Ooops, a Golden Calf!

July 5, 2021

Exodus 32-34.   “They gave me the gold, and I threw it into the fire, and out came this calf!”  Moses went up Mt. Sinai to receive the carved stone tablets of the Ten Commandments.  But meanwhile back at the camp…   We know the dilemma.  We bake a batch of cookies and before they cool some disappear. No evil intent but the cookies just jumped off the plate into a mouth and the ones on the plate got rearranged.  It sounds a bit like Adam telling God, “It wasn’t me.  It was that wife YOU gave me.”  And Eve saying, “It wasn’t me.  The snake deceived me.”  It just happened.  I didn’t see the speed sign, officer.  My odometer is broken.  I didn’t know the gun was loaded.  Excuses. 

         Aaron, left in charge of the Israelites, buckles under the wave of doubt that sweeps through the camp when Moses doesn’t return from the mountain quickly.  When events don’t unfold as quickly as we think they ought, anxiety begins to mount.  We are swamped by “what-if’s and we begin imagining what has happened and how we will cope.  For the Israelites who are still in the very baby stages of becoming a nation and who barely know their God, fear drives them to relapse.

         It is so easy to convince ourselves that we have mastered “the habit” and that one drink, one peek, one candy bar won’t hurt but it does.  That old potato chip commercial that says, “I bet you can’t eat just one!” is so true.  The Israelites have not just gone back two steps, though. They have relapsed into idolatry.  Worshipping a cow and crediting the cow with deliverance from Egypt was crossing the line and God becomes angry.  We like to say that God is love but this scene as much as any reminds us that God is a real multi-dimensional being that has real feelings and real personality.  He is not a loving force field that makes my life work and is there no matter what.

         Besides Aaron’s silly explanation for his poor leadership, besides God’s justified anger at being replaced by an idolatrous cow, is the amazing response of Moses.  Moses goes to bat for his people.  Moses reasons with God!!  In these chapters we do not see God-boss and slave-Moses, we see a God who cares what his creation is thinking and is impacted by their prayers and pleas. God and Moses discuss that perhaps Moses is to just lead the people as God might get angry at their stubbornness.  Moses counters with this plea, “If your Presence does not go with us, do not send me up from here.  How will anyone know that you are pleased with me and with your people unless you go with us?”

         God’s presence with God’s people is a distinguishing characteristic of the new nation.  Other nations have similar principles.  Other nations have stubborn people.  Moses accurately identifies God’s presence as a distinguishing characteristic of his people. 

         God does not tolerate idolatry.  God reasons with his people.  God’s presence active in our lives distinguishes us.  We work with an epic hero, a God who is willing to get his hands dirty in relationship with fragile people like us.  I find that very encouraging.  I pray you do too.  Blessings.


Laws or Guidelines?

July 5, 2021

Exodus 19:1-20:21.  An emerging nation must have a geographical definition and a social definition.  The Promised Land is the place they are being promised.  They have been slaves for 400 years, governed by the Egyptians, so what we see in the next phase of our epic story is the formation of a group of people able to govern themselves.

         Moses goes up Mt. Sinai and receives “the Big Ten,” the Ten Commandments.  For many people “the law” is the system that tells “authorities”, perhaps God, if you are behaving properly.  Staying within the parameters of the “law” allows a sense of freedom and allows society to function maximally.  These laws can be divided into three sets of arenas that need attention if society is going to function well.  The first three commandments talk about relationship with God or perhaps we can call it values. When people live with integrity with the values of their group, life works best.  The second group of commandments deals with relationships with others, parents and neighbors.  The third group of commandments deals with our relationship to things, no coveting, not stealing.

         Many people use “the Big Ten” to evaluate their own goodness as compared to others and use the Ten to create a hierarchy to tell them who the good people area so they are safe.  I think there is a second way of understanding the Ten.  I know my car works best if I service it regularly, put in gas, avoid accidents etc.  Reading the owner’s manual from the manufacturer can be a burden, a “to-do” list, or it can be seen as guidelines for maximizing use of the car.  Our epic hero, God, wants to form a nation that blesses all people and so giving the “law” on Mt. Sinai is giving us the “owner’s manual” for how to live the good life.  If we don’t steal, kill, commit adultery, act respectfully, rest regularly, speak politely, and aren’t consumed with greed, then we will be more likely to be happy and content.

         Jesus, in the New Testament, expanded the commandments to be guidelines with meaning.  Murder is wrong but hate, the root of murder, also eats up our hearts and our lives and diminishes us.  Adultery is wrong but if we are eaten up by lust, we will not be happy.  Perhaps is would be good to reread the Ten Commandments, not as a check list of how good you are, but as a letter from the owner telling you how to happy.  Perhaps it is time to service your soul to make sure you aren’t running on fumes!  Blessings.


