Few things are more difficult than Moving Day. In Exodus 13, Israel is on the move. To prepare them to travel God gives three things – a plan, a promise, and his presence. All to make it easier for them to follow. Things we also need as we follow Christ. Join us as we examine the departure of Israel from Egypt in Exodus 13:17-22. And as we consider some critical truths about following God when he brings us to our own Moving Day.
Tag Archives: Family Integrated Church
09/25/2022 | “Keeping the Feast” | Exodus 12:43-13:16
At the climax of the exodus, we see more instruction than action. God instructs Israel to keep Passover with diligence and sincerity. We too are instructed to keep the feast. To celebrate Christ our Passover at the Lord’s Table. Are you keeping the feast? Coming in faith? Carefully prepared? Join us as we examine Exodus 12:43-13:16 to consider God’s instructions to his ancient people and to us to keep the feast.
09/18/2022 | “Fallout” | Exodus 12:29-42
‘Fallout’ is an idiom for the downstream consequences of a catastrophe. The plagues of Egypt were catastrophic. And in their fallout, God kept all his promises. Complete judgement for unbelievers and deliverance for believers. Which are you?
Join us as we examine Exodus 12:29-42 and consider the catastrophe of God’s righteous judgement and the fallout that brings death to unbelievers and life to believers.
09/11/2022 | “Memory Palace” | Exodus 12:1-28
Rituals and ‘means of grace’ are vital to faith and life. They activate and improve our spiritual memory. Help us keep perspective. This is why the statement “I’m spiritual, but not religious” is untenable. Spirituality without ‘religion’ will always become cognitively impaired forgetting that I am not god and my opinion not ultimate truth. God graciously gives us means of remembrance. Before the final plague, God prepared the people, giving them rituals for remembrance. Join us as we consider the Passover in Exodus 12 and the importance of remembrance.
09/04/2022 | “The Last Word” | Exodus 11:1-10
Pharaoh was a know-it-all. He tried to have the last word, but God silenced him with a plague of death. Pharaoh’s son would die. And even Osiris could not stop it. God had the last word of judgement. But it could have been a word of grace.
What about you? When the Lord speaks the best, last word, the word of grace, will you let that be the last word? Join us as we examine God’s last word to Pharaoh in Exodus 11 and consider the importance of giving God the last word.
08/28/2022 | “Deepest Darkness” | Exodus 10:21-29
We’re all afraid of the dark, but the plague of darkness was terrifying beyond imagination. It immobilized Egypt. And brought Pharaoh to the edge of obedience. But only to the edge. Even now, Pharaoh’s heart was hard. What about you? Is your heart hard?
How much judgment must God bring to your life before you will turn to Him? How long will you love darkness? And refuse to come to the ‘light of the world?’ Join us as we examine Exodus 10:21-29 to consider the plague of darkness and its warnings for us.
08/14/2022 | “Doing Penance” | Exodus 9:13-35
In Exodus 9, Pharaoh says what he never said – “I have sinned, I am in the wrong.” Is Pharaoh’s heart softening? Is he repentant? His words say ‘yes,’ but what does his life say? Repentance is more than saying ‘sorry.’ Join us as we examine Exodus 9 to consider what repentance is and is not.
A Rock and A Hard Place
Parents never quite comprehend children’s anxiety over a family vacation. We glibly assume all is excitement and anticipation. It never enters our minds that some insignificant moment of our adventure is keeping our children awake at night. For one of my daughters, a long awaited trip to Chincoteague Island was eclipsed by fear of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel. All reverie over Misty of Chincoteague shrouded by the terror of five minutes driving under the sea.
For me, it was “Fat Man Squeeze.” Chattanooga was only a couple of hours from our home. And every barn roof in North Georgia beckoned, “See Rock City.” My dad thought it would be a great adventure. And so it was – in retrospect. But in reading about Rock City, I had learned of a spot in the tour of its rock gardens branded “Fat Man Squeeze.” Or as I feared, “Fat Boy Squeeze.”
