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Do you remember a scene like this, from a classic Western?
A canyon wall to the left, a cliff to the right, the way blocked to the front, and pursuers approaching fast from behind—the proverbial "between a rock and a hard place." It kind of sounds like how we feel when facing a trial, does it not? Surrounded on three sides, with pursuers behind. It sounds like what we face when we are trying to overcome and grow, does it not? It may not be a huge trial; but we are still trying to overcome our problems (our sins), and we feel like we have hit a blank wall. And what do we do? How do we overcome? Well, you know, the Bible has its own version of this scenario—the old 'boxed canyon' scenario. It occurred just about this time of the year—on the last day of Unleavened Bread, we believe, as the Israelites were about to march completely out of the land of Egypt. Since this is "meat in due season," I thought that it would be a good idea to see what lessons we can learn from the crossing of the Red Sea. For the Israelites, this was a literal escape from "boxed canyon." For a moment, before we go any further with the Red Sea, let us just consider that this occurs at the end of the week of Unleavened Bread—not at the beginning. Now, this should give us a little bit of pause. If the Days of Unleavened Bread picture the coming out of sin (which they do), then think about it. This happened on the last day of Unleavened Bread, which is the end of that period of time where we picture coming out of sin. And here God had to deliver them from a very big problem, by His wondrous works. If we put our own lives in there, let us say that the week of Unleavened Bread pictures our entire life of overcoming. Coming out of Egypt, at the beginning, we came out with a high hand. We came out with a wonderful attitude. We were up. But over the course of time, as we near the end of that time of overcoming, things changed somewhat. The problems seemed to get quite a bit more difficult. And maybe our attitude towards them seems to change. We seem to be, maybe, a little bit more tired. We are tired of having to face the problems—not just tired because we are older and maybe need a little bit more help. We do not maybe have all the resources that we once had to solve the problems. Let us go to Numbers 33, to begin. Many of you know, by memory, what Numbers 33 is. It is the reviewing of the journeys of Israel as they came out of Egypt, going to the Promised Land. I want to read verses 3 and 4.
This is a very concise description of the events of the first day of Unleavened Bread. Now, look at the tone of that. They came out with a high hand. They were very bold (as the New King James says). They were happy. They were free! They had just been redeemed. They had gone through the terrible plagues—especially the plague of the firstborn. They had gone through the Passover ritual. They had gotten the permission of Pharaoh to leave. They had plundered the Egyptians—and been "paid," as it were, for their many years of slavery to them. This was a great thing that happened! And they were happy! They were just ready to (I do not know) walk all the way to Canaan—that first day. Of course, their trial at that time was actually walking out of Egypt. They had to walk. They had to go through the steps; but they were engaged in this—and they were thrilled to be going through it. Also, it is very interesting just to note that, in verse 4, Moses adds here, "also on their gods the LORD had executed judgments." Think of this, also, in terms of our spiritual journey to the Kingdom. When we are first called and baptized, and this journey begins—we are of the mind that God, indeed, had executed judgments on our false gods. He had convinced us that the way we had been living before—the way of idolatry, the way of worshipping false gods—was wrong. And we, in our first love, in our zeal, had seen them (in our mind's eye) thrown down. God had executed judgments on them—just by revealing Himself and His way of life, and showing their folly and worthlessness. And we are thrilled that we have left that behind. So we walk out of our own spiritual Rameses, feeling just great—that God has called us. We are willing to take on whatever it is that God happens to place in our way. Let us go to Exodus 12, and see another little detail here. We will start reading in verse 37. This is that same thing—they were coming out of Egypt, on that first day of Unleavened Bread.
They did not want to wait. They wanted to get out, as quickly as possible.
