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Moses: The Servant of God
Moses: The Servant of God
Moses: The Servant of God
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Moses: The Servant of God

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This volume shows that Moses was like other men. His power came from simple faith and making himself the "Servant of God".
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 1, 2015
ISBN9781619580541
Moses: The Servant of God
Author

F. B. Meyer

Frederick Brotherton Meyer (1847–1929) was a Bible teacher, pastor, and evangelist of German descent, born in London. He attended Brighton College and Regent's College, and graduated from the University of London in 1869.Meyer influence giants of the faith like Charles H. Spurgeon who said, “Meyer preaches as a man who has seen God face to face.” Meyer led a long and fruitful life, preaching more than 16,000 sermons, before he went home to be with the Lord in 1929.

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    Moses - F. B. Meyer

    1

    OUR STAND POINT

    By faith, Moses . . .

    —HEB. 11:24.

    THE WRITER of the Epistle to the Hebrews lays bare the secret of the marvels effected by the heroes of Hebrew story. Obedient to his summons, they range themselves in one great battalion, and with united breath cry, Why marvel ye at these things? Or why look ye so earnestly on us, as though by our own power or holiness we had effected them? The God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, the God of our fathers, made bare his holy arm and wrought by us. And his name, through faith in his name, hath done all these wonderful works.

    We make a profound mistake in attributing to these men extraordinary qualities of courage and strength of body or soul. To do so is to miss the whole point of the reiterated teaching of Scripture. They were not different from ordinary men, except in their faith. In many respects it is most likely that they were inferior to ourselves. We would probably be much surprised if we were to encounter them in the daily walks of modern life, and would find it almost impossible to believe that they accomplished such prodigies of valor, endurance and deliverance. Gideon and Barak, Samson and Jephthah, were rather of the type of the sturdy Borderers of olden days whose wild doings kept our northern counties in constant agitation than like our modern clerics or Christian philanthropists. But there was one characteristic common to them all, which lifted them above ordinary men and secured for them a niche in the temple of Scripture: that they had a marvelous faculty of faith—which, indeed, is but the capacity of the human heart for God. Four times over this is cited as the secret of all that Moses did for his people.

    The same truth is repeatedly corroborated in the teaching of our Lord. He never stops to ask what may be the specific quantity of power, or wisdom, or enthusiasm which exists in his disciples. In his judgment these things are as the small dust of the balance, not to be taken into serious consideration and not likely to affect the aggregate results of a man’s life. But his incessant demand is for faith. If only there be faith, though it be but as a grain of mustard seed, sycamore trees can be uprooted, mountains cast into the midst of the sea, and demons exorcised from their victims. To a father he once said: "There is no if in my power; it is in thy faith. If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth."

    And what is this faith? It is not some inherent power or quality in certain men by virtue of which they are able to accomplish special results unrealized by others. It is rather the power of putting self aside that God may work unhindered through the nature. It is the attitude of heart which, having ascertained the will of God, and being desirous of becoming an organ for it, goes on to expect that God will work out his purposes through its medium. It is, in brief, that capacity for God which appropriates him to its uttermost limit and becomes the channel or vehicle through which he passes forth to bless mankind. The believer is the God-filled, the God-moved, the God-possessed man; and the work which he effects in the world is not his, but God’s through him.

    There are, therefore, these necessary conditions of all true faith:

    The sense of helplessness and nothingness.

    An absolute assurance of being on God’s plan.

    Entire consecration, that God may work out his will through heart and life.

    The daily food of promise.

    A daring to act, in utter independence of feeling, on a faith which reckons absolutely on the faithfulness of God.

    It will be our contention throughout our study of the remarkable life before us that, though Moses may have had commanding features of mind and body, and have been versed in all the learning of his time, yet the marvelous outcome of his lifework was not due to any of these qualities but to the faith which knit his soul to God. His faith sufficed to do what all his other qualities, without his faith, must have failed in doing.

    We hope to go further and show that all the blessings which God in his mindfulness of his covenant bestowed on Israel came to that rebellious and stiff-necked people through the channel of Moses’ faith. It is God’s method to seek the cooperation of man in the execution of his purposes, and to fulfill his promise through his servants’ faith. In this case it was Moses who was called into partnership with Jehovah, and it was through his faith that God fulfilled the promise made to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.

