A Study of the Life of Moses
Sermon # 7
Exodus 7:1-10:29
This morning I want you to see with me four responses of a hard heart.
You will remember that Pharaohs initial response was blatant disobedience. Moses and Aaron had stood before Pharaoh and delivered the message of God, Thus says the LORD God of Israel: Let My people go (5:1). Pharaohs response was, Who is the LORD that I should obey his voice?
Or to put it another way he was saying, Who does Jehovah think He is to tell Pharaoh what he must do?
tell him he
must let my people go. (Ex 6:10).
God explains to Moses what he can expect to happen in Exodus 7: 1-5, So the LORD said to Moses: See, I have made you as
God to Pharaoh, and Aaron your brother shall be your prophet. (2) You shall speak all that
I command you. And Aaron your brother shall tell Pharaoh to send the children of Israel
out of his land. (3) And I will harden Pharaohs heart, and multiply My
signs and My wonders in the land of Egypt. (4) But Pharaoh will not heed you, so that I
may lay My hand on Egypt and bring My armies and My people, the children of Israel,
out of the land of Egypt by great judgments. (5) And the Egyptians shall know that I am
the LORD, when I stretch out My hand on Egypt and bring out the children of Israel from
among them.
Pharaoh does indeed ignore the signs done at the hands of Moses. In Exodus 7:10 we read, So Moses and Aaron went in to Pharaoh, and they did so, just as the LORD commanded. And Aaron cast down his rod before Pharaoh and before his servants, and it became a serpent.
Pharaoh was not convinced that the miracle that he had just witnessed possessed any uniqueness to that which the magicians in his court could duplicate. The magicians were summoned and they did indeed seem to able to turn their rods into serpents. Just how the magicians were able to do this is a matter of conjecture. Whether they were able to perform some kind of optical illusion, used sleight of hand or a actually worked a genuine miracle through Satanic power is argued by Biblical scholars. But the one thing we do know is that whatever they did seemed to satisfy the heart of this wicked king.
Exodus 7:14, tells us So the LORD said to
Moses: Pharaohs heart is hard; he refuses to let the people go.
Pharaoh had resisted all efforts of Moses to get the children of Israel released. The issue now has to be forced. It would take ten plagues before Pharaoh would give the command let Israel go. Now the plagues begin. As the plagues progress, Pharaohs heart becomes increasingly hardened. Even when the Pharaoh seems to relent he inevitably fails to keep his promise.
The first of Gods judgments was against the waters of Egypt. The Plague of the Nile turned into blood (7:14-25). In verse 25 we are told that And Pharaoh turned and went into his house. Neither was his heart moved by this. The plague lasted seven days. It was a severe judgment, but the Bible says that Pharaohs heart was hardened and he refused to let the people go (7:22).
The second plague that God brought was the Plague of the Frogs (8:1-15). Aaron stretched forth his hand over the water of Egypt and frogs came up out of the waters and covered the land (v. 6). This is especially significant because the frog was considered sacred in Egypt and could not be killed. The consequence was the there was nothing they could do about this situation. They came to loathe the very symbols of their worship.
The magicians were again summoned and asked to perform the same miraculous act, this they did. But the fact that the magicians could produce even more frogs could hardly have been of any comfort. What they need was less frogs not more frogs!
When times got tough enough Pharaoh yielded
to God verbally, we will see that he later changed his mind when things were better. In
Exodus 8:8, we find, Then Pharaoh called for
Moses and Aaron, and said, Entreat the LORD that He may take away the frogs from me
and from my people; and I will let the people go, that they may sacrifice to the
LORD. (9) And Moses said to Pharaoh, Accept the honor of saying when I shall
intercede for you, for your servants, and for your people, to destroy the frogs from you
and your houses, that they may remain in the river only. (10) So he said,
Tomorrow. And he said, Let it be according to your
word, that you may know that there is no one like the LORD our God.
