible pharaoh hardened his heart and God wasn't mentioned" This doesn't make any sense as an argument. Why should God be unable to harden the Pharaoh's heart because the Pharaoh can harden his own heart? The text explicitly says Yahweh hardens the Pharaohs heart over and over. (Exodus 4:21, 7:3, 9:12, 10:1, 10:20, 10:27, 11:10) Indeed, it seems to make a point of emphasizing that without this action, the plagues would have changed the Pharaoh's mind. Or at the very least that the plagues actually are making Pharaoh lean toward relenting, not the opposite as you say. (Exodus 7:21-22, Exodus 8:15, 9:7, 9:34) With all this, you might wonder why Yahweh is doing this. The text answers this several times. (Exodus 7:3-5, Exodus 10:1-2, Exodus 11:9) "I have hardened his heart and the hearts of his officials in order that I may show these signs of mine among them" In other words, it's a divine show of power. It's true that some other sections seem to imply that the Pharaoh's heart was not hardened by Yahweh and/or that the plagues were actually intended to convince Pharaoh. ("Indeed by a mighty hand he will let them go", Exodus 6:1) It seems that there are multiple traditions with different understandings of this in the text. Possibly, since Yahweh hardens the Pharaoh's heart more explicitly toward the end, the escalating plagues would have eventually convinced Pharaoh before the firstborn deaths, but Yahweh hardened his heart to allow his demonstration of power to reach its climax. I suspect this may be the perspective of the final editors who of course combined the traditions we have into a more or less cohesive whole.
@birdmcturd16267 күн бұрын
Humans are made in the image of God. So,what happens when humans get powerful? They show off,it goes to our heads and corrupts us. If you read the Bible with the knowledge that this is God’s word and therefore inherently bias,it actually paints the picture that God is just as prideful and power-hungry as humans. The difference being that he has supreme power. My guy can see the future and still fucks things up constantly (Eden being a major example. “Oh,yeah,I’ll throw two gullible idiots,a manipulative snake who wants evil to prevail and a tree that will ruin everything in the same garden. What could go wrong?”). You can only manage that if you’re so prideful that you just think you know better.
@LordePhantom7 күн бұрын
Yeah it means that God let Pharaoh to his own heart
@camerongrow64267 күн бұрын
Never realized how much Moses's brother Aaron did in this story. It's oddly endearing how Moses actively tries to get his big brother Aaron to be involved in his prophet shenanigans.
@angelikaskoroszyn84957 күн бұрын
In popular media Moses is always this charismatic leader when in reality (or the story) he was far away from it. It's shame that Hollywood tends to oversymplify stories this way. Just like they always use tall people as action heroes while a short guy being able to defeat dudes bigger than him is more exciting
@trismegistus7778 күн бұрын
Can confirm moses being reluctant is 100% historically accurate
@ninjoshday8 күн бұрын
The Sea of Reeds joke is so good
@alexrexaros98378 күн бұрын
If memory serves me well, I remember that this specific part of the Bible was ancient propaganda to depict the Egyptians as evil slave keepers (which they were). But that was coming from people who they themselves WERE slave owners.
@Azelf897 күн бұрын
Hell, it's the whole reason why the ancient Mediterranean stereotype of Jews worshiping a donkey god was even made in the first place. It was (Hellenic-ruled) Egypt's response to a story that they considered offensive in their eyes, especially when it came from a people whose homeland was, at the time, considered a backwater piece of shit.
@dragonicus26146 күн бұрын
Dude everyone owned slaves back then
@orpheemulemo80536 күн бұрын
The Difference between how Israel had slaves and Egypt were night and day jews slaves were part of the family and could marry into the family of their owners and had to be treated with human rights if they were wrongfully beaten or killed the owner would be killed or beaten
@orpheemulemo80536 күн бұрын
And you can't also call it propaganda since Genesis depicts the first pharaoh as kind hearted and the people accommodating to the Israelites the change came with new management
@Sarah124714 күн бұрын
@@orpheemulemo8053 of note is that there is apparently no surviving records of hebrew slaves, so either it was lost to time or egyptians genuinely did respect the hebrew people's right to worship, and just left them alone Of course there is option three of me not doing enough research, but if you go down that route i would like to know what your source is, so i can check it myself
@jasonblalock44298 күн бұрын
1:10 Just as an aside, it's interesting how every film adaptation of this forgets that Aaron also got to do miracles. The movies always have Moses do everything. Aaron kinda gets done dirty.