So there is also a solemn aspect to all of this, because of what had been wrought in Egypt—what had been necessary to redeem them, to free them, and to bring them out. But it is God's actions on this particular night that I want to highlight. Early in our conversion, we are very aware (in our first love) of God watching. That is what it basically says here. We observe this night because God observed His people going out of Egypt. You see—God was there. He was involved. He was so involved that it says (back in Exodus 11:7), when He was telling Moses what was going to happen, He said, "Not even a dog will wag his tongue against you." (Meaning, not even a dog will bark as you leave Egypt.) That is how closely God supervised their leaving. So this just adds another bit of information about how they came out with such a high hand. They were aware that God was watching over them. And in our first love, we have this feeling of closeness with God. That He is there—guiding us, watching over us. That He is going to get us out. And He has gotten us out. So the whole attitude of the first day of Unleavened Bread (in this "type") is one of joyous boldness. The idea of being thrilled—with just a tinge of the solemnity of what it took for God to make our redemption possible. We have just been through the Passover service, which is a very solemn occasion. And then, we kind of 'let it all go' on the first day of Unleavened Bread—on the other end, of the joy and the thrill of being free and walking out of Egypt. And, let me must add another point to that: We are thrilled because God has greased the way. We are thrilled because we see how much God has made our opportunity to work. He has just opened everything up, and we go through the gates without much problem—because He is doing so much of the work for us. And, basically, all we have to do is walk, and continue to go on the path that He has laid out for us. And my point here—comparing the first day of Unleavened Bread and the last Day of Unleavened Bread—is that walking out of Satan's world is often easier for us than it is staying out—because of the trials that come on us later. We have kind of set the scene now for the Red Sea crossing, because it is important to see how this came about.
Most of you probably have a map in the back of your Bibles; and it would probably be a good idea just to check that at this point. Refresh your memory about the topography of the land. You probably see on the map the Nile delta. It was in the eastern part of the Nile delta where the Israelites lived. It was in one of the best parts of Egypt—one of the most fertile. And it was also the frontier of Egypt—where the land of Egypt ended; and either their provinces, or other nations', began. So this was right in a very good spot for getting into the land of Canaan. You will probably see on the map that they have a town there called "Succoth." That means, in Hebrew, "tents" or "booths." We keep the feast of "succoths" in the fall—the Feast of Tabernacles. It is that same word. And that was, basically, the place where they were all to meet. And then, from there (once everybody got together, all the Israelites), Moses led them out of Egypt. And they got to Succoth pretty much the first night, on their first day of travel; and then they went on to other places (Etham, and then on from there.) God says, in Exodus 13:17, that He did not lead them by the direct route to Canaan. It was called "the way of the land of the Philistines" (or, "the way of the Philistines"). It was also called by the Romans, later on, "the Via Maris." ("Via" meaning "the way of;" and "maris" means "sea." It was the way of the sea.) This was a very important route between Egypt and the rest of the world—especially the rest of the civilized world, along the Fertile Crescent that goes up along the coast of Canaan, and then up into Assyria, and then down the Tigris and Euphrates River. So, this was a major trade route. It was also a major war route between Egypt and the rest of the civilized world, particularly Mesopotamia. The Egyptians at this time (from what we gather) were quite strong militarily. They had jurisdiction, basically, over most of Canaan at the time—even though they may not have been there physically. Their power was such that, when you came down that far, you had to worry about Egypt. The Philistines were at the other end of this Via Maris, in Canaan. We all remember the Philistines (basically, for all the wars that they fought against Israel). The Philistines were the ones that put Goliath up against David; and David fought against the Philistines for quite a few years—as did Saul, before him. The judges also had their problems with the Philistines. The Philistines were so war-like that when Joshua finally brought the Israelites into Canaan, they avoided going into Philistine lands. God told them that all the land was theirs; but the way it worked out was that they had a hard time getting those Philistines out. And they never really did. So, God said, "I've got the way of the land of the Philistines here to use; but I'm not going to do it—because, for one thing, there are Egyptian fortifications that way. And, once they get to the end of it, there are Philistine fortifications there. Even if they get pass the Egyptians, they are going to have to fight the Philistines. And they don't know war. They've been slaves all of their lives. They don't even really have anybody to lead them into war." "So," He said, "I'll just avoid that and send them another way." He did not want to discourage them right out of the box. But on the other hand, He was setting things up for the Red Sea. He wanted to manipulate events His own way. So He said that He would not send them by way of the Philistines. Here we have another typical lesson: Early in our journey to the Kingdom of God, God picks ourpath very carefully. God is the One that is setting our maneuvers towards the Kingdom. And He looks out for us. He does not want to discourage us early on. He does not want to give us such a big trial, right away, that we cannot face it; and we will be discouraged and go back to Satan's world without a fight. So, generally, God gives us "easy" things early on. I put "easy" in quotes, because I know that, with that little experience in God's way, even easy things are not really easy. They might be easy for us looking back, fifteen or twenty years down the road. But having to go to a boss about the Sabbath, or suddenly learning about second or third tithe (or something like that), might seem pretty hard; but, in the long run, they are fairly easy—or should be. Let us go to Psalms 107, and we'll see a little bit about how God works with us. We will read the first nine verses. Look how the psalmist here (whoever it was) gets things in proper perspective.
