The Seven Steps of Redemption or Salvation in Exodus

Exodus 6:1–9, YHVH redeems Israel. The stage is set for Israel’s redemption in Exodus 5:22–23. Yet Moses’ first venture to Pharaoh was a disaster. The plight of the children of Israel had deteriorated instead of improved. Discouraged, Moses almost takes on an accusative tone toward YHVH (Exod 5:22–23). Graciously, YHVH doesn’t rebuke Moses, but as a loving Father encourages him to refocus on his word and the veracity and surety of his promises (Exod 6:2–5).

YHVH encouraged Moses upward and onward despite his discouraging first attempt at gaining the release of the ­children of Israel. Is it possible that YHVH allowed immediate success to elude Moses at his first encounter with Pharaoh to bring Moses “to the end of himself” with regard to any tendency he might have had to rely primarily on himself and on his own wisdom? After all, Moses, as either Pharaoh’s adopted grandson or his nephew (depending on whether this was the Pharaoh of Moses’ childhood or his son), had an “in” with the monarch that could have been exploited for the benefit of securing the release of Israel. As YHVH wanted Moses to rely on him alone for Israel’s deliverance, so YHVH wants us to rely on him alone to accomplish his purposes in our lives and not any human abilities that we may possess. We have to be totally emptied of ourselves before we’re ready for the Master’s use. This doesn’t mean he won’t use our natural abilities or what he have gained through life’s experiences, but we must learn to submit all that we have and are to his sovereign will. In this way, YHVH, not man, gets the glory when success occurs (Jer 9:22–23).

Next, YHVH reveals to Moses the seven steps of Israel’s redemption, which are actually promises of what YHVH will do for Israel.

Wherefore say unto the children of Israel, “I am YHVH, and I will bring you out from under the burdens of the Egyptians, and I will rid you out of their bondage, and I will redeem [Strong’s H1350, ga’al meaning “to buy back, ransom for money”] you with a stretched out arm, and with great judgments, and I will take you to me for a people, and I will be to you an Elohim, and you shall know that I am YHVH your Elohim, which brings you out from under the burdens of the Egyptians. And I will bring you in unto the land, concerning the which I did swear to give it to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob; and I will give it you for an heritage: I am YHVH.” (Exod 6:6–8, emphasis added)

Here we find listed the seven steps of redemption YHVH lays out for Israel. YHVH uses his covenant name three times during the seven promises: at the beginning, middle and end. He wraps his covenant promises in his covenant name for emphasis.

YHVH is telling Moses (and us, as well!!) to just believe him! Believe his Word; trust that he is who he says he is (which is what his covenant name implies: I am who I am, or I will be what I will be; i.e. I will be your All Sufficient One and will meet your every need … So just trust and believe!)

Redemption involves three things. First, the exchange of one thing (money or blood) for something else (the sins of Israel) must occur. This is expressed in the phrase, “I will redeem you.” Through the shed blood of the Passover lamb, which prophetically and symbolically pointed to Yeshua’s death on the cross, YHVH redeemed Israel from the power and penalty of sin, which is death (Ezek 18:4; Rom 6:23). Second, redemption involves the use of power to extricate that which is being redeemed (in this case, Israel) from that which is holding it captive or enslaved (i.e. the world, sin and the devil as pictured by Pharaoh and Egypt). This is expressed in the phrase, “with an outstretched arm.” And finally, the third step of redemption involves judgment upon and or destruction of the captor. This is expressed in the phrase, “and with great judgments.” Israel was redeemed from the enemy (sin and Egypt) by the atoning blood of the sacrificed Lamb and by the outstretched arm of YHVH at the dividing of the Red Sea and the deliverance of Israel, and Egypt was judged through the ten plagues and the destruction of her army.

As YHVH promised to redeem the children of Israel, so he promises to do the same for us. He states in Exodus 6:6, “I will redeem you …” and likewise in the Testimony of Yeshua we read:

Forasmuch as you know that you were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain conduct received by tradition from your fathers, but with the precious blood of Messiah, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot. (1 Pet 1:18–19)

For you are bought with a price; therefore, glorify Elohim in your body, and in your spirit, which are Elohim’s. (1 Cor 6:20)

YHVH promises to redeem his people “with an outstretched arm” (Exod 6:6),

And what is the exceeding greatness of his power toward us who believe, according to the working of his mighty power. (Eph 1:19)

YHVH promises to redeem his people with an outstretched arm, “and with great judgments” (Exod 6:6; see also Rev 20:10, 14 where YHVH judges sin, death and Satan).

