10 min 8 mths

โ›ช Lesson 2: The Burning Bush
๐Ÿ“˜ 2.4 Four Excuses
โœจ Four Excuses โ€“ and God’s Patient Calling

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๐ŸŸฆ Introduction

When God calls, we often expect enthusiasm, vision, and a clear plan. But in reality, the opposite is often true: fear, doubt, and excuses. Even great heroes of faith, like Moses, stood at that exact crossroads.

Exodus chapter 4 doesnโ€™t show us the triumphant leader of Israelโ€”it presents a hesitant, cautious, almost resistant man who meets Godโ€™s call with four excuses and finally says, โ€œPlease send someone else.โ€

Yet this very chapter offers comfort to all who hesitate. It shows how God responds to our doubts with patience, clarity, and concrete help. At the same time, it warns: Delayed obedience is often hidden disobedience.

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๐Ÿ“˜ Bible Study: Exodus 4:1โ€“17 โ€“ The Call and Mosesโ€™ Excuses

๐Ÿ”น Verse 1 โ€“ The Third Excuse: “What if they do not believe me?”

After already hesitating in chapter 3 (โ€œWho am I?โ€ / โ€œWho are You?โ€), Moses now asks another questionโ€”one that sounds very human:

“They wonโ€™t believe me.”

What appears to be a concern about credibility is, in truth, a defensive excuse. Moses knows his past in Egypt is not honorable (see Ex. 2:14). He assumes no one will take him seriously. But God does not respond with rebukeโ€”He gives Moses signs, visible proofs of divine authority.

๐Ÿ”น Verses 2โ€“9 โ€“ Godโ€™s Three Signs

  1. The Staff Turns into a Snake (vv. 2โ€“4):
    The shepherdโ€™s staffโ€”symbol of authorityโ€”becomes a serpent, a terrifying creature. God tells Moses to grab it by the tail (!), which would normally be dangerous.
    ๐Ÿ‘‰ Obeying Godโ€™s command overcomes fear.

  2. The Leprous Hand (vv. 6โ€“7):
    Moses places his hand into his cloakโ€”it becomes diseased, then healed.
    ๐Ÿ‘‰ God has power over disease and healing.

  3. Water into Blood (vv. 8โ€“9):
    Nile water becomes bloodโ€”a sign of judgment, later seen in the plagues.
    ๐Ÿ‘‰ Lack of faith has consequences.

These signs are not random. They reveal Godโ€™s power over nature, illness, and human authority, and theyโ€™re meant to strengthen Mosesโ€™ courage to obey.

๐Ÿ”น Verses 10โ€“12 โ€“ The Fourth Excuse: “Iโ€™m not a good speaker.”

Moses now speaks of his weakness:

โ€œI am slow of speech and tongue.โ€

This may refer to an actual speech issueโ€”or simply low self-confidence. God responds with a rhetorical question:

โ€œWho gave human beings their mouths?โ€
He points to His creative authorityโ€”He knows Moses and still chooses him.

๐Ÿ”น Verses 13โ€“17 โ€“ “Please send someone else.”

Moses now drops the questions. He directly resists God’s call:

โ€œO Lord, please send someone else.โ€

At this point, โ€œthe Lordโ€™s anger burned.โ€ Yet even then, God doesnโ€™t abandon Mosesโ€”He offers help:

โ€œAaron your brother can speak. I will be with your mouth and with his.โ€

Itโ€™s a compromiseโ€”but also a limitation. Later, Aaron will be the one to build the golden calf. Whether Aaron was part of Godโ€™s original plan is unclearโ€”but God can still work through imperfect paths to fulfill His purpose.

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๐Ÿ“– Answers to the Questions

๐Ÿ“Œ Question 1: What signs did God give Moses to confirm his calling?

God gave Moses three signs:

  • Staff to snake โ€“ God’s authority over danger.

  • Leprous hand healed โ€“ Symbol of cleansing and restoration.

  • Water to blood โ€“ A sign of judgment and divine seriousness.

These signs had a double purpose:

  • To strengthen Moses’ own trust.

  • To prove to the people that God was speaking through him.

God didnโ€™t reject Moses’ doubtsโ€”He gave proof. But the signs alone didnโ€™t produce obedience. That would require surrender.

๐Ÿ“Œ Question 2: What did God say in response to Moses’ final excuse, and what do we learn from it?

God answers firmly:

โ€œI will be with your mouth and teach you what to say.โ€
Later: โ€œAaron will speak for you.โ€

But even God’s patience has limits. His anger burnsโ€”not because Moses is weak, but because he refuses to trust. God seeks availability, not perfection.

Lessons for us:

  • God doesnโ€™t call us because weโ€™re readyโ€”He calls to make us ready.

  • Excuses block blessingโ€”or lead to detours.

  • God provides helpโ€”but we must choose obedience.

