THE
PASSAGE AT THE RED SEA
Dr.
W. A. Criswell
Exodus
14, 15
1-18-59
8:15 a.m.
You are sharing with us the services of the First Baptist
Church in Dallas. This is the pastor bringing the early morning message
entitled: The Passage at the Red Sea or The Deliverance at the Red Sea.
In our following the life of Moses, we have come to the middle of the Passover
night, in the middle of the twelfth chapter of the Book of Exodus. And you
can easily follow the message this morning if you will turn to Exodus 12:29.
This is the tenth, and the last sign. And it is a terrible
judgment; it's a figure of that final judgment, when the death angel shall pass
over and all who are not under the blood—upon them did the judgment of night,
and of death, and of darkness rest. All alike, from the Pharaoh on his throne
to the maid that worked at the mill, from the slave to the prince, all
alike—and only one way to be delivered from the visitor of death and judgment;
and that was under the blood.
Now, in the twenty-ninth verse of the twelfth chapter of
Exodus:
And it came to
pass, that at midnight the Lord smote all the firstborn in the land of Egypt…
(all who were not under the blood—every house, every home, every palace, every
hut, every firstborn in the land of Egypt died who was not under the blood.)
…The firstborn of the captive that was in the dungeon; and all the firstborn of
the cattle.
And Pharaoh rose
up in the night, he, and all his servants, and all the Egyptians; and there
was a great cry in Egypt, not a home where there was not death and judgment.
And there was a great cry in Egypt; for there was not a house where there was
not one dead.
And Pharaoh called
for Moses and Aaron by night, and said, Rise up, and get you forth from among
my people, both ye and the children of Israel; go…
Take your flocks
and your herds, as you have said, and be gone…
For the Egyptians
were urgent upon the people, that they might send them out of the land in
haste; for they said, We be all dead men.
So, the people
took their dough before it was leavened, their kneadingtroughs being bound up
in their clothes upon their shoulders.
[Exodus 12:29-34]
For they had eaten the Passover with a staff in their hands,
with their feet shod, with their clothes on their backs, with their kneading
troughs bound up with their clothes. They were a pilgrim people and they were
ready to go. So at midnight, they all marched in the dead of the night. Look
at the thirty-seventh verse: “And the children of Israel journeyed from Rameses
to Succoth, about six hundred thousand… men that were on foot, besides (the
women and) the children.”
Now, that's the reason you have the Passover—which is our
Easter—in the full light of the moon. Easter is always the first full moon
after the vernal equinox. It's the reason it changes in the course of the
passing of the years. The first full moon and the emphasis is on the
"full moon." The reason for the full moon was so the children of
Israel could march in the middle of the night. Had it been black, and starless,
and moonless; covered over with darkness and shrouded with midnight why, they
would have had difficulty moving out. But under the full light of the moon, in
that clear, crisp air where it never rains and is never clouded, it was just
about as though it was daytime.
I say that is why you have the Passover, that's why you have
Easter at the full of the moon. It was so God's children could pilgrimage on
the way. And every time you come to Easter, and look up there at that full
moon, always remember why it is that this is Easter time. It's a sign of the
pilgrimage of God's people. Joseph is no more in Egypt. It is time for God's
people to be gone. We're on the way. We're in a journey. We're in a
pilgrimage. And God has given us light for the way, that's why the full moon at
Easter time.
So, the children of Israel all converged, wherever they
lived, up and down the land of Goshen, they converged at Succoth. And there
were about two and one half million of them. And there at Succoth they
encamped, made leafy tabernacles, food, and they baked their unleavened bread
and they gathered themselves there at that rendezvous for the great trek to the
Promised Land.
