The Exodus Typology, Pt 2
As a reminder, the parallels between the types and antitypes will be limited to the more salient points that will more directly support and highlight my argument, which, again, is to show that Moses (a type of Christ) was sent to "save" only the ancient Hebrews in Egypt, which were God's elect by virtue of His covenant with Abraham wherein He promised the patrriarch that He would make a great nation out of him; and to also show that God's "firstborn" (Ex 4:22; 7:1) were totally powerless and helpless to extricate themselves from the yoke of bondage under Pharaoh -- a bondage that was decreed by God (Gen 15:12-16. In short, Israel's
redemption by Moses from their physical slavery by a physical king of a physical nation in this temporal reality is the soteriological template of Christ's spiritual and eternal redemption of his Father's elect that were given to the Son, just as God gave Abraham a great nation by making one out of his own loins even though Sarah's womb was dead and Abraham was past his fatherning years.
1. Just as God had compassion and mercy on his elect nation (Ex 3:7), so, too, He still has mercy and compassion today on whom he sovereignly decrees to bestow such (Rom 9:15).
2. God did not save Israel for Israel's sake, for she was very much an idolater as her Egyptian captors themselves (Josh 24:2, 14).
3. God saved Israel through Moses because of the oath he swore to the patriarchs and for his love for their descendants (Ex 6:5, 8; Deut 7:8). Likewise, God saves his NC "nation" (his Church, cp. Mat 21:43) because of the promises He made to her and the grace he gave to her in eternity
in Christ (Tit 1:2; 2Tim 1:9; Eph 1:4, 11), and because of the promises He made to Christ himself (Isa 49:5-9; Jn 6:37).
4. Just as Moses was a type of Christ, likewise Aaron was to Moses what John the Baptist was to Jesus (Ex 7:1).
5. God "came down" to
rescue his sorely oppressed people (Ex 3:8, 5:23). So, too, when we were as
powerless as the ancient Hebrews (Rom 5:6) God
rescued his elect from the kingdom of darkness and brought us into the kingdom of light (Col 1:13).
6. Just as God rescued Israel from Pharaoh's jaws of death, likewise king David twice rescued his sheep from certain death by wild beasts (1Sam 17:34-37), as does the Son of David and Good Shepherd to this day rescue his sheep, as well (Lk 15:1-7).
7. Just as God began his work of salvation in his elect and will bring it to completion (Phil 1:6), likewise God "came down" and initiated his rescue mission through Moses and brought it to completion after parting the Red Sea (Ex 3:8, 20; 14:27-28).
8. Pharaoh was himself a type of Satan: He accused God of lying to the people, as the Serpent implied to Eve (Ex 5:9, cp. Gen 3:1-4); he lied to Moses several times (Ex 8:8-15; 25-32; 9:27-35; 10:16); and he had a murderous heart, desiring to kill all Hebrew males at birth (Ex 1:15-16); all of which proved what Jesus said about the evil one (Jn 8:44).
9. Just as Satan's kingdom is a dominion of darkness (Col 1:13), likewise Pharaoh's kingdom was immersed in spiritual darkness, as Moses faced off against the king's sorcerers, magicians, enchanters and wise men (Ex 7:17, 22; 8:7, etc.). Likewise, in this NC age the saints of God battle not against flesh and blood but against dark spiritual forces of evil (Eph 6:12).
10. To be in spiritual darkness is to precisely be in the state of spiritual death! Is not the body in the tomb enclosed in black darkness? Or when buried in the grave? And isn't sleep used as a metaphor for physical death Mat 9;24; Jn 11:11)? And in a sleep state, don't we only see darkness? And what is blindness, especially from birth, if not utter darkness? |And has not Satan blinded the minds of unbelievers (2Cor 4:4)? Yet, after God "came down" and manifested his great power, his light shined upon the Israelites (Ex 14:20) so that the Israelites believed in Him after He crushed Pharaoh and his army (Ex 14:31). In a real sense, God raised the Hebrews from the dead through Moses when he exerted his incomparably great power on their behalf against Pharaoh who had the power of death (Ex 10:28; Eph 1:19).
