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Reformed Devotionals Daily Podcast
Reformed Devotionals Daily Podcast
Author: Bringing the timeless truths of Scripture into the everyday lives of believers
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© Chris Pretorius
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Bringing the timeless truths of Scripture into the everyday lives of believers. Each day we take the next piece of the Bible and reflect on it together to help you see how Jesus is the hero of every passage of scripture. Each day we also have a spiritual challenge for you to help you grow.
reformeddevotional.substack.com
reformeddevotional.substack.com
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Exodus 21:33–22:1533 “When a man opens a pit, or when a man digs a pit and does not cover it, and an ox or a donkey falls into it, 34 the owner of the pit shall make restoration. He shall give money to its owner, and the dead beast shall be his.35 “When one man’s ox butts another’s, so that it dies, then they shall sell the live ox and share its price, and the dead beast also they shall share. 36 Or if it is known that the ox has been accustomed to gore in the past, and its owner has not kept it in, he shall repay ox for ox, and the dead beast shall be his.22 “If a man steals an ox or a sheep, and kills it or sells it, he shall repay five oxen for an ox, and cfour sheep for a sheep. 2 1 If a thief is found dbreaking in and is struck so that he dies, there shall be no bloodguilt for him, 3 but if the sun has risen on him, there shall be bloodguilt for him. He2 shall surely pay. If he has nothing, then ehe shall be sold for his theft. 4 If the stolen beast fis found alive in his possession, whether it is an ox or a donkey or a sheep, ghe shall pay double.5 “If a man causes a field or vineyard to be grazed over, or lets his beast loose and it feeds in another man’s field, he shall make restitution from the best in his own field and in his own vineyard.6 “If fire breaks out and catches in thorns so that the stacked grain or the standing grain or the field is consumed, he who started the fire shall make full restitution.7 “If a man gives to his neighbor money or goods to keep safe, and it is stolen from the man’s house, then, if the thief is found, ghe shall pay double. 8 If the thief is not found, the owner of the house shall come near to God to show whether or not he has put his hand to his neighbor’s property. 9 For every breach of trust, whether it is for an ox, for a donkey, for a sheep, for a cloak, or for any kind of lost thing, of which one says, ‘This is it,’ the case of both parties shall come before God. The one whom God condemns shall pay double to his neighbor.10 “If a man gives to his neighbor a donkey or an ox or a sheep or any beast to keep safe, and it dies or is injured or is driven away, without anyone seeing it, 11 han oath by the Lord shall be between them both to see whether or not he has put his hand to his neighbor’s property. The owner shall accept the oath, and he shall not make restitution. 12 But if iit is stolen from him, he shall make restitution to its owner. 13 If it is torn by beasts, let him bring it as evidence. He shall not make restitution for what has been torn.14 “If a man borrows anything of his neighbor, and it is injured or dies, the owner not being with it, he shall make full restitution. 15 If the owner was with it, he shall not make restitution; if it was hired, it came for its hiring fee.It is easy to think that faith is mostly about the big moments. The dramatic sins. The public failures. The obvious acts of obedience. But as we move through this section of Exodus, God presses in on something far more ordinary. He shows us that faithfulness to Him is often revealed in the small, everyday responsibilities of life. In how we treat other people’s property. In how we respond when damage is done. In whether we take responsibility or look for someone else to blame. This passage reminds us that God cares deeply about the ordinary details of our lives, because those details reveal what our hearts are really like.These laws deal with situations that feel very normal. A pit left uncovered. An animal that wanders where it should not. Property that is damaged. Something borrowed that is lost or broken. None of this feels particularly spiritual at first glance. But that is precisely the point. God is shaping a people whose faith reaches into every corner of life. He is teaching them that love for neighbour is not an abstract idea. It is worked out in responsibility, honesty, and care.Again and again, the principle is simple. If your actions cause harm, you are responsible. If your negligence leads to loss, you are accountable. God refuses to allow people to shrug their shoulders and say, accidents happen. He is not creating a culture of blame, but a culture of ownership. A people who understand that their choices affect others. A people who are willing to make things right.This is deeply countercultural. We live in a world that is very good at deflecting responsibility. We minimise our part. We justify our behaviour. We explain why it was not really our fault. But God teaches His people a better way. When something goes wrong, the question is not how do I get out of this, but how do I love my neighbour in this moment.Notice too that God makes careful distinctions. There is a difference between theft and loss. Between deliberate harm and unavoidable accident. Between negligence and circumstances beyond control. God’s justice is thoughtful. It is measured. It takes intention seriously. This tells us something important about God. He is not harsh. He is fair. He understands the complexity of life in a broken world. And He expects His people to reflect that same care and wisdom in how they treat one another.At the heart of all of this is trust. These laws assume a community where people live closely together. Where possessions are shared. Where animals wander. Where borrowing happens. God wants His people to be able to live together without fear. Without suspicion. Without constant conflict. Responsibility builds trust. And trust allows a community to flourish.And once again, this points us forward to Jesus. Because none of us has perfectly lived this way. We have all benefited from grace we did not deserve. We have all caused damage, sometimes without even realising it. And yet Jesus takes responsibility for what we broke. He pays the cost for what we lost. He restores what we could not fix. Where we fail to love our neighbour, He loves perfectly. Where we avoid responsibility, He embraces it all the way to the cross.So what might this mean for you today. Perhaps it is a simple question. Are there places where you need to take responsibility instead of explaining yourself. Are there relationships where repair is needed. Are there moments where love for your neighbour looks like making things right, even when it costs you something. Faithfulness is often quiet. It rarely looks impressive. But it reflects the heart of a God who cares deeply about how His people live together.PrayerFather, teach us to take responsibility for our actions. Help us love our neighbours not just in words, but in honesty and care. Show us where we need to make things right. And thank You for Jesus, who took responsibility for our sin and restored what we could not. Shape us to live lives that reflect Your justice and Your grace. In Jesus name, Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
God’s Justice Is Kinder And More Compassionate Than We ExpectWhen people read the laws in Exodus, especially the ones that deal with slavery or harm or conflict, they often feel confused. Some even feel unsettled. But these laws were never random. They were never harsh for the sake of harshness. They were given to a people who had just come out of generations of brutal oppression. They had no courts. No legal structure. No shared understanding of justice. And what God gives them in Exodus 21 is no cold parliamentary legislation. It is a picture of a society shaped by His character. It is justice with compassion. Authority with limits. Power held in check by mercy. And if we listen closely, we discover that God’s heart is far kinder and more protective than we often think.Exodus 21:1–32 (ESV)Now these are the rules that you shall set before them. When you buy a Hebrew slave, he shall serve six years, and in the seventh he shall go out free, for nothing. If he comes in single, he shall go out single. If he comes in married, then his wife shall go out with him. If his master gives him a wife and she bears him sons or daughters, the wife and her children shall be her master’s, and he shall go out alone. But if the slave plainly says, I love my master, my wife, and my children; I will not go out free, then his master shall bring him to God, and he shall bring him to the door or the doorpost. And his master shall bore his ear through with an awl, and he shall be his slave forever.When a man sells his daughter as a slave, she shall not go out as the male slaves do. If she does not please her master, who has designated her for himself, then he shall let her be redeemed. He shall have no right to sell her to a foreign people, since he has broken faith with her. If he designates her for his son, he shall deal with her as with a daughter. If he takes another wife to himself, he shall not diminish her food, her clothing, or her marital rights. And if he does not do these three things for her, she shall go out for nothing, without payment of money.Whoever strikes a man so that he dies shall be put to death. But if he did not lie in wait for him, but God let him fall into his hand, then I will appoint for you a place to which he may flee. But if a man wilfully attacks another to kill him by cunning, you shall take him from my altar, that he may die.Whoever strikes his father or his mother shall be put to death.Whoever steals a man and sells him, and anyone found in possession of him, shall be put to death.Whoever curses his father or his mother shall be put to death.When men quarrel and one strikes the other with a stone or with his fist and the man does not die but takes to his bed, then if the man rises again and walks outdoors with his staff, he who struck him shall be clear, only he shall pay for the loss of his time, and shall have him thoroughly healed.When a man strikes his slave, male or female, with a rod and the slave dies under his hand, he shall be avenged. But if the slave survives a day or two, he is not to be avenged, for the slave is his money.When men strive together and hit a pregnant woman, so that her children come out, but there is no harm, the one who hit her shall surely be fined, as the woman’s husband shall impose on him, and he shall pay as the judges determine. But if there is harm, then you shall pay life for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot, burn for burn, wound for wound, stripe for stripe.When a man strikes the eye of his slave, male or female, and destroys it, he shall let the slave go free because of his eye. If he knocks out the tooth of his slave, male or female, he shall let the slave go free because of his tooth.When an ox gores a man or a woman to death, the ox shall be stoned, and its flesh shall not be eaten, but the owner of the ox shall not be liable. But if the ox has been accustomed to gore in the past, and its owner has been warned but has not kept it in, and it kills a man or a woman, the ox shall be stoned, and its owner also shall be put to death. If a ransom is imposed on him, then he shall give for the redemption of his life whatever is imposed on him. If it gores a son or a daughter, he shall be dealt with according to this same rule. If the ox gores a slave, male or female, the owner shall give to their master thirty shekels of silver, and the ox shall be stoned.When we hear the word slave, we immediately think of the horrors of modern slavery or the transatlantic slave trade. But what God describes here is something very different. This is a system meant to protect the poor. To give stability to those who had lost everything. To keep the vulnerable alive in a world without social safety nets. And right at the heart of it is something that shocks us. God builds freedom into the system. Six years of work. Then release. No debt. No ongoing obligation. No strings attached. It is mercy written into law. If only the banks worked the same way…And notice something else. When a slave chooses to stay, it is not because he is trapped. It is because he loves his master. The relationship God imagines here is not one of fear but of trust. A master who treats his servant well. A servant who willingly remains. That alone tells us something incredible about the kind of society God is trying to build.The laws for vulnerable women show the same heart. God refuses to let a man discard a woman as if she were property. If she is taken into the household, she must be protected. Provided for and treated as family. And if she is not, she goes free. Again and again God steps in to defend the dignity of those who could be easily mistreated.Then come the laws about violence. And they show us something simple and profound. Life matters. Life is sacred. Human dignity is not negotiable. If someone kidnaps another person, that is a capital crime. If someone murders, justice must be done. But these laws also make distinctions. Not all harm is the same. Intent matters. Circumstances matter. Mercy matters. God provides places of refuge. He gives room for discernment. Justice is firm, but it is not blind.The same is true of the laws about slaves and injury. And this is remarkable for us because we don’t have slaves, but it was also remarkable for Israel back then, because everyone else had slaves. In the surrounding ancient cultures, a slave had no rights. But here God protects them. If a master seriously injures a slave, the slave goes free. God refuses to let power be abused. He holds the strong accountable. Again and again the theme emerges. God is building a community where the vulnerable are safe.And finally, even animals are included. God holds owners responsible when their negligence harms others. He builds responsibility into everyday life. He refuses to let anyone shrug their shoulders and say, it is not my fault. This is God teaching His people to value every life, human or otherwise. To take seriously the impact of their decisions. To live with care.So what do we do with all this. Maybe the first thing is to see God’s heart in it. He is not distant. He is not cold. He is not harsh. He is building a society shaped by compassion. By responsibility. By protection. This is the same God who hears the cries of the oppressed. The same God who rescues slaves. The same God who lifts up the weak.And of course, this points us to Jesus. Jesus is the One who fulfils the heart of these laws. He protects the vulnerable. He treats every person with dignity. He refuses to crush the weak. He brings justice without cruelty and mercy without compromise. He is the true picture of God’s justice and compassion.So maybe today your next step is to ask what it looks like to reflect God’s heart in your own life. Where has He given you influence or power or authority. And how might you use it in a way that protects and lifts up the people around you. God’s justice is not about punishment first. It is about love shaped by truth. Maybe the call today is simply to treat others with the same dignity and care that God has shown you.PrayerFather, thank You for being a God who protects the vulnerable and upholds justice with mercy. Teach us to value every life the way You do. Shape our hearts so that our actions reflect Your kindness and Your righteousness. And help us look to Jesus, the One who perfectly fulfils Your law and shows us Your compassion. In His name we pray, Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
