Friday, April 24, 2026

Desperation Drives Us to God and God Uses the Unlikely


In the desperate hours of a besieged city, when hope had withered like grain in a drought, and the shadow of death crept through the streets of Samaria, God chose the most unlikely messengers to announce deliverance. Not priests. Not prophets. Not the king's mighty men. Four leprous outcasts, sitting at the city gate in their own slow death, became the vessels through which abundance would flow to a starving people. Their story, preserved in 2 Kings 7:3-20, reveals a profound truth that echoes through Scripture and into our own lives: God delights in using the desperate, the broken, and the unlikely to accomplish His purposes and display His glory.

This narrative is not merely ancient history. It is a mirror held up to every soul who has ever felt too broken, too marginalized, or too insignificant to be used by God. It speaks to the paradox at the heart of the Gospel itself that God's power is made perfect in weakness, and His kingdom advances not through the strong and the celebrated, but through those who know their desperate need for Him.

The Outcasts at the Gate: Understanding מְצֹרָעִים (Metzora'im)

The Hebrew text begins with stark simplicity: וְאַרְבָּעָה אֲנָשִׁים הָיוּ מְצֹרָעִים (ve'arba'ah anashim hayu metzora'im), 'And four men were leprous' (2 Kings 7:3, ESV). The word מְצֹרָעִים (metzora'im) carries profound theological weight beyond mere medical diagnosis. Derived from the root צָרַע (tzara), this term encompasses various skin afflictions described in Leviticus 13-14, conditions that rendered a person ritually unclean and socially isolated.

These men existed in a liminal space, neither fully part of the dying city nor completely separated from it. The phrase פֶּתַח הַשָּׁעַר (petach hasha'ar), 'entrance of the gate,' marks their marginal position. In ancient Near Eastern cities, the gate was more than an architectural feature; it was the place of legal proceedings, commercial transactions, and community gathering. Yet these four men could only occupy its threshold, forever on the outside looking in, bearing the double curse of social death through leprosy and impending physical death through famine.

Their condition speaks powerfully to the human predicament. Like them, every person stands spiritually leprous before God, bearing the contamination of sin that separates us from holy communion with our Creator. We are all outcasts at the gate, unable to enter on our own merit, awaiting either deliverance or death. The lepers' physical condition becomes a parable of spiritual reality.

The Logic of Desperation: מָה־נֵּשֶׁב (Mah-Neshev)

The turning point in the narrative comes with a question: מָה־אֲנַחְנוּ יֹשְׁבִים פֹּה עַד־מָתְנוּ (mah-anachnu yoshvim poh ad-matnu), 'Why are we sitting here until we die?' (v. 3, ESV). The interrogative מָה (mah), 'why,' pierces through the paralysis of hopelessness. The verb יֹשְׁבִים (yoshvim), from יָשַׁב (yashav), means 'to sit, to dwell, to remain.' It implies not merely a physical position but a settled resignation, a passive acceptance of fate.

In this single question, the lepers articulate what theologians call 'sanctified desperation', that moment when human extremity becomes God's opportunity. They perform a ruthlessly honest assessment of their situation, examining three options with the clarity that only desperation can produce. If they enter the city, וְהָרָעָב בָּעִיר וָמַתְנוּ שָׁם (veha'ra'av ba'ir vamatnu sham), 'the famine is in the city, and we shall die there' (v. 4). If they remain at the gate, וְאִם־יָשַׁבְנוּ פֹה וָמָתְנוּ (ve'im-yashavnu poh vamatnu), 'if we sit here, we die also.' Their only remaining option involves risk: to surrender to the Syrian camp.

The verb נִפְּלָה (niplah), translated 'let us surrender' or 'let us fall,' comes from נָפַל (naphal), meaning to fall, to desert, to defect. It suggests a deliberate abandonment of one position for another, a casting of oneself upon mercy. The lepers' reason: אִם־יְחַיֻּנוּ נִחְיֶה וְאִם־יְמִיתֻנוּ וָמָתְנוּ (im-yechayunu nichyeh ve'im-yemitunu vamatnu), 'If they spare our lives we shall live, and if they kill us we shall but die' (v. 4). This is the mathematics of faith, when you have nothing to lose, risking everything becomes the only rational choice.

Here we glimpse a principle that runs throughout Scripture: God works through those who have exhausted their own resources and recognize they have nowhere else to turn. Abraham was called when he was old and childless. Moses was chosen when he was a fugitive shepherd. David was anointed as the youngest son, overlooked by his family. Mary was visited when she was an unknown virgin in an insignificant town. The pattern is clear: God uses the desperate because the desperate know they need God.

