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Sabbath: The Burning Bush — 12 Comments

  1. During my years of teaching at Avondale, I had several students who thought God had called them to do some special ministry. Typically, they were arrogant "gits" who had a bee in their bonnet that the church was wrong and needed their special skills to set us right. I remember in particular one ministerial student who did one of my computer programming courses as an elective. He turned out to be a "whizz-bang" programmer in class. We had a lot of discussions about ministry and how he felt called to be a great preacher. But he had the personality of a cactus and I knew that he would go down like a lead balloon in a church. I said to him one day, "If God has called you to be a computer programmer, heaven forbid that you should stoop to being a minister!" Ultimately, he took my advice and did become a programmer for many years, and somewhere along the line, he also lost the cactus part of his personality.

    I mention this because sometimes we are inclined to think that God's calling has to be somewhat supernatural and a call to do big things. In fact, most of us are called by very natural means, a friend's advice, reading a book, seeing the example of someone else, to do rather small tasks. Let us not forget that while Moses became a national leader and captured the press, many were called to keep the goats and pitch the tents. And, in God's big plan they played their part in nation building.

    Don't wait for a burning bush experience! God has called most of us to be humble servants - a small cog in the gearbox of Christianity.

    (65)
    • My husband got a degree in mathematics and then entered graduate school where he had to teach a math class every semester. After about three weeks he told me he wanted to become a math teacher. He had never once entertained the idea of being a teacher. He loved it and never regretted not going into industry. I tell this story because he had never thought of going to graduate school until a professor encouraged him to. We have always been thankful that, as we think, the Holy Spirit gave him a nudge into grad school. He’s retired now after 38 years and still substitutes when available.

      (27)
  2. The Bible has got several incidents where God comes down to investigate human affairs. It is absolutely mind-blowing how the Creator of the heavens and the earth and who is omniscient (all-knowing) and omnipresent (everywhere at once), decides to come down to see human affairs by Himself. The memory text for this week is worthwhile to explore a bit.

    "And the LORD said: ‘I have surely seen the oppression of My people who are in Egypt, and have heard their cry because of their taskmasters, for I know their sorrows. So I have come down to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians, and to bring them up from that land to a good and large land, to a land flowing with milk and honey’" (Exodus 3:7-8, NKJV).

    What is fascinating to me is that God decides to come down, “So I have come down to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians”. Is this figurative (metaphorical) or literal? This verse is not exceptional where God comes down to see things by Himself. Let us see a few incidents where God comes down to witness things by Himself.

    1. Genesis 3:8 -13 - God comes down after Adam and Eve sinned

    2. Genesis 11:5–7 – “But the Lord came down to see the city and the tower the people were building.”

    3. Genesis 18:20-21 - “The outcry against Sodom and Gomorrah is so great... I will go down and see whether what they have done is as bad as the outcry that has reached me.”

    4. Exodus 19:11, 18- 20 - God comes down on Mount Sinai to give the Hebrew people His laws

    5. John 1:14 - God the Son (Jesus Christ) became flesh and dwelt among us

    6. Revelation 21:2-3: Ultimately, God will come down to dwell with His people forever.

    God Himself coming down to deliver the Hebrew people is profoundly heart-touching. “I have seen... I have heard... I am concerned... so I have come down to rescue...” (Exodus 3:7-8). Coming down is not about getting new information, but it is about personal engagement. God is not an absentee landlord. Our God is not distant. He sees, He feels, and He is moved to do something for His people. “Coming down” is a special moment of divine intervention. Whether used figuratively or literally, all humanity needs a special moment when God steps in to turn things around. Two thousand years ago, God came down to save not only the Hebrew people but the entire human race.

    “The Word became flesh and made His dwelling among us. We have seen His glory, the glory of the one and only Son, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.” )John 1:14, NIV).

    (68)
    • Powerful! @Omwenga Mwambi, our God is no absentee landlord!! He shows up. As I read your comments I started to reflect and praise God for the many times He
      stepped into my circunstances and turned things around for His glory. May we look for God's supernatural workings in evrything as we go through each day He blesses us with. I will definitly share this highpoint in our review on sabbath.

      (7)
  3. Thank you very much brother Mwambi for your comments. It really touched my heart, the way you have explained the importance of this concept of God coming down to intervene in our lives when we are in the danger zone. This is a very dramatic moment for any believer, when we face a situation that we need a physical intervention.

    (17)
  4. There are moments in life when I have encountered something so unexpected, so beyond my comprehension, that it stops me in my tracks- “Burning bush moments” In Exodus 3, Moses had to turn aside from his daily routine to behold a bush that was burning without being consumed.

    There are those instances, I have heard perhaps not audibly, but undeniably a Voice calling me deeper, urging me to remove my sandals, to recognize the holy ground beneath my feet. However, like Moses, I’ve often responded with hesitation (Exodus 3:11). These sacred moments often confront my inadequacy, force me to wrestle with identity, purpose, and fear. Yet even in the discomfort, God provides assurance—“I will be with you” (Exodus 3:12).Whether through tears of grief or joy, whether standing in awe or in disbelief, I’ve found these moments as a turning point, Sometimes as a call to action; other times as an invitation to simply be still and know that He is God (Psalm 46:10).

    Burning bushes may not always be dramatic as they sometimes appear as quiet moments after a long season of confusion, or the simple but overwhelming presence of peace in the midst of chaos. But whatever form they take, these circumstances change me as I meet God meets in these moment. These are not just events; they are encounter that remind me of God working though my experiences (Romans 8:28). The experiences have helped shape and reshape my walk with God as it is in these encounters that I have I’ve learned that the presence of God often comes in the most surprising places, asking me not only to see but to respond as Moses did.

    (23)
  5. I've been in a situation I did not want to be in, and I regret it every day for at least 10 years. Although things may seem complicated, I learned that God's way is perfect and much wiser and higher than mine, simply because He knows the future.

    (13)
  6. The memory text uplifts me as far as our God is concerned. We have a local chorus we sing and it "Jehovah hears me, when I cry, when am in pain, when in sorrows, he listens when i talk to Him" The memory verse " I have heared their cry and I know their sorrows" such is our God. We worship a sensitive God. The world challenges might make it look like our God is ever absent, but the lesson says it could have been worse if our God had decided to abandon us. We save a God who loves intimacy with us.

    (5)
  7. From the comments and inspirational insights above, its like I'm reading the Bible for the first time.
    The word of God is fresh every day and edifying when shared with friends.
    God bless you always my fellow pilgrims.

    (3)

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