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Exodus 7

The Lord Begins to Answer Pharaoh: Signs, Hardening, and the Nile Turned to Blood

The Lord begins to answer Pharaoh’s defiance by revealing His power over Egypt’s counterfeit signs, Pharaoh’s hardened heart, and the Nile itself.

Chapter Summary

The Lord begins to answer Pharaoh’s defiance by revealing His power over Egypt’s counterfeit signs, Pharaoh’s hardened heart, and the Nile itself.

Overview

Exodus 7 argues that Pharaoh’s resistance will not frustrate the Lord’s redemption but will become the stage for the Lord’s self-revelation. Moses’ weakness is answered by divine ordering of roles. Pharaoh’s hard heart is neither hidden from God nor outside His purposes. Egypt’s magicians can imitate signs, but they cannot overthrow the Lord’s power. The Nile, Egypt’s life-source, becomes the first major object of plague judgment so that Pharaoh and Egypt may know that He is the Lord.

Context
Author

Moses

Audience

Israel, the covenant people redeemed from Egypt and taught to understand their deliverance as the Lord’s revelation of His name, power, judgment, and covenant faithfulness.

Setting

Egypt after Moses’ first confrontation with Pharaoh failed outwardly, Israel’s suffering increased, and the Lord reaffirmed His covenant promises to redeem His people.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

The Lord defines Moses’ and Aaron’s roles, foretells Pharaoh’s hardened resistance, authenticates His messengers with the staff sign, and begins judgment by turning the Nile to blood.

Covenant Significance

Exodus 7 advances covenant redemption by moving from promise to public judgment. The Lord acts for Israel, His covenant people, while confronting the ruler who refuses to release them for worship. The chapter shows that the Exodus will be achieved by the Lord’s mighty acts, not Pharaoh’s permission. Egypt will know the Lord through judgment, and Israel’s future deliverance will reveal the faithfulness of the God who remembers His covenant.

Gospel Clarity

Exodus 7 prepares gospel clarity by showing that bondage will not be broken by negotiation with Pharaoh but by the Lord’s mighty intervention. Pharaoh’s hard heart, Egypt’s counterfeit powers, and the Nile’s judgment expose the depth of resistance against God. The Lord acts so Egypt will know His name and so Israel will be brought out. This anticipates the greater gospel reality: sinners are not delivered from slavery to sin by human strength or religious imitation but by God’s decisive redemption in Christ, who defeats the powers, reveals God truly, and brings His people into worship and life.

Formation Aim

Dependence, discernment, reverence, courage, repentance, confidence in God’s word, and worship-centered obedience.

Focus Points

  • The Lord’s sovereignty over Pharaoh
  • Prophetic mediation through Moses and Aaron
  • Hardening of Pharaoh’s heart
  • Signs and wonders as revelation
  • Judgment against Egypt’s powers
  • The knowledge of the Lord
  • Counterfeit power and divine supremacy
  • The beginning of plague judgment
  • Redemption through mighty acts
  • The Lord answers human weakness with divine order
  • Hardening and divine purpose
  • Counterfeit signs
  • Judgment on Egypt’s life-source
  • The staff of God
  • The word of the Lord proves true
  • Divine Sovereignty
  • Human Responsibility
  • Revelation
  • Prophetic Mediation
  • Judgment
  • Spiritual Counterfeit
  • Redemption
  • Doctrine of God

Cross References

Exodus 4:21
The Lord instructed Moses, “When you go back to Egypt, see that you perform before Pharaoh all the wonders that I have put within your power. But I will harden his heart so that he will not let the people go.
Hardening background
Exodus 5:2
But Pharaoh replied, “Who is the Lord that I should obey His voice and let Israel go? I do not know the Lord, and I will not let Israel go.”
Theological conflict
Exodus 6:6-8
Therefore tell the Israelites: ‘I am the Lord, and I will bring you out from under the yoke of the Egyptians and deliver you from their bondage. I will redeem you with an outstretched arm and with mighty acts of judgment. I will take you as My own people, and I will be your God. Then you will know that I am the Lord your God, who brought you out from under...
Promise background
Exodus 8:1-15
Then the Lord said to Moses, “Go to Pharaoh and tell him that this is what the Lord says: ‘Let My people go, so that they may worship Me. But if you refuse to let them go, I will plague your whole country with frogs. The Nile will teem with frogs, and they will come into your palace and up to your bedroom and onto your bed, into the houses of your officials...
Narrative continuation
Deuteronomy 4:34
Or has any god tried to take as his own a nation out of another nation—by trials, signs, wonders, and war, by a strong hand and an outstretched arm, and by great terrors—as the Lord your God did for you in Egypt, before your eyes?
Later covenant reflection
Psalm 78:43-44
When He performed His signs in Egypt and His wonders in the fields of Zoan. He turned their rivers to blood, and from their streams they could not drink.
Psalm reflection
Psalm 105:27-29
They performed His miraculous signs among them, and wonders in the land of Ham. He sent darkness, and it became dark—yet they defied His words. He turned their waters to blood and caused their fish to die.
Psalm reflection
Acts 7:35-36
This Moses, whom they had rejected with the words, ‘Who made you ruler and judge?’ is the one whom God sent to be their ruler and redeemer through the angel who appeared to him in the bush. He led them out and performed wonders and signs in the land of Egypt, at the Red Sea, and for forty years in the wilderness.
New Testament retelling
Romans 9:17-18
For the Scripture says to Pharaoh: “I raised you up for this very purpose, that I might display My power in you, and that My name might be proclaimed in all the earth.” Therefore God has mercy on whom He wants to have mercy, and He hardens whom He wants to harden.
Theological interpretation
Revelation 16:3-6
And the second angel poured out his bowl into the sea, and it turned to blood like that of the dead, and every living thing in the sea died. And the third angel poured out his bowl into the rivers and springs of water, and they turned to blood. And I heard the angel of the waters say: “Righteous are You, O Holy One, who is and was, because You have brought...
Judgment imagery

Passages

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