
âȘ Lesson 1: Oppression â The Background and the Birth of Moses
đ 1.4 Moses Is Born
âš A Child of Hope: Godâs Plan Begins in Secret
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đŠ Introduction
Some lives begin in the greatest distressâand yet God uses them in marvelous ways. Such was the life of Moses. When he was born, every Hebrew boy in Egypt faced death. And yet he survived. Why? Because Godâs hand was visibly upon him. Exodus 2:1â10 powerfully shows us how Godâs providence works amid threat, fear, and chaosâand what it means for us today.
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đ Bible Study: Exodus 2:1â10Â
Moses is born into a time of overwhelming oppression. The Pharaoh has ordered every Hebrew boy to be killed (Exodus 1:22). Yet a Levite couple defies the decree and gives birth to a sonâMoses. They recognize that this child is âgoodâ (Hebrew tov), a hint of divine purpose.
For three months they hide him. Finally, they place him in a reed basket on the Nile, trusting that God Himself will take control. And indeed: Pharaohâs daughter finds him, is moved with compassion, and adopts him as her own son. Moses grows up in the palaceâkept safe, protected, and prepared.
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đ Answers to the Questions
đ Question 1: Read Exodus 2:1â10. What role did Godâs providence and protection play at Mosesâ birth?
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Birth in Danger: Although all Hebrew boys are to be killed, God gives the parents courage to keep Moses alive.
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Called âGoodâ (tov): This term echoes the creation story. God sees in Moses more than a babyâHe sees a future calling.
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Rescue on the River: The basket is set adrift at exactly the right time and placeâstraight into the hands of Pharaohâs daughter.
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Return to His Mother: Moses is not only saved but also spends time with his birth mother, receiving vital spiritual grounding.
All these elements show that God acts decisively even when humanly all seems lost. His ways are often hidden, but never random.
đ Question 2: How much do you learn that ultimately proves useless for what really matters?
Moses received an extraordinary education in Pharaohâs houseâlanguage, leadership, warfare, diplomacy: all the makings of a great ruler. But when God calls him, most of those skills prove irrelevant. God leads Moses into the wilderness for forty years, where he learns what truly counts: humility, obedience, and dependence on God.
This question challenges us today: How much time, energy, and effort do we invest in things of no everlasting value? Knowledge, abilities, status, controlâthey are good when used for God, but worthless if they draw us away from Him.
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âš Spiritual Principles
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Godâs plan often starts in secret. Great callings arise from humble beginnings.
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Godâs protection works through simple means. A mother, a basket, a childâthese suffice for Him.
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True training happens in Godâs school. Worldly wisdom alone cannot equip one for spiritual mission.
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God fulfills His promises even when all odds are against them.
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đ§© Application for Daily Life
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Trust that God sees your lifeâeven if no one else notices.
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Offer Him your âtodayâ even when you donât understand your âtomorrow.â
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Examine your learningâdoes it draw you closer to God or farther away?
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Embrace apparent setbacks (like Mosesâ wilderness years) as Godâs preparation.
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â Conclusion
Mosesâ story begins in utmost danger and culminates in divine calling. His life proves: God rescues those whom others discardâand then uses them. His story shows that no child, no person, and no life is accidental. Godâs eyes are fixed on what He Himself has deemed âgood.â
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đ Thought of the Day
Your journey may not start in a palace but in a simple basket. Yet if Godâs hand rests upon you, He will lead you right where you are needed.
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âïž Illustration â âThe Baby in the Boxâ
Hamburg, 2023
Garbage collectors first thought it was an animal: a cardboard box, drenched, shivering under a bridge on a winterâs night. When they opened it, they found an infant wrapped in an old coatâwith a note pinned to his chest: âPlease save him. His name is Samuel.â
He was taken to the hospital and stabilized. No mother or father came forward. After a few media reports, the story quietly slipped from the public eye. But a pediatric nurse named Miriam never forgot him. She contacted child services and prayed continually. Weeks later, she was granted custody.
âI donât know why,â she often said, âbut I believe God has a plan for him.â
Samuel was differentâquiet, observant, thoughtful. In school he stood out not for grades but for helping others unseen. At seventeen he began mentoring other foster youth. At twenty-one he studied social work. By thirty he led an international childrenâs charityâquietly, effectively, in deep faith.
His colleagues sometimes ask why he fights so passionately for life. He smiles and says,
âBecause I was meant to dieâbut God had other plans.â
