The Bible Recap - Day 030 (Exodus 1-3) - Year 3
Episode Date: January 30, 2021SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: -... Genesis 15:13-14 - John 16:33 - Matthew 10:16 - Acts 7:23-29 SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
Transcript
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today, we'll be a little longer than usual because we're in a new book, which means we
have some introductory ground to cover.
We just finished Genesis, a word that means beginning, and today we begin the book of Exodus,
which means Exodus or departure. Even though most English translations don't include it, this book actually starts
out with the Hebrew word that carries the meaning AND. Which is one way we see its connection
to the book of Genesis. This is a continuation of the story we've been in. The first five
books of the Bible, Genesis Exodus Leviticus Num due to Ronymy, were originally one book, which the Jews called the Torah.
It's also referred to as the Pentateuch, which is a collection of
five books. Most historians believe that all five books of the
Torah were primarily written by Moses, a man will meet in our
reading today. He was born roughly 300 years after Joseph
died. So when the book opens, we're three centuries past the end of Genesis.
If you had a keen eye back in Genesis 15,
you may remember God's words to Abraham.
No for certain that your offspring will be sojourners
in the land that is not theirs and will be servants there
and they will be afflicted for 400 years.
But I will bring judgment on the nation that they serve.
And afterward, they shall come out with great possessions.
So God has already given Abraham a heads up about what's going to happen, like, hey, it's
going to get rough, but it ends well.
Which, by the way, I feel like could be the motto of every believer's life.
It's basically the same thing Jesus said in John 1633, in the world you will have tribulation,
but take heart, I have overcome the world.
In God's words to Abraham, he even gave a rough timeline, 400 years.
So here we are at the 300-ish ear mark.
Those 70 people who went into Egypt during year two of the famines stuck around, had a bunch
of kids, and grew strong.
Joseph is long dead and gone, and so is the nice Pharaoh who treated him and his family well.
There's a new king in town, and that old Egyptian racism toward the Hebrews
has really kicked into gear.
Do you know what drives a lot of racism,
fear and self-preservation?
When we aim to protect ourselves
instead of trusting God for protection,
we take matters into our own hands
to try to secure our future.
It leaves us unable to love others well.
Did you see that in Pharaoh's actions today?
He dreams up a hypothetical future war against an unnamed army, and worries that the descendants
of Israel might join this unnamed army in a future fight against him. Pharaoh's response to
feeling threatened was to enslave the ever-increasing number of Israelites and make things hard on them.
He figures if they had to work long days of construction projects
and the hot Egyptian sun, they won't have any energy left
to join the hypothetical war against him.
But even in the midst of his oppression, they thrive.
Remember, God has promised to bless those who bless them
and curse those who curse them?
So we can already see which direction things are swinging for Pharaoh.
I want to make one important note here.
Today, when we hear the term slaves, most of us probably think of forced labor.
But back then, slaves and forced laborers were different categories.
Slaves were often considered part of the family, and usually, though not always,
they were enslaved for a pre-arranged period of time in order to pay off debt.
It was far more civil than, say, the American
enslavement of other people groups, since that's a scenario most of us are familiar with.
What's happening here with the Hebrews is forced labor, and this is more like what we think of as
slaves. Pharaoh's oppression doesn't make a dent in their population growth, so he puts a plan
in place and ropes some Hebrew midwives into it to kill the male Hebrews as soon as they're born. Fortunately, the Hebrew midwives, Shifra and Pua, disobey
Pharaoh's orders. In the end, they're praised and rewarded by God for fearing him, and
they have their names recorded forever in Scripture, because they wanted to honor God more than
they wanted to honor Pharaoh. If you're type A, it might bother you that these women are
honored here because, after
all, they disobeyed the King, and it even kind of seemed like they may have lied.
But think of it this way, these women were put in a position to be either a liar or
a murderer, and they were discerning enough to choose wisely.
It reminds me of Christ's words to his disciples in Matthew 10, 16.
I'm sending you out a sheep in the midst of wolves, so be a shrewd as serpents and
as innocent as does. I feel like Jesus' words from 1500 years later fit this scenario perfectly.
So the Hebrews are continuing to increase in number and Pharaoh is not having it, so
he makes the killing of Hebrew male babies a nationwide order, not just one for those
two midwives. Chapter 2 opens with a Hebrew woman giving birth.
She's one of the descendants of Levi.
You may remember Levi as one of the two brothers,
along with Simeon, who killed the men of Shechem
in response to their sister Dina's rape.
This new Hebrew mother hides her baby boy for three months,
but then puts him in a basket in the Nile,
instead of throwing him in it to drown.
But then, Pharaoh's daughter finds him
and realizes he's a Hebrew baby.
This could go terribly wrong.
But it actually goes kind of better
than they could have ever imagined.
The baby's sister sidel's up to Pharaoh's daughter
and is like, oh, hey, a baby,
I know a woman who could nurse this baby for you if you want.
So not only does the baby get to live,
but the baby's mom gets paid to nurse him.
Some of you think that sounds like a really good deal.
But here's the part you would not want to add on.
