What does "Let My people go" show?
What does "Let My people go" reveal about God's desire for His people?

Setting the Scene

Pharaoh held Israel in brutal slavery. Into that oppression the Lord spoke a clear, ringing command through Moses and Aaron.


The Command Stated: Exodus 5:1

“Afterward, Moses and Aaron went to Pharaoh and said, ‘This is what the LORD, the God of Israel, says: “Let My people go, so that they may hold a feast to Me in the wilderness.”’”


What “My People” Tells Us About God’s Heart

• Ownership: Israel belonged to the LORD, not to Pharaoh (Exodus 6:7).

• Covenant Love: “My” recalls God’s promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob (Genesis 17:7).

• Protection: By naming Israel His own, God pledges to defend them (Deuteronomy 32:10–11).

• Identity: Their value flows from divine selection, not from social status (Isaiah 43:1).


What “Let … Go” Reveals About God’s Intent

• Deliverance from bondage—freedom is God’s gift, not man’s concession (Psalm 107:14).

• Public demonstration that the LORD alone rules kingdoms (Exodus 7:5).

• Restoration of dignity; slavery denied the image-bearing purpose God implanted in humanity (Genesis 1:26–27).

• Separation from the corrupt system of Egypt so Israel can live distinctly (Leviticus 20:26).


Worship: The Ultimate Purpose

• God frees His people so they can “hold a feast to Me.” Liberty is ordered toward communion.

• Service (Hebrew ‘avad) can mean both “work” and “worship” (Exodus 8:1). True freedom is the ability to serve God gladly (Psalm 100:2).

• Worship re-centers the nation on God’s presence, preparing them to receive His law at Sinai (Exodus 19:4–6).


Freedom With Boundaries

• Israel is released from Pharaoh, not from authority itself; they come under the gracious kingship of the LORD (Exodus 15:18).

• The Red Sea crossing marks a transfer of lordship (Romans 6:22).

• God’s commands afterward (Ten Commandments) safeguard the newfound freedom (Deuteronomy 5:6).


God Versus False Masters

• Each plague exposed an Egyptian idol, proving the LORD alone is God (Exodus 12:12).

• Pharaoh’s hardness contrasts with God’s mercy; the contest reveals whose yoke blesses and whose enslaves (Matthew 11:28–30).


Echoes Throughout Scripture

Isaiah 61:1—Messiah proclaims liberty to captives.

John 8:36—“So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.”

Galatians 5:1—“It is for freedom that Christ has set us free.”

Revelation 5:9–10—redeemed people freed by Christ’s blood to serve God as a kingdom and priests.


Living It Today

• Trust the Lord’s right to claim you; refuse the modern “Pharaohs” of sin, fear, and cultural pressure.

• Embrace freedom as the power to worship, obey, and rejoice in God’s presence.

• Remember deliverance points outward: freed people become a light to nations (1 Peter 2:9).

• Stand firm; the same God who said “Let My people go” still breaks chains and leads His own into joyful service.

How does Exodus 8:1 demonstrate God's authority over Pharaoh and Egypt?
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