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Exodus 18

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When Jethro, the priest of Midian, Moses’ father in law, heard of all that God had done for Moses, and for Israel his people, and that the Lord had brought Israel out of Egypt;

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Then Jethro, Moses’ father in law, took Zipporah, Moses’ wife, after he had sent her back,

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And her two sons; of which the name of the one was Gershom; for he said, I have been an alien in a strange land:

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And the name of the other was Eliezer; for the God of my father, said he, was mine help, and delivered me from the sword of Pharaoh:

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And Jethro, Moses’ father in law, came with his sons and his wife unto Moses into the wilderness, where he encamped at the mount of God:

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And he said unto Moses, I thy father in law Jethro am come unto thee, and thy wife, and her two sons with her.

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And Moses went out to meet his father in law, and did obeisance, and kissed him; and they asked each other of their welfare; and they came into the tent.

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And Moses told his father in law all that the Lord had done unto Pharaoh and to the Egyptians for Israel’s sake, and all the travail that had come upon them by the way, and how the Lord delivered them.

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And Jethro rejoiced for all the goodness which the Lord had done to Israel, whom he had delivered out of the hand of the Egyptians.

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And Jethro said, Blessed be the Lord, who hath delivered you out of the hand of the Egyptians, and out of the hand of Pharaoh, who hath delivered the people from under the hand of the Egyptians.

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Now I know that the Lord is greater than all gods: for in the thing wherein they dealt proudly he was above them.

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And Jethro, Moses’ father in law, took a burnt offering and sacrifices for God: and Aaron came, and all the elders of Israel, to eat bread with Moses’ father in law before God.

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And it came to pass on the morrow, that Moses sat to judge the people: and the people stood by Moses from the morning unto the evening.

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And when Moses’ father in law saw all that he did to the people, he said, What is this thing that thou doest to the people? why sittest thou thyself alone, and all the people stand by thee from morning unto even?

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And Moses said unto his father in law, Because the people come unto me to enquire of God:

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When they have a matter, they come unto me; and I judge between one and another, and I do make them know the statutes of God, and his laws.

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And Moses’ father in law said unto him, The thing that thou doest is not good.

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Thou wilt surely wear away, both thou, and this people that is with thee: for this thing is too heavy for thee; thou art not able to perform it thyself alone.

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Hearken now unto my voice, I will give thee counsel, and God shall be with thee: Be thou for the people to God-ward, that thou mayest bring the causes unto God:

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And thou shalt teach them ordinances and laws, and shalt shew them the way wherein they must walk, and the work that they must do.

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Moreover thou shalt provide out of all the people able men, such as fear God, men of truth, hating covetousness; and place such over them, to be rulers of thousands, and rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers of tens:

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And let them judge the people at all seasons: and it shall be, that every great matter they shall bring unto thee, but every small matter they shall judge: so shall it be easier for thyself, and they shall bear the burden with thee.

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If thou shalt do this thing, and God command thee so, then thou shalt be able to endure, and all this people shall also go to their place in peace.

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So Moses hearkened to the voice of his father in law, and did all that he had said.

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And Moses chose able men out of all Israel, and made them heads over the people, rulers of thousands, rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers of tens.

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And they judged the people at all seasons: the hard causes they brought unto Moses, but every small matter they judged themselves.

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And Moses let his father in law depart; and he went his way into his own land.

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Exodus 18

Exodus 18 is a chapter of reunion and wisdom — and a model of leadership that Moses nearly missed without an outside perspective. Jethro, Moses' father-in-law, hears everything God has done for Israel and brings Zipporah and Moses' two sons to him in the wilderness. Moses recounts the whole story, and Jethro worships: now I know that the Lord is greater than all gods. It is a remarkable confession from a Midianite priest. Then Jethro watches Moses judge the people from morning to evening — an unsustainable single point of decision-making — and delivers practical counsel: this is not good. You will wear yourself out, and the people too. Delegate. Appoint capable, God-fearing, trustworthy people to judge smaller matters; bring only the hardest cases to yourself. Moses listens and implements the structure immediately. The principle — that good leaders build systems rather than becoming indispensable bottlenecks — runs through the wisdom literature and into the New Testament's instruction on eldership in Acts 6:1–4 and 1 Timothy 3. The humility to receive correction from someone outside your community, and the wisdom to act on it, is itself a form of leadership Moses demonstrates here.