“Go Down Moses”

July 5, 2021

It is difficult to spend a week reflecting on the epic moments in history like the Moses story in the Bible without singing the song, “Go Down Moses.”  This very famous African American spiritual speaks directly to oppression and freedom and God’s goal of liberation.  Many slave owners prohibited singing this song for they understood the Moses story to be speaking against slavery of all kinds.

         “Go down, Moses,” was first heard being sung by “contrabands,” the name given to slaves caught running away and being held at Fort Monroe.  Rev. Lewis Lockwood heard the song and translated it onto sheet music.  It was then published in 1862. The Nile valley was considered lower than Jerusalem so when Moses was told by God to go to Egypt, he had to go down to Egypt.  Many slaves in the underground railroad had to cross rivers and going down the Mississippi was going down into slave country.  From this came the saying, to be “sold down the river.”

         Core to the Christian story is the call to liberation from slavery and specifically liberation from slavery to sin.  Our epic hero, God, is making a nation where people can be free and live their potential.  He will make it happen.  Below are two famous versions of the song for your enjoyment.

Paul Robeson:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtLcELU1brA Louis Armstrong:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vf6jBP4YXwo


The Fork in the Road

July 5, 2021

Exodus 13:17-14:31.  The reader might think that the culmination of the tenth plague would settle all issues for Moses.  Our epic hero, God, has shown himself more powerful than all the gods of Egypt and the people have finally started the journey to the Promised Land, a land flowing with milk and honey.  Sounds like a good start but the plot thickens.  This fledgling “nation” reaches their first challenge, the Red Sea.  It really doesn’t matter how deep the water was as some like to quibble.  There is a block on the road to happiness.  The wedding is over and it is not uncommon for there to be a major fight that first week of honeymoon as reality sets in.  The operation is over and cancer removed by physical therapy begins and it hurts.

          As the people reach the Red Sea, Pharaoh again reverses his decision and sends his army after the Israelites.  There is an army bearing down on the people from one side and a “sea” to cross on the other.  Sweaty palms.  What will Moses do as this is a new type of challenge to his leadership and in-front of the “nation” God has entrusted him to lead?  Leadership decisions need to be made and the people are close to mutiny.  Families go through this often.  Sunday morning and the kids aren’t so happy about going to church.  Or perhaps it is a decision to move for a parent’s job but the kids are not so convinced leaving their friends and the familiar is the way to go.  It is at these crisis moments that leaders have to reach within themselves and grow.  Dictatorial mandates may calm the storm momentarily but it is probably fomenting under the surface. 

         All the formation that God has been investing in Moses now shows as Moses declares, “Do not be afraid. Stand firm and you will see the deliverance the Lord will bring you today.  The Egyptians you see today you will never see again.  The Lord will fight for you; you need only to be still. (Ex. 14:13.14)”  Moses reaches within himself and realizes that the God who did the miracles of the plagues, probably has another miracle up his sleeve.  We call that faith.  Based on our past experience with God, we trust that what is to unfold is within his ability to handle.  It is one thing to know about the Bible but it is another thing to put the principles into action – to refuse to cheat, to turn the other cheek, to forgive, to leave a job that requires unethical actions from you.  Stepping out in faith, defines Moses as the leader.  Standing in faith is a defining moment.

         So where is the challenge facing you today?  We might call it our “growing edge.”  If we have no challenges then perhaps we need to rethink our priorities.  I note Moses does not look to his abilities but he is encouraging people to look at how God is going to solve the problem.  The answer is not what he might plan as we would never have imagined parting of the sea!  Often the answer comes in unexpected ways but we know God is watching and is able.  He is there with us in our challenge today and he has a better way forward than we can imagine.  Are we looking to him?


Passover — Communion

July 5, 2021

Exodus 12:1-42.  Jews all over the world celebrate Passover every year and Christians celebrate communion frequently.  Both of these deeply symbolic rituals are grounded in the celebration at the end of the tenth plague.  Moses has continually confronted Pharaoh of Egypt with God’s message, “Let my people go!”  Pharaoh agrees and then relents nine times.  Each time God is revealed more powerful than Pharaoh or his magicians or his officials.  To prepare for the night of the tenth plague the Israelites are given extensive instructions about choosing, caring for, slaughtering, and eating a goat whose blood is to be smeared on their doorposts.  The angel of death will pass over any home marked with the blood of the lamb.  Hence this ceremony is called Passover. After the tenth plague, Pharaoh grants the Israelites their freedom.   It marks the liberation of the Israelites from slavery in Egypt.  This story is foundational to the identity of the Israelites and is remembered and retold throughout the Bible.  What is the big deal?

