Do you think Moses felt honored by God’s calling to such a marvelous task? Well think again. God is asking him to stand before the most powerful man of his time, Pharaoh, and asked him to let millions of slaves go free. Moses did not think he had the courage to make that demand. Most likely, he was thinking that the only way to liberate the Israelites was by means of the sword and those Hebrews were not armed and lacked the will and the training to carry out such uprising. But God's task are not by to be accomplished by human power or might but by the Spirit of God.
Between 1560 and 1599, The Geneva Bible was providentially unleashed upon a dark, discouraged, downtrodden English speaking world. Just when it looked as if the Machiavellian, Divine Right kings, such as the Tudors of England, were about to drive Christendom back to the days of Caesar worship, a Bible appeared that set the stage for a Christian Reformation of life and culture the likes of which the world had never seen. By the time of the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588, just 28 years after the first printing of the Geneva Bible, it was already being said of the English that they were becoming a “people of the Book.” The results of a people reading and obeying the Word of God were the explosion of faith, character, the first missionary movement in history, literature, economic blessing, and political and religious freedom.