Troublesome Zeal
Moses was the awed hero of Israel. The religious accusers at Stephen's trial considered Moses as God's holy law-giver: he could do no wrong. Stephen was charged with 'changing the customs Moses handed down' (Acts 6:14). But they had forgotten the history of this man who God saved from infanticide … the man God chose to lead His people out of Egypt. He was also a murderer (Exodus 2:11-12).
Stephen took time to remind the court of how Moses got into that mess. Until he was forty years of age, Moses was a prince in Egypt, highly educated and trained as a capable leader. But he never forgot his Hebrew background even though it appears he kept his distance from his own people. When he saw the reality of the cruel slavery which was crushing them, Moses decided to intervene and he killed an Egyptian who was ill-treating an Israelite. By the next day all the slaves knew that he was cruel too, and did not want to have anything to do with him.
Moses was now unacceptable to his own people, and a liability to Pharaoh (Exodus 2:14-15). Despite his privileged upbringing and status in the country, Moses became a common criminal and he fled for his life. For the next forty years he became a shepherd in the Sinai wilderness. He was a non-entity who married the daughter of a Bedouin priest in Midian, Jethro (also known as Reuel), and Moses spent his next four decades as a shepherd in the desert (Exodus 2:16-22).
And yet God had His hand on this sinful man and his untamed passion. For forty years, he learned how to read the wilderness and where water could be found: it was essential training for his main job, another forty years of leading God's people and their livestock in the same wilderness. Yet, Moses was a murderer; why did God choose him? The same was true of the Apostle Paul (1 Corinthians 15:9); and the same question might be asked of any of us. The truth is that there are no sinless people for God to use (Romans 3:23), except Jesus (2 Corinthians 5:21). All of us are unworthy, but the grace of God is greater than our sin. Our future is not determined by our past, if we repent and receive Christ. He is able to do far more than ever we can imagine (Ephesians 3:20), using us despite, or because of, our past. Please be encouraged; let the Lord be at work in and through a sinner like you, today.

