Scripture Text
Exodus 4:1-17 -- "Then Moses answered and said, “But suppose they will not believe me or listen to my voice; suppose they say, ‘The LORD has not appeared to you.’ ” So the LORD said to him, “What is that in your hand?” He said, “A rod.” And He said, “Cast it on the ground.” So he cast it on the ground, and it became a serpent; and Moses fled from it. Then the LORD said to Moses, “Reach out your hand and take it by the tail” (and he reached out his hand and caught it, and it became a rod in his hand), “that they may believe that the LORD God of their fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has appeared to you.” Furthermore the LORD said to him, “Now put your hand in your bosom.” And he put his hand in his bosom, and when he took it out, behold, his hand was leprous, like snow. And He said, “Put your hand in your bosom again.” So he put his hand in his bosom again, and drew it out of his bosom, and behold, it was restored like his other flesh. “Then it will be, if they do not believe you, nor heed the message of the first sign, that they may believe the message of the latter sign. And it shall be, if they do not believe even these two signs, or listen to your voice, that you shall take water from the river and pour it on the dry land. The water which you take from the river will become blood on the dry land.” Then Moses said to the LORD, “O my Lord, I am not eloquent, neither before nor since You have spoken to Your servant; but I am slow of speech and slow of tongue.” So the LORD said to him, “Who has made man’s mouth? Or who makes the mute, the deaf, the seeing, or the blind? Have not I, the LORD? Now therefore, go, and I will be with your mouth and teach you what you shall say.” But he said, “O my Lord, please send by the hand of whomever else You may send.” So the anger of the LORD was kindled against Moses, and He said: “Is not Aaron the Levite your brother? I know that he can speak well. And look, he is also coming out to meet you. When he sees you, he will be glad in his heart. Now you shall speak to him and put the words in his mouth. And I will be with your mouth and with his mouth, and I will teach you what you shall do. So he shall be your spokesman to the people. And he himself shall be as a mouth for you, and you shall be to him as God. And you shall take this rod in your hand, with which you shall do the signs.”"
Introduction: The Divine Calling Dilemma
I want to start with something that might feel uncomfortably familiar. You know that moment when you sense God asking you to do something, and your immediate response isn’t “Yes, Lord,” but rather a mental list of reasons why you’re not the right person for the job?
Maybe it’s sharing your faith with that neighbor who seems completely uninterested. Maybe it’s stepping into a ministry role you feel completely unqualified for. Or maybe it’s something as basic as having that difficult conversation you’ve been avoiding.
We all do this. We sense God’s leading, and then we become our own defense attorney, building a case for why someone else would be better suited for the task. Moses was a master at this.
In Exodus 4:1-17, we find Moses at the burning bush, fresh from his encounter with the living God. God has just revealed His plan to deliver Israel from Egyptian bondage, and He’s chosen Moses as His instrument. But Moses isn’t exactly enthusiastic about the assignment.
What unfolds in our passage is a fascinating study in divine calling meeting human resistance. Moses raises three distinct objections, and God responds to each one in ways that reveal both His character and His approach to our inadequacy.
Here’s what we’re going to discover: God’s calling doesn’t depend on our qualifications—His power perfects our weakness, and His patience overcomes our resistance. But there are limits to that patience.
Let’s read Exodus 4:1-17 together.
What we see here is Moses systematically working through every excuse he can think of, while God patiently demonstrates His power and provision. But this isn’t just ancient history—this is a mirror for our own responses to divine calling.
Point 1: The Credibility Crisis (4:1)
Moses’ first objection in verse 1 sounds reasonable on the surface:
“But behold, they will not believe me or listen to my voice, for they will say, ‘The LORD did not appear to you.'”
Think about this from Moses’ perspective. He’s been gone for forty years. He’s going to walk back into Egypt, tell the Israelites that God appeared to him in a burning bush, and expect them to follow him out of slavery? That’s a tough sell.
The Hebrew text gives us some insight into what Moses is really saying. When he says “they will not believe me,” he uses ya’ămînû, from the same root that gives us “Amen.” This isn’t just intellectual doubt—it’s about fundamental trust and reliability. Moses is saying, “They won’t consider me trustworthy.”
And when he says they won’t “listen to my voice,” the Hebrew šāma’ implies obedient hearing—the kind of listening that leads to action. Moses is worried about more than just getting a hearing; he’s worried about getting a following.
So Moses’ first objection reveals what we might call the credibility crisis of divine calling. He’s worried about authentication—how do you prove that God has really called you?
Now, Moses’ concern actually shows pastoral awareness. He understands his audience. After 400 years of slavery, the Israelites would naturally be skeptical of liberation promises. Moses isn’t being faithless here—he’s being realistic about the spiritual condition of his people.
But there’s something deeper going on. Moses’ objection reveals the universal human tendency to focus on potential rejection rather than divine commission. How often do we do the same thing?
