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POSTED
15 APRIL, 2008
The Message of Exodus
by
J.K. McKee
editor@tnnonline.net
The Book of Exodus is one of the
most important, yet controversial books of the
entire Bible, and certainly the most important
book of the Torah. Commentator John I. Durham
confidently asserts, “The
Book of Exodus is the first book of the Bible.”[1]
This is because without an Exodus of Israel from
Egypt, there is no people to preserve and
testify to the traditions regarding Creation,
Noah, Abraham and the Patriarchs, and the
faithfulness of God toward these individuals. In
other words, without the Book of Exodus you have
no Book of Genesis. And this is only one of the
obvious themes that gets overlooked when one
considers the significance of Exodus.
Every year in the Spring,
sometime between Passover or Easter (or Easter
and Passover depending on the year), the Exodus
usually gets a great deal of publicity. There
are many questions and debates surrounding the
Exodus. When did it take place? How many people
were actually involved? What was the route of
the Exodus and the real location of Mount Sinai?
Who was the Pharaoh of the Exodus? Why is there
no Egyptian record surrounding it? And while it
may be good to engage with these discussions
from time to time, too frequently people take
their eyes off of the Biblical text and the
significant message(s) that Exodus has for us as
people of faith, and away from the unique
character forming ability that the Book of
Exodus so aptly possesses. Furthermore, as
Messianics who often examine Exodus every year,
are there any things that we overlook regarding
this critical text of God’s revelation?
The Hebrew name of Exodus is
Shemot, as the text begins with “These are
the names of the sons of Israel” (Exodus 1:1),
testifying how the Patriarch Jacob and his sons
entered into Egypt, and have now “multiplied
greatly and became exceedingly numerous, so that
the land was filled with them” (Exodus 1:6).
While Joseph had been used in the past to
deliver Egypt through a time of famine and
trial, making a great name for himself (Genesis
chs. 39-50), a new Egyptian dynasty and a new
Pharaoh had come to power “who did not know
about Joseph” (Exodus 1:8). Not knowing about
Joseph, this dynasty found the Semitic
Israelites to be a convenient workforce, and
they were concerned “if war breaks out, [they]
will join our enemies, fight against us and
leave the country” (Exodus 1:10).[2]
The Israelites in Egypt, while having greatly
multiplied, found themselves pressed into deep
servitude to Egypt, as the Egyptians “made their
lives bitter with hard labor in brick and mortar
and with all kinds of work in the fields”
(Exodus 1:14).
In spite of the Israelites being placed
in slavery to Egypt, the Egyptians were still
worried as they did multiply. The Pharaoh thus
rules that Israelite males born are to be killed
(Exodus 1:16), and sees to it that a search be
made for infant males to be thrown into the Nile
(Exodus 1:22).
A Levite woman conceives, giving
birth to a son, and is able to actually hide him
for three months (Exodus 1:2). Yet she is unable
to hide him indefinitely, and so “she got a
papyrus basket for him and coated it with tar
and pitch. Then she placed the child in it and
put it among the reeds along the bank of the
Nile” (Exodus 1:4; cf. Hebrews 11:23). The boy’s
sister watches this from a distance (Exodus
1:5), and then sees it actually floating to
where the Pharaoh’s daughter is bathing. The
Pharaoh’s daughter recognizes the child as one
of the Hebrew babies, but is intent to take it
for her own. “She named him Moses, saying, ‘I
drew him out of the water’” (Exodus 1:10). The
prince Moses is raised as a member of the
Egyptian court.
Somehow, although raised
Egyptian, Moses knew that he was different. “One
day, after Moses had grown up, he went out to
where his own people were and watched them at
their hard labor. He saw an Egyptian beating a
Hebrew, one of his own people. Glancing this way
and that and seeing no one, he killed the
Egyptian and hid him in the sand” (Exodus
2:11-12). Having been enraged at the terrible
treatment toward the slaves, he reaches a point
of decision and somehow recognizes that he too
was a Hebrew. This murder is known by two
Hebrews the next day (Exodus 2:11-12), and news
also gets back to Pharaoh (Exodus 2:15).
Presumably, Moses as a prince of Egypt and
grandson of Pharaoh could have killed a common
Egyptian and easily gotten away with it. But the
revelation that he was actually a Hebrew changed
everything. Moses quickly had to flee to Midian
for his own life.
Moses’ life in Midian
certainly did not have the luxuries he experienced
in Egypt. He becomes acquainted with the priest
of Midian, Jethro, whose daughter, Zipporah, he
marries (Exodus 2:20-21). Moses becomes a
shepherd. While in this time of exile, “the king
of Egypt died. The Israelites groaned in their
slavery and cried out…God heard their groaning
and he remembered his covenant with Abraham,
with Isaac and with Jacob” (Exodus 2:23-24). As
he tended the flock of Jethro at Mount Horeb,
Moses witnesses a burning bush, exclaiming “I
will go over and see this strange sight—why the
bush does not burn up” (Exodus 3:3). The Lord
cries out to Moses from the bush, and Moses
simply responds with hinneni, “Here I am”
(Exodus 3:4). Moses removes his sandals on the
holy ground (Exodus 3:5), and the Lord
identifies who he is by telling Moses that He
knows of the suffering of Israel and that He
will deliver them into the land promised to
their forefathers (Exodus 3:7-8): “[T]he cry of
the Israelites has reached me, and I have seen
the way the Egyptians are oppressing them. So
now, go. I am sending you to Pharaoh to bring my
people the Israelites out of Egypt” (Exodus
3:9-10).