They were looking for the same city, basically, that Abraham was—even though they really did not understand that they were doing that. But that is the illustration here.
Now verse 7, which is really the part that I want to get.
This is using the illustration of the Israelites coming out of Egypt, in this reflection of how God works with us. Verse 7 says, "He lead them forth by the right way." It is always the right way when God is leading. And even though He led them away from trouble in the north (on the Via Maris), and led them into trouble in the south (at the Red Sea), it was still "the right way"—because He was leading, and He was guiding. And, as the psalmist says here: Give thanks to the Lord for that—because it is good. He is good! And the result of what He is trying to get out of it is filling our hungry soul with goodness. And He will do whatever wonderful works it takes to accomplish that.
We are told to walk by faith, and not by sight, but God had quite a bit of mercy on Israel. They had a visual aid that was there all the time—by day and by night, a cloud or a pillar of fire. All they had to do was look up, and their faith could be bolstered. God was in that cloud. God was in that pillar of fire. He was there with them all the time—throughout forty years of wandering. They could see Him leading—minute by minute. It says in another place that if the cloud went up, they got ready. When it moved, they moved on. When it stopped, they stopped. And they did this for forty years. All they had to do was "look up;" and God was there. Now, can we apply this to ourselves? He is with us just as surely as He was with the Israelites coming out of Egypt—except He is not there visibly. Let us go to Isaiah 41. Think of this, not in terms of Israel, but in terms of the Israel of God.
Are we not the descendants of Abraham—according to the books of Romans and Galatians? We are of the seed of Abraham if we believe.
So He promises us (as the Israel of God) strength, help, and support. What more do we need? Do we really need a pillar of cloud and a pillar of fire? We should not. Jesus said to Thomas, "Blessed are those who do not see, yet believe." Let us go to Haggai. Let us think of this in terms of a work that we have to do.
We could say that about the works of the churches now. There was a work that was done years ago, now. Think of it—that was fourteen years ago, when Herbert Armstrong died; and he did a great work. We had nice buildings, nice campuses. Everything seemed "glorious," in many respects. And now we look on the works we can accomplish now; and they seem like nothing.
He connects it right back to what we are talking about to day. "Do not fear. I am with you." Even though the pillar is not there (a pillar of cloud and of fire), He is there with us to do the work—whatever that "work" happens to be, and however glorious that "work" happens to be. And He goes on to say that even though it is going to look kind of shoddy at the moment, this latter work is more glorious than the former work. So, just give it some time. Have some faith. Walk the path. Do the work. That is very interesting. Now, to Matthew 28. Let us put this into a New Testament context, and bring it right up to the end time.
So our God and our Savior, the Head of this church, is always with us. Do we believe it? Do we trust it? Do we act as if He is there with us all the time? Or do we allow ourselves to become discouraged and fearful, when we seem to be facing a boxed canyon? That should set the scene for Exodus 14. This is literally the turning point of the story.
They had been going mostly eastward, at this time. They reached a certain point, and God said, "Moses, we're going to turn here. The most obvious route is just to keep going straight, and leave Egypt. But," He said, "Moses, I want you to have the children turn, and I want you to go south. Turn to the right hand. Go south, and camp at this particular place by the sea." What this did was that it put them in a spot. Let us go to verse 3, where God gives His reasons.