I was ‘husky’ in my childhood – and very self-conscious of it. And as if the thought of being permanently wedged in a tight rocky passage was not terror-inducing enough, the thought of being publicly branded as the “Fat Boy” who got lodged in “Fat Man Squeeze” was just too much. So, to my father’s dismay, I offered excuse after excuse as to why a trip to Rock City was not a good idea. Never daring to reveal my real fear of being literally stuck between a rock and a hard place.
None of us wants to be in that place. Stuck between a rock and a hard place. Either literally or figuratively. The expression and experience are common ones. To be ‘stuck between a rock and a hard place’ means, to face two equally unpleasant, dangerous, or risky alternatives, where the avoidance of one ensures encountering the harm of the other.
We consciously avoid being in situations with no safe exit strategy. Yet as Christians we recognize in both the Bible and in our own lives, that the Lord often places us between a rock and a hard place. He does so intentionally, so we will learn that He can make a way when there seems to be no way.
As the people of Israel leave Egypt, they go out with head and hand high. Their God has delivered them from the iron grip of Pharaoh and centuries of slavery and oppression. They have plundered the Egyptians and depart victoriously, while a defiant Egypt is in ruins. Yet as their journey begins, we see two things that seem troubling.
First God takes the people off the interstate, off the fast track to their new home. They need to learn about themselves what He already knows. They must grow in their faith before they face certain enemies and let fear drive them back to slavery. And second, God leads them directly into what appears to be a dangerous and indefensible encampment. After making good progress on the desert highway, the Lord tells them to turn around and camp on the shore of the Red Sea. At the same time, he tells them that Pharaoh will harden his heart one more time and come for them – to either capture or kill them.
God places the people between a rock and a hard place. They are not victims of poor planning, poor leadership, or rebellion. But of the purposeful plan of God. They are about to learn that the Lord makes paths where no paths appear to exist. And that the Lord will fight their battles for them. As Pharaoh’s chariots appear on the horizon, they panic, grumble, and despair. But Moses instructs them.
And Moses said to the people, “Fear not, stand firm, and see the salvation of the Lord, which he will work for you today. For the Egyptians whom you see today, you shall never see again. The Lord will fight for you, and you have only to be silent.”
Exodus 14:13-14
This is good counsel for us. When we are stuck between a rock and a hard place – at work, in relationships, with decisions, and in our spiritual lives, have we learned to “fear not, stand firm, and see the salvation of the Lord, which he will work for [us]?” Will we panic, accuse others, or fall into a pit of black despair as the Israelites did before the Red Sea? Or will we learn that we must only be silent and let the Lord fight for us?
What is your response when you are between the rock and the hard place? Join us as we examine Exodus 14:1-14 and consider how God places us in hard places to show us that he will make a way when there seems to be no way. And that He, himself, is that way.
We meet on the square in Pottsville, right next to historic Potts’ Inn at 10:30 am for worship. Get directions here or contact us for more info. Or join us on Facebook Live @PottsvilleARP or YouTube.
Moving Day
Inca Court was a utopian outpost on the frontier of a dystopian suburbia. The small suburban Atlanta street where I grew up had only ten houses. Until I left home for college, it was the only home I had ever known.
None of the families on our street ever moved in or out. None of the parents in any of those homes ever moved in or out. We never knew the curiosity of new neighbors and never coped with the stress of leaving Inca Court behind. There were no Moving Days on Inca Court. In a mobile society marked by constant transition, Inca Court was sociological anomaly.
My first significant move was phenomenally stressful – filled with logistical angst and existential self-doubt. Was I crazy to leave the familiar, the comfortable, the settled, the influential, the known – even with its problems and challenges – for the uncomfortable, the unsettled, the uninfluential, the unknown?
Life transitions are fertile fields for lush and verdant anxiety, yet as followers of Jesus, we have been chosen to live a pilgrim life and to farm these fields. Our God is always moving, always at work, even to this very day. To be a follower means to follow – to follow a God who never changes, but often calls us to change, a God who never leaves or forsakes, but often calls us to leave and forsake. Followers of Christ in scripture were often on the move, tracing the movement of God.
