
Exodus 7-13 I Come Follow Me I Handmaidens, Harems and Heroines I Lynne Hilton Wilson
Mar 30, 2026
A lively look at Exodus 7–13, focusing on the dramatic plagues and the build-up to the Passover. Conversations explore how Israelite women kept the home rituals, marked doorposts, and taught children the meaning of deliverance. The paschal lamb and its ties to later sacrificial symbolism are examined alongside practical timing and ritual details.
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Plagues Show God's Sovereignty And Build Israelite Faith
- The plagues escalate to show Yahweh's sole rule and to give Pharaoh repeated chances to acknowledge God's authority.
- Lynne Hilton Wilson ties the sequence to strengthening Israelite faith over ~430 years in Egypt and the narrative's covenant context.
Goshen's Exemption Highlights Covenant Protection
- Many early plagues affected both Egyptians and Israelites, but later plagues spared Goshen, highlighting distinct covenant protection.
- Wilson maps parallels between Exodus' ten plagues and Revelation's seven, suggesting typological foreshadowing.
Imagining Israelite Women Caring Through The Plagues
- Wilson highlights the unseen labor of Israelite women caring for plague victims, tending boils, shooing flies, and struggling without clean water.
- She asks listeners to imagine Goshen homes full of mothers and children suffering through contaminated water and disease.