The Abandoned Camp: כִּי־יְהוָה הִשְׁמִיעַ (Ki-Adonai Hishmia)

When the lepers arrived at the Syrian camp בַּנֶּשֶׁף (baneshef), 'at twilight,' they discovered it completely abandoned. The explanation comes in verse 6: כִּי אֲדֹנָי הִשְׁמִיעַ אֶת־מַחֲנֵה אֲרָם קוֹל רֶכֶב קוֹל סוּס קוֹל חַיִל גָּדוֹל (ki Adonai hishmia et-machaneh Aram qol rechev qol sus qol chayil gadol), 'For the Lord had made the army of the Syrians hear the sound of chariots and of horses, the sound of a great army' (ESV).

The causative verb הִשְׁמִיעַ (hishmia), from the root שָׁמַע (shama), in the Hiphil stem means 'caused to hear.' This is divine intervention of the most extraordinary kind. God created an auditory phenomenon, whether an actual sound or a perception in the minds of the soldiers, that threw the entire Syrian army into panic. The threefold repetition of קוֹל (qol), 'sound' or 'voice', קוֹל רֶכֶב קוֹל סוּס קוֹל חַיִל גָּדוֹל (qol rechev qol sus qol chayil gadol), 'sound of chariots... sound of horses... sound of a great army', emphasizes the overwhelming nature of what the Syrians believed they heard.

Notice the divine economy at work: God did not need to send an actual army. He did not need physical chariots, horses, or soldiers. He simply caused the enemy to hear what was not there, and they fled in terror, leaving behind אֶת־מַחֲנֵיהֶם כַּאֲשֶׁר־הֵמָּה (et-machaneyhem ka'asher-hemah), 'their tents as they were', completely intact with all provisions (v. 7). The phrase וַיָּנוּסוּ אֶל־נַפְשָׁם (vayanasu el-nafsham), literally 'they fled for their soul/life,' captures the absolute panic that seized them.

This divine act reveals God's sovereignty over human perception and His ability to deliver without conventional means. Earlier in 2 Kings 6, God struck another Syrian army with blindness so they could not see what was actually present. Now He causes them to hear what is not present. God controls both the seen and the unseen, the heard and the silent. He orchestrates deliverance in ways that ensure all glory returns to Him alone.

The Feast of the Outcasts: וַיָּבֹאוּ וַיֹּאכְלוּ (Vayavo'u Vayochlu)

The lepers' initial response to discovering the abandoned camp is refreshingly human: וַיָּבֹאוּ הַמְּצֹרָעִים הָאֵלֶּה עַד־קְצֵה הַמַּחֲנֶה וַיָּבֹאוּ אֶל־אֹהֶל אֶחָד וַיֹּאכְלוּ וַיִּשְׁתּוּ (vayavo'u hametzora'im ha'eleh ad-qetzeh hamachaneh vayavo'u el-ohel echad vayochlu vayishtu), 'And when these leprous men came to the edge of the camp, they went into a tent and ate and drank' (v. 8, ESV). The sequential verbs, came, entered, ate, and drank, convey the simple actions of desperate people finally finding sustenance.

They did not merely nibble. They did not apologize for their hunger. They feasted. After months of famine, after being the lowest priority for any scarce food in Samaria, they ate and drank freely. Then they took כֶּסֶף וְזָהָב וּבְגָדִים (kesef vezahav uvegadim), 'silver and gold and clothing,' and hid them (v. 8). They returned to another tent and did the same. These were men securing their future, men who had learned that in this world, resources are precious and opportunities fleeting.

The text contains no condemnation of their initial self-interest. God understands human nature. He knows that the starving must eat before they can serve, that those who have lived in deprivation will naturally think first of securing provision for themselves. The gospel does not demand that we deny our needs; it transforms how we meet them and what we do once they are met. The lepers' joy in the feast was legitimate. God had provided, and they were right to receive His provision with gratitude.

The Conviction of Conscience: לֹא־כֵן אֲנַחְנוּ עֹשִׂים (Lo-Chen Anachnu Osim)

But something remarkable happens in verse 9. The lepers speak to one another: לֹא־כֵן אֲנַחְנוּ עֹשִׂים הַיּוֹם הַזֶּה יוֹם־בְּשֹׂרָה הוּא (lo-chen anachnu osim hayom hazeh yom-besorah hu), 'We are not doing right. This day is a day of good news' (ESV). The phrase לֹא־כֵן (lo-chen), 'not right,' expresses moral conviction. The noun בְּשֹׂרָה (besorah), often translated 'good news' or 'glad tidings,' is the same word used elsewhere in Scripture for the proclamation of victory, deliverance, and salvation.

These outcasts, these men whom society had written off as worthless, suddenly recognize that they have become bearers of בְּשֹׂרָה, good news. They understand that silence in the face of such news is sin: וַאֲנַחְנוּ מַחְשִׁים (va'anachnu machshim), 'and we are keeping silent' (v. 9). The verb מַחְשִׁים (machshim), from חָשָׁה (chashah), means to be silent, to hold peace. But this is not peaceful silence, it is guilty silence, the silence of those who withhold life-giving information from the dying.

