Exodus 3:1-22 · Moses and the Burning Bush
All In
Exodus 3:1-22
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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We hear a lot about covenants in scripture. Anyone know what a covenant is? How would you define it if someone asked you, “What’s a covenant?”

That’s right. It has “legal” connotation. It’s actually ancient legal language. You might call it a kind of agreement or contract between two or more parties in a legally binding promise or vow. If you look at our marriage liturgy, you can see it there! You can also see it in our communion liturgy.

In the marriage contract, the covenant of marriage refers to the promise made and fulfilled between two people uniting in matrimony. In scripture, a covenant is also used to describe God’s relationship with God’s people.

God promises to watch over, protect, love, cherish humankind. In turn, humankind promises to be loyal only to God. It was the kind of contract you might see between a “King” and a people. And it was this way that our ancestors understood their relationship with God. God was “King,” and God’s people were God’s subjects. They were both bound by an agreement.

That said, there’s a bit of an imbalance of power, no? It’s not really an equal contract. The King has a lot more power than the people. Similarly, God has a lot more power and glory than we do!

So, what does that all mean?

Just this past week a couple were trying to sort through an argument. The one said to the other, “You need to meet me halfway!” They saw their marriage as a 50-50 agreement. One person gave half, the other half, and they would meet somewhere in the middle. That’s fair, right?

Except marriage, like life, seldom really works that way, does it?

Those of you who are married know, sometimes, one person does more than the other. One of you cooked half the Thanksgiving meal, and the other the other half, right? No, relationships are not 50-50. But you know what? Each of those partners in the covenant is all the way in!

Know what I mean? In other words, [you can use pretend people from the congregation if you wish], let’s say Jack here is married to Karen over here.

[You don’t need to use an actual couple.]

Okay. If Jack vows to love, cherish, and honor Karen, he’s not going to only do it halfway, right?

And Karen, she’s not going to only love Jack half the time. Or put only half of her heart into it, is she?

Well, I don’t know, but we hope not!

So, what if we say that Karen became very ill. She could no longer contribute the same things to the relationship that she had. Or perhaps she was going through a rough time in her life and wasn’t giving Jack much attention. Does Jack still give his all?

[Allow people to answer.]

Each partner vows to give their all, their best, their 100%, all of their heart, mind, and strength to this endeavor. For better…or for worse. [Ok Jack and Karen..you’re off the hook now.]

Well, that’s also how it works with God. When God loves and cherishes us humans, God doesn’t do it only halfway. God’s all in! And God doesn’t say, “Look, you’re totally not pulling your half (which we never are by the way, right?), so if you can’t meet me halfway, we have no covenant!

Nope! Not happening!

God would never say that!

What DOES God say?

Well, let’s look at a couple of our scriptures for today. When God meets Moses face to face, God tells Moses, I’ve been hearing the cries of my people, so I’m going to need to come down and rescue them!

And to Elijah? God burns up the altar and all the water on it in Elijah’s somewhat vain experiment, so that hearts can be turned back to God.

In every story, through every prophet, across every event, every time in the scriptures we see an encounter with God, we see God pursuing us! God is going whole hog, all-in on our behalf, while much of the time, we are complacent to say the least. Look at the most famous scene in Christian art, Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel painting, where God is stretching out the divine finger to Adam, and Adam offers a limp and leisurely response.

We don’t see a whole lot of us pursuing God. In fact, it’s the exact opposite! We see complaining, lamenting, griping, idol-worshiping, orgy-making, God dissing people, who don’t even come close to meeting God part of the way, let alone half way.

But what does God do? Does God end our covenant?

No!

Does God pull back?

No!

What does God do?

God comes even closer!

And the epitome of that is Jesus. God’s Light. God’s presence in the world in human form, just so God can come as close to us as possible.

Jesus is the Emmanuel. God with us. God dwelling among us.

You can’t come closer than that! Because no matter what, God’s in it with us 100%. God’s all in.

God meets us not half way. God meets us all the way. All the way to the manger. All the way to the cross. All the way to the tomb. All the way to the depths of hell, and all the way back again.

That’s how God loves God’s people.

And God is there when we least expect it, to surprise us with and comprise us of His loving, saving grace.

The fire of commitment. That’s what God models for us in our covenant with God. For no matter how far from God we’ve roamed, God meets us exactly where we are.

