The Land of Egypt
And thou shalt say unto Pharaoh, Thus saith the LORD, Israel is my son,
even my firstborn: And I say unto thee, Let my son go, that he may serve me: and if
thou refuse to let him go, behold, I will slay thy son, even thy firstborn.
Exodus 4:22 (Spoke 2, Cycle 1)
The Exodus from Egypt marks a great theme from Spoke 2. God used it to establish the
whole theme of Redemption through Christ, His Son, our Passover Lamb. Just as the
Second Psalm contains the great prophetic proclamation of
Christ as God's Son, so
the first reference in all the Bible to anyone as God's Son is found in the Second Book, as
quoted above.
This all integrates with the nature of the Second Person of the Trinity,
God the Son, and the
Bet KeyWord בן (Ben, Son).
God also designed the chapter sequence of Matthew to express the structure of the
Godhead and the Divine
Alphabet by explicitly linking Matthew 2 to
the Exodus from Egypt, saying "Out of Egypt I have called
my son." Likewise, Isaiah 2 is deeply integrated
with major themes from Exodus, such as the Giving of the Law, and with the prohibition
against idols found in the Second Commandment.
All of this manifests in the geometric correlation between Exodus and Jeremiah on the
Wheel, where the distribution of the phrase "the land of Egypt" is maximized.

This graph is exceedingly significant. The |