But when do we go, how do we know where to go? Or what will happen one the way? Or when we arrive? What will we leave behind and what will we find ahead? Following God and leaving the familiar is tough. But he does not simply push us out of the nest to find our own way. Nor does he send us unaccompanied. The Lord promises to go with us and provide us with direction, encouragement, and provision for the journey.
In Exodus 13:17-22, the narrative of Exodus transitions from God visiting his people in Egypt to God leading his people into the Promised Land. To prepare the people for the move God gives three things we need as we follow Christ: his plan, his promise, and his presence. God lays out the route, sends them with the bones of Joseph, and appears to them as the pillar of cloud and fire. All to make it easier for the Israelites to follow.
Join us as we examine the departure of Israel from Egypt in Exodus 13:17-22. And as we consider some critical truths about following God when he brings us to our own Moving Day.
We meet on the square in Pottsville, right next to historic Potts’ Inn at 10:30 am for worship. Get directions here or contact us for more info. Or join us on Facebook Live @PottsvilleARP or YouTube.
Keeping the Feast
Complaints about mothers-in-law are as old as the institution of marriage. Yet I confess, my mother-in-law was a rare jewel. She had many remarkable qualities. She was the ultimate encourager. She never forgot your name or your situation. She left a wake of joy and blessing wherever life’s voyage took her. And her life took her into some dark and difficult places. She excelled in the art of gift giving. And she always knew and gave exactly what you needed.
But her chief pleasure was the pleasure of others. And no event gave her greater opportunity to please than feast-keeping. Holiday meals were lavish, expansive, and eclectic. She ensured that everyone’s favorite dish was on the table. For me it was pickled peaches. No one else shared my passion for pickled peaches. And they are extremely hard to procure in Arkansas. Yet every Thanksgiving MaMa preserved one quart jar of homemade pickled peaches, just for me.
MaMa knew the importance of keeping the feast. Of gathering and celebrating the season. Of remembering the grace of God with gratitude through feast-keeping. Feasting it important. God commanded feasts in the Old Testament to ensure the people would remember His mighty acts of deliverance. And to prepare them for the even greater ultimate deliverance in Christ. The feasts joyfully told the story – His story. The story of what made God’s people different. Of who they were and whose they were. And of how they came to be.
The feasts of Israel were not optional. Not extra for experts. Nor merely perfunctory or obligatory. They were to be attended with solemnity, yet joy. With careful preparation, yet zealous participation. And most of all they were to be enjoyed in faith. Faith that the God who delivered them from the tyranny of Pharaoh would deliver them from the ultimate tyranny of sin. And so, at the climax of the exodus, we find more instruction than action. God instructs his people to keep the Passover with diligence and sincerity. And in the same way we are still instructed to keep the feast.
But Christ is our Passover and we celebrate this great work of redemption as we gather around his table in the Lord’s Supper. Paul instructs us.
For even Christ our passover is sacrificed for us: Therefore let us keep the feast, not with old leaven, neither with the leaven of malice and wickedness; but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth.
1 Corinthians 5:7-8
And again.
The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ? The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? For we being many are one bread, and one body: for we are all partakers of that one bread. Behold Israel after the flesh: are not they which eat of the sacrifices partakers of the altar?
1 Corinthians 10:16-17
And finally.
And when he had given thanks, he brake it, and said, Take, eat: this is my body, which is broken for you: this do in remembrance of me. After the same manner also he took the cup, when he had supped, saying, this cup is the new covenant in my blood: this do ye, as oft as ye drink it, in remembrance of me. For as often as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup, ye do shew the Lord’s death till he come. Wherefore whosoever shall eat this bread, and drink this cup of the Lord, unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. But let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of that bread, and drink of that cup.
1 Corinthians 11:23-26
Are you keeping the feast? Are you coming in faith? Carefully prepared to thankfully participate? Join us this week as we examine Exodus 12:43-13:16 to consider God’s instructions to his ancient people and to us to keep the feast.
We meet on the square in Pottsville, right next to historic Potts’ Inn at 10:30 am for worship. Get directions here or contact us for more info. Or join us on Facebook Live @PottsvilleARP or YouTube.