If you look on those maps, if they have any topographical information on them, you will see that there is a ridgeline that goes down the western edge of the Red Sea—the Gulf of Suez. There is a very small area there, just on the western side of the Gulf of Suez, where you can lead a group of people. But very soon, the cliffs jut up. And, at a certain point, those cliffs come very close to the water's edge. So, they are almost like a "J" in certain spots. So they were walking down this narrow strip of land, with cliffs on their right. And once they got to a certain point, the cliffs swung around in front of them and blocked their way south. To their west (that is, to their left) was the Red Sea. They were closed in on three sides, The Sea on the left—and the cliffs before them and to the right. And guess who was coming from the north, behind them. The "bad guys" were on the north. In verse 4, God continues to explain to Moses what is happening.
That was just where God had decided He was going to lay the trap. What we really need to see is just that—that God was manipulating this entire event. He had the reins, you might say. Now, go to Isaiah 45. This is in connection with the prophecy about Cyrus; but I want you to see the principle that comes out here. Isaiah made this prophecy, under inspiration of God—I think it was 150 or 200 years before Cyrus was even born. But something comes out here. God speaks to Cyrus as though he was alive at the time.
Now remember—this is the same reason He gave back in Exodus 14 for wanting to do what He did to Pharaoh and his army. He wanted them to know that He was God! He wanted to have honor, yes; but He wanted them to be absolutely sure Who was working all this out.
Very interesting! This principle means that He can pretty much do whatever He wants. Something that may seem to us to be terrible—a great calamity—but, in reality, He is working out His plan. We look at these things from our perspective, and we make a judgment that such-and-such a thing is good and such-and-such a thing is evil. And God is doing the whole thing! Are we really going to ascribe to God evil motives? These things may look that way to us; but, in God's mind, they are all steps in bringing about His plan.
Now that should give you a clue. These catastrophes that He is sending down—as rain, in this symbolism here—are supposed to make righteousness spring up. Just like water comes out of the clouds, and grass (or, whatever kind of plant) springs up out of the ground, He is saying that it is a "cause and effect" relationship. If He does certain works, and if we respond to them correctly, then righteousness is going to spring up.
Is this not interesting, that this would follow? Because, automatically, the carnal mind says, "That's not fair!"
This is the deist, who says that God has set things in motion and then He goes off somewhere else. That God has no hands—He has no power, He has no part in what is going on. And God, through Isaiah, is saying here that both ideas are wrong. (1) That you should strive with your Maker; and (2) that God is powerless.
Now that last verse was speaking of Cyrus; but it could just as well apply to Pharaoh—not in what was accomplished here specifically about building a city, but that God raised up Pharaoh (or, used Pharaoh) to do a certain work for Him. He hardened Pharaoh's heart all through the process, in order to bring them out of Egypt. And once they got out of Egypt, He hardened his heart again—to bring them to the Red Sea: to test them and to get honor over Pharaoh. To show Pharaoh (and all the Egyptians) who was Boss—because, do you not remember (back in chapter 5 or 6), that Pharaoh said, "Who is this Lord, that I should obey Him?" And so God says, "In order to tie everything up neatly, and to get the lessons learned by all those that I want to learn these lessons, and to make sure the honor is distributed properly, and to make sure that everyone knows just Who is in control of everything that goes on here—let us go to the Red Sea and have it out." That was His "tableau," you might say—so that He could speak, to make sure that everybody knew what was going on. Now, it was not just "them." Let us go to I Corinthians 10.
What is Paul saying here? What is he leading up to? Well, the simplest principle that we can get out of this is that Israel is a "type" of us. They walked out of Egypt redeemed by God, and they had to be baptized in the Red Sea.
That is all the lessons wrapped up into one little verse. God orchestrated it all—not just for their benefit, not just to make sure Pharaoh understood, not just so all the people round about would fear God; but He did it for us—His sons of God, that would be begotten many, many, many generations down the road. So that we all have an example to look at, and try not to emulate.
