February 28, 2020
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{Editor's Note to our audio devotions listeners … although we highly value the audio translations of our devotions, we wanted you to know we will be pressing pause on them for an indeterminate amount of time, effective March 2. Please know this is not a permanent decision. It is our intent to revise this service as soon as possible. We will let our devotions audience know when audio will be available again.}
"How good and pleasant it is when God's people live together in unity!" Psalm 133:1 (NIV)
I remember when my boys were little. There were days I felt more like a referee than a mom.
My little one was usually the instigator, egging his big brother on, but it takes two to tango, right? So, when it looked like there was no end in sight, I would step in.
"Okay boys. Enough is enough." I'd make them repeat after me: "… how good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell in unity" (Psalm 133:1, ESV).
Yes, I was that mom. I made my kids quote Scripture at the most inopportune times. But I was determined — my kids will get along, whether they like it or not.
And you know what? It worked. My boys stopped fighting! The Word of God is not only powerful, but it's also a great distraction. Of course, they would then be temporarily annoyed at me instead of each other.
The book of Exodus is filled with sibling rivalry drama and examples of how not to treat your brother. Cain and Abel, Jacob and Esau, Joseph and his brothers.
But in the book of Exodus, we come across Miriam, Aaron and Moses, a set of siblings who, for the most part, got along.
When baby Moses was sent into the Nile, it was his sister Miriam who waited by the bulrushes to ensure his safety. Decades later, Moses and his brother Aaron worked side by side, leading the children of Israel out of Egyptian slavery … together!
But life wasn't always sunshine and roses for these three. Like most siblings, they also had their moments. Remember the golden calf? Moses was furious when he came down the mountain and saw what his brother had done. What was Aaron thinking?
Then, in Numbers chapter 12, Aaron and Miriam spoke against Moses. They had an issue with his authority (Who died and made him boss?) and with his wife's ethnicity (she was a Cushite, not an Israeli).
As a result, God struck Miriam with a skin disease. Aaron cried out to Moses in Numbers 12:11b, "Please, my lord, I ask you not to hold against us the sin we have so foolishly committed" (NIV). |
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