When you’ve sensed God calling you to something, what’s usually your first concern? I suspect many of us, like Moses, immediately jump to: “What if they don’t believe me? What if they reject what I have to say? What if I fail?”
Notice what Moses is really doing here—he’s making the success of God’s mission dependent on human response rather than divine power. He’s forgotten that the same God who appeared to him in the burning bush is perfectly capable of authenticating His own message.
This is a crucial lesson: When God calls, the burden of proof isn’t on us—it’s on Him. Our job isn’t to convince people of our credibility; our job is to be faithful to the calling and let God handle the authentication.
God, in His patience and wisdom, doesn’t rebuke Moses for this concern. Instead, He provides exactly what Moses thinks he needs: unmistakable signs of divine power.
Point 2: Divine Authentication Through Signs (4:2-9)
God’s response to Moses’ credibility crisis is immediate and dramatic. He gives Moses three authenticating signs, each one more powerful than the last. Let’s examine what these signs reveal about God’s character and His approach to human doubt.
Sign 1: The Staff Becomes a Serpent (4:2-5)
God starts with something Moses already has—his shepherd’s staff. “What is that in your hand?” God asks. Sometimes God uses what we already have rather than giving us something completely new.
The Hebrew word for staff here is maṭṭeh, which means not just a walking stick, but a symbol of authority and leadership. When Moses throws it down and it becomes a serpent, God is demonstrating His power over creation itself.
But there’s more. In Egyptian religion, the serpent—specifically the uraeus serpent—was a symbol of divine authority worn on Pharaoh’s crown. God is essentially saying, “I have power over the very symbols of Egyptian divine authority. Pharaoh’s gods are under My control.”
And when Moses picks up the serpent by the tail—the dangerous end—and it becomes a staff again, God is showing that His power can be safely handled by those He calls. What seems dangerous in human hands becomes a tool of divine authority when we trust God’s instructions.
Sign 2: The Leprous Hand Restored (4:6-7)
The second sign is even more dramatic. God tells Moses to put his hand inside his cloak, and when he pulls it out, it’s leprous—white as snow. Then God tells him to do it again, and the hand is completely restored.
This sign demonstrates God’s power over purity and impurity, health and disease, life and death. In ancient Israel, leprosy wasn’t just a medical condition—it was a sign of divine judgment that resulted in social isolation and ritual impurity.
The fact that God can cause leprosy instantly and heal it just as quickly shows that He has absolute authority over both judgment and mercy. This would be particularly significant to the Israelites, who understood that only God could heal leprosy.
Sign 3: Water Becomes Blood (4:8-9)
The third sign is prophetic: if the first two signs don’t convince them, Moses is to take water from the Nile and pour it on dry ground, where it will become blood.
This sign is a direct assault on Egyptian religion. The Egyptians worshiped the Nile as Hapi, the god of fertility and life. By turning the Nile’s water into blood, God is demonstrating His power over Egypt’s most sacred symbol and foreshadowing the first plague that will come upon Egypt.
Notice the progression in these signs: The first affects an inanimate object, the second affects Moses personally, and the third affects Egypt’s life source. God is systematically demonstrating His power over every realm—creation, humanity, and the forces that sustain life itself.
How do you see God authenticating His work in your life and in our church today? What are the modern equivalents of these authenticating signs?
The principle remains the same: God doesn’t call us without providing the authentication we need. Sometimes it’s through answered prayer, sometimes through opened doors, sometimes through the transformation He works in and through us. The key is learning to recognize His authentication rather than demanding our own kind of proof.
But even after these incredible demonstrations of divine power, Moses isn’t finished objecting. His second objection goes deeper—to the core of his personal inadequacy.
Point 3: The Speech Impediment Excuse (4:10-12)
In verse 10, Moses raises his second objection: “O my Lord, I am not eloquent, either before or since You have spoken to Your servant; but I am slow of speech and slow of tongue.”
Now we’re getting to the heart of Moses’ insecurity. The Hebrew phrase here is fascinating: kəbad-peh ûkəbad lāšôn—literally “heavy of mouth and heavy of tongue.” The word kābēd means heavy, weighty, or difficult.
Moses is essentially saying, “I’m not a good speaker. I don’t have the eloquence this job requires.” Some scholars think this refers to a speech impediment—maybe a stutter. Others suggest it could be that Moses had lost fluency in Hebrew after forty years in Midian, or that he simply lacked the rhetorical skills expected of a leader.
But here’s what’s ironic: Moses is giving this eloquent objection about not being eloquent! He’s articulating quite clearly why he can’t articulate clearly.
What Moses is really revealing here is the universal human tendency to focus on our limitations rather than God’s power. How often do we do the same thing? “I can’t teach—I’m not smart enough.” “I can’t lead—I don’t have the personality for it.” “I can’t share my faith—I don’t know enough theology.”
