Salvation Story. David R. Froemming

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Salvation Story - David R. Froemming

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concludes that the problem with idolatry is that all our self goes into things, instead of into other people. The self that is free from the idols of power and anxiety, the self that is sane, is the self that is set free from conformity to fear and can now love others.33 It is this God that is being revealed to Moses in the burning bush. It is this God that frees the Israelites from slavery in Pharaoh’s Egypt. Like the God we find in the prophet Isaiah, this God in the book of Exodus “who is becoming” is found in the powers of nature.

      Exodus 8 and 9

      1 Then the LORD said to Moses, “Go to Pharaoh and say to him, ‘Thus says the LORD: Let my people go, so that they may worship me. 2 If you refuse to let them go, I will plague your whole country with frogs. 3 The river shall swarm with frogs; they shall come up into your palace, into your bedchamber and your bed, and into the houses of your officials and of your people, and into your ovens and your kneading bowls. 4 The frogs shall come up on you and on your people and on all your officials.’”

      16 Then the LORD said to Moses, “Say to Aaron, ‘Stretch out your staff and strike the dust of the earth, so that it may become gnats throughout the whole land of Egypt.’” 17 And they did so; Aaron stretched out his hand with his staff and struck the dust of the earth, and gnats came on humans and animals alike; all the dust of the earth turned into gnats throughout the whole land of Egypt.

      Exodus 9:24 there was hail with fire flashing continually in the midst of it, such heavy hail as had never fallen in all the land of Egypt since it became a nation. 25 The hail struck down everything that was in the open field throughout all the land of Egypt, both human and animal; the hail also struck down all the plants of the field, and shattered every tree in the field.

      Exodus lists nine nature plagues in all, and then concludes with a tenth plague that copies the violence done to the Hebrews at the start of this story—the death of the firstborn, only now among the Egyptians. In between the ninth and tenth plagues is the celebration of Passover, a ritual meal in Chapter 12, so that the Israelites may always remember their slavery and the God who led them to freedom. Then the drama concludes with one more attempt by Pharaoh to destroy the Hebrews as they leave. Again nature, the water of the Red Sea, swallows Pharaoh’s army.

      Returning to the salvation story, the Israelites once set free will regress to their idols after leaving Egypt. And today we regress in our religious life as we fashion gods in our own images of power, and in our own images of conformity to unjust powers that have once again blinded us through rivalry—our in-groups and out-groups, those we copy, and those we resent for not conforming to our copying. Law alone and law telling us not to make idols is only part of the salvation story’s response to the problem of human mimesis. The prophets, as we have already seen in Isaiah, take up the problem of idolatry again, and as we shall see, point us to the other part of the equation—receiving a new identity from the God who is becoming.

      Deuteronomy 5

      1 Moses convened all Israel, and said to them: Hear, O Israel, the statutes and ordinances that I am addressing to you today; you shall learn them and observe them diligently. 2 The LORD our God made a covenant with us at Horeb. 3 Not with our ancestors did the LORD make this covenant, but with us, who are all of us here alive today. 4 The LORD spoke with you face to face at the mountain, out of the fire. 5 (At that time I was standing between the LORD and you to declare to you the words of the LORD; for you were afraid because of the fire and did not go up the mountain.) And he said: 6 I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery; 7 you shall have no other gods before me. 8 You shall not make for yourself an idol, whether in the form of anything that is in heaven above, or that is on the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. 9 You shall not bow down to them or worship them; for I the LORD your God am a jealous God, punishing children for the iniquity of parents, to the third and fourth generation of those who reject me, 10 but showing steadfast love to the thousandth generation of those who love me and keep my commandments.

      If books of the bible were movies, Exodus could be titled Moses One. Deuteronomy could be titled Moses Two. The reason the commandments are given once again is because refugees from the fall of the Northern Kingdom of Israel to the Assyrians in 721 BCE are now coming south to settle into the remaining Southern Kingdom of Judah. Moses is long gone. But the story needs to be retold once again to a new generation of people. The first three verses of Chapter 6 are a recasting of the Israelites’ first entrance into the Promised Land for this new generation of refugees:

      6:1 Now this is the commandment—the statutes and the ordinances—that the LORD your God charged me to teach you to observe in the land that you are about to cross into and occupy, 2 so that you and your children and your children’s children may fear the LORD your God all the days of your life, and keep all his decrees and his commandments that I am commanding you, so that your days may be long. 3 Hear therefore, O Israel, and observe

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