Genesis
49:1-27
Exodus
1:1-2:10 - Things were difficult for Israel yet ‘the more they were oppressed the more they multiplied’ (12). Difficult times can be the making of God’s people! Pharaoh (and Satan!) is murderously anxious about the growth of God's people (15-16; John 10:10). God is about to move in saving power - His ‘midwives’ are preparing for the ‘birth’ of His redeemed people (17,20). Moses was preserved in ‘a basket made of bulrushes’ (2:3). Born again, we are preserved through God’s Word and Spirit - ‘the living and abiding Word of God’ (1 Peter 1:23). Moses was drawn out of the water (2:10). Israel was drawn out of the bondage in Egypt (6:6-8). Like Israel, we have been redeemed by blood (12:13; 1 Peter 1:18-19). Redeemed by the Lord, we are to be consecrated to Him. In 20:1-2, ‘the Ten Commandments’ are introduced by a declaration of God’s salvation. Our obedience to God is to be grounded in this: He has redeemed us!
49:1-27
Jacob
blesses his sons, ‘blessing each with the blessing suitable to him’
(28). The most significant blessings are reserved for Joseph (22-26).
This is not simply the blessing of Jacob. This is the blessing of ‘the
Mighty One of Jacob... the Shepherd, the Rock of Israel... the God of
your father... God Almighty' (24-25). God blesses us ‘with blessings of
heaven above, blessings which are mighty beyond the blessings of the
eternal mountains, the bounties of the everlasting hills’ (25-26). He
does this for us in Jesus Christ, the fulfilment of the divine purpose
within which Joseph was privileged to take his part. ‘God... has blessed
us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places’
(Ephesians 1:3). What blessings He has given to us - the forgiveness of
sins, the Holy Spirit, eternal life (Ephesians 1:7,13-14)! ‘Bless the
Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits’ (Psalm 103:2).
49:28-50:26
It
was a time of ‘very great and sorrowful lamentation’ (10). Jacob had
died (33). Soon, Joseph would be gone (26). God was still there. He had
been there in the past (20). He would be there in the future (24-25).
Times are hard. We rejoice: ‘The steadfast love of the Lord never
ceases’. An earthly life has ended. We say, ‘His mercies never come to
an end’. We cannot cope. We discover that ‘His mercies are new every
morning’. Everything seems to be changing. We trust in God’s unchanging
love: ‘Great is Thy faithfulness’. It seems hopeless. We say, ‘I will
hope in the Lord’ (Lamentations 3:22-24). ‘Bad’ things are happening to
you. Do you need to be ‘reassured... and comforted’? - ‘God meant it for
good... Do not fear’. The Lord ‘will provide for you’ (20-21). Whatever
happens, remember this - God is in control, and He loves you (Romans 8:28)!
Exodus
1:1-2:10 - Things were difficult for Israel yet ‘the more they were oppressed the more they multiplied’ (12). Difficult times can be the making of God’s people! Pharaoh (and Satan!) is murderously anxious about the growth of God's people (15-16; John 10:10). God is about to move in saving power - His ‘midwives’ are preparing for the ‘birth’ of His redeemed people (17,20). Moses was preserved in ‘a basket made of bulrushes’ (2:3). Born again, we are preserved through God’s Word and Spirit - ‘the living and abiding Word of God’ (1 Peter 1:23). Moses was drawn out of the water (2:10). Israel was drawn out of the bondage in Egypt (6:6-8). Like Israel, we have been redeemed by blood (12:13; 1 Peter 1:18-19). Redeemed by the Lord, we are to be consecrated to Him. In 20:1-2, ‘the Ten Commandments’ are introduced by a declaration of God’s salvation. Our obedience to God is to be grounded in this: He has redeemed us!
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