The Lord is a Man of War, Part 2

August 4, 2024 Pastor Chris Oswald
Thesis The God who destroys His enemies in Exodus 15 is the same God throughout Scripture, and the cross reveals His preferred means of destroying enemies by destroying them in salvation through identification with Christ's death and resurrection.
Series
The Lord is a Man of War
Type
Expository
Tone
Method
What's in this sermon

The shape of the argument

57 units across exposition, application, illustration, theological claim, and conclusion. The pastor's argument is built from these moving parts.

Pastoral correction · unit #7
"Oswald applies the catfishing illustration to the deconstruction crisis among young Christians. He argues that many have been given a false, sentimentalized picture of God and feel betrayed when they encounter the real God of Scripture — a God who executes judgment and displays wrath."
Doctrinal loci· 8 surfaced
Doxology / Worship · 11 Christology · 9 Pastoral Theology · 6 Providence / Sovereignty · 4 Sanctification · 4 Ethics / Moral Theology · 3 Spiritual Warfare · 3 Covenant Theology · 1
Bible citations· 22
Romans 3:4 | Exodus 15:3 | Exodus 15:1-2, 20-21 | Exodus 15:1-3 | Exodus 15:21 | 1 Samuel 2:1-10 | Proverbs 1:24-27 | Luke 1:46-53 | Genesis 3:15 | 1 Corinthians 15 | Psalm 110:1 | Colossians 2:13-15 | Hebrews 2:14 | Psalm 7:12-16 | Psalm 9:15-16 | Psalm 57:6 | 1 Corinthians 1:26-29 | Romans 5 | 2 Corinthians 5:14-17 | Galatians 2:20 | Luke 15:7 | Ezekiel 18:32
Illustrations· 1
  1. cultural reference · unit #6 — Oswald introduces the concept of 'catfishing' through a documentary illustration — a man falls in love with a false online persona and is devastated when he meets the real person. The illustration sets up the claim that modern Christians have been catfished with a false, overly sentimental picture of God.
Theological claims· 15
  1. The entire point of Exodus 15 is 'the Lord is a man of war,' and we must not only accept it but delight in it. unit #4
  2. Pastors who over-qualify hard passages about God's wrath remove the God of the text, contributing to deconstruction. unit #8
  3. Modern evangelical worship music has a crisis: it omits the biblical themes of God's wrath and judgment that dominate the Psalms. unit #11
  4. We should worship God for His judgment and not be embarrassed by it — the correct posture is adjustment to God, not demanding that God adjust to us. unit #16
  5. Objections to God's wrath are rooted in modernity, not femininity — people who know Scripture embrace God's judgment regardless of gender. unit #21
  6. Exodus 15 is just God being God — His pattern of violent judgment runs from Genesis 3:15 through the entire Bible. unit #26
  7. God's pattern of violent judgment is not an Old Testament phenomenon — Psalm 110:1, the most quoted Old Testament verse in the New Testament, is militaristic. unit #27
  8. God's pattern of saving and destroying is evident throughout redemptive history and into eternity — we must celebrate this, not merely tolerate it. unit #30
  9. God's method of judgment is to let His enemies destroy themselves with their own pride — this is true of Pharaoh and throughout Scripture. unit #35
  10. God sometimes uses His people as bait to destroy His enemies — this is evident in the stories of Job and Joseph. unit #36
  11. God accomplishes redemption and judgment simultaneously — He is able to walk and chew gum at the same time. unit #39
  12. The new covenant introduces a surprise: through the cross, God can simultaneously save and destroy the same person. unit #42
  13. The new covenant's surprising possibility — destroying and saving the same person — exists only because Christ took on flesh, bore God's wrath, died, and rose again. unit #44
  14. The cross is God's preferred way of destroying His enemies — He takes no pleasure in the death of the wicked but rejoices when sinners repent. unit #48
  15. Faithful gospel witness requires being unashamed of God's wrath — wrath is integral to the gospel, both as problem and solution. unit #52
Quotations· 6
"no problem passages" — a saying in evangelicalism (unit #1)
"the Bible is not the one with the problems. I am." — Chris Oswald (self-reference) (unit #1)
"I will let the word of God be true and every man a liar" — Romans 3:4 (paraphrase) (unit #2)
"This is war in earnest, not a childish play. Swords and martial music on a festal day. O thou Christian soldier, to the cause be true. In the day of battle there is work to do." — Unknown woman hymn writer (unit #22)
"Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord he is trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored. He has loosed the faithful lightning of his terrible swift sword. His truth is marching on." — Julia Ward Howe (unit #22)
"The Redeemer came and the deceiver was overcome. What did our Redeemer do to our captor? In payment for us, he set the trap. His cross, his blood for baked." — Augustine (unit #38)
Read it

