The Bible says
in Exodus 2:12, that before Moses killed the Egyptian that was beating the
Hebrew, he looked "this way and that way," and then killed the Egyptian.
While we may think that Moses' heart was in the right place in his defense of
the Hebrew, his actions were foolish, and clearly, not been told by the Lord to
do it. Instead of looking around to insure no one was looking, Moses should
have been looking up. Moses acted out of impulse and being impulsive, can have
its drawbacks, as did Moses' impulsiveness, as it brought some devastating
results to him. While Moses might have been a leader in training, he wasn't
ready at that point. He had some serious schooling ahead of him, if he were to
be used of God. For what looked like the end, was actually the beginning, of a
plan that God had for Moses’ life and the people that he would lead under God’s
authority and leadership. There are many ways in which God’s reasoning and
actions make no sense to us. Often times we will ask God for help and our
enemies show up at our doorsteps. We trust in Him to provide and it appears as
though He withholds. We plead for a day without pain, and yet another rolls
around to bring us agony. One thing for sure is that God is never inconsistent,
but simply running according to another time schedule and another set of plans
and priorities.
While Moses questioned God concerning God’s
choosing him, the prophet Habakkuk questioned God’s plan to use a pagan people
to discipline the Hebrew children. It made no sense to either of these men. Yet
they both learned through the many years of God’s teaching and training them,
through mistakes and heartbreaks that no matter what may have come their way,
they would stay the course and serve God no matter what. When Moses approached
the Red Sea, he acted in frustration and not faith when he hit a rock that God
told him to merely speak to, a breach in faith that cost Moses getting into the
Promised Land. As great a man as Moses was, God held His ground on the
repercussions of consequence. While He forgave Moses, He did not allow Moses to
enter the promise land that he would lead God’s people up to, but not enter in
himself. Moses was only allowed to look upon the Promise Land, but not enter
it. However, Moses remained faithful to God even in this. For he knew that it
was his actions that brought him that consequence, not Gods choice.
Hab 2:1 says of Habakkuk, “Like a guard who
waits through his watch with eyes peeled for a sign of movement, Habakkuk
waited for God. Wait for the Lord; be strong, and let your heart take courage;
wait for the Lord! Ps. 27:14…and so we must, no matter what our eyes see, our
ears hear, or the condemnation that our hearts want to pass on to us, we must
stay the course. For God is greater than our hearts…I John 3:19-20 tells us
that are in Christ, “This is how we know that we belong to the truth and how we
set our hearts at rest in his presence: If our hearts condemn us, we know that
God is greater than our hearts, and He knows everything".
He may not appear to be there as of yet sweet
friend; but hold on, wait for Him, He is nearer than you may think!
Loving on you!
Bren
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