An appeal to get me up a hill in the middle of the night for a powerful cause.
4 days to go – https://www.justgiving.com/page/paul-hudson-elim?utm_medium=FR&utm_source=EM
When you have a simple job description, will you do it, no matter what?
I wonder how many are going to work today and silently refuse to comply with their manager or leader? In the same way, I wonder how many comply because they have to but feel terrible in doing so. Wherever leadership exists, there is the possibility of coercive control intended to eliminate any autonomous choice.
This is the essence of Exodus 1.
“Then the king of Egypt summoned the midwives and asked them, ‘Why have you done this? Why have you let the boys live?’ The midwives answered Pharaoh, ‘Hebrew women are not like Egyptian women; they are vigorous and give birth before the midwives arrive.’ So God was kind to the midwives and the people increased and became even more numerous. And because the midwives feared God, he gave them families of their own.” (Exodus 1:18-21)
Shiphrah and Puah had a simple job description: do what Pharaoh says. This wasn’t compliance at its best. This was survival. Every midwife in Egypt understood the arrangement. You served at the pleasure of the Pharaoh; defy him at your cost.
But in essence, Pharaoh was asking them to stop being midwives. Their job was to bring children into the world, not kill them. This was their vocation and their identity. Being obedient to Pharaoh meant no longer being the same people. The enemy of our lives still wants to do that: to take what is good in you, what you were made for, and turn it against itself.
But these two women refused.
Their identity as midwives was greater than bowing down to man’s authority. In fact, verse 21 reveals where their identity was rooted. They feared God. That settled loyalty to a higher authority meant Pharaoh’s command had a ceiling it could not break through.
God was kind to them. The women who had spent their lives delivering other people’s children were given children of their own. The blessing fit the obedience.
Shiphrah and Puah show us that faithfulness sometimes looks like simply refusing to be disloyal to your purpose.
There is always a path of least resistance. But it leads you where you cannot go if you want to hold on to your purpose.

