Exodus 2
The plan of the Anti-Messiah Pharaoh was to use all the
people of Egypt as his deputized force against the Hebrews. They were
to be the extension of his own hatred against Israel. His order was
plain: “Every son that is born to the Hebrews you shall cast into
the Nile.”
God began His redemption by using one of those baby
boys. The parents of this one boy did put their little one in the
Nile, but not the way that Pharaoh insisted, and not with the result
that he anticipated.
These parents, both of the tribe of Levi, first hid
their son for three months, and then they prepared a little ark of
safety for him. They also sent his older sister, Miriam, to look over
him where he floated in the reeds at the river's edge. What an irony
that the person who would save the boy, the young woman who would be
touched by what she saw and heard, would be the daughter of Pharaoh.
A man like Pharaoh may dream that he rules the world,
but his own daughter can be moved by God in the direction that the
Lord Himself decrees. Not only is the baby brought up out of the
waters that were to be his grave, the baby's sister is nearby to make
this helpful suggestion: “Shall I go and call you a nurse from the
Hebrew women to nurse the child for you?” The boy's true mother
will be the baby's happy nurse, and then, in due time, the weaned
child will be treated as the son of Pharaoh's daughter. What a
deliverance from death! But God will use this boy to lead His people
through the waters that will engulf their enemies.
It will be the daughter of the enemy of the Hebrews who
will name the child “Moses.” He was drawn out of the water. He
will be the one that God will use to lead his people out of Egypt.
This Moses grows up as a son of privilege in a land of
oppression. Yet he will identify himself with his real brothers and
sisters. One day, after he has acquired the strength of a young man,
he will secretly express his calling as a deliverer by murdering an
abusive Egyptian who was beating a Hebrew, one of his own people.
This kind of, take-matters-into-your-own-hands approach would not be
the way that God would bring his people out of Egypt. Moses would not
be a violent revolutionary. In fact, his deed was not as secret as he
supposed. It would not be through his own strength or through his
skills of personal persuasion that freedom and righteousness would
come. God would bring the best release. He would do it in His time,
and He would do it His way. He would use Moses, but not as a commando
or as a community organizer. Moses would be a mediator of a solemn
covenant between God and His nation.
For now, Moses was afraid that His murder of an Egyptian
man would lead to his own death. He ran away from Egypt, settling in
the land of Midian for many years. There he took a wife and had
children. But he had not really forgotten his people.
Even in the way that Moses found a wife in a far-off
land, he expressed his calling to come to the aid of the oppressed.
Seven daughters of a priest of Midian got into some trouble with some
shepherds who would have used their force to drive these
shepherdesses away. Moses rescued them. He was a courageous man who
saw injustice and stood in the way of approaching trouble. This was
what these women needed. This was also what Israel needed. And this
is what the world needs. We need the right man to come and to stand
in the way of danger for us. We need someone to protect us from
adversaries and enemies who are far too strong for us.
Their father, Reuel, had an eye for such a man. When he
heard what this strange “Egyptian” had done for his girls, he had
questions for them. “Then where is he? Why have you left the man?
Call him, that he may eat bread.” Exactly. This is the kind of man
that we need in a dangerous world. And Reuel gave one of his
daughters to this man as a wife. She bore him a son. Would Moses just
settle down there and forget his calling? He knew that he could not
entirely run away from his past. He named his boy Gershom based on
his own awareness that he was not at home. He said, “I have been a
sojourner in a foreign land.”
Meanwhile, his people, the people of Israel in Egypt,
were suffering under the cruel bondage of their enemy. They cried out
to God. God heard. He saw. He knew. He would help. And He would
choose to use this man whose life was spared by Pharaoh's daughter.
“God remembered his covenant with Abraham, with Isaac,
and with Jacob. God saw the people of Israel—and God knew.”
What about now? Does God know about oppression? Does God
hear when those who call upon His Name are mocked and abused? More
than that, can God do anything about the problem of our own sin, and
the swiftly approaching enemy of death? God has appointed a Mediator
of a New Covenant. He sent His own Son to accomplish what Moses could
never have done. His Son faced the righteous wrath of the Almighty
that was against us. He has led us out of the worst bondage
imaginable.
Not only has God gathered us in Christ; we are His body,
a force for love and good. Pharaoh demanded that all his people join
him in his murderous hatred of the Hebrews. Jesus calls us to be his
body in love, even commanding us to love those who persecute us. He
is patient. And He will win.
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