Let’s gain a deeper understanding of the concept of redemption. Redemption is deliverance by payment of a price. In the Testimony of Yeshua, redemption refers to loosing or ransoming something (Luke 2:38; Heb 9:12) and loosing away, delivering or releasing (Luke 21:28; Rom 3:24; Eph 1:14), and to salvation from sin, death, and the wrath of Elohim by Messiah’s sacrifice. In the Tanakh, the word redemption can refer to redemption by a kinsman (Lev 25:24, 48–52; Ruth 4:6; Jer 32:7–8), a rescue or deliverance (Num 3:49), and spiritual ransom (Pss 111:9; 130:7).

The NT emphasizes the tremendous cost of redemption: “the precious blood of [Messiah]” (1 Pet 1:18; Eph 1:7), which is also called an atoning sacrifice, ‘a propitiation by His blood’ (Rom 3:25). Believers are exhorted to remember the ‘price’ of their redemption as motivation to personal holiness (1 Cor 6:19–20; 1 Pet 1:13–19). The Bible also emphasizes the result of redemption: freedom from sin and freedom to serve [Elohim] through [Yeshua the Messiah our Master]. (Nelson’s Illustrated Bible Dictionary, p. 904–5)

Let’s now explore the concept of Redeemer:

A redeemer is one who frees or delivers another from difficulty, danger, or bondage, usually by the payment of a ransom price. In the OT, the redeemer could function in several ways. He could buy back property (and even enslaved people) sold under duress (Lev 25:23–32). He (usually as owner, not as a relative) often redeemed from [YHVH] dedicated property and firstborn livestock (Lev 27:1–33; also Exod 21:28–30).

Boaz’s function as redeemer for Ruth (Ruth 3:13–4:10) is well known, as is Job’s resurrection hope in [YHVH], his Redeemer (Job 19:25). [YHVH] himself is the Redeemer of Israel, a fact mentioned 18 times—especially by the prophet Isaiah (Ps 78:35; Isa 41:14).

In the NT, [Messiah] is viewed as the ultimate Redeemer, although the Greek word for redeemer is not used. [Yeshua] gave his life “as a ransom for many” (Mark 10:45). Thus, the apostle Paul speaks of believers as having “redemption through his blood’ (Eph 1:7)” (ibid.).

We see once again, as Moses could do nothing through his own ability to redeem Israel out of the Egyptians’ hands, so too we are powerless to accomplish our own deliverance and redemption from that holds us captive. We, as did Moses, must come to the end of ourselves and trust and believe in the covenant promises of YHVH.

And Moses spoke so unto the children of Israel, but they hearkened not unto Moses for anguish of spirit, and for cruel bondage. (Exod 6:9)

Here we see the heart response of unregenerate man: first he complains (groans, verse 5) about his bondage and then rejects the grace and deliverance freely available from the Redeemer (verse 9).

But finally in Exodus 6:10–13, 28–30; 7:1–10 armed with YHVH’s covenant promises, Moses goes forth to fulfill his commission. Moses responds with excuses and reluctance, yet finally, after encouragement and coaxing from YHVH, he obeys. We see here the patience of YHVH with his children. How long does he have to lovingly lead, coax and encourage us to do his will? To fulfill his destiny and plan for our lives?

Now let’s explore the concept of redemption as it applies to the four cups of wine drunk during the Passover (Pesach) Seder. The first four “I wills” of Exodus 6:6–7 are central to the Passover Seder. The four cups in the Passover Seder represent the four I wills that YHVH declares over Israel in this Scripture passage.

1. “I will bring you out” is represented in the Cup of Sanctification

2. “I will rid you out of their bondage” is represented in the Cup of Deliverance

3. “I will redeem you” is represented in the Cup of Redemption

4. “I will take you to me” is represented in the Cup of Praise or Completion. This last cup is marriage language. He is taking Israel to be his bride. We still use this type of language in our modern marriage ceremony.

The remaining three steps in YHVH’s plan of redemption are:

5. “I will be your Elohim.

6. “I will bring you into the land which I swore to give to Abraham…”

7. “I will give it to you as a heritage.”

These seven steps of redemption correlate to the seven biblical feasts, which are yet another way of explaining YHVH’s seven steps of salvation. (These seven steps also relate to the seven stations in the Tabernacle of Moses and the seven steps in the biblical Hebraic wedding, but that’s another discussion that we’ve already covered exhaustively in other studies.) Let’s review YHVH’s seven “I will” statements again to see how they line up with the seven biblical feasts.

