Pastor Nate continues our study through the Bible in the book of Exodus.
[00:00:00] In Exodus 10, we are dropping into really the tail end of the plague series that God brought upon Pharaoh and Egypt.
[00:00:12] And we are going to begin today with looking at the A plague. And of course, the 10th plague is the last plague, the 10th plague being the plague of the Passover, which much time and space is dedicated to not only here in Exodus,
[00:00:27] but also in all of Scripture. That being said, the first 9 Plagues in one sense are different from that 10th plague. And that day are delivered in three sets of three, as I mentioned to you in our last study.
[00:00:44] The first fourth and seventh Plagues all begins. So each one of those sets of three, Plagues 1 through 3, Plagues 4 through 6 on Plagues 7 through 9, begin in the same way.
[00:00:59] In the morning Moses went out to Pharaoh and spoke the plague warning to him. Verse, excuse me, plague 1 through 3 were initiated by Aaron. Aaron's staff was held in the air. Plagues 4 through 6, there was no staff and Plagues 7 through 9, Moses's staff were hand-isused to pronounce or initiate the plague.
[00:01:29] But we went through the first 7 Plagues in our last time together. And so now here in chapter 10, we pick up the 8th plague of Locus. Let's begin by reading verse 1 and 2 together.
[00:01:41] Then the Lord said to Moses, go into Pharaoh for I have hardened his heart and the heart of his servants so that I may show these signs of mine among them.
[00:01:51] And that you may tell in the hearing of your son and of your grandson, I have dealt harshly with the Egyptians and what signs I have done among them, that you may know that I am the Lord.
[00:02:06] Now here again, God reconfirms in verse 1 that He was involved in and responsible for hardening Pharaoh's heart. Of course, Pharaoh himself over and over again has been hardening his heart but now God is hardening his heart.
[00:02:26] And as I said in our previous study, both of these are true. Pharaoh hardening his heart, God hardening Pharaoh's heart. And neither does one deny the other. It's not simply just Pharaoh doing it for a while then God doing it for a while.
[00:02:43] It seems that these things are working in tandem. They're both true simultaneously. One does not deny the other. But the big point here, in these first two verses of chapter 10, is the phrase there in verse 2 that God wants these signs done.
[00:03:03] So that you may tell in the hearing of your son and of your grandson, how I have dealt harshly with the Egyptians and what signs I have done among them, that you may know that I am the Lord.
[00:03:16] This helps us understand that these plagues were designed for judgment. And we've been focusing on that as we've gone through the plague, seeing how they were direct judgments upon the gods, the false gods of Egypt. But they were also designed as a praise report concerning God's power.
[00:03:36] In other words, God wanted these events to be told to succeed generations of the nation so that they would know the power of God.
[00:03:46] Particularly he said, your sons and your grandson. So if you think about that, this would be the generation, their sons, their grandsons, who would go into the Promised Land 40 years after this event.
[00:04:01] And what would they need? We need to know of the power of God. We need to know of the faithfulness of God.
[00:04:07] They would need to know of the ability of God to deliver them as they went into the Promised Land because in the Promised Land there were many enemies that God had decided were right for judgment.
[00:04:19] He would use the people of Israel to be his instrument of judgment upon those peoples. And so the people of Israel going into the Land of Canaan filled with even walled fortified cities would have wondered how can we possibly be victorious.
[00:04:40] Part of the reason that they should know how they be victorious is because these stories should be told to their sons and to their grandsons. Everybody was supposed to know and learn about the power of God.
[00:04:54] And for this, I think we can come to some great applications for our own lives today. First of all, I would encourage you to be a person who is constantly reading stories hearing stories of God's faithfulness. Now, I've discovered that we can do this in many ways.
[00:05:13] First of all, there's the Bible itself isn't there. The Bible has filled with stories of God's faithfulness and God's power in the lives of his people.
[00:05:23] So whether in the Old or New Testament, you won't make it very long in your daily Bible reading before you come across an individual. Or whom God has expressed his power, his mind, his majesty. And reading those stories is helpful to your faith.
[00:05:42] I would also encourage you to read and listen to the stories throughout church history.
[00:05:50] In other words, after the time of Scripture, listening to or reading the stories of what God did from the first century all the way to our modern century is also greatly edifying for the faith.
[00:06:05] I just recently completed listening through an entire college class on church history as an effort just to continually wrap myself in the stories of the ancient historic church.
[00:06:19] And overall, there was just this feeling within my heart that, you know, God is faithful. He gets his church where he wants to bring his church.