May our hearts be turned to the One with the power to change us and move us, free us and love us with a fire that burns brighter than any furnace.

God’s all in. Are you? It doesn’t matter how much.

No matter how far in you are, God’s all in.

For you and with you. God’s all in.

In you and through you. God’s all in.

Maybe it’s time you went all in too.


Based on the Story Lectionary

Major Text

*Moses and the Burning Bush on God’s Mountain (Exodus 3)

Minor Text

Let There Be Light (Genesis 1)

Witnesses to Moses on Sinai and the First Covenant (Exodus 24)

Moses in the Tent of Meeting (Exodus 33)

God Promises a Prophet Like Moses (Deuteronomy 18:15-22)

Elijah Baptizes (Immerses) the Altar with Water and God’s Fire Burns it Up (1 Kings 18)

Elijah Meets God at Horeb (1 Kings 19)

Elijah’s Disappearance (2 Kings 2)

Psalm 27: Light of God Dwells

Psalm 43: Light of Dwelling

Psalm 68: Presence of God in Wilderness and Mountain

Psalm 112: Light of the Righteous

Psalm 119: Glory of God’s Precepts

The Coming of Elijah (Malachi 4)

Jesus’ Transfiguration (Matthew 16:13-17:13; Mark 8:27-9:13; Luke 9:18-9:36)

The Prophecy About John (Luke 1:15-17)

Jesus as God’s Light (John 1:1-18)

John’s Revelation: Those Surrounding the Throne are Dressed in Brilliant White, and the Lamb Spreads His Tent and Offers Springs of Living Water (7)

John’s Revelation: The Home of God is Among Mortals in the Restoration (21)

Moses and the Burning Bush

Now Moses was tending the flock of Jethro his father-in-law, the priest of Midian, and he led the flock to the far side of the wilderness and came to Horeb, the mountain of God.

There the angel of the Lord appeared to him in flames of fire from within a bush.

Moses saw that though the bush was on fire it did not burn up. So, Moses thought, “I will go over and see this strange sight—why the bush does not burn up.”

When the Lord saw that he had gone over to look, God called to him from within the bush, “Moses! Moses!”

And Moses said, “Here I am.”

“Do not come any closer,” God said. “Take off your sandals, for the place where you are standing is holy ground.” Then he said, “I am the God of your father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob.”

At this, Moses hid his face, because he was afraid to look at God.

The Lord said, “I have indeed seen the misery of my people in Egypt. I have heard them crying out because of their slave drivers, and I am concerned about their suffering. So I have come down to rescue them from the hand of the Egyptians and to bring them up out of that land into a good and spacious land, a land flowing with milk and honey—the home of the Canaanites, Hittites, Amorites, Perizzites, Hivites and Jebusites. And now the cry of the Israelites has reached me, and I have seen the way the Egyptians are oppressing them. So now, go. I am sending you to Pharaoh to bring my people the Israelites out of Egypt.”

Image Exegesis: The Dwelling Place

The metaphor of fire/light/heat/brilliance is so powerful in these scriptures, which all point to the immanent presence of God with us. When Paul experiences his blinding light on the way to Damascus, when Moses experiences the burning bush, when Jesus experiences the presence alighting “like” a dove of light, when God’s fire burns up the altar of Elijah –and in so many other stories of scripture, the power of fire and light –culminating in Pentecost—signifies not just the presence of God but the nature of God, which is so overwhelmingly intense that we barely can comprehend it at all. Jesus’ transfiguration into Light, and John’s affirmation of Jesus as the Light syncs too with the images in Revelation.

Light is a metaphor of sight, of revealing. In Light, we experience the inexplicable God in a tangible kind of way, and we attribute to God all of those qualities that go with burning –power, unpredictability, uncontrollable passion, purity, love and heat, intensity, the ability to consume, blinding unknowability.

The light and the mountain metaphor combined (which also suggests the place where God dwells “on high” and where the light is purer and more intense, uninhibited by cloud cover of our minds --a higher plane of spiritual attainment), all make for an interesting meeting place.

Often, those meetings come across kind of like a tryst, emphasizing the secret nature of our personal relationship with God, even while God’s covenant is for a people. God reveals God’s self personally and powerfully. When Moses came down from the mountain, his face shone, much like Jesus’ shone in His transfiguration.

The story of scripture is not so much how we dwell with God as how God dwells with us, even in our most terrible moments.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner