Thursday, October 30, 2025

God Restores the Broken: Nehemiah and the Wall Explained. Nehemiah’s rebuilding of Jerusalem’s wall mirrors God’s work of restoring His Church. Learn lessons of holiness, leadership, and perseverance for today.

 Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today — Part 10


Broken Walls, Broken People

When Nehemiah heard that Jerusalem’s walls lay in ruins, he wept. The broken walls symbolized a broken people, exposed to shame and unable to defend themselves (Nehemiah 1:3–4).

The Church, too, has known broken walls — seasons of compromise, decline, and weakness. Like Jerusalem after exile, God’s people have often been scattered, their testimony fractured. Yet the story of Nehemiah reminds us: God restores what is broken.


A Vision to Rebuild

Nehemiah was not a priest or prophet but a cupbearer — an ordinary man with extraordinary faith. His heart was moved to rebuild the ruins of God’s city.

“You see the bad situation that we are in, that Jerusalem lies waste, and its gates are burned with fire. Come, let us build up the wall of Jerusalem, that we won’t be disgraced.” (Nehemiah 2:17, WEB)

The Church likewise needs visionaries who see the ruins and refuse to accept them. Restoration begins with those willing to rise and build.


The Enemy’s Opposition

As the walls rose, opposition came. Sanballat and Tobiah mocked, threatened, and conspired to stop the work (Nehemiah 4:1–3, 7–8). Nehemiah’s response was decisive:

  • Prayer and watchfulness (Nehemiah 4:9).

  • Builders with tools in one hand and weapons in the other (Nehemiah 4:17).

  • Leadership that refused compromise (Nehemiah 6:3: “I am doing a great work, so that I can’t come down.”).

Restoration always provokes resistance. The Church must rebuild with the same resolve — praying, working, and guarding against distraction.


Walls of Holiness

Walls are not about exclusion but protection. For God’s people, they represent separation from sin, holiness unto the Lord. Without walls, the Church blends into the world and loses its distinct witness.

Nehemiah’s rebuilt walls symbolize the Church reclaiming consecration — living as “a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for God’s own possession” (1 Peter 2:9, WEB).


Gates of Authority

Walls need gates. Nehemiah’s record of restoring each gate (Nehemiah 3) points to the need for godly authority and order. The Church must restore true spiritual leadership — shepherds after God’s heart, not hirelings seeking gain. Gates determine what enters and what leaves; leaders discern truth from error, keeping the flock safe.


Joy in Restoration

When the wall was finished in just 52 days, the people celebrated with great joy (Nehemiah 6:15; 12:27–43). Restoration is not only about defense but about joy — the joy of God’s people dwelling securely in His presence.

“The joy of Yahweh is your strength.” (Nehemiah 8:10, WEB)

So too, the Church’s restoration is marked not by sorrow alone but by joy in God’s presence.


Lessons for the Church Today

  1. See the ruins. Restoration begins when we acknowledge brokenness.

  2. Rise and build. Vision and action must replace despair.

  3. Expect opposition. Every work of restoration will be resisted.

  4. Rebuild holiness. The walls represent separation unto God.

  5. Restore leadership. God’s gates are guarded by faithful shepherds.

  6. Celebrate joy. The end of restoration is not heaviness but gladness in God.


Looking Ahead

Nehemiah’s wall reminds us that God restores what is broken. He is faithful to rebuild His people and secure His testimony. In the next post, we’ll look at Ezra and the Word — Renewal Through Scripture, showing how the restored walls were strengthened by the restored Word.


👉 This is Part 10 of our series “Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today.” In Part 11, we’ll explore Ezra and the Word — Renewal Through Scripture.

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Samson’s Fall and the Church Today: A Prophetic Parallel. Samson’s story mirrors the Church: Spirit-empowered yet vulnerable to compromise. Discover how his strength, failure, and restoration speak to us today.

 Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today — Part 9


Samson: A Mirror of the Church

Samson’s story is one of the most paradoxical in Scripture. Set apart as a Nazarite from birth, he was called to deliver Israel from the Philistines. Yet his life was marked by moments of great strength and devastating weakness.

The Church’s story has often followed the same rhythm — endowed with Spirit-given power, yet compromised by worldliness and distraction. Samson becomes a living parable of what happens when consecration is lost.