Exodus 18:1

Jethro the priest of Midian, Moses' father-in-law, heard of everything God had done for Moses and for his people Israel, and how the Lord had brought Israel out of Egypt. The opening verse establishes the reach of the Exodus story: it has traveled to Midian, to a foreign priest, to the family Moses left behind. Jethro hears everything and responds by coming to Moses. The Exodus is already functioning as the global testimony Exodus 9:16 declared it would be. Rahab in Joshua 2:10 and the Gibeonites in Joshua 9:9 will cite the same news. The God of the Hebrews has done things the whole world hears about, and what the world hears prompts movement toward Moses, toward Israel, toward the God who acts in history.

Exodus 18:2

After Moses had sent away his wife Zipporah, his father-in-law Jethro received her and her two sons. The verse acknowledges a domestic complexity that Exodus has not explained: Moses had sent Zipporah away at some point during the journey. The sending away is recorded without elaboration, and Jethro brings them back. The reunion is a family act that precedes the professional counsel Jethro will offer. Moses the leader of a nation is also a husband and father, and the reunion of his family is part of the wilderness story. The God who attends to cosmic events — parting seas, raining bread — is also the God who attends to family reunions in the desert. Nothing in the human story is too small for the narrative to record.

Exodus 18:3

Her two sons, of whom one was named Gershom, for Moses said, I have become a foreigner in a foreign land. Gershom's name is the name Moses gave himself in Exodus 2:22 — I have been a sojourner in a foreign land. The name carries the theology of Moses' wilderness years: the man who was between identities, belonging fully neither to Egypt nor to Israel, expressing his displacement through his son's name. Hebrews 11:13 says the patriarchs acknowledged they were strangers and foreigners on the earth. Moses' naming of Gershom was his acknowledgment of the same condition. Now Gershom arrives in the Sinai wilderness to be reunited with the father who named him after his own displacement.

Exodus 18:4

And the other was named Eliezer, for he said, my father's God was my helper; he saved me from the sword of Pharaoh. The second son's name is the counter-testimony to Gershom's: where Gershom means sojourner, Eliezer means my God is help. The progression is the arc of Moses' own life: displacement followed by divine rescue. The specific rescue cited — saved me from the sword of Pharaoh — refers to Moses' flight from Egypt after killing the Egyptian. Acts 7:25 says Moses thought his own people would realize that God was using him to rescue them — in Eliezer's name, Moses confesses that while Israel did not yet understand, he himself knew God had been his helper throughout.

Exodus 18:5

Jethro, Moses' father-in-law, together with Moses' sons and wife, came to him in the wilderness where he was camped near the mountain of God. The mountain of God — Horeb/Sinai — is the geographical anchor. Moses is near the place where he received his commission, where the burning bush burned, where the law will be given. The wilderness that seemed like Moses' place of exile has become the center of the world's most significant theological events. The family reunion happens in sacred geography: Jethro, Zipporah, and the boys arrive at the mountain where God spoke the divine name. The domestic and the divine are not separate spheres in Exodus.

Exodus 18:6

Jethro had sent word to him: I, your father-in-law Jethro, am coming to you with your wife and her two sons. The advance notice is a courtesy — Jethro does not arrive unannounced in the wilderness camp. The message signals respect for Moses' position and awareness that a formal welcome will be required. The identification of the sons as her two sons — Zipporah's sons — is a small but notable phrasing. The children who carry Moses' theological autobiography in their names are identified relationally with their mother in this verse. The details of the Exodus are not only theological but humanly specific, preserving the ordinary texture of real family relationships.

Exodus 18:7

So Moses went out to meet his father-in-law and bowed down and kissed him. They greeted each other and then went into the tent. Moses bowing to Jethro is one of the most humanly tender scenes in Exodus. The man who stood before Pharaoh and said thus says the Lord goes out to meet his father-in-law and bows. The deference is genuine — Jethro is the elder, the father figure, the man who gave Moses a home when he had none. Genesis 33:3 records Jacob bowing to Esau on their reconciliation. Moses and Jethro's greeting is the embrace of a son returning to a father who received him as a refugee forty years earlier, now himself the leader of a nation.