Moses is not entirely convinced that returning
to Egypt and speaking to a people whom he barely
knows will work. Moses does not even know the
proper name of the God to whom he is speaking,
who will promptly tell him “I
am who I am” (Exodus 3:14), ehyeh
asher ehyeh.[3]
He then gives him a special name, that not even
the Patriarchs knew (cf. Exodus 6:3), YHWH (HaShem),[4]
to designate Himself from the many gods of Egypt
(Exodus 3:15). Moses is to tell the Egyptian
Pharaoh to let the Israelites go for a three-day
journey to worship Him, but instead he will
resist. The Lord says, “I know that the king of
Egypt will not let you go unless a mighty hand
compels him. So I will stretch out my hand and
strike the Egyptians with all the wonders that I
will perform among them. After that, he will let
you go” (Exodus 3:19-20). The Israelites will
leave Egypt with a great number of spoils
(Exodus 3:21-22).
Moses, still not entirely sure,
is shown the power of the Lord right before his
eyes. His staff turns into a snake (Exodus
4:3-5), and his hand turns leprous as he inserts
it into his cloak (Exodus 4:6-8). The Lord
speaks to Moses about the kinds of mighty acts
he will be responsible for unleashing upon Egypt
(Exodus 4:8-10). And worried about his speaking
abilities, the Lord, although irritated with
Moses, tells him that his brother Aaron will be
used as a spokesman (Exodus 4:11-16). Coming
down from the mountain, Moses returns to his
enslaved people in Egypt (Exodus 4:18-20) to
face a new Pharaoh and the biggest challenge of
his life (Exodus 4:21-22).
Aaron is led into the wilderness to meet Moses
on his return to Egypt (Exodus 4:27-28), and
both of them demonstrate the Lord’s signs before
the Israelite elders (Exodus 4:29-31). Convinced
of their cause, Moses and Aaron go before
Pharaoh for the first time, commanding that the
people be allowed to go into the desert to
worship before HaShem for a three-day festival
(Exodus 5:1-3). The Pharaoh refuses because he
is unwilling to stop the Israelites’ labor
(Exodus 5:4-5), and he then issues the order
that they not be given straw to make their
required allotment of bricks (Exodus 5:6-19).
The people were furious with Moses in disbelief,
clamoring, “May the
Lord look upon you and judge you! You have made us a stench
to Pharaoh and his officials and have put a
sword in their hand to kill us” (Exodus 5:21).
Moses beseeches the Lord, expressing some doubts
(Exodus 5:22-23) as the Israelites deride him.
Under extreme stress, the Lord repeats the great
calling that He has given Moses to free His
people (Exodus 6:1-8),[5]
and He tells him to go again before Pharaoh.
Once again Moses must go before
Pharaoh, but this time God says “I will harden
Pharaoh’s heart” (Exodus 7:3). Even though Moses
and Aaron must obey the command of the Lord to
go before Egypt’s king, he will still not listen
to them (Exodus 7:4), requiring Divine judgments
upon them to know that HaShem is the God of the
universe (Exodus 7:5). Moses and Aaron perform
their first “miracle” (Exodus 7:9) before
Pharaoh when Aaron’s staff is transformed into a
snake. The Pharaoh is not impressed as his
magicians can do the same thing (Exodus 7:11),
even though “Aaron’s staff swallowed up their
staffs” (Exodus 7:12). Pharaoh’s heart is
hardened (Exodus 7:13). What follows are a
series of distinct encounters between Moses and
Pharaoh, and great ecological plagues are
unleashed upon Egypt.
The tension between Moses as
leader of Israel and the Pharaoh of Egypt is
obvious. “Pharaoh’s heart is unyielding; he
refuses to let the people go” (Exodus 7:14).
Moses is commanded by God to turn all of the
water in Egypt into blood, and it is so bad that
even the fish of the Nile die (Exodus 7:16-21).
The Pharaoh is still not convinced, as his own
magicians can replicate the act (Exodus 7:22).
A week later Moses goes before
the Pharaoh again, repeating God’s request that
His people be allowed to worship Him for three
days in the wilderness (Exodus 7:25-8:1). He is
threatened with a plague of frogs, which will
come out of the Nile and overwhelm the people as
an annoying menace (Exodus 8:2-5). Even though
Moses and Aaron are able to call the frogs upon
Egypt, so can Pharaoh’s own magicians (Exodus
8:7). For the first time, though, Pharaoh
actually asks Moses and Aaron to “Pray to the
Lord
to take the frogs away from me and my people,
and I will let your people go to offer
sacrifices to the
Lord”
(Exodus 8:8), as he is at least beginning to
recognize that HaShem has some power. The next
day, the plague of frogs stops (Exodus 8:10-11),
“They were piled into heaps, and the land reeked
of them” (Exodus 8:14). Pharaoh hardens his
own heart (Exodus 8:15).
The third plague comes without an
initial clash with Pharaoh, as the Lord simply
commands Aaron to “‘Stretch out your staff and
strike the dust of the ground,’ and throughout
the land of Egypt the dust will become gnats”
(Exodus 8:16). This is the first plague that the
magicians of Egypt were unable to
reproduce (Exodus 8:18), who are forced to tell
their king “This is the finger of God” (Exodus
8:19a). Still, the Pharoah “would not listen,
just as the
Lord
had said” (Exodus 8:19b).