They warn each other: וְחִכִּינוּ עַד־אוֹר הַבֹּקֶר וּמְצָאָנוּ עָוֹן (vechikinu ad-or haboqer umtza'anu avon), 'If we wait until the morning light, punishment will overtake us' (v. 9, ESV). The noun עָוֹן (avon) carries the weight of both iniquity and its consequences, guilt that brings punishment. They understand that a blessing received carries the responsibility to share.

This moment represents one of the most profound spiritual awakenings in Scripture. Men who had every human reason to be self-absorbed, diseased, marginalized, and starving suddenly see beyond their own needs to the needs of others. Men who had been excluded from the community now rush to serve it. Men who were deemed unclean become the very agents through which God's provision flows to His people. This is the gospel pattern: those who have been saved become witnesses, those who have received freely give freely, those who have tasted grace cannot help but share it.

The Proclamation: וַיָּבֹאוּ וַיִּקְרְאוּ (Vayavo'u Vayikre'u)

The lepers act immediately on their conviction: וַיָּבֹאוּ וַיִּקְרְאוּ אֶל־שֹׁעֵר הָעִיר (vayavo'u vayikre'u el-sho'er ha'ir), 'So they came and called to the gatekeepers of the city' (v. 10, ESV). The verb וַיִּקְרְאוּ (vayikre'u), from קָרָא (qara), means to call out, to proclaim, to summon. It is the same verb used when heralds announce royal decrees, when prophets declare God's word, when those who have seen miracles testify to what they have witnessed.

Their message is simple and factual: בָּאנוּ אֶל־מַחֲנֵה אֲרָם וְהִנֵּה אֵין־שָׁם אִישׁ (banu el-machaneh Aram vehineh ein-sham ish), 'We came to the camp of the Syrians, and behold, there was no one there' (v. 10). The exclamation וְהִנֵּה (vehineh), 'and behold,' conveys their own amazement. They are not spinning tales or embellishing; they are reporting what they have seen with wonder still fresh in their voices.

Notice what the lepers do not do. They do not demand credit. They do not insist on being honored as the discoverers. They do not bargain for a reward before sharing the information. They simply announce the good news and leave the response to others. This is the proper posture of Gospel witnesses; we are not the source of the good news, merely its messengers; we are not the Savior, merely those who point to Him.

The good news travels from the gatekeepers to the king's household through the simplest means possible: one person telling another. This is how the gospel has always spread, not through sophisticated marketing or compelling programs, but through ordinary people telling others what they have discovered. The word וַיַּגִּידוּ (vayagidu), 'and they told' (v. 11), from נָגַד (nagad), means to declare, to make known, to announce. It is active, intentional communication of important information.

The Fulfillment: כִּדְבַר יְהוָה (Kidvar Adonai)

When the report proves true, and the people plunder the Syrian camp, the narrator provides a crucial theological comment: כִּדְבַר יְהוָה (kidvar Adonai), 'according to the word of the LORD' (v. 16, ESV). The entire episode, the prophecy of Elisha, the departure of the Syrians, the discovery by the lepers, the provision for Samaria, all of it unfolds exactly as God had declared through His prophet the day before.

The precise fulfillment of prices is particularly striking: סְאָה־סֹלֶת בְּשֶׁקֶל וְסָאתַיִם שְׂעֹרִים בְּשֶׁקֶל (se'ah-solet besheqel vesa'tayim se'orim besheqel), 'a seah of fine flour for a shekel, and two seahs of barley for a shekel' (v. 16). This was not vague prophecy or general prediction. God had named the exact commodities and the exact prices. When God speaks, reality conforms to His word.

Yet embedded in this triumph is a sobering lesson. The king's officer who had mocked Elisha's prophecy, asking sarcastically הִנֵּה יְהוָה עֹשֶׂה אֲרֻבּוֹת בַּשָּׁמַיִם הֲיִהְיֶה הַדָּבָר הַזֶּה (hineh Adonai oseh arubot bashamayim hayihyeh hadavar hazeh), 'If the LORD himself should make windows in heaven, could this thing be?' (v. 2), this man saw the fulfillment with his own eyes but did not taste it. Trampled by the crowds rushing to receive God's provision, he died at the gate, a victim of his own unbelief.

The phrase וַיִּרְמְסוּ אֹתוֹ הָעָם בַּשַּׁעַר וַיָּמֹת (vayirmesu oto ha'am basha'ar vayamot), 'the people trampled him in the gate, and he died' (v. 17), captures the tragic irony. He stood at the very place where provision was being distributed, the gate, but his skepticism prevented him from receiving it. This is the danger of unbelief: not that God's promises fail, but that we position ourselves outside their blessing through doubt and cynicism.

What the Lepers Teach Us Today

The story of the four lepers is not merely a historical narrative; it is a prophetic pattern, a theological principle, and a practical instruction for every believer. Consider what God teaches us through these unlikely deliverers.