Exodus 18:8

Moses told his father-in-law about everything the Lord had done to Pharaoh and the Egyptians for Israel's sake and about all the hardships they had encountered along the way and how the Lord had saved them. Moses recounts the entire Exodus — the plagues, the sea, the wilderness hardships, the deliverances. The telling is comprehensive: everything the Lord had done. The hardships are included alongside the deliverances — Moses does not curate a highlight reel but gives Jethro the full picture. This honest reporting is itself a form of testimony: the God whose acts are worth telling is also the God who is present through difficulty, not only triumph. Psalm 105 and 106 both rehearse the Exodus story with the same comprehensiveness.

Exodus 18:9

Jethro was delighted to hear about all the good things the Lord had done for Israel in rescuing them from the hand of the Egyptians. The word delighted — yichad, to rejoice together — is the response of someone who hears genuinely good news and receives it as genuinely good. Jethro the Midianite priest rejoices over the God of Israel's acts for Israel. This is the response Abraham's covenant was designed to produce: through you all families of the earth will be blessed (Genesis 12:3). Jethro, a family member by marriage rather than by birth, is being blessed through Moses and through Moses' God. His delight is the first gentile response of joy to the Exodus testimony, foreshadowing the rejoicing Luke 15:10 describes in heaven over every act of divine rescue.

Exodus 18:10

He said: praise be to the Lord, who rescued you from the hand of the Egyptians and of Pharaoh, and who rescued the people from the hand of the Egyptians. Jethro's declaration of praise is a doxology — praise be to the Lord — the form of blessing that acknowledges God as the source of good. The repetition of rescued three times in verses 9–10 hammers the theological point: the Lord is the one who rescued, and the rescue is the reason for the praise. Psalm 124:1–7 follows the same structure: were it not for the Lord on our side, they would have swallowed us alive. Jethro's praise is the gentile version of the Song of the Sea — same God, same acts, same appropriate response. Romans 15:9 quotes the Old Testament's expectation that the Gentiles would praise God for His mercy.

Exodus 18:11

Now I know that the Lord is greater than all other gods, for he did this to those who had treated Israel arrogantly. Jethro's conclusion — now I know — is the knowledge that the entire Exodus curriculum was designed to produce. The formulation is careful: not that other gods do not exist, but that the Lord is greater than all of them. The reason given is specific: because of what He did to those who treated Israel arrogantly. The arrogance of Egypt — the slave system, the killing of infants, the nine refusals — has been answered by a God who is greater than every deity Egypt worshipped. Jethro's confession from outside Israel is one of the most remarkable pieces of evidence in the plague narrative's purpose: a Midianite priest hears the testimony and concludes the Lord is supreme.

Exodus 18:12

Then Jethro, Moses' father-in-law, brought a burnt offering and other sacrifices to God, and Aaron came with all the elders of Israel to eat bread with Moses' father-in-law in the presence of God. Jethro brings a burnt offering and sacrifices — acts of worship appropriate to someone making covenant with God. The meal that follows, eaten in God's presence with Aaron and the elders of Israel, is a covenant table. The Midianite priest is welcomed into the fellowship of the covenant community through the confession of verse 11 and the worship of verse 12. Numbers 10:29–32 will record Moses inviting Jethro's son Hobab to travel with Israel. The inclusion of the Midianite family in Israel's community is an early enactment of the universal mission embedded in the Abrahamic covenant.

Exodus 18:13

The next day Moses took his seat to serve as judge for the people, and they stood around him from morning till evening. The scene Jethro observes the next day is revealing: Moses sits as judge from dawn to dusk, with the entire community standing around him waiting for decisions. The scale is extraordinary — one man, two million people, every dispute requiring his personal adjudication. The system is unsustainable, and Jethro sees it immediately. Acts 6:2–4 records the apostles facing a similar organizational problem: the Twelve should not neglect the ministry of the word to wait on tables. The solution — appointment of deacons — follows the same logic Jethro will recommend. Every organization that grows beyond its founding structure eventually faces the same challenge Moses faces here.