         Oppression of God’s creation and idolatry that denies God’s authority will not be tolerated forever.  The Pharaoh thought he was god and the people worshipped idols.  Control over life and death was the final word, settling where real power lies, who is the real God.  Pharaoh finally submits and allows the people to go worship the real God.  Secondly God has now created a ritual that reminds us who we are and what God wants from us.  Christians believe the blood of the doorpost foreshadowed the blood of Jesus on the cross.  We believe we may live under the penalty of death but death cannot cause us to perish.  Communion is the ritual we celebrate that remembers Jesus, the lamb of God, being sacrificed for our sins so we will live eternally.  Our epic hero, God, has a plan to create a nation to bless all nations and here at Passover those people are beginning to emerge.  They still have a long journey ahead to be molded but so do we.

         We would like to think we do not have idols today but there are many things that are so very important to us – health, wealth, and prestige.  We will sacrifice to secure a future for ourselves and our children.  Perhaps we need to ponder for a moment if there is anything we are holding on to too tightly.  I think we call it, “Put first things first.”  Do we need to get our priorities right?  Secondly, rituals are things we do to enact our beliefs.  Do you have rituals you do regularly that teach your family and remind them who they are and what God expects of them.  Communion is one of them but family prayer is another.  Bedtime prayers and songs settle us down and put us in a good frame of mind as we go to sleep.  Some people have special “sacred” places where they go to sort out their thinking and pray and journal.  Idolatry needs to be nipped in the bud and rituals need to be nourished.  Blessings as you journey.


Be patient. God isn’t finished with me yet!

July 5, 2021

Exodus 6:28-11:10 has been made into multiple movies telling of the encounters between Pharaoh and Moses, the kingdom of this world versus the kingdom of God.  “Let my people go,” takes ten plagues.  If God is God then why not just zap Pharaoh with plague ten, the death of the first-born, and let Moses lead the people to the Promised Land?  It seems that is not the way an epic hero works with fragile humans and with stubborn enemies.  Think, in a good movie there is usually a rescue plan that needs to be planned, executed and occupies a good part of the movie.  Pharaoh was stubborn and thought he was god.  Moses was new to leadership and needed to be formed.  The people did not know the “I AM.”  When we say “I do” at the altar or before the adoption judge, that is only a declaration of relationship but it is not the stuff that makes up relationship as we live into the reality.

         As the plagues unfold, God defeats the gods of Egypt and ultimately shows himself as a real God and not Pharaoh.  The Egyptians and the Hebrews witness and are immersed in the unfolding drama.  The God who created the heavens and the earth that daily testify to his presence now takes on new dimensions.  Moses speaks for him predicting the plagues and punishment of rejection of him.  God is not just far away in the heavens but is involved in “good government” of his creation.  God’s desire is liberation of his people to live in a “promised land” where they can freely worship under his guidelines that will be revealed. But God does not just zap us and make it happen.  Growth is a process.

         Why?  God is revealing his character and God is forming people.  So how does that apply to my life today?  Relationships cannot be forced or dictated.  The song goes “if I had never had trials, I’d never know what God can do.”  It doesn’t make the troubles we go through fun or easy nor does it mean we have done something wrong.  The Hebrews were not being punished for sins but were participants in an unfolding epic story that will be told for generations to come.  I am challenged to ponder my story that will pass down to others.  Perhaps the challenge today is to know the “I AM” better and to look for his hand working in our world.  Perhaps the challenge is to reflect on how my story is forming.  In either case, we are in the hands of a God who is working with the world around us and the powers that oppress us and he is working to form us into our best selves.  Whew.  Thank you.


The Bush that Didn’t Burn

July 5, 2021

Exodus 3:1-4:17.  The unexpected.  Stories of people bargaining with God are not uncommon.  If God will save my child in this illness, the person will promise all sorts of things.  Desperate people in hopeless situations needing help from God frequent healing services.  People flocked to Jesus, but what about Moses.  Moses was caring for his sheep, not particularly in need.  He is older, a herdsman out in the desert and a refugee from Egypt where he killed a man.  He is not a likely person to choose for a task nor does he have many bargaining chips.  God seems to pick people the world passes by to do important tasks.