Consecrated Yet Compromised

From his earliest days, Samson carried an extraordinary call. The Spirit of the Lord came upon him, and he performed feats of power (Judges 14–15). But his consecration was fragile. His Nazarite vow required separation, yet he repeatedly blurred boundaries:

In each compromise, the enemy inched closer. The lesson is clear: giftedness without holiness is unsustainable.


The Hair and the Spirit

Samson’s hair symbolized his Nazarite vow. When Delilah cut it, his strength departed (Judges 16:19–20). The tragedy was not in the hair itself but in what it represented: a life consecrated to God.

Likewise, the Church’s strength is not in numbers, wealth, or influence but in consecration to Christ. When holiness is traded for compromise, the Spirit’s power departs. We may “shake ourselves as before” (Judges 16:20), but without the Spirit, it is only noise.


The Church’s Strength and Weakness

The Church throughout history has displayed Samson’s paradox:

At times, the Church has carried the gates of the enemy city on its shoulders (Judges 16:3). At other times, it has lain powerless in Delilah’s lap.


Samson’s Final Act

Yet Samson’s story did not end in defeat. Blind, bound, and humiliated, he cried out:

“O Lord Yahweh, remember me, please, and strengthen me, please, only this once, O God.” (Judges 16:28, WEB)

In his death, he accomplished more than in his life. The pillars fell, and the Philistine lords perished with him.

This foreshadows the Church’s end-time witness. Though weak in the world’s eyes, the faithful remnant will demonstrate God’s power in final testimony. As Revelation 12:11 declares, “They overcame him because of the Lamb’s blood, and because of the word of their testimony. They didn’t love their life, even to death.”


Lessons for the Church

  1. Guard consecration. Samson lost power when he lost separation. The Church must pursue holiness.

  2. Beware of Delilahs. Worldly seductions still whisper, “Tell me your secret.”

  3. Depend on the Spirit. Samson’s feats were not his own but by the Spirit’s empowerment.

  4. Hope in restoration. Even after failure, God answered Samson’s cry. So too, He restores His people.


Looking Ahead

Samson shows us the peril of compromise but also the possibility of restoration. God’s purposes are not thwarted, even in weakness. In the next post, we will turn to the story of Nehemiah and the Wall — God’s Work of Restoration, exploring how broken walls can be rebuilt and God’s people restored to their calling.


👉 This is Part 9 of our series “Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today.” In Part 10, we’ll learn from Nehemiah how God rebuilds what has been broken.



Friday, October 17, 2025

The Decline of the Early Church — Apostolic Warnings Fulfilled. The Early Church began in glory but drifted into decline. Discover why it stopped, the warnings the apostles gave, and what this means for the Church today.

 Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today — Part 8


A Sobering Parallel

Solomon’s Temple shone with unmatched glory — gold, cedar, and the cloud of God’s presence filling the house. Yet within a generation, decline set in. Solomon’s own compromises planted seeds of division and idolatry that eventually tore the kingdom apart.

The Church, too, began in glory. At Pentecost, believers were filled with the Spirit. Signs, wonders, and unity marked the first century. But as Paul, Peter, and John warned, decline soon crept in. The history of Israel became the mirror for the Church’s own story.


Apostolic Warnings

The apostles did not leave us unprepared. They saw danger ahead.

  • Paul: “I know that after my departure, vicious wolves will enter in among you, not sparing the flock.” (Acts 20:29, WEB)

  • Peter: “There will be false teachers among you, who will secretly bring in destructive heresies, denying even the Master who bought them.” (2 Peter 2:1, WEB)

  • John: “Even now many antichrists have arisen.” (1 John 2:18, WEB)

The warnings were clear: deception, false teaching, and corruption would follow the apostles’ passing.


The Early Decline

History confirms the warnings. Within 100 years of Pentecost, the Church had already begun to shift:

  • Loss of spiritual gifts: Prophecy, tongues, and healings diminished by the mid-2nd century.

  • Rise of clericalism: Bishops and clergy replaced the Spirit-led ministry of apostles, prophets, and teachers.

  • Influence of philosophy: Thinkers like Origen and the Alexandrian school mixed Greek speculation with Scripture, blurring the faith.

  • Corruption of manuscripts: Variants and theological editing crept into texts.