The next encounter with Pharaoh
comes with the decree that if he does not let
the Israelites go worship HaShem in the
wilderness for three days, “I will send swarms
of flies on you and your officials, on your
people and into your houses. The houses of the
Egyptians will be full of flies, and even the
ground where they are” (Exodus 8:20). Included
in this warning is that the Israelites in Goshen
will not have this plague affect them (Exodus
8:22), as the Lord says “I will make a
distinction between my people and your people”
(Exodus 8:23). As the flies are unleashed upon
Egypt, Pharaoh actually extends permission to
Moses, “Go, sacrifice to your God here in the
land” (Exodus 8:25), as he is still at least beginning to
recognize that HaShem has some power. Yet, Moses
insists that God will only allow the sacrifices
outside of Egypt (Exodus 8:26-27), so Pharaoh
says that they can do it “but you must not go
very far. Now pray for me” (Exodus 8:28). Yet,
as the flies leave Egypt, Pharaoh once again
hardens his heart (Exodus 8:32).
Each plague gets more and more
intense. The Pharaoh is once again told that if
he does not allow the Israelites to worship God
in the wilderness, severe consequences will be
unleashed. This time, a major catastrophe will
be unleashed against Egyptian livestock (Exodus
9:1-3), but not against the livestock of the
Israelites (Exodus 9:4). “Pharaoh sent men to
investigate and found that not even one of the
animals of the Israelites had died. Yet his
heart was unyielding” (Exodus 9:7).
The fifth plague comes when God
commands Moses and Aaron, “Take handfuls of soot
from a furnace and have Moses toss it into the
air in the presence of Pharaoh. It will become
fine dust over the whole land of Egypt, and
festering boils will break out on men and
animals throughout the land” (Exodus 9:8-9).
This was yet another plague that the magicians
of Egypt could not replicate (Exodus 9:11), and
so the Lord hardens Pharaoh’s heart (Exodus
9:12).
The next encounter with Pharaoh
is even more intense. If the Pharaoh does not
let the Israelites go into the desert to worship
the Lord, He says “this time I will send the
full force of my plagues against you and against
your officials and your people, so you may know
that there is no one like me in all the earth.
For by now I could have stretched out my hand
and struck you and your people with a plague
that would have wiped you off the earth. But I
have raised you up for this very purpose, that I
might show you my power and that my name might
be proclaimed in all the earth” (Exodus
9:14-16). HaShem promises to “send the worst
hailstorm that has ever fallen on Egypt, from
the day it was founded till now” (Exodus 9:18).
The hail, along with significant thunder and
lightning, descends upon Egypt (Exodus 9:22-25),
but not upon the Israelites in Goshen (Exodus
9:26). The Pharaoh pleads with Moses and Aaron,
“This time I have sinned…The
Lord
is in the right, and I and my people are in the
wrong” (Exodus 9:27), agreeing to let them go to
worship Him (Exodus 9:28). However, once the
plague subsides Pharaoh recants, this time “He
and his officials hardened their hearts” (Exodus
9:34) refusing to let Israel go.
For some reason or another, the
Pharaoh of Egypt and his court fail to realize
that by refusing the request of HaShem they are
plunging their country into utter ruin. God
subsequently tells Moses and Aaron to once again
go before him, asking him “How long will you
refuse to humble yourself before me? Let my
people go, so that they may worship me” (Exodus
10:3). The Lord says that if Pharaoh does not
allow this, locusts will be unleashed upon the
Egyptians, and “They will cover the face of the
ground so that it cannot be seen” (Exodus 10:5).
Pharaoh’s officials exhibit some common sense:
“How long will this man be a snare to us? Let
the people go, so that they may worship the
Lord
their God. Do you not yet realize that Egypt is
ruined?” (Exodus 10:7). Pharaoh agrees to let
only the Israelite males go worship Him, and
that the whole population including females and
small children is not allowed to go (Exodus
10:8-10). By refusing the Lord’s request,
locusts are unleashed upon Egypt (Exodus
10:12-15). Pharaoh confesses once again that he
has sinned against Him, and a strong wind takes
all of the locusts into the Red Sea (Exodus
10:16-19). Still, Pharaoh hardens his heart
(Exodus 10:20).
There is no encounter with the
Pharaoh as the ninth plague manifests itself
upon Egypt. Moses is simply told by the Lord,
“Stretch out your hand toward the sky so that
darkness will spread over Egypt—darkness that
can be felt” (Exodus 10:21). This choshek
engulfed Egypt for three days, although not the
dwellings of the Israelites (Exodus 10:23).
Pharaoh summons Moses and appears to capitulate,
this time allowing the women and children to go
with them into the wilderness to worship God. He
does, though, say “only leave your flocks and
herds behind” (Exodus 10:24). This is
unacceptable as those animals are needed to
offer burnt offerings to the Lord (Exodus
10:25-26). God thus hardens Pharaoh’s heart, and
he forcibly tells Moses, “Get out of my sight!
Make sure you do not appear before me again! The
day you see my face you will die” (Exodus
10:28).
