Wulf's Webden

The Webden on WordPress

13 July 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Moses and Identity

Yesterday morning, I spoke at Hathern Baptist Church on Hebrews 11:23-29. It is the depiction of Moses (and his parents) in the “chapter of faith” and it got me thinking about the subject of identity and particularly how we find our God-given place in life. There was an issue with the sound system (it turned out the main speakers weren’t working so most of the sound was coming from an upstairs speaker) which made it harder for people to hear so I’m posting the audio and also the notes I spoke from.

Moses and Identity

You Can’t Run from Yourself

Have you heard of the musician Larry Norman? The radical, evangelical Christian music he was producing in the 1970’s was part of the soundtrack to my growing Christian faith in the late 1980’s. I was influenced by his lyrics such as this one from Why Should the Devil Have All the Good Music (1972): “They say to cut my hair, they’re driving me insane / I grew it out long to make room for my brain”! Another song that sticks with me to this day is Nothing Really Changes from the album Upon this Rock (1970). Larry’s point is that nothing really changes unless Jesus Christ sets you free but he illustrates this by imagining various historical figures in modern times still exhibiting the same characteristics we would recognise them by:

Would Henry the Eighth use etiquette
In a busy New York luncheonette?
Would Cleopatra die when bit
Or save herself with a tourniquet?
Would Beethoven join a jazz quartet?
Would Ben Hur drive a blue Corvette?
Would Aristotle be an acid head?
Would Cain kill Abel with a bayonet?

That was “modern times” 50 years ago! Today we live in a society which is deeply confused about the question of identity. You might feel a need to be careful about what you say about identity but two statements that would be uncontroversial in even the most progressive of settings are (a) “we can choose who we want to be” and (b) “we need to live as who we really are”. They sound nice and accepting but aren’t they pulling in different – or even opposite – directions?

In Alice in Wonderland, The White Queen proudly says, “Sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.” That was written in 1871 suggesting this tendency to hold incompatible views isn’t uniquely recent. It is probably an innate human trait. In Isaiah 44, written around 2,700 years ago, and Psalms 115 & 135, which may be even older than that, we find pictures of people who use natural materials like wood and metal and then worship what they make from the leftovers. Here is Isaiah 44:16-20:

16 Half of the wood he burns in the fire;
over it he prepares his meal,
he roasts his meat and eats his fill.
He also warms himself and says,
‘Ah! I am warm; I see the fire.’
17 From the rest he makes a god, his idol;
he bows down to it and worships.
He prays to it and says,
‘Save me! You are my god!’
18 They know nothing, they understand nothing;
their eyes are plastered over so that they cannot see,
and their minds closed so that they cannot understand.
19 No one stops to think,
no one has the knowledge or understanding to say,
‘Half of it I used for fuel;
I even baked bread over its coals,
I roasted meat and I ate.
Shall I make a detestable thing from what is left?
Shall I bow down to a block of wood?’
20 Such a person feeds on ashes; a deluded heart misleads him;
he cannot save himself, or say,
‘Is not this thing in my right hand a lie?’

Humans have always been prone to odd ideas, since Eve was persuaded to eat the forbidden fruit and Adam hopped on the bandwagon right alongside her. Yesterday, today or tomorrow though, the truth about identity is that you can’t run from yourself.

Who are you?

So, who are you? What are your habits? What roles do you tend to fall into? I know that in churches I always seem to end up involved in music, in home groups, in doing some computer things and so on. Having been involved in several churches over the years, I’m beginning to be able to pick out the patterns. It is partly my skills, partly my choices but the bottom line is that God has given me a shape and I find the places I fit.

What about you? Where do you fit? Are you connected into the fellowship here in a way that suits that or do you still need some help figuring out what your shape is or finding opportunities that look like you?

Do you remember the wristbands that said WW JD (“what would Jesus do”)? I was cautious of them because it is easy to find you are answering the question “what do I feel like doing”. However, the more we know Jesus and walk in his footsteps, the better our answer will be. Perhaps a better acronym would be WDITJWHMD, which stands for “what do I think Jesus would have me do”? It is a bit of a mouthful but it might just fit around my wrist. Alternatively, what about shortening it to “HMG!” or, in other words, help me Jesus?

