Lesson 6.Through the Red Sea | 6.4 Marching Forward by Faith | π EXODUS | π± LIVING FAITH

π THE SECOND BOOK OF MOSES
βͺ Lesson 6: Through the Red Sea
π 6.4 Marching Forward by Faith
β¨ Trust Despite Fear
π¦ Introduction
In Exodus 14:13β31, we witness one of the most dramatic moments in salvation history: Israel trapped between the Red Sea and Pharaohβs army. Fear and despair swept through the people, yet God acted sovereignlyβdespite their lack of faith. Moses, as Godβs spokesperson, encouraged the people and showed them how to move forward in faith. The lesson for us today is timeless: even when fear and doubt grip our hearts, God calls us to trust Him, stand still, look, and witness Him fighting for us.
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π Bible Study β Exodus 14:13β31
Israel was at a critical turning point in its history. They had left Egypt under dramatic circumstances, witnessed the ten plagues, and celebrated the Passoverβa clear sign of Godβs deliverance. But just a few days later, they faced a situation that destroyed every human hope: the Red Sea before them, Pharaohβs chariots behind them. Their reaction was typically human: fear, blame, doubt.
πΉ 1.βDo not be afraidβ β The first step to freedom (v. 13)
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Fear is natural when we have no control.
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Godβs call, βDo not be afraid,β is not empty reassurance but grounded in His faithfulness and power.
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Isaiah 41:10, 13 affirms: Godβs presence is the basis for courage.
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In the New Testament, Jesus repeatedly says, βDo not be afraidββespecially when His disciples had lost their sense of safety (Matt. 14:27; John 6:20).
πΉ 2,βStand firmβ β Obedience in stillness (v. 13)
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Standing firm means not running in panic but remaining in trust.
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In the Bible, βstandβ often means trusting that God will fight (2 Chron. 20:17).
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The people were not to drown in frantic activity but give God space to work.
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Today: listen before actingβprayer before action.
πΉ 3,βSee the salvation of the LORDβ β Faith through perception (v. 13)
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Faith grows when we consciously notice Godβs work.
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βSeeβ here means opening spiritual eyesβunbelief is blind to Godβs possibilities.
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Psalm 46:9β11 urges us to behold Godβs works in the midst of chaos.
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In the New Covenant, we see this βsalvationβ in Jesus Christ, our Savior (John 1:29).
πΉ 4.βThe LORD will fight for youβ β Godβs initiative (v. 14)
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God is not a passive observer; He is a warrior for His people.
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Calvary is the ultimate proof: Christ fought and triumphed over sin and death (Col. 2:14β15).
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Revelation 12:10β11 shows that victory comes by Godβs power, not human strength.
πΉ 5.Godβs precise rescue plan (vv. 15β31)
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Step 1: The pillar of cloud moves to protect Israel from the enemy.
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Step 2: Moses acts in faith, stretching out the staff.
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Step 3: God parts the sea with a mighty east windβthe way opens where there was none.
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Step 4: Israel crosses on dry groundβfear turns to praise.
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Step 5: The Egyptians pursue blindlyβtheir defeat demonstrates Godβs power.
πΉ 6.Spiritual connection to the New Testament
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Crossing the Red Sea is a picture of baptism (1 Cor. 10:1β2).
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Egypt symbolizes the old life in slavery to sin.
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The sea marks the boundary between past and future.
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The far shore marks the beginning of the journey with God in freedom.
πΉ 7.Lessons for our faith life
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God acts despite weak faith: Israel grumbled, but God still delivered.
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Faith requires steps of action: Moses had to move before the sea parted.
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Godβs timing is perfect: He opened the way at night, at the right moment.
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The enemy realizes too late that God is intervening: The Egyptians saw it only in the midst of the sea.
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π Answers to the Questions
Β π Question: Read Exodus 14:13β31. What did God do for the children of Israel despite their lack of faith?
Israel faced an impossible situationβsea before them, the mightiest army of the day behind them. Their reaction was not faith but fear and complaint. Even though they had just seen Godβs mighty rescue from Egypt, the new threat made them lose heart.
Despite their doubt and grumbling, God still intervenedβnot because their faith was great, but because His covenant, love, and faithfulness are unchanging.
Godβs actions in detail:
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Encouraging words through Moses (vv. 13β14): βDo not be afraid. Stand firm. See the salvation of the LORD. The LORD will fight for you.β His help depended on His plan, not their mood.
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Protecting them from the Egyptians (vv. 19β20): The pillar of cloud moved behind Israel, forming an impenetrable barrierβdarkness to the Egyptians, light to Israel.
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Opening a way where there was none (vv. 21β22): A strong east wind parted the sea, creating a dry path.
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Leading Israel safely through (v. 22): They crossed βon dry groundββa complete miracle, not half-done.
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Destroying the pursuers (vv. 23β28): God returned the waters, burying Pharaohβs army. Even the Egyptians confessed, βThe LORD fights for them.β
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Strengthening their faith (v. 31): The people feared the LORD and believed in Him and His servant Moses.