Now, let's turn over to the thirteenth chapter and the
nineteenth verse, Exodus 13:19, and look what Moses did when they met at the
rendezvous of Succoth: “And Moses took the bones of Joseph with him, for he had
straitly sworn the children of Israel, saying, God will surely visit you; and
ye shall carry up my bones away hence with you.” That's the way the fiftieth
chapter—isn't that how many chapters you have in Genesis?—that's the way the
fiftieth chapter of Genesis closes:
And Joseph said
unto his brethren, I die: but God will surely visit you, and bring you out of
this land unto the land he sware to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob.
And Joseph took an
oath of the children of Israel, saying, God will surely visit you, and ye shall
carry up my bones from hence.
[Exodus 50:24, 25]
That's the only thing Joseph said that is quoted in the New
Testament. The only thing the Spirit of God picked out to reiterate: "Ye
shall carry up my bones from hence," and now God had surely visited them.
He may be long in keeping His promise. He may tarry, He may
delay, but it will come. God will surely visit you. And Joseph had been dead
a long, long time, but God did surely visit His people. And in keeping with
their promise and their oath, when the children of Israel go out of the land of
bondage and of darkness, they carry with them the bones of Joseph, taking them
back to the land that should belong to his children forever, and forever, and
forever.
So they took their
journey from Succoth, and encamped at Etham, at the edge of the wilderness.—where
the green vegetation of Egypt plays out. There, they stopped the second time
in the journey
And the Lord went
before them by day in a pillar of a cloud, to lead them the way; and by night
in a pillar of fire, to give them light; to go by day and night.
He took not away
the pillar of the cloud by day, nor the pillar of fire by night, from before
the people.
[Exodus 13:20-22]
That, of course, is a picture of the presence of God with
us, the Holy Spirit of God. This is the shekinah glory of the Lord. It's the
very chariot of the Almighty. And he is there to guide them, like the Holy
Spirit is here to guide us. And God's Holy Spirit will guide us if we will let
Him. There's no decision you ever make that God will not certainly tell you
how to make it, if you will lean upon Him. And any direction that a church
ought to take, and any choice that a church ought to make, and anyway that a
church ought to go there will be a pillar of light, and of fire, and of
cloud—the presence of the Holy Spirit of God—to show you what to do if you will
ask, and lean, and wait upon the Lord.
That comes to us in many ways; and I haven't time this
morning even to begin to describe them—but a conviction will come into your
heart, and outward circumstances will corroborate it when a thing ought to be
done. And when God's Spirit says this is the way, walk ye in it. He's to
guide us—this light of God, the Holy Spirit of God—and He is to shield us,
shielding those people from the rays of the burning sun, shielding them from
their enemies when the Egyptians pursued them. That's the Holy Spirit of God
today in our church and in our lives. The Holy Spirit of God shields us.
How many disasters almost have overtaken you? How many
times have you come within an inch or hair's breath of death? And how many
times have those disasters almost overtaken us and you did not realize it?
There are a thousand things. You can read in any newspaper of things terrible
and tragic that have happened to other people, why didn't they happen to you?
They could have. Why did that automobile run head on into this automobile?
Could have been you driving that car. Why did this awful thing overtake this
family, why didn't it happen to you? It's by the protecting, merciful care of
God!
Don't let anyone of us stand up and say now, “These things
can happen to others, but they never come by me. He may have cancer, but I
will not. He may have leukemia, but I will not. He may have these other
terrible scourges, but I will not. Sorrows desperate may visit their home, but
it will never visit mine.” Don't you think it for a minute! We are dependent
upon the merciful care and goodness of God.
Lord, remember us, remember us. Our lives are in Thy
hands. And our ways are guided by Thine eye, sheltered by Thy great, strong
arm. The pillar was for guiding, the pillar was for protection. This is a
blessed and precious figure of the Holy Spirit of God as He guides, and
protects, and leads us in the way of today.
All right, they are on the journey now: “And the Lord spake
unto Moses saying”—now he had just written over here in the thirteenth chapter
and the seventeenth verse: “And it came to pass, when Pharaoh had let the
people go, that God led them not through the way of the land of the Philistines,
although that was near”—It was only a hundred miles up there from where they
lived in Goshen. Up there to the Promised Land was just about a hundred miles
across the Isthmus of the Suez. They could just go right straight up to it. But
God never led them that way.—
For God said, Lest
pray that the people repent when they see war (lest they turn around and flee
when they see war) and they return to (the land of) Egypt.