Who was Moses?

We’ve thought about identity and things that might help us find our God-given shape but I’ve got there from thinking about today’s Bible passage, which is the description of Moses in the Hebrews 11 roll-call of faith. For a while, set aside who you are and instead let the Bible help us understand who was Moses?

Like Noah, who I talked about last month, and like most of the other heroes covered so far, you have probably heard of him. An average person in the UK might remember Moses for parting the Red Sea. An observant Jew would be more likely to remember him as the giver of the law. Both of those views are partly true: God worked through Moses in parting the Red Sea and, through Moses, God gave the law.

His name means “to draw out”, which happens to be the story of his life. The first thing we learn about Moses is that, as a child, he was put in the Nile in a small basket and Pharaoh’s daughter drew him out, adopting him as her son. Incidentally, that makes her the first financier in the Bible, because she went to the bank and came back with a little profit! More seriously though, God always had a plan to use Moses to draw his people out of Egypt. It would be fair to say that Moses was not an overnight success. He spent 40 years as a “Prince of Egypt” and another 40 years in exile after trying to rescue the Hebrew people his own way. Finally, in his last 40 years, he was ready to lead God’s people on God’s chosen path of redemption.

Moses is one of the most often mentioned people in the Bible. I recently discovered that he comes up 85 times in the New Testament and, even if you strip out the 600 or so times his name comes up in the first five books while he was an active participant, over 100 more times in the Old Testament. He is a key character in the story of God’s long-term plan for salvation. Therefore, it isn’t surprising that, like Abraham before him, Moses gets a significant chunk of Hebrews 11 dedicated to his part in our heritage of faith:

By faith Moses, when he had grown up, refused to be known as the son of Pharaoh’s daughter. 25 He chose to be ill-treated along with the people of God rather than to enjoy the fleeting pleasures of sin. 26 He regarded disgrace for the sake of Christ as of greater value than the treasures of Egypt, because he was looking ahead to his reward. 27 By faith he left Egypt, not fearing the king’s anger; he persevered because he saw him who is invisible. 28 By faith he kept the Passover and the application of blood, so that the destroyer of the firstborn would not touch the firstborn of Israel. 29 By faith the people passed through the Red Sea as on dry land; but when the Egyptians tried to do so, they were drowned.

Frozen Chickens

Here is an interesting point to ponder. If you are familiar with how the story of Moses is told from Exodus chapter 1 onwards, you might be wondering how to line Hebrews up with that account. In Hebrews, everything Moses does is an act of faith; in Exodus, some things appear questionable. One thing that might help is to consider how God sees things differently from us, with his perspective above and beyond time. Just using a camera, you can get remarkable results by slowing the shutter speed. This photo (above) was taken at 7:15pm on a January night but, by leaving the shutter open for 20 seconds, it looks almost as bright as day despite no additional lighting. God has infinite control over his “shutter speed” or, in more biblical terms, he can make known the end from the beginning (Isaiah 46:10) so it is no wonder that, as Psalm 139 says, even the darkness is not dark to him and he sees us differently to how we see even ourselves.

Moses is drawn out of the Nile and trained as a leader of Egypt. Exodus doesn’t tell us outright that he rejected this privilege although he did find himself knowing the people he came from and spending time observing them. He strikes down an Egyptian guard and Exodus makes it sound more like fear than faith that led him into exile in the wilderness. From God’s view though, I wonder if that 40 years living in the desert as a humble shepherd was what Moses needed to break his pride in his upbringing?

It isn’t for us to judge which version we prefer or which makes us less uncomfortable. We must discern what comes into focus as we put both pictures side by side. What I see is someone who had a calling – who was made in a particular shape – but it was a slow process for God to refine that and make him ready for his most significant tasks. That sounds like a story I can identify with and it also brings hope. God sees us not as constant sources of failure and frustration but as people he loves and, even though it might feel like the long way round for us, people for whom he will go to great lengths to keep us on a good path.

