
đŚ Introduction
The story of Moses does not begin with a miracle, but with oppression. At a time when God’s people seemed forgotten and were brutally enslaved by a new Pharaoh, the Bible lays the foundation for one of the greatest acts of redemption in human history. The transition from blessing to slavery in Egypt is not merely a historical shiftâit reflects the reality of many people today who ask: Where is God in the midst of suffering? Yet it is precisely in the darkness that God’s light begins to shine. This lesson invites us to read the beginning of the book of Exodus with open eyes and a searching heartâand to recognize: when people forget us, God does not. In the birth of a child, hope begins to grow anew.
⪠Lesson 1: Oppression: The Background and the Birth of Moses
đ 1.1 God’s People in Egypt
⨠From Blessing to Oppression: God’s People Under Foreign Rule
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đŚ Introduction
The story of Moses doesnât begin with a miracle, but with oppression. At a time when Godâs people seemed forgotten and brutally enslaved by a new Pharaoh, the Bible lays the foundation for one of the greatest works of redemption in human history. The shift from blessing to slavery in Egypt is not just a historical turnâit reflects the reality of many today who wonder: Where is God in the midst of suffering? Yet it is precisely in the darkness that God’s light begins to shine. This lesson invites us to read the beginning of Exodus with open eyes and seeking heartsâand to realize: when people forget us, God does not. In the birth of a child, hope begins to grow anew.
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đ Bible Study â Exodus 1:1â11
1. Blessing Amid Oppression
Exodus doesnât open with spectacle but with a remembrance: âThese are the namesâ (Ex. 1:1). Names are more than dataâthey represent people with stories, faith, and dreams. God begins where people often stop seeing: in the unseen. The 70 who once came with Jacob to Egypt (Gen. 46:27) have multiplied into a great nationâcarried by God’s blessing.
Verse 7 uses five expressions for growth:
âfruitful, swarmed, multiplied, became mighty, and filled the land.â
This abundance echoes Genesis 1:28ââBe fruitful and multiply.â
â Israel is not just an ethnic group; itâs the bearer of God’s original blessing, even in a foreign land.
2. New Power, New Problem (vv. 8â11)
Then comes the pivot: âA new king arose in Egypt who knew not Joseph.â
The blessing Joseph brought was forgotten. History was ignoredâand with it, trust was lost.
What do we learn?
⥠Good relationships and blessings should never be taken for granted.
What is goodwill today can quickly turn to suspicion, envy, or control.
Pharaoh saw Israel not as a blessing, but a threat: âThey are numerous… What if they turn against us?â
Fear replaced gratitude. And fear gave way to oppression: forced labor, exploitation, dehumanization. Hebrew men were made to build foreign citiesâlikely Pithom and Rameses.
Note: This pressure was not economic developmentâit was control. An attempt to crush identity through labor.
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đ Answers to the Questions
đ Question 1: What key truth is found in Exodus 1:1â7?
Answer:
These verses show that Godâs promises persist even in unfavorable conditions. Israel had no land, no status, no cities, no freedomâand yet they multiplied.
The use of creation language emphasizes: even in chaos, God brings life. Growth is a sign of His presenceânot the surrounding conditions.
⥠Key Truth: Godâs blessing is not tied to political stability or external freedomâit works in hidden places, in suffering, in exile.
đ Question 2: What was the situation of the Israelites in Exodus 1?
Answer:
The Israelites were enslavedâforced into labor, restricted in movement, attacked in identity. It was not just physical oppression, but psychological warfare:
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Their fertility became a threat.
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Their work a tool of control.
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Their history was erasedâJoseph was âforgotten.â
But: the text offers a divine reversal. Oppression did not weaken themâit led to further growth.
⥠Itâs as if God was saying: âNo Pharaoh can stop My plans.â
đ Question 3: What does the rise of a new Pharaoh teach us about good circumstances?
Answer:
The new Pharaoh represents a shift in timeâregimes change, attitudes shift, favor turns to suspicion. Joseph, once Egyptâs savior, was erased from memory.
This reminds us:
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Good circumstances are temporary.
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Gratitude can fade.
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Safety is not permanent.
⥠We learn:
If your faith rests in politics, society, or successâyouâre on shaky ground.
Only Godâs promises remainâeven in hostile surroundings.
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⨠Spiritual Principles
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Godâs faithfulness exceeds human forgetfulness.
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Growth often happens in secretâand in pain.
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Blessing is not always visible.
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Darkness can mark the beginning of deliverance.
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Faith anticipates God’s movementâeven when it seems delayed.
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đ§Š Application for Daily Life
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Family: Build your home on Godâs promises, not external stability.
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Work: Be faithful, even in injusticeâGod sees you.
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Faith: Godâs silence is not absence. WaitâHe is working in the unseen.
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Church: If you’re growing amid resistanceâyouâre on the right path.
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â Conclusion
The story starts in darkness. But God is already writing light into it. Moses hasnât been born, Pharaoh rules uncheckedâbut heaven is not silent. This lesson shows: God prepares deliverance long before people even cry out for it.
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đ Thought of the Day
Donât lose heart when life darkensâperhaps thatâs where God begins His greatest work.
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âď¸ Illustrationâ A New Exodus Story
He was just an ordinary man. Quiet. Humble. His family had fled a war-torn country over a decade ago. They arrived in Europe with nothingâexcept their names, their faith in God, and the hope of belonging.
In the beginning, the new land was full of promise. Authorities were kind. Neighbors helpful. People said: âYou can start over here.â
And they believed it.
The family grew. They opened small businesses, attended school, pursued trades. Every Friday, they gathered to pray, singing in their mother tongue to the God who had carried them through.
But thenâchange.
A new government. Different laws. A colder tone in the media. Suddenly the feeling: You donât really belong here.
Those who once helped stepped back. Now came questions:
âHow many of you are there?â
âWhy are you still here?â
He watched his brother lose his job for refusing to work on a holy day. His cousin was mocked at schoolââthe girl with the headscarf.â His mother wept quietly when their citizenship was denied again.
They kept livingâbut no longer free.
An invisible pressure now shaped their days.
And yetâthe more they were pressed, the more they grew.
Their church overflowed on Sundays. Young people volunteered, helped the elderly, tutored kids in forgotten neighborhoods. Their children won academic prizes; their parents fasted and prayed for a country that never fully embraced themâbut that they still loved.
It was a paradox:
The more their identity was attacked, the deeper it rooted.
They were called âforeignersââbut became a blessing.
Just like long ago in Egypt, when a new king forgot Joseph.
When Godâs people were oppressed, forced, exploited.
And yet: âThe more they were oppressed, the more they multiplied and spreadâ (Exodus 1:12).
Because behind the story stood an invisible Godâfaithful, patient, and certain of the future.