There are times when we make worship more complicated than it needs to be. We worry about the right words, the right appearance, the right atmosphere. We start thinking God is impressed by our polish or our presentation. But in this short passage at the end of Exodus 20, God pulls His people back to the basics. He shows them that true worship is not about show. It is not about performance. It is not about our ability to impress Him. True worship is about coming to Him as people who know they have been rescued. People who know their need. People who come with honesty and gratitude. And maybe that is exactly what you need to hear today.Exodus 20:22–26 (ESV)And the Lord said to Moses, Thus you shall say to the people of Israel, You have seen for yourselves that I have talked with you from heaven. You shall not make gods of silver to be with me, nor shall you make for yourselves gods of gold. An altar of earth you shall make for me and sacrifice on it your burnt offerings and your peace offerings, your sheep and your oxen. In every place where I cause my name to be remembered I will come to you and bless you. If you make me an altar of stone, you shall not build it of hewn stones, for if you wield your tool on it you profane it. And you shall not go up by steps to my altar, that your nakedness be not exposed on it.God begins with a reminder. You have seen for yourselves that I have talked with you from heaven. In other words, God says, you do not worship a distant God. You worship a God who speaks. A God who reveals Himself. A God who draws near. Worship is never us trying to climb up to God. Worship is always God coming down to His people.And because of that, God warns them again. Do not make gods of silver or gold. Do not try to create something to stand beside Me. The temptation for Israel is the same temptation we feel in our hearts. To create something physical. Something impressive. Something visible. Something we can control. But God will not be placed beside our idols. He knows that whatever competes with Him will eventually enslave us. True worship begins with letting God be God.Then God gives a surprising instruction. Make an altar of earth. Not of polished stone. Not of carved blocks. Not of impressive craftsmanship. Just earth. Dirt. Something ordinary. Something humble. Something that reminds you that you come to God not because of what you can build but because of what He has done. And if you use stone, He says, do not shape it. Do not cut it. Do not decorate it. Because the moment we begin chiseling the stone, the moment we try to make the altar impressive, the focus moves from who God is, to how skillful we are. Worship becomes performance.And then God says something even stranger. Do not build steps leading up to the altar. Why. Because climbing lifted robes would expose the worshipper. God is telling His people something simple. Come before Me with dignity. Come before Me without show. Come before Me without trying to elevate yourself. Worship is not about rising above others. Worship is about humbly standing before a holy God who loves you.All through this passage God is stripping away the things we add to worship. He is taking away the idols. The decorations. The performance. He is removing anything that might draw our attention away from Him and back toward ourselves. And He replaces all of it with something breathtaking. In every place where I cause My name to be remembered I will come to you and bless you. That is the heart of worship. Not our ability to climb up to God, but God choosing to come down to us.And of course, this reaches its fullness in Jesus. Jesus is the place where God causes His name to be remembered. Jesus is the altar where the final sacrifice was offered. Jesus is the One who removes every barrier. Jesus is the One who brings blessing from heaven to earth. Through Him, our worship is not about what we bring but about what He has already done. We come to God not with impressive stones or perfect steps but with humble hearts that rest in Christ.So maybe your next step today is to let God simplify your worship. To stop trying to impress Him. To stop thinking your performance is what matters. Maybe it is simply to remember that worship is about God coming near to you. And that He delights to meet you when you come with honesty and gratitude. Even if all you bring is the equivalent of an altar made of dirt.PrayerFather, teach us to worship You with humility and honesty. Strip away our idols and our desire to perform. Help us remember that You are the God who comes near. Thank You for Jesus, the true altar and the place where Your name is remembered. Draw our hearts back to You in simple and joyful worship. In Jesus name, Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
When people think about God’s laws, they often picture limits. Restrictions. Heavy burdens. A list of things you cannot do. But Exodus 20 pushes us to rethink that. Because before God gives a single command, He reminds His people who He is and what He has already done for them. He has rescued them. He has carried them. He has brought them out of slavery. And the commands that follow are not shackles. They are invitations into real freedom. They show us how life actually works when God is at the centre. And maybe you need that reminder today.Exodus 20:1–21 (ESV)And God spoke all these words, saying, I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery.You shall have no other gods before me.You shall not make for yourself a carved image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. You shall not bow down to them or serve them, for I the Lord your God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children to the third and the fourth generation of those who hate me, but showing steadfast love to thousands of those who love me and keep my commandments.You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain, for the Lord will not hold him guiltless who takes his name in vain.Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days you shall labor, and do all your work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath to the Lord your God. On it you shall not do any work, you, or your son, or your daughter, your male servant, or your female servant, or your livestock, or the sojourner who is within your gates. For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that is in them, and rested on the seventh day. Therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy.Honor your father and your mother, that your days may be long in the land that the Lord your God is giving you.You shall not murder.You shall not commit adultery.You shall not steal.You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor.You shall not covet your neighbor’s house. You shall not covet your neighbor’s wife, or his male servant, or his female servant, or his ox, or his donkey, or anything that is your neighbor’s.Now when all the people saw the thunder and the flashes of lightning and the sound of the trumpet and the mountain smoking, the people were afraid and trembled, and they stood far off and said to Moses, You speak to us, and we will listen, but do not let God speak to us, lest we die. Moses said to the people, Do not fear, for God has come to test you, that the fear of him may be before you, that you may not sin. The people stood far off, while Moses drew near to the thick darkness where God was.Before God gives His people the law, He reminds them them of who he is and what He has done for them. I am the Lord your God who brought you out of Egypt. In other words, He says, I saved you before you did anything. I redeemed you before you kept a single command. I loved you before you even knew how to live. Obedience was never the doorway into God’s favour. It was always the response to it.And so God begins with the first command. You shall have no other gods before me. God knows there is no life to be found in anything else. Idols promise a lot, but they take more than they give. They leave you empty. They demand everything from you and give nothing back. God calls us to Himself because He alone is the source of life.The second command builds on this. Do not make an image of Me. God refuses to be reduced or reshaped into something manageable. We do not get to remake Him according to our preferences. We do not get to tame Him. He is who He is. And His jealousy here is not petty. It is the jealousy of a God who loves His people too much to let them wander into spiritual slavery again.The third command reminds us that God’s name is weighty. We do not use it carelessly. We do not attach it to lies or empty promises. When we speak of God, we speak of the One who made us, who sustains us, who rescued us. Reverence is right.Then comes the Sabbath. One of the most countercultural commands. The world tells you to work endlessly. To produce. To hustle. But God tells His people to stop. To rest. To remember that He is the One who provides. The Sabbath teaches us that we are not machines. We are children. And children rest because their Father is strong enough to hold their world together.The commands that follow shape our life together. Honour your parents. Value life. Be faithful in marriage. Respect the property of others. Speak truthfully. Refuse envy. At first glance, they might seem like ordinary things, but they are not. They describe a community shaped by the character of God. A people who reflect His ways in the world. These commands are not random. They flow out of who God is. And because of that, they show us who we are meant to be. They describe what it means for a human being to flourish. The show what a flourishing society looks like.But notice the people’s reaction. When they see the mountain shake and hear God’s voice, they tremble. They stand far off. They say to Moses, you speak to us instead. They sense the holiness of God and it is overwhelming. And Moses responds with something both surprising and comforting. Do not fear. God has come to test you, that the fear of Him may be before you, that you may not sin. Moses is distinguishing two kinds of fear. There is the fear that pushes you away from God, and the fear that pulls you toward obedience. One is terror. The other is awe. And awe is good for us.And this is where Jesus becomes so precious. The people could not bear the voice of God. They needed a mediator. They needed someone to stand between them and the holy presence of God. Moses could do that in part, but only Jesus could do it fully. Only Jesus could bring sinful people into the presence of a holy God without them being consumed. Only Jesus could obey these commands perfectly when we could not. Only Jesus could bear the cost of our disobedience.So how might you respond today. Perhaps it is simply to remember that God’s commands are not chains. They are invitations into life. They show us what freedom actually looks like. And maybe your next step is to ask where you have been resisting God’s ways. Where you have listened to the idols around you. Where you have shaped God into something smaller than He really is. And then to come back to the God who rescued you first. A God who speaks these commands to His redeemed people not to bind them, but to set them free.PrayerFather, thank You that Your commands come to us after Your rescue. Teach us to see them as gifts. Help us to trust that Your ways lead to life. Give us hearts that honour You, rest in You, and walk in Your ways. And thank You for Jesus, who obeyed perfectly in our place and brings us near to You. In His name we pray, Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
There are moments in the Christian life where you feel drawn in by God. You feel His kindness. His nearness. His grace. But then, almost in the same breath, you also feel the weight of His holiness. The gap between who He is and who you are becomes painfully clear. And it is easy to wonder how both of those things can be true at the same time. Exodus 19 is one of those moments. God brings His people close. He reminds them of His love. He invites them into something beautiful. But He also shows them His holiness in a way that leaves no doubt that He is not like us. And this is good for us to hear.Exodus 19 (ESV)On the third new moon after the people of Israel had gone out of the land of Egypt, on that day they came into the wilderness of Sinai. They set out from Rephidim and came into the wilderness of Sinai, and they encamped in the wilderness. There Israel encamped before the mountain, while Moses went up to God. The Lord called to him out of the mountain, saying, Thus you shall say to the house of Jacob, and tell the people of Israel, You yourselves have seen what I did to the Egyptians, and how I bore you on eagles wings and brought you to myself. Now therefore, if you will indeed obey my voice and keep my covenant, you shall be my treasured possession among all peoples, for all the earth is mine. And you shall be to me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation. These are the words that you shall speak to the people of Israel.So Moses came and called the elders of the people and set before them all these words that the Lord had commanded him. All the people answered together and said, All that the Lord has spoken we will do. And Moses reported the words of the people to the Lord. And the Lord said to Moses, Behold, I am coming to you in a thick cloud, that the people may hear when I speak with you, and may also believe you forever.When Moses told the words of the people to the Lord, the Lord said to Moses, Go to the people and consecrate them today and tomorrow, and let them wash their garments and be ready for the third day. For on the third day the Lord will come down on Mount Sinai in the sight of all the people. And you shall set limits for the people all around, saying, Take care not to go up into the mountain or touch the edge of it. Whoever touches the mountain shall be put to death. No hand shall touch him, but he shall be stoned or shot. Whether beast or man, he shall not live. When the trumpet sounds a long blast, they shall come up to the mountain.So Moses went down from the mountain to the people and consecrated the people. And they washed their garments. And he said to the people, Be ready for the third day. Do not go near a woman.On the morning of the third day there were thunders and lightnings and a thick cloud on the mountain and a very loud trumpet blast, so that all the people in the camp trembled. Then Moses brought the people out of the camp to meet God, and they took their stand at the foot of the mountain. Now Mount Sinai was wrapped in smoke because the Lord had descended