Exodus 3:1-22 · Moses and the Burning Bush
God Powered Impact
Exodus 3:1-22
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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“Frisch weht der Wind.”

[Tristan und Isolde by Richard Wagner, quoted by Tristan, as he escorts the newly captured Isolde via sailing ship to his home in Cornwall]

Wind is the most powerful force on the earth. The wind moves everything that exists, and anything combined with the power of wind can be a beautiful or equally destructive force!

Think of tornadoes, hurricanes, forest fires –all of them dynamically fueled by the power of wind. Is it any wonder then that the ancients equated the wind with the Holy Spirit of God!

The most intriguing thing however about wind is that you can’t see it, not unless it is combined with something visual like dust or you see its activity and effect in the movement of trees, breaking of power lines, or the tearing away of a roof. We know of the dynamic and powerful impact of wind only by its impact on us and our world. From gentle breezes to catastrophic cyclones, the wind works in ways we can even now barely understand.

Our attempts to harness wind power prove that the wind is a power unto itself. Wind in fact can be quite capricious when we attempt to rein it in. Although sailboats and turbines (aka windmills) take advantage of wind to move their mills and sails, the wind is fickle and unpredictable, irregular and inconsistent. Sometimes raging, other times barely whispering, one cannot regulate the wind. One can only receive it with eager and hopeful anticipation. The wind works in ways we cannot and do not entirely understand.

What we can bank on is that where there is movement of wind, something will move. Something will be altered. There will be impact. Something or someone will change.

In John 3:8, Jesus tells his disciples, “The wind blows where it wishes, and you hear its sound, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes. So, it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit.”

Now we need to hear that, don’t we? Let’s listen to that again. [Repeat it.] Jesus doesn’t merely say, “So, it is with the Spirit!” He is not just giving us a description of the nature of the Holy Spirit. But He says, “So, it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit.”

Jesus is describing a phenomenon of what it means to be “wind powered,” “Spirit powered,” God powered if you will. In fact, the play on words is spectacular in the way that Jesus uses it, because in Greek the word pneuma means both wind and spirit. It also means breath, creative source, soul, and identity.

When the wind or creative breath of the Spirit blows upon us, as it did those years ago upon Jesus’ first disciples, our entire identity is changed. And we too become a force of nature in our world as disciples and as the church of Jesus Christ.

This is the whole reasoning behind the idea of “revival” –that supernatural breath that moves us, lifts us, impacts us, and propels us forward into a new life as a new creature into the world in Jesus’ Name to worship Him, praise Him, acknowledge Him, and proclaim Him. We become God powered people. A God powered church.

And only those who truly feel that impact of the Holy Spirit upon their hearts and upon their lives know how powerful indeed that change can be! How powerful a force in our world that change can be when disciples of Jesus enter into the world in a God powered way. For God powered disciples, a God powered church can’t help but move the world, just by being in it.

In our scriptures for today, when Moses encounters God’s force and energy emanating from an unconsumed mountain bush, he is astounded and amazed. And he asks two key questions: “Who are you?” and “Who am I?”

God’s presence seems to appear out of nowhere. One minute, he sees an ordinary landscape. The next, God’s fiery light and presence is exploding from that bush, just as God’s voice resounds through the quiet morning air: “Moses, I have heard the cries of my people.”

And still gaping at the beaming bush, when God tells Moses to go out and rescue the people of Israel, Moses says immediately, “Who am I to do this?” You see, Moses thinks, he can’t possibly pull off such a feat. He’s not able. And that’s the meaning of the word here: “to be able.” The very idea of approaching the Egyptian Pharaoh and leading every Israelite out of the land of Egypt and into a God promised place sounds fairy-tale like, extraordinary.

But you see, that’s the great part of it. He doesn’t need to do a thing. God has got this. And God is an extraordinary God, amen? All Moses has to do is allow himself to be God powered! He must allow God to empower his voice, his deeds, his message, and his feet. He will be the messenger, the vehicle. But God will be the force. For when God comes upon us in a powerful way, we become God powered disciples.

But Moses is still a bit overwhelmed by all of this, and the next question he asks, reveals that: Okay. So, who I am isn’t a problem. I don’t have to have the power all on my own. But what if people ask me where the power IS coming from. What should I tell them then. Whose power is it? Who are you?

We all know God’s answer. “I am.” Just “I am.” You see, God doesn’t have to have a name. When God creates the world, things have names. Adam receives a name. The animals receive names. Eve receives a name. Everyone after that through eternity will be named, sometimes more than once depending upon their character and identity. But God is not creation but creator. God simply IS. God is being. God is existence. God is the source of all power, the source of the wind. God IS.

