The Good Book Club | Week of January 12
Welcome to the Good Book Club: Exodus Edition. Thank you for joining us on this journey with God’s word. For resources and additional information, visit goodbookclub.org.
This week: Exodus 5–7777777777777

There’s something about being known.

Just as we humans want to love and be loved in return, it can also be said that we experience love when we are known and understood.

When someone asks me a question and genuinely desires an answer that only I alone can give, a knowing happens within me. I feel loved because this person took the time to understand who I am and what I’m all about—and I, in turn, am led to further know and understand them in response.

Whether it’s my husband, a friend, or an acquaintance on the front steps of my children’s elementary school, when someone takes the time to really know me, I genuinely feel loved.

In a way, the same unfolds in this week’s reading: first with Moses, then with Pharaoh, and, even, dare I say, with God.

Throughout Exodus 5–7, the reader grows to know and understand the character of Moses. Just as Moses is God’s ambassador, we also see within him a real faith: a faith that doesn’t know all the answers, but still shows up. A faith that believes in himself and in his God one minute, then wavers and doubts like it’s his very job the next.

Moses doubts his ability to speak, once again calling himself a poor speaker (Exodus 6:30). Other translations cite this as “faltering lips” (NIV) or by the simple declaration, “I stutter” (The Message). Regardless of specifics, his speech impediment causes God to problem-solve on the spot and enlist the help of Moses’ brother, Aaron, to accompany him before the Pharaoh.

Of course, his doubt doesn’t end there.

Exodus 5 ends with the following declaration from Moses: “O Lord, why have you mistreated this people? Why did you ever send me? Since I first came to Pharaoh to speak in your name, he has mistreated this people, and you have done nothing at all to deliver your people” (5:22-23).

Moses doesn’t hold back with a litany of accusatory “why?” questions. He doesn’t try and sugarcoat his experience, but he speaks with an openness and an honesty that’s rather refreshing, if you think about it.
 
The more he speaks, the more we get to know him – and the more we are reminded that God is always in the business of using ordinary, prone-to-doubt humans like ourselves. Moses, one theologian writes, “was seeking reassurance … confirmation that he was, indeed, obeying. Moses was learning.” I don’t doubt Moses was a lot like us.

As readers, we also get to know more about the villain of these chapters, Pharaoh himself. 

Like a toddler who only utters a singular “no,” Pharaoh’s response is much the same: “Who is the Lord, that I should heed him and let Israel go? I do not know the Lord, and I will not let Israel go” (5:2). Just as God predicted, Pharaoh’s heart becomes hardened and he refuses to listen to Moses and Aaron (7:13). As a result, God’s people are forced to build bricks without the king’s straw; later, blood is everywhere, covering the Egyptian land.

But just as the reader gets to know the doubting figure of Moses, we get to know the Pharaoh who doesn’t fully understand. “He had obviously never heard of Yehoveh,” the aforementioned theologian continues. “Further, since gods were territorial, and the Hebrews lived in Egypt, Pharaoh was incredulous that there could have existed a god that had some undefined kind of influence within Egypt, and he didn’t know that god.”

Knowing a god’s name mattered to an ancient Egyptian mind, because when you knew a god’s name, you could communicate with a god—and if you could communicate with a god, you could get that god to do what you wanted. Although Pharaoh got his wires got crossed in the many noes he spewed, I also can’t help but wonder if Pharaoh merely wanted to know the God Moses and Aaron spoke of—so that he might love and be loved by this same God of Aaron and Moses.

In that way, perhaps Pharaoh is there to remind us to choose empathy. We choose to be empathetic even when we disagree, even when we are told “no,” even when we don’t understand. We can let a mindset of empathy guide our path.

Because there, at the front of the path and at the end of the path, above the path and below the path, and at every inch around the path, is the God who is with us—the God who is called I-Am-Present (The Message) and The God Who Sees, as immigration advocate and author Karen González writes in the appropriately-titled book. 

This God is the one who equipped Moses and Aaron to go before the Pharaoh and ask that the slaves be set free—just for three days, mind you—so they could journey into the desert to celebrate and worship (Exodus 5:3).

