The Tale of Two Mothers
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· 9 viewsMothers day sermon focusing on the importance of mothers, the types of mothers, and sanctity of life
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The Tale of Two Mothers
Exodus 2
Good morning, Baptist Fellowship. Happy Mother’s Day to all the moms here and who are watching online.
I want to start this morning by playing a short but inspirational video for you.
Play Video (mothers of the bible)
Obviously today, I want to take a break from James, we will be back in James next week… but I want to talk about moms. As was mentioned in the video we just watched, there are all kinds of moms! Birth moms, Faith moms, Mentorship moms, Adoptive moms, Spiritual moms, moms of all kinds!
There are moms, like my grandmother, who had more than a dozen birth children.
There are moms like Amy Carmichael who never married, never birthed a child, and yet was mother to thousands and thousands of children in her missionary orphanages.
There are moms like this lady in Africa… A missionary to Africa tells her story… Though she was blind and could neither read nor write, she wanted to share her newfound faith with others. She went to the missionary and asked for a copy of the Bible in French. When she got it, she asked the missionary to underline John 3:16 in red and mark the page it was on so she could find it. The missionary wanted to see what she would do, so one day he followed her. In the afternoon, just before school let out, she made her way to the front door. As the boys came out when school was dismissed, she would stop one and ask if he knew how to read French. When he said “Yes” she would ask him to read the verse that was marked in red. Then she would ask, “Do you know what this means?” and tell him about Christ. The missionary said that twenty-four of the schoolboys that lady led to the Lord became pastors.
God made women in His image, just like He made men in His image. He made women to reflect his compassion, nurturing nature. He made women to reflect His ability to love unconditionally and to see past the mess!
Mothers are special people.
· Real mothers would like to be able to eat a whole candy bar (all by themselves) and drink a Coke without any "floaters" in it.
· Real Mothers know that their kitchen utensils are probably going to end up in the sandbox.
· Real Mothers often have sticky floors, filthy ovens, and happy kids.
· Real Mothers know that dried play dough doesn’t come out of shag carpets.
· Real Mothers sometimes ask, "Why me?" and get their answer when a little voice says, "Because I love you best."
· Real Mothers know that a child’s growth is not measured by height or years or grade.
It is marked by the progression of Mama to Mom to Mother...
APPLY: Real mothers are an integral part of our lives.
We wouldn’t be who we are without our mothers.
Some of the greatest people in history will tell you how important their mothers were to their lives. George Washington, for example, declared: “All I am I owe to my mother”.
This was also true of one of the greatest men in Old Testament history, a man named Moses. Moses became the kind of man he was because of the type of mother he had. In fact, who he was, was very much determined by the type of MOTHERS he had, because God gave Moses two mothers. And they were both good mothers because they both had some of the same instincts for their roles.
For example: They both loved babies
Now, that may seem like a given… but not every woman loves kids.
ILLUS: I once read the story of a woman who went shopping for swimsuits with her mother.
In the department store, though, she was having a hard time finding one that fit. After trying on at least 10, all to no avail, she grew increasingly frustrated.
Trying to calm her, her mother said "Look at it this way: what would you rather have – the husband and three children who adore you, or a swimsuit that fits?"
Before she could answer, a faceless voice from the next dressing room stall replied
"I want a swimsuit that fits!"
Not every woman wants kids.
But these Jochebed and the Pharoah’s daughter did.
And that WAS no small thing in their day because Moses’ 2 mothers lived in a culture of death.
A decree had gone out from the throne of Pharaoh that every male child born to a Hebrew was to thrown into the Nile and drowned. And Moses’ birth mother – Jochebed – was a Hebrew woman.
Thus, she had a choice to make.
The society in which she lived made it virtually impossible to keep her child and she could have decided to simply allow her child to be thrown away. I mean - her son was not wanted.
She could have chosen death (the easy choice)… but she chose life instead.
Jochebed Chose Life
And this was not an easy decision for Jochebed to make.
It required her to hide her child for 3 whole months always fearing that Egyptian soldiers would discover the baby… and not only would they kill her child but punish her entire family for disobeying the law.
Choosing life was not an easy decision.
