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							Writer and artist Mary Anne Radmacher has said, 
							“Courage doesn't always roar. Sometimes courage is 
							the little voice at the end of the day that says 
							I'll try again tomorrow.”
 If there ever was a story about courage, look no 
							further than the story of the exodus of God’s people 
							in the Hebrew Scriptures. No other book in the Bible 
							has been more dramatized and filmed except the life 
							of Christ. Perhaps the fascination with this story 
							is because God is not talked about, or even 
							theorized about. Rather, God is there. And God's in 
							the face of Moses almost the entire time.
 
 When we are introduced to Moses, “courage” is a word 
							that resonates and reveals what this stammering 
							prophet’s story is about.
 
 The story of Moses’ beginning would be impossible 
							without the strength and courage of women. There is 
							the bravery of his own mother, who defies the law of 
							the state to keep her son alive; pharaoh’s daughter, 
							who takes the baby she knows is a Hebrew boy and, 
							also in defiance of the state and her father, raises 
							him as her own; and Moses’ sister, Miriam, who 
							guards Moses from a distance as he floats in his 
							basket--eventually bringing their mother to 
							pharaoh’s daughter to be his wet nurse.
 
 The progression of heroines and their showing of 
							courage begins with the midwives Shiphrah and Puah. 
							It is they who defy pharaoh’s edict and refuse to 
							kill the Hebrew boys.
 
 To do that—to stand in the way of genocide and to 
							confront commands from a powerful empire—requires 
							courage.
 
 You know what else requires courage?
 
 To be honest with God.
 
 
  
							Soon these little ones will have gained enough 
							courage to spread their wings and fly...
 
 This is why Moses’ story is fascinating. After being 
							saved by the courage of midwives, Moses courageously 
							enters into perhaps the most intimate relationship 
							we see unfold in the story of God.
 
 
 
 
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			I’m not talking about the obvious and well known events of Moses’ 
			life: the burning bush, the parting of the Red Sea, the final scene 
			of his life where he stands on the edge of the Promise Land but 
			doesn’t get to enter. No, I’m talking about the moments in Moses’ 
			life where he expresses his frustrations towards God as he and the 
			Israelites wander aimlessly in the desert, when Aaron and the 
			Israelites build a golden cow, and when God calls Moses to the task 
			of being God’s spokesperson–one perk being to go before pharaoh and 
			declare that God’s people be let go. Like most of us would, Moses 
			thinks this is one horrible idea and tries to get out of it: “O my 
			Holy One, I have never been eloquent, neither in the past nor even 
			now that you have spoken to your servant; but I am slow of speech 
			and slow of tongue.” 
			Moses, in the presence of God, had the courage to express to God 
			Moses’ fears and doubts.
 And guess what?
 
 God doesn’t abandon Moses. And God also doesn’t buy his excuses.
 
 God responds to Moses: “Who gives speech to mortals? Who makes them 
			mute or deaf, seeing or blind? Is it not I, the Holy One? Now go, 
			and I will be with your mouth and teach you what you are to speak.”
 
 Thus continues the story of God’s presence and promise to always be 
			with God’s people.
 
 Courage doesn’t always look like a person who has their lives in 
			order, who always has a smile on their face in all their Facebook 
			photos, nor is courage defined as a radical act of protest in the 
			face of an oppressive political play out.
 
 Courage, like many of the most-treasured virtues, is often much more 
			subtle. It looks like ordinary people, doing ordinary things, and 
			being honest not only with others and themselves, but with God.
 
 We resolve to “try again tomorrow” because we, as God’s people, live 
			in the hope and promise that, like with Moses, God will meet us 
			there.
 
 
 [Adam Quine, First Presbyterian Church in Lincoln]
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