Israel in
Egypt by C. H. Spurgeon
A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, June 14, 1857, By Pastor C. H.
Spurgeon, At The Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens.
And they sing the song of Moses the servant of God, and the song of the
Lamb, saying, Great and marvellous are your works, Lord God Almighty; just
and true are your ways, oh King of saints. (Re 15:3)
1. At the outset, let us remark the carefulness of the Holy Spirit in
guarding the honour of our blessed Lord. This verse is often quoted as if it
says thus—“They sing the song of Moses and the Lamb.” This mistake has led
many weak minds to wonder at the expression, for they have imagined that it
divided the honour of the song of heaven between Moses and the Redeemer. The
clause—“the servant of God”—is doubtless inserted by the Holy Spirit to
prevent any error upon this point, and therefore it should be carefully
included in the quotation. I take it that the song of Moses is here united
with the song of the Lamb, because the one was a type and picture of the
other. The glorious overthrow of Pharaoh in the Red Sea foreshadowed the
total destruction of Satan and all his host in the day of the great battle
of the Lord; and there was in the song of Moses the expression of the same
feelings of triumph which will pervade the hearts of the redeemed when they
shall triumph with their Captain.
2. May God the Holy Spirit enable me to exhibit the parallel which exists
between the condition of Israel when passing through the sea, and the
position of the church of Christ at the present day. Next, we shall compare
the triumph of the Lord at the Red Sea with the victory of the Lamb in the
great and terrible day of the Lord. And lastly, I shall point out certain
prominent features of the song of Moses, which will doubtless be as
prominent in the song of the Lamb.
3. I. First, it is our business to regard THE POSITION OF THE CHILDREN OF
ISRAEL AS EMBLEMATIC OF OUR OWN. And here we observe, that like the church
of God the vast host of Israel had been delivered from bondage. We, my
brethren, who constitute a part of the Israel of God, were once the slaves
of sin and Satan; we served with hard bondage and rigour while in our
natural state; no bondage was ever more terrible than ours; we indeed made
bricks without straw, and laboured in the very fire; but by the strong hand
of God we have been delivered. We have come forth from the prison house;
with joy we behold ourselves emancipated—the Lord’s free men. The iron yoke
is taken from our necks; we no longer serve our lusts, and pay obedience to
the tyrant’s sin. With a high hand and an outstretched arm, our God has led
us forth from the place of our captivity, and joyfully we pursue our way
through the wilderness.
4. But with the children of Israel it was not all joy; they were free, but
their master was at their heels. Pharaoh was loathe to lose so valuable a
nation of servants; and therefore with his chosen captains, his horsemen,
and his chariots, he pursued them in angry haste. Frightened Israel beheld
her infuriated oppressor close at her rear, and trembled for the issue—the
hearts of the people failed them while they saw their hopes blighted and
their joys ended by the approach of the oppressor; even so it is with some
of you; you think you must be driven back again like dumb cattle, into
Egypt, and once more become what you were. “Surely,” you say, “I cannot hold
on my way with such a host seeking to drive me back; I must again become the
slave of my iniquities.” And thus dreading apostasy, and feeling that you
would rather die than become what you were; you this morning are filled with
trepidation. You are saying, “Alas! for me! Better that I had died in Egypt
than that I should have come out into this wilderness to be captured again.”
You have tasted for a moment the joys of holiness and the sweets of liberty;
and now again to go back to endure the bondage of a spiritual Egypt, would
be worse than before. This is the position of the sacramental host of God’s
elect; they have come out of Egypt, and they are pursuing their way to
Canaan. But the world is against them; the kings of the earth stand up, and
the rulers take counsel together against the Lord and against his people,
saying, “Let us scatter them; let us utterly destroy them.” From the fiery
days of the stakes of Smithfield1 even until now, the world’s black heart
has hated the church, and the world’s cruel hand and laughing lip have been
for ever against us. The host of the mighty are pursuing us, and are thirsty
for our blood, and anxious to cut us off from the earth. Such is our
position to this hour, and such must it be until we are landed on the other
side of Jordan, and until our Maker comes to reign on the earth.
