1. "Yahweh rescues the descendants of Abraham from slavery in Egypt so that they can serve him and become his people. So, maybe I should correct myself. They're already his people. Yes. But they're going to become a nation with a sense of national identity and a constitution that God gives them at Sinai to live by. So, rather than being governed by someone else, they're going to be able to govern themselves. But it's according to the way Yahweh wants them to live."
[11:21] (45 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

2. "The law is not a prerequisite for their salvation. They're already saved. He already rescues them. The law comes at the point of the story when they're being commissioned to live as his people. So, the purpose of the law becomes a lot clearer when you notice this symmetry. Because you can see, oh, the law is not how to get saved. The law is how to be on mission for God. This is how we live out our purpose as his people. And if we get that right, then a lot of other things fall into place."
[15:45] (30 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

3. "One of the things we see right off the bat is that God is someone who hears the cries of the oppressed. The Israelites groaned in their slavery. It tells us at the end of chapter two and cried out and their cry for help because of their slavery went up to God. God heard their groaning. He remembered his covenant and he looked on the Israelites and was concerned about them."
[22:23] (20 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

4. "If you, as a man, who's the head of the household, do not use your power to protect the vulnerable in your community, then your family members who depend on you to protect them will become vulnerable too. Yes. It has the most stringent consequences for disobeying. And in Hebrew, it's like super emphatic. So I will hear, hear their cry and my anger will be aroused, be aroused. Like it's very emphatic. And it's, it's so interesting to me how this echoes what God himself did when he heard the cry of the Israelites in Egypt."
[23:40] (43 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

5. "We learn that we should begin to act in ways that mimic what Yahweh does, hearing the cries of those around us and treating them with the respect that those of us who have power and privilege in society should be reigning that in to make sure that everyone has access to what they need, that everyone can flourish, that we're going to actually leverage our influence on behalf of others."
[28:42] (23 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

6. "We are going to fulfill our purpose as we walk in obedience to God's commands. It's not about me charting out my life plan, but about me listening to God's voice and living faithfully to what he's revealed that I should do."
[30:12] (17 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

7. "The daughter of Pharaoh and Moses' mother and Moses' sister and the midwives, they don't have this kind of dramatic call narrative. We're not told that they heard a divine voice saying, save the baby boys. They just see what needs to be done and they do it. And I like that that's set alongside Moses' story because I think that for many of us, that's the sort of, that's, it matches our experience more than Moses' does. Right? That we just see things that need to be done and we get busy and do them."
[33:33] (31 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

8. "When Moses first encounters Yahweh at Mount Sinai in chapter three, it is a really dramatic encounter and God speaks to him. We have a very long conversation and it's interesting because, because God addresses Moses saying, I've seen the misery of my people in Egypt. I've heard them crying out because of their slave drivers. I'm concerned about their suffering. So I have come down to rescue them. And if I'm Moses, I'm thinking great because I tried to rescue them and it didn't work. And so I'm glad you're showing up and doing it because I sure wasn't able to do it."
[34:48] (36 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

9. "If your presence does not go with us, do not send us up from here, which is very dramatic. When you think about where they're camped out in the middle of a desert where hardly anything grows and all they have to eat is manna, which would get old after a while and they've been there a year and it is hot. And Moses says, I don't know. I would rather stay here for the rest of my life than leave without you. And to me, that shows such an about face that before he wouldn't leave with the presence of God and now he won't leave without the presence of God."
[37:12] (36 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

10. "I think what I would want to say to Christian listeners is that Exodus is our story, that we are the heirs of this story, that we're not just reading about something that happened to somebody else. In chapter 19, when the people arrive at Mount Sinai for the first time and God speaks to them, he tells them that he's, he says, you yourselves have seen what I did to Egypt. And how I carried you on eagle's wings and brought you to myself. Now if you obey me fully and keep my covenant, then out of all nations you will be my treasured possession. Although the whole earth is mine, you will be for me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation."
[43:59] (44 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)