The Church that began in Spirit and truth drifted toward hierarchy, ritual, and intellectual pride.


From Bride to Babylon

What God had birthed as a pure Bride was slowly entangled with worldly power and compromise. Like Samson, who rose in strength but fell through disobedience, the early Church traded consecration for comfort.

  • Samson’s hair cut = the loss of consecration.

  • The Church’s compromise = the loss of spiritual power.

Instead of overcoming the world, the Church often conformed to it.


Lessons for Us Today

The failure of the early Church is not written to discourage but to warn us. As Paul said, “These things… were written for our admonition” (1 Corinthians 10:11, WEB).

  1. Guard against pride. Glory today does not guarantee glory tomorrow.

  2. Test everything. Even early teachers drifted; we must measure all by God’s Word.

  3. Stay Spirit-led. Human systems can never replace the gifts and power of the Spirit.

  4. Pursue consecration. Holiness is the safeguard of power.


God’s Purpose Remains

Even when Israel failed, God did not abandon His plan. Even when the Church declined, He continued to preserve a remnant. God’s purpose is never thwarted. He is not just the author of faith — He is the finisher.

The story does not end with decline. It ends with restoration, with God raising up a glorious Church, “not having spot or wrinkle” (Ephesians 5:27, WEB).


Looking Ahead

We’ve seen how the Church, like Israel, faltered after great beginnings. But God’s story is not one of failure. It is one of restoration and fulfillment. In the next post, we’ll turn to Samson as a prophetic parallel for the Church, exploring how his rise, fall, and final act mirror God’s dealings with His people.


👉 This is Part 8 of our series “Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today.” In Part 9, we’ll examine Samson and the Church — Strength and Failure.

Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Why Solomon’s Temple Foreshadows the Completed Church: Solomon’s Temple was more than stone and gold — it foreshadowed God’s end goal for the Church: a unified, Spirit-filled dwelling place for His glory.

Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today — Part 7


From Tent to Temple

David’s tabernacle was a glimpse of intimacy — worship without veil, continual access to God’s presence. But the story didn’t end with a tent on Mount Zion. David’s son Solomon was chosen to build a permanent dwelling place for God: the Temple in Jerusalem.

“Then Solomon began to build the house of Yahweh at Jerusalem… and the house which King Solomon built for Yahweh was great.” (2 Chronicles 3:1, 5:1, WEB)

The shift from tent to temple was more than architectural. It was prophetic. It pointed to God’s ultimate purpose — a mature, completed house filled with His glory.


The Glory of the House

When Solomon dedicated the Temple, something remarkable happened:

“The house was filled with a cloud, even the house of Yahweh, so that the priests could not stand to minister by reason of the cloud; for the glory of Yahweh filled God’s house.” (2 Chronicles 5:13–14, WEB)

The Temple became the meeting place of heaven and earth. God’s presence filled it so powerfully that human activity stopped. The house of stone became a dwelling of glory.


A Picture of the Church

The New Testament interprets the Temple as a shadow of something greater — the Church, built together as God’s true house.

  • “You are God’s temple, and God’s Spirit lives in you.” (1 Corinthians 3:16, WEB)

  • “You also are built together for a habitation of God in the Spirit.” (Ephesians 2:22, WEB)

  • “You also, as living stones, are built up as a spiritual house.” (1 Peter 2:5, WEB)

Just as Solomon’s Temple was carefully designed, the Church is built on the foundation of apostles and prophets, with Christ as the cornerstone (Ephesians 2:20). God’s goal is not just scattered believers, but a unified, Spirit-filled body — His eternal dwelling place.


From Foundation to Completion

Solomon’s Temple illustrates the progression of God’s work:

  1. The foundation laid — Christ, the cornerstone.

  2. The structure rising — believers as living stones, joined together.

  3. The house completed — a corporate people filled with God’s glory.

The wilderness generation perished short of the promise, but Solomon’s Temple shows the end goal: God will finish what He began.


God the Finisher

Paul captures the principle in his letter to the Philippians:

“Being confident of this very thing, that he who began a good work in you will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ.” (Philippians 1:6, WEB)

The Temple reminds us that God is not only a starter but a finisher. He did not redeem Israel just to leave them in the desert. He did not send His Son just to leave us halfway to maturity. His purpose is fullness — the measure of the stature of Christ (Ephesians 4:13).