Spiritual parallel today:
God often acts not because of our perfect loyalty but despite our weak faith. We, too, face βseasβ and βarmiesββproblems with no visible solution. Yet His promise remains: βI will fight for you.β The cross of Calvary is the ultimate proof of His intervention (Rom. 5:8).
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β¨ Spiritual Principles
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Faith means trusting Godβs promises even when circumstances are overwhelming.
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Godβs protection is activeβHe places Himself between us and our enemies.
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Standing still in trust is often the first step before moving forward in faith.
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God fights for His people, even when we canβt yet see it.
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Obedience in faith opens the way to the miracle.
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π οΈ Practical Life Application
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When facing overwhelming obstacles, recall past moments of Godβs help.
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Practice βstanding stillβ in prayer before acting.
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Keep a record of Godβs work in your daily lifeβsmall and great.
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Trust that God knows the next stepβeven if you see only the first.
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Take the faith step even if the βseaβ hasnβt yet parted.
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β Conclusion
God is faithfulβeven when our faith is weak. The crossing of the Red Sea shows that His power depends not on our strength but on His plan and faithfulness. He calls us not to fear, to stand firm, to look to Him, and to let Him fightβthen to move forward in faith.
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π Thought of the Day
βIf God shows the way, He will also part the sea.β
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βοΈ Illustration β βThe Path Through the Seaβ
How a Young Entrepreneur in New York City Saw Godβs Hand in the Impossible
Chapterβ―1 β The Wall Before Me
Traffic on the Brooklyn Bridge was at a standstill. Leah Parker tapped her fingers nervously on the steering wheel. It was Aprilβ―14, and in less than three hours she would know whether her startup, PureWave Technologies, would surviveβor whether four years of hard work would end like water slipping through sand.
For months, she had been working on a new water purification technology for small communities without access to clean drinking water. The breakthrough had been almost within reachβuntil last week, when a major client backed out, investors withdrew, and now a lawsuit from a former business partner loomed.
Before her lay the βseaββa huge gap between what she needed and what she had. Behind her was βPharaohββthe threat of bankruptcy, the risk to her reputation, and the responsibility for her employees.
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
Chapterβ―2 β The Voice in the Night
The night before, Leah had barely slept. At 3:17β―a.m., she woke up, unable to shake off the fear. She reached for her Bible, which had sat untouched on the nightstand for weeks.
Her eyes fell on Exodusβ―14:13β14:
βDo not be afraid. Stand firm and you will see the deliverance the LORD will bring you todayβ¦ The LORD will fight for you; you need only to be still.β
She read the verse several times until the words burned into her heart. Stand firmβit sounded like a command to her chaotic heart. The LORD will fight for youβit sounded like a promise bigger than any number on her companyβs bank account.
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
Chapterβ―3 β The Cloud Moves Behind Me
That morning, an email made things even worse: her lawyer warned her that the plaintiff would try to secure an emergency injunction that same day to shut her company down.
She headed for the officeβor at least tried to. The traffic snaked endlessly through Manhattan. She thought about the pillar of cloud that had moved behind Israel to block the Egyptians. βLord, put Yourself between me and whatβs trying to destroy me,β she whispered.
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
Chapterβ―4 β The Step into the Water
At 10:05β―a.m., Leah stood outside a conference room at a large relief organization in Midtown. It was a last-minute meeting arranged by an acquaintance. The organization worked to bring clean water to communities in the Appalachian Mountains.
The director, a man in his early sixties with kind eyes, listened as she presented her project. After half an hour, he leaned back and said, βYou know, we have an emergency fund for exactly this kind of technology. I canβt decide everything today, but I believe God brought us together.β
Leah felt something stir within herβa first step into the βwater,β without knowing whether the sea would truly part.
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
Chapterβ―5 β The Night Wind
That same evening, the director called back. The board had unanimously decided to grant PureWave a six-figure subsidy to secure production.
As if that werenβt enough, the next morning her lawyer laid another piece of news on her desk: the judge had dismissed the plaintiffβs request for an injunctionβdue to βinsufficient evidence.β
Leah could hardly believe it. In less than 24 hours, the βseaβ before her had opened.
β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦ βββββββββββββββ β¦
Chapterβ―6 β The Song on the Shore
A few days later, Leah stood in a small church in Kentucky. She had been invited to speak to a congregation that, thanks to her technology, had clean drinking water for the first time in years.
As she looked at the smiling faces, glasses of clear water in their hands, she thought of Israel standing on the far shore of the Red Sea.
βGod made a way where there was none,β she told the congregation. βAnd that means He can do it for you, tooβno matter how deep your sea looks.β
Closing thought from the story:
Just as Israel at the Red Sea, Leah learned that Godβs intervention did not depend on the perfection of her faith but on His faithfulness. The βseaβ was real, the βarmyβ behind her was threateningβbut the God who performed wonders yesterday is the same today.