God Uses the Unlikely

First, God delights in using those the world considers unusable. The lepers had nothing to commend them by human standards, no social standing, no ritual purity, no physical health, no wealth, no power. Yet God chose them to be the first recipients and primary announcers of His miraculous provision. This is the consistent biblical pattern. God called Moses, who protested that he could not speak. He chose Gideon who was hiding in a winepress. He selected David, who had been overlooked by his father. He appointed Jeremiah, who said he was only a youth. He used Mary, who was an unknown peasant girl.

Paul would later articulate this principle explicitly: 'God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong; God chose what is low and despised in the world, even things that are not, to bring to nothing things that are, so that no human being might boast in the presence of God' (1 Corinthians 1:27-29, ESV). The lepers embodied all of this: foolish by worldly wisdom, weak in body, low in social standing, despised by the community. Yet through them, God brought abundance to an entire city.

If you feel too broken to be used by God, too marginalized to matter, too weak to make a difference, take heart from these four lepers. Your very weakness may be the qualification God is looking for. Your desperation may be the doorway to discovering His provision. Your status as an outcast may position you perfectly to understand and proclaim the good news to other outcasts.

Desperation Drives Us to God

Second, the lepers teach us that desperation, rightly directed, becomes the catalyst for faith. Their question, 'Why are we sitting here until we die?', broke through the paralysis of hopelessness and drove them to action. They had exhausted their own resources. They had no remaining human options. So they cast themselves on the possibility of divine mercy, even if that mercy came through pagan enemies.

This is precisely the posture God desires from us. He is not impressed by our self-sufficiency or our carefully constructed backup plans. He responds to those who come to Him, knowing they have nowhere else to turn. The Psalms are filled with such prayers: 'Out of the depths I cry to you, O LORD!' (Psalm 130:1). 'When my soul was embittered, when I was pricked in heart, I was brutish and ignorant; I was like a beast toward you. Nevertheless, I am continually with you' (Psalm 73:21-23). 'My soul clings to the dust; give me life according to your word!' (Psalm 119:25).

Jesus pronounced blessing on this very desperation: 'Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied' (Matthew 5:3, 6, ESV). The lepers were literally poor and literally hungry. Their physical condition became a picture of the spiritual poverty and hunger that opens the door to God's kingdom.

Blessing Brings Responsibility

Third, the lepers demonstrate that receiving God's blessing carries the responsibility to share it. They could have remained in the camp, gorging themselves while their countrymen starved. They could have rationalized that their leprosy absolved them from social responsibility, that the city, which had excluded them, deserved no consideration from them. But conscience, awakened by grace, drove them back to the gate with their good news.

This is the nature of the gospel. We cannot truly receive it for ourselves without becoming witnesses to others. The apostle Paul expressed the compulsion perfectly: 'For if I preach the gospel, that gives me no ground for boasting. For necessity is laid upon me. Woe to me if I do not preach the gospel!' (1 Corinthians 9:16, ESV). The lepers felt this same necessity. To remain silent about the abandoned Syrian camp would have been a sin, not because they needed to earn their salvation through sharing, but because a genuine encounter with God's provision produces an overflow that must be expressed.

Every Christian is in the position of these lepers. We have identified a provision in which the world sees only famine. We have found life where others face only death. We know the location of abundance while multitudes perish in scarcity. The question confronts us just as it confronted them: Will we keep silent? Will we hoard our discovery? Or will we rush to tell others what we have found?

God's Word Always Proves True

Fourth, the precise fulfillment of Elisha's prophecy reminds us that God's word is utterly reliable. Every detail came to pass exactly as declared, the timing, the prices, the method of deliverance, even the fate of the skeptical officer. When the narrative concludes with the phrase 'according to the word of the LORD,' it ascribes divine authority to the entire episode.

This reliability extends to every promise God has made in Scripture. What He has spoken concerning salvation through Christ, He will fulfill. What He has declared about His presence with His people, He will accomplish. What He has promised regarding the ultimate restoration of all things, He will bring to pass. We can stake our lives on God's word because it has proven trustworthy in every generation, in every circumstance, for every person who has tested it.

Isaiah captured this certainty: 'For as the rain and the snow come down from heaven and do not return there but water the earth, making it bring forth and sprout, giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater, so shall my word be that goes out from my mouth; it shall not return to me empty, but it shall accomplish that which I purpose, and shall succeed in the thing for which I sent it' (Isaiah 55:10-11, ESV). The lepers and the people of Samaria discovered this truth. So can we.

The Gospel Pattern in Ancient History

The four lepers discovered more than an abandoned camp that twilight evening. They discovered a pattern that would be repeated in the greatest deliverance story of all, the Gospel itself. Like them, we were outcasts, leprous with sin, sitting at the gate of death with no way to save ourselves. Like them, we faced the famine of spiritual starvation, separated from the abundance of God by our own uncleanness.