         Moses notices a bush that appears to be burning but is not consumed and goes to investigate.  God notices that Moses notices.  God approaches Moses.  The pursuing exchange between creator and human is interesting.  God identifies himself as the God of Moses’ ancestors but also importantly the God who sees the suffering of his people with a plan to deliver them. In fact, the God who does not wait afar for his creation to deserve him but the God who is willing to come near and get his hands dirty.  But Moses identifies himself as a person with a past.  Two very different characters in this story.

         God counters that he will accompany Moses to do the proposed plan to deliver God’s people from oppression.  Moses points out he has no credibility anymore and essentially asks, “Who are you?”  God reveals his name as “I AM.”  This name will become the name by which God is identified in this epic story.  God gives Moses signs to prove himself but Moses still waffles in doubt because Moses is still looking at his own ability and not looking at the God who is speaking.  This God can speak! Can be in a bush that looks like it is burning but isn’t! and knows the state affairs of the world and its injustices!  This is a God with a plan to bring justice and freedom to the oppressed and downtrodden, those laboring under our epic villain.  Moses can only see his own limitations.

         How many times are we so focused on our “can’ts” that we do not even see the irony of whining to the God of “cans.”  Our past, our limitations, our ignorance convince us we are nobodies and we become grasshoppers in our own eyes.  Perhaps there is a challenge you have been avoiding because it felt overwhelming.  Sometimes writing on one side of a paper the reasons it would be hard and then writing on the other side the qualities of God that might help you, helps. God meets us in our doubts and questions and reveals his true identity.  It is when our fear becomes denial of God’s power and a smoke screen for rebellion that I suspect we try God’s patience.  Blessings as you tackle the challenges God places before you.  Remember the promise that he goes with you.

Remember to pray for those who are on the battle front facing injustice.  Blessings.


Moses: Bulrushes, Blood, and Bushes

July 5, 2021

Exodus 1 and 2 gives us the skeletons in Moses’ closet, the “before story,” the “before-God-touched-me” story.  The Pharaoh of Egypt developed a plan to “deal with” the family of Joseph that had greatly multiplied over 400 years and who were becoming a threat in Egypt.  Pharaoh decided to kill newborn male babies but Moses was hidden in a basket in the bulrushes of the Nile and retrieved by Pharaoh’s daughter who “adopted” him.  Moses, that means “drawn out,” would be the one to draw the family of Joseph out of Egypt to be formed into a nation in the desert – but not yet. 

         One day, Moses as a grown up, sees an Egyptian beating up a Hebrew. Moses defends the Hebrew, killing the Egyptian and has blood on his hands and must run for his life.  Bulrushes and blood.  He runs into the desert where he becomes a shepherd, marries and has two sons.  40 years later, probably in his 60s+, he sees a bush that looks like it is burning but is not consumed. God speaks and gives him a task for which he feels totally inadequate.  He argues with God, hummm.

         Bulrushes, blood and bushes.  It is there at the bush, he talks with God who sends him back to Egypt with the famous cry, “Let my people go!”  Our epic hero, God, chose a man with a past, an old man, a man who thought he was not qualified, to lead a group of people who knew nothing about God, into a desert and to a “Promised Land.”  What are the odds that this scheme will defeat our epic villain, Satan?

         Is there a story behind your name?  Many people carry family names.  Others are named after famous people or famous places.  Many children in Kenya were named “Kennedy.”  Our stories of origin often deeply affect the trajectory of our lives even as Moses’ childhood story impacted his.  That a farmer’s son becomes a farmer is not a surprise or that a musician has a talented daughter is logical. How did your family origins affect you? Our stories of major mistakes often deeply impact the trajectory of our lives even as Moses’ murder of the Egyptian affected his.  Can you names any benefits from some of your blunders.  Ultimately when we may kneel at a “burning bush” and bow in relationship with God, our life changes direction.  Like Moses we may feel inadequate.  But note that God came to Moses because God had a plan to bless.  God believed in Moses even when Moses hardly knew God, much less believed in him.  Family origins, blunders, and encounters direct our lives.  Prayer keeps us in touch with God so that we do not get ahead of him.  “It helps us stay in touch with God’s timing and God’s ways. (P.48, Essential 100)”  Spend a few minutes thanking God for your family of origin that has shaped you, your blunders that have directed you, and God’s intervention to use your inadequacies to bless another!


Psalm 46: Be Still My Soul

July 5, 2021

Psalm 46 opens “God is our refuge and strength, an ever present help in trouble.  Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea, though its waters roar and foam and the mountains quake with their surging.”  Verse 10 continues, “He (God) says, ‘Be still, and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth.”