on it in fire. The smoke of it went up like the smoke of a kiln, and the whole mountain trembled greatly. And as the sound of the trumpet grew louder and louder, Moses spoke, and God answered him in thunder. The Lord came down on Mount Sinai, to the top of the mountain. And the Lord called Moses to the top of the mountain, and Moses went up.And the Lord said to Moses, Go down and warn the people, lest they break through to the Lord to look and many of them perish. Also let the priests who come near to the Lord consecrate themselves, lest the Lord break out against them. And Moses said to the Lord, The people cannot come up to Mount Sinai, for you yourself warned us, saying, Set limits around the mountain and consecrate it. And the Lord said to him, Go down, and come up bringing Aaron with you. But do not let the priests and the people break through to come up to the Lord, lest he break out against them. So Moses went down to the people and told them.When God speaks to Israel at Sinai, He does something amazing. Before He gives a single command, before He lays out a single law, He reminds them of His love. You yourselves have seen what I did for you. You saw how I bore you on eagles wings and brought you to myself. Before God calls His people to obey, He calls them to remember. Remember My goodness. Remember My rescue. Remember My kindness. Every act of obedience begins with the memory of grace.And then God gives them a breathtaking promise. If they will walk with Him, they will be His treasured possession. A kingdom of priests. A holy nation. Think about that for a moment. God does not simply rescue Israel from slavery. He rescues them for something. He rescues them to belong to Him. To be a people who carry His name into the world. This is not a small thing. This is identity. This is purpose. This is dignity.But then the tone shifts. God invites them near, but He also draws a boundary. Set limits for the people. Do not let them touch the mountain. If they do, they will perish. The message is unmistakable. God is near, but He is not common. He is good, but He is not tame. He loves His people, but He is holy. And holiness is not something to take lightly.And the people feel this. The mountain shakes. Thunder rolls. Fire descends. The trumpet grows louder. The people tremble. And this too is right. There is something deeply healthy about recognising the sheer scale of God’s holiness. Something that corrects our casualness. Something that reminds us that God is not just an accessory to our lives, but the Creator of everything. The One who holds all things together. The One before whom every knee will bow.And so we are left with this tension. God draws His people near, and yet He warns them to keep their distance. Come close, but not too close. Approach, but do not presume. And perhaps this explains so much of the Christian life. We live in this tension too. We have access to God through Jesus. We draw near to the throne of grace. But we also remember that the God we approach is holy. He is not small. He is not like us. And it is His holiness that makes His grace so astonishing.Because here is the truth. What Israel could not do at Sinai, Jesus makes possible. Israel could not cross the boundary. Israel could not stand on the mountain without fear. But Jesus climbs the mountain for us. Jesus mediates for us. Jesus stands in the holy presence of God on our behalf. And because of His work, we are welcomed. Not just to the foot of the mountain, but into the very presence of God.So what does this mean for you today. Maybe it is simply this. Remember the grace that drew you in. Remember the holiness that humbles you. And remember the Saviour who holds those two things together. Maybe your next step is to rediscover a sense of awe before the God who rescued you. To let His holiness correct you. To let His grace comfort you. To let His voice call you again to trust and obey.PrayerFather, help us remember Your kindness in drawing us to Yourself. Give us hearts that tremble rightly before Your holiness. And teach us to find our confidence only in Jesus, the One who brings us near. Help us walk as Your treasured people today. In Jesus name, Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
Quick note here at the start - most people are interacting with these only via the podcast stream, or via the text. So there really doesn’t seem to be much point in making the video versions, and they require quite a bit more work. So I have decided to keep going on the podcast and the text versions, but to drop my video podcast.There are seasons in life where you realise, often slowly, that you have taken on more than any one person can carry. You care for others. You try to solve problems. You try to hold everything together. And you keep going because you believe that this is what faithfulness looks like. But somewhere along the way the weight becomes too heavy and you do not even notice how tired you have become. Exodus 18 speaks right into that place. It shows us what happens when someone who truly loves God tries to shoulder more than God ever asked him to. And maybe this is the reminder you need today.Exodus 18 (ESV)Jethro, the priest of Midian, Moses father in law, heard of all that God had done for Moses and for Israel his people, how the Lord had brought Israel out of Egypt. Now Jethro, Moses father in law, had taken Zipporah, Moses wife, after he had sent her home, along with her two sons. The name of the one was Gershom, for he said, I have been a sojourner in a foreign land, and the name of the other, Eliezer, for he said, The God of my father was my help, and delivered me from the sword of Pharaoh. Jethro, Moses father in law, came with his sons and his wife to Moses in the wilderness where he was encamped at the mountain of God. And when he sent word to Moses, I, your father in law Jethro, am coming to you with your wife and her two sons with her, Moses went out to meet his father in law and bowed down and kissed him. And they asked each other of their welfare and went into the tent.Then Moses told his father in law all that the Lord had done to Pharaoh and to the Egyptians for Israel’s sake, all the hardship that had come upon them in the way, and how the Lord had delivered them. And Jethro rejoiced for all the good that the Lord had done to Israel, in that he had delivered them out of the hand of the Egyptians. Jethro said, Blessed be the Lord, who has delivered you out of the hand of the Egyptians and out of the hand of Pharaoh and has delivered the people from under the hand of the Egyptians. Now I know that the Lord is greater than all gods, because in this affair they dealt arrogantly with the people. And Jethro, Moses father in law, brought a burnt offering and sacrifices to God, and Aaron came with all the elders of Israel to eat bread with Moses father in law before God.The next day Moses sat to judge the people, and the people stood around Moses from morning till evening. When Moses father in law saw all that he was doing for the people, he said, What is this that you are doing for the people. Why do you sit alone, and all the people stand around you from morning till evening. And Moses said to his father in law, Because the people come to me to inquire of God. When they have a dispute, they come to me and I decide between one person and another, and I make them know the statutes of God and his laws.Moses father in law said to him, What you are doing is not good. You and the people with you will certainly wear yourselves out, for the thing is too heavy for you. You are not able to do it alone. Now obey my voice, I will give you advice, and God be with you. You shall represent the people before God and bring their cases to God, and you shall warn them about the statutes and the laws, and make them know the way in which they must walk and what they must do. Moreover, look for able men from all the people, men who fear God, who are trustworthy and hate a bribe, and place such men over the people as chiefs of thousands, of hundreds, of fifties, and of tens. And let them judge the people at all times. Every great matter they shall bring to you, but any small matter they shall decide themselves. So it will be easier for you, and they will bear the burden with you. If you do this, God will direct you, you will be able to endure, and all this people also will go to their place in peace.So Moses listened to the voice of his father in law and did all that he had said. Moses chose able men out of all Israel and made them heads over the people, chiefs of thousands, of hundreds, of fifties, and of tens. And they judged the people at all times. Any hard case they brought to Moses, but any small matter they decided themselves. Then Moses let his father in law depart, and he went away to his own country.When Jethro arrives, Moses recounts everything God has done. The plagues. The Red Sea. The hardship. The deliverance. And Jethro rejoices. He praises God. It is a beautiful moment of shared faith. But the very next day paints a different picture. Moses sits from morning until evening listening to every dispute, every complaint, every burden. And Jethro sees something Moses can no longer see. The weight is crushing him. And it is crushing the people waiting for help.Jethro says the words Moses needed to hear. What you are doing is not good. You will wear yourself out. The thing is too heavy for you. You cannot do it alone. And let’s be honest. Many of us need someone to say the same thing to us. Because sometimes we mistake exhaustion for godliness. We think that taking on everything ourselves is what it means to be committed. But Jethro gently shows Moses that trying to be everything for everyone is not faithfulness. It is a failure to recognise the limits God has placed upon us.Notice something important. Jethro does not tell Moses to abandon his calling. He tells him to keep doing what only he can do. Moses is still to teach the people. He is still to intercede for them. He is still to lead them in the ways of God. But he is not meant to carry the whole burden alone. God’s people flourish when God’s people share the load.And Moses listens. This might be the most remarkable part of the chapter. Moses is the man who spoke to God face to face. Yet he humbles himself and receives correction from his father in law. He does not defend himself. He does not justify his busyness. He simply listens. Wisdom listens. Wisdom receives help. Wisdom recognises that God often uses the people around us to restore us.So what about you. What burden are you carrying alone that God never asked you to carry. Where have you convinced yourself that being overwhelmed is the same thing as being faithful. Who are the people God has already placed around you to help. And are you willing to let them. Are you willing to admit that you are finite. That you cannot carry everything. That God has not asked you to.And remember this too. The gospel is the ultimate reminder that you do not have to carry the heaviest weight. Jesus carried the burden of sin that would crush any one of us. He bore what we could never bear. And because he carried that burden for you, you do not have to try to be your own saviour. You are free to ask for help. You are free to rest. You are free to be human.Maybe today the next step for you is simply to admit that something is too heavy. And perhaps to let someone else step in alongside you. That is not weakness. That is obedience.PrayerFather, help us see where we are carrying more than you have asked us to. Give us humility to listen to the wisdom of others. Teach us to share the burdens you never meant us to bear alone. Turn our hearts again to the rest and the freedom that Christ has won for us. And help us trust that your strength is made perfect in our weakness. In Jesus name, Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
There are seasons where the fight goes on longer than you thought it would. You believed you could hold yourself together. You believed you could endure. You believed you had enough strength. Then the hours turn into days and the days into months, and you feel yourself slipping. Your arms get tired. Your resolve weakens. Your heart sinks. Exodus 17 shows us a moment exactly like this. It teaches us that God never intended His people to fight alone. He gives us community not as an optional extra but as a way that His strength reaches us when our own strength runs out.Exodus 17:8–16 (ESV)Then Amalek came and fought with Israel at Rephidim. So Moses said to Joshua, Choose for us men, and go out and fight with Amalek. Tomorrow I will stand on the top of the hill with the staff of God in my hand. So Joshua did as Moses told him, and fought with Amalek, while Moses, Aaron, and Hur went up to the top of the hill. Whenever Moses held up his hand, Israel prevailed, and whenever he lowered his hand, Amalek prevailed. But Moses hands grew weary, so they took a stone and put it under him, and he sat on it, while Aaron and Hur held up his hands, one on one side, and the other on the other side. So his hands were steady until the going down of the sun. And Joshua overwhelmed Amalek and his people with the sword.Then the Lord said to Moses, Write this as a memorial in a book and recite it in the ears of Joshua, that I will utterly blot out the memory of Amalek from under heaven. And Moses built an altar and called the name of it, The Lord is my banner, saying, A hand upon the throne of the Lord. The Lord will have war with Amalek from generation to generation.This is the first battle Israel faces after leaving Egypt. They have not trained as soldiers. They do not know how to fight. They have no military experience. Yet Amalek attacks them. The wilderness is not empty. It is full of real dangers. And here Israel learns that God does not merely save them from something. He saves them into a life where trust is needed at every turn.Moses sends Joshua to lead the battle while he goes to the top of the hill with the staff of God in his hand. The staff is the sign of God’s power. It struck the Nile. It parted the sea. It symbolises the God who fights for His people. And as long as Moses holds up his hand, Israel prevails. But when his hand sinks, Amalek begins to win. The point is not that Moses is doing magic. The point is that Israel wins only as they depend on God. The raised hands are a posture of dependence.But Moses gets tired. His arms grow heavy. He cannot hold them up forever. And this is where the beauty of this passage shines. Aaron and Hur come beside him. They put a stone under him so he can sit. Then they hold up his hands, one on each side. Together they keep his arms steady until sunset. And because of this, Israel wins the battle.There is something deeply human here. Even the strongest servants of God grow tired. Even faithful leaders become weary. Even people of great faith reach their limits. God never designed you to hold your arms up forever on your own. He gives brothers and sisters to hold you up when you can no longer hold yourself up.Some battles in life are not won by individual strength. They are won by community dependence. They are won when others pray for you, when others lift you up, when others carry you through. God uses the hands of your friends to steady your own. And this is not weakness. This is faith lived out in community. God designed His people to hold one another up.After the victory the Lord tells Moses to write it down. Israel must remember that their triumph came from the Lord. Moses builds an altar and calls it The Lord is my banner. A banner was the rallying point in battle. The standard under which an army marched. Moses is saying that God Himself is the one under whom they fight and through whom they prevail. Their strength does not come from their swords or their numbers or their bravery. It comes from the presence of God in their midst.This story also foreshadows something greater. One day another man would stand on a hill with His hands outstretched. Not in fatigue but in willing sacrifice. And in that moment the true victory would be won. Not against Amalek but against sin and death. Jesus is the one who holds His arms out so that victory might come to His people. He is the one who fights for us when we cannot fight for ourselves.So this passage puts a question to your heart. Where are your arms tired. Where have you reached the end of your endurance. Who has God placed beside you to hold you up. And perhaps even more importantly, whose arms are you meant to hold up. The Christian life is not a solo battle. It is a shared one. And God meets His people in their weakness through the hands of those He has placed around them.PrayerFather, help us to recognise our need for one another. Strengthen us when our arms grow tired. Surround us with people who will hold us up in faith and help us to hold up others in their weakness. Teach us to depend on you in the battles we face. Remind us that you are our banner and that victory belongs to you alone. Lead us to trust in the one who stretched out His hands for our salvation. In Jesus name, Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