[00:06:29] And that can be a great encouragement to you. And so I'm not necessarily saying that you have to be a history buff or like dry communication about times passed, but someone who's interested in the stories of the faith from previous generations.
[00:06:47] The biographies and autobiographies of past saints, the stories of God is done throughout church history. These things can be greatly helpful to you and your faith. Also, hearing the stories from your fellow believer. People that are around you today and Christ Jesus, these stories can be greatly edifying.
[00:07:07] And they can work themselves out then in power in your own life. I remember a little episode in the Gospels, I think in particular it's recorded in Mark chapter 5 where Jesus went to the Seasure in Copernium and was met by a huge crowd.
[00:07:27] And in the crowd, there was a woman who had a flow of blood for 12 years. And she wanted to be healed and had spent money on all kinds of physicians to try to get better but to no avail.
[00:07:40] Well, when the crowd approached Jesus, the most prominent man in the community, a man named Jyrus, the ruler of the synagogue, came forward and told Jesus that his 12-year-old daughter was lying home ill at the point of death.
[00:07:58] And Jesus committed to going with Jyrus to heal this little girl or to be with this little girl. Now on the way, the woman with the flow of blood, she touched Jesus's garment.
[00:08:12] And the power was released from him and she was healed. Jesus stopped and asked, who touched me? Who touched me today? The disciples said,
[00:08:24] You mean who touched you? People are pressing up against you. And Jesus said, no but I perceived today the power has gone from me. Who touched me? And the woman who had the flow of blood, but was now healed privately by Jesus.
[00:08:39] Her story became public. And Jesus said to her, daughter, go your way, your faith has made you well. Now in part, don't you think that Jyrus was a little bothered by this delay?
[00:08:55] He wanted Jesus to meet with his 12-year-old girl, but Jesus wanted to talk with this woman who'd been healed of a 12-year-old affliction.
[00:09:05] But Jyrus needed faith. And the story of the woman whom Jesus called daughter would build up Jyrus' faith for his daughter, who was at home, no longer sick, but now dead.
[00:09:20] And so when Jesus came to the home, he said, only believe she is not dead but sleeping only believe. You see I think that story of the woman was designed to help Jyrus in his faith and in his situation.
[00:09:36] And for that I just would continue to encourage you to read, listen to, get around the stories of what God has done and is doing in the lives of his people.
[00:09:47] But also be remiss not to say, and I don't want to spend too much time here on only these first two verses since we've got a bit of ground to cover in this teaching, but tell your children about God's power.
[00:09:58] Tell the next generation about who God is, teach them about God.
[00:10:04] Let's move on into passage. Though verse 3, it says, so Moses and Aaron went in to Pharaoh and set to him. Thus says the Lord, the God of the Hebrews, how long will you refuse to humble yourself before me?
[00:10:19] Let my people go that they may serve me. For if you refuse to let my people go, behold tomorrow I will bring locusts into your country and they shall cover the face of the land so that no one can see the land.
[00:10:30] And they shall eat what is left to you after the hail and they shall eat every tree of yours that grows in the field.
[00:10:37] And they shall fill your houses and the houses of all your servants and of all the Egyptians as neither your fathers nor your grandfather's have seen from the day they came on earth to this day.
[00:10:48] Then he turned and went out from Pharaoh. So Moses delivered to Pharaoh the prediction that a plague was coming to eighth plague and that it would be locusts like had never been seen before in Egypt consuming everything.
[00:11:04] Then Pharaoh's servants verse 7, said to him, how long shall this man be a snare to us? Let the men go that they may serve the Lord their God. Do you not yet understand that Egypt is ruined?
[00:11:20] Now Moses had asked the question, how long until you submit to God's request, to God's demand and now these servants of Pharaoh. This is fascinating. His servants, some of them, perhaps the magician who had previously been able to work various miracles.
[00:11:41] But it's very notable that these servants of Pharaoh actually stand up to a degree against Pharaoh. But agree a little bit with Pharaoh and say, how long will this man be a snare to us? Moses asked how long will you resist?
[00:11:58] God, they ask how long will this man be a snare to us? Their whole concept or reason for saying this in verse 7 is, do you not yet understand that Egypt is ruined?
[00:12:12] So they're trying to persuade Pharaoh to change his position. By this stage, these servants of Pharaoh were convinced of the folly of trying to stop the Israelites from going and worshiping God.
