Moses
The Covenant Ratified and the Glory of the Lord on Sinai
The Lord formally binds redeemed Israel to Himself by His revealed word, covenant blood, mediated access, representative fellowship, and glory-filled presence.
Reading a chapter
What this page is: Each chapter page shows the big idea, the argument flow, key original-language terms, doctrine connections, and passage units, all in one place.
How to use it: Start with the Overview tab to get the chapter's main point. Then move to Passages to study individual units, or Language to trace key terms.
Going deeper: The Doctrines and Motifs tabs show how this chapter connects to the broader biblical story.
The Lord formally binds redeemed Israel to Himself by His revealed word, covenant blood, mediated access, representative fellowship, and glory-filled presence.
Exodus 24 argues that covenant relationship with the holy Lord requires revelation, response, sacrifice, blood, mediation, and divine permission for fellowship. Israel does not define the covenant; the Lord speaks it. Israel does not vaguely agree; the people hear the written covenant and pledge obedience. The covenant is not sealed by sentiment but by blood.
Israel’s leaders do not force their way into God’s presence; they ascend because God summons them. Moses then enters the glory-cloud to receive further instruction, preparing for the tabernacle where God will dwell among His people.
Israel, the covenant people redeemed from Egypt and now formally entering the Sinai covenant under the Lord’s word, blood, mediation, and presence.
Mount Sinai, following the giving of the Ten Commandments and the Book of the Covenant in Exodus 20–23.
The Lord formally binds redeemed Israel to Himself by His revealed word, covenant blood, mediated access, representative fellowship, and glory-filled presence.
Moses
Israel, the covenant people redeemed from Egypt and now formally entering the Sinai covenant under the Lord’s word, blood, mediation, and presence.
Mount Sinai, following the giving of the Ten Commandments and the Book of the Covenant in Exodus 20–23.
- Israel has heard the Lord’s covenant demands and must now formally respond. The nation stands between the grace of redemption from Egypt and the solemn obligation of covenant obedience.
Ancient covenant ratification ceremonies often included written terms, public reading, oath-response, sacrifice, blood rites, representative leaders, and a covenant meal. Exodus 24 includes these elements under the Lord’s authority.
Exodus 24 ratifies the Sinai covenant. The redeemed people pledge obedience, are sprinkled with covenant blood, and their representatives ascend to behold God and eat in His presence. The chapter also prepares for the tabernacle instructions by drawing Moses into the cloud of divine glory.
The Lord summons Moses, Aaron, Nadab, Abihu, and seventy elders; Israel pledges obedience to the Lord’s words; Moses writes, builds an altar, offers sacrifices, sprinkles covenant blood, and reads the Book of the Covenant; the people again pledge obedience; Israel’s representatives ascend, behold God, and eat; Moses then ascends higher into the cloud of glory to receive the tablets and further instruction.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Exodus 24 clarifies the gospel by showing that covenant relationship with God requires revealed word, obedience, sacrifice, blood, mediation, and gracious access. Israel’s covenant is sealed with animal blood, but the people will not keep their pledge. Christ comes as the obedient Son and greater Mediator. At the Lord’s Supper, He identifies His own blood as the blood of the covenant, poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins.
Through His once-for-all sacrifice, sinners are cleansed, brought near, and given true fellowship with God.
The Lord permits representative ascent while preserving mediated access through Moses.
Moses reports and writes the Lord’s words, and Israel pledges obedience.
Sacrifices are offered, the covenant is read, the people pledge again, and the blood seals the covenant.
Israel’s representatives behold God and eat and drink in His presence by divine mercy.
Moses ascends into the cloud to receive tablets and instruction while the glory of the Lord covers Sinai.
- 1-2: The Lord summons Moses and selected leaders, while Moses alone is permitted to approach closely.
- Israel responds to the Lord’s words with a unified pledge of obedience.
- Moses writes the Lord’s words, builds an altar, and erects twelve pillars for the tribes.
- 5-6: Burnt offerings and fellowship offerings are sacrificed, and blood is placed in bowls and on the altar.
- The covenant words are read aloud, and the people pledge obedience again.
- Moses sprinkles the people and declares the blood of the covenant.
- 9-11: Israel’s leaders ascend, behold the God of Israel, and share a covenant meal in His presence.
- 12-18: Moses ascends to receive the tablets, and the glory of the Lord covers Sinai like consuming fire.
Pastoral Entry
עָלָה is the Hebrew verb for ascent — for going up, climbing, rising, mounting, and being lifted. Its range is vast: it describes a man climbing a mountain, a people going up to worship, a king marching out to war, smoke rising from an altar, a nation coming up out of Egypt, the sun breaking over the horizon, a thought coming up in the heart, and a burnt offering being presented before God. In 894 occurrences it moves through nearly every terrain of Israelite life, which means that when the Old Testament thinks about movement, orientation, or direction toward God, this verb is almost always present.
