the Life of Moses3 - Learning In God's School of the Desert
Learning In God's School of the Desert
Series: The Life Of Moses
Scripture Reference: Exodus 2:15–25
Date: 7 May, 2015
Scripture Reading
let us rise to our feet and together read... Exodus 2:15–25
15 Now when Pharaoh heard this thing, he sought to slay Moses. But Moses fled from the face of Pharaoh, and dwelt in the land of Midian: and he sat down by a well.16 Now the priest of Midian had seven daughters: and they came and drew water, and filled the troughs to water their father's flock.17 And the shepherds came and drove them away: but Moses stood up and helped them, and watered their flock.18 And when they came to Reuel their father, he said, How is it that ye are come so soon to day?19 And they said, An Egyptian delivered us out of the hand of the shepherds, and also drew water enough for us, and watered the flock.20 And he said unto his daughters, And where is he? why is it that ye have left the man? call him, that he may eat bread.21 And Moses was content to dwell with the man: and he gave Moses Zipporah his daughter.22 And she bare him a son, and he called his name Gershom: for he said, I have been a stranger in a strange land.23 And it came to pass in process of time, that the king of Egypt died: and the children of Israel sighed by reason of the bondage, and they cried, and their cry came up unto God by reason of the bondage.24 And God heard their groaning, and God remembered his covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob.25 And God looked upon the children of Israel, and God had respect unto them.
This is the word of God. Thanks be to the LORD. May the sweet Holy Spirit add His manifold blessings to our text this morning... in our hearing. Amen! You may be seated in God's Presence.
Introduction
You will remember that when Moses stepped out on his own to become the deliverer of Israel it was an unmitigated disaster. He ended up killing an Egyptian and then hiding his body in the sand. In his failure we saw how no matter how talented or educated we may be we can do nothing without God. We saw that we are capable of terrible things if we persist in our own ways. We discovered that hiding our wrongs does not erase them it only postpones its discovery. Verse 15 tells us that, “When Pharaoh heard of this matter, he sought to kill Moses. But Moses fled from the face of Pharaoh and dwelt in the land of Midian; and he sat down by a well.”
After he slew the Egyptian, Moses thought that the Israelites would embrace him as their leader, but instead they rejected him. Moses must have been very despondent and discouraged after he was rejected by his own people and had to flee Egypt for fear of his life. He had inwardly presumed that he would be elevated into the position and ministry that God had for him. Instead of finding success, Moses found everything had fallen apart. Often when we think it is time for elevation, we may find ourselves in a wilderness situation.
When we left Moses last week he had fled from Egypt into the desert of Midian. Fleeing to the land of Midian, Moses ended up at a well, to which the daughters of a priest of Midian have brought their father’s flocks. [The Midianites were also descendents of Abraham (through his second wife - Kethurah- Gen. 25:1-2) and may have remained worshipers of the true God.] We find the story beginning in verse 16, “Now the priest of Midian had seven daughters. And they came and drew water, and they filled the troughs to water their father’s flock. (17) Then the shepherds came and drove them away; but Moses stood up and helped them, and watered their flock.”
After traveling a long way across the desert wilderness Moses “sat down by a well.” While he is there the seven daughters of the priest of Midian came to water their father’s flock. As they began drawing water to fill the troughs some shepherds came and ran them off, intending to use the water that had already been drawn to water their own flocks.
When we left Moses last week he had fled from Egypt into the desert of Midian. Fleeing to the land of Midian, Moses ended up at a well, to which the daughters of a priest of Midian have brought their father’s flocks. [The Midianites were also descendents of Abraham (through his second wife - Kethurah- Gen. 25:1-2) and may have remained worshipers of the true God.] We find the story beginning in verse 16, “Now the priest of Midian had seven daughters. And they came and drew water, and they filled the troughs to water their father’s flock. (17) Then the shepherds came and drove them away; but Moses stood up and helped them, and watered their flock.”
After traveling a long way across the desert wilderness Moses “sat down by a well.” While he is there the seven daughters of the priest of Midian came to water their father’s flock. As they began drawing water to fill the troughs some shepherds came and ran them off, intending to use the water that had already been drawn to water their own flocks.
Moses who noticed
what was happening “stood up and helped them.” I like to think that
words “stood up” have a double meaning, he not only stood to his feet
but he stood up for and protected these young women. He “helped them” by
running off the offending shepherds and he then helped them to water
their flocks. Notice that the former prince of Egypt helped these women
to water a flock of smelly sheep. Moses was already beginning to learn
the lessons of servanthood.
