The Bible Recap

Day 033 (Exodus 10-12) - Year 8

9 min
Feb 2, 20263 months ago
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Summary

This episode covers Exodus 10-12, focusing on the final plagues God sent upon Egypt and the institution of Passover. Host Tara Lee Cobble explores the theological complexity of God hardening Pharaoh's heart, the significance of the lamb's blood marking homes in a cross shape, and how these events foreshadow Christ's sacrifice for humanity's redemption.

Insights
  • God's sovereignty over human hearts and free will is presented as comforting rather than threatening when understood through the lens of redemption and hope for the unreachable
  • The Passover narrative contains deliberate foreshadowing of Christ's sacrifice, including the marking of firstborn sons and the blood covenant imagery
  • Difficult theological concepts should be wrestled with contextually rather than oversimplified, acknowledging mystery as legitimate spiritual practice
  • God's deliverance operates through multiple persons of the Trinity—Father as initiator, Son as mediator, Spirit as sustainer—creating a unified redemptive plan
  • The podcast has evolved into a multi-platform ministry generating measurable spiritual outcomes including conversions and family restoration
Trends
Religious content platforms expanding beyond audio into YouTube, multiple languages, and published books for broader audience reachSubscription-based community support models (recaptants) becoming primary revenue for faith-based digital mediaTheological education emphasizing contextual interpretation and acknowledgment of scriptural complexity over dogmatic certaintyCross-platform ministry integration combining daily podcast episodes with annual celebration frameworks and community engagementFaith-based content focusing on relational outcomes (salvation, family restoration) as key success metrics alongside audience growth
Topics
Biblical exegesis and scriptural interpretation methodologyTheological problem of divine sovereignty versus human free willPassover narrative and Jewish religious observanceChristological foreshadowing in Old Testament textsGod's character and protective nature toward chosen peopleRedemption theology and sacrifice symbolismThe Trinity and roles in salvation historyCircumcision as covenant marking and set-apartnessThe ten plagues narrativePharaoh's hardened heart theological debateBlood covenant symbolism and cross imageryTheophany and Christophany theological conceptsPodcast monetization through listener supportMulti-language content distribution strategySpiritual transformation metrics in faith communities
People
Tara Lee Cobble
Host of The Bible Recap podcast, provides theological analysis and interpretation of daily scripture readings
Moses
Biblical figure who led Israelites out of Egypt; discussed regarding obedience to God and circumcision covenant
Pharaoh
Egyptian ruler whose hardened heart against God's plan is central theological discussion point of the episode
Paul (Apostle)
Referenced as example of radical heart transformation from actively opposing God to becoming his servant
Joseph
Biblical figure whose initial settlement in Egypt is referenced regarding the 430-year timeline discrepancy
Abraham
Referenced regarding the binding of Isaac as thematic parallel to God's sacrifice of his firstborn son
Quotes
"We can't cut sentences like this out of the Bible. We have to wrestle with them and see what they mean and how they fit into the context of everything else in scripture."
Tara Lee CobbleEarly in episode
"It can feel threatening to recognize that God is bigger than your own heart that he can shape it for his own purposes. If that's you and your feeling that way right now, I would encourage you to not let fear drive that thought."
Tara Lee CobbleMid-episode
"For God to be sovereign over sins and hearts means no one is beyond his reach and it's never too late for anyone. And that is the greatest comfort I can imagine."
Tara Lee CobbleMid-episode
"God knows the pain the Egyptians felt because to secure your freedom and mine, he sacrificed his first born son so that the massive debt our sins accrued could be paid in full."
Tara Lee CobbleClosing segment
"The plan that God has initiated, sustained and fulfilled is the only way we can be united with him. And thank God because he's where the joy is."
Tara Lee CobbleClosing segment
Full Transcript
Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible Recap. Yesterday we saw the first seven plagues God brought on the Egyptians because Pharaoh wouldn't listen to Moses and set the Israelites slaves free. Today we dropped in on the rest of the plagues. The first few sentences we read today said, I have hardened his heart and the heart of his servants that I may show these signs of mine among them, that you may know that I and the Lord. This whole paragraph was a witty paragraph. It almost sounds like part of God's plan was to harden Pharaoh's heart against his plan. And the reason was that this process would help Israel really know and trust him as God. He uses the wicked as a tool to advance his plan and bless the children he's adopted into his family. We can't cut sentences like this out of the Bible. We have to wrestle with them and see what they mean and how they fit into the context of everything else in scripture. I'm not going to tie it up with a pretty bow and make it look simple. It's hard. It's mysterious and it's okay to not have answers about it yet or maybe ever. In yesterday's reading, we encountered several places where God hardened Pharaoh's heart. A few where it just says his heart was hardened and if you attribute the hardening to Pharaoh himself. But interestingly, Pharaoh's hardening of his own heart is almost always followed with the statement as the Lord had said. It can feel threatening to recognize that God is bigger than your own heart that he can shape it for his own purposes. If that's you and your feeling that way right now, I would encourage you to not let fear drive that thought. The enemy of your soul wants you to view God's power through a lens that pushes you away from him instead of drawing you in. So instead, try to stop and acknowledge how comforting it is that we serve a God who is that powerful. For instance, think about the people that you know and love who are the furthest from God. People you've prayed for and cried for. People who have told you that they never want to hear you say another