Gleanings in ExodusSovereign Grace Publishers,, 2003 - 390 páginas Produced in his pre-mil days, but still very useful, as Pink always is. The beginning of a nation arrests world attention; the bondage of a people evokes the full range of human feeling; the effective work of a human deliverer for one or a million raises human emotions to an exceedingly high pitch. In Exodus we have the beginning of a nation, Israel; we have the enslavement of a people, the Israelites; we have the arrival of a deliverer named Moses who carried through the demand of the Lord, ''Let my people go.'' In spiritual terms we have the beginning of a Christian life, the acknowledgment of a power which will work in the Christian and for the Christian beyond the natural; the redemption from the bondage of sin, of Satan through a divine Deliverer, Jesus Christ our Lord. Christians young or old cannot help but be blessed in pursuing a reading and study of Exodus, second book in the Bible. In this book Arthur W. Pink provides you with hours of blessed study help for your spiritual enrichment. He gives thoughtful guidance for weeks on end for the teacher of a Bible class. Student or teacher may mine some of the richest o£ Bible ore from this book of Exodus and become the wealthier spiritually in possession of its mighty truths. We heartily commend to you GLEANINGS IN EXODUS by Arthur W. Pink. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 86
Página 9
... tells of the security of the believer beneath the sheltering blood of God's Lamb . The exodus from Egypt announces our de- liverance from the yoke of bondage and our judicial separation from the world . The crossing of the Red Sea ...
... tells of the security of the believer beneath the sheltering blood of God's Lamb . The exodus from Egypt announces our de- liverance from the yoke of bondage and our judicial separation from the world . The crossing of the Red Sea ...
Página 13
... tells Moses His name , ' I am that I am , ' you find attributed to God in the monuments of Egypt . And yet , with all that , what did Egypt every- where worship ? Emphatically and uni- versally , the creature and not the Creator . Egypt ...
... tells Moses His name , ' I am that I am , ' you find attributed to God in the monuments of Egypt . And yet , with all that , what did Egypt every- where worship ? Emphatically and uni- versally , the creature and not the Creator . Egypt ...
Página 17
... tells us ( what we had never con- ceived for ourselves ) that life comes to us through death . Though Moses was brought to the place of death , he was made secure in the ark . And this speaks to us of Christ * who went * It is ...
... tells us ( what we had never con- ceived for ourselves ) that life comes to us through death . Though Moses was brought to the place of death , he was made secure in the ark . And this speaks to us of Christ * who went * It is ...
Página 19
... tells us that Pharaoh had no other children , and that his daughter , Thermutis , had no children of her own . So , most probably Moses would have suc- Iceeded to the throne . That some offer was made to Moses , after he had reached ...
... tells us that Pharaoh had no other children , and that his daughter , Thermutis , had no children of her own . So , most probably Moses would have suc- Iceeded to the throne . That some offer was made to Moses , after he had reached ...
Página 22
... tells us , " Every shepherd is an abomination to the Egyptians " . Thus God leads His servants to take that very place which is hateful to worldlings . " The ' backside of the desert ' is where men and things , the world and self , pre ...
... tells us , " Every shepherd is an abomination to the Egyptians " . Thus God leads His servants to take that very place which is hateful to worldlings . " The ' backside of the desert ' is where men and things , the world and self , pre ...
Contenido
Crossing the Red Sea | 107 |
Israels Song | 113 |
In the Wilderness | 118 |
The Manna | 123 |
Mannaa Type of Christ | 131 |
The Smitten Rock | 136 |
Amalek | 141 |
Moses Wife | 146 |
48 | |
53 | |
58 | |
64 | |
69 | |
76 | |
81 | |
The Passover Continued | 88 |
The Accompaniments of the Passover | 95 |
The Exodus from Egypt | 101 |
Israel at Sinai | 151 |
The Law of God | 156 |
The Ten Commandments | 160 |
The Decalogue and Its Sequel | 165 |
The Perfect Servant | 170 |
The Covenant Ratified | 175 |
The Tabernacle | 180 |
The Tabernacle Continued | 186 |
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Términos y frases comunes
Aaron Abraham altar Amalek antitype atonement behold blessed blood book of Exodus brazen altar bread bring brought Canaan chapter children of Israel Christ Christian commanded covenant cubits Curtains death Deut Divine earth Egypt Egyptians ephod Exodus faith Father flesh fore foreshadowed give glory God's gold grace hand hath heart heaven Hebrews high priest Holy Spirit Israelites Jehovah John judgment king lamb land of Egypt light linen Lord Jesus Lord's Luke manifested manna Matt mercy Mercy-seat midst mount ness offering Passover perfect Pharaoh plague present Red Sea redeemed redemption righteousness Sabbath sacrifice Satan Saviour Scripture servant shittim wood significance Sinai sinner sins soul speaks Tabernacle Ten Commandments thee things thou shalt tion truth typical unto Moses unto the Lord Urim and Thummim Veil verse wilderness word worship
Referencias a este libro
A Criticism of Theological Reason: Time and Timelessness as Primordial ... Fernando Luis Canale Vista de fragmentos - 1987 |