The tenth and final plague upon
Egypt is the most severe and serious. HaShem
says, “After that, [Pharaoh] will let you go
from here, and when he does, he will drive you
out completely” (Exodus 11:1). Far be it from
just being able to go worship the Lord in the
wilderness, the Israelites will be let go
completely from the bonds of Egypt (cf. Exodus
11:3), and they will leave with a great amount
of spoil (Exodus 11:2). The Lord intends to “go
throughout Egypt. Every firstborn son of Egypt
will die, from the firstborn of Pharaoh, who
sits on the throne, to the firstborn son of the
slave girl, who is at her hand mill, and all the
firstborn of the cattle will die. There will be
loud wailing throughout Egypt” (Exodus 11:4-6).
The command is given in Exodus
for the Israelites to commemorate this event by
remembering the Passover. Prior to the plague of
the firstborn being unleashed upon Egypt, the
Israelites were told to take the blood of a lamb
“and put it on the sides and tops of the
doorframes of the houses” (Exodus 12:7). They
were also to eat its meat, along with bitter
herbs and unleavened bread (Exodus 12:8). The
original Passover meal was to be eaten in haste,
as the promised departure from Egypt was
imminent (Exodus 12:11).
In the plague upon Egypt’s
firstborn, HaShem is clear “I will bring
judgment on all the gods of Egypt” (Exodus
12:12), but also that “The blood will be a sign
for you on the houses where you are; and when I
see the blood, I will pass over you. No
destructive plague will touch you when I strike
Egypt” (Exodus 12:13). So significant is this
Passover event, “This is a day you are to
commemorate; for generations to come you shall
celebrate it as a festival to the
Lord—a
lasting ordinance” (Exodus 12:14). The Festival
of Unleavened Bread is also to be commemorated
for the week following, as one contemplates the
departure from Egypt (Exodus 12:15-20; 13:7-10)
and eats nothing with yeast. Critical lessons
are to be taught to each generation as one
remembers the deliverance of God (Exodus
12:24-27, 43-50).
As the Israelites assemble to
have a very sacred and sober meal of lamb,
bitter herbs, and unleavened bread, “At midnight
the Lord
stuck down all the firstborn in Egypt…Pharaoh
and all his officials and all the Egyptians got
up during the night, and there was loud wailing
in Egypt, for there was not a house without
someone dead” (Exodus 12:29-30).
The Egyptian Pharaoh, leader of
the Thirteenth Century B.C.E. superpower, is now
completely humiliated before the power of HaShem
the God of Israel. He summons Moses and Aaron,
telling them “Up! Leave my people, you and the
Israelites! Go, worship the
Lord
as you have requested” (Exodus 12:31). “The
Egyptians urged the people to hurry and leave
the country. ‘For otherwise,’ they said, ‘we
will all die!’” (Exodus 12:33). The Israelites
gather spoil of “silver and gold and…clothing”
(Exodus 12:35), and several hundred thousand
people make their way from Ramses to Succoth
(Exodus 12:37).
The Israelites find themselves
nestled in a camp on the shores of the Red Sea,
as God prohibited them from traveling to Canaan
via the dangerous Philistine country, lest they
desire to return to Egypt (Exodus 13:17-18).
With them are the mummified remains of the
Patriarch Joseph (Exodus 13:19; Genesis 50:26). The Lord
appears to them “in a pillar of cloud to guide
them on their way and by night in a pillar of
fire to give them light, so that they could
travel by day or night. Neither the pillar of
cloud by day nor the pillar of fire by night
left its place in front of the people” (Exodus
13:21-22).
While the Israelites are encamped
with their backs to the sea (Exodus 14:1-2), the
Lord still desires to communicate something to
the Egyptian Pharaoh. “Pharaoh will think, ‘The
Israelites are wandering around the land in
confusion, hemmed in by the desert’” (Exodus
14:3). God asserts, “I will harden Pharaoh’s
heart, and he will pursue them. But I will gain
glory for myself through Pharaoh and his army,
and the Egyptians will know that I am the
Lord”
(Exodus 14:4). When Pharaoh hears that the
Israelites have gone, he is furious and declares
“What have we done? We have let the Israelites
go and have lost their services!” (Exodus 14:5).
Pharaoh sends the Egyptian army after these
rabble to the seaside where they are gathered
(Exodus 14:7-9).
The Ancient Israelites, having
seen the plagues that the Lord enacted upon
Egypt, see the Egyptian chariots “marching after
them. They were terrified and cried out to the
Lord”
(Exodus 14:10). But then they chastise Moses,
“Was it because there were no graves in Egypt
that you brought us to the desert to die? What
have you done to us by bringing us out of Egypt?
Didn’t we say to you in Egypt, ‘Leave us alone;
let us serve the Egyptians’? It would have been
better for us to serve the Egyptians than to die
in the desert!” (Exodus 14:11-12). Answering the
clamor of people, Moses says hityatzbu u’re’u
et’yeshuat
Adonai, “stand firm and see the
salvation of the
Lord”
(Exodus 14:13, RSV). “The
Lord
will fight for you” (Exodus 14:14). Up to this
moment, the focus of disobedience and rebellion
to HaShem has been on the Egyptian Pharaoh; now
it shifts to the people of Israel themselves and
whether they will believe in their God and His
power.
We all know the scene far too
well. At the moment of disbelief for the
Israelites, “Moses stretched out his hand over
the sea, and all that night the
Lord
drove the sea back with a strong east wind and
turned it into dry land. The waters were
divided, and the Israelites went through the sea
on dry ground, with a wall of water on their
right and on their left” (Exodus 14:21-22). The
horde of several hundred thousand makes their way,
albeit carefully, on the land provided to them.