    Each of the above-mentioned conditions of a mighty faith was fulfilled in the history of Moses.

    He was allowed to make his first efforts for the emancipation of his people in the energy of his own strength, and to fail egregiously; so that he fled away to Midian, abandoning all hope of delivering them, and spending his years in solitude and exile, until it was with the greatest difficulty that he could be induced to undertake the divine commission. He was reduced to the last extreme of helpless nothingness when the burning bush flamed in his path—a symbol of utter weakness, possessed and indwelt yet unconsumed by God, who is a consuming fire.

    He could have no doubt as to God’s plan, for that lay unfolded before him in the promise made to Abraham long years before, fixing four hundred years as the limit of the Egyptian sojourn. And, in addition, God distinctly told him that he had come down to deliver.

    He was as thoroughly yielded to the purpose of God as the staff which he held in his hand was to his own will. Hence his chosen name, the servant of the Lord; and the constant recurrence of the phrase, as the Lord commanded Moses.

    He fed daily on the promises of God, pleading them in prayer, and leaning his whole weight upon them. And he often knew what it was to leave behind him the familiar and tried for the strange and new; at the bidding of God, he stepped out, though there seemed nothing to tread upon, launching himself and three millions of people absolutely on the care of God, assured that God’s faithfulness could not fail.

    His faith made Moses all he was. We shall see this more clearly as we proceed. For it is our eager desire to learn exactly how such a faith as his was produced. Why should we not have it? God’s methods are never out of date. It is certain that we shall have his faith if we but pay the price of enduring his discipline. And if only we possessed his faith, why should we not see another Exodus?—seas seamed with paths of salvation; foes defied; chains snapped; captives emancipated; and Jehovah worshiped with songs of triumph! Surely there is no limit to the possibilities of a life which has become the aperture or channel through which God can pour himself forth.

    Are you willing to die to your own strength; to forsake your own plans for God’s; to seek out and do his will absolutely; to take up the attitude of entire and absolute surrender to his purposes; to feed daily on the promises of God, as a girl on the pledge of her absent lover; to step out in faith, reckoning, without emotion of any kind, on the faithfulness of God, only fully persuaded that he will perform all that he has promised? Then surely through you God will, here or hereafter, work as in the times of old, of which our fathers have told us.

    It is certain, as the present age draws to a close, that God has great schemes on hand which must shortly be realized. According to his invariable method he will have to perform them through the instrumentality and faith of men; the one question is, Are we in such a condition, is our faith of such a nature, that he can work by us to the glory of his holy name? Let us ponder well the lessons taught in the life and character of Moses, that in due time we too may become vessels meet for the Master’s use and prepared to every good work.

    2

    HIS MOTHER’S FAITH

    By faith Moses, when he was born, was hid three months of his parents, because they saw he was a proper child; and they were not afraid of the king’s commandment.

    —HEB. 11:23.

    IT WAS on a very unfriendly world that the little babe opened his eyes. Without, all was as fair as nature and art could make it. Hard by the mean cottage, which for a brief space was to shelter him, the mighty Nile rolled between its reedy banks, reflecting on its broad bosom the deep azure of the arching heavens by day, and the starry constellations of the night. Within the easy distance of a maiden’s morning walk stood the great city of Memphis, metropolis of Egypt and seat of the court; center of trade and art and war and religion—the focus to which the national life converged.

    Past that cottage-home would go royal processions, as in solemn state the monarch went forth to war, or came down to the Nile brink to worship. Priests from all parts of the land would pass it on their way to the mighty Temple of Phthah, whose pillared avenues, and sculptured galleries, and hieroglyphed chambers were the result of centuries of industry, and told the story of the generations that had built them; but how little would they dream that the site of that humble cottage would attract the interest of generations to the end of time, when their lordly temple had fallen into an indistinguishable heap! And the perpetual supply of leeks and melons and garlic, of barley and wheat and rye, of delicate fabrics from the loom, for which the Egyptians became so famous, of spice and balm for the vast City of the Dead, and of all the multitudinous provision for the demands of a large and wealthy population must have covered the neighboring roads with an unceasing stream of camels and asses and caravans, and the river with an innumerable flotilla of boats, barges, and ships. Not far away, across the level sands, were the pyramids, which even then were becoming venerable with age and were destined to remain for forty centuries, witnesses alike to man’s instinctive belief in his immortality and to his selfish indifference to the anguish of his fellows. Amid these circumstances of wealth and splendor the little babe was born to an unkindly lot.

