Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Day 30: Nile Turned to Blood

 Today's readings: Exodus 6-7, Leviticus 5, and Psalm 47.


I. God reassures Moses that He will free the Hebrews from slavery in Egypt, make them His people, and that they will be given "the land which I swore to give to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob" (6:1-9). Moses told them, but they didn't believe him, "because of their broken spirit and their cruel bondage" (6:9). Bypassing further reassurance it seems, God commanded Moses to go to Pharaoh and tell him to "let the people of Israel go out of his land" (6:10-11). 

Oddly enough, we then get a genealogical digression detailing the ancestry of Moses and Aaron, brothers from the Levi clan (6:14-27). It seems out of place in this part of the story, interrupting the flow of the narrative. At the beginning of the tale would seem to me to have been better, but I'm sure it served a sort of cultural purpose for them at the time unknown to me.

The story continues with God telling He will speak to Moses and that Aaron will speak for him to Pharaoh, who will not listen and then be chastised by divine power. Interestingly, both are quite old: Moses is 80 and Aaron 83 (7:1-7). It's not those the world considers strong and of prime age that God always chooses to do His will; many times, He surprises us by doing the opposite of our expectations. So the brothers do as God commanded, with Aaron throwing his staff down to miraculously turn into a serpent, as a sign to Pharaoh. His court magicians somehow do likewise, but Aaron's ends up swallowing them up, but "Pharaoh's heart was hardened and he would not listen to them" (7:8-13). I've always been curious if what the magicians did was some kind of illusion trick or perhaps demonic power. Regardless, Pharaoh's poor choice brings the first of the Ten Plagues: the water of the Nile is turned to blood (7:14-24). Given the importance and sacredness of the Nile River to Egyptian pagans, this must have seemed like quite the blow. As shall be seen, each of the Ten Plagues will also be an attack on the Egyptian false gods and goddesses, as can be seen in the Ignatius Bible, p. 134. Hapi, their Nile god, was the first target.

Yet even this first plague didn't faze Pharaoh, for his court magicians again pulled some trick to imitate this, so "Pharaoh's heart remained hardened and he would not listen to them" (7:22).

I do like how the BIY Companion, Vol 1, comments on the repeated reminders to Moses here:
We can have short-term memory regarding God. We can easily forget what he has done for us due to our anxiety about the present or future. We study Scripture to be reminded of who God is, so he can reveal himself to us and we can know him even more deeply. (p. 68)
II. Leviticus continues listing offenses that require a sin offering. As the Ignatius Bible notes:
Three offenses requiring a sin offering. The first is a sin of omission: a witness who declines to testify in court despite having knowledge relevant to the administration of justice (5:1). The second and third offenses are sins discovered after the fact: a person who touches uncleanness is liable for the offense as soon as he learns of it (5:2-3), as is the person who comes to learn that he has violated a careless oath (5:4). (p. 185)

As this doesn't apply to us today, it can seem boring, which is why many readers tend to get bogged down in Leviticus while trying to read Scripture from the beginning to the end. Nevertheless, I did find it interesting that even in this list, God thinks of the poor in 5:7-13

The BIY Companion, Vol 1, comments on this:

In Leviticus, regarding the sin offering to be presented, God is merciful. If someone cannot afford a lamb or a goat, he can offer two pigeons or turtledoves. If he cannot afford even that, he can offer fine flour. God does not want anything to get in the way to stop people from receiving his mercy. (p.68)

III. Psalm 47 is a royal celebratory one. Even the way it begins speaks of this praise:

Clap your hands, all peoples!

Shout to God with loud songs of joy!

For the Lord, the Most High, is terrible,

    a great king over all the earth. (47:1-2)

That's all for today! 

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Day 30: Nile Turned to Blood

  Today's readings: Exodus 6-7, Leviticus 5, and Psalm 47. I. God reassures Moses that He will free the Hebrews from slavery in Egypt, ...