Beside my bed is a nightstand. The nightstand and its two drawers are the resting place of things that, at a particular moment, are not at the top of the priority list. They are things that I want to keep and maybe use later, but are not things that I will use in the immediate future. Screen protectors that come in a 3-pack, but I only need one now. My little case of tiny screws that I can use to repair glasses. A COVID-era calendar that I threw there and forgot about. And ... gift cards with usable value, but they are in that drawer.
What will happen to those gift cards? I might retrieve them and use them. They may stay in the drawer till they expire. But the longer they stay in the drawer, the longer they become forgotten, unused, and potentially wasted.
Enter Moses from the 2nd and 3rd chapters of Exodus. He was a Hebrew born in Egypt during the time the Hebrews were slaves. Moses, at the age of 3 months, was placed in a basket, floated down the Nile River, and was a human Hail Mary prayer as his mother hoped and prayed for his survival (if Moses had been discovered, he would have been killed). Moses was found by the Pharaoh's daughter, nursed to health in the palace, and became her son. Moses, as an adult, saw how his people were mistreated and, in a fit of anger, killed an Egyptian who was beating one of the Hebrew slaves. His act is discovered, and Moses flees justice, going to Midian, where he built a life, married, and tended sheep there for his father-in-law, Jethro. Moses is in the 'nightstand' of life! God opens the drawer, lifts Moses out, and calls him to the work for which Moses was created.
Three things about this story:
1. Even people born into dire circumstances are born with gifts.
2. The circumstances of life and culture will place your gifts in jeopardy, telling you that they are not urgent, important, or currently usable.
3. God doesn't miss or misplace you or your gifts ... He calls you to the Holy Ground of calling.
Moses is told by God (Exodus 3), "I am (the God that exists)," "You are standing on holy ground (a place of divine encounter), and "I have seen the misery of my people." God is real, God can make even dirt holy, and God will use messed-up people and their gifts of obedience to bring people into His plan. He is still doing that! AMEN!
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