         After a week of reflecting on Joseph, Psalm 46, written years later by the sons of Korah after David defeated some enemies, seems a nice end of week “song.”  In fact Martin Luther was inspired by this psalm when he wrote “A Mighty Fortress is Our God.”  The other favorite hymn based on these verses is “Be Still My Soul” by German born Katherine von Schlegel (1752), translated a hundred years later into English by Jane Borthwick and set to the tune of Finlandia.

Lyrics

  1. 1. Be still, my soul: The Lord is on thy side;

With patience bear thy cross of grief or pain.

Leave to thy God to order and provide;

In ev’ry change he faithful will remain.

Be still, my soul: Thy best, thy heav’nly Friend

Thru thorny ways leads to a joyful end.

Joseph was the “after thought” baby, born to Jacob by his second wife after having ten sons by his first wife and two maids.  Joseph was favored by father but resented by half brothers and sold into slavery in Egypt.  Finding stillness in the midst of trials is hard. 

  • 2. Be still, my soul: Thy God doth undertake

To guide the future as he has the past.

Thy hope, thy confidence let nothing shake;

All now mysterious shall be bright at last.

Be still, my soul: The waves and winds still know

His voice who ruled them while he dwelt below.

Joseph must have heard the tales of God’s faithfulness to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and those childhood stories gave strength to his convictions as he faced injustice.

  • 3. Be still, my soul: The hour is hast’ning on

When we shall be forever with the Lord,

When disappointment, grief, and fear are gone,

Sorrow forgot, love’s purest joys restored.

Be still, my soul: When change and tears are past,

All safe and blessed we shall meet at last.

Joseph chose to forgive and reconcile even though he had the power and ability to revenge himself when his brothers appeared in Egypt years later.  We do not always realize justice but we believe it will come.


The Truth Comes Out

July 5, 2021

Genesis 45:1-46:7.  This week we have been following the story of Joseph, the son of Jacob and the great grandson of Abraham.  The villain in our epic story has used jealousy, hatred, and betrayal to divide the descendants of Abraham and to defeat the promise of blessing from our hero, God, to bless all nations through them. Joseph, sold by his half brothers into slavery in Egypt has risen to high position in charge of food during this famine and the brothers must bargain with him to survive.  He recognizes the brothers but they do not recognize him.  He demands they return home and bring back Joseph’s younger brother as proof of their story and to show they are not spies.  Joseph has the upper hand and all the power.  His birth family is starving and he has the power to reap revenge.  But he hesitates, giving himself time to process this turn of events and to grieve his losses.  When the brothers return, he invites them for a meal and finally reveals himself.

         “I am Joseph!  Is my father still living?”  Rather than revenge, Joseph first states his core identity, Joseph, son of Jacob.  All the labels that life has put on him: steward of Potiphar, criminal, dreamer, favorite son of Jacob all carry stories he is able to lignor and to simply say, “I am Joseph.”  When we are put to the test and have to sort out our identities do we flash our credentials from schools and degrees and accomplishments and relationships or are we able to stand secure in our birth identity as a child of God?

         Secondly we see that under the anger and grief is a deep longing to be reunited with the father who loved him so much.  Many of us know the pain of a wayward child and the agony of the years of silence that separations and differences can bring about.  We long to hear that child ask for us.  Sometimes that happens but not always.  Some of us are living in the midst of stories that have not finished and the reunion scene may still be coming.  Some of us are denied that reconciliation by the evils of life – suicide, addictions, poverty, and ignorance.  We never meet the child born out of wedlock or the child that ran away.  Joseph’s story shares of reunited love for his father that enabled him to forgive his brother.

         Most importantly, Joseph gains a larger picture of life through this experience. “It was not you who sent me here, but God.”  Sometimes the pain is so intense we cannot see the hand of God directing events till later.  But Joseph is able to look back and see how God has led through all the rough times to now.  That does not mean there will be no more troubles or family squabbles but it does mean Joseph can forgive and reconciliation with the brothers and with his father takes place.  The truth comes out.  The man of power is Joseph, Joseph has the internal power to forgive, and Joseph still loves his father.

         So what is our take away?  Perhaps there are broken relationships that you could make the first move to mend.  Perhaps there is a need to ask yourself where God is in the relationship you are grieving about.  Silence and avoidance, not seeing each other does not seem to resolve things.  Abusive relationships may need to be dealt with on your knees with God.  In any case, God does not abandon us in our difficult family arguments and our painful life experiences.  He is always working to bring about good, even if we cannot see it today.  Peace as you wait for him to resolve your conflict and bring reconciliation.