@tslex64776 күн бұрын
it doesn't make for a good story to have somebody who's gonna do all the important stuff instead of your main character yet your main character will have all the credit. Also, you don't really need both of them since they fill the same narrative role, so why not cut the character you can remove without any affect on the story? It's just practical
@mrhalfsaid13897 күн бұрын
This is genuinely some of of the best use of a running joke I've ever seen, now you're probably thinking *WHAT DO YOU MEAN BY THAT?!?*
@Jpnotmyname8 күн бұрын
As a european, im ready to wait half a day to watch this (Its 4:00 am, send help)
@noahtylerpritchett26828 күн бұрын
Oof. Prayers (literal not metaphorical) go with you.
@Francium872238 күн бұрын
As a Brit, this premiers at 15:00 for me (or 17:00, I have a VPN on). Edit: 17:00
@lueezationlueezaming29288 күн бұрын
12 am in the Philippines
@Comicbookguy2268 күн бұрын
LOL, you nonliberated British. What was 2 days ago? 4th of July🗽🌎🦅🇺🇸 (This is a joke)
@rishikeshnair76988 күн бұрын
Y does it say 13 hrs ago despite it only being out for 19 mins
@freyadoesitall8 күн бұрын
Me casually belting the lyrics to ever prince of egypt song throughout this series
@jaxjaxattaxx7 күн бұрын
Coming back to say I really, really appreciate the seriousness and emotion Jake took with his respect of Passover. Like the entire video is just up up up up up with comedy and amazing edits, and this impending sense of doom because of Moses, but Jake’s tonal change make me emotional and really sold the gravity of the situation. For a lot of us, Passover is never seen from the perspective of those who weren’t passed over. Even “Prince of Egypt” sells the pain of it, but its still hard to feel bad for Pharaoh in POE, because it’s seen as a “serves you right for being arrogant, tee hee”. The Pharaoh is more angry than his despairing at the loss of his son. Even as a kid, the image of him hunched over his son’s body scowling terrified me. But Jake is the first historian/youtuber I’ve ever heard (Catholic school kid w/hyperreligious Christian-Baptist Black family, so it’s not like I don’t know my scripture) who stressed that God literally manipulated Pharaoh into literally being stubborn and losing his son. I feel significantly worse for both Moses and Pharaoh in Jake’s depiction of this than POE. Like you really feel his sorrow. My heart broke when Moses walked, broken, like off like “Don’t worry…”. Even now, it’s making me emotional. Amazing work!
@daniellevi70122 күн бұрын
Something that might help is the fact that all of this was done by God, not a murder by human hands. Since He created everything that ever exists, He is the only being with the right to take it away. So in a way, one way or another the child would have been taken by God anyway no matter what they do. Such is the nature of death. At least the child died in his sleep, not murdered in war or died because of pestilence. It is simply an acceleration of the inevitable.
@SleepyPotterFan7 күн бұрын
“My god has blotted out the sun for three days!” “…my Gods have let me own your people for 400 years.”
@orpheemulemo80536 күн бұрын
My God saved your people from a seven year famon that would erase you from history
@orpheemulemo80536 күн бұрын
And remember most of those 400 years the Israelites weren't slaves because of Joseph but until knew management arrived
@SleepyPotterFan6 күн бұрын
@@orpheemulemo8053 Joseph wasn’t a historical figure. There’s no evidence that a seven year famine ever existed in Egypt or that a random outsider ever helped them survive it. You can watch another video by this very KZfaqr explaining that Joseph’s story is obviously two separate stories spliced together. Also, I was making a joke because there’s also absolutely no evidence that the Hebrews were ever enslaved en masse in Egypt, which means that there wasn’t actually an exodus.
