The Well Church Keller Sermons

God's Power Against the Amalakites - Exodus 17

1 h 0 min · 18 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio God's Power Against the Amalakites - Exodus 17

Descripción

In this message from our ongoing series in Exodus, Men's Minister Adrien Parker takes us to Exodus 17 — where the Israelites, barely out of the wilderness, are ambushed by the Amalekites in one of the most lopsided matchups in the Old Testament. What God does next isn't what anyone expects. Instead of fighting the battle for them like he did at the Red Sea, he puts Moses on a hill with a staff and tells Joshua to go fight. And as long as Moses's hands are raised, Israel wins. When they drop, Israel loses. It's a strange battle — and it's one of the most honest pictures of what God is doing when he doesn't just fix things for us. Adrien draws on the imagery of architectural blueprints, ancient high places, and the Hebrew name Yahweh Nissi to unpack what this passage is really saying: that you are designed for dependency, given an identity you don't have to search for, and called into a victory that was already won. Key themes: Dependency as design, not weakness The four friends Moses needed (prophet, priest, servant, fighter) Identity and the high places The Exodus Way — God's pattern of brokenness, wilderness, and wholeness Yahweh Nissi: the Lord is my Banner Scripture references: Exodus 17:8–15 · Psalm 121 · Isaiah 59:19 · John 12:32 · 2 Corinthians 12:7–9 · James 1:2–4

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Portada del episodio God's Power Against the Amalakites - Exodus 17

God's Power Against the Amalakites - Exodus 17

In this message from our ongoing series in Exodus, Men's Minister Adrien Parker takes us to Exodus 17 — where the Israelites, barely out of the wilderness, are ambushed by the Amalekites in one of the most lopsided matchups in the Old Testament. What God does next isn't what anyone expects. Instead of fighting the battle for them like he did at the Red Sea, he puts Moses on a hill with a staff and tells Joshua to go fight. And as long as Moses's hands are raised, Israel wins. When they drop, Israel loses. It's a strange battle — and it's one of the most honest pictures of what God is doing when he doesn't just fix things for us. Adrien draws on the imagery of architectural blueprints, ancient high places, and the Hebrew name Yahweh Nissi to unpack what this passage is really saying: that you are designed for dependency, given an identity you don't have to search for, and called into a victory that was already won. Key themes: Dependency as design, not weakness The four friends Moses needed (prophet, priest, servant, fighter) Identity and the high places The Exodus Way — God's pattern of brokenness, wilderness, and wholeness Yahweh Nissi: the Lord is my Banner Scripture references: Exodus 17:8–15 · Psalm 121 · Isaiah 59:19 · John 12:32 · 2 Corinthians 12:7–9 · James 1:2–4

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