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Nov.

17, 2005 EGYPT IS DESTROYED Kathleen Maples

Exo 10:7 And Pharaoh's servants said unto him, How long shall this man be a snare
unto us? let the men go, that they may serve the LORD their God: knowest thou not
yet that Egypt is destroyed?

Hebrew: The Septuagint translated "passer from beyond" (perates), taking the name from eeber
"beyond." The name is also derived from Eber, "beyond, on the other side",

Repeatedly the enemy tries to negotiate when he sees he's up against someone that will stand
firmly on the Word of God. Don't back down, don't negotiate and beware a false or partial
surrender.

"Knowest thou not yet that Egypt is destroyed?"

When God looses his people from sin, and bondage, he not only breaks the bonds,
he completely obliterates them. There's nothing left of the bondage that can retain
a hold on his people. And he brings them out with gifts and abilities and power to
live for him. When he took Israel out of Egypt, that land was devastated. It's
people were devastated and plundered. And God went all out to show his people
this truth. He went way above and beyond what was necessary so there would no
doubt in his people's mind or in their enemies' minds that God's people were free.

The first plague, the water turning to blood, it killed the fish, in the water. The
frogs. The Lice. The Flies. The plague on the animals, the boils on both beast and
human, the hail, the locusts, the darkness, the death of the firstborn.
When the command was given to let God's people go, retaliation from the enemy
was swift. BUT God told Moses beforehand everything that would happen and the
consequences that would be forthcoming. Not one time were God's people left in
the dark to wonder what was going on. They only fretted because they did not
believe. God told Moses in ch. 7:2-5 what would happen. He would demand his
people be set free. Pharaoh would not listen or let them go. God would lay his hand
on Egypt and bring forth "his armies" out by great judgments." God calls things
that are not as though they are. He knows where he wants to take us and what he
wants to make us and he is able.

Israel, to the natural eye, at the time, were a subdued, depressed, and weary group
of slaves. They had nothing. They had no money, no freedom, their children were
being slaughtered, (males), symbolic of strength, they were oppressed, beat down,
discouraged. Weak. And God calls them his armies.
Exo 7:1 And the LORD said unto Moses, See, I have made thee a god to Pharaoh: and Aaron thy
brother shall be thy prophet.
Exo 7:2 Thou shalt speak all that I command thee: and Aaron thy brother shall speak unto
Pharaoh, that he send the children of Israel out of his land.
Exo 7:3 And I will harden Pharaoh's heart, and multiply my signs and my wonders in the land of
Egypt.
Exo 7:4 But Pharaoh shall not hearken unto you, that I may lay my hand upon Egypt, and bring
forth mine armies, and my people the children of Israel, out of the land of Egypt by great
judgments.
Exo 7:5 And the Egyptians shall know that I am the LORD, when I stretch forth mine hand upon
Egypt, and bring out the children of Israel from among them.
Exo 7:6 And Moses and Aaron did as the LORD commanded them, so did they.
Exo 7:7 And Moses was fourscore years old, and Aaron fourscore and three years old, when they
spoke unto Pharaoh.
Exo 7:8 And the LORD spoke unto Moses and unto Aaron, saying,
Exo 7:9 When Pharaoh shall speak unto you, saying, Show a miracle for you: then thou shalt say
unto Aaron, Take thy rod, and cast it before Pharaoh, and it shall become a serpent.
Exo 7:10 And Moses and Aaron went in unto Pharaoh, and they did so as the LORD had
commanded: and Aaron cast down his rod before Pharaoh, and before his servants, and it
became a serpent.
Exo 7:11 Then Pharaoh also called the wise men and the sorcerers: now the magicians of Egypt,
they also did in like manner with their enchantments.

Egypt means that troubles or oppresses; anguish


It's also symbolic of the people of God trusting in flesh. Relying on someone or
something other than God. God does not lend his strength to flesh, but only to
faith. Here, he meant he would show the enemy without a doubt he was God, and
he was able to deliver, and he would free his people. God only allowed them to be
held captive long enough to destroy the power of their enemy, and put on a display
for his people and the whole world to see, both natural and spiritual, that He had
control, and that his people would be free.

