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Story 13 – I Am Who I Am
Exodus 3
Some stories begin with fire.
This one begins with silence.
Moses is 80. A fugitive. A forgotten man herding sheep in the wilderness.
He thinks his purpose is behind him.
But then… a bush burns.
And it doesn’t burn out.
This isn’t spectacle. It’s invitation.
God calls his name—and Moses responds: “Here I am.”
What follows is a sacred confrontation—not just between God and man, but between calling and fear.
Moses says: “Who am I?”
God replies: “I will be with you.”
And when Moses asks God’s name?
The answer isn’t a title. It’s an existence.
“I Am who I Am.”
This is a story for anyone who feels too old, too broken, too late.
Because sometimes, the call doesn’t come in youth.
Sometimes it comes in the wilderness.
When everything is quiet enough to hear it.
Story 14 – Blood, Frogs, and Fire
Exodus 7–12
“Who is the LORD, that I should obey Him?”
That’s Pharaoh’s question.
And God answers… with plagues.
This isn’t chaos. It’s confrontation.
Each plague is a strike against Egypt’s gods.
The Nile turns to blood.
The sky turns black.
Frogs, gnats, and fire dismantle an empire’s belief system—one false god at a time.
But this isn’t just about Egypt.
Because we all cling to our own pharaohs.
Power. Control. Identity. Image.
And sometimes, God breaks what enslaves us—so we can finally let go.
This is a story of judgment, yes—
But beneath that?
It’s a story of deliverance.
Story 15 – The Sea That Saved a Nation
Exodus 14
The Israelites are free—but not safe.
They’ve escaped Egypt, but now they stand at the Red Sea.
Behind them: Pharaoh’s army.
In front of them: water.
And in their hearts? Panic.
This is where deliverance gets dangerous.
Where God says something wild:
“Stand still. I will fight for you.”
Then: “Now move.”
Moses lifts his staff. The sea parts.
And they walk through the impossible.
Not around it. Not over it.
Through it.
This is the story of a God who doesn’t just save His people—
He teaches them to walk by faith…
Even when the path looks like death.
Because some seas are meant to be crossed.
And some enemies? Meant to drown.