Page 34 - Advanced OT Survey Student Textbook
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Study Section 4: Exodus and Leviticus
4.1 Connect
Have you ever gone on a long trip somewhere? Once you plan such a trip, there may be
weeks of preparation and packing and planning. The closer the time comes to your trip, the
greater your anticipation rises. Then comes the day of your trip. You depart from your
home and take some form of transportation to get to your new location. You see and
experience new things. Perhaps the food is different than you are used to. You have to stay
in a different place than you are used to. But all in all, a trip is normally a very exciting time
in our lives.
Imagine the children of Israel, after having lived in Egypt for over 400 years, suddenly told that they
were leaving their homes and their jobs to go to a place they did not know. They had very little time to
plan the trip. But I am sure it was exciting for them to leave their bondage and begin their trek to a
Promised Land. They started out strong, but as we will see, it did not take them long before they began
to complain about the journey. Let’s see what happened….
4.2 Objectives
1. The student should be able to describe how the plagues of Egypt were really God challenging the
gods of the Egyptians, demonstrating his power over them.
2. The student should be able to site the many miraculous events that occurred as a part of the
Exodus.
3. The student should be able to describe how God revealed Himself to His chosen people through the
book of Exodus.
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4.3 Exodus
Author: The author of Exodus is undoubtedly Moses.
Purpose: Exodus is the second book of the five books of the Law or Pentateuch. Regarding
the purpose of Exodus Andrew E. Hill and John H Walton said, “The purpose of Exodus is to
explain how the Israelites became slaves in Egypt and their
deliverance from the Egyptian oppression. The book also reveals the
God whose name is Yahweh and relates how his divine presence came to dwell
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among his people, Israel.” Also regarding the name Exodus, Hill and Walton
said, “The English name for this second of the Pentateuch, or Law of Moses,
comes from the Greek Old Testament titles Exodus, meaning a ‘going out’ or
31 Main Contributor. Dr. Brian Gault (Prof. of Old Testament and Hebrew at Columbia International University) for
giving me permission to use most of his class notes for this Old Testament Survey. Forever grateful To God.
32 Andrew E. Hill and John H. “A Survey of the Old Testament (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 2009), p. 135.
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