There is
something very interesting about the exodus of the children of Israel from
Egypt. The Lord knew from the beginning that this mammoth undertaking was going
to have incredible difficulties from the start and I believe He used it to His
advantage to impress upon the children of Israel that He was the great
deliverer who gathers His own and that Moses was only an instrument in His
hands.
Thus He
instructed Moses to tell them this: "I am the LORD, and I will bring you out from under the
burdens of the Egyptians, and I will rid you out of their bondage,
and I will redeem you with a stretched
out arm, and with great judgments: And I will take you to me for a people, and I will be to you a God: and ye shall
know that I am the LORD your God which bringeth
you out from under the burdens of the Egyptians. And I will bring you in unto the land,
concerning the which I did swear to give it to Abraham, to
Isaac, and to Jacob; and I will give it you for an heritage: I am the LORD. (Exodus 6:6-8)
And He
didn’t stop at this. He went on to say: “And the Egyptians shall know that I
am the Lord” (Exodus 7:5). His efforts to help humanity know that He is the
fountain of all salvation is incredibly prominent in the scriptures. Once I
counted His oft repeated declaration of “ye shall know that I am the Lord” in
the book of Ezekiel alone which came to 32 times and 25 times of the same
statement in reference to other nations than the House of Israel. I kept a list
of all the scriptural references. I find His inexhaustible efforts to impress
this upon us amazing. But I digress….
The first
time that Moses and Aaron went to Pharaoh didn’t go so well. The Pharaoh
increased the Hebrews’ burdens and in one fell swoop destroyed their initial
hope of deliverance which immediately made them accuse Moses and Aaron of
wanting to kill them (Exodus 4:31; 5:20,21).
This lack of
faith snowballed to Moses who went back to the Lord to complain and ask where
the deliverance was that was promised (5:22,23). He then pointed out to the
Lord again, as he did in Midian, that he was of ‘slow speech’ so how can
Pharaoh believe and obey him? (Exodus 6:12,30) This, after he was apprised of
the difficulty of the mission before he left Midian, all the assurances he was
given of its eventual success and despite having a spokesman and the heads of
the tribes accompany him to the Egyptian court (6:14-27).
Sometimes I
don’t know who I feel more sorry for….us and our backsliding faith or the Lord
and His continual necessity to carry us in our frustrating humanity. His mercy,
tolerance and patience in impressing upon us that with Him nothing is
impossible astounds me.
As the sun bursts through the morning
light
It reveals You in the depths of my heart.
Gratitude overwhelms me
For Thy enduring patience
Of my inconsistent delight;
My erratic trust,
My feeble faith in Thy might.
I marvel You wait
In the shadow of my stubborn heart
And reach out to me in mercy to fulfil Thy
part.
- CATHRYNE ALLEN
(Art: With God Nothing is Impossible by Greg Collins)