But God led the
people about, through the way of the wilderness of the Red Sea: and the
children of Israel went up harnessed out of the land of Egypt.
[Exodus 13:17, 18]
All prepared, all dressed, all ready to march, but God
never led them up right, straight to the land, because the Philistines were
there and they had never been trained in war. They didn't know what war was,
and those fierce warriors, those [ancestors] of Goliath, those tremendous
soldiers, armed with spears and shields, why, it would have struck panic in the
hearts of these slaves, just to look at them. So, the cloud, and the directive
of the Spirit of God did the most impossible thing, speaking of the children of
Israel,14 and 2: “that they turn and encamp before Pi-hahiroth, between Migdol
and the sea, over against Baal-zephon: before it shall ye encamp by the sea.”
Now, I want you to see what the Holy Spirit of God did when
they came out of Egypt. They turned due south, and they went down south, until
they could not go any further. Down beyond them was an impassable mountain
range, Baal-zephon. Then to the side of them, were limitless wastes of sand.
And then to the north of them, where they had come, there was the land of Egypt
and in front of them was the Red Sea.
And I can imagine, when the cloud led them there—on one
side, the mountain range; on this side, the limitless wastes of the sand of the
desert; in front of them, the Red Sea; and back of them, the land of Egypt; the
lonely egress where they came from—I can imagine that the people looked at that
and they said one to another, "This is the most preposterous and
impossible of all of the selective sights for a camp that we ever thought
for."
And somebody else could have said: "Well, is this the
way to the promised land?"
And somebody else, with a discerning eye, said: "It is
good for us that Pharaoh is burying his firstborn or else he would come upon us
like a wolf upon penned sheep."
And somebody else would have said: "Had I been blind, I
think I could have chosen a better place for us than this place."
And sure enough all of those predictions, and murmurings,
and observations, and prognostications, and lugubrious murmurings, and
observations—they all proved true. No sooner had they settled there—penned up
like sheep—than an outpost rode back furiously into the camp saying: "We
saw, on the horizon, a whole army of Egyptians marching, marching this
way!"
For you see: “It was told the king of Egypt that the people
had fled”—this is 14:5—“and the heart of Pharaoh and of his servants was
turned… and they said, Why have we done this, that we have let Israel go from
serving us?”
There, that big empty space in the land unoccupied, all of
their servants gone, all of the toil of making brick and building cities now
denied them all the revenues and services that once came to them through two
and a half million slaves—all of it taken away. “Why, we made a great mistake
in just letting these people go. And not only that, but they carried off our
gold and our silver. And in our haste to get them out of the land, we did
anything to get rid of them. We must change this decision and bring them back
so they can serve us again.”
“So he made ready his chariots…” [Exodus 14:6] Made ready his army, made ready his people and
they pursued after the children of Israel. And when Pharaoh heard what they
had done, what Israel had done, where they were encamped, do you know what
Pharaoh said? He looked at his prime ministers, and he looked at his generals,
and he looked at his leaders and he said: “Uh-huh, my old gods, whom I thought
were dead, my old gods are true gods after all. I thought they had forsaken
me. I thought they had let me down."
In those contests between Moses and the gods of Egypt, every
god that Pharaoh worshiped was humiliated; he was darkened; he was killed; he
was made obscene and unclean. “But now,” Pharaoh says, "my old gods have
come back to my aid. Look at Israel—penned down there against the sea, against
the sand, and against the mountain range; and the only egress—the one that we
are following and bearing down upon, ourselves."
