God did not forget the promise he had made
A man from the Levi tribe
married a woman from the same tribe, and she later had a baby boy. He
was a beautiful child, and she kept him inside for three months. But
when she could no longer keep him hidden, she made a basket out of reeds and
covered it with tar. She put him in the basket and placed it in the
tall grass along the edge of the Nile River. The baby's older sister
stood off at a distance to see what would happen to him. About that time one of the king's daughters came down to take a
bath in the river, while her servant women walked along the river bank.
She saw the basket in the tall grass and sent one of the young women to pull
it out of the water. When the king's daughter opened the basket, she
saw the baby and felt sorry for him because he was crying. She said,
"This must be one of the Hebrew babies." At once the baby's older sister came up and asked, "Do you
want me to get a Hebrew woman to take care of the baby for you?" "Yes," the king's daughter answered. So the girl brought the baby's mother, and the king's daughter
told her, "Take care of this child, and I will pay you." The baby's mother carried him home and took care of him.
And when he was old enough, she took him to the king's daughter, who adopted
him. She named him Moses because she said, "I pulled him out of
the water." After Moses had grown up, he went out to where his own people
were hard at work, and he saw an Egyptian beating one of them. Moses
looked around to see if anyone was watching, then he killed the Egyptian and
hid his body in the sand. When Moses went out the next day, he saw two Hebrews
fighting. So he went to the man who had started the fight and asked,
"Why are you beating up one of your own people?" The man answered, "Who put you in charge of us and made you
our judge? Are you planning to kill me, just as you killed that
Egyptian?" This frightened Moses because he was sure that people must have
found out what had happened. When the king heard what Moses had done,
the king wanted to kill him. But Moses escaped and went to the land of
Midian. One day, Moses was sitting there by a well, when the seven
daughters of Jethro, the priest of Midian, came up to water their father's
sheep and goats. Some shepherds tried to chase them away, but Moses
came to their rescue and watered their animals. When Jethro's daughters
returned home, their father asked, "Why have you come back so early
today?" They answered, "An Egyptian rescued us from the shepherds,
and he even watered our sheep and goats." "Where is he?" Jethro asked. "Why did you
leave him out there? Invite him to eat with us." Moses agreed to stay on with Jethro, who later let his daughter
Ziporah marry Moses. And when she had a son, Moses said, "I will
name him Gershom, since I am a foreigner in this country." After the death of the king of Egypt, the Israelites still
complained because they were forced to be slaves. They cried out for
help, and God heard their loud cries. He did not forget the promise he
had made to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and because he knew what was happening
to his people, he felt sorry for them. Exodus 2:1-25 Contemporary English Version The Holy Bible (New York , NY: American Bible Society 1995) |