In Pharaohs reactions we see the mistakes that individuals make to day when things get difficult in their lives. In times of difficulty, they put God off. He puts off submitting to God until the last possible moment. Tomorrow he says will be soon enough. In times of crisis, they cry out to God. When and only when they have exhausted every human possibility they turn to God in prayer (v. 28). In times of relief, they forget God. He promised to let the children of Israel go, but when that there was relief, that is the frogs were gone he changed his mind . Exodus 8:15 says, But when Pharaoh saw that there was relief, he hardened his heart and did not heed them, as the LORD had said. Today is no different, many people when faced with difficult situations, pay lip service to God never intending to fulfill their vow. How many of us have in the midst of some extreme difficulty, cried out to God, Oh Lord, get me out of this, and I will do anything. But when the Lord has delivered us we withdraw our promise just like Pharaoh.
Then Pharaoh called for Moses and Aaron, and said, Go,
sacrifice to your God in the land. The same temptation is offered today, Be a Christian
but also be in the world and of the world. Conform.
Yet the New Testament warns us in Romans 12:1-2,
I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of
God, that you present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is
your reasonable service. (2) And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by
the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and
perfect will of God.
So Pharaoh said, I will let you go, that you may sacrifice to the LORD your God in the wilderness; only you shall not go very far away. Intercede for me.
Not so! Go now, you who are men, and serve the LORD, for
that is what you desired. And they were driven out from Pharaohs
presence.
Pharaoh offers to let the men go but not the women and children. If you have to go then go but dont take your loved ones with you. The Devil is still trying to convince believers, Let your children make up their own minds when they are old enough. Dont try to teach your children about God. Dont try influence your child to attend church let your children be a part of the world so they can have all of its advantages.
When the plague struck, Egypt Pharaoh confessed his
sins and asked Moses for forgiveness and asked that the plague be stopped (vv. 16-17). His confession is not real however and when the plague was removed Pharaoh returned to his old ways and would not let Israel go (v 20).
A new plague, The Plague of darkness (10: 21-29), now fell over Egypt. The darkness was so intense that for three days the Egyptians could not arise from their beds. The darkness was so great that the Bible says that it could be felt (v. 21). Pharoahs response to the plague was to offer another compromise to the children of Israel.
4. Dont Commit Everything (10:24)
Then Pharaoh called to Moses and said, Go, serve
the LORD; only let your flocks and your herds be kept back. Let your little ones also go
with you.
Pharaoh was convicted but he made no change. Being convicted of our sins is not the same as being saved from our sins. You can sit in a service with tears streaming down your face because of the deep conviction of your sins, but that does not save you. It takes more than conviction it take commitment. To be delivered from our sins we must commit ourselves to the Lord.
Because there was not true change in Pharaohs heart we read in Exodus 9:35, So the heart of Pharaoh was hard; neither would he let the
children of Israel go, as the LORD had spoken by Moses.
Pharaoh was a thoroughly modern man in his responses to God. He was a man who reacted to each new circumstance in his life. His principles if he had any were: Sin when you can get away with it, Ignore God when it is convenient, and Repent when you have no choice!
Eventually Pharaoh lost. By then Egypt was in ruins. Pharaoh had lost his kingdom. Egypt had been devastated by the death angel. And Pharaoh had lost his son! What will it take before you will surrender to God?
The New Testament warns in Hebrews 3:7-8, Therefore,
as the Holy Spirit says: Today,
if you will hear His voice, (8) Do not harden your hearts as in the rebellion, In the day
of trial in the wilderness,
You may be in the danger zone ..You have played fast and loose with your life, ignoring warning after warning. You have shoved aside essential truths for so long that your heart has become hardened. And the longer you harden it, the more difficult it will be to allow Gods light to finally break through.
[Charles Swindoll. Moses: A Man of Selfless Dedication. (Nashville: Word, 1999) p. 188].Click the BACK button to return to "A Study in the Life of Moses" page.