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God sends ten devastating plagues on Egypt — each one escalating — as Pharaoh repeatedly refuses to let the Israelites go.
The plagues start with the Nile turning to blood and progress through frogs, gnats, flies, livestock disease, boils, hail, locusts, and total darkness. Each time, Pharaoh either refuses outright or agrees and then changes his mind. The plagues systematically dismantle Egypt's sense of power and directly challenge its gods.
Exodus
When God Sends a Message Pharaoh Won't Accept
God sends Moses and Aaron back to Pharaoh with signs and wonders — a staff that becomes a serpent and swallows the competition, then the Nile itself turning to blood. Pharaoh watches it all happen and still won't budge.
Exodus
The Plagues Keep Coming
God sends three devastating plagues on Egypt — frogs, gnats, and flies — and each time Pharaoh negotiates, makes promises, and then breaks them the moment the pressure lifts. It's one of the most honest pictures of how people deal with God when they're desperate versus when they're comfortable.
Exodus
The God Who Draws Lines
Three more plagues hit Egypt — livestock disease, boils, and apocalyptic hail — and each one reveals the same pattern: God protects His people, Pharaoh makes promises he won't keep, and the gap between stubbornness and surrender keeps getting wider.
Exodus
The Man Who Kept Saying No
Pharaoh's grip tightens even as Egypt crumbles around him. Two more plagues hit — locusts that devour everything and a darkness so thick you can feel it — and still he won't fully let go. It's one of the most honest portraits of stubbornness you'll ever read.
Exodus
The Final Warning
God tells Moses there's one plague left — and it's the one that will finally break Pharaoh. Moses stands before Pharaoh and delivers the announcement that will shatter an empire, and Egypt is about to learn the difference between stubbornness and sovereignty.
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