You might say, “how does this help me? I’m not like Moses,” and you’d be absolutely right. Did you spot I was a bit crafty with what I read as our passage for the day? If you had jotted down the Bible reference that was on the screen at the start, you would have noticed I missed off the first verse, which says:

By faith Moses’ parents hid him for three months after he was born, because they saw he was no ordinary child, and they were not afraid of the king’s edict. (Hb 11:23)

Some translations say that his parents hid him because they saw he was a beautiful child but doesn’t every parent think that about their offspring? More likely that they were granted to see that there was something special about this child, worth taking extraordinary measures for. Remember the definition of faith from Hebrews 11:1: “Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.” The act of faith that saved him was nothing to do with Moses; he might have been a bonny wee laddie but he was utterly helpless. It was his parents, acting in faith, who provided the opportunity for life. That reminds me of what Paul wrote to the Ephesian church (2:4-10):

But because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, 5 made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions – it is by grace you have been saved…. 8 For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith – and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God – 9 not by works, so that no one can boast. 10 For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.

Those of us who have become followers of Jesus have made some kind of choice and followed through on that decision but God was reaching for us before we began to reach for him. If you wouldn’t yet say you are one of the “Jesus-people”, have a think about how you’ve come to hear this message. Was it an accident or are there hints that God is on your case and calling you to find your home in him?

We know a little more about Moses’ parents than you might realise – for example, Exodus 6:20 tells us their names were Amram and Jochebed – but we don’t know much. I’m pretty sure none of have a calling like Moses but perhaps we could at least be a bit like his parents, glad to be a brush stroke or two in the bigger picture God is painting?

You have probably heard of the evangelist Billy Graham. He passed away in 2018 but it will be a long time before he is forgotten. Attending a Billy Graham meeting in London was a significant part for me becoming a committed “Jesus-person”. I expect Graham has blessed some of your lives too. However do you know the name of the person in whose revival meeting Graham gave his life to Jesus? I’ve done my homework and the answer is Mordecai Ham, who is on the left in this picture. That is someone relatively unknown playing a pivotal part in the life of someone we’ve all heard of.

You don’t need to regret that God didn’t make you like someone “better” or “more effective”. God doesn’t make mistakes. He made you who you are and he loves who he made you to be. I’d like to invite the band back to the stage and we will be ending the service with some songs that express the source of our true identity. We’d love you to join us in singing them but also use the time to think about the shape of your life. There might be areas where you need to change but there are also going to be things equip you to fit into God’s plan in a way that even Moses couldn’t do.

Who are you and – today and in the life that lies ahead – how will you give that back to God in his service and praise?

12 July 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Short-notice Gig

I had another Panamas gig this evening (double bass and guitar with a selection of jazz / latin flavoured songs). This one was fairly short notice and down at the Kilo wine bar in Quorn again. Our next official booking at the Kilo isn’t until the end of August (TBC) or the end of October but Simon’s son also plays there and realised he wasn’t going to be able to make his slot due to a holiday opportunity so we took it up.

11 July 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Sing-around Songs – 11 July 2026

I took my five string electric bass to the sing-around today and led on three songs.

I started with a cover of Holding Out for a Hero by the late Bonnie Tyler (who passed away this week). I found that I could get the gravelly character of my voice if I dropped it from A minor to E minor. Although a fairly simple song, it has some interesting moments. I like the end of the bridge where it suddenly switches to an ascending series of diminished chords – all the same notes but shifting up a minor third each time. In E minor, I had G°, B♭°, D♭° and, a particular favourite of mine, F♭°!

Probably the less said about the second song, the better. It was meant to be a version of the sea shanty Santiana but I’ve got a feeling that the melody I sang was more like New York Girls (which I know better and has a chorus that starts “Away santy…”). One to work on.

On my third go, I returned to an old favourite, Diving Duck Blues. I didn’t do a particularly good job of it but I think it was the first simple blues song we’d had all afternoon so extra points for one that was easy to join in with.