The pillar of fire and cloud keeps the Egyptian
army at bay (Exodus 14:24), and they recognize
“Let’s get away from the Israelites! The
Lord
is fighting for them against Egypt” (Exodus
14:25).
Still, the stupidity of the
Pharaoh compels them to follow in after the
Israelites (Exodus 14:28). The Lord commands
Moses, “Stretch out your hand over the sea so
that the waters may flow back over the Egyptians
and their chariots and horsemen” (Exodus 14:26),
and the force is decimated with not one of them
surviving. One can now validly wonder why there
is no record of the Exodus in Egyptian history.
The god Pharaoh was defeated by HaShem the God of
Israel―a God of slaves―in battle. Gods do not make mistakes, and
so why would Egypt want to remember such
catastrophes, failures, and blunders brought on
them by Pharaoh, the son of Ra? Yet for His people, “when
the Israelites saw the great power of the
Lord
displayed against the Egyptians, the people
feared the
Lord and put their trust in him and in
Moses his servant” (Exodus 14:31). Miriam and
the women of Israel begin dancing in praise to
Him (Exodus 15:20-21).
A song, the shirat ha’yam or the Song of
the Sea, is commissioned to remember what
happened to the Egyptian armies. It proclaims
“The Lord
is my strength and my song; he has become my
salvation” (Exodus 15:2), speaking of the fall
of Pharaoh’s chariots (Exodus 15:4-5) and the
great majesty of God (Exodus 15:7). HaShem as
Creator has dominion over the sea to swallow up
His enemies (Exodus 15:8), as the people ask
“Who among the gods is like you, O
Lord?
Who is like you—majestic in holiness, awesome in
glory, working wonders?” (Exodus 15:11). So
significant is this Song of the Sea, that it
even conveys a message to the Canaanites whose
land has been promised to Israel (Exodus
15:14-17; cf. Joshua 2:10).[6]
While the Israelites are a free
people on the opposite shores of the Red Sea,
the process of their salvation has only begun.
Only three days into their journey, after seeing
the mighty acts of deliverance via the hand of
God, they start complaining. They wish to have
sweet waters (Exodus 15:23-25). At this time,
the people are first told “If you listen
carefully to the voice of the
Lord
your God and do what is right in his eyes, if
you pay attention to his commandments and keep
all his decrees, I will not bring on you any of
the disease I brought on the Egyptians, for I am
the Lord,
who heals you” (Exodus 15:26). Obedience to
HaShem is now a clear requirement of His people.
As they learn to obey Him, they will not face
the same kinds of adversities that the Egyptians
faced when God judged them for being obstinate.
This still does not phase the
Israelites. Just about a month out of Egypt and
in the Wilderness of Sin, the people again
complain against Moses and Aaron, “If we had
died by the
Lord’s
hand in Egypt! There we sat around pots of meat
and ate all the food we wanted, but you have
brought us out into this desert to starve this
entire assembly to death” (Exodus 16:3). They do
not appreciate the freedom that the Lord has
given them, but as their Provider He gives them
instructions on how to collect bread or the
manna He sends from Heaven (Exodus 16:4-5),
which would only last for an allotted time
(Exodus 16:15-26). Moses still must remind the
people that although they think of themselves
grumbling against him, they are actually
grumbling against God (Exodus 16:6-8). The
faithfulness of God is demonstrated, and so
Moses is told “Take an omer of manna and keep it
for the generations to come, so they can see the
bread that I gave you in the desert when I
brought you out of Egypt” (Exodus 16:33).
The initial challenges for the
newly-free Israelites still keep coming. The
Israelites complain because of lack of water:
“Why did you bring us up out of Egypt to make us
and our children and livestock die of thirst?”
(Exodus 17:3). Moses is told by the Lord, “take
in your hand the staff with which you struck the
Nile, and go. I will stand there before you by
the rock at Horeb. Strike the rock, and water
will come out of it for the people to drink”
(Exodus 17:6). While the thirst of the
Israelites is quenched, Moses “called the place
Massah and Meribah because the Israelites
quarreled and because they tested the
Lord
saying, ‘Is the
Lord
among us or not?’” (Exodus 17:7; cf. Psalm 95:8;
Hebrews 3:8).
Now encamped at Rephidim, the
Amalekites come and attack Israel. Joshua is
told by Moses to take a force and go out and
fight them, as he would stand on top of a hill
watching, holding out the staff that God gave
him (Exodus 17:8-9). The fight went well “As
long as Moses held up his hands, the Israelites
were winning, but whenever he lowered his hands
the Amalekites were winning” (Exodus 17:11).
“Aaron and Hur held his hands up…So Joshua
overcame the Amalekite army with his sword”
(Exodus 17:12, 13). Hence we see the beginnings
of a long, protracted hostility between Israel
and the Amalekites (Exodus 17:14-15).
Now approaching the third month
out of Egypt, Moses and his father-in-law,
Jethro the priest of Midian, have a reunion
along with Moses’ wife and sons (Exodus 18:2-8).
He attests to have heard of the plagues HaShem
dispensed upon Egypt, and the deliverance He had
accomplished for the people of Israel (Exodus
18:1, 9-12). Jethro gives Moses advice on how to
delegate responsibility among the leaders of
Israel so he alone will not have to judge each
individual dispute and be worn out (Exodus
18:13-26).