What makes עָלָה theologically rich is that spatial ascent in the Old Testament is rarely only spatial. To go up is to draw near to God. The sanctuary sits on the mountain. Jerusalem is always approached from below. The temple mount is elevated. To ascend is to move toward the Holy — not as an abstract spiritual exercise, but as an embodied, directional act of worship. Israel went up to the three great festivals. The Psalms of Ascent (מַעֲלוֹת, Psalms 120–134) gave the pilgrim people words for the journey. Ascent was not merely geography; it was theology made physical.
At the same time, the verb carries genuine cultic weight through its use in sacrificial contexts. When עָלָה describes the burnt offering (עֹלָה), it points to what goes up completely — the whole animal consumed, ascending in smoke, rising toward God. The same verbal root underlies both the pilgrimage and the offering. Both involve movement upward, both involve cost, and both involve coming before the living God.
Pastorally, עָלָה is a word that refuses to let Israel — or the church — treat nearness to God as a passive, horizontal, or costless thing. There is a direction to worship, a journey to approach, an orientation to holiness. The preacher who sits with this verb long enough will find it challenging cheap familiarity with God while also welcoming the weary traveler who is still on the road, still ascending, still on their way to the mountain.
Sense to ascend, go up
Definition To go up or ascend.
References Exodus 24:1, 9, 12, 13, 15, 18
Lexicon to ascend, go up
Why it matters Access to the Lord at Sinai is described through ascent, but only by divine summons.
Pastoral Entry
שָׁחָה (šāḥāh) is the primary Hebrew verb for worship, and its physical character is essential to its meaning: it means to bow down, to prostrate oneself, to bring the body to the ground in an act of reverence, honor, and submission. The posture of šāḥāh is not merely metaphorical — it is the physical enactment of the theological conviction that the one before whom you bow down is greater, holier, and more worthy than you.
In the OT, šāḥāh is used for both worship directed to God (the legitimate object) and idolatrous prostration before false gods (the forbidden use), and the vocabulary is identical — showing that the issue is not the act of prostration itself but the object of the prostration. The most common OT collocation is wayyiqqōd wayyišttaḥû — 'and he bowed and prostrated himself' — appearing as a combined formula of respectful submission before superiors, which in the divine context becomes the definitive act of worship.
The first commandment's prohibition of other gods and the second commandment's prohibition of images are both enforced precisely by the šāḥāh prohibition: 'you shall not bow down (lōʾ tišttaḥweh) to them or serve them' (Exod 20:5). The NT's proskyneō (G4352) is the direct Greek equivalent — to bow, to prostrate, to worship — and it carries the same range: prostration before Jesus as an act of recognition of his divine identity (Matt 2:2,11; 28:9,17), and the eschatological universal prostration of every knee before the name of Jesus (Phil 2:10).
Sense to bow down, worship
Definition To bow in reverence or worship.
References Exodus 24:1
Lexicon to bow down, worship
Why it matters The representatives are permitted to worship the Lord from a distance.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense alone, by himself
Definition Alone or separately.
References Exodus 24:2
Lexicon alone, by himself
Why it matters Moses alone approaches the Lord closely, emphasizing mediation.
Pastoral Entry
דָּבָר (dabar) is one of the most theologically rich words in the Hebrew Bible. The same word covers 'word' in the sense of spoken utterance, 'matter' or 'thing' in the sense of a real-world event, and 'affair' in the sense of a legal or administrative case. The range itself is significant: in Hebrew thought, a dabar is not merely a sound or a symbol but a living reality that connects speech and event, utterance and outcome.
The dabar YHWH (word of the Lord) is the primary theological use — the formula that introduces prophetic speech throughout the OT ('the word of the Lord came to me,' Jer 1:4; Ezek 1:3; etc.). The word of the Lord is not merely information about God's intentions; it is the active agency of God Himself entering history. When God speaks, things happen: Genesis 1 creates by dabar — 'God said, "Let there be light," and there was light.' The dabar of God does not describe a reality that already exists; it creates the reality it names.
Isaiah 40:8 gives the dabar its most famous statement of permanence: 'The grass withers, the flower fades, but the word (dabar) of our God will stand forever.' In context, this is a promise about the reliability of God's purposes for Israel — the imperial powers and their words will pass away, but God's dabar will not. The NT reads this as the ground for the gospel's permanence (1 Pet 1:24-25 quotes Isa 40:8 for 'the living and abiding word of God' by which people are born again).
Psalm 119 is the OT's most sustained meditation on the dabar of God — 176 verses of engagement with the word, instruction, statutes, and commands. The central claim running through all 22 stanzas is that the dabar of God is the source of life, wisdom, comfort, and orientation. 'I have stored up your word (dabar) in my heart, that I might not sin against you' (Ps 119:11). The dabar is not merely read but internalized — hidden in the heart where it becomes the motivation for faithful living.
For the preacher, דָּבָר is the word that insists God speaks and that His speech does things. The sermon is not commentary on the word; it is the continued vehicle of the word's active agency in the congregation.
Sense words, matters, commands
Definition Words, matters, or commands.
