Showing posts with label burning bush. Show all posts
Showing posts with label burning bush. Show all posts

Monday, 21 March 2022

Moses - it's never too late

I always find the story of Moses most encouraging. Despite his mistakes, despite his age, despite his doubts and fears, God used him powerfully. God saved his life and turned an arrogant and then fearful man into his vessel, submitted to him – a humble man, more humble than anyone else (Numbers 12: 3) and through him led a whole nation out of captivity into a new land, as God had promised. 

Moses was born into a time of infanticide and survived. He not only survived but thrived in the court of Pharaoh and according to Stephen, 'was educated in all the wisdom of the Egyptians and was powerful in speech and action' (Acts 7: 22). He was also raised knowing he was a Hebrew, and he had a destiny, to rescue his people from slavery. Like many before and since, he tried to make his destiny come to fruition in his way and time – and it didn’t work. Instead, he had to flee into the desert to Midian for 40 years. 

I sometimes ponder what Moses thought about his destiny during those 40 years. I am sure he thought it was all over, settled down in his new life with Zipporah and probably put his time in Egypt down to experience. I mean he hardly needed the wisdom of the Egyptians to be a shepherd. But again, it is surprising how many of God’s leaders were shepherds. Maybe we should send today’s ministers-in-training for a module on shepherding! 


And then after 40 years, God met Moses at the burning bush and commissioned him now ‘to go to Pharaoh to bring my people the Israelites out of Egypt’ (Exodus 3: 10). By this time, at the age of 80, Moses was not keen to go back to Egypt and Pharaoh. All his pride, all his trust in his own ability had vanished and now he had to learn to trust God.  Five times he argued with God about his calling and in the end, the only concession he negotiated was for Aaron to go with him and speak on his behalf. This was his calling and not even his brother could fulfil it. The man ‘powerful in speech and action’ had disappeared and the humble man powerful in God’s word and action was beginning to take shape.

Through the obedience of performing the 10 plagues, Moses learned that the only way to become the man God wanted him to be was to trust God and do things his way 

Miracle upon miracle followed; the Israelites plundered Egypt of quantities of gold, silver and jewels (enough to build the furnishings of the tabernacle), the angel of death passed over their homes with the blood of the lamb on their doorposts, a million people with all their animals left Egypt, crossed the Red Sea and the powerful Egyptian army was annihilated. But they were free at least from the land of slavery, even if the slavery mentality was never fully delivered.   

For 40 years, Moses led these tiresome, doubting, idol-worshipping, grumbling and complaining people to the edge of the Promised Land. His destiny was fulfilled even if he never actually entered the land himself. Moses had to deal with his brother leading the people into idolatry, his brother and sister leading a rebellion, various other tragic rebellions but he also met with God in powerful, divine visitations. 

Moses’s story is one of encouragement. No matter how old we are, God has not finished with us till we take our final breath. If you are feeling God has forgotten you, your destiny is lying in tatters it is time to pick it up, dust it off and apply faith-filled prayers and see what God will do because ‘Nothing is impossible with God’ (Luke 2: 37). 



Wednesday, 27 April 2016

Born to burn


Romans 12: 11 Never be lacking in zeal, but keep your spiritual fervour, serving the Lord

The church was born on the day of Pentecost in fire. 

Acts 2: 1 – 4 When the day of Pentecost came, they were all together in one place. Suddenly a sound like the blowing of a violent wind came from heaven and filled the whole house where they were sitting. They saw what seemed to be tongues of fire that separated and came to rest on each of them. All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit enabled them.

Fire draws a crowd and the fire of God drew the crowd at Pentecost. It transformed a fisherman into an orator who preached with passion and conviction and 3000 were saved. It so inspired those early disciples that they revolutionised their world. They were prepared to die for the one who had died for them.

There are many references to fire in the Bible and most of them have to do with either the presence of God or his judgment.  As Simon Ponsonby wrote ‘If we will not embrace the fire of his love, we will experience it as the fire of his judgment.’

Moses met God at a burning bush – a place made holy by God’s presence so that Moses had to remove his shoes. I believe God placed a spark of his fire in Moses at that encounter that changed him from a timid shepherd into a man who could confront Pharaoh, one of the mightiest leaders of the known world. 

We read in Exodus 11 that after Moses had accosted Pharaoh for the final time ‘Moses, hot with anger, left Pharaoh’. What had happened to the timid shepherd? The fire of God had changed him.

Many of the rebellions against God and Moses in the desert were dealt with by fire from the golden calf (Exodus 32:20)  to Korah’s rebellion (Numbers 16: 31 – 35).

God’s presence was revealed time and again with fire. Fire on Mount Sinai, the pillar of fire that led God’s people through the desert, Elijah and the prophets of Baal and the chariot of fire that took Elijah up to heaven. The sacrifice at the instigation of the priesthood was consumed by heavenly fire as was the sacrifice at the dedication of the temple.

In the New Testament John the Baptist promised that Jesus ‘will baptize with the Holy Spirit and fire’ (Matthew 3:11). When Jesus returns it will be with ‘blazing fire’ (II Thessalonians 1: 7).  Our God after all is ‘a consuming fire’ (Deuteronomy 4: 24).

Paul inspires and exhorts us to be people of passion and fire – to keep our zeal alight and to blaze with spiritual fervour.  

Luke warm Christians have been the bane of the Church and never more so than in the Western church in the 21st century where respectability and political correctness and God-help-us entertainment have infiltrated the ranks.

God is stirring up a fresh generation of radical, burning Christians. He wants believers who will be like John Wesley. ‘I felt ablaze with a desire to go the length and breadth of Wales to tell of the Saviour.’

I love the quote from W E Sangster when interviewing a nervous young man who said that he was not the type to set the Thames on fire replied, ‘I’m not interested to know if you could set the Thames on fire but if I was to pick you up by the scruff of the neck and drop you into the Thames, would it sizzle!”

God is looking for a generation of sizzling Christians whose lives have been burnt up on the altar of his love who are now ablaze with his presence. Zeal needs a fuel. The fuel is God’s presence, daily pursued by people not prepared to be half-hearted or lukewarm but devoted to their Lord and Saviour.

The giants of our day are not going to be overthrown by timid, fearful Christians but by burning Christians. That does not necessarily mean noisy and outspoken.  Quiet and passionate is powerful.


Let’s put some fuel on the fire of our lives and burn with God’s love that transforms our world.

Footnote: I am grateful to Simon Ponsonby and his book on Romans entitled God is for us. I have shamelessly taken the title of this blog from him.