word about God again. God can soften their hearts and turn them on their heels just like he did with the Apostle Paul, who by the way, wasn't just not seeking God. He was actively at war against God and his people much like Pharaoh. For God to be sovereign over sins and hearts means no one is beyond his reach and it's never too late for anyone. And that is the greatest comfort I can imagine. Moving on, today we see the frustration mounting with Pharaoh's servants and Pharaoh starts to weaken his resolve. But instead of obeying, he asks for a compromise. God doesn't really go for that. So the locusts and the darkness come, but still no repentance. Then God sends what he knows will be the final plague. Moses has all the Israelites asked the Egyptians for their valuables and they hand them over. He also tells every Israelite house to sacrifice a lamb and sprinkle its blood on the left sides, right sides and tops of their doorways, marking their homes and their families by the blood of a sacrifice. Interestingly, if you were to use a hisset branch like they did to wipe blood in those three spots, the placement on the left and the right and then the dripping from the top down to the ground would leave the shape of a cross. God also tells them to eat their dinner, but finish it quickly. Don't even make bread that rises and stay fully dressed with your carkeys and hand basically. By the way, the description he gives their attire is a little bit reminiscent of the armor of God described much later in Ephesians 6-10-18. Then he tells them about an annual dinner party he's planned for them to celebrate what he's about to do that night. I love that God is already telling them how to commemorate his deliverance before he fulfilled it. Jewish people around the world still celebrate this event today. The Hebrew calendar is built around it. You'll see this one day event referenced in scripture as Passover. And this is important to what we'll be learning in scripture. So make a mental note of it. It's called Passover because that's what the Lord did when he saw the blood on their doorways. He passed over that house and didn't kill the firstborn. So all the firstborn of Israel are spared, but not Egypt. By the way, in the references to the destroying angel in this passage, his identity is kind of blurred, but most signs point to this being a theophanie, possibly a Christophany. After the angel who is maybe God the Sun passes through, the Egyptians drive the Israelites out just like God promised, with fistfuls of jewelry and fine clothing that they willingly handed over just like God promised. The Israelites plundered the Egyptians. In the middle of the night, 600,000 men and an estimated total of two to three million people left Egypt on foot. Some other non-Israelites went with them. We find out later that even some Egyptians went to and God tells the Israelites to treat them like family as long as they're circumcised. Also, you may be a little concerned about the 430 years that it says they spent in Egypt like, God was 30 years late. I thought it was only supposed to be 400 years. There are two possible ways this could shake out. First, God could have just been giving a round number of generality, not a down-to-the-minute timeline. Or second, those first 30 years may have included the good times when Joseph had first moved his family there and all was still right with the old Pharaoh before they started inslating them. So if you were worried that God got it wrong or broke his promise, hopefully that will help you breathe easy. What was your God shot today? What did you see about his character or his motives or his heart? I've kind of been paying attention to this theme he keeps touching on. Think back to day 31. We read two things in Exodus 4 that kind of foreshadowed this final plague and helped to see a little bit of what's happening here with God's motives. Remember how God was angry and sought to kill someone, maybe Gershim? Moses is first born son because Moses had disobeyed God by not circumcising Gershim, which means he wasn't set apart as one of God's people. And remember how God said that if Egypt didn't relent and let his first born son Israel go free to be set apart, that he would kill their first born son? That was all a bit of foreshadowing for today. This even has echoes of Abraham and his first born son Isaac. And then today, just like with circumcision, God tells Israel to set themselves apart with a specific marking to mark the entryway of their homes with blood in the shape of a cross no less. That makes today's reading feel like foreshadowing for something yet to come and scripture. God has been hinting all along at what he's initiating here. He's so protective of his people and his plan for their freedom and restoration. He goes to great lengths to secure it. And this is certainly not even the greatest length God goes to. God knows the pain the Egyptians felt because to secure your freedom and mine, he sacrificed his first born son so that the massive debt our sins accrued could be paid in full. We could never pay it even with his help. We don't need him to help us. We need his utter and complete rescue. And through the plan he initiated to sacrifice his son, he also initiated a relationship with us and saved us from ourselves. We needed an initiator, God the Father, and we needed a mediator, God the Son. And we need someone to sustain and fulfill his work in us, God the Spirit. The plan that God has initiated, sustained and fulfilled is the only way we can be united with him. And thank God because he's where the joy is. I wish I had time to sit down with you and tell you all the incredible things that God has done here at the Bible recap over the past few years. We put out a bunch of books. We're on YouTube. We're in multiple languages. We hired additional staff. We have seen salvation and we have seen families restored. And so many of you helped make that possible. Our primary income for this podcast comes through the incredibly generous support of our recaptants. So if you've been encouraged to read, understand and love Scripture more, become a recaptan. If you want to help us further our reach, become a recaptan. If you want to help us to equip even more people around the world, to know God in a way that transforms their lives, become a recaptan. Joining us simple, just click on the recaptans link on our website, thebibelrecap.com. 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