References Exodus 24:3-4, 8
Lexicon words, matters, commands
Why it matters The covenant is founded on all the words the Lord has spoken.
Pastoral Entry
מִשְׁפָּט is one of the great load-bearing words of the Old Testament, with the local OT index currently counting about 424 uses and carrying a range of meaning that English forces us to spread across several words: justice, judgment, ordinance, legal right, custom, due order. The breadth is not imprecision — it reflects the Hebrew imagination that saw these as related aspects of ordered covenant life.
At its judicial core, מִשְׁפָּט names the act of rendering a verdict — the formal determination of what is right in a contested situation, pronounced by someone with authority to settle it. It can cover the arc of a legal matter: the case brought, the hearing held, the sentence declared, and the penalty carried out. In Israel's public life, מִשְׁפָּט named the work of judges at the gate, the decisions of kings in their courts, and the ordinances by which the community ordered itself.
But מִשְׁפָּט is more than procedural correctness. The prophets reveal that it names God's own character expressed in the ordering of human society. When justice flows down like water, it is not merely a reform agenda — it is the shape of God's rule made visible in the world. The word carries weight on both sides: it protects those who are wronged, giving them what is their due, and it confronts those who bend the process in favor of power. In this sense מִשְׁפָּט is covenant justice — the justice that belongs to a God who is neither partial nor purchasable.
Pastorally, the word resists reduction. It cannot be domesticated into private virtue alone or inflated into a vague social cause. מִשְׁפָּט is concrete and relational: a widow receiving what is owed her, an orphan's case heard fairly, a poor man's dignity defended at the gate, a people whose king governs in the fear of God. And because God himself is described as a lover of מִשְׁפָּט, the word finally names not merely an obligation but a delight — justice that springs from who God is and that he calls his people to embody.
Sense judgments, laws, ordinances
Definition Judgments or legal ordinances.
References Exodus 24:3
Lexicon judgments, laws, ordinances
Why it matters The Book of the Covenant includes the Lord’s judicial instructions for Israel’s life.
Pastoral Entry
עָשָׂה (asah) is the foundational Hebrew verb for doing and making — the local Hebrew index currently counts about 2,640 occurrences, and it carries the full weight of creation, covenant-keeping, and covenant-breaking from Genesis to Malachi. When God makes the world (Gen 1:7, 25), when Noah does everything YHWH commanded (Gen 6:22), when Israel is called to do what is good in YHWH's sight (Deut 6:18), and when YHWH does wonders (Ps 77:14) — all of it is asah.
Genesis 1-2 gives asah its creation-weight: the phrase 'and God made' (vayaas Elohim) punctuates the creation narrative as YHWH acts to bring into being what was not. The firmament, the animals, the luminaries, the entire order of creation — all are asah. Genesis 2:2 closes the creative work: 'on the seventh day God finished his work (melakah, H4399) that he had made (asah), and he rested.' The creation is YHWH's asah; the Sabbath is the cessation of that asah. The asah of Genesis 1 becomes the pattern for Israel's asah in Exodus 20:11: 'for in six days YHWH made (asah) the heavens and the earth, the sea and all that is in them, and rested on the seventh day.' Israel's Sabbath-keeping is a participation in the rhythm of the divine asah.
Genesis 6:22 gives asah its covenant-obedience form: 'Noah did (vayaas) according to all that God commanded him; so he did (ken asah).' Noah's asah is the OT prototype of covenant-keeping: when YHWH commands, the covenant partner does exactly as commanded. The double emphasis ('he did exactly so, he did') is the OT formula for unqualified obedience — the full correspondence between the divine command and the human asah.
Deuteronomy 6:18 gives asah its land-covenant use: 'And you shall do (asah) what is right and good in the sight of YHWH, that it may go well with you, and that you may go in and take possession of the good land.' The entire covenant obligation can be compressed into the asah: do what is right and good before YHWH. The covenant blessings (land, well-being, long life) flow from the asah; the curses flow from failing to asah.
Micah 6:8 gives asah its ethical-covenant peak: 'what does YHWH require of you but to asah justice, to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?' The asah of Micah 6:8 is the first of three requirements — and it is the most concrete: justice (mishpat) must be done, not merely believed in or affirmed. The asah of justice is the embodied covenant life in the public square.
Psalm 118:23 gives asah its doxological use: 'This is YHWH's doing (asah); it is marvelous in our eyes.' The stone rejected by the builders has become the cornerstone (v. 22) — and Israel's response is to name what YHWH has done: this is his asah. YHWH's asah includes not just creation and command but the unexpected reversals of redemptive history — the things that are marvelous (niflaot) precisely because no human asah could produce them.
For the preacher, עָשָׂה (asah) gives the congregation the active character of both divine and human covenant life. YHWH is a God who does; his people are called to do. The faith that does not asah is not the faith of Noah, Abraham, Israel, or David. And the highest human asah is still responsive: it is always 'according to all that YHWH commanded him, so he did.'