[00:12:27] They now are ready to submit to God. When common sense is rejected because of hardness of heart, you know that a time of real darkness has come. And that seems to be what has occurred here with Pharaoh.
[00:12:42] But common sense would have told him to let these people go. But instead of hardness of heart has come upon him and he's unwilling to submit to God. So Moses, verse 8 and Aaron were brought back to Pharaoh and he said to them, go serve the Lord your God.
[00:13:00] But which ones are to go? And Moses said, we will go with our young and our old. We will go with our sons and daughters and with our flocks and herds.
[00:13:10] And Moses heard for we must hold a feast to the Lord. But he said to them, the Lord be with you if I ever, I let you and your little ones go, look, you have some evil purpose in my know.
[00:13:25] And then, go, the men among you and serve the Lord for that is what you are asking. And they were driven out from Pharaoh's presence. Now here Pharaoh tries to compromise or negotiate with Moses. He asks which ones are to go there in verse 8.
[00:13:49] As if Pharaoh doesn't know what they've already been requesting over and over again. Moses has made it clear. God says, let my people go. This means men and women and children. Everyone is supposed to go and worship the Lord.
[00:14:05] Pharaoh refuses, he's obstinate and there in verse 11 he says, the men among you go, not the women and not the children but the men only.
[00:14:16] And so what Pharaoh is offering to Moses and Aaron is partial obedience, partial obedience. He was prepared to let the men go but the women and the children had to remain behind.
[00:14:32] Now I've found that the enemy of our souls loves to offer God's people partial obedience. You know, being God in one area of life and disobeying God in another major area of life.
[00:14:48] For instance, in our modern times it's not difficult to find someone who is naming the name of Christ saying that they are a believer saying that they are a Christian.
[00:15:00] Who then, privately, perhaps not even to their pastor but I've had this conversation with people who would call me their pastor or know that I am a pastor.
[00:15:10] Who will confess and say that they've worked it out before God that they're allowed to sleep with their boyfriend or their girlfriend or cohabitate.
[00:15:21] They've worked it out, they know the teaching of the Bible, they know the teaching of the church but in this one area of life, they've worked it out with God and they feel okay with the decision that they've made.
[00:15:37] But this is partial obedience. Now of course we understand we're never going to perfectly obey God on this side of eternity, but we certainly want to live lives where all known sin is dealt with before God and certainly major areas of rebellion that we just give up and say I've worked it out before God should be absent from our lives.
[00:16:01] Here Moses was offered partial obedience but he refused. Then the Lord, verse 12, said to Moses, stretch out your hand over the land of Egypt for the locust so that they may come upon the land of Egypt and eat every plant in the land all that the hail is left.
[00:16:21] So Moses stretched out his staff over the land of Egypt and the Lord brought an east wind upon the land all that day and all that night when it was morning the east wind had brought the locusts.
[00:16:33] The locust came up over all the land of Egypt and settled on the whole country of Egypt, such as dense swarm of locusts as had never been before nor ever will be again.
[00:16:46] They covered the face of the whole land so that the land was darkened and they ate all the plants in the land and all the fruit of the trees that the hail had left.
[00:16:56] Not a green thing remain neither tree nor plant of the field through all the land of Egypt. So here the locusts come in and invade the land of Egypt and decimate the vegetation.
[00:17:14] Now there were of course gods that the Egyptians worshiped of the sky which could do nothing, gods of the crops which also could do nothing and could not prevent this destruction.
[00:17:27] I also should just point out that many of these events or these plagues they also remind us of the book of Revelation, the destruction of vegetation.
[00:17:40] Now the part of the reason I mentioned that at this point is because often people will look at the book of Revelation particularly chapter 6 through 18 which in which there is cataclysmic judgment and apocalyptic language.
[00:17:57] And we'll feel that certainly these must be purely symbolic things that John has written in the book of Revelation. But we don't go back to the book of Exodus and say that these are, this is a pachaliptic language. These are clearly symbolic events that occurred.
[00:18:18] The vegetation was literally struck by these locists as they entered in. So I don't think it's all that wild to expect that some of these events will literally unfold just as the book of Revelation for tells.
[00:18:36] And so just pointing out the similarities here between the plagues of Exodus and the Tribulation Time described in Revelation 6 through 18.
[00:18:48] Then verse 16, Pharaoh hastily called Moses and said, I have sinned against the Lord your God and against you. Now therefore forgive my sin. Please only this once and plead with the Lord your God only to remove this death from me.
