Exodus 6
The previous chapter of Exodus ended with discouragement
and doubt. The people of Israel were turning against Moses, and Moses
was questioning the plan of God. God spoke into this situation that
seemed hopeless to men. His Word turns our gaze away from powers of
dictators and toward the authority of heaven's King.
God said, “Now you shall see what I will do to
Pharaoh; for with a strong hand he will send them out, and with a
strong hand he will drive them out of his land.” This would not
happen immediately, but it most certainly would happen.
The Lord reminded Moses of His commitment to the people
of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and His revelation of Himself to Moses
as the great “I-AM.” He also renewed His ancient promise to give
the land of Canaan to His people. This great God of history is also
the God of the future. He had heard the cry of His people and He was
working decisively according to His plans. Even during a time when
the world seems to be falling apart all around you, perhaps
especially during those times, you need to hear the sure Word of God
again. You need to trust. You need to believe.
God had a message for His suffering people. They were
being played by Pharaoh. But Pharaoh was not the biggest player in
the game. He was not the Lord of heaven and earth. God would bring
the people out of Egypt. He would do this in a way that showed His
“outstretched arm.” He would establish the descendents of Jacob
as His people, and He would be their God. This would be a moment to
remember. Pharaoh may have been quite the man of oppression, but I-AM
is the Lord.
Moses told all this to the people, but they did not
listen. They were broken. They could not hear the Word of God with
faith.
So God moved. He knows our weakness, and He still loves
us. He used Moses, who himself continued to doubt that Pharaoh would
ever listen to him. This Moses, from the tribe of Levi, the man the
people of Israel would not listen to, the man who considered his
inability to speak as a fatal flaw; God would use this Moses to speak
to Pharaoh, and to lead the oppressed people of Israel out of Egypt.
The tribes of Israel were still intact after all those
years in Egypt. Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and the rest had leaders and
followers. But God picked this one man, the son of Amram and his wife
Jochebed, the brother of Aaron and Miriam, the boy that was rescued
out of the waters. He would be the man that God would call to this
important and difficult post.
“Bring out the people of Israel from the land of Egypt
by their hosts.” That was God's Word. It was impossible for man,
but the Lord would show forth His great power. This Moses and Aaron
would speak again to Pharaoh king of Egypt about bringing out the
people of Israel from their bondage in Egypt.
Yet when the time came for this man Moses to act, would
he follow what the Lord told him to do?
God said to Him, “I am the Lord.” Would Moses
continue to argue with the God of His fathers, the God of the burning
bush?
God said to him, “Tell Pharaoh king of Egypt all that
I say to you.”
So far this had not gone very well on two levels. Moses
had not delivered the precise message of God to Pharaoh. He did not
say that Israel was God's special son. He did not tell Pharaoh what
would happen to Pharaoh's own son if the king dared to resist
Israel's God. He had instead appealed to Pharaoh's sympathy for the
Israelites who might be hurt by their God if they did not obey His
command to worship them in the wilderness. Moses did not glorify God
in the Lord's particular love for Israel. This was a disappointing
start.
Furthermore, the reaction of Pharaoh had been so
strategic and so fiercely evil that not only did the people falter in
their faith, but even Moses continued to look for a way out of his
divine calling. He said, “I am of uncircumcised lips. How will
Pharaoh listen to me?”
God knows our weakness. He hears our cries. He loves His
church. He will step in with mighty acts of deliverance when we have
run out of strength.
How can we be sure of this? The gifts and calling of God
are irrevocable. See Romans 11:29. When we doubt the determination of
God, when we cannot hear His voice, when we hear only our own
uncircumcised lips, we need to remember Jesus, the Mediator of the
New Covenant. He heard the call of God upon His life, and He obeyed.
He obeyed even when obedience insisted on a cross.
It is from that cross that we are reminded of our own
sad failure. But it is also from that cross that we remember the
Lord's perfect atoning sacrifice. God knows the full situation. He is
committed. He will not be stopped. He will rescue His people
according to His Word.
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