The third act in the story of God is all about his response to people. It covers hundreds of years of history and focuses specifically on how God advanced his plan to redeem people from sin during these years.
Previously, we learned that sin entered the world when Adam and Eve first disobeyed God. From that moment in the garden, people struggled mightily to follow God. But God did not abandon them. Just the opposite; God got even more involved with people.
The Journey of the Israelites
Genesis 12 through Genesis 50 is the story of how the Israelites became a nation. It all began with God’s promise to one man, Abram. “I will make you into a great nation . . . all people on earth will be blessed through you (Genesis 12:2-3).
By Genesis 50, the Israelites were living in Egypt and their numbers were swelling far beyond the pharaoh’s comfort zone.
As we learned in our previous devotional, the ancient Egyptians brutally enslaved the Israelites (Exodus 1). The famous story of Moses is about how God freed his people from slavery. Though generations had passed, God had not forgotten his promise to Abram or his promise to Eve that a savior would come (Genesis 3:15), and so he set the Israelites on a course to a new homeland.
Along the way, God gave the Israelites what we know as the Ten Commandments.
The Ten Commandments
Read Exodus 20:1-18.
These rules were not a prerequisite for God’s love and faithfulness. The Israelites had already experienced God’s faithfulness and his miraculous power to save them.
The Ten Commandments are about how to love God (vv. 6-11) and love others (vv. 12-18).
Abiding by these commands, as well as the rest of the law, enabled the nation of Israel to live in harmony with God and bless “all people on earth,” just as God promised Abram.
Why does all this history matter? Because God hasn’t changed. He’s still a promise-keeper. He’s still forgiving people and setting them free from what binds them. He’s still incensed by injustice (Isaiah 28:16-19), and he’s still powerful (Ephesians 1:18-21).
This is the God that created you and loves you. God loves people—including you.
Reflection
What were you taught about the Ten Commandments in the past?
What do you think about the Ten Commandments being about loving God and loving others? Read Matthew 22:36-40 as you consider this.
Is there a commandment that is especially challenging for you? Would you pray about that today?
Prayer
Thank you, God, for loving people, including me. Thank you for being upset by injustice and for using your power to free enslaved people. Help me, please, by your power, to love you and to love people as much as you love me. Amen.
Read the rest of the Jesus Bible Devotional series — and go deeper with the full Jesus Bible Study Series.
Encounter the living Jesus in all of Scripture through The Jesus Bible — the Bible that lifts Jesus up as the lead story and encourages you to faithfully follow him as you participate in his story. Also available as part of Bible Gateway Plus!
Passion Publishing loves books. Their mission is to lift and amplify life-shifting messages globally from the Passion movement. Above all else Passion is about glorifying God by inviting people to live for what matters most, the name and renown of Jesus.