Oh, what a day for Pharaoh! Why, he could go in there with
his sword and kill all the leaders; and take all the rest of those people
captive, back to serve him all the days of his life, and all the generations
that are to come. He envisioned on the building of more cities; and the
digging of more canals; and the irrigation of more land. Oh, all the work the
two and a half million slaves would be doing for him.
Pharaoh said his gods had come to deliver into his hand this
oppressed people. Do you know the world has always got it figured out that
way. There never was a fellow that went to war—whether his name was Hitler, or
whether it was Tojo, or whether it was Mussolini, or whether it was Stalin, or
whether it was any other one of them—there never was a one of them that went to
war that didn't think the gods were propitious: “They're on my side, everything's
all set, we're going to conquer the world.” They're just typical of all the
other acts of darkness and iniquity: “The things all set; it's on our side;
everything is arranged.”
And away Pharaoh goes marching triumphantly at the head of
his army. Now, can you imagine the consternation in the camp of the Israelites
down there; penned against the sea, penned against the mountains, penned against
the sands of the desert? Oh, the things they had to say to Moses. Look at
what they said unto Moses. Exodus 14:11:
And they said unto
Moses, Because there were no graves in Egypt, hast thou taken us away to die in
the wilderness? wherefore hast thou dealt thus with us, to carried us forth
out of Egypt?
Is this not the
word that we did thee in Egypt, saying, Let us alone that we may serve the
Egyptians for it would have been better for us to serve the Egyptians than that
we should die in this wilderness.
Isn’t that what we told you back there? Isn’t that what we
said? Now I want you to look at Moses. I want you to contrast the thirteenth
verse with the fifteenth verse. Moses stands before those people and they are
frightened to death. They are scared. They don’t have any weapons. They
don’t how to fight. They have never had any experience in war and here the
whole Egyptian army with 600 chariots bearing down upon them.
Now look at Moses. Now look at this. This is one of the
most unusual scenes you will ever find in the Bible. Moses stands before the
people and Moses says:
Fear ye not, stand
still and see the salvation of the Lord which He will show to you today: for
the Egyptians whom you have seen today, ye shall see them again no more
forever.
The Lord shall
fight for you and ye shall hold your peace.
[Exodus 14: 13, 14]
That’s what he says to Israel. All right now contrast that
with the next verse. Now look at it: “And the Lord said unto Moses, Wherefore
thou criest now unto Me?” Moses would stand before the people, the very
picture of courage and fortitude then when he got before the Lord he was like a
broken reed. O Lord, O Lord; Moses didn’t know what God was going to do.
Moses didn’t know. He just trusted that God would do something. He didn’t
know what God was going to do. He just stands before the people and says,
“Fear not. Fear not, the Lord shall fight for you.”
Then when he goes before the Lord he just crumbles in his
heart; “O Lord, O God, O God.” That’s not a bad way to be. It certainly
isn’t, to be weak before God, strong before men. In fact I suspect that real
strength is like that; strong before men and weak before God; standing up
before men, falling on your face before God; not afraid of any man’s face, but
scared to death of God; not afraid of what any man can do, but tremble in your
soul at what God can do. I suspect that’s real bravery, real strength, real
fortitude, real courage; not afraid of the face of a man but trembling at the
very thought of God. And that’s Moses here; stand in front of the Pharaoh;
stand in front of the whole Egyptian army; stand in the presence of his people
who are murmuring and terrified and he’s unshaken and unafraid and says, “Fear
not. God shall fight for you.” And when he closes the door to his tent, falls
down on his face and cries unto the Lord.
“Well,” says God, “Moses, this is no time to sit and sigh.
This is no time to weep and cry. Moses this is the time to do or die. Get up
Moses! Get up. Speak unto the children of Israel that they go forward.” And
that’s what the Lord says to Moses, “Moses, why cry unto Me? Speak unto the
children of Israel that they go forward. Get up and go. Get up and go where?
This way into the arms of the enemy; this way across limitless burning sands;
that way across an impassable mountain range and this way into the middle of
the sea; which way Lord, which way? Get up and go. And the Lord says, “That
way toward Canaan; that way toward the Promised Land; that way right in the
middle of the sea.”