The young women then returned to their
home where the scripture says in verse 18, “When they came to Reuel
(roo’-el) their father, he said, “How is it that you have come so soon
today?” (19) And they said, “An Egyptian delivered us from the hand of
the shepherds, and he also drew enough water for us and watered the
flock.” (20) So he said to his daughters, “And where is he? Why is it
that you have left the man? Call him, that he may eat bread.”
Their father who is called Reuel (which means “friend of God”) is later called Jethro (3:1), one of names is probably the family name and the other is his title.
Jethro wants to know why they are back so early. They told him how “an Egyptian” (no doubt his speech and dress
had led to this conclusion) had defended them from the shepherds and
drew water for their flocks. Jethro responded by saying, “where is he?
Why is it that you have left the man? Call him, that he may eat bread.”
Their father gently chastised his daughters for not extending the
hospitality of a meal to this stranger who had helped them. So the
daughters go out to bring Moses to their father.
Jethro (or Reuel) gave Moses his daughter, Zipporah, and welcomed him into his family (Ex. 2:18-22). Moses spent the next 40 years shepherding Jethro’s flocks (Ex. 3:1). This act of righteousness opened the door of hope for him and enabled him to be cared for, for the next 40 years of his life. It released God’s provision for his life. Our actions and attitudes, even in the valley of despair, are very important.
We also need to consider the fact that God sends people to look after us when we go through trials. He has holy comforters who succour us in these wilderness experiences. At the same time, we have to be very much in tune with God, because He may cause people who are in wilderness experiences to come across our path so that we may help and care for them in these difficult times.
Sermon
With the great
economy Moses records how his chance encounter at the well resulted in a
length stay in Midian, his marriage and the birth of his first son.
According to verse 21, “Then Moses was content to live with the man, and
he gave Zipporah his daughter to Moses. (22) And she bore him a son.
He called his name Gershom, for he said, “I have been a stranger in a
foreign land.”
Can you believe it? A man with an advanced knowledge
of science, literature, and military tactics seeking out an existence on
the backside of the desert, living with his father-in-law, raising a
couple of boys and watching over a flock of sheep that did not even
belong to him.
Moses entered the desert at the age of forty and didn't leave until he was eighty (Acts 7:30).
So during what most people would have been considered by many as the
most productive years of a person’s life – Moses tended sheep in what
must have seemed like Hell’s backyard. He was a man who did not become
productive for God until he was eighty years of age.
- The first forty years he was nursed by his mother and educated in the courts of the Pharaoh.
- The second forty years he spent in the desert taught by God and
- the final forty years he sent with the spend with the Hebrew people in the wilderness.
Dwight L. Moody phrased it this way, “Moses spent
his first forty years thinking he was somebody. He spent his second
forty years learning he was a nobody. He spent his forty years
discovering what God can do with a nobody.” [as quoted by Charles
Swindoll. Moses: A Man of Selfless Dedication. (Nashville: Word, 1999)
p. 20]
Moses now enters into the second aspect of his schooling.
“God’s School of the Desert.” Perhaps you have taken some courses there
too. The desert is a place of desolation. Some people spend a few weeks
in the wilderness. For others it is months. Moses walked this barren
land for forty years.
Your wilderness experience may involve caring
for an ailing family member over an extended time. For others your dry
and desert time is a physical condition that does not improve. It could
come in the form of an absent spouse or a rebellious child. It could be a
thankless job or an unending routine. The desert can wear any number of
faces. It can be crowded with people, yet lonely. Does God know? Yes!
Does God care what you are going through? Yes! After all he is the one
who allowed you to be there. His schooling includes some time in the wilderness, for it is there that he gets our attention. Sometimes
God has to take us to the barren wilderness places before he can teach
us what we need to learn.
When faced with time in the wilderness we
are prone to offer one of three responses.
- The first is, “I don’t need it!” My spouse may need it, my sister may need it, my neighbor may need it, but I certainly do not need it.”
- The second response is, “I’m tired of it.” No matter how long we may have been in a desert experience it seems to long. But Moses remained in the desert for forty years!!! Do you ever feel like saying, “Lord I weary to the point of death with this situation, this person, this circumstance. I feel trapped, and I have had it.”
- The response that God is waiting to hear is, “Here I am Lord what is that you want me to learn?” You will really never graduate from the school of the desert until you do.
God never does Anything without a Purpose.
God put Moses through forty years in the wilderness and then had him
turn right around and lead the children of Israel for forty more years
in the desert. Moses had a forty year course of study of survival in the
wilderness so that he would know how to lead a whole nation through a
similar wilderness.
Why does God lead us through desert places?
Moses himself tells us that it is in order that God can humble us, and
test us, that the true condition of our heart might be revealed. It is
not so that God can know us, he already does, it so that we can know
ourselves. In Deuteronomy 8:2
says, “And you shall remember that the LORD your God led you all the
way these forty years in the wilderness, to humble you and test you, to
know what was in your heart, whether you would keep His commandments or
not.”
