An Auspicious Beginning Genesis 50:22-26 and Exodus 1:8-2:10 June 11, 2017 M. Michelle Fincher Calvary Presbyterian Church

Similar documents
(PP1) Exodus 1:8-2:10. God in Quiet Mode

On July 4, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was approved by. the Second Continental Congress, explaining why we declared

The Story Moses We are moving from Genesis to the next book in the bible, the book of Exodus. Exodus means going out. The book of Exodus tells the

Moses, Midwives, & the Master's House

From Paradise To Prison Text: Exodus 1:1-22 Series: Book of Exodus [#01] Pastor Lyle L. Wahl Date: March 29, 2009

Note the three promises God made to Jacob regarding the sojourn in Egypt: There I will make you a great nation

The Life of Moses. Image from: hope4nc.com- Sunday Nights This Fall

Then Joseph died, and all his brothers and all that generation. 7 But the people of Israel were fruitful and increased greatly; they multiplied and

EXODUS. From Slavery to Service

INVESTIGATING GOD S WORD... EXODUS 1 20 YEAR TWO FALL QUARTER SUNDAY SCHOOL CURRICULUM FOR YOUNG ELEMENTARY CHILDREN SS02F-E

Introduction: A. In Previous Sermons We Have Seen God s Promise To Abraham To Make His Descendants Into A Great Nation.

1:15 2:22. Intro to Moses. Josh Dougherty Jimmy Cummings

The Birth of an evacuation: moses adoption

II. Connection with Genesis

At Home. One Story Ministries AH03

Moses Excuses, Parashat Shemot. Our Calling

GOD BLESSES THE OPPRESSED

Week 1: God s people enslaved (Exodus 1-2) Discussion Questions

Table of Contents 1. God Chooses Moses to Deliver His People 2. Moses and the Plagues of Egypt 3. The Ten Commandments and the Covenant

PHARAOH S MIDWIFE CRISIS Text: Exodus 1: 15-2:10 August 21, 2011 Faith J. Conklin

Moses: Learning to Lead Copyright 2003, 2016 by Catherine Schell

Exodus 1: "Thanks to our mothers Shiprah and Puah" As Christians, we come from a long line of patriarchs. Our God is often referred to in

Exodus 1 - Israel Multiplies in Egypt

Sunday closest to August 31 Year A Proper 17 RCL

Moses- An Underdog from Birth-Part 5 Pastor Mark Goodman 10/13/2013

Temporarily Afflicted, but not Long-Term Affected: God Keeps His Promises. Mid-week Bible Study Reid Temple AME Church Rev.

Exodus 1:6-7 6 Now Joseph and all his brothers and all that generation died, 7 but the Israelites were exceedingly fruitful; they multiplied greatly,

Exodus. Several decades ago, while the struggle for freedom for Africans. was raging in South Africa, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the Anglican

LESSON 21 - God Preserved Israel Enslaved in Egypt; the Providence of God in the Life of Moses

1PEOPLE WITH A PROMISE

In The Face Of Adversity

In the eyes of this new Pharaoh, Joseph meant nothing. And he felt threatened by their large numbers, and worried that they might join his enemies.

WOMEN IN THE PENTATEUCH PART II By Ashley Marivittori Gorman

WHAT WE CAN LEARN FROM THE LIFE OF MOSES

Chumash Themes. Class #11. by Rabbi Zave Rudman. Jews go through on dry land, while the Egyptians drown. Exodus 14:1 15: JewishPathways.

Early Life of Moses Exodus 1:1-2:10

THE FINAL PLAGUE EXODUS 11:1-10

Reformation Fellowship Notes October 25, 2015 Teacher: David Crabtree Handout #3 Exodus 1:15-2:10

In the Days before Deliverance

EXODUS: GOD PROVIDES A Deliverer is Born Exodus 2

A Lesson from the Life of Moses

Exodus 2:1-10. Introduction

THE EXODUS PART ONE: THE CALL OF DELIVERANCE INTO THE WORD LESSON 10

Let My People Go When This Baby Grows Up Exodus 2:1-10

Daily Bible Reading. What?

Pentateuch Genesis 12-50: The Patriarchs

PENTECOST 12 - PROPER 16 - RCL YEAR A - AUGUST The Old Testament: Exodus 1:8-2:10

Basket Case Psalm 124; Exodus 1:8, 2:10

Gen Events Creation 1-2 Fall 3-5 Flood/Noah 6-9 Tower of Babel Beginning of Human Race 2300 Years Approx.

