Day 31. Reading in Exodus 4 – 6.
I invite you to read the scripture for the day and meditate on it. What stood out to you?
Exodus 4.
From the burning bush, God told Moses that He was sending him back to Pharaoh to bring the children of Israel OUT OF EGYPT.
By now, Moses has twice told the LORD that he is “unable” to do it. God has assured Moses that He would be with him all the way. God gave Moses His sacred Name by which he could persuade the people and even told him HOW He would rescue them. (Many times, Pharaoh would refuse, but God would plague Egypt until he agreed. )
“But the people won’t believe me,” Moses counters now.
Then, God gave Moses three signs to convince the people. First, his staff turned into a snake and then back into a staff. Next, his hand turned leprous, then back to clean. Finally, when Moses poured a little Nile River water onto the ground, it would turn to blood. WOW!
“Oh, my Lord,” whines Moses, “I am not eloquent. I’m slow of speech and tongue.” (He’s spent the last 40 years with only sheep to talk to.)
God assures Moses that HE is God. He makes mouths (and ears and eyes with their deficiencies). Moses is not to worry about that, but to “Go! I will be with your mouth and teach you what you shall speak.”
“Oh, my Lord. Send someone else.”
Okay, that is enough! God is angry. “Ok, Moses, but this is the last concession. Your brother is coming to see you. Tell and show him all I’ve revealed. He will be your spokesman. I’ll tell you what to say, and you can whisper it in his ear.”
- Wow. Indeed, God has been exasperated with me like this many times as I make excuses not to obey Him. Oh, the patience and kindness of our God! Forgive me! What a wonderful example I have in Jesus when it was time for Him to become human and die for my sins. No hesitation. And God said of Him, “This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.”
Moses asks permission from his father-in-law to go and is graciously relieved of his shepherding duties. He packs up his wife and son on a donkey. At a rest stop, God threatens Moses’ life. Why? Because he did NOT follow through with the covenant commandment of circumcision, which he should have done to his son when he was 8 days old. Does Moses want to be part of God’s family or not?
While Moses lies dying, Zipporah circumcises their son and flaunts the foreskin. “You are a bridegroom of blood to me!” she says.
God relents, and Zipporah is left alone with the boy until he heals before they return home. Moses leaves on foot to meet Aaron at the Mountain of God. He tells his brother everything God said, and together, the two men go to the elders of the people of Israel in Egypt and do the signs. The people believe, and there is great rejoicing and worship of the LORD.
Exodus 5.
Buoyed up by this reaction, Moses and Aaron went to Pharaoh and said, “The LORD, the God of Israel, says ‘Let my people go, that they may hold a feast to me in the wilderness‘.”
“Um, no!” answers Pharaoh. “Who is the LORD, that I should obey him and let Israel go? I don’t know him. I will not let Israel go.”
“Please let us go three days into the wilderness to worship our God, or He may send a pestilence on us.”
“No! Get back to work! You have too much idle time on your hands. Now you will have to find the straw for the bricks for yourselves instead of me supplying it. AND YOUR QUOTA IS THE SAME!”
The elders of Israel go to Moses and complain. “You have made us stink in the eyes of Pharaoh! Things are worse than they were before!!!”
Moses goes to God. “Lord, why have You done evil to this people? Why did You ever send me? I have not delivered the people at all!”
Exodus 6.
“NOW, you will see what I will do to Pharaoh,” the LORD says. “For with a strong hand, he will send them out, and with a strong hand, he will DRIVE them out of his land.” (Just you wait and see!)
God speaks to Moses. “I am the LORD. I appeared to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob and established my covenant with them to give them the land of Canaan.
- 1) I have heard the groaning of the people of Israel whom the Egyptians HOLD AS SLAVES.
- 2) I have remembered my covenant.
- 3) Say to the people, “I am the LORD, and I will DELIVER you from slavery, I will REDEEM you with an outstretched arm with GREAT ACTS OF JUDGMENT.
- 4) I will take you to be my people, and I will be your God.
- 5) I will bring you into the land I swore to give to your fathers, and give it to you as a possession. I AM THE LORD.”
“Now, Moses, go in, tell Pharaoh, king of Egypt, to let the people of Israel go out of his land!”
And so the contest begins. In the end, Israel will be free and wealthy. Egypt will be broken and without an army, a leader, or a son to take his place.
.
As the writer of this book, Moses takes a moment to give us his and Aaron’s genealogy. Jacob’s third son, Levi, had three sons (important regarding the duties of the Tabernacle and Temple worship). They are Gershon, Kohath, and Merari. Moses and Aaron are descended from the line of Kohath through Amram and his wife, Jochebed. (Levi lived 137 years, Kohath lived 133 years, and Amram lived 137 years. At this time, Moses is 80, and Aaron is 83. Their sister Miriam is somewhere between 87-92 (sources differ).
.
