Read: Exodus 2:11-22 |
There is a time for
everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens.
Ecclesiastes 3:1
Where I live, this is the
time of year when plants defy death by remaining underground until it
is safe to come out again. Before the snow comes and the ground
freezes, they let go of their beautiful blooms and retreat to a place
where they can rest and save energy for the next growing season.
Contrary to the way it looks, they are not dead; they are dormant.
When the snow melts and the ground thaws, they will again lift their
heads toward heaven, greeting their Creator with brilliant colors and
sweet fragrances.
The seasons of life
require that we sometimes enter a period of dormancy. We are not
dead, but we may feel we’ve become invisible. During such times we
may feel useless, and we may wonder whether God will ever use us
again. But periods like this are for our protection and preparation.
When the time is right and the conditions are safe, God will call us
once again to service and worship.
Moses experienced a
period of time like this. After killing an Egyptian who harmed a
fellow Hebrew, Moses had to flee for his life to the distant land of
the Midianites (Ex. 2:11-22). There, God protected him and prepared
him for the biggest assignment of his life (3:10).
So be encouraged. We are
never invisible to God.
Savior, like a shepherd
lead us, much we need Thy tender care; in Thy pleasant pastures feed
us, for our use Thy folds prepare. Dorothy A. Thrupp
No one is invisible to God.
INSIGHT:
Although Moses was
“educated in all the wisdom of the Egyptians” (Acts 7:22), he did
not forget that he was a Hebrew (Ex. 2:11; Heb. 11:24-26). In those
crucial formative years as a child, Moses was raised as a Jew by
Jochebed, his own mother (Ex. 2:7-10; Num. 26:59). Sim Kay Tee
Bible in a Year: Jeremiah 3–5; 1 Timothy 4
By Julie Ackerman Link
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