Sermons from the Study of: Dr. Keith
Wagner |
A Basket becomes an Ark Exodus 2:1-10
August 24, 2008
A former parishioner of mine told me that when she was eighteen
she had a child but was unable to care for her. She put the child
up for adoption. It was an extremely difficult decision for her.
She lived with the guilt and sorrow of never knowing her
daughter. On the other hand it was a courageous act to give the
child an opportunity to be raised in a family who would provide
for her.
For a mother to release her child into the hands of strangers is
a difficult task. It takes tremendous courage and faith to trust
that our children will be cared for outside of our protective
grasp. At some point we ultimately give them their wings and set
them free, but to let them go when they are infants requires real
faith and trust.
The mother of Moses wanted to give her infant son a chance so she
put him in a basket and released him in the Nile River. Hebrew
male infants were in danger at the time of being killed by the
Egyptians. If Moses was going to have a life his mother had no
alternative other than to "ship" him away. For Moses,
this was his only chance for survival.
Now that school has begun some of you will place your child on a
yellow school bus for the very first time. That can be a scary
experience since you are entrusting your childrens lives
into the hands of strangers. Others will be sending their son or
daughter away to some college campus. That too, can be painful.
Your children will meet total strangers. Their teachers may be
from another culture. To send our children off for any reason can
be very emotional and scary. It will take courage and faith.
We know little about the mother of Moses except for her
tremendous act of faith. Imagine her personal sadness and
emotional feelings of loss, not to mention guilt, as she placed
her child in the river, not knowing of his future. I believe she
must have trusted in God to watch over him. In addition, I
believe she was thinking more of him than herself as she wanted
him to have a life. Therefore, she willingly took a great risk
and ultimately let him go.
Incidentally, the Nile River was full of crocodiles and swift
currents. Moses was in treacherous waters, but safe and secure in
the basket his mother had made for him.
The word for basket in Hebrew is tebah. The word also
appears in Genesis. It is also the same word for ark.
Just as the mother of Noah entrusted her sons life in a
tebah, it was also a tebah that saved Noah and the animals from
the great flood.The tebah or ark of Moses carried him down the
waters of the Nile and safely into the hands of the daughter of
the Pharoah. She, like the mother of Moses, took a great risk in
rescuing the infant Hebrew boy. Somehow she convinced her father
to raise the child. Ironically, Moses was raised, educated and
cared for in the nation that was the enemy of the Hebrews.
Miraculously Moses sister witnessed the whole river scene
and was asked by the daughter of the Pharoah to fetch a young
Hebrew woman to nurse the child. She therefore went and selected
the mother of Moses and mother and child were reunited.
One day my friend, who had put her child up for adoption, called
me to tell me that she had received a phone call from a voice of
a thirty-year old woman who did not identify herself. She thought
it might be her daughter who she had not seen since the day she
was born. She didnt know what to do if she called her
again. I suggested that her daughter was most likely reaching out
to her and something was probably going on in her life. It turned
out that she called again and indeed it was her daughter who now
had children of her own. They had some questions about their
heritage and ultimately they were reunited.
They did not become a close family. Too much time had passed.
They did however vow to keep in touch and at best became pen
pals. The good news however is that my friend felt vindicated.
Now that she had reconnected with her daughter she no longer felt
guilty. She also believed she had done the right thing by letting
her go since she had loving parents to care for her and her
children.
For my friend her tebah was the act of putting her
daughter up for adoption. It wasnt a basket or an ark.
Instead it was a system that provides homes for children who have
none. Providing tebah for someone is an act of mercy.
It means we are willing to take a risk, willing to let go and
willing to show mercy for another human being.
These are stories of women of courage, women who were willing to
take risks and trust that God would watch over them. The mother
of Moses was a woman of faith. My friend was also a woman of
faith, active and dedicated to the church.
What we glean from this story is that God wants us to take risks.
The mother of Moses took a risk to liberate her child. All that
mattered was his freedom. Consider the risks: Would the basket
float? Would it survive the currents of the river? Would the
child escape the danger of the crocodiles? Would he be safe in
the hands of the Egyptians? All she could do was take the chance.
In this case a complete stranger is entrusted with Moses
future. There are times in life when we have to entrust our
childrens lives into the hands of people we dont
know. When we do, we can be assured that God is just as present
on foreign soil as God is on ours.
Consider Shawn Johnson, gymnast for the US Olympic Team. Her
parents mortgaged their home twice to pay for their
daughters gymnastic training. What a huge sacrifice to make
for her future. On the other hand they entrusted her life into
the hands of her trainer, Liang Chow, who is from China. Shawn
Johnson won a gold medal from her performance on the balance
beam. She trained since she was a little girl, her parents
supporting her all the way, entrusting her life in the hands of
her Chinese coach.
God works through all kinds of people. In the story of Moses it
was not a powerful ruler who made a difference, but people behind
the scenes, all of them women. Their acts of mercy would change
history. They defied the oppressive system of a powerful Pharoah
and saved and nurtured a young child that would one day become
leader of the Israelites.
There are times when we need to take risks in order to ensure
that justice and mercy prevail. Sometimes we have to say
no to power and act with faithful hearts.God can work
through anyone, even people who are foreign to us. It requires
sacrifice, faith and trust. Since tebah worked for Moses and the
first faith community it can also work for us.
Dr. Keith Wagner, St. Pauls United Church of Christ,
Sidney, Ohio