There are moments in life where your expectations of God clash with your experience of God. You thought He would come through sooner. You thought He would answer differently. You thought obedience would lead to relief, not pressure. And when reality does not match what you hoped for, something inside you begins to harden. Exodus 17 shows us that this temptation is not new. Israel does not simply thirst in the wilderness. They begin to question the very character of God. And the heartbreaking thing is that this comes after miracle upon miracle. Yet this is how the human heart works. Pressure reveals what is really inside us.Exodus 17:1–7 (ESV)All the congregation of the people of Israel moved on from the wilderness of Sin by stages, according to the commandment of the Lord, and camped at Rephidim, but there was no water for the people to drink. Therefore the people quarreled with Moses and said, Give us water to drink. And Moses said to them, Why do you quarrel with me. Why do you test the Lord. But the people thirsted there for water, and the people grumbled against Moses and said, Why did you bring us up out of Egypt, to kill us and our children and our livestock with thirst. So Moses cried to the Lord, What shall I do with this people. They are almost ready to stone me.And the Lord said to Moses, Pass on before the people, taking with you some of the elders of Israel, and take in your hand the staff with which you struck the Nile, and go. Behold, I will stand before you there on the rock at Horeb, and you shall strike the rock, and water shall come out of it, and the people will drink. And Moses did so, in the sight of the elders of Israel. And he called the name of the place Massah and Meribah, because of the quarreling of the people of Israel, and because they tested the Lord by saying, Is the Lord among us or not.Israel faces another crisis. They have no water. Hunger was bad enough. Now thirst grips them. And instead of remembering the God who turned bitter water sweet and who rained down manna each morning, they quarrel with Moses. They demand water. They blame him for their suffering. They accuse him of leading them into the wilderness to die. Their fear makes them irrational. Their thirst makes them bitter.Yet beneath their complaint is a deeper issue. Moses names it when he asks why they are testing the Lord. Their real question is revealed at the end of the passage. They want to know if the Lord is with them or not. This is the heart of every spiritual crisis. When life dries up, we begin to suspect God has left us. When prayers seem unanswered, we wonder if He sees us. When the path is difficult, we assume He is punishing us. The root of their anger is unbelief.Moses feels the weight of their hostility. He cries out to God. He thinks they might kill him. This is how quickly a grateful heart can become a dangerous one. Three chapters ago they were singing on the shore. Now they are ready to stone the man God used to save them. This is what fear does. It transforms people. It makes them forget mercy. It makes them cruel.But God responds in a surprising way. He does not shut them down. He does not send judgment. He tells Moses to take the staff with which he struck the Nile and go before the people. And then comes one of the most astonishing sentences in the whole chapter. God says, I will stand before you on the rock. The Holy One stands before sinful people and invites Moses to strike the rock. Out comes water. Life from a place of death. Hope from a place of hardness.This moment becomes one of the defining images of grace in the Bible. The place is named Massah and Meribah. Testing and quarreling. Yet even there God gives water. Even there He remains faithful. Even there He meets His people in their fear. And this is meant to teach us something about His heart. God does not abandon His people in their unbelief. He provides for them while exposing the unbelief that lives inside them.When you feel let down by God, it is rarely because He has failed you. It is because your expectations were shaped by something other than His promises. Israel assumed that following God meant immediate comfort. But God is after something greater than comfort. He is forming trust. He is strengthening faith. And often that means He lets life get dry enough that we finally cry out to Him. Not in bitterness but in need.The New Testament tells us that this rock pointed forward to something far greater. Paul says in 1 Corinthians 10 that the rock was Christ. He is the one who was struck so that living water might flow. He is the one who stands before His people in grace even when they fail. He is the one who satisfies the thirst of a restless soul.So this passage puts a question to us. When life is a Rephidim moment, when you stand in a dry place with no water in sight, what do you do. Do you quarrel and accuse. Or do you cry out like Moses. Do you shake your fist or do you trust that God stands before you on the rock, ready to give what you truly need. The dryness is not a sign of God’s absence. It is often the place where He shows His presence most clearly.PrayerFather, meet us in our dry places. Forgive us when we assume you have abandoned us. Teach us to trust you when life feels barren. Help us to remember your faithfulness in the past so that we do not doubt you in the present. Give us the faith of Moses to cry out rather than quarrel. Remind us that Jesus is the true rock who was struck for our salvation. Satisfy our thirst with your presence and lead us to trust you with all our heart. In Jesus name, Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
We all have these moments in life where God allows us to feel our need so that we learn again where our help comes from. Hunger has a way of exposing the heart. It reveals what we truly believe about God and what we think we need to survive. Israel has already begun complaining. They have accused God of abandoning them. They have blamed Moses. They have twisted the past into something it never was. And yet God does not crush them for their unbelief. Instead He teaches them something deeper. He teaches them to trust Him one day at a time.Exodus 16:1–21 (ESV)They set out from Elim, and all the congregation of the people of Israel came to the wilderness of Sin, which is between Elim and Sinai, on the fifteenth day of the second month after they had departed from the land of Egypt. And the whole congregation of the people of Israel grumbled against Moses and Aaron in the wilderness, and the people of Israel said to them, Would that we had died by the hand of the Lord in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the meat pots and ate bread to the full, for you have brought us out into this wilderness to kill this whole assembly with hunger.Then the Lord said to Moses, Behold, I am about to rain bread from heaven for you, and the people shall go out and gather a day’s portion every day, that I may test them, whether they will walk in my law or not. On the sixth day, when they prepare what they bring in, it will be twice as much as they gather daily. So Moses and Aaron said to all the people of Israel, At evening you shall know that it was the Lord who brought you out of the land of Egypt, and in the morning you shall see the glory of the Lord, because he has heard your grumbling against the Lord. For what are we, that you grumble against us. And Moses said, When the Lord gives you in the evening meat to eat and in the morning bread to the full, because the Lord has heard your grumbling that you grumble against him, what are we. Your grumbling is not against us but against the Lord.Then Moses said to Aaron, Say to the whole congregation of the people of Israel, Come near before the Lord, for he has heard your grumbling. And as soon as Aaron spoke to the whole congregation of the people of Israel, they looked toward the wilderness, and behold, the glory of the Lord appeared in the cloud. And the Lord said to Moses, I have heard the grumbling of the people of Israel. Say to them, At twilight you shall eat meat, and in the morning you shall be filled with bread. Then you shall know that I am the Lord your God.In the evening quail came up and covered the camp, and in the morning dew lay around the camp. And when the dew had gone up, there was on the face of the wilderness a fine, flake like thing, fine as frost on the ground. When the people of Israel saw it, they said to one another, What is it. For they did not know what it was. And Moses said to them, It is the bread that the Lord has given you to eat. This is what the Lord has commanded. Gather of it, each one of you, as much as he can eat. You shall each take an omer, according to the number of the persons that each of you has in his tent. And the people of Israel did so. They gathered, some more, some less. But when they measured it with an omer, whoever gathered much had nothing left over, and whoever gathered little had no lack. Each of them gathered as much as he could eat. And Moses said to them, Let no one leave any of it over till the morning. But they did not listen to Moses. Some left part of it till the morning, and it bred worms and stank. And Moses was angry with them. Morning by morning they gathered it, each as much as he could eat. But when the sun grew hot, it melted. On the sixth day they gathered twice as much bread, two omers each. And when all the leaders of the congregation came and told Moses, he said to them, This is what the Lord has commanded. Tomorrow is a day of solemn rest, a holy Sabbath to the Lord. Bake what you will bake and boil what you will boil, and all that is left over lay aside to be kept till the morning. So they laid it aside till the morning, as Moses commanded them, and it did not stink, and there were no worms in it. Moses said, Eat it today, for today is a Sabbath to the Lord. Today you will not find it in the field. Six days you shall gather it, but on the seventh day, which is a Sabbath, there will be none.On the seventh day some of the people went out to gather, but they found none. And the Lord said to Moses, How long will you refuse to keep my commandments and my laws. See, the Lord has given you the Sabbath, therefore on the sixth day he gives you bread for two days. Remain each of you in his place. Let no one go out of his place on the seventh day. So the people rested on the seventh day.Now the house of Israel called its name manna. It was like coriander seed, white, and the taste of it was like wafers made with honey. Moses said, This is what the Lord has commanded. Let an omer of it be kept throughout your generations, so that they may see the bread with which I fed you in the wilderness, when I brought you out of the land of Egypt. And Moses said to Aaron, Take a jar, and put an omer of manna in it, and place it before the Lord to be kept throughout your generations. As the Lord commanded Moses, so Aaron placed it before the testimony to be kept. The people of Israel ate the manna forty years, till they came to a habitable land. They ate the manna till they came to the border of the land of Canaan. An omer is the tenth part of an ephah.Israel begins this passage with grumbling. Not mild frustration but full blown despair. They say that slavery in Egypt was preferable to freedom under God. They say it would have been better to die than to be hungry. This is the danger of spiritual forgetfulness. When pressure rises, the past becomes distorted. The memory of Egypt softens. The cruelty fades. The slavery gets repainted as comfort. And when that happens, the heart cannot see the goodness of God in the present.God does not dismiss their fear. He responds to it. He tells Moses that He will rain bread from heaven. Not grow it. Not lead them to it. He will drop it from the sky. And He tells them why. He is testing them, but not in the sense of a cruel exam. He is forming them. Teaching them. Shaping them. He is making them into people who depend on Him instead of themselves.They are to gather a day’s portion each day. Not more. Not less. They must trust God tomorrow the same way they trust Him today. This is deeply countercultural. Everything in us wants to stockpile security. We want enough comfort to quiet our fears. But God refuses to let them store their safety in a basket. He is teaching them that true security is found in Him alone. Not in accumulation. Not in control. In Him.When the quail comes in the evening and the manna in the morning, God provides exactly what they need. Some gather more. Some gather less. But no one has too much and no one has too little. God’s provision is both personal and perfect. And yet when He tells them not to store it overnight, some ignore Him. They hoard. They fear. They cling. And in the morning the manna is full of worms. What we grasp in fear always rots.This passage shows us something precious about God. He is patient with slow learners. He does not abandon Israel in their grumbling. He meets them in it. He feeds them. He teaches them gently, one morning at a time. God is not merely providing food. He is forming faith.And the lesson is for us. Many of the seasons where we feel the most needy are the seasons where God is doing His deepest work. He allows hunger so that trust can grow. He allows dependence because it is the pathway to maturity. The wilderness is where God breaks the habits of Egypt and builds the instincts of His people.So the real question is this. Are you willing to trust God for today. Not for next month. Not for next year. Today. Are you willing to gather what God gives and not cling to what He has not given. Are you willing to believe that the God who saved you will sustain you. If God rains manna only in the morning, will you wait for Him or take matters into your own hands.PrayerFather, teach us to trust you for today. Soften our hearts where fear makes us hoard. Help us to depend on you morning by morning. Remind us that you see our needs and meet them in your perfect timing. Thank you that you are patient with us even when we grumble. Shape our hearts to rest in your daily provision and to walk with you in simple obedience. In Jesus name, Amen. 