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Exodus 7 Chapter 1:15-22

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The historical account of Israel's exodus from Egypt holds many lessons for the individual Christian and the corporate church in both its practical and spiritual implications.

While many use this book to promote a secular liberation gospel, with its sole emphasis upon liberty through political or societal endeavors, it is far deeper in its implications than a mere liberation from statist tyranny.
This second book of Moses details for us the glorious liberation of Israel from slavery to freedom, and from Egypt to the Promised land. While holding many lessons and case studies for us to follow, this account points beyond the history of the Hebrew people to the history, meaning and purpose of the Lord Jesus Christ.

It is the Spiritual Exodus of God's people, through the Work of the Saviour that brings them from sin's hard bondage, to regeneration, to justice, to dominion and finally to everlasting life.

In order for a tyrant to fully eradicate the threat of Christianity from their political, economic and societal realm, he must destroy that threat. It is the family that poses the greatest threat to tyrants for cultural resistance. Destroy the family, rule the world. Since the family is God's means to dominion and liberty, the Pharaohs of this world will always wage war against it.

He can do this through a variety of means. Like the Egyptian Pharaoh, and like so many national leaders of the 20th century, barbarism and murder can be successfully employed. On the other hand, a more subtle and cunning method of mass re-indoctrination of the youth poses viable options.

This lecture examines the case study of Pharaoh and the Hebrew mid-wives in relation to the ty

223091350312
41:24
Feb 22, 2009
Sunday Service
Exodus 1:15-22; Matthew 2:16-18
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