
โช Lesson 2: The Burning Bush
๐ 2.4 Four Excuses
โจ Four Excuses โ and God’s Patient Calling
………………………………………………………………….
๐ฆ 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 doesnโt show us the triumphant leader of Israelโit presents a hesitant, cautious, almost resistant man who meets Godโs call with four excuses and finally says, โPlease 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.
………………………………………………………………….
๐ Bible Study: Exodus 4:1โ17 โ The Call and Mosesโ Excuses
๐น Verse 1 โ The Third Excuse: “What if they do not believe me?”
After already hesitating in chapter 3 (โWho am I?โ / โWho are You?โ), Moses now asks another questionโone that sounds very human:
“They wonโt 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 rebukeโHe gives Moses signs, visible proofs of divine authority.
๐น Verses 2โ9 โ Godโs Three Signs
-
The Staff Turns into a Snake (vv. 2โ4):
The shepherdโs staffโsymbol of authorityโbecomes a serpent, a terrifying creature. God tells Moses to grab it by the tail (!), which would normally be dangerous.
๐ Obeying Godโs command overcomes fear. -
The Leprous Hand (vv. 6โ7):
Moses places his hand into his cloakโit becomes diseased, then healed.
๐ God has power over disease and healing. -
Water into Blood (vv. 8โ9):
Nile water becomes bloodโa sign of judgment, later seen in the plagues.
๐ Lack of faith has consequences.
These signs are not random. They reveal Godโs power over nature, illness, and human authority, and theyโre meant to strengthen Mosesโ courage to obey.
๐น Verses 10โ12 โ The Fourth Excuse: “Iโm not a good speaker.”
Moses now speaks of his weakness:
โI am slow of speech and tongue.โ
This may refer to an actual speech issueโor simply low self-confidence. God responds with a rhetorical question:
โWho gave human beings their mouths?โ
He points to His creative authorityโHe knows Moses and still chooses him.
๐น Verses 13โ17 โ “Please send someone else.”
Moses now drops the questions. He directly resists God’s call:
โO Lord, please send someone else.โ
At this point, โthe Lordโs anger burned.โ Yet even then, God doesnโt abandon MosesโHe offers help:
โAaron your brother can speak. I will be with your mouth and with his.โ
Itโs a compromiseโbut also a limitation. Later, Aaron will be the one to build the golden calf. Whether Aaron was part of Godโs original plan is unclearโbut God can still work through imperfect paths to fulfill His purpose.
………………………………………………………………….
๐ Answers to the Questions
๐ 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 didnโt reject Moses’ doubtsโHe gave proof. But the signs alone didnโt produce obedience. That would require surrender.
๐ Question 2: What did God say in response to Moses’ final excuse, and what do we learn from it?
God answers firmly:
โI will be with your mouth and teach you what to say.โ
Later: โAaron will speak for you.โ
But even God’s patience has limits. His anger burnsโnot because Moses is weak, but because he refuses to trust. God seeks availability, not perfection.
Lessons for us:
-
God doesnโt call us because weโre readyโHe calls to make us ready.
-
Excuses block blessingโor lead to detours.
-
God provides helpโbut we must choose obedience.
………………………………………………………………….
โจ Spiritual Principles
๐น God calls us despite our weaknessesโnot because of our strengths.
๐น Excuses protect us temporarilyโbut hinder Godโs work through us.
๐น Godโs patience is greatโbut not infinite.
๐น Obedience is the beginning of miracles.
………………………………………………………………….
๐งฉ 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 โfeel readyโ? Moses wasnโt ready eitherโbut he went.
What is your staffโthe symbol of what you have? Are you willing to surrender it, even if God uses it in surprising ways?
………………………………………………………………….
โ Conclusion
God doesnโt ignore our excusesโbut He doesnโt let them stop His calling either. Moses was given signs, help, and Aaron. But the turning point came only when Moses yielded and went.
Godโs call doesnโt wait forever. He calls today.
The question is: What will you do with your โHere I amโ?
………………………………………………………………….
๐ญ 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.
………………………………………………………………….
โ๏ธ Illustration โ The Calling
โจ 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 daysโbut now he opened it:
โDear Jonas,
Iโve had you on my heart in prayer. Weโre looking for someone to guide young men in our mentoring program. Itโs not about giving speechesโbut 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.
โจ Chapter 2 โ The Memories
Jonas was 34. An interior designer. Detail-focused, calm, introverted. People liked himโfrom a distance. He was dependable, but never loud.
He remembered his last attempt at spiritual leadership. At 23, heโd tried giving a devotional in his old church youth group. Heโd stammered. Lost his place. The room had gone silentโnot reverent, just awkward. He never tried again.
โIโm not someone who stands at the front.โ
Heโd repeated that to himself for years.
โจ Chapter 3 โ The Excuses
On Wednesday, he wrote a reply. Deleted it. Wrote again. Deleted it again.
-
โIโm working on a big project right now.โ โ True, but not unmanageable.
-
โIโm not a public speaker.โ โ Probably accurate. But was that really the point?
-
โI canโt relate to troubled teens. Iโm 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:
โHeโs waiting for someone who listens. And youโre sitting in front of the TV.โ
He woke up drenched in sweat.
โจ Chapter 4 โ Godโs Response
On Thursday, Jonas opened his Bibleโrandomly.
He landed on Exodus 4. The words struck him:
โI am slow of speech and tongue.โ
โWho made manโs mouth?โ
โI will be with your mouth.โ
His throat tightened. This is no coincidence, he thought.
And then he read the line that changed everything:
โLord, please send someone else.โ
Not out of rebellionโbut because he saw himself too clearly.
He saw himself in Mosesโand it frightened him.
โจ Chapter 5 โ The Step
On Friday, he replied:
โRalf, Iโm scared. But I think Iโm supposed to say yes. So Iโm saying yes.โ
Two weeks later, Jonas sat in the church youth room. Four boys, aged 14โ17, slouched on old couches. One scrolled his phone. One yawned.
Jonas had prepared a short message: โGod sees you.โ
He spoke quietly. No pressure. No show. No applause. Just silence.
Then one boy came up after:
โWill you be here next week?โ
Jonas nodded.
โCool. I didnโt know God saw me.โ
โจ Chapter 6 โ The Change
What followed wasnโt a revival. No stage lights. No big conversions.
But every Tuesday, Jonas showed up. The group grew. Not quicklyโbut honestly.
One boy shared his dad never looked him in the eye.
Another said he prayed, even though he didnโt go to church.
And Jonas?
He learned to listen. To speak gently. To be real.
He didnโt become a preacherโbut he became a servant of God, just as God had wanted.
