BeKemified – Pampered. Prepared. Positioned.

Pampered by Grace. Prepared by Truth. Positioned for Glory.

Tag: faith

  • Exodus 11 is the calm before the greatest spiritual transition in Israel’s history. God tells Moses: “Yet will I bring one plague more upon Pharaoh… afterward he will let you go hence: when he shall let you go, he shall surely thrust you out altogether.” Exodus 11:1 (KJV) This chapter announces the last plague, the…

  • Exodus 10 introduces two more judgments of God against Egypt: Yet, in the same land: “But all the children of Israel had light in their dwellings.” Exodus 10:23 (KJV) This is not electric light, it is the light of covenant presence. Pharaoh begins to negotiate partial obedience: But Moses replies: “There shall not an hoof…

  • Exodus 9 intensifies the battle between Pharaoh’s stubbornness and God’s sovereignty. This chapter carries 3 major plagues: By the end of this chapter, even Pharaoh confesses: “I have sinned this time: the LORD is righteous, and I and my people are wicked.” Exodus 9:27 (KJV) But after the storm stops, he hardens his heart again.…

  • Exodus 8 unfolds the next dimension of God’s judgment against Egypt, plagues triggered by stubbornness.Pharaoh refuses to listen, so God escalates the confrontation. The plagues in this chapter include: While Egypt is buried in frogs and flies, Goshen where God’s people dwell is untouched.This chapter introduces a prophetic law: When God begins to separate His…

  • Exodus 7 marks a transition: Moses is no longer just called, he is now commissioned. This is the chapter where God doesn’t just speak to Moses; He speaks through him. “See, I have made thee a god to Pharaoh, and Aaron thy prophet.” Exodus 7:1 (KJV) This does not make Moses divine, it means Pharaoh…

  • Moses obeys God. He confronts Pharaoh with boldness: “Thus saith the LORD God of Israel, Let my people go…” Exodus 5:1 But instead of freedom, things get harder. Pharaoh responds not with release, but with resistance. The Israelites are now forced to make bricks without straw, yet produce the same output. The people complain. Moses…

  • Every call from God demands not just hearing, but obedience.Exodus 4 reveals the tender wrestling between divine command and human insecurity. God has already revealed His name and purpose to Moses in the burning bush. Yet, like many of us, Moses responds with doubt: “But behold, they will not believe me, nor hearken unto my…

  • Every destiny must have its burning bush encounter that divine interruption where God introduces Himself beyond religion.Exodus 3 begins with Moses, once a prince, now a shepherd on the backside of the desert. For forty years, he had hidden under anonymity, stripped of titles and applause. Yet, it was in that place of obscurity that…

  • When God intends to raise a deliverer, He begins by hiding him.Exodus 2 is the story of divine concealment. A man from the house of Levi takes a wife, and a child is born who “was a goodly child” (Exodus 2:2). Yet, the environment that received him was hostile Pharaoh’s decree demanded the death of…

  • Genesis 50 closes the book of beginnings with a profound blend of mourning, reconciliation, and prophetic assurance. Jacob’s burial unites the family in a journey back to Canaan, and Joseph’s forgiveness to his brothers seals a generational wound. The chapter ends with Joseph’s death, but not before he reaffirms God’s covenant plan to bring Israel…