God taught Moses some important lessons in the desert that he
could not have taught him anywhere else.
The first thing that I want to consider is that God taught Moses how to deal with failure in his past, he taught him how to deal with memories.
As Moses marched off into the
desert his heart was heavy with regret. Have you ever been truly
disappointed with yourself and your own actions? Have you ever felt that
you messed things up so badly that you feel that it is hopeless? That
you have whatever it is can never be straightened out. Well I believe
that Moses felt that way about himself. He must have believed that God
could not, would not ever use him again. God used the years in the
wilderness to teach Moses how to forgive himself. Can you imagine what
the 40 years guiding the whole nation of Israel through the wilderness
would have been like if Moses had not learn to first forgive himself so
that could forgive others.
A Second important thing that God taught
Moses in the “School of the Desert” was how to handle monotony, how to
wait on God. God is not at all concerned about your concept of time.
God is not limited by time. He has His own perfect plan and His own perfect timetable. Forty years in the desert taught Moses how to wait on God.
God never leaves us Alone in the Desert
In Deuteronomy 32,
verses 10 we read, “He found him in a desert land And in the wasteland,
a howling wilderness; He encircled him, He instructed him, He kept him
as the apple of His eye.”
These verses can be personalized for use.
The “He” in these verses is God. These verses would say to us today,
“God found you in a desert land…God found you in a howling wilderness.
God encircled you. He instructed you. And kept you as the apple of his
eye (literally the pupil of his eye).”
When we find ourselves in a wilderness experience we feel that God has either abandoned us or that he does not care. Neither of course is true. But before giving into feelings of abandonment we need to take a closer look at those verses in Deuteronomy 32.
These verses tell us four things that God does for us.
- First, He encircles us.
- Second, He instructs or cares for us.
- Third, He guards us as the pupil of his eye. Have you ever thought of how protective you are of your eyes. One of the reasons that I do not wear contact lenses is that no one and I mean no one is going to put anything into my eye. The last time the ophthalmologist tried to do one of those glaucoma test that they do by putting an instrument against your eye ball, he finally had to do it on the outside of my eye lid. I am very protective of my eyes and so are you. That is the point God shields us with the greatest of care. God has neither abandoned nor forsaken you.
- In the two verses that follow verse 10 we are given the fourth thing that God does for us in our wilderness experience, he guides us. The verse says, “As an eagle stirs up its nest, Hovers over its young, Spreading out its wings, taking them up, Carrying them on its wings, (12) So the LORD alone led him, …”
Although we may “feel” like we are alone in our
wilderness experiences we are not. “Whether you have known it our not,
felt it or not, even believed it or not, God has not taken His hand off
your life… It is dry. It is lonely. You feel dismal and sad. But
whatever your emotions may be telling you, the Bible says you not alone.
”[Charles Swindoll. Moses: A Man of Selfless Dedication. (Nashville:
Word, 1999) pp. 76, 77]
God Never Forgets His Promises
Just
based on what we have read thus far we might be tempted to think that
the life of Moses ended in obscurity. But in spite of the appearances,
God is very much at work as we see in the final verses of this chapter.
In verse 23 we are told, “Now it happened in the process of time that
the king of Egypt died. Then the children of Israel groaned because of
the bondage, and they cried out; and their cry came up to God because of
the bondage." It is highly probable that Moses hidden away in the
wasteland of the Midian desert still heard about the plight of the
Hebrew people. His heart must have ached to do something to help them
but this time he did not go charging back he waited and he rested and
relied on God.
Verses 24-25 tells us, “So God heard their groaning, and God remembered His covenant
with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob. (25) And God looked upon the
children of Israel, and God acknowledged them.
Humanly speaking it
looks as if everything is working against Israel. But our text uses
four verbs to record the depth of God’s response to the groanings and
the cries of his people;
- “God heard…,
- God remembered…,
- God looked…,
- God acknowledged (was concerned).”
The facts are that God is very informed,
involved and intent upon fulfilling His promises and His purposes for
Israel.
Invitation And The Final Challenge
If you find yourself in “God’s School of
the Desert” don’t despair. God has a purpose for you being there. God
does not do anything without a purpose. God has some things that He
wants you to learn. Could it be like Moses that you need to learn to
deal with some memories of past failures, you need to learn to put them
in the past? Perhaps you have received the forgiveness of God and of
others but you have not forgiven yourself. You keep beating up yourself
for past mistakes and shortcomings. It is time to put it in the past.
Remember that there are no short cuts through the wilderness time, it
time to stop running from one dead end to another and wait until God
moves you. It is here that you will learn things that you will not
learn anywhere else.

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