United in Christ Lutheran Church, Lewisburg, PA
Video of the sermon can be viewed here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KbXAx0atGBc&feature=youtu.be
First reading: Exodus 2:11-15a, 23-25 (Moses killing an Egyptian and fleeing to Midian)
First reading: Exodus 2:11-15a, 23-25 (Moses killing an Egyptian and fleeing to Midian)
Psalm 18:1-6 (God delivered me from my enemies)
Second reading: Exodus 3:1-12; 4:10-17 (Moses encountering
the burning bush)
Gospel: Matthew
4:13-17 (the people who sat in darkness have seen a great light)
Note: The week prior to the sermon, the congregation was invited to write down their weakness on a leaf that we then attached to the burning bush. We displayed the "burning bush" in chancel during the service.
The baby in the basket has now become a man. Raised in Pharaoh’s household, he certainly
enjoyed every privilege of being a princess’s son – a comfortable life of
royalty and power, wanting for nothing, access to every privilege he could
desire. But he was always uncomfortable
with this comfortable life. Because he
always knew these Egyptians were not his people. And that the ones to whom he truly belonged -
the Hebrews - were slaving away while he enjoyed this very comfortable
life.
Certainly, he must have been grateful to the Egyptian
princess who rescued him and brought her to the palace to live in safety and
luxury. He had grown strong and healthy
on the excellent food of the palace . . . cultivated, harvested, transported,
cooked and served to him by Israelite slaves.
He would have worn the finest of clothes and slept on the smoothest of
bedsheets made from Egyptian cotton . . . picked, combed, spun and woven for
him by Israelite slaves. He would have
enjoyed the grandest of homes . . . built, cleaned and served by Israelite
slaves. Are you seeing a pattern here?
Perhaps it is no wonder that Moses suffered from a speech
impediment. Tutored by the best Egyptian
teachers, the boy would have received the best education available. He would have learned the meaning of
cuneiform, the Egyptian writing made up of symbols and pictographs. But when it came to speaking Egyptian – the words caught in his throat. This was not his language.
The language of his people was Hebrew. Perhaps he remembered the words his mother
spoke to him as a toddler, before she weaned him and gave him over to Pharaoh’s
daughter completely. She would have taught
him to praise God using those words: Shema
Yisrael, Adonai eloheinu, Adonai echad.
Hear, O Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is one.
This was his mother-tongue.
But the language of his palace-mother never felt right in his mind or
his mouth. The prayers to all those
different Egyptian gods and goddesses never fit well for him. So when he spoke,
the words came out wrong. It was as if
they were wrestling with his Hebrew words, making him stutter when he tried to
speak.
He likely endured a great deal of teasing from the Egyptian
boys. Everyone knew he looked
different. His eyes were not as
dark. His skin was lighter than the other
boys. His nose was not like theirs. His hair was different. And his speech made him sound stupid. Only because he was the adopted son of
Pharaoh’s daughter did they hold back their mockery. But when she was not around, he was at their
mercy. “Stupid Hebrew.” “Where’s your daddy, sandy-skin?” “Don’t you belong down there with the other
slaves hauling up bricks?” “He talks
like he’s got a brick for a tongue.” “Brick-tongue,
brick-tongue, Moses has a brick tongue!”
This must have gone on for years, the taunting and
teasing. He wanted so badly to speak up
for himself and to speak out against the ill-treatment of the slaves, to stand
up for them. But his brick-tongue crushed
any words that might have arisen for him to speak.
But then there came that day when he left the palace. He needed to see for himself what their world
was like – the world of the Hebrews.
That day in the brick yard – that’s when he saw their true
suffering. When he came upon the Egyptian task master
brutalizing one of the Hebrews, Moses snapped.
He could no longer contain his rage against the injustice he had
witnessed all his life. He picked up one
of those hated bricks and slammed it into the skull of the man with the whip,
killing him instantly.
You would have thought his kinsman would have been grateful. But no - his fellows Hebrews had no respect
for the palace-pampered prince. In their
eyes Moses did not belong with them, either.
He may have looked like a Hebrew.
But his clothes, his posture, his rich-smelling cologne all gave him the
bearing of an Egyptian, the oppressor.
Word spread of what Moses had done, the murder he committed. Now he was hated by Hebrews and hunted by
Egyptians. He had to escape.
He needed a new life.
A different life. He needed to go
someplace where no one knew him. Where
no one would care whether he was Hebrew or Egyptian. Where no one would know whether he was a
prince or a slave. He just needed a
fresh start.