Fear is a typical human reaction when you have 100,000 men (and their horses and chariots) coming down on you, wanting your blood. We can understand that, can we not? Think about them. In their case, they had never fought. They were totally unarmed, as far as we know. I am sure the Egyptians did not give slaves swords, and spears, and whatever else they used in war at the time. Even though they still felt like they had "a high hand," they were still exhausted from a week of walking. And because they had just been released from slavery, their natural tendency was to submit to their masters—who were breathing down their neck, behind them. I am sure that for many of them, their first thought was to say, "Mercy. Mercy. Take us back." But you notice here that it says the children of Israel cried out to the Lord. They were afraid; and then they cried out. Now, what kind of crying out was this? Well, it does not say. We are left to kind of make a few suppositions here. I really do not have any answers. The fear may have brought some of them to their knees, and so it is included here. Their "crying out to God" could have been in complaint— although, normally, when the Bible says that someone cried out to the Lord, it is usually sincere. They are not complaining. They are just asking for help. It is a supplication of sorts. Maybe it was in despair. Was there any faith connected with their prayer? Maybe in some, but it does not seem like, at this point, there was a whole lot of faith. Let us read what came next.
It seems like, even if some of them did "cry out to the Lord," the majority reaction was one of complaint—one of terrified complaint. When in terror, people tend to exaggerate their situation; and they also tend to exaggerate how "good" they had it before. That is exactly what they did here. They are very sarcastic. "Are there no graves in Egypt?" Remember in "The Ten Commandments" movie? This was Dathan that came up and said it to Moses. (Edward G. Robinson. Yeah, "the gangster" comes out and says this.) But Egypt is a land of tombs. The tombs of the pharaohs, the tombs of their wives, the tombs of their servants—it was a land of graves. And yet they said: "Were there no graves in Egypt, that you brought us out here to die?" Very sarcastic! And they also misrepresented what they had said to Moses when they were back in Egypt. They were very willing to call him their "savior" at first. But it was not until Pharaoh said, "Okay, you are going to make bricks without straw. You are going to have to gather the straw yourself. And I want the same amount of bricks as you gave me before." Then they started complaining to Moses, saying, "Let us alone, that we may serve the Egyptians." So it really was not true that they had not wanted this freedom. They were in it with him. You might just want to write down Psalm 106:6-8. I will go there and read it to you. I want to show you one other thing. This is a song that was written much later, thinking back on this.
This complaint, this crying out, this being very afraid—was considered by God to be rebellion. And it was. It is very easily seen to be rebellion. As soon as the going got tough, they were headed home; and exaggerating how bad things were then, and exaggerating how "good" things were before. What they did was put all the blame on Moses, their human leader. And some commentators suppose that they were going to kill him; but, in thinking about it, I did not think that was very likely. He was their only hope! I am not sure that they were picking up stones to stone him, because he was the one carrying the staff. I think that, if any of them had any second thoughts, they would have been able to see that only Moses had been able to save them before. Maybe some of the more hotheaded ones of them wanted to string him up, or stone him, or whatever; but it just seems that they were so deeply slaves in their thinking that they really could not decide something like that for themselves. They still wanted someone to tell them what to do. And so really their only reaction was to complain. "What do we do, Moses? You brought us here. Did you bring us out here just to be killed by the Egyptians? What are you going to do, Moses?" I think this is more despair and rebellion—and not murderous anger—that they showed here. Let us go back to Exodus 14, where Moses gives his answer to the people.
I think this really shows Moses' faith. In the face of two million despairing Israelites, he told them all just to "Be calm. Don't be afraid. God's going to do something." You might write down Isaiah 63:11-13, which praises Moses for being the shepherd of the flock; and it uses this situation as the illustration. It is very interesting. Moses could "see" the same things that they saw. He could see the cliffs. He could see the sea. He could look and see Pharaoh and his armies coming. But he knew that God had not brought them out here to kill them. He knew God better than that. So Moses said, "Okay, fellows. Ladies. Never fear. Calm down. Somehow, I know it, God is going to defeat the Egyptians for good. So, be quiet and watch God deliver you." A very courageous and faithful answer, but a little vague—if you think about it. He did not know what God was up to, basically. So what he said was good, as far as it went. Now, let us go to verse 15. God's reaction has always humored me a bit.
