The Welcome Valley Reader

A Mother's
Triumph
She was
desperate. Her three-month old baby lived under a death warrant, and hiding him
grew more difficult by the day. She was part of an oppressed ethnic group living
in the territory of one of the world’s superpowers. The government had decreed
that all baby boys of her race must die. It was an effort at population control,
an effort born of mistrust and prejudice. Today, we’d call the whole mess ethnic
cleansing. When the midwives who delivered her people’s babies managed to
outsmart the ruler’s command to kill all male children at birth, the command had
become general. All of this king’s subjects were ordered to drown any infant
boys found among the unwanted people. A command that broad was impossible to
escape. Her baby had to go in the river. She had hidden him as long as was
humanly possible. The end result was inevitable. It was time to face reality and
let the sweet little thing go.
Only, a mother’s heart doesn’t work that way. An occasional insane or depraved
mother has done the unthinkable, but Jochebed was neither insane nor depraved,
only desperate. With no options left, this mother stared hopelessness in the
face and looked for a way out. At last, she found one, well, sort
of.
She struggled to wrest deliverance from the very river that waited to claim her
baby. Taking a basket woven from shoreline reeds, she coated the outside with
bitumen--a petroleum based substance--and with asphalt. Then, with feelings we
can only guess at, she placed her precious infant inside and set the basket afloat on the
river. Her baby had been dumped into the water, but he wasn’t exactly in a
situation to drown.
Floating among the shoreline vegetation, the basket lay sheltered. Nor was the
mother quite willing to trust her baby totally to fate. She charged his older
sister to keep watch. If the basket tipped, there was someone near. If any of
the master nation found it, at least someone in the family could give a report.
There was always a chance that something better could happen. It wasn’t a big
chance, but she was a mother, and she was doing her best. Hope was all she had
left--hope, and faith in God.
The river was the Nile. To Jochebed, its tepid waters spelled death, and
unfathomable sorrow. To the ruling Egyptians, on the other hand, the Nile meant
life. Its waters sustained agriculture in their arid land. The Nile had the
potential for carrying commercial traffic in vessels formed of plants perhaps
similar to those from which Jochebed’s basket had been made. Drinking wells
could be dug from its moist banks. Even the royal family used it for bath water.
If the Nile killed Hebrew babies like Jochebed’s, it gave life to Egyptians of
all ages.
As the baby’s older sister watched from shore, royalty came to the river. The
daughter of no one less than the Pharaoh who’d decreed the baby’s death had come
to bathe. As fitted her station, she was escorted by servants. Seeing the
unidentified floating object, she had one of her maids retrieve it and, moments
later, became the possessor of the original baby in a basket. And the baby was
crying.
History hasn’t recorded whether this Egyptian princess was a mother or not, but
she had too much mother in her to ignore a crying baby. He was a condemned
Hebrew boy, but she was her daddy’s daughter. She could have an adopted Hebrew
son if she chose. Nobody else might be allowed a Hebrew son in the whole realm,
but this young lady could have one. Someone once said that it isn’t who
you are but what you are that really counts. Maybe that statement holds
true in America. In ancient Egypt, who she was counted for quite a bit.
The one person on earth who could save Jochebed’s doomed son had found him. She
adopted him on the spot. Not only would this little minority baby’s life be
spared, he would now be a member of the royal family.
At this point, the sister who guarded the tiny ark—her name was Miriam by the
way—made a brilliant move. She approached the princess, I suppose bowing or
kneeling, or whatever protocol demanded, and offered to find a woman to serve as
the baby’s nurse.
The princess agreed. Before long, Jochebed reentered the baby’s life. Only, now
she wasn’t his mother. She was a hired nurse. The name she had given her infant
no longer mattered. He was now Moses, a name that in the prevailing language
suggested that he’d been pulled out of the water. That is how his new mother had
obtained him, so that’s what she called him. Jochebed had become just a servant
caring for a king’s grandson.
It’s interesting to try to imagine just what went on in Jochebed’s heart at this
point. Doubtlessly, she’d been weeping. History doesn’t say, but let’s face
it—she was a mother who’d just been forced to set her baby adrift. Now, all of a
sudden, she had received this too-good-to-be true reprieve. The sheer enormity
of emotions in such situations tends to temper the joy into sort of a sick
happiness. Then on top of it all she faced the reality that the reprieve only
came in a temporary form. Someday, a royal messenger would come to her servant’s
quarters. Someday, the little Hebrew baby she’d loved through these desperate
months would go away to become an honored member of the family that had nearly
bereaved her, of the family that even now was enforcing the extermination of the
children of her friends. Yes, it had to be a day of joy, but it was also a day
of bittersweet joy and of enough emotional intensity to leave the strongest
utterly exhausted.
Jochebed took the little baby she now had to call Moses home with her.
Officially, she was no longer his mother, but in practice, in heart, and in
love, she was still the mother, still doing her best for her baby.
History doesn’t record exactly how long Jochebed earned money as Moses’ nurse.
The time evidently went beyond mere babyhood, as later events almost demand that
she and her husband had time to teach the boy things he’d never learn in
Egypt.
Through desperate ingenuity, Jochebed had saved her baby. Through the courage of
her daughter, she was able to embrace him again. Yet, through the same events
that had saved him for her, she lost him. All too soon, the summons came. Moses,
Jochebed’s little Hebrew sailor, was taken away to become an important Egyptian.
The Bible tells us more about Moses—much more. But at this point, Jochebed fades
from the record. Her son was gone. She lived on as part of an enslaved nation.
Jochebed likely died without Moses. She’d saved him once, but lost him in the
process. So ends the story of Jochebed.
