"When Israel, standing on the banks of the Red Sea, looked back and saw their old masters dead upon the shore, their hearts thrilled with joy and the sands of the desert vibrated and re-vibrated as Moses led in the song of victory and deliverance. The allusion here is to the Israelites of old who, after having passed through the Red Sea dry shod, thus securing perfect and blessed deliverance from the bestial system of Egypt, stood upon the shore singing the song of Moses, Miriam and the women playing their tumbrels, while their enemies with their chariots and their chosen captains perished in the waters (Exodus 15)."
"Here is another sea — a sea of glass and fire. Here is another company, standing on another shore, that has won the victory over its enemies. Who might this company be? What might be the sea upon whose shore they sing the song of triumph and praise to their Lord and Deliverer? Methinks I have stood upon that very shore. As surely as the raging sea bespeaks multitudes of surging, clamoring, restless, sinning humanity, so does the exquisite sea of glass represent an assembled throng of transformed saints in whose hearts the spirit of the Lamb rules. This great sea of the sons of God is calm, serene, tranquil, and quiet — the bestial nature has been dealt with and these abide in the peace, joy, righteousness, and power of the kingdom of God. Ah, yes, I have stood upon that shore, yea, and do stand with an innumerable company of men and women whose faces are set and whose hearts are fixed to do only and completely the will of the Father. These are they who live and walk in the Spirit, the firstborn-destined who are being delivered from the power of the beast. The glassy sea is here mingled with fire — the fiery trials and processings by which the Father purifies His sons, sharpening their vision, whetting the appetite for things eternal and heavenly, slackening the desire for all that is earthly and worldly."
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"How the courts of heaven ring for joy as this illustrious company sings the song of Moses the servant of God! But there is a new note and a new stanza in that song. Not only is it the song of Moses but it is also the song of the Lamb! Truly this is one of the most fascinating songs mentioned in all the Word of God! The song of Moses and the Lamb — whatever can it mean? In transfixed wonder John caught the echo of this mighty anthem as it burst from the lips of those who have conquered the power of the beast — the bestial nature of man, and the bestial system of the world. It is the song of the great leader of Israel just after he and his followers had passed in safety through the Red Sea. It is the song of Moses because it voices the praise of those who, like Israel of old at the Red Sea, have been miraculously delivered from an awful tyranny and bondage."
"The seer of Patmos, who was in the spirit on the Lord’s day saw, not a company saved by free grace, but a company of full overcomers who had gotten the victory over the beast, and over his image, and over his mark, and over the number of his name. These overcomers stand upon the sea of glass mingled with fire, having been purged and purified in the consuming fire of God, now having the harps of God, and it is they who sing the song of Moses and the Lamb!"
"The Lamb is first and foremost our Lord Jesus Christ, together with the body of the Lamb, that glorious company which has followed Him all the way to mount Zion by way of mount Calvary. The song of the Lamb is not the song of sinners saved by grace, as glorious as that is; it is the song of joy out of sorrow, of peace in the midst of storm, of perfection out of suffering, of light out of darkness, of righteousness triumphing over sin, of victory snatched from the jaws of defeat, of life conquering death. It is the song of the OVERCOMER!"