Reflections on Exodus 11-13

God prepares the people for a final plague. All the firstborn sons in Egypt will die, but God provides a way of escape for Israel.

  • Passover – Israel must sacrifice a lamb, and place the blood on the doorposts so that God’s judgment might pass them by. Christ was sacrificed as our Passover Lamb so that God’s judgment might pass us by (I Corinthians 5:7). Stop and thank God for your Passover Lamb.
  • Redeemed from slavery – God redeemed the people of Israel from slavery, bringing them out of Egypt with great power. This is a wonderful picture of what God has done for us through Jesus. God has redeemed us from our slavery to sin through the power of Christ’s death and resurrection. Stop and praise God for your deliverance – and go live like a person freed from sin!
  • Remember – The people of Israel were called to remember what God had done for them through a week-long festival which included the Passover. God wants us to remember our salvation too. It is no mistake that Jesus initiated the Lord’s Supper while celebrating Passover. The Lord’s Supper is a regular reminder to us of what Christ has done for us. Remember…and celebrate!

Sermon Songs: Ephesians 3:14-19

MusicNotes

Before the Lord we bend the knee
with humble reverence
Responding to His great mercy
and with real earnestness
Before our Father now we come
as His own family
We ask that He would bless us from
the wealth of His glory

We pray now for the Spirit’s power
His strength to us impart
Transform us as Christ dwells each hour
within each longing heart
Help us to know Christ’s matchless love
so vast in every way
With the fullness of God above
fill us more every day

(To the tune of “We Sing The Greatness Of Our God”)

Reflections on Exodus 8-10

The battle of the gods continues. Notice:

  • God is exalted – God sends frogs. The magicians helpfully send more! God sends gnats, but the magicians cannot. They tell Pharaoh that “This is the finger of God.” Indeed the magicians cannot mimic any more of God’s plagues. Instead, the plague of boils comes upon them so that they can longer stand against Moses. The representatives of the Egyptians gods are defeated, showing the defeat of the gods too. None can best God’s awesome power. And by his power, he is exalted in Egypt. Ponder the great power of God, and stop to worship.
  • Humility – In the face of God’s power, Pharaoh should have humbled himself, but he refused. Instead, Pharaoh continued to exalt himself (9:17, 10:3). In what ways are you exalting yourself? How do you need to humble yourself before the LORD?
  • God’s sovereignty and man’s choice – Again and again, we read that God hardened Pharaoh’s heart. God is sovereign over all. And yet we also read that Pharaoh hardened his own heart. Pharaoh could not blame God; he was responsible for his own choices. God is sovereign in your life, but you can’t blame God for your poor choices. What bad choices do you need to repent of? What choices are before you today?

Exodus 8-13: Battle of the Gods

(8-12) Describe the battle between God (represented by Moses) and the Egyptian gods (represented by the magicians). What can the magicians do and not do? What is the final result (12:12)?

(8-10) Why does God enter into this battle?

  • 8:10,22; 9:14 –
  • 9:16 –
  • 10:1-2 –

(8-10) There is another battle of the gods taking place in this passage – God vs Pharaoh (who thinks he is a god). What is God demanding (8:1, etc.)? How does Pharaoh respond (9:17, 10:3)?

When are we tempted to act like Pharaoh?

In what ways is Pharaoh forced to humble himself before God? What does this remind us about human rulers (see also 9:16)?

Who hardens Pharaoh’s heart? What do you learn about God’s sovereignty? Man’s choices and responsibility?

(11-13) God clearly wins both battles, forcing Pharaoh to let the people go. Describe the final plague.

How do the people of Israel escape the final plague? How does this point to Jesus (see I Corinthians 5:7)?

What requirements does God give for the resulting annual Passover festival? What reasons are given for keeping the Passover (see especially 13:3-10)?

How does Jesus adapt the Passover for the New Covenant (Luke 22:14-20)? How might some of the Passover requirements and reasons apply to this new celebration?

God frees his people from their slavery in Egypt. How does this point to Jesus (see John 8:34-36)?

Reflections on Exodus 5-7

Moses goes to Pharaoh, but Pharaoh will not let the people go. The scene is set for the great contest between God and Moses on one side and Pharaoh and his Egyptian gods on the other. Note:

  • Trust in the waiting – Pharaoh responds to Moses by increasing the work the Israelites have to do to levels impossible to meet. The Israelites who believed at the end of chapter 4 have given up faith now in chapter 5. Moses too is disillusioned. What situations in your life only seem to be getting worse? Will you trust God in the waiting?
  • Battle of the gods – The contest is engaged not only to free the people of Israel, but that Israel and Egypt will know that the LORD is the one true God (6:7; 7:5, 17). Aaron casts down his staff and it becomes a snake. The Egyptian magicians do it too – but God’s snake swallows the Egyptian gods’ snakes. God causes the Nile to turn to blood. On a smaller scale, the Egyptian magicians also turn water to blood. Note they don’t turn the blood back into water – which would have been more helpful! The battle is engaged. What is God doing in your life to reveal himself to those around you? How has God shown his power in your life?

Jerry Bridges Collection

jerry-bridges

Jerry Bridges went to be with the Lord this past Sunday.  His writings have had an important impact on my life, especially Transforming Grace and the Joy of Fearing God.  Here are some tributes to his life to challenge you in your walk with the Lord.

Jerry Bridges (1929-2016) – Justin Taylor

Jerry Bridges (1929-2016): My Prayer Partner, Mentor, and Friend – Bob Bevington (TGC)

Jerry Bridges (1929-2016): Five Lessons from a Remarkable Life of Faith – interview by Tony Reinke (DG)

My Too-Weak Tribute to Jerry Bridges – Tim Challies

Sermon Songs: Ephesians 3:7-13

MusicNotes

We are servants of our great King
our Savior and our Lord
The good news of Jesus to bring
that He might be adored

We serve by God’s strong grace alone
We need it ev’ry day
We seek his strength before his throne
as we kneel down to pray

We serve with real humility
each sister and brother
We give of ourselves willingly
to serve one another

(To the tune of “O God Our Help In Ages Past”)

The Only Worthiness We Have

TransGrace
The only worthiness we have for entrance into God’s Kingdom is in Christ.

The only worthiness we have with which to come before God is in Christ.
And the only worthiness we have to qualify us for ministry is in Christ.
If we are to progress in any aspect of the Christian life,
we must look outside ourselves and only to Christ.

– Jerry Bridges in Transforming Grace

Reflections on Exodus 1-4

Israel had become a numerous people enslaved in Egypt. They cried out to God, and God raised up Moses to lead them out of Egypt. Observe:

  • God’s covenant – When the people cry out to God, God remembers the covenant he made with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Not that he had forgotten, for God has already made the people numerous as he had promised. Now, after many years, God will bring them back to the land as he had promised. God’s timetable is not ours – it is still many more years before God will make the people into a great nation. What promises do you need to patiently trust God to fulfill?
  • God’s name – God identifies himself first as the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Then, he calls his name, I Am Who I Am, from which we get his name Yahweh (usually translated LORD in our Bibles). This is Israel’s God and our God.
  • God’s enabling – When God calls Moses to lead his people out of Egypt, Moses asks, “Who am I?” He is of course nobody on his own, but God has called him, and God will be with him. To Moses’ complaint that he can’t speak, God says that he will give Moses the words to speak. God made us, and he is well able to enable us to do whatever he calls us to do. What is God calling you to do? Will you trust in his enabling?