Sometimes, Choosing Life is Not Easy
But then consider Pharaoh’s daughter.
She knew who this baby was.
Exodus 2:6
6 When she opened it, she saw the child, and behold, the baby was crying. She took pity on him and said, “This is one of the Hebrews’ children.”
tells us “When she opened it, she saw the child, and behold, the baby was crying. She took pity on him and said, “This is one of the Hebrews’ children.””
She knew he was a Hebrew.
Her father had decreed these children should die.
Her society had decided that these babies shouldn’t live.
Common wisdom had determined that these children were a threat to their nation.
It would have been so easy to let the child die.
But she chose life instead.
Pharaoh's Daughter Chose Life
Both mothers lived in a culture of death.
Both mothers lived in a society that has decreed certain children shouldn’t live.
And so do we.
ILLUS: It should be obvious to anyone who is paying attention. We, like the Israelites in Egypt, live in a culture that is obsessed with killing innocent children. We need to pray for our elected leaders that they will not bow to this culture. We need to pray for our elections that those who value life will be placed in power. We need to pray for our judiciary, that justices will make decisions to preserve life, not take life. Please consider coming to our movie night this coming Saturday to learn more about this topic. All proceeds will go towards CareNet and will directly help young mothers with unplanned pregnancies.
(AP – David Royse – May 1, 2008)
Now I want you to understand something:
God punished Egypt because of their culture of death.
Egypt’s culture of death required that every male child born to the Hebrews was to die.
When God punished Egypt He brought 10 plagues down upon them. Do you remember what the last one was?
God decreed: “and every firstborn in the land of Egypt shall die, from the firstborn of Pharaoh who sits on his throne, even to the firstborn of the slave girl who is behind the handmill…”--
Exodus 11:5
5 and every firstborn in the land of Egypt shall die, from the firstborn of Pharaoh who sits on his throne, even to the firstborn of the slave girl who is behind the handmill, and all the firstborn of the cattle.
Egypt decreed death for babies.
And so God decreed death for their families as well.
But Moses lived because Jochebed and Pharaoh’s daughter never accepted that culture of death.
We do not have to accept the culture of death.
They chose life.
I know there are many in our nation that have had abortions. Our culture has made it so acceptable that it’s often chosen before a woman or girl has had time to consider its implications. But the aftermath of that decision is often devastating.
You may know of someone who has had an abortion… or you yourself may have had one. Thus, I want you to remember:
Our God is a Forgiving God
We need to engrain this into our minds and make sure those around us are aware of it.
Our God is a forgiving God.
In Egypt, there were people who escaped God’s punishment from that 10th plague. They did so by applying the blood of a lamb to the doors of their homes.
Today God tells us that we escape judgment – from ALL of our sins - when we apply by the blood of the Lamb of God (Jesus Christ) to our lives. By the blood of Jesus, God removes all of our sin from our lives.
When we believe in Jesus, repent of our sins, confess Him as our Lord and allow ourselves to be buried in the waters of Christian baptism, God removes our sins as far as the East is from the West.
He buries it in the depths of the sea.
He removes it from our lives and remembers it no more.
Why would God do that for us?
He does that because our God is a God who chooses life.
Not just life for the unborn, but also for those of us who have made decisions that have brought us shame and guilt. Decisions that have robbed our lives of the joy and promise God created us to have. It’s only by the blood of Jesus that we have that hope in our lives.
Let me repeat: Moses lived… and became the kind of man he became… because his 2 mothers loved life, and loved babies.
Moses became the kind of man he was because his mothers did everything they could for him.
Jochebed hid Moses in order to save his life.
Other Hebrew mothers probably hid their children as well, but that very rarely worked.
I mean it’s kind of hard to hide a pregnant woman.
And the Egyptians would have been watching. They would have been waiting for the day when she would no longer be pregnant – and then they’d come for her child.
So what was she to do?
How is she going to save her baby?
Well, she decides to get a bit creative.
If Pharaoh wanted her child to be thrown into the river… that’s where she’d put him. But not before she had given her boy an edge, an advantage in life.
