The beginning is over, now the Exodus begins. The Hebrews are slaves. For the slaves, the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob is a sleeping god. Pharaoh is god and king. I am cataloging every command given by God in scripture, and by command I very specifically mean imperatives. Imperatives are specific verb forms in Hebrew that were used for a command. It his how a tired mom talks to her child, “Clean your room,” or a cop calls out on the bull horn, “Pull the car over.” I recently cataloged all the commands in Genesis, now we move on to the book of Exodus. The people aren’t on the move, but God is.
Exo 1:10 “Come, let us deal shrewdly…” A Pharaoh who didn’t remember Joseph came to power. Dealing shrewdly meant having slave masters over the Israelites. Apparently the debt slavery that Joseph instituted was more ceremonial. Once again, I won’t always do human commands, but this god-king’s command is pretty important for the story of Exodus.
Exo 3:5 “Take your sandals off your feet.” The first part of this verse, “do not come any closer,” is not an imperative form. It is more like a street sign, “No Parking” or “No Outlet”. This sandal-removing was an ancient way of showing respect for qodesh, holy things. But notice, God commands the holy act; the man Moses doesn’t invent it. This will be the relationship between prophet and God for the rest of Exodus.
Exo 3:10 Lit. “And you go, and I will send you to Pharaoh, then bring out my people.” The “I will send” is sandwiched between two imperatives. If Moses obeys, he will go with God’s authority. When he has God’s authority, he can obey more. This is Moses’ commissioning. God wasn’t creating another god-king to free the people from Pharaoh. He was creating someone who would obey.
Exo 3:16 “Go, assemble the elders of Israel.” The imperative is the “go” and the task upon arrival is to gather the people. God’s plan is to call out the people before crushing Pharaoh.
Exo 4:3 “Throw it on the ground.” God demands clumsiness. The staff turns into a serpent. Moses’ response? “He ran from it.” Curiously, God said, “Go, Go” but Moses didn’t budge. The snake appears and then Moses’ sandal-less feet know what to do.
Exo 4:4 “Stretch out your hand and grasp it.” Moses, that snake that scared you, God wants you to reach out and grab it. God commands herpetology. Moses isn’t fulfilling Genesis 3:15, “He will crush your head,” but we are getting closer. This is the beginning of a discussion of Moses’ hands, yad.
Exo 4:6-7 “Put your hand into your cloak… return your hand into your cloak.” God commands what we would take for a street magician’s “trick”, except the trick is to be afflicted and unafflicted with a lethal skin disease. Leprosy was no joke. God is showing Moses signs, but they aren’t happy signs. Things are on fire, snakes appear, and now leprosy is in his dry cleaning.
Exo 4:12 “Now go.” The same command from Abraham’s story, lek. But now, God adds a sense of urgency and immediacy to the command. It is important that we see what God is doing to Moses’ body. God has made his feet more saintly (3:5); his hands powerful (4:4, 6); and now God blesses Moses’ mouth. God has given Moses everything he needed to fulfill the command of “now go.”
Just to clarify, the “take some water” of 4:9 is not an actual imperative. That verse is God talking about Moses’ response to a potential circumstance.
Exo 4:13 “Send someone else please.” Moses offers up his excuse of not talking real good. God’s command has completely missed him. Moses is scheming how God can complete his plan without him, but God’s command was “now go.” Moses final refusal is a reversal of the sending that God spoke in 3:10.
Notice the patterns of Moses’ refusal. First Moses says, “I am wrong.” God says, “I will make you right. I will supply what you lack.” Moses says, “Well fine. Send someone else. Your command is wrong.” 4:14 starts, “The LORD’s anger burned against Moses…”
Exo 4:19 “Go back.” The same command as 4:12. We don’t know what Moses has been doing since his conversation with Jethro. This command from God could have been just after Moses left Jethro’s tent or some time could have passed. The curious thing is that Moses made it seem like he wanted to return to see “if any of [his relatives] are still alive” but God cuts to Moses’ fear of “the men who wanted to kill you.” Moses didn’t outright lie to Jethro, but he didn’t tell him the full truth of why he had to go. Something was still troubling Moses, and it was fear. But, God let Moses know the same command is still in effect.
Exo 4:21 “See that you perform before Pharaoh all the wonders.” Moses was nervous about his speaking ability before, God now commands his vision.
Exo 4:23 “Let my son go.” God is telling Moses how the exchange with Pharaoh will go down. You take my son, so I kill your son. God vs. god. King vs. king. It is not good to chain God’s children.
Exo 4:27 “Go to meet Moses.” Aaron gets up and does it. No questions. No wonder he ends up with the priestly lineage.
Exo 5:1, 4 “Let my people go… Get back to your work!” God through his prophet demands that the people be released. The god-king commands the people back to their work. God’s “go” is a verb for sending out, for going somewhere new. Pharaoh’s word is the ordinary word for walking. He is commanding the people walk the way they always have, slavery. The real God can do new things.
Exo 5:18 “Now! Go! Work!” The translations don’t do justice for how zealous the slave masters are. Also, there is some interesting wordplay in “no giving straw to you, but you giving quota of bricks.” The verbs are the same. The true God gave Moses one task and equipped him three ways. Pharaoh-god gave Israel one task but robs them of the means to complete it.
Exo 6:6 “Say to the Israelites.” This seems like a normal sentence, but this is a big moment for Moses. Most of Exodus has been a prophet-to-outsiders conversation. God is commanding Moses to talk to the people. This is the bulk of the prophetic role for all of scripture. And it all starts like this, “I have remembered my covenant… say to the people.”
Exo 6:11 “Go. Tell Pharaoh.” God restarts the diplomacy with Pharaoh with two imperatives. The “tell” is more emphatic that the “said” of 5:1. Pharaoh is going to get a talking to. This is not a command to have a conversation with Pharaoh.
Exo 6:26 “Bring the Israelites out” is the narrator quoting God, but it is close enough.
Exo 6:29 “I am the LORD. Tell Pharaoh king of Egypt everything I tell you.” Technically, Moses isn’t ready to tell anybody (v30), but from God’s perspective, the stage is set. He is ready to have the telling commence.
An exodus hasn’t begun, but the Exodus has. The people aren’t free yet, but God has promised it will happen. The only thing in God’s way is the god-king Pharaoh. The true God gives and gives and remembers his promises. The false god gives nothing and expects to be given everything, and he can’t even remember Joseph. God has also started teaching Moses what a prophet will be, how he will talk, how he will wear his shoes, how he must obey.