"Moses, move! Didn't I tell you before that I was going to bring you down here? I was going to defeat the Egyptians, and I was going to bring honor to Myself, and let everybody know that I was the LORD. Didn't I tell you that before, Moses? This is the time that all comes to pass, Moses." I have always thought that God said that with a bit of a mild exasperation. Moses should have known what to do. Follow the cloud! The cloud was still there. It was out over the sea, evidently. What was Moses supposed to do? Follow the cloud! Follow the pillar of fire! And that was still before them. Some little old Red Sea is nothing for God. Now, we can understand: Moses was a man, just like us. He had his weak spots. He had his fears. He had his hesitations. He did not know, or his understanding was not quite up to it at this point. So God had to prod him and remind him. You cannot fault him. But God had already said: "You follow the cloud. That's the direction. Why do you need to ask directions, when I have already pointed out to you the way to go? Go!" And this should tell us: We have here, and have been reading for years, God's directions. When we come to a boxed canyon in our trials, why do we need to stopand say, "Oh no. Here I am—stuck! There's no way out." God says, "No. Move forward. Continue in the way that I have shown you." Now that is not always easy to do; and we are all weak; and we all have our problems (just like Moses had). So we all need to learn this lesson for ourselves. But God says, "The easiest way is just to follow what I have said." Proverbs 3:5-6 puts this in the form of an aphorism—a nice nugget of wisdom that we can learn, and memorize, and use.
That is the answer. Trust not what you can see with your eyes. Trust not the circumstances that are around you, and that make your understanding very much skewed. Trust in what God has said. Trust in God's mind—that He is working things out for you, in your life. And follow the cloud! It is an easy answer, but very hard to apply. But that is usually the case, is it not? So what we have to learn to do is second-guess our human reasoning, because we are not to trust that—our own understanding. We are to lean on God's understanding, God's way. And I can say with ample proof—from my own life and the lives of others—that the way works. It is the application of it and the moving forwardthat is tough.
Where had He been? He had been leading them. It moved at that point (after God had given Moses the instructions), and went behind the children of Israel. I do not know if you had noticed that before. (I had not, until I really started digging into this.)
This cloud's movement did two things: It stopped the Egyptian army from attacking, giving God and Israel time to act: God to open the sea, and Israel to cross it. The second thing that it did, which is kind of ironic, was that it blocked the Israelites from returning to Egypt. They could not go surrender. They were forced to move forward. And God will do that, if we are a bit recalcitrant. If we dig in our heels, He will kick us in the rear to get us moving forward; and that hurts, often. He does not give us a chance to back out—or, at least that is His intention. He wants us to move forward. What this did was force both sides to go through with it: The Egyptians with attacking, and the Israelites with going across—just as God wanted to occur, so that His plan could move forward. There is also some symbolism in that the pillar was dark on the Egyptian side, which is an indication of wrath and judgment, darkness of death, and on the Israelite's side it was light. It says of Jesus, "In Him was light." Well, light stands for good, or favor. So He was comforting His people and giving the other side the willies. (You might want to write down Nahum 1:7-8—where it says that, in a nutshell, about His approach to the Assyrians.)
