The Bible Recap - Day 032 (Exodus 7-9) - Year 5
Episode Date: February 1, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits - Win a trip to Israel! - Check out WayNation ... FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Exodus 4:21 - Exodus 9:15-16 - Article: "What was the meaning and purpose of the ten plagues of Egypt?" - Get tickets to the live event with Tara-Leigh and Candace! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today we open our reading with God telling Moses and Aaron that Pharaoh is not going to
listen to them.
God says he's going to harden Pharaoh's heart against the request they're bringing.
That's a pretty tough order. He also mentioned this yesterday in 421. One thing this reveals to us is that God is sovereign
over hearts. If you're new to this idea or it's troublesome for you, resist the urge to read
into God's motives or draw conclusions about him based on this. For now, let's just notice
that he can change hearts. God also mentions several times that he's doing all of this so that Israel will know that he is the Lord.
The meaning of the word no doesn't just refer to some cognizant ascent to this reality.
It has more to do with the person's posture in response to that truth.
God wants them to believe it in their bones, not just acknowledge it as a fact,
and he wants their lives to reflect it. The plagues will serve this same purpose for the
Egyptians, for them to know that he is the Lord. But unfortunately, it's possible to know
that God is the Lord of all and still not yield to him. Remember the sins of God we've
encountered a few times, including the one called Satan, the accuser. These fallen angels would have lived in heaven with God before their fall, serving him.
Who would know the truth more than they would?
But they didn't yield to God as Lord.
They insisted on their own way.
So Moses and Aaron go before Pharaoh, and they warn him that there will be displays of
God's power if he continues to rebel, and that these displays of power will also serve to demonstrate God's judgment on Egypt.
They perform the signs God gave them, but Pharaoh is not impressed because his magicians
can do similar things.
The enemy loves to counterfeit God's work, but the enemy can't stop God's work.
Their snakestaffes were swallowed up by errandss and we see God's power over Pharaoh in his
magicians, but we see for the first time that Pharaoh's heart was hardened, as the Lord had said.
After the snake sign, we see the first plague, turning the local water to blood. One thing I learned
recently about the 10 plagues is that they weren't just about inducing pain. Each plague was a direct
attack on one or more
of the false gods worshiped by the Egyptians,
which was a polytheistic culture.
We don't have time to go into details
about all these false gods plague by plague,
so we'll link to an article in the show notes
in case you want more info on that.
The plagues also serve to reveal
that Yahweh is greater than Pharaoh,
who was revered as a God in Egypt.
This whole series of events shows how all of Egypt's false gods failed them.
The first plague was an attack on the gods of the Nile, which they worship.
But the local magicians could do the same thing, so again, Pharaoh was unmoved.
His heart remained hard, as the Lord had said.
Then the frogs came, and the magicians were able to replicate this one too.
But one thing you'll notice is that they can't ever solve the problem they can only make things worse.
Oh, God sent a bunch of frogs to overwhelm the land. Uh, no, we can't magically make them disappear,
but we can add more. Nobody needs that, you guys. In the midst of all of this, Pharaoh makes a promise to
yield, but the minute the frogs vanish, so do his promises.
Pharaoh hardened his heart.
It's the same story with the Nats.
Pharaoh's heart was hardened, as the Lord had said.
Then God does a plague with a twist.
He makes a distinction in his words to Pharaoh, calling the Egyptians your people, and the Israelites my people.
He makes it clear that the Israelites are the only people he's in a covenant relationship with. Don't miss that. God said he will send flies, but
they won't attack Goshen, where his people live. Remember Goshen? It's the fertile pasture
land Joseph managed to get for his family when he worked for the old Pharaoh back in the
day. His descendants, the Israelites, still live there centuries later, and God kept the
flies off them.
But despite this evidence of God's power in being location specific with this plague,
Pharaoh hardens his heart.
Then we have livestock and boils and hail.
Hail is the first plague where human lives are threatened.
God explicitly tells Pharaoh how to avoid it, but he hardened his heart.
Things are going exactly the way God said they would.
Pharaoh responds differently to various plagues, but his heart is always hard.
He even asks Moses to pray to God on his behalf.
Sometimes people who don't know or love God, still ask him for help when they're in
dire straits.
But despite all that, he never repents.
What was your God shot today? I saw his patience. In 915-16, he said to Pharaoh, by now I could
have put out my hand and struck you and your people with pestilence, and you would have
been cut off from the earth. But for this purpose, I have raised you up to show you my power
so that my name may be proclaimed
in all the earth.
God has patience towards sinners.
And step by step, he's working out his plan.
His patience with Pharaoh was probably really frustrating to Moses in the Israelites.
And probably even to the Egyptians as well, they were probably like, let them go already,
Pharaoh.
I'm far less patient with God than he is with everything.
I'm always trying to rush his plan. But I want to learn to trust that he's taking the
steps necessary to make his name proclaimed in all the earth. And that matters far more
than my timeline. Plus, he's with me in the struggle and the waiting, which means there
can be joy even in those moments, because he's with me in the struggle and the waiting, which means there can be joy even in those
moments, because he's where the joy is.
Do you want to hang out with me and my friend Candace Cameron Baray?
And yes, I mean in person.
If you've been loving the podcast we host together, we're re-bond talking about faith and
the Trinity, then you're going to love this.
On February 16, Candace and I are hosting a live podcast event at Life Fellowship
Church in McKinney, Texas, and we'd love for you to be there.
Get your tickets at Candace.com or click the link in the show notes.
Today's episode is brought to you by Way Nation.
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