[00:19:05] So he went out from Pharaoh and pleaded with the Lord. And the Lord turned the wind into a very strong west wind which lifted the locusts and drove them into the Red Sea.
[00:19:16] Not a single locust was left in all the country of Egypt but the Lord hard and Pharaoh's heart and he did not let the people of Israel go. Moses had increased in stature for Pharaoh to the point that Pharaoh comes to him as if Moses is God himself, a priest of God. He says, forgive my sin.
[00:19:42] You know, as God to forgive my sin, please only this once forgive my sin. But then after a bit of reprieve since Moses does intercede for him and God holds back his judgment.
[00:19:57] Pharaoh's heart was hardened even further. Here it says that the Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart. He's intermixing with Pharaoh himself and he's hardened this man's heart. Then the Lord said to Moses verse 21, stretch out your hand toward heaven that there may be darkness over the land of Egypt, a darkness to be felt.
[00:20:18] So Moses stretched out his hand toward heaven and there was pitch darkness in all the land of Egypt three days. They did not see one another in order to anyone rise from his place for three days, but all the people of Israel had light where they lived.
[00:20:32] Then Pharaoh called Moses and said, go serve the Lord. Your little ones also may go with you only let your flocks and your herds remain behind. But Moses said, you must also let us have sacrifices in burn offerings that we may sacrifice of the Lord our God.
[00:20:48] Our livestock also must go with us. Not a hoof shall be left behind, for we must take of them to serve the Lord our God and we do not know what we must serve the Lord until we arrive there. But the Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart and he would not let them go.
[00:21:05] Then Pharaoh said to him, get away from me, take care never to see my face again. For on the day you see my face you shall die. Moses said, as you say, I will not see your face again.
[00:21:21] Now if you comment about this final plague that is predicted or this ninth plague before the Passover is predicted, first of all it will be a darkness that is to be felt. In other words, it says, if God is reversing creation right in front of them, the God who said, let there be light is now removing that light.
[00:21:44] The world as they knew it was unraveling as a result of their hardness of heart and unwillingness to submit to God. And that darkness that can be felt, it almost seems as if God is letting them in on reality. They have pursued darkness. They haven't lived in darkness.
[00:22:07] Now God is letting them see the darkness, feel the darkness as a darkness that can be felt an ominous term. It just seems as if God is letting them in on the reality in which they exist.
[00:22:22] Now Israel here in verse 23 we learned would have light. There is a difference in other words and a little passage like this might remind the church of the modern era that we are called to be a light in a dark world we have the light.
[00:22:42] He tells them in verse 24, Pharaoh trying to give the temptation of partial obedience again says only let your herds remain. So yes you can go with the women and you can go with the children but leave behind your flocks.
[00:22:59] Again partial obedience and here it's partial obedience in the realm of their finances. They would go worship God but they not bring their finances with them. And this is when you can really begin discovering who a disciple is when Christ begins to become the king over their finances.
[00:23:23] But then Pharaoh says, or excuse me Moses responds and says, you must also let us have sacrifices and burn offering. In other words, Moses knew that their worship would be costly. He didn't know how much or he didn't know what God would require. So we said we've got to bring all of it in case God wants all of it.
[00:23:43] And when Pharaoh heard all of this from Moses he said, you'll never see my face again and Moses agreed he said, I will not see your face again. It's a striking conclusion to this whole passage. This indicates the different kind of end than the other sets of three plays.
[00:24:11] The others it was the hardening of Pharaoh's heart but here it's a final end. They will not see each other after this event. Now in chapter 11 Moses is still interacting with Pharaoh. So there is a question here did Moses and Pharaoh see each other after this big dramatic moment you will not see my face ever again. And Moses says, it is as you say, I will not see your face again.
[00:24:40] Did they then reconvene later and the drama of the moment was let down what's going on? Some say, well, they did see each other again but instead of in previous time for there was a merciful warning from Moses attached. It would only be judgment. There was no way to repent. But it also seems very possible if not very natural that what happens in chapter 11 is just the conclusion of the
[00:25:10] last conversation together and that's how I read chapter 11. And so with that let's check it out in verse 1 of chapter 11.
[00:25:20] It says the Lord said to Moses, yet one plague more I will bring upon Pharaoh and upon Egypt. Afterward he will let you go from here. When he lets you go he will drive you away completely.
[00:25:33] Speak now in the hearing of the people that they ask every man of his neighbor and every woman of her neighbor for silver and gold jewelry.
[00:25:40] And the Lord gave the people favor in the sight of the Egyptians. More over the man Moses was very great in the land of Egypt and the sight of Pharaoh's servants and in the sight of the people.
