Burning But Not Burned Carrying Fire Without Consuming Others
Burning But Not Burned
Carrying Fire Without Consuming Others
“There the angel of the Lord appeared to him in flames of fire from within a bush. Moses saw that though the bush was on fire it did not burn up.”
— Exodus 3:2
1. The Fire of Calling: Divine Identity in a Social World
Moses didn’t just witness a miracle—he stepped into his identity. Many of us walk with invisible fires—passions that won’t die, burdens we carry. That fire isn’t strange; it’s a signal. It’s your calling.
You are not strange for being “on fire.” You are chosen.
2. Fire that Does Not Burn You Out: Self-Control & Soul-Care
There is a danger in being on fire—you can burn out. But Moses wasn’t the source of the flame; God was. That’s why it didn’t destroy. Likewise, spiritual practices help your fire stay holy and not harmful.
Prayer, rest, community—these are not luxury; they are survival for the soul.
3. A Person on Fire Lights Others Up
You don’t need to burn others to make a difference. A person on fire for purpose ignites others. Moses lit a nation’s hope. Let your fire be so alive it wakes others up.
You can be so alive that others wake up around you.
4. Be the Bush
Not everyone is the Moses. Some are the burning bush. You might be the divine interruption that turns someone toward their calling. Be unexplainably grounded. Be a question mark that leads to the Divine.
Let your life make others stop and say, “How are they still standing?”
Closing Charge: Tend Your Fire
You are not called to create the fire. You are called to respond to it. Draw from the divine source, and you’ll never burn out—even when you burn bright.
May your presence call forth freedom.
May your soul be lit but not lost.
May you burn bright—and never burn out.
Go. Light the world. Without losing yourself.
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