Profiles of Faith: Miriam - A Lifetime of Faith
by Jerold Aust
With
cautious optimism and hope, Miriam crouched on the bank of the Nile River,
watching intently as her baby brother Moses, lying in a waterproofed
basket, floated among the reeds at river's edge.
She was anxious, and with good reason. Her mother,
whom she loved and trusted, had instructed her to place the baby in this
vulnerable position. Their hope was to save the infant, for the leader of
mighty Egypt had just decreed that all Israelite baby boys be thrown in
the river to drown.
Miriam and her mother knew that Pharaoh's daughter,
accompanied by her maidens, came to the river to bathe. Will she come to
the river today? she thought.
Miriam, the 7-year-old sister of Moses, realized that
what she was doing was risky, because the tiny basket might break free
from the protection of the reeds and get swept away in the river's
forceful current . If caught, she might die herself for defying the
ruler's order.
Then she heard muffled voices nearby. Women were
walking toward the river, talking and laughing as they approached. One of
them, Pharaoh's daughter, noticed the basket among the reeds.
Miriam's heart raced as the princess directed an
assistant to retrieve the little ark and brought the baby boy to her. When
the child began to cry, her heart was overwhelmed with compassion. She
recognized him as a Hebrew child. It was at that moment that Miriam
spontaneously hurried to the princess and offered to help. "I know of a
Hebrew woman who could take care of this baby for you. Would you like her
to nurse and care for him?"
The princess replied that she would, and Miriam rushed
away to reunite her mother with her infant brother.
This rest is history, the remarkable story of a young
girl, the older sister of Moses, who became a prophetess of God. Little
could she imagine that some 80 years later, she and her sister Israelites
would joyously proclaim their freedom from years of Egyptian bondage as
she led them in praising God for His deliverance.
Life in Miriam's
day
Let's get a glimpse of the setting, the backdrop of
Miriam's day. Seven years Moses' senior, Miriam grew up a slave, the
daughter of slaves. Assuming Moses was born around 1520 B.C. (Merrill
Unger, Unger's Bible
Dictionary, Moody Press, Chicago, 1988, p. 886),
then Miriam was born around 1527.
Some 160 years earlier, a Hebrew family had fled
drought in their homeland and arrived in Egypt as refugees. The patriarch
of the family was Jacob, also named Israel. His estranged son Joseph had
become chief assistant to the Pharaoh of that time. Under these
circumstances the Hebrews were well treated and prospered as shepherds in
the Nile delta. After the death of Israel and subsequently his son Joseph,
"there arose a new king over Egypt, who did not know Joseph" (Exodus
1:8).
Recognizing how prolifically the Israelites had
multiplied, this ruler began to fear the loss of Egyptian control of his
own country. He knew too that the Israelites could ally with an enemy
against the Egyptians. In an attempt to curb the Hebrew slaves, he pressed
them into labor on major construction projects.
For years the Israelites toiled away in service to the
Egyptians. But, in spite of the backbreaking work, the Hebrews continued
to multiply—so much so that, by Miriam's day the Pharaoh took the drastic
step of decreeing that all newborn Hebrew boys be thrown into the Nile to
drown.
It's at this juncture that we find Miriam risking her
life to save her little brother. Undoubtedly as Miriam lived and worked
under this tyrant she learned lessons of faith in preparation for her role
in the dramatic events that lay ahead for the children of
Israel.
Faithful from
childhood
Miriam helped save Moses from a sure death. She
courageously defied the Egyptian ruler by placing Moses among the reeds by
the river's edge (Exodus 2:3). Knowing she could face death for her
actions, she cautiously watched over him. Waiting for the Egyptian
princess, she seized the opportunity when it presented itself.
The princess could easily have rejected Miriam's offer
of Moses' own mother to nurse the infant. But, in fulfilling God's plan
for Moses, the Egyptian princess welcomed Miriam's suggestion.
In all this Miriam showed faithfulness, loyalty and
poise. Such character would have been commendable if she had been in her
20 or 30s. But she was only
7. Her courage in such trying times, when Hebrew
babies were being slaughtered for merely being boys, gives us a glimpse
into the kind of woman she was to become. Little wonder she is referred to
in Scripture as a faithful servant and prophetess of God!
Accounts of loyalty and faithfulness like Miriam's
were recorded for our sake (Romans 15:4). Her godly characteristics were
much in evidence at the moment of Israel's triumph, on the other shore of
the Red Sea. After Israel was delivered from the jaws of death through the
parting and closing of the Red Sea, Miriam took her timbrel and, following
Moses' own song, led the women of Israel in musical praise of God for His
deliverance (Exodus 15:20-21). It is in the recording of this incident
that Moses, the author of the book of Exodus, identified his older sister
as a prophetess, the first recorded in the Bible.
Although the Bible shows Miriam did not hold a
position equal to that of Moses, she seems to have been viewed as a near
equal to Aaron in importance. Exodus 15:20 refers to her as "Miriam the
prophetess, the sister of Aaron." In other scriptures she is mentioned
along with Moses, the nation's leader, and Aaron, its high priest.
Although her exact position isn't known, she was clearly held in high
regard by Moses, Aaron and her people.
Scripture gives no indication that Miriam ever lost
her attitude of loyalty and faithfulness. However, God in His Word records
not only the strengths of His faithful servants, but their flaws,
including their errors in judgment. One of Miriam's actions—specifically
her criticism of Moses' marriage to a woman of whom she
disapproved—disclosed what seems to have been hidden resentment. God
inspired Moses himself to record the details of her error, which was a
serious issue to God.