Full transcript

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0 · The opening prayer invokes God's illumination and asks for both individual ministry and corporate unity

Let's pray. Lord God, as we now turn to your word, would you please open our hearts to the message you'd like us to hear through your Holy Spirit? Lord, may you minister to each and every person in this room according to to your specific purposes for them as an individual. While simultaneously, Lord, as you promised to do in Ephesians, would you build us up together so that we form an appropriate body, revealing your goodness and glory to the world? Lord, we pray that you would bless not only our church this morning, but the many other churches who are gathered in your name, who are taking your word seriously and who are trying their best to present Jesus to the world. We pray you had your blessings not only on providence, but the many churches both in this country and around the world who are gathered in your name. And we pray these things in Jesus name. Amen.

1 · Oswald introduces the framing conviction of the sermon: the resolve to have 'no problem passages' in Scripture

There's a saying going around in my particular kind of slice of evangelicalism as a pastor, and that saying is no problem. Passages no problem passages. What does that mean? Well, that simply means that I have resolved people who use this phrase, and I would use this phrase, have resolved to have no problem passages in the Bible. And that is because the Bible is not the one with the problems. I am.

2 · Oswald names the specific problem this sermon addresses: God's violence against Pharaoh and his armies in Exodus 15

And so the idea is that I'm not going to be embarrassed by any part of the Bible. Rather, I will let the word of God be true and every man a liar. We've been examining a particular part of redemptive history where God is very hard on his enemies. He's very good to his people, but he's also very hard on his enemies. He is said to have hardened Pharaoh's heart and all of that so that he might destroy Pharaoh and his armies in the Red Sea. And that's really what Exodus 15 is. Exodus 15 is an accounting of God's execution of his enemies.

3 · Oswald diagnoses a tendency in suburban evangelicalism to demand that pastors soften hard passages about God's wrath by adding sentimental qualifications

And what we have when we get to a passage like this is a very important opportunity to learn how to just take the Bible straight with no mixers. What we tend to do, whether we realize it or not, as evangelical suburban Christians in particular, is we can tend to expect our preachers to. To become kind of like college bartenders who, when they get to a passage where it's really a hard taste of God's roughness, of God's wrath, we expect the pastor to be a kind of college bartender who mixes in a bunch of sweet things so that you no longer taste the hard thing in the text.

4 · Oswald asserts that over-qualification and sentimentality ruin passages about God's wrath by obscuring their actual point

And so we have come to expect our pastors to find a certain passage like this and explain it away and qualify it and add so much. What's the word? Oh, gosh, just lost it. But just add so much sentimentality is the word I was trying to think of as to essentially ruin the entire point of the passage. The entire point of this passage is the Lord is a man of war. Deal with it. Right? That's the entire point of the passage and not only deal with it, but delight in it.

5 · Oswald points to Moses and Miriam's response in Exodus 15 as the normative model: they don't merely tolerate God's violence — they rejoice in it

Because we don't only see the description of God's executing vengeance, but we see his people represented in Moses and Miriam, not just tolerating this insight about God, but rejoicing in this insight about God. So I don't only want to see hard things in the Bible and say, well, I guess I have to put up with it. It's in the Bible after all. Well, that's not me adjusting myself to the Word, is it? What I want to do is I want to see what God says about himself and I want to rejoice in what God says about himself. Simple as that.

Where this fits

Recent preaching context

The three sermons immediately preceding this one in the preaching schedule.

