A Different Perspective • by Arthur Burk • Sapphire Leadership Group, LLC • www.TheSLG.com • 1 A Different Perspective As I expected, the reaction to last night’s blog has been voluble and intense. Here are two observa- tions culled from various comments and personal emails. 1) The Exodus was a corporate event, not Moses’ personal event. He was never a slave in the brickyard; he just led the slaves out. Therefore, my lack of a big story is irrelevant, and I should be celebrating all the big stories that happened for the SLG tribe. Apparently it was a pretty dramatic week for many of you. 2) The overwhelming consensus from the field is that it is not over. For two weeks I have been get- ting a flood of emails pointing to Esther’s story and Purim. I didn’t reject them but wasn’t able to figure out how to overlay the two narratives. Finally someone dumbed it down enough for me to actually hear it. There is a backstory. I have said to my team repeatedly that there is a difference between us and the Hebrews in the Exodus because we do not have a spirit of slavery and are approaching this very dif- ferently than they did. Against that backdrop, one of you pointed out that the Hebrews were passive in Exodus with God and Moses doing most of the work. And Pharaoh was high profile in pursuing the Hebrews. God and Moses killed the Egyptians. This is the slave posture. “Where is our hero who will rescue us?” By contrast Esther’s story is one of sons, with the Persians hiding like scared cockroaches. There was an edict given that the Jews could seek out and kill anyone they considered anti-Semitic and thereafter appropriate their assets. This required individual initiative and aggressive action on the part of the Jews without a group leader and without any report of God doing big miracles for them. No Red Sea here, just individual hand to hand combat. So using that model, today and tomorrow are days when the enemy is laying low, hoping to escape notice, but we have the authority to hunt him down and each person take immense ground. That would fit the original words about a “brief window of time in mid-March.” Another facet of this story is that there is not corporate payback. In Egypt, we have