5. But once more: the children of Israel were in a position more terrible
than this. They came to the edge of the Red Sea; they feared their enemies
behind; they could not flee on either hand, for they were flanked by
mountains and stupendous rocks; one course only was open to them, and that
course was through the sea. God commands them to go forward. The rod of
Moses is outstretched, and the frightened waters divide; a channel is left
while the floods stand upright, and the waters are congealed in the heart of
the sea. The priests, bearing the ark, march forward; the whole host of
Israel follow. And now behold the wondrous pilgrimage. A wall of alabaster
is on either side, and myriads are in the pebbly depths. Like a wall of
glass the sea stands on either side of them, frowning with overhanging
cliffs of foam; but still on they march; and until the last of God’s Israel
is safe the water stands still and firm, frozen by the lips of God. Such, my
hearers, is the position of God’s church now. You and I are marching through
a sea, the floods of which are kept upright only by the sovereign power of
God. This world is a world which is suddenly to be destroyed; and our
position in it is just the position of the children of Israel, for whose
sake the floods refused to meet until they were safely landed. Oh church of
God! you are the salt of the earth: when you are removed this earth must
putrify and decay. Oh living army of the living God! you, like Israel, keep
the floods of providence still standing fast; but when the last of you shall
be gone from this stage of action, God’s fiery wrath and tremendous anger
shall dash down upon the ground in which you now are standing, and your
enemies shall be overwhelmed in the place through which you now walk safely.
Let me put my thoughts as plainly as I can. Naturally, according to the
common order, the Red Sea should have flowed on in a level and even manner,
constant in its waves and unbroken in its surface. By the might of God the
Red Sea was divided into two parts, and the floods stood back. Now mark.
Naturally, according to the common course of justice, this world, which
groans and travails until now, ought, if we only consider the wicked, to be
utterly destroyed. The only reason why the Red Sea afforded a safe passage
for the host was this—that Israel marched through it; and the only reason
why this world stands, and the only reason why it is not destroyed by fire,
as it is to be at the last great day, is because God’s Israel are in it; but
when once they shall have passed through, the parted floods shall meet their
hands, and embrace with eager joy to clasp the adverse host within their
hands. The day is coming when this world shall reel to and fro and stagger
like a drunken man. Every Christian may say, with due reverence to God, “The
earth is dissolved; I bear up its pillars.” Let all the Christians that are
in this world die, and the pillars of the earth would fall, and like a wreck
and a vision all this universe of ours would pass away, never to be seen
again. We are today, I say, passing through the floods, with enemies behind,
pursuing us who are going out of Egypt up to Canaan.
6. II. And now the TRIUMPH OF MOSES was a picture of the ultimate triumph of
the Lamb. Moses sang a song to the Lord by the sea of Egypt. If you will
turn to Holy Scripture you will find that my text was sung by the holy
spirits who had been preserved from sin and from the contamination of the
beast; and it is said that they sung this song upon “a sea of glass mingled
with fire.” Now the song of Moses was sung by the side of a sea, which was
glassy, and still; for a little season the floods had been disturbed,
divided, separated, congealed, but in a few moments afterwards when Israel
had safely passed the flood, they became as glassy as ever, for the enemy
had sunken to the bottom like a stone, and the sea returned to its strength
when the morning appeared. Is there ever a time, then, when this great sea
of Providence, which now stands parted to give a passage to God’s saints
shall become a level surface? Is there a day when the now divided
dispensations of God, which are kept from following out their legitimate
tendency to do justice upon sin—when the two seas of justice shall
commingle, and the one sea of God’s providence shall be “a sea of glass
mingled with fire?” Yes, the day is drawing near when God’s enemies shall no
longer make it necessary for God’s providence to be apparently disturbed to
save his people, when the great designs of God shall be accomplished, and
therefore when the walls of water shall roll together, while in their inmost
depths the everlasting burning fire shall still consume the wicked. Oh! the
sea shall be calm upon the surface; the sea upon which God’s people shall
walk shall seem to be a sea that is clear, without a weed, without an
impurity; while down in its hollow bosom, far beyond all mortal sight, shall
be the horrid depths where the wicked must for ever dwell in the fire which
is mingled with the glass.
7. Well, I now want to show you why it was that Moses triumphed, and why it
is that by and by, we shall triumph. One reason why Moses sung his song was
because all Israel were safe. They were all safely across the sea. Not a
drop of spray fell from that solid wall until the last of God’s Israel had
safely planted his foot on the other side of the flood. That done,
immediately the floods dissolved into their proper place again, but not
until then. Part of that song was, “You have led your people like a flock
through the wilderness.” Now, in the last time, when Christ shall come upon
earth, the great song will be—“Lord, you have saved your people; you have
led them all safely through the paths of providence, and not one of them has
fallen into the hands of the enemy.” Oh! it is my strong belief, that in
heaven there shall not be a vacant throne. I rejoice that all who love the
Lord below must at last attain to heaven. I do not believe with some that
men may start on the road to heaven, and be saved, and yet fall by the hand
of the enemy. God forbid, my friends!
All the chosen race
Shall meet around the throne,
Shall bless the conduct of his grace,
And make his glories known.