10 July 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Disassembly

My main task today has been disassembling a metal shed that we’re planning to take over to the allotment. It has a large amount of screws and bolts holding it together so it took a while. I will also need to replace quite a few of the plastic washers, which have degraded over time – possibly I can 3D print them although I might also enquire how much it would just cost to buy a bag of them. I’ll have to get looking into that but the next job, while it is in bits, is to apply some rust-proof primer and a suitable top-coat to some of the parts. The sides are pretty good but I could see the roof falling apart in the next few years without some treatment.

9 July 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Dog Sitting

We’re dog sitting for the next ten days as some friends of ours are away. This isn’t the first time we’ve hosted this pair of pooches so it should be fairly easy for them to settle down. Of course, the intense heat at them moment means they are fairly lethargic during most of the day (aren’t we all!) but we’ll be able to take them out early morning and mid-evening to get their exercise. The extra walkies probably won’t do me any harm either!

8 July 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Squeaky Voices

I wonder if the voices of the bandits in the 1981 film Time Bandits were altered in the mixing or if they are just naturally a little bit higher in pitch because of shorter vocal cords? The latter is probably the case given their smaller stature. Certainly with other ways of altering pitch, like sliding a finger up a taut string pressed against a hard surface, the shorter vibrating length increases the pitch.

It came to mind this week when I was doing a final listen back to the focus group session I ran and recorded the previous week. I had it loaded up in Reaper and, to speed things along, I slightly increased the playback rate. That reduces the time but increases the pitch. About 1.2x original speed was about the fastest I could go with this recording while still making out the details of what people were saying and that small pitch increase put me in mind of Time Bandits (a most excellent film although, in terms of subject matter, not at all related to the recorded discussion).

7 July 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Red Card

I’m not following the World Cup in any detail although it would be hard to miss that it is on. However, I did see the story that FIFA had decided to suspend the one match ban penalty for the red card received by an American striker after intercession from Donald Trump. That’s appalling – the rules are the rules and several other nations have already had to play on missing key players who were red-carded in a previous game. The whole point of the red and yellow card system is to impose a real penalty on dangerous or unsporting behaviour.

Therefore, I’m very glad that the US squad, with their reprieved player, got a thorough drubbing from the Belgian team, suffering a 4-1 defeat and going out of the tournament. That is a satisfying result given the circumstances.

Meanwhile, I predict that a team will win the World Cup within the next fortnight. I think I’m on fairly safe ground with that one. However, whoever it is will be walking away with a trophy a bit more tarnished than when we begun.

6 July 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Hats On

It looks like I’ve got another musical weekend coming up – an open mic in Hathern on Friday, a singaround in Thorpe Acre on Saturday and then (after church in the morning and probably listening to Loughborough Concert Band at the bandstand in the afternoon) hat back on for another Panamas gig at Kilo Wine Bar in Quorn that has just come up as an opportunity.

5 July 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Verjus?

I think the wine I tried brewing last year is unlikely to lose its sourness but perhaps what I’ve succeeded in creating is not wine at all but verjus (or verjuice)? This is a traditional concoction made from unripe grapes and was often used to add an acidic component to dishes in the past. It certainly worked well in the beef stew I made for dinner tonight. I mixed about 150ml with about double the quantity of stock and, cooked with beef, onion, carrot and various herbs and spices, ended up with a very palatable result. You don’t always get what you want but, if you try, sometimes you get what you need.

4 July 2026
by wpAdmin
0 comments

Spots of Rain

When I set off from Loughborough this morning, it was warm and sunny and I was mainly concerned about overheating at the Chatsworth gig. I even put on some sun-cream but I didn’t think about packing a waterproof coat. It turned out the hour and a half drive put me in a place that was a lot more overcast. Sun wasn’t a problem but we did get a few spots of rain although, fortunately, not too much. I’m glad I at least remembered to pack a tarpaulin – I didn’t need it but it gave some peace of mind in case I needed to quickly cover my electronics!