Day 30. Reading in Exodus 1 – 3.
I invite you to read the scripture for the day and meditate on it. What do you learn about God?
Exodus 1.
.And … the eleven sons of Jacob-Israel are named again (Joseph already has been in Egypt). They and all that generation die. And the children of Israel greatly increase, multiply, and grow strong so that the land is FILLED with them. 100 years after, the number of men, women and children had grown to TWO MILLION. They had become a nation, just as God had told Abraham.
Several Pharaohs had reigned since the one who elevated Joseph. The current king was ruthless and evil. He looked at the mass of strong Israelites, and fear gripped his heart. “If” war broke out, these “foreigners” might join the enemy army. So he gradually turned them into slaves with taskmasters to build store cities for him. When that didn’t slow the population growth, he worked them harder in the fields and in making bricks.
Then, this diabolical king (probably Thutmose 1) told the midwives to kill all boys being born to the Israelite women. They refused and lied to him, so he made it a “national” law that everyone, seeing a Jewish baby boy, was to grab him and throw him into the Nile River to drown or to be food for the crocodiles.
How many were killed, we don’t know, but before we judge this wicked man, think of the hundreds of thousands of abortions our country has allowed (promoted) over the years.
Exodus 2.
During these atrocities, two descendants of Levi (Amram and Jochebed) marry and begin a family. They have a daughter (Miriam), then a son, a beautiful, healthy baby. The mother keeps him as long as she can, but his cries will soon bring vengeful neighbors to take him to the Nile. So, she does it herself, except her baby is wrapped up and placed into a watertight basket before going into the river. A gentle push and the baby’s amazing voyage begins. He is carefully watched by his older sister.
The baby floats into the reeds near the pool where Pharaoh’s daughter (and her ladies-in-waiting) are bathing. THEN it starts to cry. The ladies bring her the basket, and immediately, her heart goes out to the beautiful infant. She smiles and perhaps tickles the little one until it stops crying, then she takes it into her arms and cuddles it close. She opens the blankets and discovers that the baby is a boy … an Israelite boy. (He is circumcised.) But she already wants him for her own.
Right then, Miriam steps up, bowing, and offers a wet nurse to feed the baby. Pharaoh’s daughter is not fooled, but she wants the boy and sees the practicality of having “his mother” feed him. She promises to pay this “wet nurse” and expects the boy to be brought to her as soon as he is weaned. And so, for three to four years, Amram and Jochebed sing and speak the stories of their God and His promises to the little boy.
“God has chosen them. God is with them. God has promised to rescue them and bring them to their own land. God always keeps His promises.” A lullaby and alphabet lesson of faith.
The time comes. and Jochebed presents her son to Pharaoh’s daughter. She’s done all she can to instill in the boy his Hebrew heritage. Now, she entrusts him to God.
Your name is Moses (drawn out) because I drew you out of the water. “And Moses was instructed in all the wisdom of the Egyptians, and he was mighty in his words and deeds.” (Acts 7:21)
At forty, Moses was a man of stature, education, and importance. Raised an Egyptian, he nevertheless remembered that “his people” were Israel. One day, as he watched how they were being treated, he saw a taskmaster mercilessly beating a Hebrew. Fury rose in him, and he struck the Egyptian down dead. Quickly, he buried him in the sand. (not a ‘smart’ move, as the wind would soon uncover the body).
Moses felt good (if a bit scared) about his actions. Surely, his people would recognize him as “their savior.”
NOT SO! The next day, when he tried to break up a fight between two Hebrews, they reminded him of what he’d done to the Egyptian. “Who made you PRINCE and judge over us?”
Ah-oh!
Suddenly, Moses was afraid. Pharaoh would kill him if the stern man learned he’d murdered an Egyptian. So Moses ran. He ran and ran, all the way across the desert he would one day lead God’s people. He ran to Midian. (Midian was a descendant of Abraham by his second wife, Keturah.)
At a well (where it seems all Hebrew men meet their wives), Moses met seven daughters of a priest of Midian. When the man learned that a handsome, strong Egyptian had helped his daughters, he invited Moses to dinner. The rest is history. Moses married Zipporah and they had a couple sons.
And he became a shepherd of sheep. (This began the second 40-year phase of his education. How do you lead, feed, run after, and care for a bunch of unruly, dumb sheep? Or people.)
Meanwhile, Pharaoh died. The slavery of Israel got tougher. They groaned and cried out for help. God heard the groaning and remembered His covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob (For 400 years they’d serve another nation, then He’d bring them back to the land.)
“God saw the people of Israel, and God knew.”
Exodus 3.
One day, the 80-year old-shepherd Moses, was out with his sheep on the west side of the desert near Horeb (Sinai), the “mountain of God.” He was watching the white wooly backs serenely, when suddenly the LORD appeared to him in a flame of fire out of a bush, that didn’t itself burn.
“Whoa. What’s going on here?”
“Moses, Moses!”
“What? Here I am.”
“Do not come near; take your sandals off your feet, for the place on which you stand is holy ground.”
And Moses quickly untied and took off his sandals.
“I AM the God of your father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.”
Moses hid his face for he was afraid to look AT GOD.
“I have SEEN the affliction of my people who are in Egypt and have HEARD their cry because of their taskmasters. I KNOW their sufferings, and I have come down to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians and bring them up to that good and broad land, flowing with milk and honey.
“Come, I will send YOU to Pharaoh that you may bring my people, the children of Israel, out of Egypt.”
“WHAT??? I can’t do that!! Who am I to deliver Israel out of Egypt???”
“I will be with you, and this is a sign for you, that I’ve sent you. When you have brought the people out of Egypt, you shall serve God ON THIS VERY MOUNTAIN.”
“Who shall I tell the people sent me? (A bush?)
“I AM WHO I AM. Say this to the people of Israel. The LORD the God of your fathers… has send me. This is His name forever. Go, Moses, gather the elders of Israel and say that the LORD, the God of their fathers has appeared to you and promised to bring them up out of affliction.
Then, go to the king and ask that the people go a three-day journey into the desert to sacrifice to their God. He won’t let you go, so I will strike Egypt with plagues, and then he WILL let you go. And when you ask them, all the Egyptians will give you silver and gold jewelry, and clothing. AND YOU WILL PLUNDER THE EGYPTIANS!
.
Tomorrow, we will see Moses’ response.
