Escape to Egypt

People in many parts of the world are on the move to escape from human conflict or natural disaster, seeking safety and survival.
As I write this blog, every day the TV news has reports about the Rafah Border Crossing where people trying to escape from the conflict in Gaza hope to cross into Egypt. It is the sole crossing point in the border fence. It is not always open, and then only for limited periods, but it has been the way out for foreign nationals since the present hostilities began in early October when Hamas launched its attack on Israel. Not everyone is allowed to escape into Egypt. Access to Egypt is strictly controlled, so very few Palestinians have been allowed to cross at the check point Even people with legitimate reasons to cross may find themselves denied permission if their name is not on the list for the day.
Escape to Egypt was an option for people living in the Canaan/Palestine area throughout Biblical times, though it wasn’t always the best option. Jacob and his family moved there to escape from serious famine at the invitation of Pharaoh (Genesis 45.16-20). 430 years later (Exodus 12.40-41), when they had been reduced to the status of slaves, the descendants of Jacob, the Israelites, left Egypt after God had sent a series of plagues (Exodus 7.14-11-10, 12.29-36) to force a stubborn Pharaoh to agree to their departure.
The prophet Jeremiah was taken, reluctantly, to Egypt by a group of people escaping from a threatened Babylonian invasion of Judah (Jeremiah 43.4-7). This did not really help as the Babylonian army went on to defeat the Egyptian army at the battle of Carchemish.
When Jesus was born, Joseph was instructed by God to take Mary and the new-born Jesus and ‘escape to Egypt’ (Matthew 2.14) because ‘Herod will be looking for the child to kill Him’. They stayed there, as refugees, until Herod died, when they could safely return home to Nazareth.
Times have not really changed in Palestine. People still have to flee from aggression, whether the aggressors are Hamas, Hezbollah or Israel, and it is probably harder now to escape to Egypt or find any place of safety.
If the world is distressed by what is going on at present in Palestine, what must it be doing to the heart of God to see the Holy Land anything but holy and His gift of the Prince of Peace, Jesus Christ, ignored. For the sake of the world, He gave his life on the cross to show us the greatness of God’s love and He asks us to ‘love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you’ (Matthew 5.44) and gave us a new commandment that we should ‘love one another just as [He] loves us’ (John.15.12).
We may not be able, literally or figuratively, to ‘escape to Egypt’ to get away from our problems and difficulties, but we can seek the peace of God in our hearts, the peace which Jesus came to bring (John 14.27), and perhaps we can make the world a better place in 2024 by sharing some of His great love for us with other people, be they friends or enemies, family or strangers.
May this New Year be a blessed, peaceful, and happy year for you, filled with the love of the Lord.