    He belonged to an alien race.—More than three hundred years before, the forefathers of his people had emigrated from the neighboring land of Palestine at the invitation of the Prime Minister of the time, who was connected with them by the ties of kinship and race. The king had welcomed them as likely to be valuable allies; for he also belonged to a foreign race, and sat on an unstable throne. At his command they had settled in the best of the land, a strip of green, called Goshen, situated amid vast tracks of sand. There they prospered and multiplied, till they numbered near upon two million souls. But they remained as distinct a people as they are now in every nation under heaven, and as such were open to suspicious hate.

    He belonged to an oppressed race.—A different dynasty had succeeded to that which welcomed them, and one to whom the name of Joseph had no charm. At the time of which we write, a tiny cloud of impending war trembled on the Eastern sky and suggested to the reigning monarch the fear that there might be a coalition between his enemies and the Hebrew race, which had grown into such numbers and might as to be very formidable. He resolved, therefore, to wear them out, and to reduce both their numbers and their spirit by the rigor of their lot.

    Suddenly, the shepherds of Goshen found themselves drafted for service in the brickfields, under the eye and whip of cruel taskmasters who exacted from them daily a set quantity of bricks; or they performed service in the field, drawing water from the river for the irrigation of the land and toiling in the cultivation of the soil. And all their service wherein they made them serve was with rigor—as if every occasion was eagerly taken advantage of for dealing out cruel and merciless punishment.

    The father of the little household was, probably, compelled to bear his share in the bondage and blows which made the existence of his people so bitter. From morning to night he would toil, naked, beneath the burning sun, returning often with bleeding wounds torn open by the scourge, and inclined to question the very existence of God and his character for mercy. Very dark was the night which lay heavily on the chosen people in these years of cruel enslavement.

    He was born at a time of unusual trouble.—The household consisted of father and mother, of an elder sister, some fifteen years of age, marvelously gifted with the power of song, and of a little brother, Aaron, a bright and merry boy of three years of age. When the latter was born there was apparently no special need of secrecy, for the king was trying to attain his object by the vigorous policy we have above described. But during the interval, he had discovered that it was not stringent enough to attain his end; and he had, therefore, added to it a scheme for the destruction of all the male children, by casting them into the river as they were born.

    It is not likely that this decree was in active operation for more than a few months. It was a spasm of cruelty which was inspired by sudden fear, but was too utterly opposed to the better instincts of human nature to secure for itself a permanent position in the practice of Pharaoh’s subordinates. But while it lasted, it was the bitterest element in all that bitter sorrow. Privation, hardship, scorn and rigor are easy to bear if only the beloved circle of the home is left intact; but when that is threatened, and the little fledglings are menaced by the bird of prey, the waters of a full cup are wrung out.

    Generally, the birth of a child, and especially of a boy, was heralded with unstinted joy: but now it was the subject of anxiety, and almost of dread. There was no glad anticipation, no welcome, no rapture to compensate for the mother’s anguish, in the thought that a man was born into the world. Yet in spite of all, the people multiplied and became very mighty. The edict remained in operation for but a short time, but it was during its enforcement that Moses was born. This is God’s way. In the darkest hours of the night his tread draws near across the billows. As the day of execution is breaking, the angel comes to Peter’s cell. When the scaffold for Mordecai is complete, the royal sleeplessness leads to a reaction in favor of the threatened race. Ah, soul, it may have to come to the worst with thee ere thou art delivered; but thou wilt be! God may keep thee waiting; but he will ever be mindful of his covenant, and will appear to fulfill his inviolable word.

