Infamously
In the Book of Exodus, to humanity's horror,
the nation of Israel is born.
Unfamously
The newborn nation of Israel bears the image
of a human baby!
Early in the narrative, God plainly invites
readers to conceive of Israel as his child:
"Israel is my son, my firstborn! So I
said to you: Let my son go so that he
may serve me. But you have refused to
let him go! Behold! I am going to kill
your son, your firstborn!"
Upon creating this cute, childish metaphor, God quickly...
-
Forgets about it?
Noooooooooooooooooo!
-
Walks it back?
Nooooooooooooooooooooo!
-
Abandons it?
Nooooooooooooooooooooooo!
-
Does a cute trick?
Yessssssssssssssss!
"...?"
Like a potter shaping a lump of clay, God
shapes the events of the Exodus, making Israel's story
resemble a baby's story.
An illustration
-
40 weeks
decades of pregnancy: bondage: Done.
-
Now, dad needs to deliver his son!
-
A literal human baby
The nation of Israel
is suddenly expelled from
his comfy captivity using an exit smeared w/
someone else's blood.
Mommy
Egypt
screams in agony:
-
Wages for eating God's fruit w/o permission.
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Push all you want! This pain is God's mission.
-
Our boy gets plopped in a world dry and bright.
Out here he meets dad, full of power and might!
-
His last bond is broken; all filth rinsed away.
(His first rinse was scary, but he is okay!)
-
He needs to grow; God gives him the way! White,
sweet, and so simple: This substance sustains.
-
Real food has to wait; impatience won't pay.
-
For now, he cries when he wants to be fed,
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believes animal figurines keep him safe,
-
and struggles w/ object permanence:
-
Mommy
Moses isn't visible? Waaaah!
-
Daddy isn't visible? Waaah!
Let's In the Exodus,
God's people were born, again,
to flock to a new kingdom where
God would rule from their midst!
Indeed, God tried teaching this:
"Unless you are born again, you
cannot see the Kingdom of God."
"How can a man be born when he
is old? Can he enter a second
time into his mother's womb?"
"You are a respected Jewish
teacher, and yet you don't
understand these things?"
Good news is never new.