The Israelites finally arrive at
Mount Sinai, ha’har or “the mountain”
(Exodus 19:2). Moses ascends this mountain to
speak to HaShem concerning His will for Israel.
The Lord says “if you obey me fully and keep my
covenant, then out of all nations you will be my
treasured possession. Although the whole earth
is mine, you will be for me a kingdom of priests
and a holy nation” (Exodus 19:5). Although they
do not yet understand it, God is already
speaking to Israel about their future service
unto Him as His intermediaries to the world.
Returning to the people, the Israelite assembly
unanimously declares “We will do everything the
Lord
has said” (Exodus 19:8). A very significant and
awesome time of theophany then ensues, with the
people of Israel being told to consecrate
themselves (Exodus 19:10, 15, 22) as God’s
Divine presence will engulf the mountain before
them. “Mount Sinai was covered with smoke,
because the
Lord descended upon it in fire. The smoke billowed up from it
like smoke from a furnace, the whole mountain
trembled violently, and the sound of the trumpet
grew louder and louder. Then Moses spoke and the
voice of God answered him” (Exodus 19:19). He
goes up to the top of the mountain a second
time, and one of the most important events in
human history occurs.
The aseret ha’devarim or
Ten Words (more commonly called the Ten
Commandments) are the first that are delivered
from God, to His servant Moses (Exodus 20:1-17).
It is quite significant that while HaShem will
punish those who commit idolatry against Him
(Exodus 20:4), “to the third and fourth
generation of those who hate me” (Exodus 20:5),
He will show “love to a thousand generations of
those who love me and keep my commandments”
(Exodus 20:6). No deity in the Ancient Near
East, either those of Egypt or of Canaan, would
ever make such promises. The Israelites stand
beneath Sinai in fear and at a distance (Exodus
20:18). They have told Moses, “Speak to us
yourself and we will listen. But do not have God
speak to us or we will die” (Exodus 20:19).
Moses indicates, “God has come to test you, so
that the fear of God will be with you to keep
you from sinning” (Exodus 20:20).
While on Mount Sinai, Moses
receives additional instructions from the Lord.
These concern the construction of proper altars
(Exodus 20:22-26), laws regarding servitude
within Israel (Exodus 21:2-11), personal
injuries and appropriate reparations (Exodus
21:12-36), a respect of property and warnings
against theft and shortdealings (Exodus
22:1-15), various social responsibilities
including proper sexuality among the people
(Exodus 21:16-31), how the people are to respect
justice (Exodus 23:1-9) and give their land a
Sabbath rest (Exodus 23:10-13), and how the
people are to gather three times a year for
specific festivals (Exodus 23:14-17). The Lord
promises to send His angel ahead of the people,
and for them not to adopt the ways of the
Canaanites and their gods (Exodus 23:20-32).
The seventy elders are allowed to
come closer to Moses while on the mountain, and
the people declare once again “Everything the
Lord
has said we will do” (Exodus 24:3), along with a
written transcription (Exodus 24:4). An altar is
built for HaShem and sacrifices are made. Blood
from those sacrifices is sprinkled on the
people, testifying to their commitment before
Him (Exodus 24:6-8). The elders of Israel get to
witness a greater manifestation of God’s
presence than they had ever seen before (Exodus
24:9-10). Moses goes up to the summit of Mount
Sinai to receive the Ten Words written on stone
(Exodus 24:12-14). “When Moses went up on the
mountain, the cloud covered it, and the glory of
the Lord
settled on Mount Sinai…To the Israelites the
glory of the
Lord looked like a consuming fire on top of the mountain.
Then Moses entered the cloud as he went up on
the mountain. And he stayed on the mountain
forty days and forty nights” (Exodus 24:15-18).
On Mount Sinai, Moses is
surrounded by the presence of God. Not
surprisingly, the commandments he is given by
the Lord concern how His presence is to manifest
itself in the midst of the congregation of
Israel. Moses is told “have them make a
sanctuary for me, and I will dwell among them.
Make this tabernacle and all its furnishings
exactly like the pattern I will show you”
(Exodus 25:8-9).
The elements of the Tabernacle include: the Ark
of the Covenant (Exodus 25:10-22), the Table of
Showbread (Exodus 25:23-30), and the lampstand
or menorah (Exodus 25:31-40). The
Tabernacle, a traveling tent structure, is
likewise to be constructed according to a
pattern and be elaborate (Exodus ch. 26). There
is to be an altar for burnt offerings (Exodus
27:1-8), and a courtyard (Exodus 27:9-19). Only
consecrated oil is to be used in worship (Exodus
27:20), and the priests who serve in the
Tabernacle are to be of the highest caliber with
only the appropriate garments (Exodus chs.
28-29). Other elements such as the altar of
incense (Exodus 30:1-10), special money (Exodus
30:11-16), a basin for washing (Exodus
30:17-21), anointing oil (Exodus 30:22-33), and
incense (Exodus 30:34-38) all enhance the
holiness of this enterprise. God gives a special
knowledge to the craftsmen Bezalel and Oholiab
to make the sacred objects (Exodus 31:1-11).[7]
Concurrent with His theme to
dwell among His people, HaShem is sure to tell
Moses, “You must observe my Sabbaths. This will
be a sign between me and you for the generations
to come, so you may know that I am the
Lord,
who makes you holy” (Exodus 31:12). Failure to
observe the Sabbath meant certain death for the
Ancient Israelites who transgressed (Exodus
31:14-16), as they would be skewing God’s
original desire in Creation for human beings to
commune with Him (Exodus 31:17). Finally after
emphasizing this, the Lord “gave [Moses] the two
tablets of the Testimony, the tablets of stone
inscribed by the finger of God” (Exodus 31:18).