The People God Wants Exodus 1-3 February 2-3, 2019

B. Tonight, Moses Birth; Raised In Pharaoh s Palace; Prepared To Lead Israel!

The Life Of Moses #1 I. The Shock Of The Story s Opening: The story opens with God s people in Egypt suffering, in the very place where God Himself

LEADER DEVOTIONAL. Imagine the encounter between God and Moses at the burning bush. God drew a curious Moses to Himself and then spoke: Moses, Moses!

Matthew 5:16 let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven.

Promise to Fulfillment: Unit 5 The Exodus and God s Redemption (in the Original Setting)

STORY: EXODUS: Moses & the Burning Bush (Exodus 2:12-3)

DAY 1. Read Exodus 2:1-10.

Show Me Your Glory. Lessons from the Life of Moses. Lesson 1 Exodus 1 2

THE L.I.F.E. PLAN ENSLAVED IN EGYPT BLOCK 2. THEME 3 - ISRAEL IN EGYPT LESSON 2 (46 of 216)

Moses Was Born and Called

THE STORY DELIVERANCE Rev. Dr. Kim Engelmann West Valley Presbyterian Church

2. This semester we will be studying Exodus. Have you ever studied Exodus? What comes to mind when you think of the book of Exodus?

DAY 4 THE EXODUS INTRODUCTION

Club 345 Small Groups

1. The creation of the heavens and the earth

As you begin each day s study, ask the Holy Spirit to teach you what God is saying in His Word.

A Mother s Act Of Desperation Exodus 1:15-3:6

Every teenager is thinking: Who can I follow? Copy? Emulate? Who can I watch and become like because I want the same life they have.

Defying Evil How 4 women subverted an empire and saved a nation

Our God is a Promise Keeper Exodus 3:1-5

Exodus 1:8-2:10. 8 Now a new king arose over Egypt, who did not know Joseph. 9 He said to his people,

EXODVS LEVITICUS S\x\h-cen\urv mosaic oi the ark oí the covenant EXODUS 1

LESSONS FROM THE LIFE OF MOSES

Leaving Egypt - Facing our Fear -- Devotions Monday, February 13 Opening thought - what are some fears you have faced or are currently facing?

WPC Senior Pastor s Bible Study - Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Exodus 1:8-14 [15--2:10]; 3:1-15

Route 66 Exodus: Delivered From Bondage Part 2 March 8, 2009

General comments on Exodus 1-14

(10/28/15) We are starting a new study on Wednesday evenings the book of Exodus.

Covenant and Commandments Exoudus 19:3-9; 20:1-7 Rev. Drew Hanson October 7, 2018

Old Testament Examples of Saving Faith Hebrews 11:23-31

History, Written by the Losers

Exodus Rescued For Glory

Whose Child Is This? A Launch Sunday Sermon by Rev. W. Dale Osborne August 27, 2017 Lectionary Reading: Exodus1:8 2:10

Twelfth Sunday after Pentecost, Proper 16, Year A St. Luke s Church August 27, 2017 (Exodus kickoff) Stephen H. Applegate

Exodus1-2. Bible Study

Exodus 2 God s Work in the Desert

God Prepares Israel for Deliverance

(Used with permission by Tanjong Leman.) Charity is no substitute for justice withheld. -Saint Augustine of Hippo.

LEADER DEVOTIONAL. Imagine the encounter between God and Moses at the burning bush. God drew a curious Moses to Himself and then spoke: Moses, Moses!

GOLDEN TEXT: The midwives feared God, and did not as the king of Egypt commanded them, but saved the men children alive (Exodus 1:17).

Judges & Ruth Lesson 1

STAY ON WISDOM S PATH

Kingdom, Covenants & Canon of the Old Testament

xl;v. Sh lach Numbers Reconnaissance: NAU

THE L.I.F.E. PLAN THE EXODUS BLOCK 2. THEME 3 - ISRAEL IN EGYPT LESSON 4 (48 of 216)

TWELFTH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST -- PROPER 16 August 27, 2017 Year A, Revised Common Lectionary

The evacuation initiated: moses called

THE L.I.F.E. PLAN MOSES BLOCK 2. THEME 3 - ISRAEL IN EGYPT LESSON 3 (47 of 216)

Series: Moses CEO Leadership in Changing Times Part I: Who Me? C. Gray Norsworthy Johns Creek Presbyterian Church January 4, 2015

