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| Title: | The Courageous Faith of Jocedbed: Mother's Day |
| Reference: | Exodus 2 |
| Notes: | Texts: Exodus 2:1–10; Numbers 26:59; Hebrews 11:23 *The nation Israel had been in Egypt for almost 400 years. They grew and prospered there, but before long, they became a threat to the reigning Pharaoh. So, Pharaoh forced them into slavery. By the sweat of their brow, cities like Pithom and Raamses were built. He hoped to break their backs, but they continued to grow and prosper. So, he turned up the heat a little more. He commanded the Hebrew midwives to murder the newborn sons of the Hebrew women as they were giving birth. When he discovered that he couldn't rely on the midwives because they feared God more than him, he tried another approach. He told his people to stay on the lookout for Hebrew babies. If they saw one, they were to throw him in the Nile and watch him drown. It was during this reign of terror (Herod) that Jochebed became pregnant w/ her third child. She didn't have to worry about her older children, Aaron & Miriam, but the child in her womb would be fair game for any patriotic Egyptian in a bad mood. *We fear for our children’s safety. When I think of the times in which Jochebed was called to be a mother, I think of some mothers today. I think of mothers in parts of Africa who face the very real prospect of having their son taken from their arms to be trained as child soldiers. These are challenging days to be a mother in our world! In America, there are forces at work which threaten to drown our children: kids might drown in the river of violence and promiscuity that is pouring out of the TV & internet every day. They can drown in a sea of confusion as the lines between right and wrong are blurred in our society. They can drown in a competitive culture that rewards performance above character. Every conscientious parent knows how dangerous it is to grow up in our world! Mother’s struggle with an angry or abusive ex-spouse that has custody of kids. In the dangerous world in which she found herself, Jochebed stands out because she did what she could to save her child. Then, when she could do no more, she depended totally on the faithfulness of God. She was a model of faith. *First of all, Jochebed's faith was courageous. Listen to what the writer of Hebrews 11:23 says about Jochebed: "By faith Moses' parents hid him for three months after he was born, because they saw he was no ordinary child, and they were not afraid of the king's edict." Though the king said all the male Hebrew babies had to be thrown into the Nile, Jochebed and her husband disobeyed the king and hid Moses for three months. That takes courage! Imagine how hard it probably was to hide an infant. *Second, Jochebed had a sensible faith: After three months of hiding her baby, she realized she had to be pro-active. She made a little wicker basket, covered it with tar and pitch to make it float, and put it in the reeds on the banks of the Nile. Heb. word used for "basket" is the same used for Noah's ark. Noah's ark was covered with tar and pitch just like this one was. Both Noah & Moses were placed in an ark, not a safe environment, because the occupants of an ark are at the mercy of the elements. The Nile was known for crocodiles. So, we find Moses was completely helpless in a river filled w crocodiles! Notice: Jochebed was not careless about this; she was sensible. She didn't send him floating down the river like the movie Prince of Egypt depiction…. She placed him among the reeds along the banks of the Nile. This was a place women would congregate, like placing a baby on the steps of a hospital today. She also didn't just put him in the Nile and wave good-bye, saying, "Have a nice life, Moses! Maybe I'll see you sometime!" She had Moses' sister Miriam stand by the Nile to find out what would happen to him. They might have recognized Jochebed but Miriam made a good spy. Smart. When Moses was discovered in the Nile, his sister offered to find a Hebrew woman to nurse him, her plan fell into place: You see, Jochebed was clever, shrewd. Most women choreograph/ organize things so that men think they thought of something when it was the women who made it happen. Image: scene from My Big Fat Greek Wedding where women convince the father. Part of being sensible is knowing how to improvise on the spot. I heard the story of a mom, who at the beginning of her daughter's wedding ceremony, was to light one of the candles. Not realizing the potential hazard, she got too close and set her acrylic nail on fire. Trying not to ruin her daughter's big day, she calmly lit the candle from her flaming nail and then, like a gunslinger with his six-shooter, blew it out. Needless to say, her blackened nail was the talk of the reception. That’s what moms do all day… *Jochebed's courageous, sensible faith was rewarded by God. As Moses floated among the reeds of the Nile, the daughter of Pharaoh arrived with her servants to bathe. She saw the basket and had it brought to her. She opened it, saw the child crying, had pity on him because he was a Hebrew. She knew some mom had hid him in hope. It was standard procedure for a wealthy woman to hire a wet nurse to feed a child until he was weaned, and the wet nurse would be the legal guardian during those first years. So, at just the right time, Moses' sister moved in and made an offer to help fulfill that custom. She then went to find Jochebed, who not only got to raise her child, but was now paid for her work! Did you notice that God is never mentioned once in this passage? Still, we know he's at work. One of the interesting things about this passage is the prominent role women with motherly instincts play in the story. Jochebed "saw" that Moses was beautiful. Pharaoh's daughter "saw" the basket, "saw" the child crying, and had pity on him. Moses' sister stood by the Nile to "know" or "notice" what would happen and when to act. All of this foreshadows what God would soon do for his people. Later in chapter 2, it's God who looks upon his people who are suffering. We're told in Ex. 2:25 that "God saw"—same word—"the sons of Israel, and God took notice"—same word—"of them." So you could say it's the motherly instinct of God which caused him to move forward to show compassion and save his people. And it was God's motherly instincts to "see" us as worthy of delivering from our utterly helpless state through the death, burial, and resurrection of his own Son. Someone once turned to a full-time mom and said, "And what is it that you do, my dear?" |