Exodus 18:14

When his father-in-law saw all that Moses was doing for the people, he said: what is this you are doing for the people? Why do you alone sit as judge, while all these people stand around you from morning till evening? Jethro's question is the pastoral question of someone who sees a system harmful to everyone involved — Moses, the people waiting, and the quality of decisions being made under exhaustion. The why do you alone is the central question. Leadership that refuses to delegate implicitly claims that no one else can adequately perform what only the leader can do. Jethro's gentle confrontation is an act of love for Moses — the father-in-law who received a refugee is now counseling the man who leads a nation. Good advice from an outside perspective is still good advice.

Exodus 18:15

Moses answered him: because the people come to me to seek God's will. Moses' explanation is genuine: the people are not just bringing petty disputes but seeking God's will, and Moses is the one through whom God's will is mediated. The explanation reveals Moses' understanding of his role as more than an administrator: he is a mediator of the divine will. This is correct as far as it goes — there are decisions only Moses can make. But Jethro's wisdom will be to distinguish between those decisions and the ones that can be made by capable representatives. John 21:15–17 records Jesus telling Peter to feed his sheep — the pastoral role has dimensions that cannot be delegated and dimensions that must be. Moses is about to learn where the line falls.

Exodus 18:16

Whenever they have a dispute, it is brought to me, and I decide between the parties and inform them of God's decrees and instructions. Moses describes his dual function: deciding between parties (judicial) and informing of God's decrees (teaching). Both functions are currently his alone. The teaching function — informing people of God's decrees — is what only Moses can do at this stage, since the law has not yet been written. But the judicial function — deciding between parties on the basis of established principles — can be performed by anyone who knows those principles. Deuteronomy 1:9–18 records Moses' retrospective account of implementing Jethro's advice. The principles of fair judgment can be taught and applied by others; the reception of new divine instruction cannot be delegated.

Exodus 18:17

Moses' father-in-law replied: what you are doing is not good. The assessment is direct and unqualified: not good. Jethro does not soften the critique with appreciation for Moses' dedication or acknowledgment of the difficulty of his task. He names the problem without diplomatic cushioning. Proverbs 27:6 says wounds from a friend can be trusted. Jethro's sharp assessment is the wound of a friend — it stings because it is accurate, and it is offered because Jethro cares more about Moses' wellbeing and the people's welfare than about avoiding discomfort. The ability to receive such a direct critique from a trusted person and act on it is a mark of genuine leadership maturity, which Moses will go on to demonstrate.

Exodus 18:18

You and these people who come to you will only wear yourselves out. The work is too heavy for you; you cannot handle it alone. The prediction is specific and practical: wear out. Not immediate failure but gradual exhaustion — both Moses and the people. The word heavy here is kabed, the same word used for Pharaoh's hard heart throughout the plague narrative. What was destructive in Pharaoh's resistance is now destructive in Moses' administrative burden. Numbers 11:14 records Moses later saying: I cannot carry all these people by myself; the burden is too heavy for me. The burden that was prophesied here is fulfilled there. Jethro's diagnosis is confirmed by Moses' own later confession. The warning was accurate.

Exodus 18:19

Listen now to me and I will give you some advice, and may God be with you. You must be the people's representative before God and bring their disputes to him. Jethro frames his counsel within divine blessing — may God be with you — and immediately clarifies Moses' irreplaceable role: representative before God. The work of intercession, bringing the people's situation before God, is Moses' non-delegable function. This is the function of the priest in Israel's later structure and ultimately of Christ in Hebrews 7:25: he always lives to intercede for them. Moses the mediator who stands between the people and God is doing work that cannot be shared. The judicial work can be shared; the intercessory work cannot.

Exodus 18:20

Teach them his decrees and instructions, and show them the way to live and how they behave. Teaching is Moses' second irreplaceable function. Not only intercession but instruction — teaching the community what God requires and how to live. The phrase show them the way to live and how to behave describes comprehensive formation: not only legal decisions but a formed way of life. Deuteronomy 4:5 records Moses saying he taught decrees and laws as the Lord commanded, so the people may follow them. The teaching ministry Jethro identifies as Moses' core function becomes the defining project of Deuteronomy. The teacher who shapes how an entire people understands what God requires is doing work no administrator can substitute for.