But God, in His great mercy, prepared a feast we did not deserve. He caused the enemy of our souls to flee in terror, not through our strength but through the sound of His own mighty work in Christ. The cross became the place where sin's siege was broken, where death's grip was loosened, where the powers of darkness fled before the triumphant Son of God. And when we stumbled to that place in our desperation, we found it fully provisioned with everything we needed: forgiveness, righteousness, adoption, hope, purpose, and eternal life.

Like the lepers, we are called to feast first, to enjoy the good news, to revel in the provision, to let it nourish our starving souls. But also like the lepers, we cannot remain silent. We must return to the gates where other outcasts sit, other marginalized people wait, other desperate souls wonder if there is any hope. We must call out to them: 'We have found provision! The enemy has fled! Come and see what the Lord has done!'

The question the lepers asked themselves echoes down through the centuries to us: 'We are not doing right. This day is a day of good news, and we remain silent.' It is still a day of good news. The gospel is still the most important announcement any human being can hear. And we who have tasted it, we who have been filled by it, we who know where the abundance is found, we bear the responsibility and the privilege of making it known.

May we, like those four unlikely messengers in ancient Samaria, overcome our natural self-absorption, recognize the weight of what we have discovered, and rush to share it with all who will listen. May we trust that God delights in using the desperate and unlikely. May we cast ourselves on His mercy in our own need. And may we never forget that blessing received must become blessing shared, lest we stand guilty of silencing good news in a world dying for want of it.

The camp is abandoned. The provision is ready. The feast is prepared. Come, eat and drink. Then go and tell.

Thursday, April 23, 2026

When Fear of God Overcomes Fear of Man


In the opening chapter of Exodus, tucked between the rising oppression of Israel and the eventual birth of Moses, we encounter two women whose names deserve to be spoken with reverence in every generation. Shiphrah and Puah, Hebrew midwives whose defiant obedience to God altered the course of history, stand as timeless witnesses to what happens when the fear of God overwhelms the fear of man. Their story, recorded in Exodus 1:15-22, offers us a masterclass in moral courage, civil disobedience rooted in divine allegiance, and the surprising ways God rewards faithfulness in the face of tyranny.

A Nation Under Siege

Before we meet these remarkable women, we must understand the desperate context in which they operated. The children of Israel had multiplied exceedingly in Egypt, and a new Pharaoh arose "who did not know Joseph" (Exodus 1:8, ESV). This king regarded the burgeoning Hebrew population not with gratitude for their ancestors' service to Egypt, but with suspicion and fear. The Egyptian response was systematic oppression: "Therefore they set taskmasters over them to afflict them with heavy burdens" (Exodus 1:11, ESV).

But here we encounter one of Scripture's recurring ironies: persecution intended to diminish God's people often produces the opposite effect. The text tells us, "But the more they were oppressed, the more they multiplied and the more they spread abroad" (Exodus 1:12, ESV). The Hebrew word פָּרַץ (paratz), translated here as "spread abroad," connotes bursting forth and breaking out with unstoppable force. It's the same word used to describe water breaking through barriers. Egypt tried to contain Israel, but God's blessing made them overflow.

Pharaoh's frustration with failed oppression led him to a more sinister strategy: genocide through the hands of those who bring life into the world.

Death Disguised as Policy

"Then the king of Egypt said to the Hebrew midwives, one of whom was named Shiphrah and the other Puah, 'When you serve as midwife to the Hebrew women and see them on the birthstool, if it is a son, you shall kill him, but if it is a daughter, she shall live'" (Exodus 1:15-16, ESV).

This command is breathtaking in its cruelty. Pharaoh sought to weaponize the very women whose calling was to preserve life, transforming birth attendants into executioners. The Hebrew word for "birthstool" (הָאָבְנָיִם, ha'ovnayim) literally means "the two stones" on which a woman would crouch during delivery in ancient Near Eastern birthing practices. This was the sacred space where life emerged into the world, and Pharaoh sought to turn it into a killing field.

The names Shiphrah (שִׁפְרָה) and Puah (פּוּעָה) are significant. Shiphrah likely derives from a root meaning "fair" or "beautiful," while Puah may derive from a root meaning "splendor" or possibly "crying out." These names themselves testify to life, beauty, and the vocalizations of birth, everything Pharaoh's command sought to silence.

Scholars debate whether these two women were the only midwives for all Israel or whether they were leaders of a larger guild of midwives. Given that Israel now numbered in the hundreds of thousands, the latter seems more likely. These women held positions of authority and influence among their people, which makes their upcoming act of defiance even more significant. They had something to lose.

We must also consider the demonic dimension of Pharaoh's command. Throughout Scripture, we see a pattern of Satan attempting to destroy the line through which the Messiah would come. From Cain's murder of Abel to Herod's slaughter of the innocents in Bethlehem, there runs a crimson thread of attempted genocide against God's redemptive plan. Pharaoh, whether he knew it or not, was participating in ancient evil's attempt to prevent the coming of the One who would crush the serpent's head (Genesis 3:15). Israel carried in her womb not just babies, but the hope of the world.