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There is something very human about moments where our hearts are filled with faith one day and then crash into fear the next. We can stand in church overwhelmed with gratitude for what God has done, then find ourselves grumbling before lunch the next day. It is shocking how quickly joy evaporates when pressure rises. Exodus shows us we are not the first to fall into this pattern. Israel goes from tambourines on the shore to complaints in the desert in three days. And before we look down on them, we probably need to admit that this is far closer to our spiritual experience than we would like to admit.Exodus 15:22–27 (ESV)Then Moses made Israel set out from the Red Sea, and they went into the wilderness of Shur. They went three days in the wilderness and found no water. When they came to Marah, they could not drink the water of Marah because it was bitter. Therefore it was named Marah. And the people grumbled against Moses, saying, What shall we drink. And he cried to the Lord, and the Lord showed him a log, and he threw it into the water, and the water became sweet. There the Lord made for them a statute and a rule, and there he tested them, saying, If you will diligently listen to the voice of the Lord your God, and do what is right in his eyes, and give ear to his commandments and keep all his statutes, I will put none of the diseases on you that I put on the Egyptians, for I am the Lord, your healer. Then they came to Elim, where there were twelve springs of water and seventy palm trees, and they encamped there by the water.Israel goes from worship to whining in record time. Just three days earlier they were singing about the power of God and the majesty of God and the salvation of God. Now the tune has changed. The first sign of trouble and suddenly they cannot see God anywhere. This shift is the heart of the passage. The question is not whether God saved them. They know He did. The question is whether they trust Him to sustain them.Notice the pattern. They walk into a place called Marah, which means bitter. They taste the water and find it undrinkable. Their immediate response is not prayer, not remembering the sea behind them, not recalling the song they just sang. Their response is grumbling. And this is exactly what happens to us. It is easy to sing when the seas part. It is far harder to trust when the desert is dry. The problem is not the water. The problem is the heart.Moses does what they should have done. He cries out to the Lord. And God answers in a way none of them expected. He shows Moses a log. Moses throws it into the water and it becomes sweet. The lesson is simple. God can turn bitterness into sweetness with a single act of His will. Yet we rarely give Him the chance. We panic before we pray. We grumble before we look up. We doubt before we remember.Then comes the real point of the episode. God tells them He is testing them. Not to make them fail, but to teach them something they cannot learn on the shoreline. At Marah God reveals Himself as their healer. Not just the healer of bodies but the healer of hearts. The healer of unbelief. The healer of people who know how to sing a song but do not yet know how to trust a promise.And just when they think life will always be bitter, God leads them to Elim. Twelve springs of water. Seventy palm trees. A picture of rest and refreshment. God is showing them a pattern. The wilderness will have both Marah and Elim. Bitter days and sweet days. Dry places and shaded places. Neither cancels the other. God is present in both.But Israel does what we often do. Elim is not enough to teach them gratitude. When the next pressure comes, the complaints start again. This time it is hunger. And their complaints get darker. They say it would have been better to die in Egypt. Better to be slaves with full stomachs than free people with empty ones. They twist the memory of Egypt into something it never was. Slavery becomes comfort in their imagination. Oppression becomes security. This happens to every Christian who forgets what God saved them from. If you forget the whip of Egypt, you will long for the food of Egypt.What Israel needs is not more water or more food. Those things matter, and God will provide both. But what they truly need is a different kind of nourishment. They need faith shaped by remembrance. They need to look back at the sea behind them and let it inform the desert in front of them. They need to remember that the God who brought them out will not abandon them now.This passage confronts us gently but honestly. How quickly do you forget what God has done. How often do you assume the worst when difficulty comes. How easily do you let present pressure rewrite past mercy. Israel is us. We are them. Our hearts are not naturally trusting. They need to be trained.Yet the hope in this passage is immense. God does not abandon His grumbling people. He does not turn away in disgust. He meets them in their need. He turns bitter water sweet. He provides bread in the wilderness. He reveals Himself as the God who heals and the God who feeds. His grace is not dependent on our perfect attitude. His provision is not cancelled by our fears.The invitation is clear. Bring your bitterness to Him. Bring your dryness to Him. Bring your hunger to Him. Do not grumble. Cry out. Trust that the God who saved you will sustain you. There will be seasons of Marah and seasons of Elim, but God remains the same in both.PrayerFather, we confess that we forget so quickly. We sing on the shore and complain in the desert. We doubt your goodness when life turns bitter. Help us to come to you first. Teach us to cry out instead of grumbling. Remind us of the sea you have parted behind us. Strengthen our faith to trust you in the dry places. Sweeten the bitterness in our hearts and lead us toward the rest you provide. You are our healer and our sustainer. In Jesus name, Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
Have you noticed that some of the biggest turning points in life leave you strangely quiet? You come out the other side of something you thought would break you, a diagnosis, a betrayal, a season of fear, a weight you did not think you could carry, and instead of rejoicing, you simply move on. You slip back into routine. You do not stop long enough to recognise that God actually did something extraordinary. Exodus 15 confronts that silence. It shows us a people who, having walked through an impossible situation, stop everything to remember, to praise, to declare with full lungs what God has done. And the question for us is simple. When God brings you through the sea, do you sing?Exodus 15:1–21 (ESV)Then Moses and the people of Israel sang this song to the Lord, saying,I will sing to the Lord, for he has triumphed gloriously, the horse and his rider he has thrown into the sea.The Lord is my strength and my song, and he has become my salvation, this is my God, and I will praise him, my father’s God, and I will exalt him.The Lord is a man of war, the Lord is his name.Pharaoh’s chariots and his host he cast into the sea, and his chosen officers were sunk in the Red Sea.The floods covered them, they went down into the depths like a stone.Your right hand, O Lord, glorious in power, your right hand, O Lord, shatters the enemy.In the greatness of your majesty you overthrow your adversaries, you send out your fury, it consumes them like stubble.At the blast of your nostrils the waters piled up, the floods stood up in a heap, the deeps congealed in the heart of the sea.The enemy said, I will pursue, I will overtake, I will divide the spoil, my desire shall have its fill of them. I will draw my sword, my hand shall destroy them.You blew with your wind, the sea covered them, they sank like lead in the mighty waters.Who is like you, O Lord, among the gods. Who is like you, majestic in holiness, awesome in glorious deeds, doing wonders.You stretched out your right hand, the earth swallowed them.You have led in your steadfast love the people whom you have redeemed, you have guided them by your strength to your holy abode.The peoples have heard, they tremble, pangs have seized the inhabitants of Philistia.Now are the chiefs of Edom dismayed, trembling seizes the leaders of Moab, all the inhabitants of Canaan have melted away.Terror and dread fall upon them, because of the greatness of your arm, they are still as a stone, till your people, O Lord, pass by, till the people pass by whom you have purchased.You will bring them in and plant them on your own mountain, the place, O Lord, which you have made for your abode, the sanctuary, O Lord, which your hands have established.The Lord will reign forever and ever.For when the horses of Pharaoh with his chariots and his horsemen went into the sea, the Lord brought back the waters of the sea upon them, but the people of Israel walked on dry ground in the midst of the sea.Then Miriam the prophetess, the sister of Aaron, took a tambourine in her hand, and all the women went out after her with tambourines and dancing.And Miriam sang to them, Sing to the Lord, for he has triumphed gloriously, the horse and his rider he has thrown into the sea.Israel stands on the far shore of the Red Sea. The water is still swirling behind them. The bodies of Pharaoh’s army are washing up on the sand. But instead of rushing forward into the new life ahead of them, instead of setting up camp or getting organised or making plans, they stop. They sing. They worship. And that tells us something vital about the heart of genuine faith. Salvation is meant to be sung about, not quietly filed away as something God once did.Let us be honest. We are not naturally singers in moments like this. We assume we would be. We say things like, if God did a miracle like that for me, I would praise him. But would we. God has done miracle after miracle in your own life. Forgiveness of sins. Answered prayers. Preservation in hardship. Being carried through dark valleys. And yet most days we barely whisper a thank you. We move straight on, and the silence becomes a breeding ground for amnesia. Our hearts, if left unattended, wander back toward Egypt, back toward the very things that enslaved us.Pharaoh’s army behind Israel is a picture of that pull. The old life does not politely stay behind. It chases you. It pursues you. It insists that you belong to it. And the world, the flesh and the devil still operate the same way. They promise familiarity. They whisper that you were happier back there. They tell you that faith is too costly, too narrow, too intense. Come home, they say. But God steps in. He parts seas. He makes a way where no way exists. He brings you through the chaos, not around it, and then he buries the old life so thoroughly that it cannot claim you again.And what should our response be. The same as Israel’s. You sing. You declare. You name the salvation for what it is. Worship is not the emotional garnish we sprinkle onto faith. It is the warfare by which we resist the old life. It is how we remember. It is how God reorders our desires and redirects our fears. Worship is how faith breathes when fear tries to suffocate.So Israel sings. And their song is not a gentle hum. It is a full bodied proclamation. The Lord is my strength and my song. Who is like you. You have redeemed us. You will plant us. The same way Habakkuk praised God while Babylon marched toward Jerusalem, Israel praises God with the saltwater still drying on their skin. They know that the God who saved them yesterday will lead them tomorrow.Then we come to Miriam. She takes a tambourine. The women follow her. And suddenly the shoreline becomes a worship service. Why a tambourine. Because salvation demands a physical response. Because joy is not meant to stay locked inside your chest. Because when God rescues, his people move. They sing. They celebrate. It is not emotional manipulation. It is not mindless repetition. It is the response of a people who refuse to forget what God has done.That is the real challenge for us. If you do not teach your heart to sing after God saves you, the world will teach your heart to forget. Many Christians live as though Pharaoh is still in charge, even though the sea has collapsed behind them. They intellectually acknowledge salvation but emotionally live like slaves. Exodus 15 calls us out of that fog. It tells us that the Christian life is not driven by the echoes of Egypt but by the memory of deliverance.So the question stands. Has God brought you through something, and have you stopped to sing.PrayerFather, help us to remember. Help us to see the seas you have parted, the enemies you have defeated, the sins you have buried and the future you have promised. Draw us out of silence and into praise. Make us a people who sing not because life is easy but because you are faithful. Let our hearts echo Israel on the shore and Miriam with her tambourine, rejoicing in the salvation that you alone have accomplished. You are our strength, our song and our salvation. In Jesus name, Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
