The God Who Leads (14 of 16)
Series: Exodus
Jim Perdue
Exodus 33
Intro/Attention
This is the fourteenth message in our study of the book of Exodus. Can I just say, you guys have been troopers. Y'all are doing great. You have hung with me every step of the way and I appreciate it. We're in the home stretch now. We will finish this series in just a few weeks. As we walk through this sermon series called, Who Is This God?, today we come to Exodus 33. The sermon subject is, The God Who Leads...
Throughout Exodus we have seen that God faithfully leads His people. He never forgot about them while they were in Egypt. He sent a deliverer, Moses, to lead them out of slavery. He miraculously led them across the Red Sea and to Mt. Sinai. But here, we see something interesting. After the people committed an awful sin by bowing down to the golden calf, God says, ''I'm done leading you. Go on without me.'' But we see Moses in one of his finest hours, and we see God in one of His most merciful moments here in this text. READ 1-3, 12-23
*Of course, one of the ways we get to where we are going today is by using the apps on our smartphone to guide the way. You may use Waze, Maps, or Google Maps; but it's hard to imagine how we got around before these things. It's very convenient. And now, they will even give you live traffic updates. If a road becomes congested or backed up, the map can redirect you and send you down a more desirable path. But I saw an interesting article this week of a man who was able to trick google into reporting a traffic jam. The man walks down some city streets pulling a wagon with 99 smartphones that all have Google Maps' navigation turned on. As the man pulls the wagon, the streets get progressively redder on Google Maps. Those red streets would typically indicate a bad traffic jam - but the streets were nearly empty. Usually, Google determines where traffic jams are by pulling location data from phones running the Maps app. If there are a ...
Series: Exodus
Jim Perdue
Exodus 33
Intro/Attention
This is the fourteenth message in our study of the book of Exodus. Can I just say, you guys have been troopers. Y'all are doing great. You have hung with me every step of the way and I appreciate it. We're in the home stretch now. We will finish this series in just a few weeks. As we walk through this sermon series called, Who Is This God?, today we come to Exodus 33. The sermon subject is, The God Who Leads...
Throughout Exodus we have seen that God faithfully leads His people. He never forgot about them while they were in Egypt. He sent a deliverer, Moses, to lead them out of slavery. He miraculously led them across the Red Sea and to Mt. Sinai. But here, we see something interesting. After the people committed an awful sin by bowing down to the golden calf, God says, ''I'm done leading you. Go on without me.'' But we see Moses in one of his finest hours, and we see God in one of His most merciful moments here in this text. READ 1-3, 12-23
*Of course, one of the ways we get to where we are going today is by using the apps on our smartphone to guide the way. You may use Waze, Maps, or Google Maps; but it's hard to imagine how we got around before these things. It's very convenient. And now, they will even give you live traffic updates. If a road becomes congested or backed up, the map can redirect you and send you down a more desirable path. But I saw an interesting article this week of a man who was able to trick google into reporting a traffic jam. The man walks down some city streets pulling a wagon with 99 smartphones that all have Google Maps' navigation turned on. As the man pulls the wagon, the streets get progressively redder on Google Maps. Those red streets would typically indicate a bad traffic jam - but the streets were nearly empty. Usually, Google determines where traffic jams are by pulling location data from phones running the Maps app. If there are a ...
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