Fearing God Over Man

"But the midwives feared God and did not do as the king of Egypt commanded them, but let the male children live" (Exodus 1:17, ESV).

This single verse contains the hinge upon which the entire story turns. The Hebrew word translated "feared" is יָרֵא (yare), which encompasses reverence, awe, worship, and yes, fear in the sense of taking someone seriously enough to order your life around them. The midwives feared God, and this fear eclipsed any terror Pharaoh could inspire.

This was not abstract theology for Shiphrah and Puah. This was lived faith in the furnace of impossible choices. They stood in the throne room of the most powerful empire on earth, receiving direct orders from a man who held the power of life and death in his hands. To refuse him meant risking torture, imprisonment, execution. They knew what happened to those who defied Pharaoh. Yet the text says they "did not do as the king of Egypt commanded them."

The verb used here, עָשָׂה (asah), means "to do, make, accomplish." They simply did not do it. There's a beautiful simplicity to their resistance. They didn't organize a protest movement or deliver eloquent speeches about human rights. They just refused to murder babies, and they used their professional position to protect life instead of destroying it.

This brings us to a crucial principle of biblical ethics: there is a hierarchy of authority, with God at the apex. Generally, we are commanded to submit to governing authorities (Romans 13:1-7), but this submission is never absolute. When human authority commands what God forbids, or forbids what God commands, our duty is clear: "We must obey God rather than men" (Acts 5:29, ESV).

Shiphrah and Puah embodied this principle centuries before Peter articulated it. They understood that Pharaoh's authority, though real, was derivative and limited. God's authority was ultimate and unlimited. When the two came into conflict, there was no real choice, only the test of whether their fear of God was genuine enough to override their fear of man.

Standing Before Power

"So the king of Egypt called the midwives and said to them, 'Why have you done this, and let the male children live?'" (Exodus 1:18, ESV).

Picture this moment. Shiphrah and Puah, women who worked with their hands in blood and water and new life, stand once again before the golden throne of Egypt's god-king. The verb קָרָא (qara), "called," suggests a formal summons; this was not a friendly conversation but a legal interrogation. Pharaoh's question drips with accusation: "Why have you done this thing?" The demonstrative pronoun הַזֶּה (hazeh), "this," points accusingly at their disobedience, highlighting the enormity of their defiance in Pharaoh's eyes.

The midwives are alone, without lawyers or advocates, facing the man who could end their lives with a word. Yet they must answer. What they say next has been analyzed, debated, and pondered for millennia.

Truth-Telling in Complex Circumstances

"The midwives said to Pharaoh, 'Because the Hebrew women are not like the Egyptian women, for they are vigorous and give birth before the midwife comes to them'" (Exodus 1:19, ESV).

This response has generated considerable discussion among interpreters. Were the midwives lying? Does God bless deception? The question is important because the text states that God dealt well with them.

The Hebrew word translated as "vigorous" is חָיוֹת (chayot), derived from the root חָיָה (chayah), meaning "to live, have life, be lively, be quickened." It suggests vitality, life-force, and energetic strength. The midwives essentially told Pharaoh that Hebrew women were so full of life that they gave birth quickly, before professional help could arrive.

The comparison itself is instructive: "not like the Egyptian women" (לֹא כַנָּשִׁים הַמִּצְרִיֹּת, lo chanashim hamitzriyot). The midwives draw a distinction between two populations. Egyptian women, living lives of relative comfort and ease, may indeed have had more difficult labors. Hebrew women, hardened by the brutal regimen of slavery described earlier in the chapter, making bricks, working in fields, enduring "hard service" (עֲבֹדָה קָשָׁה, avodah qashah), would have developed physical resilience.

Was this true? Possibly. There could well have been truth to their claim that Hebrew women, hardened by slavery and field labor, had more vigorous constitutions than their Egyptian counterparts, who lived lives of comparative ease. The midwives may have been highlighting a real pattern while conveniently omitting the fact that they had also been actively protecting babies when they did arrive in time.

The text itself doesn't tell us whether this was a lie, a partial truth, or a complete truth. What it does tell us is what God blessed: their refusal to murder innocent children. Scripture commends them not for any possible deception, but for their courage in preserving life. As one commentator notes, even if they misled Pharaoh, their commendation came from their defiant obedience to God's moral law, not from any untruth they may have spoken.

This raises important questions for us about living faithfully in hostile environments. When Nazi soldiers asked if Jews were hidden in a home, was it righteous to say "no"? When slave catchers demanded information about the Underground Railroad, was it godly to mislead them? Scripture presents examples: Rahab hides the spies, and the Hebrew midwives deflect Pharaoh, in which deception in the service of protecting innocent life seems to receive divine approval, or at least divine silence, where condemnation might be expected.

The principle seems to be this: where human authority commands participation in evil, our primary duty is to refuse that evil, and secondary questions about how we explain that refusal must be weighed against competing moral obligations. Preserving innocent life takes precedence over absolute transparency with those who seek to destroy it.

