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Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Homily for Tuesday, Week 15 of Ordinary Time

Homily for Tuesday
Week 15 of Ordinary Time

July 15, 2025
Ex 2: 1-15
Christian Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.

The Finding of Moses (Alta-Tadema, 1904)

“She took a papyrus basket … and placed it among the reeds on the river bank” (Ex 2: 3).

From the start of the story, the destiny of the child of this mother to rescue Israel is evident.  At least one commentator notes that he’s placed in a basket, tebah in Hebrew, the same word used in Gen 6-9 for the vessel that saved Noah and his family amid the waters of the flood, and the same word still used for the cabinet where the sacred scrolls are kept in a synagog.[1]  We’re speaking, then, of God’s action to preserve his people and carry out his saving will and the people’s action to preserve the memory of it.

The child’s mother places this “ark” among the reeds of the river bank.  Foreshadowing here:  Moses will lead God’s people across the Reed Sea—a more accurate rendering of the Hebrew yam suph than “Red Sea.”[2]  The child is saved in the reeds, and Israel will be saved thru what happens at the Sea of Reeds (Ex 13:18).

Finally, Pharaoh’s daughter names the child Moses because she “drew him out of the water” (2:10).  Later, he will draw or lead Israel thru the water.  The name’s Hebrew root means “rescue.”  That’s his destiny, by God’s grace.

Your name and mine isn’t related to our destiny until we’re named “Christian,” one who’s related to or belongs to Christ.  That’s the name by which we’re saved, rescued, drawn out of the water of rebirth.  So God places us in the ark of his Church and leads us thru or over the waters of death toward Mt. Sinai, toward his covenant relationship with us.

God appointed a destiny for Moses and slowly guided him to it.  He has appointed a destiny likewise for each of us and has been guiding us toward it for a very long time, ultimately toward the fulfillment of the covenant he sealed with us at Baptism.



[1] William T. Miller, The Book of Exodus Question by Question (NY: Paulist, 2009), p. 18.

[2] Ibid., pp. 18, 75.

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