Page last updated

 

 

Unsung Heroes of Faith
Exodus 1:8 – 2:10
Rev. Randy Quinn
         

I don’t know if you followed the story in 2002, but some women took over an oil terminal in Nigeria, demanding jobs for their husbands and sons.[1]  They were demanding that ChevronTexaco fulfill its promises to hire local workers and to provide schools, electricity, and water systems to their village – promises that seemed to have been forgotten by the oil company as soon as the terminal was put into service.

            The sad part of the story is that while the villagers had received nothing but empty promises from the multi-national corporation, the oil terminal itself was filled with what we would call modern amenities, including a medical clinic, a cafeteria, game rooms, and satellite TV.

            The ironic part of the story is that the name of the oil terminal is Escravos, from the Portuguese word for slave!

            The protesting women occupied the port for ten full days before oil company executives met with them and showed good faith efforts to fulfill their promises.  But they only came to Nigeria after the women threatened to “shame” the company by stripping naked on the docks.

            In a country where violence is commonplace, these women bravely and courageously used a non-violent protest to make change happen.

            Theirs is a common story in world history, though few of the people involved in those stories are known by name.  These same protestors were at Tiananmen Square in China.  They were in Selma, Alabama.  They stood alongside Gandhi in India.

            But they were in the Bible long before that.  Peter and Paul and Jesus did not resist arrest.  Nor did Daniel and his friends.  They waited for the power of God to change the world rather than using violent means to overcome the evil they saw.

            It’s easy to think that our story today is about Moses, but the real heroes are five women.  We don’t even know the names of all of these unsung heroes of faith.

            But their story is told in our text today.  Let’s stand as we hear their story.

Read Text

            If it were not for Shiphrah and Puah, this story would sound very much like the story of another baby born many years later – a baby whose very presence brought fear into the heart of a king; a king whose fear led to the intentional slaughter of innocent children (Mt 2:16).

            Our passage today is about the triumph of non-violence over violence, the triumph of right over wrong, the triumph of the weak over the strong, the triumph of slaves over their oppressors.  It is the triumph of God that sets the stage for a much larger triumph when Israel will be released from captivity and set free in the Promised Land.

            But for now, the children of Israel remain in Egypt.  They had come at the invitation of Joseph who promised to meet their needs and feed them (Gen 45:11; 47:1-6).  But that was many generations ago.

            The new leadership no longer remembered Joseph’s good deeds.  The new Pharaoh only saw a growing hoard of people who could shut down the entire economic base of his prosperity by staging a non-violent sit-in.  The new Pharaoh feared they might join with one of his adversaries and violently overrun Egypt.

            So he did what many people in power have done before and since.  He turned on the screws and made life more difficult for them.  He used his power to make life miserable.  It’s an act he will repeat when Moses returns to free the people (Ex 5).

            Pharaoh demands that all Hebrew boys are to be killed at birth (Ex 1:16).

            But Shiphrah and Puah resist the laws of Pharaoh and continue to let babies be born and live.  They know that it is more important to obey God than to obey Pharaoh.

            So Pharaoh updates the law and instructs all of Egypt to kill baby boys born in Hebrew homes (Ex 1:22) – the part of the story not depicted in the movie The Prince of Egypt but alluded to in the dream sequence we watched a few minutes ago.

            We don’t know how long that law continued to be in effect.

            We do know the story of the mother of one particular baby who hides her son until she can no longer hide him.  And, miracle of miracles, not only does her daughter help, but the daughter of Pharaoh joins the conspiracy against Pharaoh by raising this Hebrew child as Pharaoh’s own son (Ex 2:10)!

            And since we learn about Hebrew men younger than Moses when he finally returns, we must assume that the law was changed – or at least no longer enforced.

            My theory?  Pharaoh’s daughter caused the change.  By taking Moses into her care, she humanizes the very same people her father is trying to demonize.

            She joins other Biblical women – named and unnamed – who have had a tremendous impact on the story of faith.  They are heroes.

            And they are not alone.  Other women, other men, have stood up for right in the face of tremendous pressures.  They risked their lives – and at times they gave their lives – for the sake of the Gospel

            Their stories often make me feel pretty insignificant.

                        What have I done that can compare to their actions?

            But the truth is, our actions do make a difference.  There are a host of unsung heroes of faith right here among us this morning.

Ø      Some have sacrificed time in the classroom as a Sunday School teacher.

Ø      Some have chosen careers based on a calling from God rather than the calling of wealth.

Ø      Some have served in the political arena, whether as an elected official or lobbying elected officials on behalf of others.

Ø      Some have made room in their homes for people who had no other place to stay – whether the invited guest was a relative, a child, or a total stranger.

Ø      Some have participated in non-violent protests aimed to change existing laws or raise awareness of injustices in our society.

Ø      Some have simply spent time with children so that the next generation will benefit from their lives.

            Sometimes our actions touch the lives of individuals and sometimes our actions affect policies impacting many lives.  Sometimes we are the ones in positions of power who change policies and sometimes we pressure those in leadership to change them.

            Sometimes we are like Pharaoh’s daughter who encourages Pharaoh to see the Hebrew children as human beings and sometimes we are like Shiphrah and Puah who simply help one person at a time.

            Every time we find ourselves doing what is right, we join these heroes of faith.  Every random act of kindness as well as every letter to our elected leaders, every deliberate choice to serve someone without concern for repayment as well as every policy that is changed by our efforts puts us on the list of unsung heroes of faith.

            My hope and prayer is that our every act will bring glory to God so that each of us may join the saints who have preceded us, spreading the good news of God’s love and sharing the grace of Jesus Christ.

            Amen.


[1]  I followed the story in the Yakima Herald-Republic, but my source of information for this sermon was the article “Squeezing Promises from Oil” (The Other Side, September – October 2002, p 8).