[00:25:51] So here God speaks to Moses and let's him know there's one more plague. Now this point Egypt has been decimated by the three by three plagues, by the first nine plagues. And there's great fear in the general population. People are nervous about what's going to happen next.
[00:26:12] And God tells Moses that there is one plague more. Now this is partly interesting because God never told Moses at the beginning how many plagues there would be.
[00:26:23] But now he announces to Moses that the final plague has come. Now in the midst of all this God tells Moses that after this final plague, the Egyptians are going to send the people of Israel out of Egypt and that Pharaoh is going to give him command that they go.
[00:26:46] It seems that the people, the population in Egypt was very prepared to support the Israel-I ambitions to get out of Egypt to worship the Lord. God had prepared them for this and it given the people of Israel favor in the sight of the Egyptians.
[00:27:07] They would eventually donate lots of wealth to the people of Israel as they departed. This is more than just the turning of the tide or the overturning of the tables or the changing of fortunes.
[00:27:21] It's actually God providing for the worship and the journey that the people of Israel were about to go on. But again, the favor of the Lord would be upon his people.
[00:27:34] But we concluded that little paragraph in verse 3 by seeing that the man Moses was very great in the land of Egypt. There was just reverence for who Moses was, by this point, especially by the servants of Pharaoh who wanted Pharaoh to let them go.
[00:27:51] They'd seen Moses work in miraculous ways. Now this is beautiful because it helps us see that God was busy raising Moses up. He was taken this unqualified man and he'd used his life greatly.
[00:28:09] But this is beautiful partly because remember earlier in Moses's life when he was 40, he assumed that God was going to use his life. He could easily imagine being used in this way when he was 40 years old.
[00:28:26] But at 80 at the burning bush, he doubted that God could use his life in this way. But God had done it. He had raised up his humble servant as the greatest man in Egypt at that time.
[00:28:41] James 4 verse 10 says, humble yourselves before the Lord and he will exalt you. Too many people are running around trying to build their own name, build their own brand, build their own fame, their own glory and their own honor.
[00:29:04] Rather than simply humbling themselves before the Lord, allowing the Lord to be the one to exalt them. So here this man of holiness, this man of consecration, Moses is used by God. He's raised up in the sight of the Egyptians.
[00:29:21] So Moses said, thus says the Lord, about midnight I will go out in the midst of Egypt and every firstborn in the land of Egypt shall die.
[00:29:33] From the firstborn of Pharaoh who sits on his throne even to the firstborn of the slave girl who is by hand milling all the firstborn of the cattle.
[00:29:41] There shall be a great cry throughout all the land of Egypt such as there has never been nor ever will be again. Here Moses communicates what this final plague will be. At midnight God will unleash death upon Egypt, every firstborn in the land of Egypt would die.
[00:30:11] Now in our modern world this would be a terrible event. But it was made even more dramatic in that ancient world because the firstborn held a position of great prominence that we normally don't hold. The firstborn was the heir of the estate.
[00:30:31] The firstborn was the one to carry on the family name, particularly in Barrow's house. The firstborn was the future monarch that the people of Egypt would bow down to in reverence and even worship. It would be a real miracle to be an old man in the world.
[00:30:58] You have to believe that the people of Egypt are even on down into the livestock that people owned. Speaks of a terrible event for the people. This would be a heavy moment, a moment of great despair and grief in the land of Egypt.
[00:31:15] And perhaps think about all of the plays. There might be a sense within our hearts of wondering, or questioning, how could God, our father and heaven, the good and gracious God, slow to anger, an abounding and loving kindness? How could he do things like this?
[00:31:36] Now, of course, we have to remember that God is right and everything he does is good. He is holy and righteous in all his ways. He's incapable of evil. He's a pure eyes than to even behold evil as the prophet Habitat once said.
[00:31:56] And of course, throughout the whole text, we know that God had given Pharaoh many opportunities to humble himself, but still he thought highly of himself and his gods that he worshiped. God had been warning Pharaoh about all of this from the very beginning.
[00:32:16] All the way back from Exodus chapter 4, verse 22 and 23, God had warned him that a first-born son would die. So Pharaoh had ample opportunity to repent of his sin.
[00:32:29] And of course, we know from looking at the cross that God is good in that he not only did this event, but he ultimately sent his first-born son to die on the cross for our sin. We have to remember these things about God when this judgment is unleashed.