Envy and
excuse
Numbers 12:1 sets the scene for Miriam's open judgment
of Moses: "Then Miriam and Aaron spoke against Moses because of the
Ethiopian woman whom he had married; for he had married an Ethiopian
woman. So they said, 'Has the Lord indeed spoken only through Moses? Has
He not spoken through us also?' And the Lord heard it. (Now the man Moses
was very humble, more than all men who were on the face of the earth.)
Suddenly the Lord said to Moses, Aaron, and Miriam, 'Come out, you three,
to the tabernacle of meeting!' So the three came out. Then the Lord came
down in the pillar of cloud and stood in the door of the tabernacle, and
called Aaron and Miriam. And they both went forward" (verses
1-5).
"Then He said, 'Hear now My words: If there is a
prophet among you, I the Lord, make Myself known to him in a vision, and I
speak to him in a dream. Not so with My servant Moses; he is faithful in
all My house. I speak with him face to face, even plainly, and not in dark
sayings; and he sees the form of the Lord. Why then were you not afraid to speak against My
servant Moses?' So the anger of the Lord was
aroused against them, and He departed" (verses 5-9, emphasis added
throughout).
Miriam and Aaron (who was also older than Moses;
Exodus 7:7) apparently chafed at Moses' preeminent calling and position.
Since her name is mentioned first in their speaking against Moses (verse
1), perhaps Miriam initiated the criticism.
Their indignation over Moses taking a wife outside of
Israel provided them the protection and credibility they sought—or so they
thought. Miriam was searching for greater credibility; instead, she
received the curse of leprosy. She and Aaron failed to acknowledge that it
is God who sets up and removes leaders (Daniel 2:21).
God does not take rebellion lightly, especially when
it comes from among His people and is directed against His authority. "So
the anger of the Lord was aroused against them, and He departed. And when
the cloud departed from above the tabernacle, suddenly Miriam became
leprous, as white as snow . . ." (Numbers 12:9-10).
Since indications are that she had been the instigator
of this criticism leveled at Moses, she apparently was the one singled out
for punishment.
Living a lie is bad enough. Teaching wrong ways to
God's people is worse. For example, Jeremiah warned the prophet Hananiah:
"This year you shall die, because you
have taught rebellion against the Lord' "
(Jeremiah 28:16). In that case, as with Miriam, God acted decisively
against attempts to rebel against Him.
God's anger and
forgiveness
God's anger was swift but not capricious. Consider
this event's significance against the backdrop of some incredible
miracles: God heard Israel's cries for deliverance. He remembered His
promise to Abraham, and He delivered the Israelites from Egyptian bondage
(Exodus 3:7-9). He granted them freedom to worship and obey Him. God
performed mighty miracles to free Israel: After the 10 plagues He poured
on Egypt, He opened the Red Sea and allowed His people to escape over the
dry sea bed. When Pharaoh's armies attempted to follow Israel, God
dramatically buried them under tons of water.
Later, God fed, clothed and protected the Israelites
during their wilderness travels for 40 long years, mercifully tolerating
their human weaknesses. A careful study of those events can help us better
understand Israel's trying nature and God's patient mercy for His
people.
When Miriam set her hand against Moses, God reacted
with justifiable anger. If her rebellious spirit were allowed to spread,
rebellious attitudes and actions could affect others among the Israelites,
they who were chosen to be a model nation to countries around them
(Deuteronomy 4:5-8; 2 Samuel 7:23-24). God immediately inflicted Miriam
with the dread disease of leprosy. Miriam was recognized as cursed,
rebellious to God. She was exiled for a while from the Israelites'
wilderness camp, a fate worse than death for some.
Aaron immediately cried out for Moses to help Miriam,
begging him to ask God for forgiveness and the healing of their sister.
All self-importance and presumption quickly vanished when they saw where
their unwise actions had led them.
Moses responded quickly to Aaron's cry. He asked God
to heal Miriam; God did. But He would not let the rebellion go unpunished:
There was a penalty to be paid, lest others follow in her
footsteps.
Even though He healed Miriam, God expressed His
displeasure with Miriam's actions: "If her father had but spit in her
face, would she not be shamed seven days? Let her be shut out of the camp
seven days, and after that she may be received again" (Numbers
12:14).
The laws of health, hygiene and quarantine God had
instituted for the well-being of the people directed that lepers live
outside the camp (Leviticus 13:46). God wanted everyone to know that He
didn't take Miriam's rebellion lightly. Israel remained camped for one
week, time enough for this spiritual lesson for Miriam and Israel to sink
in (Numbers 12:15). God was as quick to forgive as He was to
anger.
The work of a
prophetess
Although God inspired Moses to identify Miriam as a
prophetess while she lived, she was still highly regarded in Scripture
some 700 years after she died. God, speaking through the prophet Micah,
reasoned with and chastised a backsliding Israel, reminding them how He
had delivered them from Egyptian slavery. The three leaders mentioned who
helped in this great deliverance included Miriam.
Micah, knowing how carnal Israel had become, attempted
to persuade the Israelites by reminding them of these three courageous
national heroes: "And I sent before you Moses, Aaron,
and Miriam"
(Micah 6:4). God honored Miriam by acknowledging that He chose her—along
with Aaron—to assist Moses in serving His nation Israel. God listed her in
such select company because she had set a faithful example for all
Israelites in her time and all mankind forever.
Earlier, when Moses identified Miriam as a prophetess,
he wrote how she had led the Israelite women in singing that served as a
wholehearted answer to Moses' and Israel's praise to God. The context of
her song (Exodus 15:21) shows that she clearly understood that God and God
alone delivered Israel from the Egyptian army.
Miriam led the women in singing and dancing with joy,
for God had not just vanquished their enemy, He had done so gloriously!
God vindicated Himself (Romans 12:19), delivering His people by drowning
their enemies in the Red Sea. GN
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