Homily for July 14th, 2015: Exodus 2:1-15a.
Just twelve
days ago, when the first reading told about Abraham preparing to sacrifice his
only son Isaac, and how God saved the boy ten seconds from death, I told you
that the story was an example of God’s characteristic work: bringing life out
of death. If we had time, I said then, I could give you other examples of God
doing the same in generation after generation after Abraham and Isaac. Our
first reading today gives us another example.
Pharaoh, the
ruler of Egypt , alarmed at
the robust birth rate of the enslaved Hebrews in Egypt , decreed that every male
Hebrew child should be killed at birth. “Whom the gods would destroy,” an
ancient saying says, “he first makes mad.” Pharaoh’s order was madness indeed.
He was ordering the death of the very people he needed for his ambitious
building projects.
Pharaoh’s
order was the reason why the mother of the Hebrew baby in our first reading (whose
name, we learn later, was Moses), put him in a water-proofed basket in the
river, hoping that the little one would those escape the attention of Pharaoh’s
enforcement police. It was a slender hope. Most likely the swiftly flowing
water would soon carry away the basket and its content. As an extra precaution
the mother tells her maid to keep watch from the nearby bushes.
Against all
odds, this high-risk strategy works. The little one is discovered by the
daughter of Pharaoh himself. Thus it comes about that the baby is brought up at
the court of none other than the ruler who had decreed his death. A remarkable
coincidence? So we might say. For the Bible, however, coincidences are God’s
way of concealing his identity.
Surrounded by
every luxury, including we can assume, an education in the highest culture
of that day, the adult Moses shows himself to possess a keen sense of justice.
Seeing two Hebrews being abused by their Egyptian taskmaster, he intervenes by
slaying the abuser. He does so carefully, only after assuring himself that
there are no witnesses, other than the two men whom he saves. Oppressed people
often turn on each other: see the statistics of black-on-black crime today.
When Moses sees two of his Hebrew countrymen fighting, he rebukes them. “Are
you going to kill us like you killed that Egyptian yesterday?” they ask.
Alarmed that his blow for justice is not secret, as he supposed, Moses must
flee for his life. So it comes about that a man twice on the brink of death,
once as an infant, then as an adult, becomes the man whom God has chosen to
save his entire people, entrapped between the impassible waters ahead, and
Pharaoh’s army closing in on them from behind.
Once again we witness God as the God
of the impossible, whose characteristic work in every generation, our own
included, is to bring life out of death.
No comments:
Post a Comment