@orpheemulemo80536 күн бұрын
@@SleepyPotterFan let's take it in joke format then I'm just saying according to the Bible which you took your source from that Egypt was saved
@orpheemulemo80536 күн бұрын
@@SleepyPotterFan Joseph not being a historical figure is something highly impossible since in Egypt there are litteral stone slabs with the name of the people of Israel meaning at some point jews and Egyptians were in contact Not only that Egypt is famously known to edit there loses because they had big egos or try to eras entire kings because they did not agree to them and had multiple different dynastys Joseph story takes place when Egypt was still young and he went by a different name Not only that there is a dark period in Egyptian and Canaanites history in which the jews suddenly appeared as the dominant force of the region Giving profe for theories that jews were. once canaanites
@jaxjaxattaxx8 күн бұрын
I have been waiting all night for this one, right off the back of a Prince Of Egypt analysis so I can laugh doubly hard at Jake’s take 😂
@yoyo7778 күн бұрын
you would think this would be enough to make people realize slavery is bad
@RainbowCornet8 күн бұрын
bro this didn't even make the Israelites realize slavery is bad.
@Tm-dn9ob8 күн бұрын
I’m pretty sure the pope banned slavery in Europe pretty early on but that didn’t extend to non Christians
@Abyzz_Knight8 күн бұрын
No y'see. This was to make people realize enslaving the Israelites is bad. The Israelites enslaving Non-israelites is A-okay because God said so. 😊
@jmurray11108 күн бұрын
Didn’t make them like almost immediately they went back to slavery when they found the promised land Read Joshua they signed a pact with sone people then when they came to the town abd weerd told that was the town they forged the contract with they just enslaved the lot because they couldn’t brutally murder them The Bronze Age was pointlessly barbaric
@andrewchristian64668 күн бұрын
@@Abyzz_Knight where did you get that?
@IlyassKorra69696 күн бұрын
I love how Jake portrayed the story in a funny way but respected the original message and didnt ruin the hidden message
@AtlasArtAnimation7 күн бұрын
I love the amount of humor applied in this summary
@TheAroSpecWallet8 күн бұрын
Yay! Suffering! ( -probably my favorite part of Moses' story- )
@benjamincolon54868 күн бұрын
I know yay pain!
@Georg3e7 күн бұрын
Don't forget the pharaoh had his free will removed when god hardened his heart the entire time of the plagues until the very end. He was going to let Moses's people go free until Yahweh did that to him just to show off a fraction of his power and might to the egyptians who promptly forgot if it actually happened which it didn't... so... yeah...
@lucaballarati96947 күн бұрын
Moses just being along for the ride while YWH goes on a powertrip is an underrated take.
@Elderbugiscool8 күн бұрын
2:17 Why on Ra’s green earth did you feel the need to reference THAT myth?!
@overdose00748 күн бұрын
God hardening Pharoah's heart was a dick move
@christiancrusader93747 күн бұрын
It also says Pharaoh hardened his own heart. This is more than mind control,
@TheTornAsunder7 күн бұрын
You're just as blind as the Pharaoh
@orpheemulemo80536 күн бұрын
It is explained in the Bible that God gives people to their own desires when they don't listen
@orpheemulemo80536 күн бұрын
And also Pharoah is the same guy who ordered the murder of babies this was as much of a payback as it was a Exodus
@N.I.A236 күн бұрын
My theory is that the Lord wanted to humiliate the egyptian gods since they're false idols and needed any excuse possible. His main goal was to show the Egyptians that he alone is the true god of everything which is why he kept sending plagues that targeted the gods of egypt (as if saying: I slayed your gods and made them bleed)
@VibrationCrystals8 күн бұрын
I love your videos. You're such a great story teller and artist. 😊
@mindripperful8 күн бұрын
Fact I find his Ad libs are crack up
@VibrationCrystals8 күн бұрын
@@mindripperful His ad libs are my favorite part. 😂
@user-saraswatidevi8 күн бұрын
Cant wait to see your take on leviticus, numbers and deuteronomy, those books made me feel so bad for moses
@XanderDDS8 күн бұрын
these bible videos are so great, educational, entertaining and a teensy bit upsetting
@InquisitiveBible7 күн бұрын
Like the Bible!