There are points in the Christian life where God deliberately places us in situations that feel impossible. Places where our resources are not enough, where our wisdom is not enough, where our strength is not enough. Places where we come to the end of ourselves. And often our first instinct is panic. We think God has abandoned us, or that we have misheard him, or that something has gone horribly wrong. But again and again in Scripture we see that those places are not signs of God’s absence. They are signs of his intention. They are the places where God shows us who he is, and what he can do, so that our faith rests not on ourselves but on him. And Exodus 14 brings us right into one of those moments. Let’s read it together.Exodus 14 (ESV)Then the Lord said to Moses, “Tell the people of Israel to turn back and encamp in front of Pi-hahiroth, between Migdol and the sea, in front of Baal-zephon; you shall encamp facing it, by the sea. For Pharaoh will say of the people of Israel, ‘They are wandering in the land; the wilderness has shut them in.’ And I will harden Pharaoh’s heart, and he will pursue them, and I will get glory over Pharaoh and all his host, and the Egyptians shall know that I am the Lord.” And they did so.When the king of Egypt was told that the people had fled, the mind of Pharaoh and his servants was changed toward the people, and they said, “What is this we have done, that we have let Israel go from serving us?” So he made ready his chariot and took his army with him, and took six hundred chosen chariots and all the other chariots of Egypt with officers over all of them. And the Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh king of Egypt, and he pursued the people of Israel while the people of Israel were going out defiantly. The Egyptians pursued them, all Pharaoh’s horses and chariots and his horsemen and his army, and overtook them encamped at the sea.When Pharaoh drew near, the people of Israel lifted up their eyes, and behold, the Egyptians were marching after them, and they feared greatly. And the people of Israel cried out to the Lord. They said to Moses, “Is it because there are no graves in Egypt that you have taken us away to die in the wilderness? What have you done to us in bringing us out? Is not this what we said to you in Egypt: ‘Leave us alone that we may serve the Egyptians’? For it would have been better for us to serve the Egyptians than to die in the wilderness.”And Moses said to the people, “Fear not, stand firm, and see the salvation of the Lord, which he will work for you today. For the Egyptians you see today, you shall never see again. The Lord will fight for you, and you have only to be silent.”The Lord said to Moses, “Why do you cry to me? Tell the people of Israel to go forward. Lift up your staff, stretch out your hand over the sea, and divide it, that the people may go through the sea on dry ground. And I will harden the hearts of the Egyptians so that they shall go in after them, and I will get glory over Pharaoh and all his host, his chariots, and his horsemen. And the Egyptians shall know that I am the Lord, when I have gotten glory over Pharaoh.”Then the angel of God who was going before the host of Israel moved and went behind them, and the pillar of cloud moved from before them and stood behind them. Coming between the host of Egypt and the host of Israel. And there was the cloud and the darkness, and it lit up the night, without one coming near the other all night.Then Moses stretched out his hand over the sea, and the Lord drove the sea back by a strong east wind all night and made the sea dry land, and the waters were divided. And the people of Israel went into the midst of the sea on dry ground, the waters being a wall to them on their right and on their left.The Egyptians pursued and went in after them into the midst of the sea, all Pharaoh’s horses, his chariots, and his horsemen. And in the morning watch the Lord in the pillar of fire and cloud looked down on the Egyptian forces and threw them into panic, clogging their chariot wheels so that they drove heavily. And the Egyptians said, “Let us flee from before Israel, for the Lord fights for them.”Then the Lord said to Moses, “Stretch out your hand over the sea, that the water may come back upon the Egyptians, upon their chariots, and upon their horsemen.” So Moses stretched out his hand over the sea, and the sea returned to its normal course. As the Egyptians fled into it, the Lord threw them into the midst of the sea. The waters returned and covered the chariots and the horsemen. Not one of them remained.But the people of Israel walked on dry ground through the sea, the waters being a wall to them on their right and on their left. Thus the Lord saved Israel that day. And Israel saw the Egyptians dead on the seashore. Israel saw the great power that the Lord used against the Egyptians, and the people feared the Lord, and they believed in the Lord and in his servant Moses.”The first thing we have to see here is that God deliberately leads Israel into a corner. They are hemmed in by mountains on one side, the sea on the other, and the most powerful army in the world behind them. From a human perspective, it is madness. But God tells us exactly why he does it. He is going to get glory over Pharaoh. He is going to show both Israel and Egypt who he is.And just like so many of us, Israel panics the moment things turn hard. They accuse Moses. They complain. They grumble. They say it would have been better to have remained slaves. And before we judge them, we need to recognise how quickly our own hearts go there. The moment God places us in a situation we cannot control, our hearts often run back to old sins, old comforts, old idols. We say, I knew this obedience thing would cost me. I knew God would let me down. We are not that different.But Moses answers them with words we need to hear. Fear not. Stand firm. See the salvation of the Lord. You do not save yourselves. You do not fight this battle. You do not deliver yourselves by your strength. God will fight for you, and you need only be still.Friends this is the heart of faith. At the moment of greatest fear, the temptation is to run, to panic, to grasp at control. But God often brings us to the sea so that we will finally stop trusting ourselves. He brings us to the place where the only possible explanation for our survival is his power.The rest of the chapter is God doing exactly what he promised. The pillar moves behind them, blocking the Egyptians. God opens the sea. Israel walks through on dry ground, and the waters stand like walls beside them. Egypt charges in behind them, and God collapses the sea on their heads. Not one enemy remains. And Israel sees, with their own eyes, the strong hand of the Lord.This is not a cute story. This is not children’s-book theology. This is the God of the universe saving his people by destroying their enemies. And friends, this is a picture of the gospel. The cross is God opening the sea. Jesus walks the path before us. He stands between us and judgement. And our enemies—sin, death, Satan—are drowned behind us, defeated by the power of God.But notice how the chapter ends. Israel feared the Lord, and they believed him. That is the point. God saves so that his people will trust him. He works in power so that our faith will rest not on ourselves, but on him alone.Let’s pray.Father, thank you that you are the God who fights for your people. Help us trust you when you lead us into places that feel impossible. Keep us from fear, keep us from running back to old chains, and teach us to stand firm and see your salvation. Strengthen our faith so that we walk forward with confidence in your power and in your care. Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
There are moments in the Christian life where the path God takes us on makes no sense to us. We want the straight line, the easy road, the quickest way from slavery to promise. But God, in his wisdom, rarely takes us the way we would choose. And just like Israel, we find that the Lord leads us in ways that feel longer, harder, or slower than we had hoped. The question this passage raises for us is simple and confronting. Do we trust the Lord’s path, even when it is not the path we would have chosen. Do we trust his purpose, even when we cannot understand it. With that in mind, let’s read the next part of the story.Exodus 13:17–22 (ESV)When Pharaoh let the people go, God did not lead them by way of the land of the Philistines, although that was near. For God said, “Lest the people change their minds when they see war and return to Egypt.” But God led the people around by the way of the wilderness toward the Red Sea. And the people of Israel went up out of the land of Egypt equipped for battle. Moses took the bones of Joseph with him, for Joseph had made the sons of Israel solemnly swear, saying, “God will surely visit you, and you shall carry up my bones with you from here.” And they moved on from Succoth and camped at Etham, on the edge of the wilderness. And the Lord went before them by day in a pillar of cloud to lead them along the way, and by night in a pillar of fire to give them light, that they might travel by day and by night. The pillar of cloud by day and the pillar of fire by night did not depart from before the people.What is striking here is how quickly God disrupts Israel’s expectations. The land of the Philistines was the straight line, the quickest route. It would have made the most sense to them. But God knew his people. He knew their weakness. He knew that if they saw war too soon, if fear gripped them before faith had grown in them, they would run straight back to the very place he rescued them from. So instead of taking them forward in the obvious way, he takes them sideways, into the wilderness. He leads them toward the Red Sea, a path that, from a human perspective, seems foolish.Friends, this is where God’s wisdom confronts our pride. We imagine that we know what is best for our lives. We plan, we strategise, we map out what we think will bring us flourishing. But God sees further into our hearts than we ever will. He knows what would crush us. He knows what temptations we cannot handle. He knows what trials would make us run. And so sometimes he takes us the long way around. Not to frustrate us, but to keep us. Not to make life harder, but to prevent us falling back into the slavery he rescued us from.Israel leaves Egypt armed for battle, but they are not ready for battle. And how often is that true of us. We think we are stronger than we are. We think we can handle more than we can. And we forget that spiritual maturity is not proven by how much we can carry, but by how deeply we trust the God who carries us.In the middle of this, we get this beautiful detail about Joseph’s bones. Moses carries them out because Joseph had commanded it centuries earlier. Why does this matter. It matters because Israel is learning that the God who promised to bring them out is the God who keeps every word he speaks. Joseph believed God would bring them home long before any of them saw it with their own eyes. And now that promise is being fulfilled. This is faith across generations. This is God’s faithfulness unfolding across centuries.And then comes the heart of the passage. The Lord goes before them. Not as an idea, not as a feeling, but as a visible, physical presence. A pillar of cloud by day. A pillar of fire by night. God does not hide himself. He does not leave them to guess. He leads them, step by slow step, in a way that ensures they cannot take a single movement of this journey for granted. And notice that it says the pillar did not depart from before the people. God does not lose interest. He does not wander off. He does not forget them in the wilderness.Friends, God may take us into places we do not understand, but he never takes us alone. And the longer road is often the place where we learn to trust him. Where our hearts are humbled. Where our faith is strengthened. Where we stop relying on our own wisdom and begin to rest in his.We do not always know why God leads us the long way around. But we do know this. The God who leads is the God who stays. The God who calls us is the God who goes before us. The God who rescues us is the God who carries us. And the God who brought Israel through the wilderness will bring us through ours.PrayerFather, help us trust the path you choose for us, even when it is not the path we would choose for ourselves. Keep us from fear, keep us from running back to old chains, and teach us to rest in your wisdom. Lead us by your presence, strengthen our faith, and remind us that you never depart from your people. Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
It is a remarkable thing that the very first instruction God gives Israel after bringing them out of Egypt is not about warfare, or strategy, or nation building. It is not about how to set up a government or how to defend themselves. The first thing God does is claim them. He tells them that the firstborn belongs to him. He tells them to remember his rescue. And then he tells them to teach their children that everything they are comes from the strong hand of the Lord.Friends this already pushes into our modern assumptions. We are conditioned to think that freedom means autonomy, independence, self-rule. But here, in the very first steps of Israel’s new life, God teaches them the opposite. Freedom is belonging. Salvation creates devotion. Rescue leads to remembrance, obedience, and worship.And what God does here tells us something vital about ourselves. If you have been saved by God, then your life is no longer yours. You belong to him. And that is not oppressive, it is freeing.So let’s walk through this passage together.Exodus 13:1–16 (ESV)1 The Lord said to Moses, 2 “Consecrate to me all the firstborn. Whatever is the first to open the womb among the people of Israel, both of man and of beast, is mine.” 3 Then Moses said to the people, “Remember this day in which you came out from Egypt, out of the house of slavery, for by a strong hand the Lord brought you out from this place. No leavened bread shall be eaten. 4 Today, in the month of Abib, you are going out. 5 And when the Lord brings you into the land of the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Amorites, the Hivites, and the Jebusites, which he swore to your fathers to give you, a land flowing with milk and honey, you shall keep this service in this month. 6 Seven days you shall eat unleavened bread, and on the seventh day there shall be a feast to the Lord. 7 Unleavened bread shall be eaten for seven days; no leavened bread shall be seen with you, and no leaven shall be seen with you in all your territory. 8 You shall tell your son on that day, ‘It is because of what the Lord did for me when I came out of Egypt.’ 9 And it shall be to you as a sign on your hand and as a memorial between your eyes, that the law of the Lord may be in your mouth. For with a strong hand the Lord has brought you out of Egypt. 10 You shall therefore keep this statute at its appointed time from year to year.11 “When the Lord brings you into the land of the Canaanites, as he swore to you and your fathers, and shall give it to you, 12 you shall set apart to the Lord all that first opens the womb. All the firstborn of your animals that are males shall be the Lord’s. 13 Every firstborn of a donkey you shall redeem with a lamb, or if you will not redeem it you shall break its neck. Every firstborn of man among your sons you shall redeem. 14 And when in time to come your son asks you, ‘What does this mean?’ you shall say to him, ‘By a strong hand the Lord brought us out of Egypt, from the house of slavery. 15 For when Pharaoh stubbornly refused to let us go, the Lord killed all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both the firstborn of man and the firstborn of animals. Therefore I sacrifice to the Lord all the males that first open the womb, but all the firstborn of my sons I redeem.’ 