Lessons for the Church Today

  1. Pursue maturity. The Church is called to grow from tent to temple — from intimacy to maturity, from beginning to completion.

  2. Value unity. The stones of the Temple had to be fitted together. So too must the Church walk in unity of Spirit.

  3. Seek God’s glory. Programs and activity cannot replace the presence of God. His glory must fill the house.

  4. Live as His dwelling. The Church is not a building but a people, indwelt by His Spirit.


Looking Ahead

Solomon’s Temple reveals God’s end goal — a completed, glorious house filled with His presence. But Israel’s history reminds us that decline can follow glory if hearts turn away. In our next post, we’ll look at Why the Early Church Stopped, and what lessons we must learn to avoid repeating history.


👉 This is Part 7 of our series “Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today.” In Part 8, we’ll uncover the reasons for the early Church’s decline and how God restores His people.


Tuesday, October 14, 2025

David’s Tabernacle Explained: Worship in Spirit and Truth. David’s tabernacle was unlike any other — a tent with no veil. Discover how it foreshadows New Testament worship, open access to God’s presence, and unity in Christ.

Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today — Part 6


A Different Kind of Tabernacle

When most people think of Israel’s worship, they picture the elaborate tabernacle of Moses or the grand temple of Solomon. Both had veils, priests, and layers of restricted access. But in David’s day, something unusual happened.

David pitched a simple tent on Mount Zion and placed the Ark of the Covenant inside it — without a veil (2 Samuel 6:17).

It was a startling break from tradition. For centuries, the Ark had been hidden behind curtains. Now, in David’s tabernacle, it was open and accessible. Priests and Levites ministered in continuous worship, singing psalms and playing instruments before the very presence of God.


Prophecy of Restoration

The prophets looked back on David’s tent as a glimpse of God’s heart. Amos declared:

“In that day I will raise up the tent of David that has fallen, and close up its breaches… that they may possess the remnant of Edom, and all the nations who are called by my name.” (Amos 9:11–12, WEB)

Centuries later, James quoted this prophecy at the Jerusalem council, applying it to the Church:

“I will return, and I will build again the tent of David… that the rest of mankind may seek after the Lord, and all the Gentiles who are called by my name.” (Acts 15:16–17, WEB)

David’s tabernacle pointed ahead to a time when Jew and Gentile alike would worship together in God’s presence — without veil or barrier.


Worship in Spirit and Truth

David’s tabernacle foreshadows New Testament worship:

  • Open access: The veil is torn in Christ (Matthew 27:51; Hebrews 10:19–20).

  • Continuous praise: Worship is not occasional but a way of life (Hebrews 13:15).

  • Instruments and song: David’s psalms remain the backbone of Christian worship today.

  • All nations included: The Church is made up of every tribe, tongue, and people.

Jesus told the Samaritan woman, “The hour comes, and now is, when the true worshippers will worship the Father in spirit and truth.” (John 4:23, WEB). This is David’s tabernacle fulfilled in Christ.


Worship Without Veil

For the Church, David’s tabernacle is a reminder that worship is not confined to buildings, rituals, or priestly elites. The Spirit has made every believer a priest, free to draw near to the presence of God.

  • We no longer need curtains to hide His glory.

  • We no longer stand at a distance.

  • Through Christ, we have boldness to enter the Most Holy Place.

This changes everything. Worship is not about going to a place but about becoming a people who host God’s presence.


Lessons for the Church Today

  1. Keep worship central. David’s reign was marked by music, prayer, and God’s presence at the center of national life.

  2. Tear down barriers. In Christ, there is neither Jew nor Gentile, male nor female — all have access by the Spirit.

  3. Make worship continuous. True worship is not confined to Sunday services but flows into daily life.

  4. Welcome God’s presence. David danced before the Ark with abandon. Our worship should be wholehearted, not restrained by fear of man.


Looking Ahead

David’s tabernacle was a prophetic glimpse of what God desires for His people — intimacy, access, and joy in His presence. But God’s plan did not end with a tent. The vision continued in Solomon’s Temple, a picture of the mature, completed Church, filled with glory.

In our next post, we’ll explore Solomon’s Temple — God’s End Goal for the Church.


👉 This is Part 6 of our series “Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today.” In Part 7, we’ll discover how Solomon’s Temple points to God’s final purpose: the Church as His holy habitation.



