Read Exodus 4.
Moses moved from questioning what God commanded him to do to outright rejection of what God said. All of his excuses centered on his feelings of inadequacy. Meanwhile, God continued to demonstrate that the job depended upon His adequacy, not Moses.
With each of
his five excuses, God countered with a promise.
1. Moses:
"Who am I that I should go...?" (3:11)
God: A promise of His presence. "I will be with you."
2. Moses:
"What is his name?" or "By what authority would I approach this
task?" (3:13)
God: A promise of His Person. "I AM.
3. Moses:
"They will not believe me." (4:1)
God: A promise of His miraculous power.
4. Moses:
"I am not eloquent." (4:10)
God: A promise of presentation. "I will teach you."
5. Moses:
"Send someone else." (4:13)
God: A
promise of a partner.
God wanted to
use Moses to help millions of enslaved people; a priceless opportunity! But
Moses tried to give it away. God wanted to give Moses national and
international influence as a leader. But Moses wanted to protect
himself and stay where he was. God wanted to demonstrate His omnipotence. Moses
only focused on his own limitations.
While God
prepared Moses, He also prepared the people.
1. The people
did believe the message.
2. The people
realized that God had heard and was answering their prayers.
3. They people worship the LORD.
The LORD
delights in using people who know that adequacy for the assignment in not
within them. The Apostle Paul put it this way in 2 Corinthians
4:7-"But we have this treasure in jars of clay, to show that the
surpassing power belongs to God and not to us." Humble service with
dependence on God allows all the glory to go to Him alone.
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