Exodus

Find a sermon associated with this book in the Bible below.

This sermon explores how the Israelites' journey through the wilderness in Exodus 17 serves as a guide for believers today, revealing that even in times of grumbling and doubt, God's patience and grace flow from the hardest places. It presents Jesus Christ as the ultimate rock from which our needs are met, highlighting that He took the judgment we deserved, enabling us to navigate our struggles with poise and peace.

This sermon uses the Israelites' constant grumbling for food in Exodus as a metaphor for the "soulish hunger" people have for belonging and security, even in times of plenty. It points to Jesus Christ as the true "bread of life," who satisfies our deepest, eternal hunger and frees us from a life of fear-driven striving by offering Himself as the ultimate provision.

This sermon explores the concept of enslavement, arguing that everyone is in bondage to something, and uses the Israelites' escape from Egypt in Exodus as an example of being set free. It presents Jesus Christ as the ultimate deliverer, who, through faith, takes away our condemnation and offers true freedom from the idols and fears that bind us.

This sermon uses the Old Testament Passover as a powerful illustration of the gospel, revealing that God's justice requires a payment for sin, a debt that only a perfect substitute can satisfy. It presents Jesus Christ as the ultimate Lamb of God, whose sacrifice on the cross provides a final and complete redemption, securing our eternal protection from judgment and inviting us to worship Him forever.

This sermon explores the ten plagues of Egypt not as mere divine wrath, but as God's powerful answer to Pharaoh's question, "Who is the Lord?" It argues that the plagues demonstrate God's supremacy over all false gods, reveal that disobedience leads to the unraveling of creation, and ultimately show that God uses judgment as a means of gracious salvation, fulfilled in the cross of Jesus Christ.

This sermon, drawing from the call of Moses in Exodus, highlights that God is both transcendent and faithful, actively pursuing and working through ordinary people to fulfill his promises. It emphasizes that the ultimate proof of his loving and good plan is the cross of Jesus Christ, where he reconciled humanity to himself, proving his faithfulness even when we are not.

This sermon explores how the early chapters of Exodus illustrate that God saves His people from misery and enslavement even when He seems absent, often by using the weak and marginalized to fulfill His purposes. It connects these principles directly to Jesus Christ, the ultimate deliverer who brought true freedom not through worldly power, but through a life of humble service and a sacrificial death on the cross.

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