As Moses is surrounded by the
presence of the Eternal, the Israelites return
to their cycle of being impatient and grumble.
“When the people saw that Moses was so long in
coming down from the mountain, they gathered
around Aaron and said, ‘Come, make us gods who
will go before us. As for this fellow Moses who
brought us up out of Egypt, we don’t know what
has happened to him’” (Exodus 31:1). Aaron
succumbs to the people’s demands, asking them to
gather gold. He fashions a golden calf, and perhaps
intending it to be a representative for HaShem
or some kind of consort for Him or any number of
possible things, Aaron actually tells Israel
“These are your gods, O Israel, who brought you
up out of Egypt” (Exodus 31:4). He compounds his
own sin by then declaring, “Tomorrow there will
be a festival to the
Lord”
(Exodus 31:5), and so the Israelites rebel
against the One True God and indulge themselves
before the idol (Exodus 31:6).
The Lord promptly tells Moses,
“Go down, because your people, whom you brought
up out of Egypt, have become corrupt. They have
been quick to turn away from what I commanded
them” (Exodus 32:7-8a). A unique scene then
takes place, as the Lord tells Moses, “Now leave
me alone so that my anger may burn against them
and that I may destroy them. Then I will make
you into a great nation” (Exodus 32:10). Moses
entreats his God, “why should your anger burn
against your people, whom you brought out of
Egypt with great power and a mighty hand? Why
should the Egyptians say, ‘It was with evil
intent that he brought them out, to kill them in
the mountains and to wipe them off the face of
the earth’?” (Exodus 32:11-12). Did God deliver
Israel only to wipe them out in the desert? What
message would this send to the Egyptians? It
would not be consistent with the mercy of which
He spoke when delivering the Ten Commandments
(cf. Exodus 20:5-6). Moses reminds God about the
promises He made to multiply the Patriarchs’
seed (Exodus 32:13), and so He does not destroy
the people (Exodus 32:14).
Moses descends Mount Sinai,
showing Joshua the tablets of the Ten
Commandments (Exodus 32:15-16). The two of them
encounter the Israelites in revelry before the
golden calf, and so Moses’ “anger burned and he
threw the tablets out of his hands, breaking
them to pieces at the foot of the mountain”
(Exodus 32:19). The calf is taken and ground
into powder, scattered into water for the
Israelites to drink (Exodus 32:20). Aaron’s
response to why he had fashioned the calf
is patently weak: “they gave me the gold, and I
threw it into the fire, and out came this calf!”
(Exodus 32:24). To quell any further rebellion
against HaShem, Moses rallies the Levites to
himself who are to go and kill those who “were
running wild” (Exodus 32:25, cf. vs. 28-29).
Moses returns to God’s presence on Mount Sinai,
and a plague is unleashed upon the Israelites
because of their worship of the golden calf
(Exodus 32:35). But most significantly, the fact
that the Lord did not destroy all of the
people because of their rebellion, is a
great indication that He is different from all
of the other gods of Planet Earth. All of
the other Ancient Near Eastern deities would
have wiped out their people without any second
thoughts.
As things begin to stabilize in
the camp of Israel, Moses sets up a special Tent
of Meeting, where the business of administering
Israel was to be conducted (Exodus 33:7-8). The
presence of the Lord would frequently manifest
itself at the Tent of Meeting (Exodus 33:9-11),
and most of the intimate one-on-one
communication He would have with Moses would
occur here. HaShem clearly tells Moses, “My
Presence will go with you, and I will give you
rest” (Exodus 33:14). The leader of Israel will
later get to actually see the “back” of God, but
not His face, witnessing a greater manifestation
of His goodness and compassion (Exodus
33:19-20).
The Lord does not cast aside His
chosen people. He commissions Moses to once
again ascend Mount Sinai, but this time chisel
for himself a second set of Ten Commandments
(Exodus 34:1-5). Moses recognizes what God is
doing by proclaiming “The
Lord,
the
Lord, the compassionate and gracious God,
slow to anger, abounding in love and
faithfulness, maintaining love to thousands, and
forgiving wickedness, rebellion and sin. Yet he
does not leave the guilty unpunished; he
punishes the children and their children for the
sin of the fathers to the third and fourth
generation” (Exodus 34:6-7). We are
disadvantaged as people in the Twenty-First
Century to read these words, because too many
place an emphasize on curses or punishments that
are to only pass down to the third and forth
generations, in light of what the mercy and
compassion of God truly mean when set against
the religious background of the Thirteenth
Century B.C.E. No other gods of the period
offered such beneficence! HaShem is
truly unique by displaying these great
qualities, and provides for forgiveness and
restitution (cf. Exodus 34:8-9)!
