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Home » All Resources » Sermons on Communication: General » Marilyn Murphree, "Experiencing Our Shine" - Page 1 of 4

"Experiencing Our Shine"

Topic: #14 of 116 for Sermons on Communication: General
Scripture: Exodus 34:29-34:35
Denomination: Methodist
Date Added: February 2004
Audience: Believer Adults (31 - 49)
Keywords: none (Suggest a Keyword)
Iliff and Saltillo UM Churches
February 22, 2004
"Experiencing Our Shine"
Exodus 34:29-35

INTRODUCTION: Today is Transfiguration Sunday. Usually when we speak of the Transfiguration we are referring to the scripture in Luke 9:28-36 that tells about Jesus going up in the mountain with Peter, James, and John and experiencing the change of his appearance. Gradually from the inside out his total appearance was transfigured with the brilliance of the glory of God. But today I want to concentrate on another story in the Old Testament.

In Exodus 34, Moses went up to Mt. Sinai for the second time. You will recall that when Moses brought the first two stone tablets down with the Ten Commandments written on them that the people had made a golden calf and were partying it up. In Exodus 32:19 he saw the people worshiping the golden calf, and he threw the tablets down smashing them to pieces. At the beginning of Chapter 34 God told him to chisel out two more tablets and to go back up to the mountain and He would write the words on them all over again.

Today’s scripture takes place on this second trip to the mountain where he spent another 40 days.

Let’s see what we can get out of today’s scripture.

1. The Shine: When Moses came down the mountain with the new tablets, "he was not aware that his face was radiant because he had spoken with the Lord" (Ex. 34:29). He had a shine on his face that wouldn’t quit. When the people saw him they were afraid to come near him. They backed away from him like he was "radioactive." Even Aaron, his brother, was afraid as well.

STORY: On the TV show, "Friends," Ross wanted to impress his new girlfriend with his radiant smile. He applied some tooth whitener but left it on twice as long as he was supposed to. His teeth were "noticeably" whiter as he showed his smile off to his friends. He went over to his girlfriends and asked, "Do you notice anything different about me?"
She said, "No, not really."

Later on that night they turned the lights down low, and his teeth glowed in the dark. His girlfriend was HORRIFIED!

You can imagine the people’s reaction to Moses’ shine. After Moses calmed everyone down, he called the people together and gave them the commands that the Lord had given him again on the two tablets of stone. Moses downplayed the radiant glow he had because he didn’t want them to focus on that in itself but rather on what the Lord had to say to them.

If he made a big deal out of his glowing face, he might have gone up to Aaron and said, "Oh, by the way, Aaron, I noticed you need a little light for your reading and then stand next to him and shine." That would have been prideful. He didn’t want people to focus on him and put him on a pedestal. Scripture says he "put a veil over his face" (v. 33) in order to focus on what God had to say rather than to call attention to himself.

Moses wanted them to focus on God--not on the glow. Sometimes when God does something spectacular for us, we tend to focus on the experience rather than on God who did it. Sometimes it causes us to lose our focus. We think too much of ourselves and become a little self righteous and arrogant.

What could a mysterious event on the top of a mountain far away and long ago possibly have to do with us today? Is Moses’ experience in the presence of God a totally foreign concept to us today? I don’t think so.
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Comments

February 13, 2010

1. Martin Dale says...

Thank you for a wonderful sermon - and inspiration as I prepare for our Valentine''s service

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