1. She and her husband build a little boat for him. A basket covered with pitch so it would float.
2. And she places that boat in the bulrushes along the shore of the Nile. She doesn’t put him out in the current where it could be swept downstream. No, she puts the basket in a sheltered place… a place where it could be found.
3. And it’s very likely that she scouted around for the best place for him to be found. If he’s to be found… she wants him found by someone who has the power and influence to make sure he isn’t put to death. And the only person with that kind of influence would seem to be Pharaoh’s daughter. I have often wondered if perhaps the Pharoah’s daughter could not have children, perhaps she was barren? Perhaps, in her heart, she was wishing for a child to raise, any child.
Now, I could be wrong about some of the details… but it makes sense to me.
But no matter whether I’m right or wrong on my speculations Jochebed had done an awful lot of planning to make sure her child survived.
Jochebed did everything she could for her son.
And then there’s Pharaoh’s daughter
Moses’ adoptive mother.
She loves this boy - takes him into her home and makes him her son.
She (like Jochebed) did everything she could for this boy as well.
Acts 7:22
22 And Moses was instructed in all the wisdom of the Egyptians, and he was mighty in his words and deeds.
tells us that “And Moses was instructed in all the wisdom of the Egyptians, and he was mighty in his words and deeds.
Pharaoh’s daughter wanted Moses to have all the advantages her culture could supply.
She wanted him to more than a common laborer.
She wanted him to be a leader of men/ a ruler of nations.
And she succeeded in building him into a man who was powerful in speech and action.
And so, she did everything in her power to give him an edge - an advantage fitting for the son of Pharaoh’s daughter.
Both of Moses’ mothers loved him so much that they did everything they could think to do to give him every advantage he could have.
But only Jochebed gave Moses the one thing that changed his life.
Pharaoh’s daughter supplied Moses a knowledge of the wisdom of Egypt.
She got him into the best schools
She arranged to find him the best teachers
She had supplied him with the ability to be a man who was powerful in speech and action.
She had supplied him with all the training and education he needed to be a success in this world.
And yet Hebrews 11:24
24 By faith Moses, when he was grown up, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter,
tells us that the time came when Moses “…refused to be called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter,
There was something Pharaoh’s daughter had not supplied him with.
Something was missing from his extensive education in the universities of Egypt
But what could it have been?
What was missing?
What was missing was a different kind of knowledge… a knowledge of who God was.
As parents and grandparents and uncles / aunts, we need to realize that even with the most advanced education our society can supply - without God at the center of our children’s lives there will be an emptiness that nothing else can fill.
In Ecclesiastes, Solomon looks at all the advantages a man can have in life.
Wealth, and education, and power, and success.
Toward the end of his book he declares "Meaningless! Meaningless!" says the Teacher. "Everything is meaningless!"
Ecclesiastes 12:8
8 “Meaningless! Meaningless!” says the Teacher. “Everything is meaningless!”
(NIV)
But at the very last verses, Solomon ends his book on the meaninglessness of life with this advice: “The end of the matter; all has been heard. Fear God and keep his commandments, for this is the whole duty of man.”
13 The end of the matter; all has been heard. Fear God and keep his commandments, for this is the whole duty of man.
What did Solomon mean?
He meant that – without God – life become meaningless and empty.
Only God can help us to reach the potential.
Only God can help us to realize our promise and possibility.
Once we know who God is… then we can realize that we’ve been made in His image
We are part of His plan
We have been created for a purpose and we have a reason to exist.
Ephesians 2:10
10 For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.
tells us who are Christians: “…For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.
We have purpose
We have value
We have a reason for our lives … because God is IN our lives.
And that’s what Jochebed gave her son.
She couldn’t read to him from the Bible. None of that had been written yet (except perhaps Job).
She may have told him the stories of great men like Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
But I think she did even more than that.
I think she gave that knowledge of God by sharing HER faith in God.
She told him what she believed
She told him what God had done in her life… and in his
She told him what God wanted for their people (Promises)
And because God was REAL to her… God became real for him as well.
Jochebed loved her son so much that she wanted him to know the most powerful force in her life
And she wanted Moses to know this God. She did that because she knew this was a hard and difficult world. And there would be times when Moses would doubt whether he was loved by anyone.