16 It shall be as a mark on your hand or frontlets between your eyes, for by a strong hand the Lord brought us out of Egypt.”The passage begins abruptly. God says, consecrate to me all the firstborn. Consecrate means set apart, give over, dedicate. This is not a suggestion. It is a claim. God is saying, they are mine.Now why does God do this. Because the only reason Israel has any firstborn left is because God spared them on Passover night. Their boys lived because a lamb died. Their safety came at the cost of another’s life. And so now God says, remember the cost. Remember the mercy. Remember that you live because something died in your place.Friends this runs straight against our pride. We want to think of ourselves as self-made, self-owned, self-directed. But God says, if you are spared by my grace, you belong to me. You are mine. Not enslaved, but rescued. Not oppressed, but redeemed. But make no mistake, salvation always comes with a claim.The Christian who says, “Jesus saved me but my life is my own,” has not grasped the gospel.Moses tells the people, remember this day. Do not forget it. Why. Because we forget almost everything God does for us as soon as life gets busy.Israel was about to walk into the wilderness. Hard years were ahead. And God knows the human heart. When things get hard, we forget his kindness. We doubt his goodness. We grumble against him.So God gives them a rhythm, a yearly pattern. Eat unleavened bread. Do it for a full week. Clean out all the old leaven. Why. Because God wants them to remember the night they left Egypt so quickly there was no time for the dough to rise. He wants their children to ask questions. He wants families telling the next generation, this is what the Lord did for me when I came out of Egypt.Notice the language. Not what the Lord did for us, but for me. Personal. Direct. Immediate. Every Israelite was to see themselves as someone who personally experienced God’s rescue.Friends this hits home for us too. If salvation becomes a vague theological idea rather than a personal rescue, then obedience becomes optional. But when you know that the strong hand of the Lord saved you, you obey with joy.This is why God builds remembrance into the Christian life. The Lord’s Supper, gathering with God’s people, reading the Scriptures. All of it is meant to remind us that we were saved from slavery. We were rescued from judgement. We live because the Lamb died.The final section of the passage goes deeper. God says, when you enter the land, set apart every firstborn animal. Redeem every firstborn son. And if your child asks why, you tell him the truth. Tell him about the night judgement fell. Tell him about the stubbornness of Pharaoh. Tell him that the firstborn of Egypt died. And then tell him why yours lived. Because the Lord made a distinction. Because the blood of the lamb covered your home.This is God teaching Israel the logic of redemption. Redemption always involves a cost. Something dies so that another may live. Something is given so that another is spared.And God wants every Israelite child to grow up asking, why do we sacrifice these animals. Why do we redeem the firstborn. Why do we do this every single year. And God wants every parent to say, because God saved us. Because God passed over us. Because our lives belong to him.Friends this should shape how we speak to our children. We do not raise them to be good citizens or productive members of society. We raise them to know that their lives belong to God because they were bought with a price. We raise them to know that salvation is costly, and that grace is never cheap.PrayerFather, thank you that you brought us out of slavery with a strong hand. Thank you that you spared us through the blood of your Son. Help us remember your rescue. Help us live as people who belong to you. Shape our hearts so that we give you the first and the best of our lives, not the leftovers. And help us teach the next generation that they were bought with a price. Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
There are moments in Scripture where God slows everything down and draws a line, not to exclude for the sake of exclusion, but to teach his people something about who he is and what it means to belong to him. After the urgency and chaos of Israel’s escape, the passage that follows feels almost jarringly calm. God turns from deliverance to definition. He tells his people what it actually means to be marked as his. And it forces us to consider our own assumptions about belonging, identity, and the grace that draws people in.Exodus 12:43–51 (ESV)43 And the Lord said to Moses and Aaron, “This is the statute of the Passover, no foreigner shall eat of it, 44 but every slave that is bought for money may eat of it after you have circumcised him. 45 No foreigner or hired worker may eat of it. 46 It shall be eaten in one house, you shall not take any of the flesh outside the house, and you shall not break any of its bones. 47 All the congregation of Israel shall keep it. 48 If a stranger shall sojourn with you and would keep the Passover to the Lord, let all his males be circumcised. Then he may come near and keep it, he shall be as a native of the land. But no uncircumcised person shall eat of it. 49 There shall be one law for the native and for the stranger who sojourns among you.” 50 All the people of Israel did just as the Lord commanded Moses and Aaron. 51 And on that very day the Lord brought the people of Israel out of the land of Egypt by their hosts.This is not the kind of passage we gravitate toward. It forces us to look at belonging in a way that our culture does not like. But God is making an important point. Passover was not a festival you could wander into because you happened to be nearby. It was not a cultural celebration or a family tradition. It was a meal that proclaimed salvation through the blood of a substitute. To eat this meal was to say, I belong to the God who rescues through sacrifice.And that is the heart of what God is protecting here. Belonging to him is not casual. It is not inherited by proximity or culture. It requires a covenant. It requires a heart that is marked by him. Circumcision was the sign of that covenant for Israel, but the principle runs deeper. God does not allow people to treat his salvation like an optional add on. If a stranger wanted to come in, God welcomed him, but the stranger had to come the same way Israel came. Same sign. Same submission. Same Lord. That is not exclusion for exclusion’s sake. That is God saying there is only one way into life with him.There is also something striking here about equality. The native born and the foreigner lived under the same law. There were not two levels of belonging. Once someone entered the covenant, he was treated as part of the family. Salvation was not earned through heritage or bloodline. It was received through trusting the God who saves. That same truth sits at the centre of the gospel. We do not come in because of where we were born or what we carry in our story. We come in because Christ has marked us as his.Then there is the simple obedience of Israel. After all the drama of the plagues and the urgency of the exodus, their response here is quiet. They did just as the Lord commanded. And once again, God delivers on the very day he promised. His faithfulness is steady, his timing is exact, and his people learn that belonging means listening to the God who has rescued them.This passage pushes us to consider our own assumptions. Do we treat our belonging to Christ as casual or automatic. Do we imagine that being near Christian things is the same as being in Christ. Do we forget that salvation is received through faith in the sacrifice God provides, not through our background or behaviour. God is not trying to keep people out. He is calling all kinds of people in, but they must come the way he provides, the way that centres on his saving work, not theirs.PrayerFather, help us to take seriously what it means to belong to you. Guard us from treating your grace as something casual or assumed. Teach us to come to you through the way you have provided, through the sacrifice of your Son. Make us a people who welcome others in, but who do so with a clear commitment to your truth. And help us obey you with the same quiet trust Israel showed on that day. Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
There are seasons in life where we feel stuck, where the pressure stays on long after we think things should have changed. We pray, we try, we push, but nothing moves. Then suddenly, almost without warning, the situation breaks open. A door that felt sealed opens. A burden loosens. A way forward appears. That kind of sudden change can feel unsettling, but Exodus 12 shows us that these moments rarely come out of nowhere. They are often the point where God finally acts after long years of quiet work.Exodus 12:33–42 (ESV)33 The Egyptians were urgent with the people to send them out of the land in haste. For they said, “We shall all be dead.” 34 So the people took their dough before it was leavened, their kneading bowls being bound up in their cloaks on their shoulders. 35 The people of Israel had also done as Moses told them, for they had asked the Egyptians for silver and gold jewellery and for clothing. 36 And the Lord had given the people favour in the sight of the Egyptians, so that they let them have what they asked. Thus they plundered the Egyptians. 37 And the people of Israel journeyed from Rameses to Succoth, about six hundred thousand men on foot, besides women and children. 38 A mixed multitude also went up with them, and very much livestock, both flocks and herds. 39 And they baked unleavened cakes of the dough that they had brought out of Egypt, for it was not leavened, because they were thrust out of Egypt and could not wait, nor had they prepared any provisions for themselves. 40 The time that the people of Israel lived in Egypt was 430 years. 41 At the end of 430 years, on that very day, all the hosts of the Lord went out from the land of Egypt. 42 It was a night of watching by the Lord, to bring them out of the land of Egypt, so this same night is a night of watching kept to the Lord by all the people of Israel throughout their generations.The speed of this moment catches you by surprise. Israel had been groaning for centuries. They had watched plague after plague fall on Egypt, but Pharaoh refused to change. You can imagine the doubts building. Would anything ever be different. Then, in one night, everything turns. The same Egyptians who had crushed them now push them out. Israel grabs whatever they can carry. Bread that has not risen. Bowls wrapped in cloaks. There is nothing tidy about it. It is the Lord stepping into history and bringing the story to its appointed end.And the simple truth is this. Israel could never have done this. Not in four hundred and thirty years. Not with strength, organisation, or determination. What they could not accomplish in generations, God completes in hours. That should shape how we view our own long waits. God is not late. God is not slow. He acts when he chooses, and when he does, there is no question about who brought the change.Then you have this remarkable detail. Israel walks out carrying Egyptian silver and gold. These people had been mistreated and crushed, but they leave with their hands full. God provides for them before they even understand what the wilderness will demand of them. He does not rescue his people halfway. He rescues and he supplies.And over all of it sits this line, that it was a night of watching by the Lord. While Israel hurried and Egypt panicked, God watched. He kept his promise spoken generations earlier. Their rescue did not depend on their readiness or their power. It depended on the God who sees, who remembers, who acts at exactly the right time.We often carry our own Egypts, the seasons where nothing seems to change. And we are tempted to think that God is distant or uninterested. This passage will not let us believe that. God may be quiet, but he is never absent. And when he moves, we see his hand clearly and we remember that he was watching the whole time.PrayerFather, teach us to trust you in the long waits and the slow years. Keep us from panic and from taking control when nothing seems to change. Help us remember that you watch over your people and that you act with perfect wisdom. Strengthen our faith so that when you bring change, we follow you with confidence. Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
What Happens When God Finally Says “Enough is Enough”?Exodus 12:29–32 (ESV)At midnight the Lord struck down all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, from the firstborn of Pharaoh who sat on his throne to the firstborn of the captive who was in the dungeon, and all the firstborn of the livestock. And Pharaoh rose up in the night, he and all his servants and all the Egyptians, and there was a great cry in Egypt, for there was not a house where someone was not dead. Then he summoned Moses and Aaron by night and said, “Up, go out from among my people, both you and the people of Israel, and go, serve the Lord, as you have said. Take your flocks and your herds, as you have said, and be gone, and bless me also.”There are passages in Scripture that feel heavy the moment you read them, and these verses sit squarely among them. Judgment finally arrives. There is no plague to clean up after, no discomfort to endure for a few days, no warning to reconsider. The Lord moves through Egypt in a way that no one can ignore, and every household carries the weight of His holiness.It is confronting, but it is also honest. God has been patient for chapter after chapter. He has given Pharaoh opportunity after opportunity to turn back. He has spoken clearly, shown His power, exposed Egypt’s idols and invited repentance. Yet the king’s heart has remained closed. Now the moment that has been announced for so long finally comes, and it comes with a grief that ripples through the whole nation.The text makes no distinction between Pharaoh’s household and the poorest family in the land. Rank does not shield anyone. Power does not protect anyone. Human status does not soften divine judgment. It is a levelling moment, and it reminds us that sin is not contained by social boundaries. It reaches every home, and only God’s provision can shield anyone.Then Pharaoh calls Moses and Aaron in the middle of the night. There is desperation in his voice. He does not negotiate, he does not bargain, he does not delay. “Go, serve the Lord.” For the first time, he says the words without conditions. His will has finally broken under the reality of God’s authority. And then he adds a small, almost tragic plea, “Bless me also.” The king who saw himself as a god now asks for mercy.We may feel distant from Pharaoh, but his desperation reveals something we all know deep down. When we finally come face to face with the consequences of resisting God, our defences collapse. Pride only holds for so long. Eventually the soul knows it needs help. The question is whether we reach this point willingly through humble repentance, or painfully through hardening the heart until God says “enough”.These verses also reveal something about God’s salvation. Judgment and mercy run side by side. On the same night that death sweeps through Egypt, life is preserved in every home marked by the blood of the lamb. The difference is not morality but mercy. Israel lives because the Lord Himself provides a covering. Egypt grieves because Pharaoh refuses it.The passage asks us to consider our own hearts. Do we take God’s warnings seriously, or do we treat them as background noise. Do we come under the shelter He provides, or do we insist on our own stubborn independence. Do we wait until everything collapses before we bow our heads, or do we listen now while His mercy is offered freely.Pharaoh reaches the point where he can no longer pretend to be in control. May we reach that point earlier and with softer hearts, trusting the God who judges rightly and saves generously.PrayerFather, help us to take Your word seriously and to listen when You warn us. Keep our hearts soft, and lead us to the shelter You provide in Christ. Teach us to turn to You before pride blinds us, and to trust Your mercy before judgment falls. Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
