IS EGYPT BURNING?

The lunacy of sin and the hardness of an unrepentant heart. Pharaoh brings his house down upon himself by his own choice.

“Is Paris burning?” was a command attributed to Adolf Hitler. He wanted to ensure his henchmen burned Paris to the ground in August 1944 as Paris fell to the Allies. If Hitler couldn’t have Paris, no one would. In Exodus 11, if Pharaoh can’t control the Israelites, he decides no one will. His dynasty thought nothing of ordering the genocide of all the Israelite baby boys. In the mind of Pharaoh, the Israelite people are commodities. They belong to him alone. This demonstrates the lunacy of sin and the hardness of an unrepentant heart. Pharaoh brings his house down upon himself by his own choice. Egypt will figuratively burn in Exodus 11:1-10.

SUFFICIENT WARNING GIVEN

It is not as if Pharaoh is not given sufficient warning, but he consistently denies God. Three times, Exodus mentions that Pharaoh hardens his own heart; six times there is a general reference that his heart’s condition is hard. Given opportunity after opportunity to repent, Pharaoh allows the concrete of his heart to solidify, regardless of the warnings. Judgment barrels down the tracks.

GOD COMES TO TOWN

God speaks, demonstrates, and warns. The earlier genocide of the Israelite baby boys ironically brings an equivocal death blow to Pharaoh’s own people. The first born of every Egyptian household will die. Pharaoh stands alone against Jehovah God; the gauntlet thrown down. In paraphrase, God declares: “You won’t let My people go out of Egypt? I’m coming to Egypt. I’m coming to the midst of Egypt.” God comes to town.

WORSHIP IN THE MIDST OF DEATH

Amazingly, “when does the judgment of God come against Egypt and the deliverance of God come for Israel? In the midst of worship. As the sacrifice is being lifted up, as the Passover lamb is being slaughtered, the angel of death comes. Judgment and deliverance are accomplished by sacrifice and plague. God will not be trifled with. Those who resist Him and mock do not possess the last laugh.” (Bill Sytsma)

THE GIFT OF 400 YEARS OF WAGES

After this last plague, the Egyptians rush to remove the Israelites from their country. Over four hundred years ago, in Genesis 15:13-14, God told Abram that the children of Israel would come out of the land of their oppression with many possessions. Now, God instructs Moses to tell the people to ask their Egyptian neighbors to give them gold and silver. The people of Egypt do so willingly. The Israelite slaves of Egypt receive their past wages accumulated from 400 years of slavery. They don’t leave Egypt empty-handed.

GOD WILL DO THE FIGHTING FOR US

God figuratively burns down the house of Pharaoh in one night. “This is how things go when we fight on God’s side. Our job is not to fight. Our job is to be faithful, and He will do the fighting for us. And this is a good thing because when He does the fighting, victory is certain.” (Jonathan Waits)

THE CHOICE

Pharaoh burnt down his own house. We have a choice. Do you choose to serve the same Sovereign God of Abraham, Jacob and Moses? Whatever life situation you are in right now, regardless of the odds that appear against you, entrust it to God, lock stock and barrel. When you go through deep waters, I will be with you. When you go through rivers of difficulty, you will not drown. When you walk through the fire of oppression, you will not be burned up; the flames will not consume you. (Isaiah 43:10)

KICK BUTT AND TAKE NAMES, JESUS’ WAY, OF COURSE

Why is stepping out in faith so hard sometimes? Even if you feel the nudging of Jesus, it’s just terrifying.

Why is stepping out in faith so hard sometimes? Even if you feel the nudging of Jesus, it’s just terrifying. If you are like me, stepping out in faith can be frightening. Whether stepping out in faith with your job or your new enterprise, it is hard, especially when you want to control every aspect of your life. I knew God was calling me to step out in faith to expand my small business and start selling at another store, but doing it was entirely different.

I STRUGGLED

I had a million ideas, questions, and concerns running through my head. Will I make my rent? Will people like my stuff and what happens if not a single one of my journals or stickers sells?

If I’m being 100 percent transparent, I struggled to see how everything would work with the new shop. I had faith, but the number of sales wasn’t that same at my other store. 

STEPPING OUT WHEN IT IS TERRIFYING

One day, as I struggled to figure out how everything would work out, one of my stickers sold. It’s one of my favorites, and it’s perfect to share with you today. The sticker reads, “Kick butt and take names, Jesus’ way, of course”. Translation: defeat someone or something decisively, but only by the power of Jesus. Stepping out in faith requires relying on God and not ourselves. It requires us to step out even when it is terrifying and we can’t see the road ahead.

THE STORY OF RUTH

Someone who could not see the road ahead was freshly widowed Ruth in the Bible. She stepped out in faith, left the town she knew, and went to an unknown location. Ruth told her mother-in-law: “Don’t urge me to leave you or to turn back from you. Where you go, I will go, and where you stay, I will stay. Your people will be my people, and your God will be my God.” (Ruth 1:16) 

Ruth decided she would follow God and travel to the unknown. The trip carried her to Bethlehem, her mother-in-law’s hometown. Ruth trusted, believing the Lord would provide, and He did. Because of her faithfulness, Ruth met her husband, Boaz. This remarkable man is noted in Jesus’s lineage.

RUTH’S DECISION

Sometimes, we don’t see in the beginning how our faithfulness will play out. Ruth didn’t either. She didn’t know how choosing to follow Jesus and leaving her town would end, but she did it anyway. Ruth followed my sticker, she “kicked butt and took names, Jesus’ way, of course”. You can step out in faith. It’s a choice.

For an inspiring testimony of active faith listen to an interview with Gracia Burnham