Meditation Moments 33: "MOSES FORSOOK EGYPT!"
Welcome again to Meditation Moments: God bless you and
give you a profitable day. A day lived in the consciousness
of God's presence is bound to be profitable!
Now you've often heard the expression: "the cold gray
dawn of the morning after," and that's what it is for
some this morning, the morning after election night.
I'm sure there are many like myself that are glad this stormy
battle is over, but there are many also who are disappointed
today. Your choice for president didn't win, but others
are delighted because they worked hard and the man of their
choice won. You know, as I watched and listened the last
few weeks I couldn't help but note the motives behind the
choosing of candidates.
With some it was a selfish motive, with others it was a
well-informed conviction that his choice was the man best
qualified for such a high place. And such a choice should
have been made only after one was thoroughly informed about
all the issues involved, and then deliberately and seriously
thinking it over, and praying as some have done, then to
have voted.
You know, choice at some critical period in life is always
a serious thing! A young man called me this week for an
appointment. He wanted prayer and counseling about marriage.
He felt that his decision would determine his future happiness
and usefulness. He was torn by conflicting motives. He loved
her intensely but she was not a Christian. He is a Christian
and he felt that his decision might also determine his eternal
happiness.
The poised scale quivered between human love and the Love
of God. And at last she averred that she would never be
a Christian, and so the scale turned on the side of duty
to God and he made his choice. -- He took God alone. But
you know, it's sweet that at the last love did speak out
these words, he told her, "I'll go on to my mission
field alone, but I will always wait and pray, knowing God
can change your heart."
Another young man came against an even greater choice. This
was many years ago and you've read about it in God's Word,
and I consider he's one of the greatest characters in all
history, Moses. You know, Solomon was known for His great
wisdom and Isaiah for his vision, David for his Psalms and
Peter for his zeal,
But Moses was great because of the choice he made. It was
such a mighty decision! We read here in the 11th Chapter
of Hebrews where his name is enrolled among the heroes of
faith in God's Honor Gallery: "By faith Moses, when
he was come to years, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's
daughter,
"Choosing rather to suffer affliction with the children
of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season,
esteeming the reproach of Christ's greater riches than the
treasures of Egypt: for he had respect unto the recompense
of the reward." -- Isn't that a wonderful Scripture!
You read that 11th Chapter of Hebrews today if you have
a chance.
Moses, who had as a babe been drawn from the bulrushes by
Pharaoh's daughter, was reared in her father's palace. There
was such wealth, and every luxury! But when he came to age
he had to come face-to-face with the king, who challenged
him to make a choice. Now he must choose to forsake his
own people because he was the son of Jochebed, and the blood
of Levi flowed in his veins.
He was a Hebrew, not an Egyptian, and Pharaoh demanded that
he declare himself now: will he cast his lot with his alien
mother and be true to Egypt and wear the crown of the Pharaohs?
Or will he choose his own people? Oh, what a crisis hour
it was for this young man Moses! Just picture this time
as he climbs to some high place and looks at the lights
of the palace as they twinkle out from the imperial city!
The palace with all its riches and beauty, the things that
he had been used to all his life. Then he looks south at
the pyramids, and as he did so he saw the glow of the brick
kilns where his own people, slaves of Pharaoh, were making
bricks.
And as they dragged half-starved, and moved at the sound
of the slave-drivers whip, Moses' heart burned within him.
They were his people, and the same blood ran in his veins.
And then, they were also God's people.
But if he chooses to be one of them he must forget all the
comfort and luxury he has always had, wear the hated garb
of the slave and renounce forever the only mother he'd ever
known, Pharaoh's daughter. But he made his choice and he
chose, as God's Word says, "to suffer affliction with
the children of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for
a season."
Now these pleasures of sin spoken of here in the Bible were
more tempting than appears by this mere statement, that
he refused to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season, because
Egypt was at that time the most attractive spot on Earth.
Her granaries were bursting with grain and the wealth of
the World poured into her treasury, and Moses was heir to
it all.
From the possessions of the mightiest empire on Earth he
would have to turn to just slavery! And Moses was wise.
He had been educated in all the wisdom of the Egyptians!
He knew exactly what such a choice would mean and he wasn't
turning that way through any ignorance of just what it meant.
But he was not only educated and wise, but he was far-sighted,
and that's what I really want to talk to you about: this
far-sightedness, this willingness to sacrifice for the future
gain. For God's Word says, "he had respect unto the
recompense of the reward." In other words, he knew
that the pleasures of sin were only for a moment, and the
future recompense of God's reward was for all eternity.
He believed that without God's favor, a millionaire is only
a pauper! Now, it was said of Christ, "though he was
rich, yet for your sakes He became poor." And this
is the choice that Moses had to make.
The choice that Moses embraced entailed poverty and suffering
and terrible humiliation, but he'd rather be the least of
God's children here, without an earthly crown, and wear
a diadem forever over there.
And so he took a stand with God's children that he might
stand with them before the eternal king over there. Oh,
what a choice! That's why his name's enrolled here in God's
Gallery of Fame, in this 11th Chapter of Hebrews where it
says, "By faith Moses...By faith Abraham...By faith
Sara..." and so on: you know the Chapter and his name
is there, shining amongst them.
In 2 Peter 1:9, it speaks of a people who are blind and
cannot see afar off. So many are like that today when they
make their choices, they can see only the present. They
sell out the future for the present.
They're blind to the reward that would have been theirs
if they had sacrificed the present for the future, and so
many are blind spiritually to the great recompense of reward
that God has.
They have spiritual nearsightedness of the soul. Standing
with Moses on the steps of the palace it looks like a foolish
choice, but standing on the Steps of the Throne of God over
There, as Moses looks back, what a wise, what a glorious
choice it was!
He became one of the World's greatest leaders: he led a
strange band of people on a long journey, but oh, what a
story it is! His name has gone down in history and men today
rise up and call him blessed, and his influence reaches
to this very day. I wonder about your choices today? --
Myopia is a disease, it is an affliction of the eyes. It
is a Greek word, "myopia," and it means nearsightedness.
I wonder if you have spiritual myopia? You're not far-sighted,
or you're living mostly for the present and you don't' keep
your heart and eyes on the great recompense of reward. The
Lord says if we suffer with Him we shall also reign with
Him.
Are there pleasures of any kind that are blinding you to
that far look where there is the great recompense? The realities
of eternity are pleasures for ever more! God who loves you
has made great plans for you and for your life. Are you
making your choice? Does the time come some evening when
you could read your Bible, but instead of that you just
look at some ungodly television program?
In the morning, when you could start the day with a real
season of prayer in the presence of God and get His leading
for the day, do you just sleep a little longer? They're
little choices it seems, but oh, they're big after all!
And myopia does take over, you're not far-sighted!
Better to sacrifice now, dearly beloved, and then glory
afterward. God loves you and God has planned so much, so
very much for you. Won't you take His Way? Live in the Word,
trust Him to work in all out for your good and His glory.
Make your choice! He's still on the Throne, and prayer changes
things and will change them for you.