At some point, probably after he's weaned,
Pharaoh's daughter takes the baby back and essentially becomes his mother.
She names him Moses.
He grows up in Pharaoh's household in Egypt, in the land that enslaved his people.
And even though we don't know how, Moses somehow knows that he himself is a Hebrew,
possibly because he was likely circumcised
after he was born.
One day, after he's grown,
he sees an Egyptian beating a Hebrew slave.
So it enrages him to see a fellow Hebrew getting beaten.
Moses murders the Egyptian and hides him in the sand
and thinks no one has seen.
But the next day, he gets called out
by another Hebrew for it and he's terrified.
Word gets back to Pharaoh that Moses has killed in Egyptian
and Pharaoh wants to inflict the death penalty.
So Moses flees Egypt and goes to live in a place called
Midian, which is about 300 miles away.
Act seven tells us Moses is 40 years old when this happens.
What was his first stop in Midian?
Oh well, it's where the water, and it's where the women are.
While he's hanging out at the water cooler,
he meets the seven shepherdus daughters of the priest of Midian.
Some other shepherds try to drive these women off,
but Moses stands up for them and protects them
and he even waters their flock.
Nice guy.
Murderer, but a nice guy nonetheless.
Their dad invites him to their house for dinner,
and as well as would have it,
Moses has found
himself a wife at the age of 40. Then he and his wife, Sepora, the daughter of the priest of
Midian, have a son. Meanwhile, the new Pharaoh becomes the old Pharaoh because he dies, and the
Israelites who lived in Egypt as his slaves cried out to God for rescue. God heard them, and the text
says that he remembered him, but here's something important
you need to remember. When scripture uses the word remember, and especially as it regards
God himself, it's not indicating that something slipped his mind for a while, but now he's on
top of things again. It's indicating a move to action. We'll see several times where God remembers
things and also times where he calls his people to remember things, and it indicates a responsive action, not just a thought. So basically this text is telling us that God is about to step in and
do something. After all, it's now been 340ish years of oppression for the Hebrews, so the clock
is ticking on that 400-year timeline that was a part of his promise. God's actions begin to unfold
here in some ways that may seem a bit familiar to you by now.
While Moses is out watching the family's slot near a place they call the Mountain of God,
guess who appears to him?
The angel of the capital L, capital O, capital R, capital D.
This is a theophany, a divine visitation.
Another ancient translation refers to this being who has appeared as the word,
which is one of the names used to describe Jesus
in the New Testament.
So we have a lot of reason to believe this was God the Son.
Not only that, but the angel appeared to him in a fire, which is another common way we've
talked about God appearing.
And the fire is on a bush, so imagine an angel which looks like a human male, on fire in
a bush talking.
Meanwhile, nothing is actually being burned even though it's all on fire.
God speaks to him out of the bush, calls him by name, and tells him to stand back.
God may be protected from the effects of the flame, but Moses would not be.
God identifies himself to Moses as the God of the Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,
who are all Moses' ancestors, because, remember, Moses is from the tribe of Jacob's
son Levi. Then God tells Moses that the plan is to rescue his people, and that Moses is the man for
the job. He's sending him to talk to Pharaoh. Moses offers a list of excuses why he's not a good candidate.
We saw two of his excuses today, and we'll see three more tomorrow. It's hard to tell if these rebuttals are born out of insecurity or disobedience, but regardless, neither of them gets any traction
with God. In fact, in response to Moses' second cop-out, God responds by saying,
"'Tell them I am,' sent you. This is an ancient name for God that means a lot of things, but it
mostly boils down to, "'I have always been what I will always be.
Or more succinctly, the self-existent one. That means no one created God. He's always existed and
always will. All of creation depends on him and he depends on nothing. God tells Moses the
ups and downs of what's going to happen. He gives Moses far more information than he ever gave Abraham
with things. And he tells Moses that despite all the things that may appear to be set back so long
the way, his plan will succeed.
We've covered a lot of ground today, so I'm excited to hear what you saw about God today,
from Pharaoh's fears, to Moses' birth and protection, to the time he killed someone
and fled to the desert where God called him, what was your God shot?
Here's mine.
I saw that God uses broken people. Moses was taken
from his home at a young age, talk about traumatizing, and he was raised in the home of a wicked,
paranoid, harsh man who was racist against his particular race and eventually sought to kill him.
Moses murdered someone and went on the lamb. He was either insecure or disobedient or both,
murdered someone and went on the lamb. He was either insecure or disobedient or both,
yet he is the man God appointed for this role. If you have a crazy history, or if you're a parent who is worried that your mistakes have ruined everything for your child, take heart. God has
nothing but sinners to work with, and he seems to specialize in using the unlikely.
He calls those who refer this from them them and he draws them near to himself.
And that's the best news for all of us, because he's where the joy is.
Who do you know who would enjoy the Bible recap?
Invite them to read and listen along with you.
If they missed our January launch, encourage them to start with day one today.
If there's nothing special about January 1st, I started my first trip through the Bible on a day in August.
No matter what day it is, that's always the best day
to start reading the Bible.
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