Will you obey when you don’t understand?Exodus 12:21–28 (ESV)Then Moses called all the elders of Israel and said to them, “Go and select lambs for yourselves according to your clans, and kill the Passover lamb. Take a bunch of hyssop and dip it in the blood that is in the basin, and touch the lintel and the two doorposts with the blood that is in the basin. None of you shall go out of the door of his house until the morning. For the Lord will pass through to strike the Egyptians, and when he sees the blood on the lintel and on the two doorposts, the Lord will pass over the door and will not allow the destroyer to enter your houses to strike you. You shall observe this rite as a statute for you and for your sons for ever. And when you come to the land that the Lord will give you, as he has promised, you shall keep this service. And when your children say to you, ‘What do you mean by this service?’ you shall say, ‘It is the sacrifice of the Lord’s Passover, for he passed over the houses of the people of Israel in Egypt, when he struck the Egyptians but spared our houses.’” And the people bowed their heads and worshipped.Then the people of Israel went and did so, as the Lord had commanded Moses and Aaron, so they did.There are moments where obedience becomes more than instruction, it becomes refuge. Moses gathers the elders and tells them exactly what to do, and the instructions are not complicated. Select the lamb. Kill it. Mark the doorway. Stay inside. Trust that God will keep His word. Nothing about this is dramatic, but everything about it is decisive. Their lives depend on doing what God says, even if they cannot see the danger outside the door.It is worth noticing how physical the obedience is. Hyssop dipped in blood. Streaks painted on timber. A family shutting themselves in for the night. God does not save them through vague belief or vague spirituality, He saves them through concrete trust expressed in concrete action. Faith always moves. Faith always responds. Faith always takes God at His word, even when the stakes feel impossibly high.The instructions also carry a protective tone. “None of you shall go out of the door.” In other words, the danger is real, so stay under the mercy that has been provided. They are not asked to fight, to plead or to negotiate. They are asked to shelter. It is a picture of salvation we often resist, because it requires us to admit that we cannot protect ourselves. We like the idea of earning rescue. We struggle with the idea of receiving it.Then the passage lifts our eyes to the generations ahead. This act will become a memorial. God expects the children to ask questions, and He expects the adults to answer with clarity, humility and gratitude. “It is the sacrifice of the Lord’s Passover, for He spared our houses.” The whole community is shaped by remembering the mercy they did not deserve and the judgment they did not escape on their own.And the response of the people is striking. They bow their heads and worship. Before the angel passes through, before they see deliverance with their own eyes, they worship. They trust God enough to obey Him now, not once the outcome is visible. That is genuine faith. Obedience first, explanation later. Submission now, understanding in time.The final line carries a quiet power. “They went and did so.” No arguing, no adjusting the instructions, no negotiating for alternatives. They simply obey, because they have learned the cost of resisting God’s word. In a world that constantly encourages us to treat obedience as optional, these verses stand as a needed reminder. When God speaks, safety is found in listening.The question for us is simple. When God calls us to trust Him, even when the future is unclear, do we stay inside the shelter of His word. Do we obey even when we cannot see the danger or the deliverance. Do we remember the mercy that has spared us, and do we teach the next generation to rest in it as well.PrayerFather, teach us to obey You with the same simple trust we see in Your people here. Keep us under the shelter You provide, and help us to remember the mercy that has saved us. Give us faith to act on Your word and to pass on Your truth to those who follow after us. Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
What Does It Take for Death to Pass Over Us?Exodus 12:1–20 (ESV)The Lord said to Moses and Aaron in the land of Egypt, “This month shall be for you the beginning of months. It shall be the first month of the year for you. Tell all the congregation of Israel that on the tenth day of this month every man shall take a lamb according to their fathers’ houses, a lamb for a household. And if the household is too small for a lamb, then he and his nearest neighbour shall take according to the number of persons, according to what each can eat you shall make your count for the lamb. Your lamb shall be without blemish, a male a year old. You may take it from the sheep or from the goats, and you shall keep it until the fourteenth day of this month, when the whole assembly of the congregation of Israel shall kill their lambs at twilight.Then they shall take some of the blood and put it on the two doorposts and the lintel of the houses in which they eat it. They shall eat the flesh that night, roasted on the fire, with unleavened bread and bitter herbs. Do not eat any of it raw or boiled in water, but roast it, its head with its legs and its inner parts. And you shall let none of it remain until the morning, anything that remains until the morning you shall burn. In this manner you shall eat it, with your belt fastened, your sandals on your feet, and your staff in your hand. And you shall eat it in haste. It is the Lord’s Passover.For I will pass through the land of Egypt that night, and I will strike all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both man and beast, and on all the gods of Egypt I will execute judgments. I am the Lord. The blood shall be a sign for you, on the houses where you are. And when I see the blood, I will pass over you, and no plague will befall you to destroy you, when I strike the land of Egypt.This day shall be for you a memorial day, and you shall keep it as a feast to the Lord, throughout your generations, as a statute for ever, you shall keep it as a feast. Seven days you shall eat unleavened bread. On the first day you shall remove leaven out of your houses, for if anyone eats what is leavened, from the first day until the seventh day, that person shall be cut off from Israel. On the first day you shall hold a holy assembly, and on the seventh day a holy assembly. No work shall be done on those days, but what everyone needs to eat, that alone may be prepared by you.And you shall observe the Feast of Unleavened Bread, for on this very day I brought your hosts out of the land of Egypt. Therefore you shall observe this day, throughout your generations, as a statute for ever. In the first month, from the fourteenth day of the month at evening, you shall eat unleavened bread until the twenty first day of the month at evening. For seven days no leaven is to be found in your houses. If anyone eats what is leavened, that person will be cut off from the congregation of Israel, whether he is a sojourner or a native of the land. You shall eat nothing leavened, in all your dwelling places you shall eat unleavened bread.”There are moments in life where you sense that everything is coming to a point, where all the slow movements of God suddenly gather into a single, decisive act. That is what is happening in this chapter. The plagues have been building, Pharaoh has been resisting, and now the Lord announces a night that will divide life into “before” and “after”.Before anything else, God resets Israel’s calendar. This month will be the beginning. In other words, salvation is not simply an event, it is the start of a new story. God makes a fresh beginning for His people long before they step out of Egypt.Then He gives instructions for a lamb. It must be spotless, young, without blemish. It must be killed at twilight. Its blood must be painted on the doorposts. And everyone in the household must stay inside, sheltered under that blood. This is not symbolic, it is life or death. Judgment will sweep through Egypt, and every home will face it. The only difference will be whether the blood is on the door.It is sobering to realise that Israel is not spared because of their goodness, their morality or their spiritual maturity. They are spared because they trust God’s provision. They are protected because they hide under the blood of another.This is the point that confronts us. We are not saved because of our record or because we are better than others. We are saved because God provides a substitute, and we trust Him enough to shelter beneath His mercy.The meal itself reinforces the urgency. They eat with sandals on their feet and staffs in their hands. They eat in haste, ready to walk out of slavery the moment the Lord opens the way. Salvation demands readiness. When God rescues, He expects His people to move.Then there is the command to remove all leaven. Leaven in Scripture often symbolises the quiet spread of sin. Removing it is a picture of cleansing the home, cleansing the heart, refusing to carry the habits of Egypt into the freedom God is giving. This is not legalism, it is preparation. You cannot step into God’s future while clinging to the old life.The whole passage sits on two great truths. First, God judges. His holiness is not sentimental. Second, God provides shelter under the blood of a substitute. Mercy is offered, but it must be received. Israel’s safety comes from obedience to God’s word and trust in God’s provision.For us, the question is simple. Are we willing to take God at His word. Are we willing to be found under the Lamb He provides. Are we willing to walk away from the old leaven that keeps us in slavery. The Passover is not just ancient history, it reveals the pattern of salvation that reaches its fullness in Christ, the true Lamb who takes away the sin of the world.PrayerFather, thank You for providing shelter under the blood of the Lamb. Teach us to trust Your word, to leave behind the old leaven and to be ready for the freedom You bring. Keep us close to Christ, and help us to rest in His mercy rather than our efforts. Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe
When God Draws a Line, How Seriously Do We Take It?Exodus 11:1–10 (ESV)The Lord said to Moses, “Yet one plague more I will bring upon Pharaoh and upon Egypt. Afterward he will let you go from here. When he lets you go, he will drive you away completely. Speak now in the hearing of the people, that they ask, every man of his neighbour and every woman of her neighbour, for silver and gold jewellery.” And the Lord gave the people favour in the sight of the Egyptians. Moreover, the man Moses was very great in the land of Egypt, in the sight of Pharaoh’s servants and in the sight of the people.So Moses said, “Thus says the Lord, ‘About midnight I will go out in the midst of Egypt, and every firstborn in the land of Egypt shall die, from the firstborn of Pharaoh who sits on his throne, even to the firstborn of the slave girl who is behind the handmill, and all the firstborn of the cattle. There shall be a great cry throughout all the land of Egypt, such as there has never been, nor ever will be again. But not a dog shall growl against any of the people of Israel, either man or beast, that you may know that the Lord makes a distinction between Egypt and Israel.’ And all these your servants shall come down to me and bow down to me, saying, ‘Get out, you and all the people who follow you.’ And after that I will go out.” And he went out from Pharaoh in hot anger.Then the Lord said to Moses, “Pharaoh will not listen to you, that my wonders may be multiplied in the land of Egypt.” Moses and Aaron did all these wonders before Pharaoh, and the Lord hardened Pharaoh’s heart, and he did not let the people of Israel go out of his land.There is a moment in every conflict where things become final. No more warnings, no more negotiations, no more gentle invitations. The line has been drawn, and what comes next will reveal whether the heart is hard or humble. That is exactly where this passage sits. Nine plagues have struck Egypt, yet Pharaoh remains unbending. And here God announces the final blow, one that will cut through every layer of Egyptian pride.It is striking that, before anything else, God tells Israel to ask for silver and gold. In other words, He prepares their redemption before the judgment falls. The Egyptians, who had once oppressed them, now willingly give up their wealth. This is a quiet reminder that God works in the shadows long before His people see the outcome. He supplies for the journey while they are still in the land of slavery.Then the tone shifts. Moses speaks words that would chill any listener. Every firstborn in Egypt will die, from Pharaoh’s own child to the child of the servant girl. The judgment is total, and the grief will shake the nation. Yet, at the very same moment, God promises absolute protection for His people. Not a dog will growl at Israel. This is not because Israel is morally superior, but because God makes a distinction. His mercy rests on those who belong to Him.It is uncomfortable to sit with a passage like this, because it confronts us with a God who is not tame. He is patient, but His patience has a purpose. He warns, He calls, He invites repentance, but He does not indulge rebellion forever. Pharaoh is not simply stubborn, he is determined to be his own god. Every plague has been a chance to turn back. Every warning has been a door left open. Every word from Moses has been an act of mercy. Yet Pharaoh’s heart grows harder, not softer.Before we shake our heads at him, we need to be honest about ourselves. We also resist God’s voice. We also delay obedience. We also assume there will always be another chance, another tomorrow, another gentle nudge. But God draws lines for our good. He exposes our idols because He wants to rescue us before our stubbornness destroys us.The final verses are solemn. God tells Moses that Pharaoh will not listen, and He will use that refusal to magnify His wonders. Judgment and salvation unfold side by side. One heart is hardened, another is delivered. One kingdom is broken, another is born.The question for us is simple. When God speaks, do we resist Him, or do we listen. When He draws a line, do we cross it, or do we trust Him enough to step back. This passage is heavy, but it is also full of grace, because it teaches us to take God’s voice seriously, and to run to the shelter He provides rather than harden our hearts against Him.PrayerFather, keep our hearts soft when You speak. Help us to listen quickly and obey willingly. Protect us from the stubbornness that blinds us, and teach us to trust the salvation You offer. Thank You that You prepare our redemption even before we know we need it. Lead us into Your light and keep us close to Christ. Amen. Get full access to Reformed Devotionals Daily at reformeddevotional.substack.com/subscribe





