Archive - February, 2009

Rules, rules, and more rules

As an early childhood teacher, I have very few rules in the classroom and those rules are mostly for safety. I just finished reading in the Old Testament book of Exodus about their rules. Most of the time we think about the Ten Commandments. Ten is a manageable number, easy to remember. But there was actually more to their rules than just ten. Some rules had “fine print” to read as well.

Read Exodus 21 for further explanation.

There were rules for slavery. If it was one way when the slavery work began, then it was to finish the same way, unless something else happened during the slavery work.

There were rules for fighting and different consequences, depending upon who was involved in the fight.

There were rules for theft and different consequences, depending on what was stolen and who was the thief.

My, my, my … Thank goodness we don’t have quite so many detailed rules in the 21st Century or our short-attention minds might not be able to handle it.

Life is hard

Life is hard but we must keep going and pressing on. Yes, that is easier said than done.

Look at Moses and Aaron in Exodus. God told them to free the Israelites from Egyptian slavery. God said he would show them each step to do it but Pharaoh would be stubborn, and yes, Pharaoah was stubborn and would not let the people go. Time after time, try after try, Moses and Aaron had to keep trying to get Pharaoh to let God’s people go free. What if they had just given up after the third or fourth try and said it’s not worth it?

God wouldn’t let them give up. He kept pushing with more commands and they kept trying until finally they succeeded and got out of Egypt.

Yes, life is hard but keep going; keep pressing on. God is there.

male, female equality

I recently finished reading the Book of Job, and I read an interesting point at the end of the book, end of chapter 42.

God blessed Job’s later life even more than his earlier life. In addition to his 7 sons, he also had 3 daughters of whom there was not a woman in that country as beautiful. Their father treated them as equals with their brothers, providing the same inheritance.

I found that to be an interesting point to note since Job is known to have been written around the time of Abraham in Genesis when females were not so much looked upon as male equals, as the males were the ones to carry on the family name.

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