Now this stupendous miracle that occurred is unexplainable by natural means. If you go into a commentary and they start telling you, "Well, the wind did this, and. . ."—do not believe it, because there is no way a wind could pile up water on opposite sides of the people of Israel. That is what it says. It was a wall to their left and to their right. There is no wind in this world that could do it. Now, if it did, it would blow the Israelites and all their baggage to kingdom come. You have this 500,000 mile-per-hour wind, piling up water; and here are these Israelites yelling in terror and disaster. They would never make it. But God piled that water up somehow on the one side, and He piled it up on the other; and then He sent a wind down the center, to dry the ground. And I think that the reason why Moses wrote it this way is because to them it looked like it was all one process. They could not explain it; but they felt the wind, drying the ground. So Moses stuck it in there, as whatever kind of an explanation he could come up with. He knew what it was though. The east wind made the sea into dry land. At some point, God lifted the pillar of cloud; and the Egyptians pursued into the Red Sea. Now here (where most conservative scholars think the crossing was), the Red Sea was probably six to eight miles wide—at this point. So there was plenty of room to get quite a lot of Israelites (on the one end) and the Egyptian army (pursuing from the other end), and to get the entire Egyptian army between the walls of water before they came smacking down. This was a very large miracle that occurred. God had that water stand up in a heap, on both sides, for six to eight miles. Well, we think about Universal Studios; and you go down there, and it is about three feet high. I do not know if any of you have been there; but that is where they filmed the great Ten Commandments scene. It was spectacular in itself—that they could do that. But this was for six to eight miles, and high! Who knows how deep the water was there? Yeah, wide too; because it takes a lot of ground to get two to two and one half million people—and their livestock—through this section of Red Sea in one night. This was a grand work of God! Something that our minds kind of lose the details on, because it is so big. God causes the wheels of the chariots to fall off, and the Egyptians are stuck. So they begin to flee.
That is kind of interesting. It seems as if they got confused—which God said they did—and they were fleeing the wrong direction. That is the only thing that I could think of—He so confounded them, they did not know which way to go.
Because God wanted to have honor and victory over Egypt, He tells Moses to work the miracle in the other direction. And unrestrained, millions (or, billions) of gallons of water came crashing back! It smashed the Egyptian army to smithereens. All the men died. All the horses died. And, evidently, many of them washed up on the shore; and this is what armed Israel, for their wars with Amalek (that came on, later on) and later other wars. The Bible does not say specifically that Pharaoh died. If we understand the historical setting of the Exodus (and we are not exactly sure that this is right), Amenhotep II lived for several more years—if he is the Pharaoh of the Exodus, and the timing is right. So there is a fudge factor there, as we are not exactly sure. But if he did live, he reigned in disgrace, and definitely in political and military weakness, for the rest of his life—because that smashed Egypt. Add ten plagues on Egypt and their commerce, and their religion, and their agriculture, and whatever else—and then God pulled the Egyptian army into the Red Sea and smashed that too. From what I learned at Ambassador College, three generations had to go by before they were strong enough, again, to mount an attack outside of Egypt. That was devastation! And it is no wonder that they do not write about this in their hieroglyphs, because this was a shame to them. They did not want anybody to know that this slave people, and their God, had brought them low. So, do not let anybody give you that argument. If someone came in and tore the United States down, we would not write about it either. We would be very happy to bury that knowledge, if we could. Psalm 77 was written with this in mind. It is a psalm of Asaph, and he is thinking of a boxed canyon of his own; and he thinks back on the Red Sea. (By the way, this is in our hymnal.)
Think about that. Do we not all go through trials, every once in a while, where the answer just does not seem to be coming? And we ask and ask, and we complain. And we cry out, and we do not seem to get an answer.
Remember—these things were written for our admonition. And he says, "I've gone back and considered what had happened before, in old times, to get some answers."
He is going at it, a mile a minute—trying to find an answer. Then, his question:
Think about this too. Have we not all had thoughts like this, at times, "Has God gone far off, so that He won't give me an answer? Have I done something, so that He is withholding all His grace and mercy from me?"
That is God's powers—in His right hand. So Asaph says here, "I'm going to remember God in His strength."
Think about this too—all the great works of God in the past! Now, we get to the Red Sea:
That is the answer. Wherever God leads, that is the way to go! We face "Red Seas" every now and then. We face trials that seem impossible to overcome. We may cry out to God for help, and it seems as if His favor has been removed far away. But we know that His mercy never fails. We have proof from His Word—from these examples—that He is quick and mighty to save. All He is doing is bringing all the pieces together, and waiting for us to walk forward in faith—into His salvation. Oh! I guess you want to know how the cowboy story ends. Will Calloway escape the boxed canyon?
RTR/plh/drm
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