Sunday, October 12, 2025

The Wilderness Warnings: Learning from Israel’s Failure. Israel’s wilderness story is a warning for the Church. Discover how unbelief kept them from God’s promises, and what it means for Christians today.

 Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today — Part 5


Saved, But Stalled

Israel had been delivered by the blood of the Passover lamb, baptized in the Red Sea, and gathered at Sinai under covenant. Yet, instead of entering the land of promise, an entire generation died in the wilderness.

“Now all these things happened to them by way of example, and they were written for our admonition, on whom the ends of the ages have come.” (1 Corinthians 10:11, WEB)

The wilderness is not just Israel’s story — it is a mirror held up to the Church.


The Test of the Wilderness

God led Israel into the desert not to destroy them, but to prove what was in their hearts.

  • Manna tested their daily dependence (Exodus 16).

  • Water from the rock tested their trust (Exodus 17).

  • The spies’ report tested their faith in God’s promises (Numbers 13–14).

Over and over, Israel failed the test. Instead of trust, they chose grumbling. Instead of faith, they embraced fear. Instead of obedience, they longed to return to Egypt.


The Consequences of Unbelief

Hebrews interprets the wilderness story as a warning for believers:

“So we see that they weren’t able to enter in because of unbelief.” (Hebrews 3:19, WEB)

  • They were redeemed but did not inherit.

  • They were delivered but not victorious.

  • They were saved from Egypt but not established in Canaan.

Salvation is the beginning, not the end. God calls us beyond deliverance into inheritance — but unbelief can keep us wandering in circles.


The Wilderness and the Church

The Church, too, has its wilderness seasons. Times when:

  • We prefer comfort over courage.

  • We grumble instead of give thanks.

  • We shrink back from promises that look too costly.

Like Israel, we risk dying short of God’s purpose if we harden our hearts.

Paul warns:

“Don’t grumble, as some of them also grumbled, and perished by the destroyer.” (1 Corinthians 10:10, WEB)

These words are not written to frighten but to wake us up.


Christ in the Wilderness

Yet even in their failures, Christ was present with Israel. Paul declares:

“For they drank of a spiritual rock that followed them, and the rock was Christ.” (1 Corinthians 10:4, WEB)

Even when they rebelled, God provided manna, water, and guidance. His faithfulness remained, even when theirs faltered.

The same is true for us: Christ walks with us in our wilderness. He is the Bread from heaven, the Living Water, the Rock that sustains us.


Lessons for Us Today

The wilderness warnings teach us:

  1. Don’t stop at salvation. God wants us to inherit His promises.

  2. Guard against unbelief. Fear magnifies giants; faith magnifies God.

  3. Receive God’s discipline. The wilderness is a proving ground, not a dead end.

  4. Fix your eyes on Christ. He is the Rock that never fails.

The wilderness is not forever. But how we walk through it determines whether we enter the fullness of God’s purpose.


Looking Ahead

Israel’s wilderness failures remind us of the dangers of unbelief. Yet God’s purpose did not end there. He still had a plan for His people — a plan of worship, restoration, and maturity. In our next post, we’ll turn to David’s Tabernacle, and discover how it foreshadowed the unity and intimacy God desires with His Church.


👉 This is Part 5 of our series “Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today.” In Part 6, we’ll explore David’s Tabernacle — Worship Without Veil.


From Sinai to Pentecost: The Law on Stone vs. the Law in the Spirit. Sinai and Pentecost are deeply connected. Discover how the Law once written on stone was fulfilled at Pentecost, when God wrote His commands on human hearts.

 Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today — Part 4


From the Sea to the Mountain

Israel’s journey did not end at the Red Sea. After their miraculous deliverance, they came to Mount Sinai, where God descended in fire, thunder, and smoke. The purpose of salvation was not simply to escape Pharaoh, but to meet God at the mountain.

“You yourselves have seen what I did to the Egyptians, and how I bore you on eagles’ wings, and brought you to myself.” (Exodus 19:4, WEB)

Sinai was not about distance — it was about drawing near.


Sinai: The Law Written on Stone

At Sinai, God gave His people the Law, carved by His own finger on tablets of stone. It was a covenant moment — God dwelling in the midst of a people set apart.

