“If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.” Pharaoh must have heard and heeded this
advice for when his initial population control plan failed, he hatched up
another—death by drowning. “Then Pharaoh gave this order to all his
people, ‘Every Hebrew boy that is born you must throw into the Nile’”(Ex 1:22). Sobs of grief filled Egypt’s air as helpless
infants were snatched from clinging arms and tossed cruelly in the river.
One family, descendants of Jacob’s son, Levi, couldn’t bear
for their boy to meet such a fate. The
baby was Amram and Jochebed’s third child—their second son, and they were
determined to let him live. For the first
twelve weeks of his life, they concealed his presence, cringing when he cried
and holding their breath if foreign footsteps slowed at the front door. But after three months, the baby was too big
to hush and hide, so Jochebed bought a basket and made a boat, sealing each
crack and crevice with tar, pitch, love, and prayer. It was time to let him go.
She had faithfully done her part to help him float; now she
must trust God to keep him afloat. “She placed the child in the basket and put
it among the reeds along the bank of the Nile”(Ex 2:3).
As a parent whose nest has recently emptied, this really hit
home, but children aren’t the only things we need to loosen our hold upon. We tightly clutch those and that which are
precious, and so we should, but when the time comes where circumstances,
situations, and the sovereignty of God demand that we relax our grip, we need
to “buy a basket,” coat it with lots of love and prayer, place our treasure
inside, and put it all in God’s strong hands.
Doing so requires courage, selflessness, faith, hope, love,
and sometimes desperation, since the future isn’t certain and the unknown can
be unnerving, but when we realize that all good gifts come from God and are for
God, we can trust Him with what we can’t control.
Jehovah had
big plans for Moses, but, first, his mama had to put her little baby in the
basket.
Be willing
to let go and let God.
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