And this same God is the one who promises that God’s people will know this God, simply because God is and God will: “I am the Lord, and I will free you from the burdens of the Egyptians and deliver you from slavery to them. I will redeem you with an outstretched arm and with mighty acts of judgment. I will take you as my people, and I will be your God. You shall know that I am the Lord your God, who has freed you from the burdens of the Egyptians. I will bring you into the land that I swore to give to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; I will give it to you for a possession. I am the Lord” (Exodus 6:6-8).

Even when, like the Israelites, we cannot hear because we have been beaten down in spirit by the harsh conditions around us, God is still present.

God still makes God’s ways known, over and over again, for just as we seek and desire to be known and loved, God desires to be known and loved by us in return.

And I don’t know about you, but that gives me hope.
Reflection

  • Do you agree or disagree with the writer’s assertion that we feel loved when we are known and understood? Why or why not? When, in your life, has feeling utterly known made all the difference?

  • As readers, we certainly get to know more about one Moses as we read through these chapters in Exodus. Whether through the readings or today’s reflection piece, how do you see yourself reflected in the character of Moses?

  • Take now the person of Pharaoh and the even bigger idea of empathy: who does the Egyptian king prompt you to have empathy for, especially when you disagree or do not understand?

  • How is God prompting you to see God’s ever-present, ever-seeing self in your life and in the world today? How might God be inviting you and your community to be known and know God, in the days going forward?
Bio

Our guest writer for the weekly Exodus reflections is Cara Meredith. Cara Meredith is a writer, speaker and conversationalist. A former high school English teacher and non-profit outreach director, she holds a Master of Theology degree (Fuller Seminary), and is the author of The Color of Lifea spiritual memoir about her journey as a white woman into issues of justice, race and privilege. Originally from the Pacific Northwest, she now lives with her family in Oakland, California.
Going Deeper

Exodus has so much to teach us! The questions posed each week challenge us to go deeper into the text and discern what God is saying to us. We also are pleased to offer reflections on various themes from Exodus, presented by leaders from across the Episcopal Church.
 
Good Book Club participant Theresa Chalich of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, responded to the question posed last week about “Good Trouble” and who we see modeling the fight for wholeness and justice. She wrote, “As I reflect on the Good Trouble question, I can only think of Reverend William Barber and the Poor People's Campaign. He addresses the political arena but ensures that our campaign is that of a moral one. This is what strengthens my faith and gives me the hope to continue on despite the adversities against fairness and justice.”
 
Donald Romanik, president of the Episcopal Church Foundation, offers a video reflection on "The Revelation of God through an Unlikely Leader." ECF is committed to helping build, vitalize and transform Episcopal faith communities focusing on formation, finance and resources. Learn more about their ministry.
More Ways To Get Involved

Exploring Exodus: For six weeks this Epiphany, meet with other students from around the world for a live, online class on the Book of Exodus with Vicki Garvey, a respected teacher and author and canon for lifelong education at the Episcopal Diocese of Chicago. In this free class, Vicki will teach about the context and themes of the Book of Exodus. Classes meet live on Thursdays at 8 p.m. EST. Join at any time! Register here.

Introduction to Exodus: Join the Montreal Diocesan Theological College in the Anglican Church of Canada for a free, 90-minute webinar and introduction to the Book of Exodus. This 90-minute online webinar provides a foundation for students to read Exodus for themselves by offering an overview of the book’s content, structure, and key themes. The class is on Thursday, January 13, from 7-8:30 pm EST, and taught by the Rev. Dr. Jesse Zink, principal of Montreal Diocesan Theological College. Learn more and register here.

Explore Exodus at Home: Building Faith, a ministry of Lifelong Learning at Virginia Theological Seminary, and GrowChristians.org, an online community of faith, have partnered to prepare weekly activities for adults and children to explore the Book of Exodus. Click here to download the activities or sign up for the weekly email.
Participant Spotlight

How are you participating in the Good Book Club? Share your story with us (and send pictures too, if you have them!). We’ll highlight participants from across the church. Send the information to Richelle at [email protected].

Let’s learn from and be inspired by each other!