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โœจ Spiritual Principles

๐Ÿ”น God calls us despite our weaknessesโ€”not because of our strengths.
๐Ÿ”น Excuses protect us temporarilyโ€”but hinder Godโ€™s work through us.
๐Ÿ”น Godโ€™s patience is greatโ€”but not infinite.
๐Ÿ”น Obedience is the beginning of miracles.

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๐Ÿงฉ Application for Daily Life

  • Afraid to pray out loud? God will guide your mouth.

  • Feel unworthy to talk about Jesus? He called you, not you yourself.

  • Waiting to โ€œfeel readyโ€? Moses wasnโ€™t ready eitherโ€”but he went.

What is your staffโ€”the symbol of what you have? Are you willing to surrender it, even if God uses it in surprising ways?

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โœ… Conclusion

God doesnโ€™t ignore our excusesโ€”but He doesnโ€™t let them stop His calling either. Moses was given signs, help, and Aaron. But the turning point came only when Moses yielded and went.

Godโ€™s call doesnโ€™t wait forever. He calls today.
The question is: What will you do with your โ€œHere I amโ€?

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๐Ÿ’ญ Thought of the Day

God doesn’t call you because you’re capable.
He calls you because He wants to do something greater through you.

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โœ๏ธ Illustration โ€“ The Calling

โœจ Chapter 1 โ€“ The Invitation

It was a rainy Tuesday evening when Jonas first read the email. Subject: “Mentoring Program โ€“ Your Contribution Matters.”
The sender was Pastor Ralf, an old acquaintance who had once led his confirmation class. Jonas had ignored the message for three daysโ€”but now he opened it:

โ€œDear Jonas,
Iโ€™ve had you on my heart in prayer. Weโ€™re looking for someone to guide young men in our mentoring program. Itโ€™s not about giving speechesโ€”but about being present, honest, and available. I believe God has prepared you. Please let me know by Friday.
Warmly, Ralf.โ€

Jonas leaned back and shut the laptop, as if the device had said something offensive.

โœจ Chapter 2 โ€“ The Memories

Jonas was 34. An interior designer. Detail-focused, calm, introverted. People liked himโ€”from a distance. He was dependable, but never loud.

He remembered his last attempt at spiritual leadership. At 23, heโ€™d tried giving a devotional in his old church youth group. Heโ€™d stammered. Lost his place. The room had gone silentโ€”not reverent, just awkward. He never tried again.

โ€œIโ€™m not someone who stands at the front.โ€
Heโ€™d repeated that to himself for years.

โœจ Chapter 3 โ€“ The Excuses

On Wednesday, he wrote a reply. Deleted it. Wrote again. Deleted it again.

  • โ€œIโ€™m working on a big project right now.โ€ โ€“ True, but not unmanageable.

  • โ€œIโ€™m not a public speaker.โ€ โ€“ Probably accurate. But was that really the point?

  • โ€œI canโ€™t relate to troubled teens. Iโ€™m not a counselor.โ€ โ€“ Another shield.

That night, Jonas dreamed. He saw a boy, maybe 16, sitting in a dark hallway with his head down.
Then a voice said:

โ€œHeโ€™s waiting for someone who listens. And youโ€™re sitting in front of the TV.โ€

He woke up drenched in sweat.

โœจ Chapter 4 โ€“ Godโ€™s Response

On Thursday, Jonas opened his Bibleโ€”randomly.
He landed on Exodus 4. The words struck him:

โ€œI am slow of speech and tongue.โ€
โ€œWho made manโ€™s mouth?โ€
โ€œI will be with your mouth.โ€

His throat tightened. This is no coincidence, he thought.
And then he read the line that changed everything:

โ€œLord, please send someone else.โ€

Not out of rebellionโ€”but because he saw himself too clearly.
He saw himself in Mosesโ€”and it frightened him.

โœจ Chapter 5 โ€“ The Step

On Friday, he replied:

โ€œRalf, Iโ€™m scared. But I think Iโ€™m supposed to say yes. So Iโ€™m saying yes.โ€

Two weeks later, Jonas sat in the church youth room. Four boys, aged 14โ€“17, slouched on old couches. One scrolled his phone. One yawned.
Jonas had prepared a short message: โ€œGod sees you.โ€

He spoke quietly. No pressure. No show. No applause. Just silence.

Then one boy came up after:

โ€œWill you be here next week?โ€
Jonas nodded.
โ€œCool. I didnโ€™t know God saw me.โ€

โœจ Chapter 6 โ€“ The Change

What followed wasnโ€™t a revival. No stage lights. No big conversions.
But every Tuesday, Jonas showed up. The group grew. Not quicklyโ€”but honestly.

One boy shared his dad never looked him in the eye.
Another said he prayed, even though he didnโ€™t go to church.

And Jonas?
He learned to listen. To speak gently. To be real.
He didnโ€™t become a preacherโ€”but he became a servant of God, just as God had wanted.

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