Previous Page  90 / 298 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 90 / 298 Next Page
Page Background

The Types of Redemption

84

But when God says, “Get ready to go,” I don’t care if no one has left the house in 430 years, you

go on and get ready. I don’t care if no one has been out of town in 430 years, you go ahead and

put on your traveling boots, put on your clothes, gird up your loins, pack your stuff and put it

right next to the door, and eat quick. Isn’t that what He said? Eat in a hurry.

Is this a type of redemption? Absolutely. You applied the blood to the doorway, and when the

destroyer came through killing all the firstborn of men and beasts, the Lord said, “When I see

that blood, I will not allow the destroyer to come into you,” and he would pass over that house.

That house was exempt. It got passed over.

The wages of sin is death. All men have sinned and come short of the glory of God, and the

wages of that is not just physical death but eternal death. Why aren’t we going to hell? Why

aren’t we paying the price for all of our mistakes? We’ve been exempted. We’ve been passed

over where judgment is concerned. Why? Because of the blood of the Lamb that has bought us

and paid for us, the destroyer cannot come into our houses to consume us and destroy us.

Was this a type of

the

spotless Lamb? Yes.

Someone might say, “Well, I don’t see healing in there.” I’m about to tell you about it. Psalm

105 describes this very night when they came out.

You have to remember who these people are and what they’ve been doing. They have not been

serving God in Egypt. They’ve been worshipping false gods and have not been treated well,

especially in recent times. You remember they were required to produce their quota of bricks and

weren’t given the materials to make them, so they were working night and day. When they

weren’t making bricks, they were roaming the countryside scrapping the straw together. And

then, because of what was going on, they were being beaten. They were treated like livestock;

they were slaves, and so were their fathers, and their fathers before them, and their fathers before

them, for centuries. (Exodus 5:7-14)

When you’re treated like that, you don’t have a decent place to live. Your food is substandard,

you’re overworked, and you’re malnourished. You’re going to have sick people—people who

are beaten, with broken ribs and broken limbs. There will be people with eyes, ears, and noses

that are broken and damaged, and they didn’t receive proper medical care. They’ve been worked

out in the field until they drop, from heatstroke. There had to be a lot of broken, sick, diseased,

weak, damaged people; that’s what slavery does to people.

But when they came out that night, Psalm 105:36-37 says, “He smote also all the firstborn in

their land, the chief of all their strength. He brought them forth also with silver and gold: and

there was not one feeble person among their tribes.”

There were 603,550 foot soldiers, not counting the older people, the women, or the children, so

they probably had 2-3 million people. Are you’re going to tell me that among 2-3 million people,

you couldn’t find one weak or feeble person—out of a group of people who have grown up in

slavery, slept in the cold, worked in extreme heat, and been beaten, overworked, and underfed? It

doesn’t even make sense. There had to be many of them who were weak, broken, and diseased,