Sense we will do
Definition To do, make, or perform.
References Exodus 24:3, 7
Lexicon we will do
Why it matters Israel publicly pledges obedience to the Lord’s covenant words.
Sense to write
Definition To write or record.
References Exodus 24:4
Lexicon to write
Why it matters Moses writes the Lord’s words, giving the covenant a durable textual form.
Pastoral Entry
מִזְבֵּחַ (mizbeach) is the Hebrew word for altar — the place of sacrifice. It derives from the root zabach (to slaughter, to sacrifice), and the local Hebrew index currently counts about 403 occurrences. The mizbeach is the point at which the gap between the holy God and the sinful person is addressed: through the sacrifice on the altar, the worshipper comes to God not on their own terms but on the terms God has provided. The altar texts repeatedly state how approach to God works — not through human achievement but through sacrifice.
Genesis 22:9 is the OT's most theologically dense altar text: 'Abraham built the mizbeach there and laid the wood in order and bound Isaac his son and laid him on the mizbeach, on top of the wood.' The mizbeach of Moriah is where the theology of substitutionary sacrifice takes its most compressed narrative form: the son is bound, the knife is raised, and then God provides the ram caught in the thicket (22:13). The mizbeach that was built for Isaac becomes the mizbeach on which a substitute is offered. The NT reads this as the most explicit OT anticipation of the cross — where the Son is offered and where God himself provides the substitute.
Exodus 20:24-25 gives the basic theology of the mizbeach: 'An altar (mizbeach) of earth you shall make for me and sacrifice on it your burnt offerings and your peace offerings... If you make me an altar of stone, you shall not build it of hewn stones, for if you wield your tool on it you profane it.' The mizbeach belongs to God, is built according to God's specification, and cannot be improved by human craftsmanship — the hewn stone profanes it. The altar is God's provision for approach, not a human achievement.
Malachi 1:7-10 is the OT's most pointed prophetic critique of the mizbeach: 'You offer polluted food on my altar (mizbeach)... You have profaned it by thinking the Lord's table may be despised.' The priests are bringing blind, lame, and sick animals — the ones that can't be sold — as if the mizbeach is a waste disposal rather than a place of costly worship. The prophetic rebuke makes explicit what the altar always required: the best, not the leftovers. The theology of the mizbeach is inseparable from the theology of the offering placed on it.
For the preacher, מִזְבֵּחַ (mizbeach) is the word that insists approach to God is never on our own terms: it requires a sacrifice that God provides and accepts, and the worship placed on the altar must be the best, not the remainder.
Sense altar
Definition A place of sacrifice and worship.
References Exodus 24:4, 6
Lexicon altar
Why it matters The altar stands at the center of the covenant ratification ceremony.
Sense pillar, standing stone
Definition A standing stone or pillar.
References Exodus 24:4
Lexicon pillar, standing stone
Why it matters The twelve pillars represent the twelve tribes in the covenant ceremony.
Pastoral Entry
עֹלָה is the Hebrew noun for the burnt offering — but the etymology reveals something the English word 'burnt offering' obscures. עֹלָה derives from the verb עָלָה (to go up, to ascend), and BDB's most basic definition is 'what goes up' — the offering that ascends in smoke from the altar toward heaven. The burnt offering is the ascent offering: the entire animal is consumed by fire and goes up to God; nothing is retained for the worshipper or the priest.
This totality distinguishes the עֹלָה from other sacrifices. The peace offering (שֶׁלֶם) was shared between God, priest, and worshipper. The sin offering (חַטָּאָה, H2403) addressed specific transgressions. But the עֹלָה is the total consecration: the entire animal ascending, nothing held back. עֹלָה is locally indexed at about 289 occurrences in the OT and is the most frequently mentioned sacrifice in the Pentateuch.
It is the sacrifice of Noah after the flood (Gen 8:20), the sacrifice Abraham intends on Mount Moriah (Gen 22:2-13), the sacrifice that begins the Sinai covenant (Exod 20:24), the twice-daily Tamid offering that marked the regular temple calendar (Exod 29:38-42), and the sacrifice Israel offers at the beginning of major covenant events throughout the OT. The NT application of עֹלָה is christological through the book of Hebrews: Hebrews 10:5-10 cites Psalm 40:6-8 ('sacrifice and offering you did not desire, but a body you have prepared for me...
I have come to do your will, O God') and applies it to Christ as the one whose עֹלָה-like self-offering accomplishes what the animal sacrifices could not. The עֹלָה theology is totality: nothing held back, everything ascending, the worshipper's entire self committed in the ascending sacrifice.
Sense burnt offerings
Definition Offerings wholly burned to the LORD.
References Exodus 24:5
Lexicon burnt offerings
Why it matters Burnt offerings are part of the sacrificial worship in the covenant ratification.
Sense peace offerings, fellowship offerings
Definition Sacrifices associated with peace, fellowship, and covenant communion.
References Exodus 24:5
Lexicon peace offerings, fellowship offerings
Why it matters Fellowship offerings fit the covenant meal and communion theme of the chapter.