1. “I will bring you out.” This points to Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread, which occurred when Israel was preparing to leave and then actually left Egypt. This a prophetic picture of YHVH delivering the believer from the bondage and enslavement to the world, the flesh and the devil at the time of one’s spiritual conversion or initial salvation.

2. “I will rid you out of their bondage.” This is YHVH delivering the children of Israel from their enemies. For the believer, Egypt is a prophetic picture of the world, and Pharaoh is a symbolic metaphor of the devil. Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread are a spiritual picture of this.

3. “I will redeem you.” This occurred when the Israelites put the blood of the lamb on their door posts on the Passover. This prophetically points to Yeshua’s death on the cross as an atonement for our sins.

4. “I will take you to me.” This is marriage language, and brings us to the next biblical feast, which is the Feast of Weeks (or Pentecost), where YHVH married Israel at Mount Sinai after giving them his Torah covenant.

5. “I will be your Elohim.” This is another picture of the Feast of Weeks when the children of Israel married YHVH and vowed to be faithful to him obeying all his Torah commandments. On the day of Pentecost in Acts 2, YHVH gave his saints the gift of the Set-Apart Spirit by which his Torah-commandments were written on their hearts thus enabling them to obey them. We become the people of Elohim and he becomes our Elohim when he redeems us from sin, and we choose to obey him faithfully (1 John 2:3–6; John 14:15).

6. “I will bring you into the land which I swore to give to Abraham.” YHVH promised to give the Israelites the land of Canaan as their promised inheritance if they would be faithful to him. Those who weren’t faithful, died in the wilderness. The Promised Land is a prophetic picture of the saint receiving eternal life in the kingdom of Elohim. This occurs when one receives their glorified bodies at the first resurrection when Yeshua returns to this earth on the Day of Trumpets. This also points to the Day of Atonement when Yeshua will lead his warrior bride into the land of Israel after having defeated the Babylon the Great new world order at the battle of Armageddon. The Feast of Tabernacles is a prophetic picture of YHVH’s people coming into their promised inheritance, which is the Promised Land of Israel from where the saints will be ruling over the world under King Yeshua for one thousand years during the Messianic Age or Millennium.

7. “I will give it to you as a heritage.” The land of Canaan or Promised Land was to be the permanent home of the Israelites with Jerusalem as its eternal capital for eternity. Similarly, after the one thousand year long Millennium, the saints will have as their eternal inheritance the New Jerusalem from heaven on the new earth. This is prophetically pictured by the Eighth Day, which is the last of YHVH’s seven biblical festivals.

This is yet another example of how the Word of Elohim weaves itself together like a rich, multi-colored pictorial tapestry with each layer and thread relating to and interdependent upon the others. When all the threads are woven together, they form a huge, varied and complex picture­—a gospel message tract that far excels any other! Only the infinite mind of Elohim could have engineered this in light of the fact that the Bible was written over a period of some 1800 years by dozens of authors from different backgrounds and countries on three different continents.

The Abrahamic Covenant has seven “I wills” from YHVH as well.

“And I will make my covenant between me and you, and will multiply you exceedingly.” And Abram fell on his face, and Elohim talked with him, saying, “As for me, behold, my covenant is with you, and you shall be a father of many nations. Neither shall your name any more be called Abram, but your name shall be Abraham, for a father of many nations have I made you. And I will make you exceeding fruitful, and I will make nations of you, and kings shall come out of you. And I will establish my covenant between me and you and your seed after you in their generations for an everlasting covenant, to be an Elohim unto you, and to your seed after you. And I will give unto you, and to your seed after you, the land wherein you are a stranger, all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting possession; and I will be their Elohim.” (Gen 17:2–8, emphasis added)

The New Covenant also contains seven “I will” statements from YHVH:

“‘Behold, the days come,” says YHVH, “that I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah; not according to the covenant that I made with their fathers in the day that I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt, which my covenant they break, although I was an husband unto them,” says YHVH, “But this shall be the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days,” says YHVH, “I will put my law [or Torah] in their inward parts, and [I will] write it in their hearts; and will be their Elohim, and they shall be my people. And they shall teach no more every man his neighbor, and every man his brother, saying, ‘Know YHVH,’ for they shall all know me, from the least of them unto the greatest of them,” says YHVH, “for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.” (Jer 31:31–34, emphasis added)

This last covenant is the one that Yeshua is in the process of making with redeemed Israel or the Israel of Elohim, as Paul the apostle terms it (Gal 6:16). He started the process at his Passover last supper (Matt 26:28; 1 Cor 11:25). This process continues to this day (Heb 8:8–13), and will be finalized after Yeshua’s second coming (Ezek 34:25; 37:26; Jer 32:40; 50:5). This covenant is Yeshua’s marriage covenant with his blood bought bride—redeemed Israel, the saints.

