Acts 7:30-36. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on December 18, 2022.
We have been looking at Stephen’s defense before the Sanhedrin, although he is actually on offense here. Last week, he reminded them about the rejection of Moses.
Today, we are going to be reminded of the fact that God later sends Moses back to Egypt to serve as His representative. He would be used first to deliver Israel from their bondage, and second to bring them to their promised inheritance.
Deliverance in God is not just about getting out of trials and difficulties. We cannot say, “God get me out of this difficulty,” and then, “I’ll take it from here,” after He delivers us. God is a deliverer, but He is not AAA. Of course, if the AAA guy tries to tell you how to live your life, you will remind him that you are only paying for him to tow your vehicle to the shop. However, with God, there is always a positive thing that God is bringing us towards when He delivers us out of difficult things.
Let’s look at our passage.
Stephen calls to their attention that the rejected Moses is sent back to Egypt to lead Israel out of slavery. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out why he would be pointing this out in light of the events surrounding Jesus. (The backdrop to this found in Exodus 3-4).
We last saw Moses hightailing it out of Egypt because Pharaoh has put his picture on the Top 10 Most Wanted List in all of Egypt’s post offices (just kidding about the picture). At 40 years of age, Moses flees from Egypt into the Sinai and then keeps going into what we would call northwest Saudi Arabia, the land of Midian in those days.
The Midianites came from a man named Midian. He was the offspring of Abraham and his marriage with Keturah, whom he had married after Sarah had died. The several sons that he had with her were given gifts and sent eastward so that they would not interfere with God’s promise to give the land to Isaac.
Moses meets a “priest of Midian” named Reuel, and also called Jethro. He marries one of Jethro’s daughters and has two children. It is 40 years later (Moses would then be 80) that God shows up to call him back to Egypt.
This part of the life of Moses is skipped over very quickly. In fact, this happens a lot in the Bible. Sometimes Christians can wonder why God doesn’t do something supernatural everyday in their life, but we forget that even biblical prophets sometimes felt the same way (see Habakkuk 3:2). God does do amazing supernatural things from time to time, but He also is with us in the in between times of routine. It is there that we live out the faithfulness of trusting Him.
In fact, human beings were not created to be in a frenetic state of excitement all of the time. It would kill us. So, we serve God greatly during the times of routine, even if it doesn’t seem to be something great to us.
This brings up another issue. If the only thing you ever do is marry and raise a family to replace yourself in the next generation with the torch of faith, then that is a great thing. Think of how many people have failed to do this, and have even caused the fall of people from believing God. We can be very poor at seeing what is really great.
We don’t really know where Moses received his understanding of God. Was it all from the bush forward, and directly from God? Or, is it possible that this priest of Midian, his father-in-law, still held to the faith of Abraham his ancestor? There is no way to know.
Let us notice that the call of God upon Moses began long before he could show himself faithful to God. God did not spare the child in the basket because his faith was so strong. Yet, there comes this time as an adult where God comes knocking, and Moses is going to need to respond with faith. It looks like Moses was a little shaky in his faith. At one point, he even tells God that the plan is great, but that He should do it with someone else. So, what is the key to responding in faith when God comes knocking? The key is to live a life of faith during the routine times. It may seem like God isn’t doing anything, but nothing in our life goes to waste with God.
The forty years of being trained in the wisdom of Egypt in the house of Pharaoh and the forty years of learning to be a husband, father, and shepherd in the desolate wilderness would be important parts of God’s preparation in the life of Moses. Don’t get me wrong. Everything you are going through is important for you right now, but it is also preparatory. We are not generally told why God allows us to go through what we do, but God will not waste it in the end. God often uses the routine times to build in us the greatest thing that we can have and that is faith in Him. So, let’s be faithful today.
At 80 years of age, Moses has a spectacular event. The Angel of the Lord appears to him in the middle of the wilderness in a burning bush. It is clear that he is not intending to go back to Egypt, but God has different plans. Don’t you just love it when God has plans other than what you have?
It is not a burning bush that draws his attention. I have read that bushes on fire are a common thing in that area. However, this bush is not being consumed by the fire. This is what causes Moses to go over and see what is up with this bush. It is then that he finds out that this is no normal bush and it is no normal fire. It is the Angel of the Lord.
This picture of a natural thing on fire by God and yet not consumed is an important one. It is a good picture of how God made human beings. Our God is a consuming fire, and yet, He created us to be filled with Him and yet not be destroyed. Of course, our fallen, mortal state does need to be resurrected in order for us to be perfectly fit to dwell in the presence of God. However, even in our mortal state, God has made us to be capable of being filled with His presence and displaying His glory without dying. Two things operate together to make this possible. First, there is His work of mitigating, or moderating, His powerful glory. However, there is also our faith in Him. God is to be feared because He does not suffer fools. However, the believer who trusts in Him does not need to fear that God’s presence will consume him.
This also connects to the Day of Pentecost. The 120 believers had tongues that looked like fire come down and set above their heads. They each became a bush on fire from the presence of God, and yet not consumed. Quite the opposite, they become a source of life. They are not a big Redwood, or a Cedar of Lebanon, but rather just a simple bush on fire of God.
The cross itself is the most ignoble tree of the earth, and yet the Son of God hung on that cross as the fire of God’s wrath came down upon him. The cross is a place of consuming and Jesus did die. Yet, he was not destroyed because He is the Lord of life.