And where else have we heard those very questions? In reference to Jesus, yes! Jesus’ disciples, his contemporaries, the Pharisees, the Priests, even the Romans, everyone around him keeps asking him, “Who are you?” And in John 8:25, He replies, “I am exactly who I told you at the beginning.” If that’s not a sign of Jesus’ identity as Lord and Messiah, I don’t know what is! Right! “I am …exactly who I told you….at the beginning.” I AM.

And in our gospel lesson for today according to the disciple Matthew, when Jesus is preaching in his home synagogue, his family, friends, and neighbors are equally taken aback by His God powered miracles. And the first thing they say is, “Where did this man get this wisdom and this supernatural power? Isn’t this the carpenter’s son? Aren’t his brothers James, Joseph, Simon, and Judas, and his sisters right here as well? Don’t we know him?

Like Moses, their first reaction is “Who is he?” But Jesus’ answer, like Moses reminds us that all power and glory come from God: For He is the Messiah, Son of God, empowered by God (the Greek dunamai…to be enabled/able) to change the world, move the people, act in the Name of the all-powerful, sustaining and redeeming Creator God.

We are called to trust in the power of the wind, the power of the Spirit. Though we can’t see it, though we may not always even sense whether it is moving, coming, or about to gale, we are called to trust in the empowering force of the Holy Spirit. And we are to allow God to come into our hearts and lives, into our church body of Christ in a powerful and all-encompassing way.

Every time we gather together in worship, in prayer, in holy communion, in service, we signal God that we are ready and willing to be moved by that powerful force and source of God that can revive us and send us out to be change agents in the world.

When we are moved and infused by the winds of the Spirit, our entire identity changes. And we become forces of nature in our communities and beyond. [Here you can talk about the history of your church if you wish, and the amazing impact that church has had in your community in the past.]

But you are still not done. For the winds of the Spirit are the winds of revival, and they roar and whisper according to God’s holy and creative wisdom.

You as the church provide the mill and the sails. God provides the Spirit. Joan Gray, in an article in the “Presbyterian Outlook” talked about the signs of a God powered church. She mentions being in partnership with God, nurtured by God, equipped by the Holy Spirit, living by prayer, being guided by scripture, living to serve, serving as a place of transformation, practicing discernment. These and others are signs that God’s powerful Spirit has touched down in your church. Just as in the kinetic energy burst of Pentecost, God’s Spirit never appears on demand nor can be dispatched as we may desire. But wherever two or more are gathered in Jesus’ holy name, you can be sure, the wind will be stirring. For the church of Jesus Christ from the very beginning was created to be God powered.

Like a sailboat, it only takes a little bit of wind to guide a boat across the sea.

Who are we to believe this? you think? Just one church in a sea of culture? Just a few disciples among thousands of others?

Who am I to do this? You are, because God is. You are God powered. Jesus driven. Wind infused. And Spirit enabled.

God reminds us with the breath of that Spirit that we are His beloved, His chosen, His favored. “You can do all things, because I will be your strength,” He tells us. “You are my beloved. You are my hands, feet, voice, and staff.” All you have to do is go. I will do the rest. For I AM God.

God's name is "I Am."

Our name is “Ecclesia,” Jesus’s own Church, gathering of God, born of the Spirit, beloved apostles who trust in Him and go out in His ability to heal and change the world. We are named, created, and defined, given our identity, all by our relationship to God, our creator and sustainer. That is the beauty of God's holy name. You are, only because because God is.

So be ready church. Live in faith. Immerse in prayer. Trust in the timing and nature of the Holy Spirit breath, the power of God to impact the world in a powerful way.

Jesus is putting His faith and trust in you. All you need to do is believe. And go.

You are the Church, the most powerful force of the Holy Spirit on earth, empowered by God to change the world, enabled by Christ to be his hands and feet and breath of salvation.

So, when the wind blows, don’t ask, “Who am I?” or even “Who are you?” But, like Moses, simply say, “Here I am.”


Based on the Story Lectionary

Major Text

The Lord Speaks to Moses from a Burning Bush (Exodus 3)

Minor Text

Elijah Confronts Ahab (1 Kings 18)

Psalm 7: The Lord Will Judge the Peoples

Psalm 35: May Those Be Put to Shame Who Threaten My Life

Psalm 37: Do Not Fret Because of Those Who Are Evil

Psalm 79: We Are Objects of Contempt

Psalm 119: Do Good to Your Servant O Lord

The Death of the Prophet Uriah (Jeremiah 26:20-23)

The Suffering Servant (Isaiah 53)

The Lord’s Prophecy and Jesus’ Messianic Sign (Isaiah 61)

Jeremiah, the Most Persecuted Prophet (20 and 37)

Jesus’ Rejection at Nazareth (Matthew 13:54-58 and Mark 6:1-6)

Jesus’ Rejection at Nazareth at the Beginning of His Career (Luke 4:14-30)

The Parable of the Wicked Tenant (Luke 20:9-19)

Stephen Addresses the Sanhedrin (Acts 7:51-53)

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner