
Hosted by Kirk · EN

Families talk. We bicker, we disagree, and we stay together because we are family and we're supposed to. Yet in several instances, God's word has records of family arguments where the people involved seem to completely forget that there is a Creator God, His name is Yahweh, and He comes first - even ahead of family! When we allow ourselves to get wrapped up in family bickering - within our physical families or even our church families ... we are disrespecting & disobeying our God! Learn from the mistakes of our older brothers and sisters!

Sorry the sound is messed up on this one again. I fixed it some, and it's not too bad in the middle ... This episode is an attempt to recap the experiences of the three main characters from the burning bush, plagues, trials of desert life and dependency on God, camping at Sinai and receiving the Torah ... and now they should be ready to enter the Promised Land! God had trained them - He has given them plenty of reason to understand that He will take care of them. But then something happens... "Self Esteem" is one of the very popular false gods of our time. We are taught - sadly even in churches - that we should have "good" self-esteem. These people's esteem was spot-on: compared to the giants in the land, they looked like grasshoppers. Was that bad self image? No, it was accurate. God's people do not walk by self esteem! We walk by FAITH, which is: "God Esteem." "The man who trusts himself is a fool," wrote Solomon in the Proverbs, and it's still true. Self esteem is a god of false hope.

Okay this one is actually about the Torah itself: the law of Moses. Does it apply today? Should we post it in the courthouses of the USA? What does it have to do with anything? at least ... that's what I think this episode is about. Actually, I haven't listened to it, and don't remember what I preached about, but this seems logical.

Not much explanation necessary - the title says it all.

Not much description for this lesson ... but an apology: when getting it ready to post I did notice there were serious sound quality issues ... sorry about that!

God is a patient teacher. He wants us to understand that we can trust Him completely for everything we need. If we will learn these lessons, we will arrive at a place of peace. We will discover that we need fear nothing - be anxious for nothing - be stressed: zero. This episode of the Exodus is where God's people have escaped their bondage, been baptized in the sea, and now are on their own in the middle of nowhere in the desert. So now what? Now God begins the slow process of teaching them that they can live in the middle of a barren desert, because their strength and provisions do not come from their work, but from God's hand.

According to the Apostle Paul in his first letter to the Corinth church of Christ, all of Israel was "baptised" when they passed through the Red Sea. They symbolically had Egypt washed off, just as we also symbically wash off our sins when we are buried with Christ in baptism.

The first Passover was held on Israel's last night in Egypt, when Israel was redeemed from their slave masters. The Last Passover was held on the eve of Jesus' crucifixion. When Jesus died on the cross he bacame the lamb that was sacrificed once and for all. There no longer remained a need for the practice of the "shadow," but now the real lamb had been killed, and the true High Priest sat in the true heavenly tabernacle (the spiritual one). This episode is a slight departure from the Torah series, as it fell on Easter - but it ties-in with the principle ideas.

The final plague was when God caused the firstborn of all of Egypt to die, but He spared the Hebrews. This horrible and wonderful night has been remembered for thousands of years with a memorial meal called the "Passover." The first passover was held on the night of the Exodus. The last Passover (at least from God's point of view) was held on the night Jesus was betrayed. In this episode we remember the events of that first night.

Finally, our story begins. I'm writing this intro without having heard this lesson in a long time, so this may be a bit misleading ... but ... It helps if we remember the situation of the people when their first real encounter with Moses happens. Their kind of slavery is different than what is generally portrayed, Moses is the old man who's coming to release them by the power of the invisible God of their ancestors, and then the plagues begin. At first, things get worse - not better - and Moses is in deep trouble with everyone. What happens to people today when they transition from slavery in the world ... into the freedom of God's kingdom? Are drug addicts the only ones who have withdrawals? Were the Israelites the only ones who experienced travails? No - even Jesus went through temptations right after his baptism, and so do new disciples. If you are considering becoming a disciple, have just become one, or are walking someone else through that process ... you should know this story! It's not just about frogs, boils and blood.