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. |