When that time came, she wanted him to remember that he WAS loved by at least one individual: God. She wanted him to remember that God always cared for him and would watch out for him.
And that’s the reason our children/ grandchildren/ nephews and nieces need to know Him as well. There will be times they won’t feel worthy, lovable, needed. And they’ll need to know that God will never leave them nor forsake them.
CLOSE: Max Lucado has intriguing explanation of this truth in "A Gentle Thunder. p. 46ff
(given with some modification)
Moms: WHY do you love your newborn child?
I know, I know; it’s a silly question, but indulge me. Why do you?
For months this baby has brought you pain.
They’ve made you break out in pimples and waddle like a duck.
Because of them you craved sardines and crackers and threw up in the morning.
They punched you in the tummy.
They occupied a space that wasn’t theirs and ate food they didn’t fix.
You kept them warm. You kept them safe. You kept them fed.
But did she say thank you?
Are you kidding?
She’s no more out of the womb than she starts to cry!
The room is too cold, the blanket is too rough, the nurse is too mean.
And who does she want? Mom.
Don’t you ever get a break? I mean, who has been doing the work the last nine months?
Why can’t Dad take over? But no, Dad won’t do. The baby wants Mom.
She didn’t even tell you she was coming.
She just came.
And what a coming!
She rendered you a barbarian. You screamed. You swore. You bit bullets and tore the sheets.
And now look at you. Your back aches. Your head pounds. Your body is drenched in sweat. Every muscle strained and stretched.
You should be angry, but are you?
Far from it.
On your face is a longer-than-forever love.
They’ve done nothing for you; yet you love them.
They’ve brought pain to your body and nausea to your morning, yet you treasure them.
Their face is wrinkled and their eyes are dim, yet all you can talk about are her good looks and bright future.
She’s going to wake you up every night for the next 6 weeks, but that doesn’t matter.
I can see it on your face. You’re crazy about her.
Why? Why does a mother love her newborn?
Because the baby is hers?
Even more. Because the baby is her.
Her blood. Her flesh. Her sinew and spine. Her hope. Her legacy.
It bothers her not that the baby gives nothing.
She knows a newborn is helpless, weak.
She knows babies don’t ask to come into this world.
And God knows we didn’t either.
We are his idea. We are his. His face. His eyes. His hands. His touch. We are Him.
(end of Lucado’s comments)
The love a mother has for her child is only a small taste of the love God has for you. When He looks at you, He sees His finest creation. He sees His Child.
When we experience the love of a mother, whether biological or adopted, whether physical or spiritual, we experience a taste of God’s Love.
If you would like to experience that love every single day; you need to have a relationship with Him. The only way to do that is to be born again. Admit that you are sinner, that you have acted in a way that is selfish and self-centered, that you have broken God’s Law. Repent of those sins and turn towards Jesus. Believe that Jesus is who He says He is, that He is the Son of God, that He voluntarily gave this life as a payment for your sins, that He rose again the third day defeating death and hell. And then Confess Jesus as your Lord, your Savior.
Admit
Believe
Confess
Invitation song – appeal to accept Christ
If you have had that conversation with God, Admitting sin, turning away from it, Believing Jesus at His Word, and Confessing Him as Lord and Savior… even if you just did that in the past 5 minutes, you can now participate with this church, this local fellowship of believers, in the Lord’s Supper. That is what we are going to do now.
I would like for everyone to take a moment to follow Paul’s advice to the Church in Corinth.
He said, “So a man should examine himself; in this way he should eat the bread and drink from the cup. For whoever eats and drinks without recognizing the body, eats and drinks judgment on himself.”
Take a moment to confess any unrepented sin, to make right a broken promise or a broken relationship, ask God to show you what is in your heart that needs confessed.
Communion
The Bread – Ask Tim to bless the Bread
For I received from the Lord what I also passed on to you: On the night when He was betrayed, the Lord Jesus took bread, gave thanks, broke it, and said, “This is My body, which is for you. Do this in remembrance of Me.” I Cor 11
The Cup – Ask Bob to bless the Cup
“In the same way, after supper He also took the cup and said, “This cup is the new covenant established by My blood. Do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of Me.” For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until He comes.” - I Cor 11
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