    But he was the child of believing parents.—We know but little of them. The father is said to have been a man of the house of Levi, and we learn afterwards that his name was Amram, and descended from Kohath, the son of Levi; but the tribe of Levi had then no special importance—in fact, it seemed destined to be divided in Jacob and scattered in Israel. The mother, Jochebed, belonged to the same tribe, and, indeed, was related to her husband in a closer consanguinity than was afterwards permitted. They were humble folk, glad enough to receive wages from the hand of wealth and royalty; but they preserved the best religious traditions of their nation, and in this contrasted favorably with many of their race.

    Dean Stanley has shown that the sojourn in Egypt had produced a very deleterious result on the children of Israel. The old freedom, the old energy—above all, the old religion of the patriarchal age—had faded away. There are clear evidences in the later Scriptures that the people participated in the idolatrous rites of the land of their adoption. Your fathers, said Joshua, served other gods in Egypt (Josh. 24:14). And through the lips of Ezekiel, Jehovah reminded the nation, at a later date, of their early unfaithfulness. In the day that I lifted up mine hand unto them, to bring them forth of the land of Egypt into a land flowing with milk and honey, the glory of all lands, then said I unto them, Cast ye away every man the abominations of his eyes, and defile not yourselves with the idols of Egypt; I am the Lord your God. But they rebelled against me, and would not hearken unto me; they did not every man cast away the abominations of their eyes, neither did they forsake the idols of Egypt (Ezek. 20:6–8). The Sabbath was forgotten; the rite of circumcision, the significant token of the covenant, fell into disuse; the comparative purity of their forefathers proved unable to resist the licentious attractions of heathen festivals, to which in after years they perpetually recurred.

    But evidently there were some families who remained faithful amid the prevalent corruption. Amongst these was that into which this child was born. The sacred covenant between God and their race was reverently remembered, and held by a faith which dared to believe that, sooner or later, God must interpose. The treasured stories which are preserved to us in the book of Genesis would be carefully taught to the children as soon as their hearts could appreciate, and their memories preserve them. The firstborn, Aaron, would be set apart, with some kind of consecration, to perform the functions of the priest of the household. And Miriam, the first Mary of Scripture, would be taught to use her sweet, clear, voice in the praise and worship of the God of their fathers.

    But their religious life was still more manifested by their faith. By faith Moses, when he was born, was hid three months of his parents, because they saw he was a proper child; and they were not afraid of the king’s commandment. We have often been furnished with a picture depicting the anxiety with which his parents received their newborn babe, the distress of Amram and the fears of Jochebed. Such a picture may be true of others of the Hebrew parents, but it is not true of them. They were not afraid. When it was announced to Jochebed that she had borne a boy, she was enabled to cast the care of him on God, and to receive the assurance that he would come to no hurt. And as the couple bent over their child, in that peasant’s hut, and saw his exceeding goodliness, the conviction grew in their hearts that a great destiny awaited him; and that in some way he would live to see the expiration of the time of slavery, foretold centuries before in words which had passed from lip to lip—the one rift of light amid the blackness of their night. Josephus says that a dream announced to Amram that Moses would be the deliverer of his people.

    Could those downtrodden serfs ever forget what God had told their great ancestor, when the horror of a great darkness had fallen on his soul? Know of a surety that thy seed shall be a stranger in a land that is not theirs, and shall serve them; and they shall afflict them four hundred years . . . but in the fourth generation they shall come hither again (Gen. 15:13,16). The slow-moving years had at last accumulated to the prescribed number. Four hundred years had nearly, if not quite, elapsed. The promise must be on the point of fulfillment. The words, they shall come out (Gen. 15:14) rang like a peal of bells in the mother’s heart; and there was a confidence nurtured by the Spirit of God, and by the loveliness of her child, who was goodly (Exod. 2:2), proper (Heb. 11:23), and exceeding fair (Acts 7:20), that in some way he would share in that Exodus.

    She was not always on the qui vive for the step of officer or midwife. She would take all ordinary precaution; but she would never give way to excessive fear. Sometimes when her heart grew sick she would betake herself to her knees, and plead the divine promise on which she had been caused to hope. The whole family lived on that woman’s faith, as men live on bread; and God’s angels bent over the unconscious babe, shielding it with their tenderest care, and whispering their love-words into its

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