Part of the triumph of heaven will be, that there is not one throne that is
unoccupied. As many as God has chosen, as many as Christ has redeemed, as
many as the Spirit has called, as many as believe, shall arrive safely
across the stream. We are not all safely landed yet.
Part of the host have crossed the flood,
And part are crossing now.
The vanguard of the army have already reached the shore. I see them up
there.
I greet the blood besprinkled bands
Upon th’ eternal shore.
And you, and I, my brethren, are marching through the depths. We are at this
day following hard after Christ, and walking through the wilderness. Let us
be of good cheer: the rearguard shall soon be where the vanguard already is;
the last of the chosen shall soon have landed; the last of God’s elect shall
have crossed the sea, and then shall be heard the song of triumph, when all
are secure. But oh! if one were absent—oh! if one of his chosen family
should be cast away—it would make an everlasting discord in the song of the
redeemed, and cut the strings of the harps of paradise, so that music could
never be distilled from them again.
8. But, perhaps, the major part of the joy of Moses lay in the destruction
of all the enemies of God. He looked upon his people the day before.
He looked upon his people,
And the tear was in his eye;
He looked upon the foemen
And his glance was stern and high.
And now today he looks upon his people, and he says, “Blessed are you, oh
Israel, safely landed on the shore;” and he does not look upon the foes, but
upon the foes’ tomb; he looks where the living were protected by the shield
of God from all their enemies; and he sees—what? A mighty sepulchre of
water; a mighty tomb in which were engulfed princes, monarchs, potentates.
“The horse and his rider has he thrown into the sea.” Pharaoh’s chariots
also are drowned in it. And soon, my hearers, you and I shall do the same. I
say that now we have to look abroad on hosts of enemies. What with the wild
beasts of Rome, what with the antichrist of Mohammed, what with the
thousands of idolatries and false gods, what with infidelity in all its
myriad shapes, many are the enemies of God, and mighty are the hosts of
hell. Lo, you see them gathered together this day; horseman upon horseman,
chariot upon chariot, gathered together against the Most High. I see the
trembling church, fearing to be overthrown; I mark her leaders bending their
knees in solemn prayer, and crying, “Lord, save your people, and bless your
heritage.” But my eye looks through the future with telescopic glance, and I
see the happy period of the latter days, when Christ shall reign triumphant.
I shall ask them where is Babel? where is Rome? where is Mohammed? and the
answer shall come—where? Why, they have sunk into the depths; they have sunk
to the bottom as a stone. Down there the horrid fire devours them, for the
sea of glass is mingled with the fire of judgment. Today I see a
battlefield: the whole earth is torn by the hoofs of horses; there is the
rumble of cannon and the roll of drum. “To arms! to arms!” both hosts are
shouting. But you wait awhile, and you shall walk across this plain of
battle, and say, “Do you see that colossal system of error dead? There lies
another, all frozen, in ghastly death, in motionless stupor. There lies
infidelity; there sleeps secularism and the secularist; there lie those who
defied God. I see all this vast host of rebels lying scattered upon the
earth.” “Sing to the Lord, for he has triumphed gloriously; Jehovah has
gotten to himself the victory, and the last of his enemies are destroyed.”
Then shall be the time when shall be sung “the song of Moses and of the
Lamb.”
9. III. Now, turning to the song of Moses, I shall conclude my address to
you by noticing some interesting particulars in the song which will
doubtless have a place in the everlasting orchestra of the redeemed, when
they shall praise the Most High. Oh! my brethren, I could only wish that I
had stood by the Red Sea, to have heard that mighty shout, and that
tremendous roar of acclamation! I think one might well have borne a
servitude in Egypt, to have stood in that mighty host who sang such mighty
praise. Music has charms; but never had it such charms as it had that day
when fair Miriam led the women, and Moses led the men, like some mighty
leader, beating time with his hand. “Sing to the Lord, for he has done
gloriously.” I think I see the scene; and I anticipate the greater day, when
the song shall be sung again, “as the song of Moses and of the Lamb.”
10. Now, just notice this song. In the 15th chapter of Exodus you find it,
and in several of the Psalms you will see it amplified. The first thing I
would have you notice in it is, that from beginning to end it is a praise of
God, and of no one else but God. Moses, you have said nothing of yourself.
