Exodus 2:11-25 - Not for now

This week I heard that I was unsuccessful in an interview for a job I had.  It made sense in some ways that I hadn't got it but it was something I felt called to and so it was a big disappointment.  Serving full-time in the strategic leadership of a local church is something God has put on my heart to pursue but there's a slight snag - right now no-one wants me to do it!

In this section of the story we see Moses has justice on his heart and a desire to defend the Israelite slaves but the time just isn't right for him to do the big thing yet and he has a long wait in store before any of that stuff happens...

Exodus 2:11-25

When Moses killed the Egyptian slavedriver, he was doing the wrong thing for the right reason.  His motive was good - he wanted justice for God's people, but sin was right there too and he went about it totally the wrong way.  He needed patience to seek God's will for how to channel the passion he had.

"Who made you ruler and judge over us?"  It's an interesting question because the answer in a lot of ways is, "God actually." It's just not the right time and Moses only has a slight hint of what God really wants him to do.  No clue really.

So Moses ends up having to run away from home because his dad wants to kill him (so not the best home!) and he decides to live in Midian.  How would Moses have felt as he set up a new life there?  He must have been fuming about the injustice God's people were facing and the limitations on him to do anything about it.  But he is able to defend a group of girls against some shepherds.  Moses hasn't lost his strong sense of justice.  And this event leads to him getting married, having kids and settling down in Midian.

The passage tells us it was a "long period".  Moses no doubt still had a desire for God's people to be free but he knew he was powerless to do anything about it.  So instead he settles down in Midian and learns to faithfully obey God as a husband, dad and shepherd.  God has so much more for Moses to do but it's not yet.

What do you long to do for God in the future?  What does it mean for you to be faithful in the things God has you doing now? 


Exodus 2:1-10 - Names and beginnings

The way children are treated in their early childhood can have a powerful impact on them for good or bad, sometimes for the rest of their lives. Names are important too, especially if there is a clear meaning attached. A strong name can inform and influence a person's identity as they grow up. It can hold them back or it can be a reminder to them of who they are and what they're called to.  Moses' messed up childhood and the name he was given are an insight for us into how God was preparing him for all that was to come...

Exodus 2:1-10

Many Christians would agree that Moses wrote the first 5 books of the Bible, mostly because of verses like Exodus 24:4, Deuteronomy 31:24, Joshua 23:6 and John 5:46, and many others which refer to the written work of Moses.

If that's the case, we should imagine Moses as a grown man writing these words about the beginning of his life. They would have been supernaturally revealed to him by the Holy Spirit (2 Peter 1:21), probably through his mum and sister's stories of it to him in his first few years or perhaps as brand new information.  Either way, the knowledge of how he began life would have been a powerful reminder to Moses of who he was and what he was called to do by God: lead the Israelite slaves out of Egypt.

Moses name, given to him by his Egyptian mother, sounds like the Hebrew for "Drawn out".  It was a reminder of how he was 'drawn out' of the Nile as a baby but also a sign of all that God was going to do through him to 'draw his people out' of slavery in Egypt.  Moses' name is rich with meaning and significance and he must have had a growing awareness of this as he grew older and realised more of what God was calling him to do.  It's certainly easy for us to see it with the benefit of hindsight and I fully expect that Moses reflected on it with gratitude as he wrote this section.

What does your name mean or what does it mean to you?  What do you think God might want to say about your name and who he has made you to be for him?

In what ways can you see that God is beautifully redeeming the mess in your own life as you reflect back?  What can you praise him for?  What can you trust him for?