11. Just as Satan is the god of this world (2Cor 4:4), likewise the pharaohs of ancient Egypt not only acknowledged other gods but they themselves were also deified and God brought judgement upon all of them (Ex 12:12). Likewise, Christ will judge all his moral creation and soon will crush the devil under our feet (Rom 16:20), as Moses crushed Pharaoh under his (Ex 14:15-18).
12. Just as the Hebrews were in physical slavery under the power of Pharaoh, likewise the entire world is enslaved to sin and the basic principles of the world (Rom 6:18, 22; Gal 4:3) and is currently under the control of the evil one (1Jn 5:19).
13. Just as salvation is of the Jews (Jn 4:22), so Moses led many Gentile captives (apparently) of Pharaoh out of the Land of Darkness (Ex 12:38) and from their prison (Isa 42:7; 49:9), thereby freeing the prisoners.
14. Just as God seeks those who will worship him in Spirit and in Truth (Jn 4:23-24), so God sought out his covenant people to worship him (Ex 9:1, 13; 10:3; 12:1ff.).
15. God's awesome demonstration of his power from the beginning of his first plague to the last one, and beyond that to the parting of the Red Sea that at once provided the narrow way to Life for the Hebrews (Mat 7:14) while simultaneously the Sea served as the burial ground for God's enemies. This ongoing exhibition of power, which extended for multiple days, served as an example of God's sanctifying work unto obedience to God (1Pet 1:2), which would include the life saving obedience of faith (Rom 16:26); therefore, it is extremely noteworthy that
when God parted of the Red Sea, Moses succinctly summarized the
outcome of God's display of power in this way:
Ex 14:31
31
And when the Israelites saw the great power the LORD displayed against the Egyptians, the people feared the LORD and put their trust in him and in Moses his servant.
NIV
Also, we should not miss the fact that the people not only put their trust in God but in his Chosen Servant Moses! After all, "He who does not have the Son does not have the Father (1Jn 2:23). And "no one can come to the Son unless the Father draws him" (Jn 6:44, 65). And, again, "all that the Father gives to me will come to me" (Jn 6:37). God's mighty power enabled the people to trust in his Servant, as well, whom he sent to rescue them. What an awesome picture!
It took nothing less than the final dramatic, salvific act of God to finally convince Israel! (Of course, this doesn't mean all Israel in the distributive sense trusted the Lord, since God never intended to save all Israel any more than he ever intended to save the entire world; for Abraham's descendants, again, consist of Natural Children and Children of Promise.) But nonetheless, this doesn't detract from the force of the above text and its placement in the Exodus narrative.
There's not even a remote hint that the ancient Hebrews really trusted in the Lord prior to the final curtain falling on Israel's Redemption (Ex 14:10-12). Nor is there anything in the narrative that hints that the Israelites were pricked in their conscience and thus turned to the Lord in an effort to soothe their corrupt conscience. Nor is there anything in this account that remotely suggests that salvation is partly God's and partly sinners', such as with a quid pro quo arrangement whereby God does his part and the sinners do theirs by their response with their faith. Rather what we have is what Rom 9:16 that says,
"Therefore, it does not depend on man's desire [will] or effort but on God who has mercy.". God's salvation is just that! HIS salvation. A salvation that is not synergistic but a 100% supernatural, monogernistic, gracious act of God that was motivated by his eternal love for the elect in Christ.
It's also equally as noteworthy that we find the "fear of the Lord" in this passage. The FEAR of THE LORD, which is the
beginning of [godly] knowledge, wisdom and understanding (Prov 1:7; 9:10). And it is this reverential awe of God that moves the heart to trust him and love him! Notice the logical order of the phrases: They feared God and [then] put their trust in him and and Moses.
In summary, then, what we have learned from The Exodus is that God sovereignly intervened, intruded into, broke into the lives of more than 600,000 Hebrews who basically were pagans for the most part (Josh 24:14) before He redeemed them. In other words God broke into their lives when they were DEAD in their transgressions, sins and uncircumcision of their hearts (Eph 2:1, 5; Col 2:13) to raise them from the dead whereby he freed them from the slavery to their sin nature. Likewise, God has always saved his elect by his sovereign grace (power) -- both Old and New Covenant saints alike.
The ancient Hebrews in Egypt did not seek after God; rather He sought them out for the purpose of redeeming them; so it appears Paul knew of what he spoke in Rom 3:11.