  • The Ten Commandments provided the moral framework.

  • The covenant ceremony bound Israel as a nation to their God.

  • The fire, cloud, and trumpet blast demonstrated God’s holy presence.

Sinai was a marriage covenant: God as the Husband, Israel as His bride. But it was external, written on stone, often resisted by rebellious hearts.


Pentecost: The Law Written on Hearts

Fifteen hundred years later, on the day of Pentecost, God again descended in fire. But this time, it was not to engrave stone tablets. It was to engrave His will on human hearts.

“They were all filled with the Holy Spirit, and began to speak with other languages, as the Spirit gave them utterance.” (Acts 2:4, WEB)

The parallels are striking:

  • Sinai: fire on the mountain → Pentecost: tongues of fire on each believer.

  • Sinai: God’s voice thundered → Pentecost: the Spirit gave utterance.

  • Sinai: the Law written on stone → Pentecost: the Law written on hearts.

The prophet Jeremiah foresaw this:

“I will put my law in their inward parts, and in their heart will I write it; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people.” (Jeremiah 31:33, WEB)


The Spirit and the New Covenant

The giving of the Spirit is not a side note. It is the very heart of the New Covenant. Paul explains:

  • “The letter kills, but the Spirit gives life.” (2 Corinthians 3:6, WEB)

  • “The law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus made me free from the law of sin and of death.” (Romans 8:2, WEB)

What Sinai began, Pentecost fulfilled. The Spirit makes obedience possible by transforming us from within.


Sinai and Pentecost for the Church Today

Why does this matter for us? Because many believers stop at the Red Sea — saved, forgiven, and baptized, but not yet filled with the Spirit’s power. God’s purpose is not only forgiveness but transformation.

  • At Sinai, Israel was constituted as a holy nation.

  • At Pentecost, the Church was birthed as God’s dwelling place.

Both moments remind us that salvation is communal, covenantal, and Spirit-filled.


Living in the Fire

The Spirit given at Pentecost is not a relic of history but the ongoing power of God for the Church today. Just as the Israelites could not live by the Law without God’s presence, we cannot live for Christ without the Spirit’s fullness.

The call is simple: Do not stop at the Red Sea. Press on to Sinai. Do not settle for stone when God offers His Spirit.


Looking Ahead

We’ve now seen Israel’s journey through the Passover, the Red Sea, and Sinai. Each step is a pattern of the believer’s walk. Next, we’ll turn to the wilderness wanderings — a sobering reminder of how unbelief and disobedience can keep God’s people from entering His promises.


👉 This is Part 4 of our series “Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today.” In Part 5, we’ll explore the Wilderness Warnings and how they speak to the Church today.

Thursday, October 9, 2025

From Egypt to Freedom: The Blood of the Lamb and the Red Sea. Exodus and Passover are more than history—they reveal Christ our Deliverance. Discover how the lamb’s blood, the Red Sea, and baptism point to salvation today.

 Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today — Part 3


The Night of Deliverance

The Exodus story begins not with freedom, but with a lamb. For centuries, Israel had lived in Egypt under Pharaoh’s harsh rule. When God moved to deliver them, He gave a strange command:

“They shall take the blood, and put it on the two doorposts and on the lintel… The blood shall be to you for a token on the houses where you are: and when I see the blood, I will pass over you.” (Exodus 12:7, 13, WEB)

That night, judgment fell on Egypt, but Israel was protected by the blood of the lamb. Their freedom began with sacrifice.


Christ Our Passover

The New Testament makes the connection unmistakable:

“For indeed Christ, our Passover, has been sacrificed in our place.” (1 Corinthians 5:7, WEB)

  • The lamb slain in Egypt points to Jesus, the Lamb of God (John 1:29).

  • The blood on the doorposts points to the blood applied to our hearts by faith.

  • The meal eaten in haste points to our readiness to follow Christ out of bondage.

The Exodus is not just Israel’s story. It is our story — deliverance through the blood of Christ.


Out of Egypt by the Blood

The first step in salvation is always the blood. Before Israel crossed the Red Sea or received the Law at Sinai, they first experienced redemption through the lamb’s sacrifice.

  • Bondage in Egypt = humanity in sin.

  • Pharaoh’s rule = Satan’s grip.

  • The Passover blood = Christ’s atonement, freeing us from judgment.