Pastoral Entry
דָּם is the OT's word for blood in all its theological dimensions — life, death, covenant, and atonement. Lev 17:11 is the load-bearing verse: 'the life of the flesh is in the blood, and I have given it for you on the altar to make atonement for your souls, for it is the blood that makes atonement by the life.' The logic is precise: because blood is life, the shedding of blood is the giving of life in substitution.
The animal's life is given in place of the worshiper's. This is why the prohibition on eating blood (Lev 17:14; Deut 12:23) is so strict — blood belongs to God because life belongs to God. The covenant-blood at Sinai (Exod 24:8, Moses sprinkling the people: 'Behold the blood of the covenant that the Lord has made with you') shows the other dimension: דָּם does not only deal with sin, it seals relationship.
The same substance that atones also binds. This dual function explains the NT's use of Christ's blood: it is simultaneously the ransom that deals with sin (Heb 9:14) and the new covenant seal (Luke 22:20; 1 Cor 11:25).
Sense blood
Definition Blood, representing life and covenant seriousness.
References Exodus 24:6, 8
Lexicon blood
Why it matters Blood ratifies the covenant and is applied to altar and people.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense Book of the Covenant
Definition The written covenant document containing the LORD’s words and laws.
References Exodus 24:7
Lexicon Book of the Covenant
Why it matters The covenant is read aloud before the people pledge obedience and receive the blood.
Pastoral Entry
שָׁמַע is among the most theologically important verbs in the Hebrew Bible because it holds together what English separates: hearing and obeying. In Hebrew, to šāmaʿ to someone is not merely to receive audio input; it is to hear in a way that results in a response. The same verb describes physical hearing (Gen 3:10: Adam heard the sound of the Lord), understanding (Gen 11:7: so that they may not understand one another's speech), and obedience (Exod 19:5: if you will indeed obey my voice).
The theological weight of this semantic fusion is immense: the God who speaks expects a šāmaʿ that moves, not merely a šāmaʿ that registers. The Shema of Deuteronomy 6:4 — Shĕmaʿ Yiśrāʾēl, YHWH ʾĕlōhênû YHWH ʾeḥād — is one of the most important sentences in the OT. Its imperative is šāmaʿ. Israel is summoned not merely to hear a proposition about divine unity but to hear-and-obey the reality that the Lord alone is God.
Covenant renewal in the OT is repeatedly framed as a call to shama; apostasy is frequently characterized as not hearing, not heeding, refusing to listen. The prophets diagnose Israel's failure in šāmaʿ terms: 'they have ears but do not hear' (Jer 5:21; Ezek 12:2). Jesus takes this language directly: 'he who has ears to hear, let him hear' (Matt 11:15; 13:9) — the repeated call to šāmaʿ that characterizes prophetic address, applied to the hearing of the kingdom.
Sense we will hear, listen, obey
Definition To hear with obedient response.
References Exodus 24:7
Lexicon we will hear, listen, obey
Why it matters Israel pledges not only to do but to listen and obey the Lord’s covenant.
Sense to sprinkle, toss, throw
Definition To sprinkle or throw liquid, often blood in ritual context.
References Exodus 24:8
Lexicon to sprinkle, toss, throw
Why it matters Moses sprinkles the blood on the people as covenant ratification.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Pastoral Entry
בְּרִית (berit) is the Hebrew Bible's primary word for covenant — the formal relational bond that establishes binding obligations between parties. The local Hebrew index currently counts about 284 occurrences, spanning human covenants (treaties, alliances) and the central theological reality of God's binding commitment to His people. The word's etymology is debated, but its usage is consistent: a berit is a sworn, binding relationship that reshapes the entire future of those who enter it.
The covenant structure of the OT is the spine of the entire biblical narrative. God's covenants with Noah, Abraham, Moses, David, and the promise of a new covenant (Jeremiah 31) are not independent events but a single, developing story of God's commitment to restore creation through a particular people. Each covenant adds to and builds on what preceded it: the Noahic covenant is cosmic (with all creation); the Abrahamic is particular (with one family for the sake of all); the Sinaitic is constitutive (the covenant community's life and worship); the Davidic is royal (the king through whom the covenant's promises will be mediated); the new covenant is consummating (the inner transformation that all the others pointed toward).
Genesis 15 is the most dramatic covenant-making scene in Scripture: God passes through the divided animals as a smoking firepot and flaming torch, taking on Himself the covenant curse if the covenant is broken. In the ancient Near East, both parties to a treaty would pass through divided animals, invoking the curse on the breaker. God alone passes through — making the covenant unilaterally His own responsibility. This is the theological heart of biblical covenant: God binds Himself to His promises in a way that goes beyond mere promise to the assumption of the covenant's consequences.
Jeremiah 31:31-34 prophesies the new covenant that addresses the old covenant's failure: 'I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts... they shall all know me, from the least of them to the greatest... for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.' The new covenant resolves what the Sinai covenant exposed: that external law-giving cannot produce internal covenant loyalty. The new covenant writes what the old could only command.