BIBLE RADIO PRODUCTIONS

Transcription:

1 An Auspicious Beginning Genesis 50:22-26 and Exodus 1:8-2:10 June 11, 2017 M. Michelle Fincher Calvary Presbyterian Church This morning we begin a new sermon series on Moses and the book of Exodus. For a lot of people in this room, the name Moses immediately brings to mind an image of a young Charlton Heston playing the leading role in Cecil B. Demille s production of The Ten Commandments. For others, you are more likely to think of Walt Disney s animated story of Moses life in The Prince of Egypt. What we re going to discover over the next several weeks is that no film could do the man or the story justice. Moses is the central character in the Old Testament and the exodus is the central event, and I believe you will be amazed at how relevant this story is to our faith and also to our contemporary lives. To begin, we need to set the stage, and if you were here a couple of years ago for our short sermon series on Joseph, you ll notice that this story picks up where the story of Joseph left off. When Genesis ends, Jacob s 12 sons and their families are living in Egypt as welcome immigrants. One of Jacob s sons, Joseph, was Pharaoh s right-hand man, a position of great power and responsibility which he achieved after devising and executing a plan that saved the country during a seven-year famine. But at least 400 years go by between the end of Genesis and the beginning of Exodus, and in that time, Jacob s descendants have grown numerous. They prosper and grow strong in both numbers and financial dealings. Over those four centuries, various pharaohs have come and gone and by the time Exodus opens, a new king is sitting on Egypt s throne, one who did not know Joseph. Since Joseph had died centuries earlier, that s no surprise, but what the statement really means is that this particular monarch felt no obligation to honor an ancient promise of hospitality made by one of his predecessors to the Hebrews. He felt no loyalty to remember the critical role Joseph had played in saving his empire from starvation so long ago. Far from an attitude of gratitude and hospitality, this pharaoh saw Jacob s descendants as a potential threat. There s not the slightest indication that the Hebrews have done anything threatening; it s simply that they have been prolific and filled the land. The Egyptian king sees their large number as dangerous and suggests that, in the event of war, the Hebrews might side with the enemy. So, thinking it strategically

2 advantageous to exert his power over them, Pharaoh introduces chaos into their lives. He enslaves them, putting them to work on massive government building projects. The Hebrews did the work, but they also continued to multiply. So, Pharaoh steps us his game. He calls in two Hebrew midwives, Shiphrah and Puah, and instructs them that when they deliver girls to Hebrew women, the infants can live, but when they deliver boys, they are to kill those babies. The midwives, fearing God more than they fear the king, ignore his directive. When Pharaoh sees that his orders have not been carried out, he calls the midwives in again, and these two brave women tell him that the Hebrews give birth so quickly that the babies are delivered before the midwives can get there. The oppressive labor hasn t worked; going through the midwives hasn t worked. Pharaoh now doubles-down on his murderous plan. This time he commands the entire Egyptian population to seek out male Hebrew children and drown them in the Nile. His underhanded methods give way to a very public decree. Before going any further I want us to pause and think about the implications of this story we re hearing. First, be sure to notice that the population growth among the Hebrews is the direct fulfillment of the covenant God made with Abraham. God had promised Abraham that his descendants would be as numerous as the stars, that they would become a great nation. In verse 7 of Exodus 1 we see five verbs used to describe that God s promise has come to pass: the Israelites were fruitful, prolific, they multiplied, grew exceedingly strong and filled the land. Exodus wants to make sure we take note of the fact that God is a God who keeps his promises, not only to Abraham and Moses, but also to us. Second, the five verbs go beyond the promise to Abraham to connect us to the story of creation. Israel s fruitfulness bears witness to God s ongoing work of creation and blessing. God s intentions for a good and overflowing creation are being realized in this family, in this people. But, they are but a microcosmic fulfillment of God s macrocosmic design. Yet, notice that so far, God s name has not even been mentioned. God s creative activity is all behind-the-scenes, as it has been during the 400+ year interlude between Joseph and Moses. We are meant to see that this long period has not been a time when God has been absent, but when God s work of blessing has been substantial. The God who creates, redeems and keeps his promises has been at work in life-giving ways all along the Hebrews journey, even in their darkest times. Exodus invites us to experience that what was

