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A Mother's Wages

Exodus 2: 9

Dark were the hours among those slave people in Egypt, whose backs felt the sting of the whip.
Those people experienced the greatest joy with the birth of a son.
But now, the birth of a son had turned into the greatest of life's sorrows because of the decree
of the Pharaoh.
The Hebrew people had now reached the point where life had become so oppressive that it had almost
lost its meaning for them.
Yet, there was a thread of faith that kept the flame of hope flickering in their lives.

One such person of faith was a Hebrew housewife named, Jochebed, who looked with joy into the face
of her newborn son, and then felt the joy draining from her heart as reality began to dawn upon her.
The edict that all boy babies of the Hebrew people must be slain came sweeping in on her consciousness
to slash her heart like a jagged knife blade cutting and tearing one's flesh.

To deny her God-given motherly instinct and to preserve her small son at all costs was something
she felt she must do.
She did not intend to obey the Pharaoh's edict, which stated that she should snuff out this precious little life,
which God had given her.

At the risk of losing her own life, she planned a way to save her newborn son.
She prepared a little basket from the reeds growing nearby and coating it over with pitch,
and then she placed her little son in it and carried it secretly to the river.
She placed it near the spot where Pharaoh's daughter was accustomed to bathe each day.

Soon, the Princess of Egypt came for her daily swim, and "when she saw the ark among the reeds,
she sent her maid to fetch it
." (2: 5)
Seeing the baby, "she had compassion on him." (2: 6)

Miriam, the baby's sister, approached the princes with the suggestion that she fine a nurse among
the Hebrew women to care for the little baby.
Receiving an affirmative response, Miriam dashed off to her own house and brought her mother
to Pharaoh's daughter, who gave her a command: "Take this child away, and nurse it for me." (2: 9a)

The remaining part of her command to Jochebed forms the text for our thinking this morning.

"And I will give thee thy wages." (2: 9b)

What are the wages of the mother -- abuse, overwork, heartache?
In our modern life this often seems to be the type of reward that a mother may expect.
However, a godly mother can look beneath the surface, and see what the real wages are.
We can look at the story of Jochebed, the mother of Moses, and see truths pertinent to the role of motherhood today.

A Godly Mother's Characteristics

There are certain characteristics, which are a part of a mother's way of life.

One is faith.

To keep a crying baby for three months with guards passing by the house required of this mother a strong faith.
To have faith that her scheme to preserve her baby's life had been planted in her heart by God,
and that He would see that it worked.
This required a faith that was born out of a personal experience with God.
To have faith in the future when everything pointed to the ultimate destruction
of her race required a faith in the power of Almighty God to control the future as well as the present.

For a mother in our day to give birth to a child and to have faith to believe that he or she will see
a better day ahead requires faith in God through Jesus Christ.
For a mother in our day to believe that her child will be able to have the Christian stamina to withstand the evils
which that child will face requires faith in God through Jesus Christ.
It will require a faith like that of Eunice and Lois, the mother and grandmother of young Timothy. (2 Timothy 1: 5)
Faith is required of a godly mother.

Another characteristic of a godly mother is hope.

Against all odds, Jochebed found that hope that her son, Moses, would be saved from Pharaoh's sword
to a life of useful service.
This was not a vain human hope, but it was a hope born out of faith, not in her own scheme,
but in the power of God to save and to sustain to be uttermost.

Today, every godly mother has hope in her heart for each child, which God gives to her.
It is a hope that her child will grow up to take a useful place in life's drama, but more especially
a place of real service in Christ's Kingdom.
She carefully imparts this hope into the heart and soul of her child while that child is still at her knee.
As Jochebed said, "Son, on the day you were born I dedicated you to God to be
a servant in His kingdom
."

Another characteristic of a godly mother is love.

Every godly mother must have a love that is submissive to the will of God.
Technically, Jochebed carried out Pharaoh's edict... for she did cast (place) him into the river.
Actually, however, she was casting him on the love of God, realizing His power and His love
was sufficient for her great need.
In that heart-rending moment on the riverbank, the love of a human mother for her baby
and the love of God combined to perform a miracle of salvation.

It was a miracle that changed the course of history for a great race of people.
It changed the way of life for the great Judeo-Christian segment of the human race!
In that moment on the riverbank, Jochebed found that "... perfect love casteth out fear."
(1 John 4: 18b)

A Mother's Task

I would not be so foolish this morning as to attempt to name all of the many functions
a mother performs for her children.
Wiping noses, scrubbing grimy little hands, tying shoelaces, applying a psychology book
"to the seat of understanding" -- are among some of the tasks.

Serving, as social secretary and chauffeur for their children... and many others that are too numerous to count.
There are certain general areas into which I shall attempt to define as the tasks of a godly mother.

One is to curb the child's lawlessness.

The mother has just a few short years to instill into that young life the ideals and precepts for life's best living.
The author of Proverbs expressed it best: "Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old,
he will not depart from it
." (Pr