[00:32:51] I think a similar moment is found in our time frame of our walk with God today. You see, we're in a period of grace. We're in the age of the church. We're in the age where God's spirit is willing and drawing people to himself.
[00:33:07] And that grace and mercy that he gives to us as a result of that gospel message, it's powerful. We become new creatures in Christ Jesus. All things pass away in all things become new. And we understand God is long-suffering and patient.
[00:33:24] And hopefully with that patience, we become repentant and we come towards Him. But when we see the words of Jesus, the preparation that's given to us in the epistles and the book of Revelation, we understand that a time of coming judgment will occur eventually
[00:33:43] God's long-suffering will give way to God's justice. And here that seems to be what is happening in Egypt at this time. Enough is enough and it's time for one final harsh plague to be unleashed so that Pharaoh will finally submit
[00:34:00] and the world will know that there is a God greater than any God in Egypt, including Pharaoh himself. Now when this occurred, when this horrible final plague occurred, Moses went on to say in verse 7,
[00:34:18] but not a dog shall grow against any of the people of Israel, either man or beast. You may know that the Lord makes a distinction between Egypt and Israel. And all these your servants shall come down to me and bow down to me saying,
[00:34:35] get out you and all the people who follow you. And after that I will go out and he went out from Pharaoh in hot anger. A here, Moses announces that God is going to make a distinction between the Egyptians and the Israelites. His covenant people will be protected.
[00:34:57] Moses says, he says it in an artistic way when he says not even a dog will grow against any of the people. Now this happened to a degree with some of the previous plagues. When the flies struck, the livestock, the hailed came, the darkness came,
[00:35:14] when the boils were unleashed and the locust came, it seems that God protected the people of Israel in a unique way. There were some plagues that they endured just like Egypt did and there were others that they were protected from.
[00:35:29] But this is a theme throughout this whole passage. God is watching over his people. He is caring for his flock. And so God is going to protect them in this final plague, this final judgment as well.
[00:35:50] And of course this will lead to the ultimate protection of God when they will be able to leave Egypt entirely and deliver his people completely. And again, this is the way it is in our Christian life at times.
[00:36:05] At times we go through trials that everyone else on Earth goes through. At times we go through trials that are unique to us because we're God's people, trials like persecution. At times we will be protected from trials that other people endure.
[00:36:23] And ultimately we will be delivered from the coming wrath to come. Now when Moses said all of these things to Pharaoh, we already read it there at the end of verse 8, it says that he went out from Pharaoh in hot anger.
[00:36:44] I wonder if Moses thought about the stupidity and the waste of all those lives that were lost because Pharaoh would not simply let God's people go. With this final pronouncement, Moses leaves Pharaoh angry because of this man's stubbornness.
[00:37:05] Angry because of this man's hardness of hardness, this is righteous indignation that Moses is experiencing. And as a result of Pharaoh's unwillingness, his people, the Egyptians, were going to be put through a terrible expression of God's power. After this, Israelites would leave.
[00:37:29] So it says then in verse 9, then the Lord said to Moses, Pharaoh will not listen to you. That my wonders may be multiplied in the land of Egypt. Moses and Aaron did all these wonders before Pharaoh.
[00:37:44] And the Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart, and he did not let the people of Israel go out of his hand. So again, the Lord hardening the heart of Pharaoh. The promise is that Pharaoh would not listen to the promise.
[00:38:00] Would not listen to the predictions of what was to come. His hardness and his refusal led to the display of God's power before Christ. God's power before Egypt and before the world. God would become known as powerful in part because of this man's folly.
[00:38:17] He would use this man as an example for all. And this summary is meant to recall the entire previous narrative and add justification for the calamity, the terrible nature of the judgment that is to come.
[00:38:37] Instead of humility or repentance or submission, Pharaoh behaved in pride and in self justification and expressed his own lordship over his own life. You know for us as we consider this man, Pharaoh, I wonder if often we've felt ourselves similar to this man.
[00:39:06] The Lord working, perhaps not as drastically as he did with the plagues. But in different ways to try to bring us to a place of brokenness, a place of humility, a place of repentance, a place of submission to him.
[00:39:25] And rather than do these things we become hard within our hearts. No God, there's my way. There's the way that I choose. I will be the Lord of my life. But just as occurred with Pharaoh so we often experience we bring greater pain into our lives
[00:39:45] when we self-govern. Refuse to submit ourselves to his way and allow ourselves to be the Lord. It actually leads to great pain in our lives. We need to be better for us to submit to God.

