Day 30 — Won’t you read the Bible with me this year? It only takes a few minutes. (You can also listen to an audio recording.)
Day 30 – Exodus 1 – 3 (Israel grows & becomes a threat, Moses appears)
In Joseph’s time, Israel was 70 people strong. Now, 300+ years later (chapter 1), they had “increased greatly; they have multiplied and grew exceedingly strong, so that the land was filled with them.” WOW! (God was fulfilling His promise to Abe in Genesis 15.)
But the new, paranoid Pharoah is afraid of them. What if…? And what if they…? he worried. So he set out to “deal” with this problem. First he conscripted the Hebrews to build cites for him through hard manual labor. Then – because they just got stronger and multiplied – the forced labor got ruthless and turned into cruel slavery. And still they multiplied.
The next solution was to kill baby boys at birth, but that didn’t work out so well. God used the midwives to save the newborns. Pharoah’s “final solution” was infanticide. He commanded all Egyptians to throw EVERY son born to the Hebrews into the crocodile-infested Nile River.
But a beam of hope arises in chapter 2. A beautiful baby boy is born to a couple who are from the tribe of Levi. (Not Joseph, not Judah). The mother kept her son hidden as long as she could, but babies do cry loudly sometimes. So she obeyed the ruling pagan authority and “cast” her baby boy into the Nile. It just so happens, that he was lovingly wrapped and placed in a water-proof basket, and had a big sister to look after him.
He “happened” to float by where Pharoah’s (childless) daughter was bathing and began to cry pitifully. She had the basket brought to her, recognized the baby boy as Hebrew (circumcision), but instantly wanted him. Miriam steps up right then and offers a wet nurse for the baby, and Pharaoh’s daughter PAYS the baby’s own mother to nurse him. WOW. But at about 3-years old, Jochabed gives up the baby (named Moses by the Egyptian) to live as the grandchild of the Pharoah.
This was of course all in God’s plan. Moses is trained up in all ways (achedemics, languages, military command, etc,) to become a leader (not for Pharoah, but for God). He just needed some time learning how to lead…. SHEEP. Dumb sheep.
After defending a Hebrew slave by killing an Egyptian taskmaster (a big no-no), Moses has to flee for his life. He runs hundreds of miles away, trekking across the Sinai desert to Midian. (Midianites were descendants of Abraham & his second wife, Keturah). There at a well, where some women came to water their sheep, another matchmaking takes place. Moses meets the seven daughters of the local priest, and marries one of them, Zipporah and looks after his sheep. The have a son (later another one).
It looks like Moses (mighty man of God) has sunk into obscurity. Well, he has. For forty years he herds, feeds, cares for, chases after, and nurses flocks of sheep.
Then God calls him. He was trained 40 years in Egyptian leadership and 40 years in shepherding. God has heard the cries of his people in slavery, and Moses is ready. Well, GOD thinks he is ready. Not so, Moses.
In chapter 3, God talks to him through a burning bush that does not get consumed. (But not TOO close, for the area around God Almighty is holy). Moses, God says, “Come, I will send you to Pharoah that you may bring my people the children of Israel out of Egypt.”
“WHAAAATT???” Moses cries. Who am I?
God promises Moses His very Presence will go with him, and, in fact, God will help Moses bring the nation back to the very spot on which they stand.
“What am I gonna tell the people?”
God tells Moses to use his “personal” name to the people. The Name he used with Abraham… I AM WHO I AM. (Yaweh, or Jehovah).
Then God goes on to tell him how it will happen. He is to tell the Pharoah certain things, which will be resisted, do some miracles, which will be resisted. Then God will bring them out with POWER, with lots and lots of loot, and take them to the Promised Land.
(Okay. It’s settled, right? Wrong. Moses, the sheep-herder has more objections.)