Prayer Practice
Breath
Prayer – Take 2-3 minutes today to pray
a simple breath prayer. Get somewhere quiet and relaxing. Breathe in deeply,
and then breathe out fully. As you breathe in, ask God to fill you with His
presence, grace, love, peace, etc. Consider using the list of spiritual fruit
in Galatians 5:22-23. As you breathe out, offer to God the things you need Him
to take from you – sin, doubt, shame, anxiety, fear, etc. Pray this way for
just a few minutes, trusting God to work, and then begin reading today’s
Scripture.
DAILY READING
REFLECTION
A Stubborn Faith -- Moses Meets Pharaoh
by Tom Richards
As I looked at today’s reading and some of the verses that come before and after Exodus 5:1-5, I was impressed by Moses’ and Aaron’s “stubborn faith”. Moses encountered God in
the burning bush in Exodus 3 and was told of his mission to return to Egypt and lead the Israelites to freedom. In Exodus 3:10 God says “So now, go. I am sending you to Pharaoh to bring my people the Israelites out of Egypt.” Moses was reluctant to accept this assignment, to say the least. However, he finally obeys God.
As Moses is preparing to go to Egypt God makes an interesting statement in Exodus 4:21 “The Lord said to Moses, “When you return to Egypt, see that you perform before Pharaoh all the wonders I have given you the power to do. But I will harden his heart so that he will not let the people go.” That had to be hard to hear for Moses, but with the support of Aaron he moves forward – returning to Egypt, addressing the Israelites and sharing God’s plan, and then to Pharaoh as we see today.
Big surprise
(Not!), Pharaoh refuses to let the Israelites go! In fact he is pretty emphatic about this as
we read in Exodus 5:2 “Who is the Lord,
that I should obey him and let Israel go? I do not know the Lord and I will not let Israel go.”
As the story
develops, we see Moses and Aaron return to Pharaoh repeatedly until finally the
Jews are freed to leave Egypt and head to the Promised Land.
Moses was
reluctant, but he was ultimately obedient to God’s calling. However, that did not mean things went
smoothly for him. In fact, things were
anything but smooth. Yet, with God’s
help, Moses (and Aaron) remained faithful and continued to follow His command
regarding the Exodus of the Jews from Egypt.
I am guilty
of thinking that if you do the right things then you get the results you
want. If you are obedient to God’s
commands, things will go smoothly with your health, finances, relationships. Unfortunately, that is not always true
(remember “But I will harden his heart so that he will not let the people go”!). Yet,
like Moses we are called to have a “stubborn faith” because we have a “stubborn
God” who pursues us as his children and desires nothing more than to lead us
out of slavery to the Promised Land.
Thank you
Father, for the faith of Moses (and Aaron), for the fact that they were human
and had feelings that many of us have had, and yet demonstrated a “stubborn
faith” in you. Help us demonstrate that
same kind of faith, even when --- or perhaps especially when, things do not go
“smoothly”.
Amen
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