This angel speaking from the bush is no normal angel. It is the Angel of the Lord. This passage in Exodus is one of the classic passages of demonstrating that this angel is unique from all of the others. Though he is an angel (messenger), he speaks as if he is God. In another place, God refers to this unique angel as having His Presence within him and having His Name upon Him. Some scholars of Israel before the first century would even refer to this as being a Visible Yahweh versus the Invisible Yahweh. It was a way of God accommodating Himself so that people could see and interact with Him. Of course, this Angel of the Lord could only be the Lord Jesus Christ.
Regardless, the Angel tells Moses to remove his sandals because he is on holy ground. The idea of sacred space is huge in the Old Testament. You don’t just walk into sacred space without making sure you have permission and do it in the proper way. To us moderns, it may appear that God is creating arbitrary barriers to approaching Him, but it is anything but arbitrary. We are taught to be very careful how we treat holy things, things set apart for God’s purposes, as opposed to the common things that are for our own purposes. Christ makes us holy and shows us how to humbly approach God the Father in prayer. This space is not holy because of its coordinates on the earth. It was holy because God was there.
This brings up another issue. What are God’s holy things? Do you not know that you were made to be a holy, sacred space, for God? Do I treat my life as a common thing to do whatever I want, or do I recognize that I am a holy person set apart for His purposes, and so I should be careful what I do? How many Christians tell themselves that fornication isn’t so bad because many people are doing far worse in this world. Yet, this excuse will not stand us in good stead. We should not fool ourselves that God won’t care. The only way to fix this is through repentance and faith in Jesus. This can cleanse us so that we can go forward. When the temple was defiled, you couldn’t just say, “Oops!” and then just continue on with sacrifices. They would have to stop and cleanse the temple before they could resume service to God. For Christians, we must listen to the conviction of the Holy Spirit, instead of grieving Him, and repent before the Lord while putting our trust in the way that Jesus shows us to live, in Him period.
The Lord also let’s Moses know who is talking to him, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Moses hides for fear of dying from seeing God, but God instead reveals to Moses a new name for Himself. He is to be called Yahweh, The Being One. In the past, He is the Being One; in the present, He is the Being One; in the future, He will still be The Being One. All things that exist find their source in The Being One.
Following this, the Angel has a message of deliverance for Israel. Three phrases are given by Stephen to represent God’s message: I have seen their oppression; I have heard their groaning; and, I have come down to rescue them.
Have you ever doubted that God saw your difficulties and heard your cries? Have you doubted because He didn’t come down and rescue you in the past? This is part of the faith that we are called to have. Imagine how many Israelites died in slavery before this moment. A generation passed away in liberty and then finally a generation will see deliverance. Is this fair?
We don’t always understand the timing of God, but know this: He always sees and hears, even if He doesn’t come down to rescue. Death itself is a type of rescue that takes the righteous into the presence of God. I doubt that in the Resurrection those who experienced deliverance in Egypt will grouse over those who didn’t. This kind of thing becomes irrelevant in light of eternity because they all had to have faith, whether waiting for deliverance, or being delivered.
So, why does God wait for deliverance? First, it calls for us to learn humility, which is an essential part of imaging God. Some would emphasize that none of us deserve deliverance, but I think this misses the point. There are things that we need to learn and experience before we are delivered. This is true as individuals, or as a nation, or as a world. God’s timing optimizes His grace with our ability to learn. God sees you and He has a day of deliverance for you regardless of how your trial goes. In fact, the cross itself is God declaring, “I see you; I hear you; and I have come down to save you!” In some ways, Moses is a type of Christ, but in this burning bush episode, he is a type of us coming to the cross and receiving a revelation of who God is. There as the wrath of God burns upon the Son of God, He tells us that He sees us and hears us and will save us. Yet, this burning God/man is asking you to participate in His deliverance of others!
Did God need Moses to deliver Israel? Why is God in Midian convincing Moses to go to Egypt? God technically doesn’t need us in the sense of our abilities, but He does need us in the sense that He created us to bear His image. No father needs their son to come and work with them. The boy isn’t good at it and often gets in the way. But, a father also needs, or wants badly, for his son to grow up and become a man like He is. Of course, we will never be Gods like our Father is, but we can participate in His divine nature as Sons of God. God often waits because it is the only way we will ever learn to become like Him, and He calls us to join Him in the deliverance of others (as well as ourselves) because He wants us to learn to become like Him!
Stephen emphasizes that God sends Israel a deliverer that they had rejected, “the Moses whom they disowned.” If they wanted to be delivered, then they would have to get behind Moses and follow him. There would not be another.
Moses would become a savior and a ruler over them because God chose him. However much Moses had been trained to lead, it is not he who would do the heavy lifting of saving Israel and bringing them to the promise land. God would do the great wonders and signs. Whereas, Moses is His representative. Even surviving in the desert is not mainly at the ability of Moses, but the provision of God. The ruling of Moses is mainly him explaining the laws that God had legislated. The ruling, and saving, of Israel by Moses is overshadowed by the Angel of the Lord, the true Savior and Ruler of Israel. Moses was simply a mediator.
This is the tension that exists between being called of God and yet not to do it in our own wisdom, strength, reason, etc. Sure, our past is preparatory, but not always for us to do what we think. Many times, our training helps us understand that God is working due to the contrast. Ultimately, we must be prayerfully making decisions and asking God for wisdom.
Are not our people in slavery today under the Pharaoh of this world? Can we not hear the Holy Spirit saying that He sees, hears, and has come down? Who among us will choose to labor with God? Perhaps today, He is intersecting your life and calling you to come with Him to work for the souls who are held in bondage to sin in this world.