And he found it. Far
to the south, down to the southern tip of the Sinai Peninsula, he found a
mountain-dwelling people who took him in.
And he found a woman who accepted him for who he was – brick tongue and
all. And Zipporah’s father Jethro became
like a father to Moses. It is likely that
Jethro, being the wise, observant priest that he was, knew that there was
something special about Moses, even when the young man couldn’t see that in
himself. All Moses knew about himself were
his weaknesses – his speech impediment and his past crime. He was ashamed of both, so he kept mostly to himself
living among the Midianites. All he
wanted was to leave everything behind and live a quiet life tending sheep alone,
wandering on the mountains.
Jethro knew this, and gave his son-in-law the space he
needed. But he knew that Moses’ life was
meant for something more. And so one
morning as they sat eating the meal served by Zipporah, Jethro said, “Today I
would like you to set off for the mountain of Horeb and pasture the flock
there.” Being a priest, Jethro knew that
if anyone had a chance of encountering the Divine, going to Horeb would be the
most logical place to go. It was the
mountain of God. Moses didn’t know
that. But Jethro did. And so that’s where he sent Moses, hoping
that his son-in-law would have an encounter with the Divine to guide him back onto
the right path.
And that is where Moses found God. Or rather, where God found him. He had been found in the water of the Nile as
a baby; now he was found by the fire on the mountain as a man. And he was a man
consumed by shame, grief and loneliness.
Perhaps it was deliberate, then,
that God would choose a burning bush to make God’s self known to Moses. A bush that burns but is not consumed. Who is this God that can create such a
thing? It is the God who speaks to Moses
in his own language. Not Egyptian, but
Hebrew. ‘I am the God of your father,
the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.’ Those names, like a faint childhood
memory. Moses recalled his mother
speaking to him about those men, about where he comes from, about the people
who are his kin. And now here this God
who is speaking to him from the fire, telling him that he is to free his kin
from the Egyptians, and that a land of freedom is prepared for them.
You would think Moses would have been
excited by this news of liberation. But
no. How does he respond? Like a kid with a brick tongue and a
checkered past. “Who am I? Who am I that I should go to Pharaoh and
bring the Israelites out of Egypt?”
Ah, but you see, it’s not just
about who Moses is. God’s response
is: “I will be with you.” It’s not just about who you are, it’s about
who I am, says God, and what I will do, and the promise I make to you right
here on this mountain. You are like this
bush – you may have any number of faults and sins in your past. But I will not let them consume you. In fact, I will use them to bring light to
the people.
Where is your leaf on the burning
bush?
I know where my leaf is. I know the thing that I am not proud of, the
aspect of myself that is my weakness, what I would rather run away from. I know what part of myself and my past
threatens to consume me. But I also know
what happens when God enters into that burning bush. Moses’ encounter with God on that mountain
tells me two things. First, God has the
power to keep me from being consumed by my past and by my faults and weaknesses. And second, God can use our weaknesses to
provide light to others.
Where is your leaf on this bush?
What is the shame or crime or mistake or
weakness you have that when God gives you a mission, gives you your marching
orders, offers you an opportunity to bring light and hope and warmth to
another, what is it that causes you to echo Moses’ words: “O my Lord, please send someone else. I’m not the man or woman for the job.”
Yes, you are, answers the Lord, the fire shooting up into
the sky. And you’re not going to have to
do this by yourself. I’m sending your
brother Aaron. He will help you. Do you hear that? Not everyone back home has rejected you. Aaron has been hearing about you from his
sister from the time he was a child. You’ve
never met him, but he’s been watching you from afar. And when you came to the brickyard that day,
he was there. He noticed, he saw, he was
inspired by your courage and your righteous indignation. Finally, finally, someone is willing to stand
up for us, to be our advocate. You tried
to run away, but he followed you. He
came to find you. Together you will lead
your people out of slavery and into freedom.
I don’t know how God is speaking to you today. Probably not a burning bush. Or maybe it is. I don’t know what your faults and past and
weaknesses are. Probably not a speech
impediment or the crime of taking a life.
Or maybe it is. But I do know
this. Wherever you are right now, God
has a job for you to do, and God is not finished with you yet. You are not alone. Your Jethro is guiding you. Listen to him or her. And even now, someone has noticed you, is
coming to find you, and wants to work with you to change things, to make things
better, to bring light and warmth and hope into this world. Your Aaron is on the way.
It’s not just about who you are, but who God is. And God is.
God is.
Amen.