The Terrible Swift Sword
Notes
Transcript
The Terrible
Swift Sword
Exodus 11
Context
• God has delivered 9 plagues in patterned, clockwork
fashion.
• Now, the singular plague remains – the 10th plague is in
a category all its own and was the plague the previous
nine led toward.
• Exodus 11 is an important addendum to Chapter 10 –
Pharaoh asked to never see Moses’s face again and
Chapter 11 details their final exchange.
• Today, I would like to work through the Biblical material
then close with an extended theological consideration.
God Speaks to Moses (11:1-3)
• “He will drive you out completely” foreshadows
Pharaoh’s true intent and ultimate fate (11:1).
• God predicts a great plundering – God is not
content with a simple escape (11:2).
• God predicts a great turn-around – Former slaves
are held in high regard; a former fugitive is
deeply honored.
God Speaks to Pharaoh (11:4-8)
• God makes 6 distinct Declarations:
1. Yahweh warns Pharaoh one last time.
2. Yahweh declares the time of the final plague.
3. Yahweh promise nationwide retribution.
4. Yahweh predicts nationwide sorrow.
5. Yahweh promises Israel’s total safety
6. Yahweh predicts national desperation.
• Points to Ponder:
1. Yahweh himself will enact this plague directly.
2. Moses’s Irony: Israel’s foremen cried just like Egypt will cry.
3. Yahweh wards off hope of Egyptian retribution.
4. Pharaoh’s bargaining backfires – He will assent permanently
God States the Tension (11:9-10)
• God expresses twin truths that hang in tension:
1. Pharaoh will not listen.
2. The LORD hardened Pharaoh’s heart.
• Moses is a brilliant writer yet sees no need to
explore how these truths work together.
• It is both inevitable and right to ask, “Was God
just in slaying Egypt’s firstborn?” Abraham
(Genesis 18), Job (Job 8), and Paul (Romans 9) all
under inspiration wrestle with this question. Let’s
answer it with 10 biblical observations.
Was God Just in Slaying Egypt’s
Firstborn?
1. Egypt was guilty of genocide – the punishment
fits the crime.
•
•
Exodus 1:16-22: Two orders to kill all males
Exodus 9:27: “I and my people are in the wrong.”
2. God warned of this outcome at the start and
offered an escape at every point.
•
•
•
Exodus 4:23: “If you refuse … I will kill your
firstborn.”
Exodus 9:20: “Whoever feared …”
Exodus 12:38, “A mixed multitude also went up with
them”
Was God Just in Slaying Egypt’s
Firstborn?
3. The 10th plague is a singular event meant to warn
the whole world.
•
•
Exodus 10:2: “That you may tell in the hearing of your
son …”
Exodus 12:14-27: Passover celebrated perpetually in
Israel
4. God is both giver and taker of life – every person
has an appointed day of death.
•
•
•
Job 33:4: “The Spirit of God has made me, and the
breath of the Almighty gives me life.”
Hebrews 9:27: “It is appointed for man to die once.”
Psalm 90:3: “You return man to dust”
Was God Just in Slaying Egypt’s
Firstborn?
5. God mercifully brings all children (and other
innocents) immediately to heaven upon their
natural death.
•
•
•
2 Samuel 12:23: “I shall go to him”
Psalm 23:6: “I shall dwell in the house of the Lord
forever”
1 Kings 14:12-13: “The child shall die … because in
him there is found something pleasing to the LORD.”
6. God holds all people accountable for all their sins.
•
•
Romans 6:23: “For the wages of sin is death …”
Hebrews 12:23: “God, the judge of all …”
Was God Just in Slaying Egypt’s
Firstborn?
7. God allows nations to suffer under the bad choices
of wicked leaders.
•
•
2 Samuel 24: David’s census resulted in a terrible
plague
Isaiah 10: God’s use and judgement of Assyria
8. God is not criticized in our culture for “unfairness”
when He chooses mercy over judgment.
•
•
Jonah 4:11: “Should I not pity Nineveh … ?”
Genesis 41: God showed tremendous mercy to a
previous Pharaoh by saving him and Egypt from a
severe famine – no other nation was shown such mercy.
Was God Just in Slaying Egypt’s
Firstborn?
9. God is the Potter; we are the clay.
•
•
Jeremiah 18:6: “Like the clay in the potter’s hand, so are
you in my hand”
Romans 9:21: “Has the potter no right over the clay, to
make out of the same lump one vessel for honorable use
and another for dishonorable use?”
10.God suffered a worse fate when He gave His Firstborn
into the hands of wicked men to die for a world of
sinners.
•
•
Romans 8:32: God “did not spare his own Son but gave
him for us all.”
John 3:16: “God so loved the world that He gave his only
Son.”