Divine Sovereignty Through Human Agency

The interplay between God's sovereignty and human responsibility in this narrative deserves careful attention. The text attributes Israel's multiplication directly to God's blessing, yet this blessing flows through and alongside human courage. God dealt well with the midwives; God made the people multiply; God gave families to the faithful. Yet none of this happened through divine fiat alone. It happened because two women chose courage over compliance.

This is the Biblical pattern: God ordains both the end and the means. He determines that His purposes will be accomplished, and He also determines that they will be accomplished through the faithful obedience of His people. Pharaoh said "less," and God said "more," but God's "more" came through midwives who said "no" to murder.

The Hebrew construction throughout this passage emphasizes both divine action and human response. When the text says "the people multiplied" (וַיִּרֶב הָעָם, vayirev ha'am), it uses a form that can indicate divine causation. Yet this multiplication happened because babies weren't murdered, babies whose lives were preserved by human choice. God's sovereignty doesn't bypass human agency; it enlists it.

Consider also the irony that pervades this narrative. The Pharaoh's attempt to diminish Israel caused her to increase. His slavery made them stronger. His genocide plot was thwarted by the very women he tried to use as instruments of death. At every turn, human evil meets divine reversal. Where sin abounds, grace abounds all the more (Romans 5:20). This isn't an accident or coincidence; it's the fingerprint of God's sovereign grace.

Moreover, note that God achieves victory not through overwhelming force but through quiet faithfulness. He doesn't send angels to strike Pharaoh dead. He doesn't part the Nile to drown the Egyptians (not yet, anyway). He works through two women whose names most people never heard, women without political power or military might, women whose only weapons were conviction and courage. God delights to show His power through weakness, to accomplish cosmic purposes through seemingly insignificant people.

This should encourage every believer who feels small and powerless in the face of institutional evil. You may not be able to change the whole system. You may not be able to reform the government or redirect the culture. But you can, in your sphere, refuse to participate in evil and choose to do good. And God, who sees and honors such faithfulness, can take your obedience and weave it into purposes far greater than you imagine.

The midwives didn't overthrow Pharaoh's regime. They didn't organize a resistance movement or stage a revolution. They simply refused to kill babies. That's all, and that's everything. They stewarded their limited power with integrity, and God used it to preserve a nation and advance His redemptive plan.

"So God dealt well with the midwives. And the people multiplied and grew very strong. And because the midwives feared God, he gave them families" (Exodus 1:20-21, ESV).

Three distinct blessings flow from the midwives' faithfulness. First, God dealt well with them personally, a phrase suggesting divine favor, protection, and blessing in all their affairs. The Hebrew הֵיטִב (hetiv) means "to do good to, make well, make better." God improved their circumstances and prospered their way.

Second, the people they protected multiplied and grew strong. Their obedience didn't just save individual lives; it enabled the exponential growth of the entire nation. Every male child they saved could father children of his own. Every generation saved multiplied God's people. One act of courage echoed through centuries.

The word for "grew strong" is עָצַם (atzam), meaning "to be strong, mighty, numerous." It's often used in military contexts to describe the strengthening of forces. What Pharaoh tried to prevent through murder, God accomplished through the faithfulness of two women. The very thing Pharaoh feared, Israel becoming "too mighty for us" (Exodus 1:9), came to pass through the courage of those who defied him.

Third, and perhaps most intimately, God gave the midwives' families, literally, "He made for them houses" (וַיַּעַשׂ לָהֶם בָּתִּים, vaya'as lahem batim). The word בַּיִת (bayit) means "house" but extends beyond physical structure to household, family, dynasty, posterity. God gave them what they had helped others achieve: thriving families of their own.

This detail is particularly poignant because midwives often entered their profession precisely because they were childless. To watch others give birth, day after day, while remaining barren themselves, would have been its own form of suffering. Yet God saw their faithfulness in stewarding others' children and responded by giving them children of their own. They saved sons, and God gave them sons. They preserved families, and God built their families.

When Evil Doubles Down

The story doesn't end with a blessing, however. It ends with escalation: "Then Pharaoh commanded all his people, 'Every son that is born to the Hebrews you shall cast into the Nile, but you shall let every daughter live'" (Exodus 1:22, ESV).

Thwarted by the midwives, Pharaoh made his genocidal command public and comprehensive. No longer would he work through the subterfuge of corrupting birth attendants. Now every Egyptian was deputized to drown Hebrew baby boys in the Nile. The verb שָׁלַךְ (shalak), "cast, throw," suggests violent disposal, not careful laying but hurling into the river to drown.

This escalation reminds us that faithfulness doesn't always prevent evil from advancing. Sometimes it simply redirects evil, which then seeks another avenue. The midwives' courage saved countless lives, but it didn't end Pharaoh's campaign of death. Evil, when resisted in one form, often mutates into another.

