A New Beginning
Can
you think of a time in your life when you acted impulsively and came to
regret it? Maybe you bought a car on impulse and were sorry afterward.
Maybe it was that contract you signed without reading it carefully.
Maybe it was that business deal you entered into that you should have
taken more time to consider. Whatever the decision may have been, you
regretted it later.
I have discovered that God’s timing is just as important as God’s
will. In fact, the Bible talks a lot about timing. Ecclesiastes 3:1
says, “To everything there is a season, a time for every purpose under
heaven”
The Bible talks about a man of God who had really bad timing. If
this man were in a race, he would have been the one to come out of
nowhere, take the lead, and then suddenly self-destruct. The man I’m
speaking of is Moses.
Although Moses was one of the greatest men of God, he also was a man
who had some serious setbacks and committed serious sin. It is worth
noting that, along with Saul of Tarsus, Moses is one of the men God
used who actually was guilty of murder.
Moses was a bit on the impulsive side. I can understand that,
because I share that characteristic with him. I can be impulsive. But
being impulsive has its drawbacks, and Moses’ impulsiveness brought
some devastating results.
Moses was born at a time of extreme hardship in Israel’s history.
The descendents of Jacob had grown to about three million in Egypt and
had been forced into slavery. Pharaoh, seeing the Hebrews as a
potential threat, decreed that newborn Hebrew boys were to be drowned
in the Nile River.
As the children of Israel cried out to God for deliverance, enter
Moses, the man of God. First, he was the baby protected by God and
adopted by Pharaoh’s daughter. The Jewish historian, Josephus, tells us
that this Pharaoh had no son or heir; therefore, Moses was being
groomed to become the next Pharaoh of Egypt. He was being raised as
royalty, which meant that he would have been schooled in all that Egypt
had to offer.
But Moses still knew who he was. He was a true believer in the God
of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Underneath those Egyptian robes beat the
heart of a Hebrew.
Maybe that’s what caused him to swing into action when he saw an
Egyptian beating a Hebrew. The Bible says he looked “this way and that
way,” and then killed the Egyptian (see Exodus 2:12).
Moses’ heart was in the right place, but his actions were foolish,
to say the least. Clearly, the Lord had not told Moses to do this.
Instead of looking around, Moses should have been looking up.
Moses probably thought that his fellow Hebrews would be grateful for
what he had done, but things didn’t turn out that way. Everyone knew
what he did, but no one applauded. When Pharaoh heard what had
happened, Moses had to flee for his life. Off he went, into the
wilderness.
God wants us to do His will in His way in His timing.
Moses was a leader in training, but he wasn’t ready yet. He had lost
his people. He had lost his reputation. But he had not lost God. What
looked like the end was actually the beginning.
Forty years later, God appointed Moses to lead the children of
Israel out of Egypt. What Moses did not realize was that God had been
preparing him during that time. Notice what God said to him: “I am the
God of your father-the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of
Jacob” (Exodus 3:6).
What was God saying? I am the God of ordinary men who have
accomplished some extraordinary things. There is hope for you. I am not
just the God of Abraham. I am not just the God of Isaac and Jacob. I am
the God of Moses. I am calling you. I am giving you a second chance.