Jul 25, 2024
You learn to hate sin by cultivating love for God through meditation on the cross, which is the only motivation sufficient to kill sins resistant to self-preservation and love for others.
Jul 28, 2024
God allows us to face seemingly unconquerable trials so that we might see his character as a man of war who delivers the humble and destroys the proud — truths that can only be learned in the trenches.
Exodus 13:1-15:27
Aug 1, 2024
We must maintain dual identification with both our insider privileges and outsider disadvantages, for over-identifying with either produces spiritual disaster—revolutionary destruction when we fixate on victimhood, or idolatrous hoarding when we fixate on possession.
August 4 · This sermon
The Lord is a Man of War, Part 2
The God who destroys His enemies in Exodus 15 is the same God throughout Scripture, and the cross reveals His preferred means of destroying enemies by destroying them in salvation through identification with Christ's death and resurrection.
Take it further

Discuss · apply · pray

Memory verse this week

Exodus 15:3

The Lord is a man of war; the Lord is his name.

Why this verse: This verse is the theological anchor of the entire sermon—it states plainly what the congregation must not merely accept but delight in: that God's warfare, judgment, and wrath are essential to who He is. Memorizing this declaration guards against the sentimental, truncated view of God that leads to deconstruction and positions us to worship God for the fullness of His character.

Draft · pending review
Couples · three questions over coffee

Delighting in God's Judgment

  1. What was your initial reaction to hearing that we should *delight* in God's wrath and judgment rather than merely tolerate it—and what did the sermon help clarify about that posture?
  2. Where do we as a couple tend to shrink back from the full character of God revealed in Scripture, and how might embracing His judgment together change the way we pray, worship, or raise our children?
  3. What is one aspect of God's justice and judgment that we can commit to praise Him for this week—and how can we each pray that the other will grow in unashamed celebration of His wrath toward sin?
Draft · pending review
Small-group discussion

6 questions for your group this week

  1. In Exodus 15:3, the song declares 'The Lord is a man of war.' What does it mean for God to be described as a warrior, and what was He doing in that moment that prompted Israel to sing about His warfare?
    Exodus 15:3
    → How does this description of God in Exodus compare to the way you typically hear God described in contemporary Christian worship or teaching?
  2. The sermon argues that God's pattern of judgment—destroying His enemies while saving His people—runs throughout Scripture, not just in the Old Testament. Where do you see this pattern active in the New Testament, and how does it change your understanding of the gospel?
    Psalm 110:1
  3. According to the sermon, God sometimes accomplishes both redemption and judgment simultaneously—most dramatically at the cross, where He saves sinners through the death of His own Son. How does Christ bearing God's wrath make it possible for the same person to be both destroyed and saved?
    → What does this mean for how you understand your own salvation?
  4. The sermon identifies a 'fallen condition focus': many deconstructing Christians feel deceived because they were given a sentimental, false picture of God rather than the God revealed in Scripture. Have you experienced this gap between a domesticated version of God and the God of the Bible? How does it affect your faith?
  5. If God takes no pleasure in the death of the wicked (Ezekiel 33:11) but the cross is His 'preferred way of destroying His enemies,' what is the call to us as believers who witness to others? How does the gospel message of 'choose your death' flow from understanding God's wrath?
    → What would it look like to be unashamed of God's wrath when you're sharing your faith this week?
  6. The sermon suggests that worshiping God means adjusting ourselves to who He actually is, rather than demanding that God adjust to who we want Him to be. Where in your life right now are you tempted to quarrel with God's character or His ways, and what would it mean to 'delight' in His judgment the way Israel did?
Draft · pending review
Daily readings · Monday–Friday

5-day reading plan

This week we trace the arc of God's judgment from creation through redemption: His pattern of destroying enemies while saving His people, culminating in the cross as His preferred method of salvation and judgment unified.

Monday Genesis 3:15

The protoevangelium announces judgment from the beginning: the serpent's seed will be crushed. We must not treat God's warfare as an anomaly confined to Exodus or the Old Testament—it is woven into the very fabric of redemptive history. The gospel itself is born from this promise of cosmic conflict and divine victory.

Tuesday Psalm 7:12-16

The psalmist reveals the mechanics of God's warfare: He does not always strike directly, but rather allows the wicked to dig pits into which they fall. Pharaoh's hardened heart is not unique—it is God's consistent pattern. We worship a God whose enemies are often undone by their own rebellion, which makes His judgment both just and inexorable.