Yet even here, God's sovereignty weaves redemption through the warp and woof of human evil. This very command, to cast boys into the Nile, becomes the means by which Moses, the deliverer, ends up in Pharaoh's household, educated in all the wisdom of Egypt, positioned perfectly to lead God's people to freedom. The weapon Pharaoh meant for destruction became the instrument of Israel's salvation. The river of death became the pathway to deliverance.

Lessons for Modern Disciples

What does this ancient story of Hebrew midwives speak to us today? Everything.

First, moral courage is possible even under tyranny. Shiphrah and Puah had every human reason to comply with Pharaoh's command. The deck was stacked against them. Yet they said no. Their example refutes the claim that circumstances render righteousness impossible. Difficult, yes. Costly, certainly. But impossible? Never.

Second, fearing God provides courage to resist human tyrants. The antidote to the fear of man is not the absence of fear, but the presence of a greater fear. When we see God rightly, in His holiness, power, and justice, the threats of earthly powers shrink in proportion. Pharaoh could kill the body. God could cast into hell. Who, then, should we fear?

Third, our vocations can become venues for faithfulness. Shiphrah and Puah didn't abandon their profession to become activists. They practiced faithful midwifery in defiance of wicked policy. They stewarded their calling with integrity. Whatever our sphere of influence, healthcare, education, business, government, or parenthood, we can choose to operate according to God's kingdom values rather than cultural corruption.

Fourth, God blesses those who take risks for righteousness. We cannot manipulate God into rewarding us, but Scripture consistently testifies that He sees and honors those who honor Him, often in surprising and generous ways. The midwives risked everything and received everything. God may not always bless our faithfulness with material prosperity, but He always blesses it with His presence and pleasure, which is infinitely more valuable.

Fifth, individual faithfulness can have a multigenerational impact. Two women said no to murder, and the result was the preservation of Israel and eventually the birth of the Messiah through that line. We rarely see the full consequences of our choices in the moment. Faithfulness plants seeds that bear fruit in ways we cannot imagine.

Sixth, civil disobedience is sometimes a biblical imperative. We do this text a disservice if we domesticate it into mere inspiration while ignoring its radical implications. There are circumstances, rare but real, when following Jesus means breaking human law. When the state commands abortion, worship of false gods, denial of truth, or participation in injustice, the follower of Christ must refuse, must resist, must obey God rather than men.

The Greater Midwife

Ultimately, the story of Shiphrah and Puah points beyond itself to a greater story of life rescued from death. These midwives saved Hebrew boys from Pharaoh's decree to kill them. But there is One who saves all humanity from the murderous decree of sin and death.

Jesus Christ is the ultimate midwife of souls, bringing us from death to life, from darkness to light. Where we were dead in trespasses and sins, He has made us alive (Ephesians 2:1-5). Where we faced the just sentence of divine wrath, He interposed Himself, taking our death that we might have His life.

The midwives feared God and preserved physical life. Christ feared, which is to say, obeyed and honored His Father and preserved eternal life for all who believe. The midwives risked death from Pharaoh. Christ embraced death on the cross. The midwives received households as a reward. Christ is building an eternal household, a family of faith drawn from every tribe and tongue.

And like the midwives, Christ's work of deliverance came through defiance of tyrannical power. Satan demanded death; Christ offered life. The world system demanded conformity to its patterns; Christ refused and called His followers to do the same. The powers that be commanded silence; the gospel refuses to be silenced.

Your Birthing Room Moment

Somewhere today, someone reading these words stands in their own birthing room moment. You face a choice between complicity with evil and costly obedience to God. Your Pharaoh may be a boss demanding dishonest practices, a culture pressuring compromise, a government requiring what God forbids, or even your own heart rationalizing convenient evil.

Remember Shiphrah and Puah. They were ordinary women in an extraordinary crisis who discovered that the fear of God is more powerful than the fear of man. They stewarded their calling with courage and found that God stewards the courageous with blessing. They said yes to life when everything around them demanded death, and through that simple, terrifying, beautiful yes, they became partners with God in His redemptive purposes.

The question before you is the same question that confronted two ancient midwives: Whom will you fear? Whose command will you obey? What life, physical or spiritual, your own or another's, is God calling you to protect, even at great cost?

The call to radical obedience is never easy. But it is always right. And it is always rewarded, if not in houses and families in this age, then in the age to come with the words we all long to hear: "Well done, good and faithful servant."

May we all have the grace to follow in the footsteps of Shiphrah and Puah, who feared God and saved life, who defied tyranny and trusted the Almighty, who risked everything and found that God is faithful to preserve and reward those who choose Him over every earthly power.

For in the end, the Pharaohs of this world pass into dust, but those who fear God and do righteousness remain forever in His household, that eternal house which He has prepared for all who love Him more than life itself.

Desperation Drives Us to God and God Uses the Unlikely

In the desperate hours of a besieged city, when hope had withered like grain in a drought, and the shadow of death crept through the streets...