I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.
Today, I am reading and commenting on Exodus 13-15.
The beginning of this passage Moses instructs the children of Israel to celebrate the Passover every year. In addition, he directs them that the first born male, both human and animal must be dedicated to God. Each first born must be presented to the Lord in remembrance of what God did for Israel in rescuing them from the Egyptians. These two ceremonies remind us of the importance of religious ceremony. Religious ceremony, properly conducted, reminds us of what God has done for us in the past. It can also serve to renew our commitment to serving God. This is an important lesson for me, because I was raised, not intentionally, with a bias against ceremony. I will add that while ceremony is important sometimes the ceremony becomes the object of worship rather than turning our attention and focus to God.
The Israelites left Egypt like an army ready for battle. Then God had Moses lead them on an indirect route, one which made it seem like they did not know where they were going.
On a side note: I suspect that part of the reason Pharaoh gathered his army and set out to re-enslave the Israelites was because he feared them setting up as a bandit nation right on his border (the other, probably primary, part was hubris, thinking the plagues were done and would not resume if he did so).
The Israelites were cocky and full of themselves. God engineered the pursuit by the Egyptian army in order to remind them that they needed to depend on Him. There was a second purpose to it as well. Their complete unreadiness and panic when confronted by Pharaoh’s army made the Israelites aware of their need to accept discipline and training. It was not sufficient to have numbers. They needed to learn how to work and fight together. They saw that the threat was not just to their fighting men, but to their families and loved ones as well. There is actually a third reason for this pursuit. The loss of the best of Pharaoh’s army meant that the Egyptians would not be a threat to the Israelites for a generation or more after this, giving them time to become not just a people but a nation.
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