How could God use me for anything? I'm no one special.
I'm just an ordinary person with an ordinary life.
THIS WEEK'S TORAH PORTION:
Shemot (שמות | Names)
Torah: Exodus 1:1-6:1
Haftarah: Isaiah 27:6-28:13, 29:22-23
Gospel: Luke 5:12-39
Ordinary Life
When Moses got up that morning and counted the sheep, he
did not say to himself, “I think I’ll take the sheep out on the west side of
the wilderness over by the Mountain of God.” Mount Horeb was simply Mount
Horeb, an indistinct rock in the wilderness like so many other hills and
mountains, completely ordinary looking. There was nothing special about it.
Mount Horeb became Mount Sinai, the mountain of God, simply because God chose
it, not because it was taller, mightier or holier than any of the surrounding
hills and mountains.
In a similar way, Moses became Moses, the Man of God
because God called him, encountered him and commissioned him, not because he
was more pious, mightier, smarter or more eloquent than other men. God is in
the ordinary, and encounters with God happen in ordinary places. But when God
is encountered, the ordinary is immediately transformed into the extraordinary.
The very ordinary Mount Horeb was transformed into the extraordinary, Mount
Sinai because of God’s presence was there. The very ordinary Moses, a simple
Hebrew exile from Egypt, a shepherd in the wilderness, was transformed into
Moses the Man of God, the greatest prophet of all time because he encountered
God. God transformed the ordinary man into something extraordinary.
Most of us do not regard ourselves as extraordinary
people. You probably think of yourself as a fairly ordinary person with a
fairly mundane life. From God’s perspective, that is perfect. You are the
perfect person with whom He can do extraordinary things. He is not looking for
prophets; He is looking for normal people who are carrying on under normal circumstances.
When Moses saw the burning bush, he turned aside to
investigate. Only then did the Holy One reveal Himself to Moses. Our problem is
that we do not take the time to turn aside and investigate. We all intend to
grow spiritually. We all imagine that one day, we will take time to study, take
time to grow in Torah, to do a mitzvah, to pray regularly. But you can’t take
good intentions to the grave. A famous rabbi once said, “Do not say to
yourself, ‘When I have more time, I will study Torah. Perhaps you will not have
more time'" (m.Avot 2:4) Do not say, when I have more time, I will turn
aside, you might not have more time.
-First Fruits of Zion
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