3 true for them is also true for us. Even when we can t see it, God s work of creation and blessing, in our lives and in our world, is ongoing. Third, irony plays a significant role in the book of Exodus. In just the few verses we ve read, think about this: God s abundant, creative work is occurring in, of all places, pagan Egypt, and it will be through a death-dealing pharaoh that God s great act of life and liberation will come to pass. Two Hebrew midwives are pitted against that pharaoh and indeed, against the entire Egyptian community, and the women prove to be too much for them all. The Egyptians fear of the Israelites leads to their failure, while the women s fear of God leads to their success. Ironically, the efforts of both Egyptians and Hebrews have the same result: the people of Israel multiply all the more. Perhaps we shouldn t be surprised that the women in the narrative are named while the mighty Pharaoh never is. Pharaoh s rampage against all the male, Hebrew babies sets the stage for the birth of one very particular Hebrew son. With the threat of Israel s extinction ringing in our ears, the question of this baby s survival heightens the drama. Certainly Moses family takes precautions for his safety, but the risks are enormous. The mother hides him for as long as possible, but when that is no longer feasible, she creates a waterproof container to hold him while strategically positioning him where Pharaoh s daughter is known to bathe. The baby s sister is stationed as a lookout. The child is discovered, just as his family hoped, and the princess exhibits a compassion that is absent in her father as well as a commitment to non-compliance with his brutal policies. Ironies continue to abound. Pharaoh s chosen instrument of destruction, the Nile, becomes the means for saving Moses. A member of Pharaoh s family undermines his policies, saving the very person who will lead Israel out of Egypt and destroy the king s dynasty. The baby s mother gets paid to do what she most wants to do and from Pharaoh s own pocket, no less. The Egyptian princess gives the boy a name that betrays much more than she knows. She drew Moses out of the water just as Moses will eventually do for all the people of Israel. The importance of women in this drama is striking. In addition to Shiphrah and Ruah, Moses mother, his sister and Pharaoh s daughter all make crucial contributions to the preservation of life and the fulfillment of God s creative, redemptive purposes. It is not overstating it to say that their wisdom, courage, vision and faithful non-compliance make a difference not only to Israel, but also to God. These women were not leaders; they didn t hold positions of influence that

4 could impact Egypt s immigration policies. Yet they were not powerless. Each of them used all the resources she had at her disposal. Of the women we re met thus far, Pharaoh s daughter is the most unexpected. She was, after all, the daughter of a despot who was oppressing and killing Hebrews. A non-israelite, she worshiped the Egyptian gods and goddesses. Yet, God used her, as Moses adoptive parent, in one of the most important roles played by any mother in human history. In fact, her activity is directly parallel to that of God with Israel. She comes down, sees the child, hears him cry, takes pity on him, draws him out of the water and provides for his daily needs, all actions that also describe God s response to Israel. In the final analysis, both Hebrew midwives and Egyptian royalty are agents of life and blessing in the created order. God makes use of the gifts of both, and the community of faith is equally accepting of their efforts. By telling both sides of the story, Israel acknowledges the contributions of Hebrew and pagan alike with gratitude and praise and reminds us not to be too narrow in where we think God may show up, who God may use, or how. Already, several of the major themes of Exodus have emerged, themes that we will encounter again and again. The relationship between divine agency and human action is woven like a golden thread throughout the narrative. God chooses to work through human beings to accomplish God s divine purposes. God didn t send angels from heaven to spare Moses life. God didn t miraculously step in to destroy Pharaoh or change his wayward heart. Instead, God worked through the talents, the plans, and the compassion of human beings. We are partners with God in God s divine purposes and sometimes that means that even God does not get his first choice in how events play out. God chooses to be self-limiting in order to work with the frailties of his human partners in mission. God s self-revelation is also a major focus throughout this story. That you may know that I am your God is a refrain we ll hear again and again. Pay attention as the narrative progresses to the fact that God s self-revelation is meant not just for Israel but also for Pharaoh and the Egyptians. God s concern for selfdisclosure is not confined to one people; it includes the whole world. It is that cosmic nature that is a key to understanding this narrative. While the liberation of Israel is the focus of God s activity in Exodus, it is not God s ultimate purpose. The deliverance of Israel is ultimately for the sake of all creation. The issue for God is finally not that God s name be made known in Israel but that it be declared in all the earth. What s at stake is God s mission for the world. All

who oppose God s life-giving, creative, redemptive purposes will be judged and judged severely. But for the Hebrews, the Egyptians, and for us, every time we opt for compassion, for giving voice to the victim, for remaining faithful and courageous in the face of adversity, we can be sure that our efforts are not in vain. God is working with us and through us. Thanks be to God! 5