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the distance the first tendrils of sunlight appeared on the horizon. In a few moments it would be dawn with
sunlight splashing over the landscape as it had for thousands of dawns before
this one. Not far away, the bleating of
sheep and goats signaled that the night was indeed ending as man and beast
eagerly awaited the arrival of the morning sun.
He
had been lying there for over an hour, waking from a fitful sleep. His tent was open and he stared at the
vanishing stars fighting against the breaking of the dawn with all the fury and
determination of someone battling for his life. The sound of the animals and
the ever-brightening sky meant he needed to start his day. It would be a busy one as it always was when
he moved the flock from one area to another.
He was tired from lack of restful sleep but tonight he knew his rest
would be sweet and deep.
The
flock gathered around him, eager to begin the long journey. Although they didn’t know where they were
going, anticipation filled the air. The
tents were struck, camels were loaded, and all the animals were gathered into
one place. Finally, after one last check
around the campsite, man and beasts set out for the pastures found at the foot
of the mountains on the backside of the desert.
The
journey took most of the morning and by early afternoon they had reached their
destination. Once camp was established,
it was time to visit the pastures and feed the flock. The shepherd was finally relieved, having
arrived at the base of the mountain and its pastures in record time. He joyfully led his flock to the grasslands
to graze. That’s when he saw something
he would never forget, something that shouldn’t be, something no one had ever
seen, and something that would change his life forever! What he saw defied all logic and yet it was
real—a bush on fire that did not burn up!
Yes,
our shepherd is Moses, the man who would stand before Pharaoh, the man who
would deliver the children of Israel from slavery, the man who would use his
staff to perform miraculous signs, and the man who would be known as the lawgiver. But all of these things were in the
future. Moses’ past still haunted
him. He had fled Egypt because
he had murdered an Egyptian. He had come
to the wilderness of Midian, married a woman named, Sephora, and became a
shepherd for his father-in-law’s flocks.
But from this day forward, nothing would be the same.
Let
us take a closer look at Moses’ not-so-usual-day-at-the-office. Exodus
3:1 gives us the following account, “Now
Moses kept the flock of Jethro his father in law, the priest of Midian: and he
led the flock to the backside of the desert, and came to the mountain of God ,
even to Horeb.” Notice that Moses is
in the wilderness. It was a remote place
where he had very little contact with others.
As if this weren’t enough, the passage tells us that Moses led the flock
to the backside of the desert. Now I ask you, how much more remote can you
get? Exactly where is the backside of a
desert anyway? Wherever it is, it had to
be one of the loneliest and most challenging places Moses knew.
Yet
it is in this very setting that God performs one of His greatest calls to ministry. Although the story of Moses and the burning
bush is well-known, we need to understand exactly what took place at Horeb, the
mountain of God , on the backside of the desert. In the conversation between God and Moses,
Moses learns he is to return to Egypt . God has chosen him to walk into Egypt and break
the good news to Pharaoh that the Hebrew slaves are free and will be leaving
right away! Lucky Moses! But it is not so much the message God gives
Moses as the manner in which it is given.
Notice in verse 12 that God
tells Moses he will return to this very mountain to serve God. Notice also that Moses is leading a flock of
sheep, caring for them and tending to their needs. For the past forty years he has covered this
ground, learning everything about its contours, its dangers, and its safe
havens. The time has now come for God to
take all that knowledge, all that training, and all that skill, and put it to
use for His divine purposes.
But
in order for Him to make that point clear to Moses, God leads him to the
backside of the desert. This encounter
with God forever changes the life of Moses and forever alters the future of
mankind. Where once he led sheep, he
will now lead people. Where once he fed
animals, he will provide for God’s own.
Where once he traveled alone; he will now lead a multitude. Everything Moses did for his father-in-law,
he will now do for God on a scale never before imagined.
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you wondering in the wilderness today?
Do you feel you have covered the same ground countless times and
performed the same tasks over and over so that they now are just part of the
routine? Take heart from Moses. Who knows how many times he had been to the
backside of the desert? Who knows how
many times he had seen that bush in previous years? Who knows how often he had gazed at the
summit of Mount Horeb , wondering what views could be
seen from its heights? Then one day God called
Moses to the far end of the desert to be His own. Are you
ready to visit the backside of the desert today?
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