Oh brother, what faith, what faith! So He says, “Lift up
thy rod and stretch out tine hand over the sea. And the children shall go on
the dry ground through the midst of the sea.” [Exodus
14:22] God never leads us in, He leads us through: “Yea though I walk in
awe through the valley of the shadow of death…” [Psalm
23:4]
God leads the
children along,
Some through the
fire… and some through the floods;
Some through deep
waters… but all through the blood.
[George A. Young, 1903]
God leads the children along, leading them through,
leading them through. And God's restraining hand pulls back those great waves
of the sea as the strong wind divides it and God's restraining hand holds those
walls of glass; and rank upon rank, upon rank, upon rank. Surely that's a
picture of our marching into the presence of the Lord some of these days. Rank
upon rank, upon rank, upon rank; when the saints go marching in, and across the
sea, and upon the other side.
And when Pharaoh had saw the cloud lifted, when Pharaoh saw
how they had gone across, he said: “My gods have delivered them into my hands,
who is this God Jehovah? We don't even know His name; we don't know anything
about Him, but my gods have delivered them.”
And Pharaoh tempts Jehovah God; and into that divided sea he
heads his army; he sends his chariots; he sends his generals; he sends his
men. And when they got down there in the sea, their chariots began to bog
down, and the wheels begin to come off; and there began to be filled with fear,
and terror, and consternation.
And the Lord said unto Moses, “Stretch out thine hand over
the sea, that the waters come again…" And there before the eyes of God's
people they looked upon their oppressors—not one, not one left, not one, like
the angel of death that swept over one night, the great army of Sennacherib, in
the days when Hezekiah prayed unto the Lord at the appeal of the prophet
Isaiah. And the next morning, 185,000 corpses—instead of a live army: so it
was here, so it was here tempting God, the oppressors of God's people; and on
the other side, an emancipated nation stood. On the other side, God’s redeemed
people stood, on the side toward the Promised Land—the victory of the Red Sea,
the deliverance at the Red Sea.
Have you come to
the Red Sea place in your life
Where, despite all
you can do,
There is no way
out; there is no way back;
There is no other
way but through?
Then wait on the
Lord with a trust serene
Till the night of
your fear is gone.
He will send the
winds. He will heap the floods,
When He says to
your soul: “Go on!”
The tossing
billows may rear their crests;
Their foam at your
feet may break;
But over their
bed, you shall walk dryshod
In the path that
your Lord shall make.
In the morning watch,
‘neath the lifted cloud,
You shall see but
the Lord alone.
When He leads you
forth from the place of the sea,
To a land you have
never known.
And your fears
shall pass as your foes have passed.
You shall no more
be afraid.
You shall sing His
praise in a better place,
In a place that
His hand hath made.
[Annie Johnson Flint, “The Red Sea Place”]
When you face the Red Sea place in your life, oh, why are we
sometimes afraid? I don't know. Why do our hearts tremble? I don't know.
Why do we doubt the able-ness, and power, and delivering adequacy, and might,
and sufficiency of God? I don't know, but we do, but we do! That's why we
need to read the Book; that's why we need to have the sermon; that's why we
need to come to church—just to remind ourselves that God is able!
When He blocks it this way, and this way, and this way, and
that way—He will make a way, He will make a way! And God's way is never
ending. God's way is always through, up, up, on. The Lord’s marching orders
are forward.
Now, while we sing our song, somebody this morning to give
his heart to the Lord, somebody to put his life in the fellowship of the
church, while we sing this song, make this appeal, would you come and stand by
me? In this great post, in the balcony around, on this lower floor into this
aisle or down one of these stairwells, “Pastor, today I give my heart to the
Lord.” Or, “Today I'm putting my life in the church.” One somebody you, or a
family as the Lord shall open the door and lead the way, would you come, while
we make this appeal, while we stand and sing?