Thursday, March 2, 2017

Year 7, Day 61: Exodus 12


Theological Commentary: Click Here



In Exodus we finally meet the event for which this book is named: the exodus.  For today, I am going to take a broad overview approach to the passage.  Notice that we start and end with talk of the Passover.  In the middle, we have a brief conversation involving Pharaoh and Moses discussing how the people should leave.



Personally, I believe that the emphasis of this passage is on the Passover.  The exodus happens, and it is that for which the people have been hoping.  But I believe that the power of this passage is indeed in the Passover, not the exodus itself.



Look at what happens in the Passover.  God sends His angel of death – yes, His angel of death – around to check on the people.  Those who have been obedient to God by killing the lamb and putting its blood on the doorposts do not experience God’s wrath.  Those who have not been obedient and who have ignored God’s warning get a taste of God’s wrath.  Fundamentally, this passage is about obedience.  Those who are obedient are spared.  Those who are disobedient discover wrath.



Furthermore, notice the scope of the action.  Among those who are afflicted with wrath are Pharaoh, the lowest of those in jail, and all the people in the middle.  God’s wrath is neither caused nor mediated by a person’s status.  Furthermore, look at those who are spared.  Every obedient person is spared from Moses’ own family all the way down to the poorest of the obedient.  Human understanding of status has no implication upon God’s mercy, either.



What God looks for in terms of followers are the obedient.  It isn’t about status.  It isn’t about skill.  It isn’t about popularity.  After all, what can we bring to the table that God Himself cannot give to us?  No, what relationship with God is about is obedience to Him.  That’s why the Passover is such a powerful event.  We are obedient to Him.  He is merciful to us.  That how grace works.  That’s the pattern God desires to set up in this event as a foreshadowing of what God does in Christ.



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