It is at this point where God
states His definitive intention to enter into a
covenant relationship with Israel (Exodus
34:10). Their salvation thus far has been a very
rocky road since the parting of the Red Sea, but
now He is preparing to train the people as to
what it means to be His holy witnesses in the
world. By obeying Him, the pagan inhabitants of
Canaan will be driven out (Exodus 34:11). But
Israel is reminded, “Break down their altars,
smash their sacred stones and cut down their
Asherah poles. Do not worship any other god, for
the Lord,
whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God” (Exodus
34:13; cf. 17). HaShem desires the complete and
total loyalty of His people! He then repeats to
Israel some of the important things of what it
means to be His people (Exodus 34:17-26), and
these things are all transcribed in the official
record (Exodus 34:27). When returning from the
mountain, Moses shines with the glory of God so
significantly that he must place a veil over his
face (Exodus 34:29-35).
The remainder of the Book of
Exodus describes how the Tabernacle was
constructed, the materials used were collected,
and how some specific people were used in its
assembly (Exodus chs. 35-40). One year from
their departure from Egypt, the Tabernacle of
the Lord is finally consecrated (Exodus 40:17),
and the people of Israel have a sanctuary in
their midst with which they can formally relate
to their God. After Moses completes the final
work, “the cloud covered the Tent of Meeting,
and the glory of the
Lord
filled the tabernacle…In all the travels of the
Israelites, whenever the cloud lifted from above
the tabernacle, they would set out; but if the
cloud did not lift, they did not set out—until
the day it lifted. So the cloud of the
Lord
was over the tabernacle by day, and fire was in
the cloud by night, in the sight of all the
house of Israel during all their travels”
(Exodus 40:34, 36-38). The Israelites were
now ready to enter into the great purpose that
God had for them, following Him at His lead.
We reflect on these events 3,300
years after they took place. We are undeniably
affected by films such as The Ten Commandments
or Prince of Egypt, each of which gives an
artistic interpretation of the events. But the
Biblical text tells us things much more
significant than Hollywood ever can! When
examining the message of Exodus, we are given
the two important sides to the salvation
message. Salvation begins by the Lord God
directly intervening in the lives of human
beings via His deliverance through the Red Sea,
and salvation continues by being brought to His
mountain and given His Instruction for holy
living. As we grow in faith, we are trained and
molded by God so that we can serve as priests in
the world—intermediaries between HaShem and the
rest of the world commissioned to declare His
goodness. We also remember that the Lord is very
patient with us when we do falter, and He will
often restrain the full force of His judgment.
Understanding the dynamic themes
of the Book of Exodus is one of the most
important things that today’s Messianic movement
can do. The unique messages that Exodus has,
played an extremely important role in the
development of Messianism and the concept of the
Messiah serving as a “second Moses,” they formed
a substantial part of Messianic expectation and
prophecy accomplished by Yeshua, and certainly
Exodus was a part of the Apostles’ worldview in
the First Century. Yeshua the Messiah is
certainly our Passover Lamb, but we have so much
more to consider when it comes to Exodus,
that it is overwhelming with all of the lessons
to be considered and learned, although it is
also very simple. How are we to be led on our
own exodus out of sin, into not only a new birth
via the cross, but also a new life as we
approach God’s mountain? Exodus thematically
teaches us about justification and
sanctification—being forgiven of sin and
growing in God’s grace—concepts which we can
never overemphasize! How we learn to appreciate
the message of Exodus as today’s Messianic
community will not be a huge challenge if we
truly desire to be a people who can accomplish
the Lord’s purpose for us.
J.K. McKee (B.A., University of Oklahoma; M.A. Student, Asbury
Theological Seminary) is the editor of TNN Online (www.tnnonline.net)
and is a Messianic apologist. He is author of several books,
including: The New Testament Validates Torah, Torah In the
Balance, Volume I, and When Will the Messiah Return?.
He has also written many articles on the Two Houses of Israel
and Biblical theology, and is presently focusing on Messianic
commentaries on various books of the Bible.
NOTES
[1]
John I. Durham, Word Biblical
Commentary: Exodus, Vol. 3 (Waco,
TX: Word Books, 1987), xix.
[2]
Consult the FAQ entry on
the TNN website “Exodus,
Pharaoh who did not know Joseph.”
[3]
The Hebrew ehyeh asher
ehyeh was rendered as egō eimi
or “I am” in the Greek Septuagint. Egō eimi is used
numerous times in the Gospels pointing
to the Divinity of Yeshua the Messiah
(cf. Matthew 14:24-33; Mark 14:61-63;
Luke 22:70-71; John 8:56-59; 18:4-6).
[4]
In this article, when
wanting to point people to the Divine
Name of God, I will simply refer to YHWH
as HaShem concurrent with the
traditional Jewish interpretation of the
Third Commandment (Exodus 20:7;
Deuteronomy 5:11; cf. m.Yoma
6:2), adhered to by Yeshua and His
Apostles (cf. 3 John 7).
[5]
In the text of Exodus
following (6:14-27), a Levite
genealogical chart is given, validating
Moses’ leadership.
[6]
Consult the editor’s
article “The
Song of Moses and God’s Mission for His
People.”
[7]
While some try to find
secret or hidden meanings behind every
single design of the Tabernacle, it is better
for us to remember that the Lord is
working within the religious
expectations of the people of the
Ancient Near East. Far be it from the
Tabernacle being the First Temple “read
back” or “microscoped” into the
“mythology” of the Exodus as purported
by many past liberal theologians, there
were many traveling tent shrines in the ANE. Furthermore, the great significance
of the poles, rings, and ropes may just
actually be that they kept the
Tabernacle structure from falling down!
The specificity and elaborate nature of
the Tabernacle must first be understood
as a testament to
the holiness of the structure and how
God expects it to reflect His majesty.
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