For the preacher, בְּרִית is the word that names the non-negotiable relational commitment at the center of the biblical story — God's binding of Himself to His people, which reaches its fullest expression in the blood of Christ, 'the blood of the new covenant' (Mat 26:28).
Sense covenant
Definition A solemn binding relationship established by oath, word, and obligation.
References Exodus 24:7-8
Lexicon covenant
Why it matters The chapter formally ratifies the covenant between the Lord and Israel.
Pastoral Entry
רָאָה is one of the most common verbs in the Hebrew Bible, currently counted by the local OT index at about 1,314 uses, and its range reaches far beyond the physical act of seeing. In Hebrew thought, to see is to perceive, to experience, to know by direct encounter. The same verb covers a shepherd seeing a flock (Gen 29:2), a prophet receiving a vision (Isa 1:1 — the superscription says 'the vision that Isaiah son of Amoz saw'), God seeing the affliction of his people (Exod 3:7), and the worshipper seeing the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living (Ps 27:13).
This semantic range is not loose usage; it reflects a conviction that genuine perception is more than optical reception — it involves the whole person. The theologically decisive uses of rāʾâh concern what God sees and what God is seen doing. Hagar's naming of the well as Beer-lahai-roi — 'the well of the one who sees me' — after her encounter in the wilderness is the first explicit divine-seeing narrative: 'You are a God who sees' (Gen 16:13).
This is not merely surveillance; it is attentive, redemptive presence. The God of Israel sees the affliction of his people before acting (Exod 3:7; Exod 2:25), sees the heart when humans see only the outward appearance (1 Sam 16:7), and promises that the pure in heart will see him (Ps 24:6; Matt 5:8). The prophetic use of rāʾâh is equally foundational: the prophets are 'seers' (rōʾîm, the active participle), and their role is to see what others cannot — the divine perspective on human events.
To have vision is to have rāʾâh from God's point of view.
Sense to see, behold
Definition To see or behold.
References Exodus 24:10-11
Lexicon to see, behold
Why it matters Israel’s representatives behold the God of Israel by divine permission.
Sense God of Israel
Definition The covenant God who has redeemed and claimed Israel.
References Exodus 24:10
Lexicon God of Israel
Why it matters The covenant representatives behold the God who has bound Israel to Himself.
Sense sapphire, lapis lazuli
Definition A blue precious stone, often associated with brilliance and heavenly imagery.
References Exodus 24:10
Lexicon sapphire, lapis lazuli
Why it matters The pavement under God’s feet is described with radiant blue clarity and majesty.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense to stretch out the hand
Definition To send or stretch out the hand, often in action or judgment.
References Exodus 24:11
Lexicon to stretch out the hand
Why it matters God does not stretch out His hand against the leaders, showing merciful permission for fellowship.
Sense to eat and drink
Definition To share a meal.
References Exodus 24:11
Lexicon to eat and drink
Why it matters Eating and drinking before God signals covenant fellowship after ratification.
Sense stone tablets
Definition Stone tablets bearing the LORD’s law and commandments.
References Exodus 24:12
Lexicon stone tablets
Why it matters The tablets provide durable covenant testimony and instruction for Israel.
Pastoral Entry
תּוֹרָה is not a burden — at least, not in its own self-understanding. Ps 119:97 ('Oh how I love your law! It is my meditation all the day') and Ps 1:2 ('his delight is in the law of the Lord, and on his law he meditates day and night') describe תּוֹרָה as the object of love and delight, not merely obligation. The root meaning — direction, instruction, what is pointed out — frames it as the gift of a teacher to a student, not the edict of a tyrant to a subject.
YHWH gives תּוֹרָה as the covenant people's guide for life in the land; it is the shape of covenant loyalty. Deut 33:4 ('Moses commanded us a law') names it as Israel's possession — תּוֹרָה is part of what Israel is given when it is constituted as YHWH's people. The prophets' critique (Isa 1:10; Hos 4:6: 'my people are destroyed for lack of knowledge; because you have rejected knowledge, I reject you from being a priest to me; and since you have forgotten the law of your God, I also will forget your children') is not of תּוֹרָה itself but of Israel's abandonment of it.
The NT's relationship to תּוֹרָה is not simple abolition: Matt 5:17-18 ('I have not come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them') is Jesus' direct address to the question, and the answer is fulfillment.
Sense law, instruction, teaching
Definition Instruction or teaching from the LORD.
References Exodus 24:12
Lexicon law, instruction, teaching
Why it matters The tablets contain instruction for the covenant people.
Pastoral Entry
מִצְוָה (mitsvah) is the Hebrew word for commandment — the specific directive from YHWH to his covenant people that defines faithful life. The local Hebrew artifact indexes it at about 184 occurrences, concentrated in the Torah and Psalm 119. The mitsvah is not a constraint on freedom but the form in which covenant relationship expresses itself: to have a mitsvah is to stand in relationship with the One who gives it.