Wednesday Psalm 110:1

This psalm's vision of Christ subduing His enemies appears repeatedly in the New Testament, cementing that Jesus Himself is the warrior-king who executes judgment. The earliest Christian witness embraced a militaristic Messiah. Our hesitation to celebrate God's wrath reflects modern squeamishness, not biblical faithfulness or feminine sensibility.

Thursday 2 Corinthians 5:14-17

Paul's proclamation of Christ's love constraining us speaks to the paradox: the same cross that destroys the old self simultaneously raises up the new creation. Christ bore judgment so that His enemies might become His beloved. This reversal—death and resurrection in one person—is possible only because Christ took on flesh and absorbed God's wrath. We are compelled by this grace to rejoice in a God who saves by destroying.

Friday Romans 5

Paul establishes that we were enemies of God, objects of wrath, and powerless to save ourselves—then announces that Christ's blood satisfies that wrath and reconciles us to God. The gospel makes no sense without divine judgment as the backdrop. Our witness crumbles when we hide God's wrath; it shines brightest when we proclaim that the cross addresses both our guilt and God's righteous anger, inviting all who believe to choose death to self rather than face eternal death.

Draft · pending review
Pray together this week

A Prayer to Delight in God's War

Father, we come before You with hearts humbled by the God You reveal in Scripture—not the sentimental deity of our cultural imagination, but the Lord who is a man of war, whose judgment is sure and whose wrath is just. We adore You for Your sovereignty over all things, for Your power to save and to destroy, and for Your unwavering commitment to vindicate Your own name and establish Your righteous rule (Exodus 15:3). We confess that we have often been embarrassed by Your judgment; we have softened Your words when preaching them, we have sung worship songs that omit the biblical themes of Your wrath that fill the Psalms, and we have demanded that You adjust to our modern sensibilities rather than adjusting ourselves to the God revealed in Your Word. Forgive us for this arrogance.

Yet the gospel announces that You have not compromised Your holiness. Through the cross of Christ, You accomplish the stunning redemption of destroying and saving the same person—enemies of God become children of God because Jesus took upon Himself the full weight of Your wrath that was meant for us (Romans 5; Hebrews 2:14). In His death and resurrection, Christ has become the preferred way by which You destroy Your enemies: not by their outward annihilation, but by their transformation through repentance and faith. We are humbled and grateful that His blood covers us.

Grant us grace, we pray, to embrace the full counsel of Scripture without apology or qualification. Compel us to worship You not merely for Your mercy, but to delight in Your judgment as the fitting response of a holy God to wickedness. Give us courage to proclaim the gospel faithfully—the good news that You offer sinners a choice between death to self now through faith in Christ, or eternal death later. And transform our worship, our witness, and our homes so that we celebrate Your character in its wholeness, neither embarrassed by Your wrath nor indifferent to Your compassion, but marveling that one God accomplishes both through the gospel. To You alone be glory and dominion forever.

Draft · pending review
Sunday-evening family table

When God Fights for His People

For the parent

This sermon emphasized that God's judgment and power to fight are not things to hide from or apologize for, but reasons to worship Him. Use this prompt to help your family think about a time when God protected them or stood against evil, and how that makes them want to praise Him.

In the sermon, we heard that the Lord is a man of war—He fights against evil and protects His people. Can you think of a time when you saw God fight for someone, or when you felt safe because God was protecting you? What did that make you want to do or say to God?
works for ages 6+ — younger children can share simple experiences of safety; older kids and teens can reflect on God's judgment against evil and His care
Draft · pending review
Where this was preached

About the church

Providence Community Church
Lenexa, KS
Sundays · 10:00 AM
About us · What we believe
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# Providence Community Church

A church preaching expository sermons through the books of the Bible.

## Sermons
- [How to Hate Your Sin (2024-07-25)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2024/07/how-to-hate-your-sin)
- [The Lord is a Man of War (Exodus 13:1-15:27, 2024-07-28)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2024/07/the-lord-is-a-man-of-war)
- [Insider & Outsider Status. AKA: How to Trick a Feminist (2024-08-01)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2024/08/insider-outsider-status-aka-how-to-trick-a-feminist)
- [The Lord is a Man of War, Part 2 (2024-08-04)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2024/08/the-lord-is-a-man-of-war-part-2)

## About
- [About the church](/about)
- [Plan a visit](/visit)

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