Sermon Tone Analysis

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Exodus chapter 12.
We will begin reading in verse 1 and read through verse 13.
Hear the word of Our Lord.
The Lord spoke to Moses in the Aaron, in the land of Egypt.
Sang, this month shall be your beginning of months.
It shall be the first month of the year to you speak.
To all the congregation of Israel, saying, on the 10th of this month, every man shall take for himself a lamb, according to the house of his father, a lamb for a household.
And if the household is too small for the lamb, let him.
And his neighbor next to his house, take it.
According to the number of persons, according to each man's need, you shall make your account for the lamb.
Your lamb shall be without blemish.
A male of the first year.
You may take it from the sheep or from the goats.
Now, you shall keep it until the 14th day of the same month.
Then the whole assembly of the congregation of Israel.
She'll kill it out.
She'll kill it at Twilight.
And they shall take some of the blood and put it on the two-door post and on the lintel of the houses where they eat it.
Then they shall eat the Flesh on that night.
Roasted in fire with unleavened bread and with bitter herbs.
They shall eat it.
Do not eat it.
Raw, nor boiled at all with water, but of roasted in fire.
Its head with its legs and its entrails, you shall you?
Shall let none of it.
Remain until morning, and whatever remains of it until morning.
You shall burn with fire.
And dust, you shall eat it with a belt, on your waist, your sandals, on your feet, and your staff in your hand.
So you shall eat it in haste.
It is the Lord's Passover.
For I will pass through the land of Egypt on that night and we'll strike all the firstborn in the land of Egypt.
Both man and Beast and against all the gods of Egypt.
I will execute judgment.
I am the Lord.
Double blood shall be a sign for you on the houses where you are.
And when I see the blood, I will pass over you and the plague will not be on you to destroy you.
When I strike the land of Egypt.
So ends, the reading of God's word.
May he bless it to our hearts?
Today.
so often when it comes to The Lord's Supper.
We focus on New Testament passages.
And the reason for that is quite simply, it was in the New Testament that the Lord instituted the Lord's Supper.
But I think it's good for us to see.
That what the Lord's Supper symbolizes and signifies was already being pictured for the Old Testament Saints.
So it's not a new idea.
Really?
It's not like we come to the New Testament and hey, there's this there's this meal for the believing community.
That no other community in the past has ever experienced.
Or ever had something that signified.
The same thing.
now, as a bit of context,
We're at the point in the book of Exodus where God has sent Moses.
He has sent him to Egypt.
Remember, Moses grew up in Pharaoh's house.
He fled after he killed an Egyptian guard and Pharaoh was coming for his head.
He remained in the Midian Wilderness for a time, and then God sent him back.
And he sent him back with a very simple message for farro.
And that message was let my people go.
And pharaoh.
We are told that Pharaoh hardened, his heart and would not let God's people go.
And so where we are now, there have been nine players that have come against Egypt.
And we are approaching the tenth plague which is the angel of death, or the death of the firstborn.
So, we are going to look particularly at the land in the Passover.
And I think it is there that we see Christ in the Passover.
2 degree, you could even say.
We see the Lord's Supper in the Passover, but we're going to focus on Christ in the Passover.
And so we do that by looking first at the need for a lamb.
Judgment is coming upon.
Egypt upon the land of Goshen.
Lambs, as we have already seen through a reading, they were part of the worship of God.
But also what will learn as as we continue reading in our Bibles, especially once you get to the later portion of Exodus and then Leviticus that, there were particular offerings that were made to atone for sin.
Not all of the sacrifices were an atonement for sin, but all of them taught that sin had to be paid for all of them taught that sin was judged.
Now, what was the sin that the land of Egypt in Goshen was going to be judged for?
At this time.
Well, it's a two-fold sin.
We could probably find many other ones, but there were at least two.
And the first is not receiving, God's word, the sin of not receiving, God's word, Moses.
And Aaron are sent to Pharaoh sent with a message of that, says the Lord, let my people go and Pharaohs.
Response is no.
I will not let your people go.
I have pyramids to build and work for them to do.
I will not listen to the Lord.
Actually.
Is his response was even more rebellious than that.
He said, who is the Lord that I should listen to him?
So no, I will not do what the Lord says.
But have you wondered, why?
And all of the other plagues there was a distinction between Egypt and Goshen where the Israelites lived for all of the other plagues.
Goshen was free.
Goshen did not experience the plague of frogs or locusts or any of the other plagues up to this point.
And yet we read
we read particularly in verse 13.
The god in judgment is even going to pass over the land of Goshen where the Israelites on.
Why is that?
Well, the reason is because this sin of not receiving, God's word was not exclusive to the Egyptians.
when God sends Moses and Aaron the Israelites even says, who are you?
Over UPS.
The Israelites.
The Israelites fail to recognize that Moses was sent as a prophet of God sent for their Deliverance.
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