Oh great lawgiver, mightiest of men, did not your hand grasp the mighty rod
that split the sea—that burned its fair breast, and left a scar for a while
upon its bosom? Did not you lead the hosts of Israel? Did not you marshal
their thousands for battle, and like a mighty commander lead them through
the depths? Is there not a word for you? Not one. The whole strain of the
song is, “I will sing to the Lord,” from beginning to end. It is all praise
of Jehovah; there is not one word about Moses, nor a single word in praise
of the children of Israel. Dear friends, the last song in this world, the
song of triumph, shall be full of God, and of no one else. Here you praise
the instrument; today you look on this man and on that, and you say, “Thank
God for this minister, and for this man.” Today you say, “Blessed be God for
Luther, who shook the Vatican, and thank God for Whitfield, who stirred up a
slumbering church;” but in that day you shall not sing of Luther, nor of
Whitfield, nor of any of the mighty ones of God’s hosts; forgotten shall
their names be for a season, even as the stars refuse to shine when the sun
himself appears. The song shall be to Jehovah, and Jehovah only; we shall
not have a word to say for preachers nor bishops, not a syllable to say for
good men and true; but the whole song from first to last shall be, “To him
who loved us, and has washed us from our sins in his own blood, to him be
glory forever and ever. Amen.”
11. And next will you please to note, that this song celebrated something of
the fierceness of the enemy. Do you observe how, when the songster describes
the attack of Pharaoh, he says, “The enemy said, I will pursue, I will
overtake, I will divide the spoil; my lust shall be satisfied upon them; I
will draw my sword, my hand shall destroy them.” A song is made out of the
wrath of Pharaoh. And it shall be so at the last. The wrath of a man shall
praise God. I believe the last song of the redeemed, when they shall
ultimately triumph, will celebrate in heavenly stanzas the wrath of man
overcome by God. Sometimes after great battles, monuments are raised to the
memory of the fight; of what are they composed? They are composed of weapons
of death and of instruments of war which have been taken from the enemy.
Now, to use that illustration as I think it may be properly used, the day is
coming when fury, and wrath, and hatred, and strife, shall all be woven into
a song; and the weapons of our enemies, when taken from them, shall serve to
make monuments to the praise of God. Rail on, rail on, blasphemer! Smite on,
smite on, tyrant! Lift your heavy hand, oh despot; crush the truth, which
yet you cannot crush; knock from his head the crown—the crown that is far
above your reach—poor puny impotent mortal as you are! Go on, go on! But all
you do shall only increase his glories. For all we care, we bid you still
proceed with all your wrath and malice. Though it shall be worse for you, it
shall be more glorious for our Master; the greater your preparations for
war, the more splendid shall be his triumphal chariot, when he shall ride
through the streets of heaven in pompous array. The more mighty your
preparations for battle, the more rich the spoil which he shall divide with
the strong. Oh! Christian, fear not the foe! Remember the harder his blows,
the sweeter your song; the greater his wrath, the more splendid your
triumph; the more he rages, the more shall Christ be honoured in the day of
his appearing. They sang the song of Moses and the Lamb.
12. And then will you note, in the next place, how they sang the total
overthrow of the enemy. There is one expression in this song, which ought to
be and I believe is, when set to music, very frequently repeated. It is that
part of the song, as recorded in the Psalms, where it is declared that the
whole host of Pharaoh were utterly destroyed, and there was not one of them
left. When that great song was sung by the side of the Red Sea, there was,
no doubt, a special emphasis laid upon that expression, “not one.” I think I
hear the hosts of Israel. When the words were known by them, they began and
they proceeded thus—“There is not one of them left;” and then in various
parts the words were repeated, “Not one, not one.” And then the women with
their sweet voices sang, “Not one, not one.” I believe that at the last, a
part of our triumph will be the fact, that there is not one left. We shall
look abroad throughout the earth, and see it all a level sea; and not one
enemy pursuing us—“not one, not one!” Raise yourself ever so high, oh you
deceiver, you cannot live; for not one shall escape. Lift your head ever so
proudly, oh despot, you cannot live; for not one shall escape. Oh heir of
heaven, not one sin shall cross the Jordan after you; not one shall pass the
Red Sea to overtake you; but this shall be the summit of your triumph—“Not
one, not one! not one of them is left.”
13. Just let us note again, and I will not detain you too long, lest I weary
you. One part of the song of Moses consisted in praising the ease with which
God destroyed his enemies. “You did blow with your wind, the sea covered
them: they sank as lead in the mighty waters.” If we had gone to work to
destroy the hosts of Pharaoh, what a multitude of engines of death we would
have required. If the work had been committed to us, to cut off the hosts,
what marvellous preparations, what thunder, what noise, what great activity
there would have been. But mark the grandeur of the expression. God did not
even lift himself from his throne to do it: he saw Pharaoh coming; he seemed
to look upon him with a placid smile; he only blew with his lips, and the
sea covered them. You and I will marvel at the last how easy it has been to
overthrow the enemies of the Lord. We have been tugging and toiling all our
lifetime to be the means of overthrowing systems of error: it will astonish
the church when her Master shall come to see how, as the ice dissolves
before the fire, all error and sin shall be utterly destroyed in the coming
of the Most High. We must have our societies and our machinery, our
preachers and our gatherings, and rightly too; but God will not require them
at the last. The destruction of his enemies shall be as easy to him as the
making of a world. In passive silence unmoved he sat; and he only broke the
silence with “Let there be light; and light was.” So shall he at the last,
when his enemies are raging furiously, blow with his winds, and they shall
be scattered; they shall melt even as wax, and shall be burned like tow;
they shall be as the fat of rams; into smoke shall they consume, yes, into
smoke shall they consume away.