@strikeforcetheplayer8 күн бұрын
"It's time for you to exit us." Bro what
@The_pitbull5368 күн бұрын
Exit us--exodus it's a terrible pun
@Maxyboianimates8 күн бұрын
11:38 all those fish looked so done
@maryudomah43877 күн бұрын
Each time you upload about Moses it just makes me want to rewatch The Prince of Egypt. AGAIN.
@SovietPupper6 күн бұрын
The conceptions behind Exodus were so fascinating in my opinion. These texts were written and orally told during the Henotheistic period of the Israelites. Many other gods are mentioned and attributed to in the OT. We see an example in this video. Miracles, not enacted by God, are performed by the Egyptians. The god of the Israelites was meant to be their supreme god. Only he was worthy of worship in their eyes, but the existence of other gods wasn't denied or disbelieved. This eventually did change though, the faith, not long after, switched to proper monotheism. It's always fascinating to read into it all.
@randomwagtail42957 күн бұрын
Idk if i said it already but I was taught (as well as other people in other schools) that moses was stuttering and that kinda made moses someone i can relate to as someone that stutters
@MuhadКүн бұрын
I'm Jewish, religiously so. So hearing Moses scream out "what do you mean by that" to God of all entities is one of the most biblically accurate things I have ever heard.
@ficheal8 күн бұрын
moses is so pathetic in this i love him
@nemnem___7 күн бұрын
I’m a Christian and these videos are beyond amazing and accurate 😅 Including the uncomfortable parts that we struggle to understand Thank you for this!!!
@pnguinkillr30917 күн бұрын
That's Jake charms for me he don't try to adapt the story but to showcase how originally crazy they are ( in an educational way regarding interpretation )
@Nehorait158 күн бұрын
12:17 in theory....40 years later
@thecowilsoninc41758 күн бұрын
Damn, Jake's content is always nice to see pop up in my feed.
@TheAmazingMinty7 күн бұрын
After having to hear these stories over and over in my childhood, it’s really fun seeing them in a new perspective. Especially with the humor being so funny.
@goblindemonboi7 күн бұрын
WELP! That raises some questions about "freewill" that I don't feel like grappling with right now😂😂😂😂😂😂
@KingTaterBugg8 күн бұрын
"GET OUT OF MY HOUSE, exodus"- Hank Hill
@birdmcturd16267 күн бұрын
“Well that raises some questions about free will I don’t feel like getting into right now” Yep. To be fair,this is what I do in the Sims when I want a villain character though. “Oh,you’re apologising? No,you aren’t”. Just more proof that reality is a game of the Sims and God is the player
@xSHAMELLx8 күн бұрын
Top tier "Exodus" joke😂
@user-gd6se5qb9c8 күн бұрын
😂
@chimera98187 күн бұрын
Well in Hebrew it is less epic name: shemot (names , because it name some of the most major figures in Judaism in this book)
@lambchloroplasts4747 күн бұрын
now THIS is quality comedy, voice acting, story telling, art, visual comedy, and all other things i may praise for
@farawaytales43967 күн бұрын
Wow I kinda love the idea of Moses, a famous prophet actually taking issue with God's ten plagues idea, trying his best to stop the worst from happening even if he knows it's futile in the end.
@anikayap67775 күн бұрын
Have you heard of the Prince of Egypt? It does a good job at expanding on that
@farawaytales43965 күн бұрын
@@anikayap6777 I haven't watched it yet but I'll give it a watch!
@DaoFAQ8 күн бұрын
Commenting to keep Jake on the algorithm’s good side
@umdemuitos20057 күн бұрын
"God is all-good" God is Exodus: Am I?
@JakeDoubleyoo7 күн бұрын
He is what he is 🤷
@umdemuitos20057 күн бұрын
@@JakeDoubleyoo 1st: I can't believe you answered! Nice! 2nd: indeed, He Is what He Is. 3rd: my particular opinion about god is not the greatest. Mainly because things like the pharaoh stone-turned heart
@durrangodsgrief65033 күн бұрын
@@umdemuitos2005 these statements are bound in a caricature of god he is all good but he aint a pacifist
@umdemuitos20053 күн бұрын
@@durrangodsgrief6503 So basically, the ends justify the means?
