God Wants You-Exodus 3-4
- Sermon (10/17/21).
- Have you met God? Describe when and how?
- Do you know what God wants of you?
- How do you understand being called by God?
- Is it primarily to find fulfillment in life?
- Is it dependent on your God-given gifts?
- Is it optional or irresistible?
- Is ministry a career decision or rooted in a sense of calling?
- Isaiah met God when he strolled into the temple (Isa 6:1).
- Jeremiah met God when he heard God speaking to him (Jer 1:4).
- Ezekiel met God by a river (Eze 1:1).
- Jonah met God in the belly of a fish (Jonah 2:1, 9).
- Paul met God when he was knocked off his horse (Ac 9:3-5).
- Peter met God while he was at work fishing (Lk 5:6-8).
- Moses met God while doing his ordinary day job after 40 years (Exo 3:1-2). [Moses met God on an Ordinary Working Day.]
- How did God get Moses’ attention (Exo 3:2)? How did he respond (Exo 3:3)? How might his life be different if he ignored it (cf. Exo 3:4)?
- Has God sought to get your attention? How have you responded?
- Is anything keeping you from turning from your daily life to connect with God?
- How can you make it more likely that you answer God when He calls you?
- Do you find time every day to talk with God, to give Him your attention?
- Do you sense that God desires to meet you so that you can know Him?
- Why did God tell Moses to take off his sandals (Exo 3:5)?
- Why did God identify Himself as the “God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob” (Exo 3:6)? Why does He use their names? [God is all-powerful and personal.]
- What is God’s goal for meeting Moses (Exo 3:8,10,12,18; 4:23; 5:1,3)? For meeting you?
- What are 5 excuses Moses gives to God’s call [protests, objections, expressions of reluctance, unwillingness]?
- Who am I that I should go (Exo 3:11)?
- What if they ask the name of the God who sent me (Exo 3:13)?
- What if they don’t believe me or listen to me (Exo 4:1)?
- I am slow of speech and tongue (Exo 4:10).
- Please send someone else (Exo 4:13).
- What was every excuse focused on? [Himself, his background, knowledge, or skills.]
- What are the answers God gives to each excuse?
- Moses: Who am I that I should go (Exo 3:11)?
- God: I will be with you (Exo 3:12). [See Q. 9]
- Moses: What if they ask the name of the God who sent me (Exo 3:13)? [Who are you?]
- God: gives his name “I Am Who I Am” [I-Will-Be-Who-I-Will-Be] and His mission (to save them) and even a short message about how it will all play out (3:14-21).
- Moses: What if they don’t believe me or listen to me (Exo 4:1)?
- God: I will work miracles so they will believe (4:2-9).
- Moses: I am slow of speech and tongue (Exo 4:10).
- God: Am I not the one who made humans have mouths? I will help you (Exo 4:11-12).
- Moses: Please send someone else (Exo 4:13).
- God: No, but I’ll send someone to help you (4:14-16).
- What do God’s responses focus on? [Not on Moses, but on God. God says that He will be with Moses and that He is all-powerful.] What is God really asking Moses? Asking you? [To trust God, to be used by God.]
- Do you make excuses when God asks you to do something?
- What makes you feel inadequate?
- Is God’s promise to Moses enough to help you to overcome your inadequacies or reluctance?
- Is bringing the people out of Egypt [liberation from slavery] the goal of Moses’ success (Exo 3:12a)? What is the culmination of the exodus event (ch. 15) and the subject of the 2nd half of the book (ch. 20-40)? What does it mean to worship? [‘abad is translated “worship” and “serve.’] (Exo 3:12b; 4:23; 7:16; 8:1,20; 9:1,13; 10:3,7-8,11,24-26; 12:31; 20:5; 23:24-25,33; 24:1; 34:14).
- What are the 7 points that God gave Moses for the elders (Exo 3:16-22)?
- What are the 5 encounters after God responded to Moses’ 5 objections (Exo 4:18-20,21-23,24-26,27-28,29-31)?
- What does it mean to “harden/toughen” Pharaoh’s heart (Exo 4:21)? During the plague cycles notice the 3 different ways this hardness of heart is expressed:
- Pharaoh hardened his own heart (Exo 8:15,32; 9:34).
- Pharaoh’s heart was hardened or became hard (Exo 7:13-14,22-23; 8:19; 9:7,35).
- God hardened his heart (Exo 9:12; 11:10; 14:8).
- Why might God possibly want to put Moses to death and how was it averted (Exo 4:24-26)?
Reference:
- James K. Bruckner. Exodus. New International Bible Commentary. 2008.
- John Goldingay. Exodus & Leviticus for Everyone. 2010.
- Robert Alter. The Hebrew Bible. A translation with commentary. The Five Books of Moses. 2019.
- Dennis Prager. Exodus. God, Slavery, and Freedom. The Rational Bible. 2018.
Exodus sermons:
- Slaves Need Liberation (1:1-14). Women Power–resisting the authorities (1:1-2:10). A Nowhere Man. A man with no home (2:11-24). From a guerrilla to a fugitive.
- God Wants You (3-4). Meeting God on an Ordinary Work Day (3:1-10). God has a Name. The 1st 2 of 5 objections/protests by Moses (3:11-15). 7 points for the elders (3:16-22). Moses’ last 3 protests (4:1-17). 5 short encounters (4:18-31).