14. Furthermore, in this song of Moses you will notice, there is one
peculiar beauty. Moses not only rejoiced for what had been done, but for the
future consequences of it. He says—“The people of Canaan, whom we are about
to attack, will now be seized with sudden fear; by the greatness of your arm
they shall be as still as a stone.” Oh! I think I hear them singing that
too, sweetly and softly—“as still as a stone.” How would the words come
full, like gentle thunder heard in the distance—“as still as a stone!” And
when we shall get on the other side the flood, see the triumph over our
enemies, and behold our Master reigning, this will form a part of our
song—that they must henceforth be “as still as a stone.” There will be a
hell, but it will not be a hell of roaring devils, as it now is. They shall
be “as still as a stone.” There will be legions of fallen angels, but they
shall no longer have courage to attack us or to defy God: they shall be “as
still as a stone.” Oh! how grand will that sound, when the hosts of God’s
redeemed, looking down on the demons chained, bound, silenced, struck dumb
with terror, shall sing exultingly over them! They must be as still as a
stone; and there they must lie, and bite their iron bands. The fierce
despiser of Christ can no more spit in his face; the proud tyrant can no
more lift his hands to oppress the saints; even Satan can no more attempt to
destroy. They shall be “as still as a stone.”
15. And last of all, the song concludes by noticing the eternity of God’s
reign; and this will always make a part of the triumphant song. They
sang—“The Lord shall reign for ever and ever.” Then I can suppose the whole
band broke out into their loudest strains of music. “The Lord shall reign
for ever and ever.” Part of the melody of heaven will be “The Lord shall
reign for ever and ever.” That song has cheered us here.—“The Lord reigns;
blessed be my rock!” And that song shall be our exultation there. “The Lord
reigns for ever and ever.” When we shall see the placid sea of providence,
when we shall behold the world all fair and lovely, when we shall mark our
enemies destroyed, and God Almighty triumphant, then we shall shout the
song—
Hallelujah! for the Lord
God Omnipotent shall reign;
Hallelujah! let the word
Echo round the earth and main.
Oh! may we be there to sing it!
16. I have one remark to make, and I am finished. You know, my friends, that
as there is something in the song of Moses which is typical of the song of
the Lamb, there was another song sung by the waters of the Red Sea which is
typical of the song of hell. “What mean you, sir, by that dread thought?”
Oh! shall I use the word music? Shall I profane the heavenly word so much as
to say, it was doleful music which came from the lips of Pharaoh and his
host? Boldly and pompously, with roll of drum and blast of trumpet they had
entered into the sea. Suddenly their martial music ceased; and ah! oh
heavens and oh floods what was it? The sea was coming down upon them,
utterly to devour them. Oh! may we never hear that shriek, that awful yell
of hideous agony, that seemed to rend the sky, and then was hushed again,
when Pharaoh and his mighty men were swallowed up, and went down alive into
hell! Ah! stars, if you had heard it, if the black pall of waters had not
shut out the sound from you, you might have continued trembling to this
hour, and maybe you are trembling now; maybe your twinklings by night are on
account of that terrible shriek you heard; for certainly it would be enough
to make you tremble on for ever. That dreadful shriek, that hideous moan,
that horrible howl, when a whole army sank into hell at once, when the
waters swallowed them up!
17. Take heed, my friends, take heed, lest you should have to join in that
terrible miserere; take heed, lest that horrible howl should be yours,
instead of the song of the redeemed. And remember, so must it be, unless you
be born again, unless you believe in Christ, unless you repent of sin and
renounce it wholly, and with trembling hearts put your confidence in the Man
of Sorrows, who is soon to be crowned the King of kings and Lord of lords.
May God bless you, and give you all to taste of his salvation, that you may
stand upon the sea of glass, and not have to feel the terrors of the mingled
fire in the lower depths of it! God Almighty bless this vast assembly, for
Jesus’ sake!
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2009/06/09/israel-in-egypt