Look at God’s response in verses 11-12. God doesn’t say, “You’re right, Moses, you’re not qualified.” Instead, He goes straight to creation theology: “Who has made man’s mouth? Who makes the mute, the deaf, the seeing, or the blind? Have not I, the LORD?”
God is essentially saying, “Moses, I designed your mouth. I created your tongue. Do you think I made a mistake?” This is a profound theological statement about divine sovereignty over human faculties—both our abilities and our limitations.
And then comes the promise in verse 12: “Now therefore, go, and I will be with your mouth and teach you what you shall say.”
God doesn’t promise to change Moses’ limitations—He promises to work through them. The same God who created speech will enable speech. The same God who designed communication will provide the words.
What limitations do you use as excuses for not responding to God’s calling? How might God want to work through those very limitations rather than despite them?
Here’s a crucial principle: God’s calling isn’t based on our natural abilities—it’s based on His supernatural enablement. When God calls, He equips. When He commissions, He empowers. Our inadequacy becomes the stage for His adequacy.
But even this profound theological truth isn’t enough for Moses. His third objection reveals the depth of his resistance to divine calling.
Point 4: The Final Refusal and Divine Anger (4:13-17)
Moses’ third objection in verse 13 is the most telling of all: “O my Lord, please send by the hand of whomever else You may send.”
This is polite language, but it’s essentially Moses saying, “Please, God, send someone else. Anyone else.” This isn’t about credibility anymore. This isn’t about personal limitations. This is outright refusal.
And for the first time in our passage, we see divine anger. Verse 14: “So the anger of the LORD was kindled against Moses.”
The Hebrew here is vivid: wayyiḥar-‘ap yhwh—literally, “the nose of the LORD burned.” This is the first mention of God’s anger in the book of Exodus, and it’s significant that it comes in response to persistent resistance to divine calling.
What does this teach us about God’s character? First, it shows us that God’s patience, while great, is not infinite. He patiently addressed Moses’ first two objections with signs and theological truth. But when Moses moves from concern to outright refusal, divine patience reaches its limit.
But notice—even in His anger, God doesn’t abandon the mission or reject Moses entirely. Instead, He provides a compromise: Aaron will be Moses’ spokesman.
God’s anger is redemptive, not destructive. It serves to show Moses—and us—the seriousness of rejecting divine calling, while still maintaining the integrity of the mission.
Look at how God describes the arrangement in verses 15-16: Aaron will speak for Moses, Moses will speak for God, and the staff will remain in Moses’ hand as the symbol of divine authority. God accommodates Moses’ weakness without compromising His purpose.
But here’s what we need to understand: this accommodation comes at a cost. Aaron, who was supposed to be a helper, later becomes a source of problems—remember the golden calf incident in Exodus 32? Sometimes our resistance to God’s perfect plan results in His permissive will, which brings its own complications.
The theological tension here is profound: How do we balance God’s sovereignty with human responsibility? How do we understand divine patience alongside divine justice?
The answer is that God’s character holds these in perfect tension. He is patient with our weakness, but He will not tolerate persistent rebellion. He accommodates our limitations, but He expects our obedience. His anger serves His love, and His justice serves His mercy.
So what does all this mean for us as we consider our own response to divine calling?
Conclusion: Living Under Divine Calling
As we wrap up our study this morning, let’s consider what Moses’ experience teaches us about responding to God’s calling in our own lives.
First, God’s calling doesn’t depend on our qualifications. Moses felt unqualified, inadequate, and ill-equipped. But God’s choice wasn’t based on Moses’ resume—it was based on God’s purpose and power. When God calls you, He’s not looking for perfection—He’s looking for availability.
Second, God provides authentication for His calling. Just as He gave Moses signs to confirm his commission, God provides confirmation for us. It might not be a staff turning into a serpent, but God always gives evidence of His calling to those who are willing to see it.
Third, our limitations can become God’s opportunities. Moses’ speech impediment didn’t disqualify him—it became the stage for God’s power. Your weaknesses aren’t obstacles to God’s calling—they’re opportunities for His strength to be displayed.
Fourth, persistent resistance to God’s calling provokes divine displeasure. God’s patience is great, but it’s not unlimited. When we move from honest concern to outright refusal, we risk missing God’s best for our lives.
Finally, even when we resist, God’s purposes will be accomplished. Moses’ reluctance didn’t derail God’s plan to deliver Israel. God’s mission will succeed, but the question is whether we’ll be part of His perfect will or His permissive will.
So let me ask you this: How is God calling you? Maybe it’s not to lead Israel out of Egypt, but it might be to lead your family in faith. Maybe it’s not to confront Pharaoh, but it might be to have that difficult conversation with a friend. Maybe it’s not to perform miraculous signs, but it might be to serve faithfully in the nursery or teach a Sunday school class.
Whatever God is calling you to, remember Moses’ experience: Your objections are not stronger than God’s power. Your limitations are not greater than His ability. Your fears are not more real than His faithfulness.
The question isn’t whether you’re qualified—the question is whether you’re willing.