Without the blood, there is no deliverance. With the blood, no power of Pharaoh can hold us.


Through the Sea

Deliverance did not end with the blood. Israel still faced Pharaoh’s army at the Red Sea. God commanded Moses to stretch out his hand, and the waters parted. Paul explains:

“All our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea; and were all baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the sea.” (1 Corinthians 10:1–2, WEB)

The Red Sea is a type of water baptism. What the blood began, baptism confirmed. The old life was buried; Pharaoh’s power was drowned.

  • Egypt behind them.

  • The wilderness ahead.

  • A new identity as God’s people.

This is the second step of salvation: passing from slavery into freedom, marked by baptism.


Christ the Firstborn

There is another striking detail. On Passover night, every firstborn of Egypt died — but Israel’s firstborn were spared through the blood. The New Testament declares:

“He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation… the firstborn from the dead, that in all things He might have the preeminence.” (Colossians 1:15, 18, WEB)

Jesus is the true Firstborn, struck down for our sake, that we might be spared and become the assembly of the firstborn (Hebrews 12:23).


What This Means for Us

The Exodus and Passover are not distant stories. They are God’s blueprint for deliverance:

  1. The Blood: Christ’s sacrifice covers us.

  2. The Sea: Baptism seals our separation from bondage.

  3. The Journey: A new life begins under God’s guidance.

Salvation is not only forgiveness; it is liberation. The God who delivered Israel still delivers today.


Looking Ahead

We’ve followed Israel from Egypt’s bondage through Passover night and the Red Sea crossing. In the next post, we’ll stand with them at Mount Sinai and discover how the giving of the Law foreshadows Pentecost — when God writes His commands, not on stone, but on the heart.


👉 This is Part 3 of our series “Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today.” In Part 4, we’ll explore how Sinai and Pentecost reveal the Spirit’s role in God’s plan.


Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob: God’s Blueprint for His People. Why does God call Himself the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob? Discover how these patriarchs reveal the Father, Son, and Spirit, and form a covenant pattern for the Church today.

 Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today — Part 2

The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob

When God introduced Himself to Moses at the burning bush, He did not simply say, “I am the Creator” or “I am Almighty.” Instead, He identified Himself this way:

“I am the God of your father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.” (Exodus 3:6, WEB)

Why these three names? Why not Adam, Noah, or Joseph? The answer is profound: Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob form a blueprint of God’s nature and plan. Their lives are not just historical records but patterns of the Father, Son, and Spirit — and through them, the covenant line of promise.


Abraham — The Father of Faith

Abraham stands as the starting point of covenant. God called him out of Ur, away from idols and security, to become the father of many nations.

  • Type: God the Father, the One who calls, initiates, and promises.

  • Key Scripture: “He believed Yahweh; and He reckoned it to him for righteousness.” (Genesis 15:6, WEB; Romans 4:11)

  • Application: Faith always begins with God’s call. Just as Abraham trusted, we too are invited to trust God’s promises before seeing their fulfillment.


Isaac — The Beloved Son

Isaac is the miracle child, born when Sarah’s womb was as good as dead. He is the son offered up by his father on Mount Moriah, carrying the wood for his own sacrifice. Sound familiar?

  • Type: God the Son, the Beloved who is offered up.

  • Key Scripture: “Take your son, your only son, whom you love, even Isaac… and offer him there as a burnt offering.” (Genesis 22:2, WEB; John 3:16)

  • Application: Isaac points us to Christ, the Lamb of God. Salvation is not earned by works but provided by the Son whom the Father did not withhold.


Jacob — The Spirit Who Transforms

Jacob’s life is more complicated. He is born grasping, wrestles for blessing, deceives and is deceived, yet encounters God and is renamed Israel. His story is one of transformation, struggle, and indwelling presence.

  • Type: The Holy Spirit, who wrestles with us, disciplines us, and reshapes us.

  • Key Scripture: “Your name shall no longer be called Jacob, but Israel; for you have fought with God and with men, and have prevailed.” (Genesis 32:28, WEB; John 16:13–15)

  • Application: The Spirit is not abstract — He wrestles within us, bringing conviction, changing our name, and conforming us to God’s purposes.


The Pattern of the Godhead

Together, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob foreshadow the fullness of God:

  • Abraham → The Father who calls.