@amemecreator15902 күн бұрын
@@umdemuitos2005Well , No one around that time was good , even the israeliates who we're supposed to be God's chosen people were so broken that God had to take small steps to unharden their hearts , Pharaoh absolutely enjoyed all the bad things he did and never actually cared for the egyptians Pharaoh was really like that kid who does WORSE when you scold him for his own BAD DOINGS I can't even imagine God thought when he allowed slavery just because the israeliates couldn't live with the idea of not having them , at least they had set out rules to not be absolute torture for them , even Jesus scolded the israelites as God made incomplete laws because their heart was hard
@andistansbury43668 күн бұрын
And then Moses looks at the screen and says, "This truly was an Exodus"
@genesismultiverse48968 күн бұрын
Oh hey i remember that tho i also remember the pharoh saying we will bath in wine instead as a no
@VibrationCrystals8 күн бұрын
"And we're watchin, and we're waitin. Do, da, do, da, dooooo...." 😊
@El_chupacabra188 күн бұрын
I think it would be cool if later on there was a video made about prophet jeremiah and his prophecies about jerusalems fall to babylon or on the book of revelation in detail. But so far these are good videos, nice job!!
@Kai-ye8cr5 күн бұрын
The fact Moses acts a lot like me without my anxiety medication in a huge crowd makes me so happy
@theascendunt99607 күн бұрын
Moses' eye twitching and about to blow was hilarious.
@BingusDaCat8768 күн бұрын
Bro is tickling our bawlz with this one
@PhilipLaSnail7 күн бұрын
One of your best videos yet, and with this good of a channel I didn't know it is even possible! Great video as always.
@YakAttack9152 күн бұрын
So many golden nuggets throughout this entire video. Well done. Standing ovation, bravo.
@KlaxontheImpailr7 күн бұрын
2:44 A Thorthorer sounds like a wizard that just shoots clones of Thor from his fingers.
@cat_who_draws7 күн бұрын
huh, with the parting of the re(e)d sea, i was always taught that one old man had to wade into the water all the way up to his head before the lord parted the sea, not that moses just did some jazz hands and it opened
@assymezzo4 күн бұрын
"But the LORD hardened the Pharaoh's heart" makes me question how anyone could see the LORD as a good being.
@noelleosullivan33093 күн бұрын
Yahweh did that to triumph over Egypt with these plagues
@assymezzo3 күн бұрын
@noelleosullivan3309 And I get that but he already triumphed the first or even the second time didn't he?
@videogollumer2 күн бұрын
@@assymezzo Egypt messed with Israel; God promised that those who bless Israel will be blessed and those who curse Israel will be cursed. God keeps his promises; DON'T MESS WITH HIS CHILDREN!
@swamperytooter88915 күн бұрын
The guys reaction to the locusts killed me lol
@efrayen44973 күн бұрын
As a christian, I love how you did this man. This in no way felt disrespectful to my faith, probably strengthened it somewhat! Hope you keep doing bible videos, and if by a rare happenstance you find this comment, have a blessed day! May the Lord be with you.
@zuhayranjumul52018 күн бұрын
You know it's a banger when jake drops a video
@kyledesmet8978 күн бұрын
I've always been confused regarding the Nile turning to blood. Was it the entire river or just the part in Egypt? I think it's amusing to picture giraffes thousands of kilometers away freaking out because the river is now all red
@kyledesmet8978 күн бұрын
Come to think of it, the Nile flows into the Mediterrean, which connects to the Atlantic, which connects to the rest of the world's oceans. Did all of the planet's water turn to blood? If so, that's hilarious and terrifying
@Boss_Isaac8 күн бұрын
For conveniences sake, let's imagine that it was just the part of the Nile as crosses through Aigyptos that was transfigured. Even though the Book of Exodus specifies that all of the water in Egypt was made blood, brother the Nile ALONE turning into blood would irreversibly *d e s t r o y* Egypt, all of the river life, the fish and others, would wash up the riverbank with their rotting corpses pilled up there as the _unimaginably horrid_ stink would set in; all of Egypt would be absent the ability to bathe and disease would run rampant; starvation sets in as the kingdom *_doesn't have a tangible harvest anymore._*
@Akrafena7 күн бұрын
@@Boss_Isaac Plus it is God's doing, which explains the oddness of the miracles
@AlekzanderTamayo-ln8bf4 күн бұрын
I love how comedic and Biblically accurate this is.