Please note that each successive covenant YHVH makes with his people is based on and is an expansion of the previous covenant/s. The concept of YHVH redeeming his people from sin is an ancient one, yet is constantly expanding and extending into the future. YHVH’s love and outreach to his people knows no limits!

 

8 thoughts on “The Seven Steps of Redemption or Salvation in Exodus

  1. Shalom Natan thankyou for this written study it accompanies the vid well.

    I do have a query as to why the Last Supper and the Passover Meal are interchangeable in language in the gospels at times and in our discussions but impossible to have happened if we follow Torah.

    I have understood that the very timing of Messiah giving up His life for us on the Cross was the time that the lambs were killed for the Passover in Temple times.

    Somewhere I have come across the explanation of the Greek translation “I have desired to eat this Passover with you” as the Greek word translated desire easily can mean a very strong desire but not necessarily a desire of Yeshua’s heart that was fulfilled as Yeshua chose to do the Father’s will and Became the Passover Lamb instead of eating the Passover Lamb with the disciples.

    Also the word for the bread Yeshua broke in this meal is inconclusive as to being leavened or matzah.

    That explanation seems logical as it takes all the words into account and the physical realities of observance as well. Any thoughts?

    Blessings to All who have hope in the Truth and seek Him.
    FJ

    • I answer several of these questions in my video on Parashat Bo. I put out a lot of videos, and some of them are long, so I realize it’s not possible for everyone to watch them all.

      First, let’s start with the fact that three of the gospels call the Lord’s supper Passover. Yeshua himself calls it Passover, so that is what it was.

      Second, in Exodus 12:6 we have the timing of Passover— it occurs at twilight (NKJV). This is a misleading English translation. The actual Hebrew phrase is beyn erev, which literally means “between the evenings.” This would be “between the evening of the 13th day of the first month going into the 14th day until the 14th day going into the 15th day. In other words, this would include the entire day of Passover itself, which is on the 14th day off the first month (i.e. Abib/Nisan) as the time frame Torah commands us to keep Passover. The children of Israel kept it at the end of the day, while Yeshua kept it at the beginning of the day, so that he could be the Passover lamb hanging on the cross at the end of the day. Both times are acceptable as per Torah to keep the seder.

      Third, the Greek word for bread is the generic word meaning bread and can include specialty breads such as unleavened bread as well. I go into this in my article on our website about when Passover is available at

    • https://www.hoshanarabbah.org/pdfs/psvr_dy.pdf
    • .

      • Shalom Natan,
        thankyou for your in depth reply. Lots to look at from your resources too. I am all for having hamburgers from sacred cows! Am off to work now and will come to look at your studies so I don’t ask you questions you have already answered. Thanks for receiving questions without offence. It is so pleasant to discuss and not argue. Love in Messiah &
        Many blessings for you & your wifes’ going out and coming in as servants of the Most High. FJ

  2. Thank you for this study, it had so many facts and deep understandings of the words in scripture that have helped me in my current study of the Torah.

  3. Thank you Natan for sharing the word. I am seeking Salvation and Deliverance for my own children and as I researched, I found yours to be very helpful.

  4. Do the current real Jewish people need to have faith in Yeshua, I take it it that all need to have faith, as no one can get to the FATHER except through Yeshua alone. If the Jew or Gentile refuses Yeshua, they are not HIS at all but hasatan.

    • There is only one Door to salvation for the Hebrews, Jews and the people of the nations, and that Door is Yeshua the Messiah by way of the cross. There is no other way. Anyone who does not go through that Door will not have salvation. To say that the unsaved Jews now are of Satan is an incorrect broad brush statement. Some Jews are of the synagogue of Satan as the Book of Revelation tells us. Most of the Jews, however, have not been called by YHVH yet, or are in the process of being called, or will be called. This is part of the regathering of Israel that the Bible prophecies. I would not call these people belonging to Satan though. They are just fleshly carnal people who have yet to make a choice one way or the other.

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