  • Isaac → The Son who is offered.

  • Jacob → The Spirit who indwells and transforms.

This is why Jesus could say, “Before Abraham was born, I AM” (John 8:58). He is present in the covenant line, the fulfillment of its promise.


Covenant Continuity

It’s no accident that God’s promises ran through these three, not through Ishmael or Esau. The covenant flows through faith, promise, and transformation — not flesh or self-effort.

  • Ishmael represents works of the flesh.

  • Esau represents worldly appetites.

  • But Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob represent faith, promise, and Spirit.


Why This Matters Today

The God who revealed Himself as the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob is still the same God who calls, saves, and transforms His Church. We cannot stop at believing in the Father or acknowledging the Son. We must also embrace the Spirit’s wrestling and reshaping work.

The pattern of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob is not just history. It is the Christian life.


Looking Ahead

We’ve seen how the patriarchs reveal the very nature of God and His covenant plan. In our next post, we’ll step into Israel’s deliverance from Egypt — exploring the Passover, the blood of the Lamb, and how Christ fulfills it all.


👉 This is Part 2 of our series “Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today.” In Part 3, we’ll discover how Exodus and the Passover reveal Christ our Deliverance. Part 1 here.


Monday, October 6, 2025

Learning from Israel’s Story: How the Old Testament Shapes the Church. Is the Old Testament just ancient history? Discover how Israel’s story is a living pattern for the Church, offering warnings, guidance, and hope for believers today.

 Why the Old Testament Still Speaks Today

Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today — Part 1


A Book Written for Our Learning

When most people think about the Old Testament, they picture ancient stories: Abraham’s tent, Moses at the burning bush, or David facing Goliath. For some, these accounts feel distant, locked away in the dusty past. Yet the apostle Paul tells us something startling:

“For whatever things were written before were written for our learning, that through patience and through the comfort of the Scriptures we might have hope.” (Romans 15:4, WEB)

And again:

“Now all these things happened to them by way of example, and they were written for our admonition, on whom the ends of the ages have come.” (1 Corinthians 10:11, WEB)

The Old Testament is not just history. It is a mirror, a teaching tool, and a prophetic pattern for the Church today.


History as a Pattern

The Israelites’ journey from Egypt to the Promised Land wasn’t only about geography. It was a drama written on the stage of history for our benefit. Their triumphs and failures are ensamples—living blueprints that reveal God’s plan for His people in every generation.

  • The Passover lamb points forward to Christ, our true Lamb, whose blood delivers us from bondage.

  • The Red Sea crossing foreshadows baptism, where old masters lose their hold, and we walk into new life.

  • The wilderness wandering is a warning, reminding us how unbelief can keep us from entering God’s promises.

What happened to them is a map for us.


A Word for the Church Today

Why does this matter now? Because we face the same challenges Israel did. It is easy to settle for religion instead of relationship, for outward form instead of inward faith. Israel saw miracles but perished in unbelief. Paul warns us not to repeat their mistake.

The Old Testament urges us to look beyond mere survival. God’s goal isn’t just to get us out of Egypt—it’s to bring us into maturity, a dwelling place for His Spirit.


Hope Anchored in Scripture

The beauty of this truth is simple: the Old Testament stories are not just warnings, they are sources of hope.

  • They remind us that God is patient.

  • They assure us that His promises do not fail.

  • They point us toward the fullness of His plan.

As Paul wrote, through the comfort of the Scriptures we might have hope.


Where We Go From Here

This post begins our journey into a series exploring how the Old Testament provides patterns for the New Testament Church. In the coming weeks, we’ll look at:

  1. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob — The Blueprint of God’s People

  2. Exodus and Passover — Christ Our Deliverance

  3. Sinai and Pentecost — God Writes His Law on Our Hearts

  4. The Wilderness Warnings — Learning from Failure

  5. David’s Tabernacle and Solomon’s Temple — God’s End Goal

…and much more.


A Question for You

When you read the Old Testament, do you see it as ancient history or as a living pattern for your own walk with God?

The answer to that question will shape not only how you read Scripture, but how you live your faith.


👉 This is Part 1 of our series “Learning from the Old Testament: Patterns for the Church Today.” In Part 2, we’ll dive into the lives of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and discover how they reveal the very nature of God Himself.