Exodus
Exodus demonstrates that God keeps His covenant with Abraham by redeeming Israel from slavery through Moses, not because Israel earns deliverance through obedience, but so that a redeemed people might worship Him in the place of His presence, making the law and tabernacle the grateful response of the ransomed rather than the ladder by which sinners climb to God.
Exodus is the foundation narrative of Israel's identity and the pattern for all God's redemptive work; without it, the covenants remain disconnected promises, and the law becomes mere moral instruction rather than the ordering of a saved community. The New Testament reads Jesus as the true Passover lamb, the one who leads his people through water into freedom, and the church as the tabernacle in which God dwells, making Exodus not merely historical but constitutive of how Christians understand what Christ accomplishes. For the modern church, Exodus exposes our tendency to invert grace and law, reminding us that we obey God because we have been saved, not in order to be saved, and that worship is the purpose of our redemption.
- Read Exodus as a book about redemption and worship: God delivers Israel from slavery in order to dwell with them.
- Do not separate the law from the Exodus event; the Ten Commandments and the tabernacle instructions are the response of a redeemed people, not a program for earning salvation.
- Follow the progressive revelation of God's name and character: the God who remembers, rescues, reveals himself at Sinai, and then comes to dwell in the tabernacle.
- Notice the structural symmetry: chapters 1-18 (deliverance) mirror chapters 25-40 (tabernacle construction), with Sinai at the center.
- Read the tabernacle chapters carefully; they are not architectural detail but theology in spatial form , showing how a holy God can dwell with sinful people.
40 Chapters
- 1 Israel Multiplies Under Oppression
- 2 The Birth, Preservation, and Exile of Moses
- 3 The LORD Calls Moses from the Burning Bush
- 4 Signs, Reluctance, Covenant Blood, and Return to Egypt
- 5 Pharaoh Rejects the LORD and Increases Israel’s Burdens
- 6 The LORD Reaffirms His Name, Covenant, and Promise of Redemption
- 7 The LORD Begins to Answer Pharaoh: Signs, Hardening, and the Nile Turned to Blood
- 8 Frogs, Gnats, Flies, and the LORD’s Distinction
- 9 Livestock, Boils, Hail, and the LORD’s Sovereign Display
- 10 Locusts, Darkness, and the Signs Told to Future Generations
- 11 The Final Plague Announced
- 12 Passover, Judgment, and the Exodus from Egypt
- 13 Consecration, Remembrance, and the LORD’s Guidance
- 14 The LORD Fights for Israel at the Sea
- 15 The Song of the Sea and the Testing at Marah
- 16 Manna, Quail, and the Testing of Daily Dependence
- 17 Water from the Rock and War with Amalek
- 18 Jethro’s Counsel and Shared Leadership
- 19 At Sinai: Covenant Calling, Consecration, and the LORD’s Descent
- 20 The Ten Commandments and the Fear of the LORD
- 21 Case Laws for Covenant Justice, Human Dignity, and Restitution
- 22 Restitution, Responsibility, Social Holiness, and Compassionate Justice
- 23 Justice, Sabbath Mercy, Festivals, and Covenant Faithfulness
- 24 The Covenant Ratified and the Glory of the LORD on Sinai
- 25 The Sanctuary Pattern: Offerings, Ark, Table, and Lampstand
- 26 The Tabernacle Structure: Curtains, Coverings, Frames, Veil, and Holy Arrangement
- 27 The Altar, Courtyard, and Oil for the Lamp
- 28 Priestly Garments for Glory, Beauty, Mediation, and Holiness
- 29 The Consecration of the Priests and the LORD’s Promise to Dwell Among Israel
- 30 Incense, Atonement Money, Washing, Anointing Oil, and Holy Incense
- 31 The Craftsmen Called by the Spirit and the Sign of the Sabbath
- 32 The Golden Calf: Covenant Rebellion, Intercession, Judgment, and Mercy
- 33 The Crisis of the LORD’s Presence After the Golden Calf
- 34 The LORD Proclaims His Name and Renews the Covenant
- 35 Sabbath Rest and Willing Contributions for the Tabernacle
- 36 More Than Enough: The Construction of the Tabernacle Begins
- 37 The Ark, Table, Lampstand, Incense Altar, Anointing Oil, and Incense Are Made
- 38 The Altar, Basin, Courtyard, and Inventory of Tabernacle Materials
- 39 The Priestly Garments Completed and the Tabernacle Work Inspected
- 40 The Tabernacle Erected and Filled with the Glory of the LORD
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