@Diamond_sleeps7 күн бұрын
THIS IS SO GOOD!! the execution was legitimately beautiful! And the story was portrayed so well!!!!!! Keep up the amazing work ^_^
@Blipiblip4 күн бұрын
"So kids, can you guess WHO'S the villain of this story ? Carefull, it's tricky !"
@videogollumer4 күн бұрын
😒
@lasseehrenreich55028 күн бұрын
the Apocalypse is coming but the only thing the Pharaoh care about is the economy thes Comedy Gold jake You are a genius
@ConsarnitTokkori7 күн бұрын
swallow being an attack that can somehow be supef effective hurts my competitive pokémon bones
@tinotabisi5 күн бұрын
Amazing content. Great animation, wonderful storytelling and the most precise interpretation of the facts I've seen.
@duckduel58206 күн бұрын
5:18 I’m pretty sure this line means that pharaohs heart was hardened because of his personal hate for God, not his free will being affected
@thomaspau2114 күн бұрын
If you want to check for yourself go to exodus 10
@BIGTHANKSHEESH9 сағат бұрын
Then it would’ve made that clear. It literally states “The Lord hardened his heart”. It doesn’t say that the Pharaohs heart hardened (with no mention of God) or at least due to Pharaohs hatred for the Lord his heart hardened
@duckduel58202 сағат бұрын
@@BIGTHANKSHEESH it’s an interpretation Otherwise, God can control our free will, which is what Satan wanted to do before being cast out of heaven. God will not affect our free will, as it destroys the meaning of life.
@BIGTHANKSHEESH2 сағат бұрын
@@duckduel5820 define free will for me. FULLY
@BIGTHANKSHEESH2 сағат бұрын
@@duckduel5820 explain free will in full real quick
@Cloverthecat6 күн бұрын
6:08 bro opened his mouth-
@violentart7 күн бұрын
the lil detail of the boils appearing lighter or darker depending on the skin tone of the character>>>
@braedenmclean53047 күн бұрын
I just wanted to say, it’s wild to see how your art and animation has evolved over time, absolutely stellar work
@FO18L7 күн бұрын
I love how the take away from this story is "god is a fkn dickhead"
@anasaziarmitage53007 күн бұрын
How is this dude not famous yet? This is too good
@AmirM-rj3gw5 күн бұрын
Jake nice job on giving the characters some advanced expressions! this is really incredible nice work man! 👌🏿😤 you deserve a 1million views on these videos you rightfully deserve that man. 👍🏿
@killerb53058 күн бұрын
Been waiting excitedly for a new episode
@angelikaskoroszyn84957 күн бұрын
I think that Exodus is a nice window into the past, during the time when priests wanted to encourage Israelites to worship only one God. You can feel the frustration. "He is the most powerful God, why can't you see it!". From the story telling perspective it doesn't make sense that Israelites would ever go against their God in any way. They know what he is capable of. Meanwhile they seem to only moan and seek other gods. It makes more sense if you interpret the whole story as a message for its reader. "Other gods might look cool but remember - ours is the best so stop cheating on Jahwe"
@AlexiusScholius7 күн бұрын
Amazing. I love both the references to the Kemetic (Ancient Egyptian) mythology and the historical giggles about Re(e)d Sea, not to mention making fun of the nonsensical, cruel and inhuman parts of the bible never gets old (can't wait for all these stories in Judges or much sooner, when we go to Joshua and his conquests of Jericho, Ai et cetera). Great work! I hope you enjoy making this series and it shall continue until properly finished! ^^
@F1lmVerse3 күн бұрын
Moses : so it’ll take us a couple weeks to reach the promise land right ? *40 years later
@giuseppelogiurato57187 күн бұрын
I like how he thanks "my mom" (his mom) in the patron list. My mom helps me out too! ❤️
@user-jz1yc1sq6i8 күн бұрын
You left us waiting for over a month
@JakeDoubleyoo8 күн бұрын
yea
@Cloverthecat8 күн бұрын
@@JakeDoubleyoo bro just responded "yea" no more context needed im staying subbed