When God does something, the first thing the enemy will try to do is duplicate it,
he will have a fake for everything God does. This is one way the enemy tries to
discourage God's people and sow unbelief in their hearts and minds. God kept his
servant informed during the entire thing of exactly what was going on and what
would happen next. He gave him clear, concise direction. So, to combat this, we
must be familiar with the Word of God ourselves. To know what God has said for
our selves. Now, think about what is about to happen here. Pharaoh *(a type of the
devil) had a great setup here. He was the supreme (so he thought) ruler,
unchallenged, in total control, (again, so he thought), living in a luxurious palace,
with servants and slaves, satisfying his every whim and appetite, ruling with a
heavy hand, over the people both of his own country, and a foreign country (God's
people are in but not of this world). He was particularly cruel to the foreigners. He
made slaves out of them. He slaughtered their children. He had them beaten. He
looked on them with something akin to fear heavily laced with contempt. He
feared their strength, so he immediately set about to weaken them. To discourage
them. To occupy them.
Exo_1:7-14 To dominate them completely. He used their forced labor to build up his
own land and make it more glorious to the world. He was arrogant, calculating,
and evil. He had magicians and sorcerers in his palace that entertained and served
him. They counseled him. And here comes an 83 and an 80 year old man. They tell
this powerful ruler to let the foreigners he uses for slave labor go. Release them,
says the Lord. Moses was told beforehand by God exactly what would happen and
how to handle it. Oh, to get so close to God to have that kind of communion!!!! It is
what the Lord wants, as well, I believe. Jesus did not give us access to the Father
for us not to use it. It's a high privilege, and required a high price. And he paid it.
God forgive me for letting things hinder me from going there.
Aaron's rod was turned into a serpent, This word is used symbolically of a
deadly, subtle, malicious enemy. (Luk_10:19).

Interesting References on the Serpent:

Serpent. The Hebrew word, nachash, is the generic name of any serpent. The following are
the principal biblical allusions to this animal --
● its subtlety is mentioned in Gen_3:1;
● its wisdom is alluded to by our Lord in Mat_10:18;
● the poisonous properties of some species are often mentioned, see Psa_58:4;
Pro_25:32;
● the sharp tongue of the serpent is mentioned in Psa_140:3; Job_20:16;
● the habit serpents have of lying concealed in hedges and in holes of walls is alluded
to in Ecc_10:8;
● their dwelling in dry sandy places, in Deu_8:15;
● Luk_11:24-26 (Pro_30:19); the serpent, though without feet or wings, trails along
the rock (stony places being its favorite resort) wheresoever it will, leaving no impression
of its way, light, gliding without noise, quick, and the mode unknown to us.

Lord help us to have that living water flowing freely in us, for the unclean spirits
love dry places. God help us not to have a hard heart, but to be broken before the
Lord, usable, teachable, yielded to Him.

When the command was given to let God's people go, retaliation from the enemy
was swift. BUT God told Moses beforehand everything that would happen and the
consequences that would be forthcoming. Not one time were God's people left in
the dark to wonder what was going on. They only fretted because they did not
believe. God told Moses in ch. 7:2-5 what would happen. He would demand his
people be set free. Pharaoh would not listen or let them go. God would lay his hand
on Egypt and bring forth "his armies" out by great judgments." God calls things
that are not as though they are. He knows where he wants to take us and what he
wants to make us and he is able.

Israel, to the natural eye, at the time, were a subdued, depressed, and weary group
of slaves. They had nothing. They had no money, no freedom, their children were
being slaughtered, (males), symbolic of strength, they were oppressed, beat down,
discouraged. Weak. And God calls them his armies.

The first thing God does is cut off the water. Without it, the people will get weak.
He turns it into blood, why blood? Blood is very sacred to God, could it be because
of the bloodshed of the innocent babes thrown in the Nile by the Egyptians? For as
the blood of Abel cried out to God, surely, these innocent children's blood did, too.
Of course, the magicians duplicated this. And the Egyptians had to stop
tormenting God's people and start digging for water. Exo_7:24

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