Moses, after spending those early years under his mother’s tender care found
himself in the royal household. A whole new world opened before him. His father
and countrymen lived as slaves, common laborers for a nation that loved them
not. It isn’t clear, but maybe they quarried the huge blocks that formed one of
the pyramids. Perhaps they felt the crack of the overseer’s whip as they
struggled those gigantic stones up and up and up with most of the group sweating
and straining like draft animals as others hustled heavy log rollers forward to
allow the monster rocks to keep moving. Maybe, toiling under a scorching desert
sun, some of them suddenly found their
temperatures shooting up and they fell from heat stroke, never to rise again.
Maybe some died in despair, beaten by overseers, misunderstood, mistreated, and
with no hope of things improving. The Bible names the important cities that they
built as slaves, but it leaves no room to speculate that they benefited from
them. We aren’t given a lot of details, but we do know that Moses had
escaped.
Instead of slaving and dying with the worshippers of the one invisible God Who
seemed unable to deliver His followers, Moses sat in the coolness of royal
quarters. He learned about the gods of Egypt, the falcon-headed one with a man’s
body, the shining ball of fire in the sky that he’d thought of only as the sun,
not as a god named Ra, of his own adopted grandfather who also demanded worship.
He may have learned the complex math the sophisticated Egyptians had developed.
He may have had a touch of training in the occult.
Obviously, Moses would have experienced great pressure to be as Egyptian as
possible, separating himself from the despised Hebrews both in his own eyes and,
as much as he could manage, in the eyes of his VIP adoptive family. The foods
Mother Jochebed refused to cook because the God of their fathers didn’t approve
would have been welcome fair in the new house. The idea of one invisible God
would have been derided. Smart people pleased whichever god they needed to keep
their careers on track. The need to be Egyptian rather than Hebrew never went
away. Whatever Moses had learned in the home of Jochebed and Amram was far
behind, and it would be to his advantage to forget. After all, that
mother-turned-nurse stood to fade into a mere memory in the life of a prince.
Did he dabble in all things Egyptian? Was he temporarily wowed by the strange
religion and culture? We don’t know.
We only know that his poor slave parents had managed to instill something in him
that wouldn’t go away. Moses the great Egyptian prince was still a Hebrew at
heart. The mother who had given her all for him, the mother who had parted with
him because she loved him too much to risk keeping him, had done her work. We
don’t know if the princess mother allowed visits to the servant mother or if
racism and jealousy prevented it. We do know that Moses remembered his native
people and came to see himself as their deliverer.
One day, this Hebrew in an Egyptian costume had had enough. Acting like a
touring big shot, he sought out the people of his old family. He was a prince.
They likely had to bow before him, but he was one of them. He was on the side of
the Egyptian overseer whom he found beating a Hebrew slave, yet he killed the
bully--something that even a prince wasn’t allowed to do. He was a prince in a
country he didn’t love and an anomaly and a foreigner to the nation that owned
his heart. Jochebed had done her work; and Moses, despite the luxuries of Egypt;
Moses, despite his education in a powerful religion; Moses, whose mother had
been forced to give him up; remembered her people and her God. He was still his
mother’s son. He was still her God’s servant.
Then, word got out that Moses had betrayed the royal house of Egypt by siding
with the oppressed Hebrews and killing a slave driver. Soon, he was but a
memory, herding sheep in a distant desert. It is possible that during this time
an aging Jochebed breathed her last. What were her thoughts over the years as
the family came home, Miriam and Aaron with his wife and children? (We have no
Biblical record of whether Miriam ever married or not.) Did she fondly remember
the baby she’d saved by making a boat? Did she occasionally think about the
little boy she’d told about Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob and their God? Did she
weep and long to have him back in her sad, enslaved existence? Did she rejoice
that he’d escaped the slavery known by her husband and older son? Did she shed
bitter tears at night, wondering why things couldn’t have been different? Did
she believe that the wilderness had swallowed her fugitive son? We don’t know.
We only know that a very desperate mother had done her best and had gotten
better results than she might have.
Better results? Better results than she realized. Eighty years after little
Moses bawled his way into the princess’s heart, a gray-bearded sheepherder
stepped from a wilderness trail to investigate a flaming bush that wouldn’t burn
up. When a voice thundered from the bush, declaring the presence of the God of
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, Moses didn’t have to ask who they were or who this
God was. This God who made the very ground he stood upon holy wasn’t a stranger.
No, He was the God of the brave mother who’d bid him goodbye at the gate of a
palace long, long ago.
That familiar God now commissioned Jochebed’s son. All that followed--the
winning of Israel’s confidence, the judgment of Egypt, the miracles in the Red
Sea and in the wilderness, the giving of the law on the burning mountain, the
establishment of God’s people as special, the major step Moses brought into the
plan of God’s saving grace—the whole triumphant story--is the story of a baby
whose mother wouldn’t give up. The triumph of Moses and the ascendancy of Israel
all belong to Jochebed. She may or may not have lived to see some of it, but
much of what you read in the Bible is ultimately a story of overwhelming
victory. Yes, it is God’s triumph, but as part of that, it is her triumph as
well. One desperate, overpowered, hopeless mother refused to give up, and in
doing so, changed the course of the world.
The
Bible says:
Honour
thy father and mother; which is the first commandment with promise; That it may
be well with thee, and thou mayest live long on the earth. (Ephesians
6:2-3)
Her
children arise up, and call her blessed; her husband also, and he
praiseth her. (Proverbs 31:28)
This story is in the public domain and may be copied and distributed freely.
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