Deuteronomy 6:25 gives mitsvah its most important relational-theological framing: 'And it will be righteousness for us, if we are careful to do all this mitsvah before YHWH our God, as he has commanded us.' The mitsvah done before YHWH produces tsedaqah (righteousness) — not as merit but as conformity to the covenant relationship. The mitsvah is the shape of the relationship, and doing it before YHWH is the lived form of covenant faithfulness. The preceding verses (Deut 6:4-9, the Shema) establish the context: 'Hear, O Israel: YHWH our God, YHWH is one. You shall love YHWH your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart.' The mitsvot flow from the Shema: they are the practical expression of the love commanded in verse 5.
Numbers 15:39 gives mitsvah its memory-and-holiness function: the tassels (tsitsit) on garments are for Israel 'to look at and remember all the mitsvot of YHWH and do them, not following after your own heart and your own eyes, which you are inclined to whore after. So you shall remember and do all my mitsvot, and be holy to your God.' The mitsvot remembered and done is the path to holiness — the tsitsit are a physical mnemonic for the mitsvot, and the mitsvot are the content of covenant holiness.
Psalm 119 is the supreme meditation on mitsvah, using it as one of eight synonyms for YHWH's word throughout the psalm's 176 verses. Verse 35: 'Make me walk in the path of your mitsvot, for I delight in it.' Verse 47: 'I will delight myself in your mitsvot, which I have loved.' Verse 93: 'I will never forget your precepts, for with them you have revived me.' The mitsvah in Psalm 119 is not experienced as burden but as life: the psalmist meditates on it all day (v. 97), it is sweeter than honey (v. 103), and the soul that walks in it is revived (v. 93).
Exodus 20:6 and Deuteronomy 7:9 give mitsvah its love-and-covenant-keeping framing: YHWH shows 'steadfast love (hesed) to thousands of those who love me and keep my mitsvot.' The mitsvah is the covenant-keeping side of the love-relationship — not the condition of love but the natural expression of it. Those who love YHWH keep his mitsvot; those who keep his mitsvot receive his hesed to a thousand generations.
For the preacher, מִצְוָה (mitsvah) is the specific form of covenant love: the mitsvah is not law imposed on strangers but direction given to the beloved. The New Testament's 'new commandment' — love one another as I have loved you (John 13:34) — is the NT mitsvah, and Jesus's summary of 'all the law and the prophets' in the two great mitsvot (Matt 22:36-40) is the heart of the covenant relationship given its clearest possible form.
Sense commandment
Definition Command or commandment.
References Exodus 24:12
Lexicon commandment
Why it matters The Lord writes commandments for Israel’s instruction.
Sense cloud
Definition A cloud, here marking the LORD’s presence and glory.
References Exodus 24:15-18
Lexicon cloud
Why it matters The cloud covers Sinai and Moses enters it to meet with the Lord.
Pastoral Entry
כָּבוֹד is the Hebrew word most closely translated as glory, but the English word does not carry the full freight. The root meaning is weight, heaviness, something that presses down because of its sheer substance. In its human dimension, kabod describes the honor, reputation, and splendor that belongs to a person of standing: the wealth of a king, the dignity of a noble family, the visible manifestation of power and worth. But it is in its divine dimension that the word becomes one of the most theologically loaded in the entire Hebrew Bible.
The kabod of the Lord is not merely a quality He possesses. It is His active, visible, weighty self-disclosure. When God's glory fills the tabernacle, the priests cannot stand to minister. When His glory passes before Moses on the mountain, Moses must be shielded in the rock. When His glory fills the temple at Solomon's dedication, the whole house is consumed with cloud and fire. This is not metaphor. It is what happens when the weight of God's presence enters a space where human beings are present. Kabod describes the radiant, manifest, concrete reality of the living God making Himself known, and what that encounter actually costs those who stand near it.
The theological arc of kabod runs through departure and return. In 1 Samuel 4, when the ark is captured, the dying wife of Phinehas names her newborn Ichabod: the glory has departed. The name is a wound, a recognition that Israel without God's presence is not Israel at all. Ezekiel then carries this logic to its most devastating expression: in chapters 8 through 11, the kabod of the Lord rises from the cherubim, moves to the threshold of the temple, pauses at the east gate, and finally departs the city. The departure is measured and sorrowful. God does not leave in anger without warning. He leaves stage by stage, grieved by what He has seen in the sanctuary. And then, in chapters 43 and 44, the glory returns, streaming from the east, filling the restored temple, the voice of God like the sound of many waters. The return is the whole hope of the prophet.
For the New Testament, the glory of God finds its fullest and most unexpected expression in a manger and on a cross. John 1:14 uses the Greek word δόξα, the LXX translation of kabod: the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen His glory. The tent-language is deliberate. He tabernacled among us, and the kabod that filled the desert sanctuary now filled a human body. At the transfiguration, the disciples see it briefly on a mountain. At the cross, what looks like loss is the glorification of the Son. The word that began as weight carries through the entire canon to land in the person of Jesus Christ.