Exodus 18:21

But select capable men from all the people — men who fear God, trustworthy men who hate dishonest gain — and appoint them as officials over thousands, hundreds, fifties and tens. The criteria for the delegated judges are character-based, not skill-based: fear God, trustworthy, hate dishonest gain. The capacity to make good decisions is assumed; what Jethro specifies is the moral formation that makes the capacity trustworthy. 1 Timothy 3:2–7 lists qualifications for elders in similar terms: above reproach, self-controlled, not a lover of money. The leadership structure Jethro recommends is the first organizational hierarchy in Israel, and its character criteria will govern every subsequent appointment of covenant community leadership.

Exodus 18:22

Have them serve as judges for the people at all times, but have them bring every difficult case to you; the simple cases they can decide themselves. That will make your load lighter, because they will share it with you. The division of labor is practical and hierarchical: routine cases to the lower judges, difficult cases to Moses. The result — your load lighter — is the pastoral goal. Moses' wellbeing matters, not only his function. The structure does not merely make the system more efficient; it protects the one who carries the heaviest responsibility. Galatians 6:2 says carry each other's burdens and so fulfill the law of Christ. The judges who share Moses' load are fulfilling the same principle. Good organization is an act of care.

Exodus 18:23

If you do this and God so commands, you will be able to stand the strain, and all these people will go home satisfied. Jethro's counsel is conditional on two things: Moses doing it, and God commanding it. The deference to divine authorization is significant — Jethro is not presenting his advice as binding but as wisdom to be submitted to divine confirmation. Moses will consult God before implementing it. The outcome promised is double: Moses will stand the strain, and the people will go home satisfied. Both outcomes have been absent under the current system. The measure of good organizational design is whether the people served feel justly attended to and whether the leaders sustain their health. Both criteria are human and practical, and both are endorsed.

Exodus 18:24

Moses listened to his father-in-law and did everything he said. The obedience is complete and immediate. Moses, the leader of a nation, the one through whom God delivered Israel from Egypt, listens to the advice of a Midianite priest and does everything he said. The humility required to receive counsel from outside one's own community and to implement it fully rather than partially is the mark of genuine wisdom. Proverbs 12:15 says the way of fools seems right to them, but the wise listen to advice. Moses is wise not only because he received divine instruction at the burning bush but because he receives human wisdom from his father-in-law at the wilderness camp. The capacity to learn from multiple sources — divine and human — is what makes leadership sustainable.

Exodus 18:25

He chose capable men from all Israel and made them leaders of the people, officials over thousands, hundreds, fifties and tens. Moses implements Jethro's structure with the same thoroughness with which he implements divine commands: capable men from all Israel. The universality — from all Israel — means all twelve tribes are represented in the judicial structure. Leadership is not concentrated in a single family or tribe but distributed across the whole community. Acts 6:3 says choose seven men from among you who are known to be full of the Spirit and wisdom — the early church's appointment of deacons follows the same all-community selection principle Jethro recommended. The organizational health of the people of God has always required leadership that represents and serves the whole community.

Exodus 18:26

They served as judges for the people at all times. The difficult cases they brought to Moses, but the simple ones they decided themselves. The structure functions exactly as Jethro designed: distributed justice for ordinary disputes, escalation for complex ones. The phrase at all times means the system operates continuously — not just when Moses is available, not just during formal sessions, but whenever a dispute arises. Deuteronomy 1:16–17 records Moses' instruction to the judges: hear the disputes between your people and judge fairly. The at all times availability of justice is one of the marks of a covenant community ordered around God's requirements. Where justice is available only when the most prominent leader is present, it is effectively unavailable to most people most of the time.

Exodus 18:27

Then Moses sent his father-in-law on his way, and Jethro returned to his own country. The farewell is brief and warm. Jethro came, worshipped, counseled, and returns home. The episode is complete: a Midianite priest has confessed the supremacy of Israel's God, eaten covenant bread with Israel's elders, and restructured Israel's judicial system — and then gone home. His contribution to Israel's life is permanent; his presence was temporary. Numbers 10:29–32 records Moses later inviting Hobab, Jethro's son, to stay with Israel as a guide. The Midianite family's relationship with Israel continues through the next generation. The God who works through unexpected sources — a burning bush, a gentile priest, an outside perspective — is consistently the God of Exodus.