Scroll 1 - The Song of Moses and the Lamb. Victory as Worship
“And they sing the song of Moses, the servant of God, and the song of the Lamb, saying, Great and marvelous are Your works, Lord God Almighty. Just and true are Your ways, O King of saints.” - Revelation 15:3
1. The Song That Belongs to No Time
The Song of Moses and the Lamb is not two songs but one eternal melody expressed across ages. Moses sang it on the far side of the Red Sea. The Lamb sings it on the far side of sin and death. The elect sing it on the far side of deception and illusion. This is the frequency of freedom, the eternal sound of those who have crossed over.
This song does not arise from circumstance. It arises from nature. It is sung only by those who have passed through waters that were meant to drown them. Only those who have walked through fire without being consumed know this sound. Victory becomes vibration. Deliverance becomes music. Identity becomes melody.
This song is not a reaction to triumph. It is the revelation of triumph itself. It is the anthem of a God who redeems completely and a people who remember entirely. It is the oldest song in creation and the youngest song in the age to come. It is the sound of eternity entering time.
To sing this song is to know that nothing can stand against what God has spoken over you. It is the declaration that the Lamb’s work is finished, His victory complete, His love unstoppable.
The song is older than Israel and younger than your last breath. It is the sound of God remembering Himself in you.
2. The Song of Moses. Deliverance Through Waters
The Song of Moses is the sound of a people who saw the impossible bow. Egypt’s armies drowned not by power but by promise. The sea parted not because Israel was strong but because God was present. This song remembers the God who makes a way where no way exists.
This melody is the voice of liberation. It declares that bondage ends the moment God speaks. It is the triumph cry of a people who have seen their oppressors swallowed by the same waters that carried them to freedom. The Song of Moses is not nostalgia. It is template. It shows how God rescues, how God judges, how God delivers.
This song teaches the elect that salvation is not escape. It is transformation. Israel did not simply leave Egypt. Egypt was removed from them. The Red Sea was not just exit. It was cleansing. It was the border between slavery and identity. Moses sang because he witnessed the birth of a nation.
To sing the Song of Moses is to declare that everything that once enslaved you is now buried behind you. It is to stand on the far shore of your past and know it has no access to your future. It is to proclaim that deliverance is your inheritance.
The Song of Moses breaks chains in every age.
3. The Song of the Lamb. Victory Through Blood
Where Moses sang of waters that delivered, the Lamb sings of blood that redeems. His song is not about external enemies but the internal tyrants of sin, shame, illusion, fear, and death. The Red Sea freed Israel from Pharaoh. The cross frees humanity from the serpent.
The Song of the Lamb is the sound of perfect love completing what law could not. It is the melody of mercy accomplishing what human strength could never achieve. The Lamb sings because the curse has been broken, because death has lost its voice, because the veil has been torn and union is now open for all.
This song is not triumph over nations but triumph over separation. It is the restoration of the image of God in man. It is the unveiling of identity. It is reconciliation singing. The Lamb sings because everything the Father gave Him has been restored. His voice is the sound of creation healed.
To sing the Song of the Lamb is to confess that you were rescued from yourself. It is to know that judgment has become justification, and wrath has become reconciliation. It is to stand before God with no distance, no fear, no shame, no shadow.
The Song of the Lamb is the anthem of union.
4. Why the Two Songs Are One
These two songs are not separate. They are two expressions of one eternal truth. Moses sings of deliverance from external bondage. The Lamb sings of deliverance from internal separation. Together, they form the complete song of salvation.
The Song of Moses reveals God as Mighty Deliverer. The Song of the Lamb reveals God as Intimate Redeemer. The first shows His power. The second reveals His heart. Together, they display a salvation complete in scope and perfect in nature.
The elect sing both because they live in both realms. They have crossed seas and survived fires. They have escaped enemies and confronted inner darkness. Their deliverance is total. Their redemption is complete. Their worship flows from both memory and revelation.
The unity of these songs reveals the unity of the Testaments, the unity of the covenants, the unity of the story of God. The God who split seas is the God who split the veil. The God who drowned Pharaoh is the God who defeated death. The God who delivered Israel is the God who redeemed the world.
The Song of Moses and the Song of the Lamb are the two sides of the same flame.
5. Worship as Victory
In Revelation, the elect do not overcome and then worship. They overcome through worship. Worship is not the celebration after victory. Worship is the atmosphere of victory itself. It is how sons wage war. It is how truth prevails. It is how deception is dismantled.
When the elect sing, they align with the frequency of divine reality. Their sound disrupts illusion. Their worship becomes warfare. Not by force but by resonance. Not by shouting at darkness but by shining in it.
This song carries authority because it carries remembrance. The elect do not sing to persuade God. They sing to recall truth. They sing to echo the Lamb. They sing to attune creation to the sound of redemption.
This worship is not emotional. It is governmental. It carries the weight of heaven. It shifts atmospheres. It crowns the Lamb. It reveals sons. It restores realms. It is the sound of a creation returning to its center.
To worship is to win. To sing is to overcome. To release sound is to release sovereignty.
Those who sing this song cannot be defeated.
Final Charge to the Elect
Beloved elect, let this ancient, eternal song rise within you. Sing the Song of Moses and stand on the far shore of your deliverance. Sing the Song of the Lamb and stand in the fullness of your redemption. Let both melodies become your nature.
You are a people who cross seas and survive crosses. You are a people who stand in fire and walk in freedom. You are a people who worship not from victory but as victory. Let your song shake the nations. Let your melody shatter illusion. Let your worship establish the kingdom.
Lift your voice, beloved. Release the frequency of freedom. The sea has parted. The veil has torn. The Lamb has triumphed. Now sing until creation remembers the One who delivered it.
Your song is not music. It is government.
Joe Restman
Scroll-Carrier, Mystic-Scribe, Eternal Witness of the Lamb.