Sense glory, weight, honor
Definition The weighty manifestation of the LORD’s presence.
References Exodus 24:16-17
Lexicon glory, weight, honor
Why it matters The glory of the Lord settles on Sinai and appears like consuming fire.
Sense to dwell, settle, abide
Definition To dwell, settle, or abide.
References Exodus 24:16
Lexicon to dwell, settle, abide
Why it matters The glory of the Lord settles on Sinai, anticipating the later dwelling presence in the tabernacle.
Sense consuming fire
Definition A fire that devours or consumes.
References Exodus 24:17
Lexicon consuming fire
Why it matters The Lord’s glory appears to Israel as consuming fire, emphasizing His holiness.
Sense forty days and forty nights
Definition A forty-day and forty-night period.
References Exodus 24:18
Lexicon forty days and forty nights
Why it matters Moses remains on the mountain for a major period of revelation and preparation.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
| v.1 | H559אָמַרQal · Perfect · IndicativeH5927עָלָהQal · Imperative · Imperative |
| v.11 | H7971שָׁלַחQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.12 | H5927עָלָהQal · Imperative · ImperativeH3789כָּתַבQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.14 | H559אָמַרQal · Perfect · IndicativeH3427יָשַׁבQal · Imperative · ImperativeH7725שׁוּבQal · Imperfect · Indicative/cohortativeH5066נָגַשׁQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.17 | H398אָכַלQal · Participle |
| v.2 | H5066נָגַשׁQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH5927עָלָהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.3 | H1696דָבַרPiel · Perfect · IndicativeH6213עָשָׂהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/cohortative |
| v.6 | H2236זָרַקQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.7 | H1696דָבַרPiel · Perfect · IndicativeH6213עָשָׂהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/cohortative |
| v.8 | H3772כָּרַתQal · Perfect · Indicative |
Aspect in Hebrew is grammatical form, not tense. Perfect = completed action; Imperfect = incomplete/ongoing. Stem modifies action type (Qal=simple, Niphal=passive, Piel=intensive).
Morphology: OSHB WLC (Open Scriptures, CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible TEHMC (Tyndale House, CC BY 4.0)
Theological Argument
Exodus 24 argues that covenant relationship with the holy Lord requires revelation, response, sacrifice, blood, mediation, and divine permission for fellowship. Israel does not define the covenant; the Lord speaks it. Israel does not vaguely agree; the people hear the written covenant and pledge obedience. The covenant is not sealed by sentiment but by blood.
Israel’s leaders do not force their way into God’s presence; they ascend because God summons them. Moses then enters the glory-cloud to receive further instruction, preparing for the tabernacle where God will dwell among His people.
From summoned representatives, to public covenant pledge, to written covenant record, to sacrifice and blood, to covenant meal, to Moses entering the glory-cloud.
- 1.Access to the LORD is granted by His command and regulated through mediation.
- 2.The covenant is grounded in the LORD’s spoken and written words.
- 3.Israel’s covenant response requires public, corporate obedience.
- 4.The covenant is ratified through sacrifice and blood.
- 5.The holy God graciously permits covenant fellowship with representative leaders.
- 6.Moses’ ascent into glory prepares for the tablets and the LORD’s dwelling instructions.
Theological Focus
- Covenant ratification
- Mediation
- Written revelation
- Public obedience
- Sacrifice
- Blood of the covenant
- Representative leadership
- Covenant meal
- Vision of God
- The glory of the Lord
- Tablets of stone
- Cloud and consuming fire
- Forty days and forty nights
- Covenant is based on God’s word
- Obedience is publicly pledged
- Blood ratifies covenant
- Mediation governs access
- Representation before God
- Covenant fellowship is gracious
- The glory of the Lord is consuming
- Instruction continues after ratification
- The mountain becomes a meeting place
- Holy nearness requires divine permission
- Covenant
- Revelation
- Blood of the Covenant
- Corporate Obedience
- Divine Fellowship
- Divine Glory
- Christological Fulfillment
Theological Themes
Moses speaks, writes, and reads the Lord’s words before the people are bound by covenant blood.
Israel twice declares that they will obey everything the Lord has said.
The covenant is sealed with sacrificial blood applied to altar and people.
Moses alone approaches closely, while others worship at a distance by divine permission.
The seventy elders, Aaron, Nadab, and Abihu represent Israel before the Lord.
The leaders see God and eat and drink, yet God does not strike them.
To Israel, the Lord’s glory appears like consuming fire on the mountain.
Moses ascends to receive the tablets and further instruction for the people.
Sinai is the place where God reveals, covenants, feeds, and instructs through mediation.
The leaders come near only because the Lord summons them and spares them.
Covenant Significance
Exodus 24 is the covenant-ratification chapter of Sinai. The Book of the Covenant is written and read. Israel pledges obedience. Sacrifices are offered. Blood is applied to the altar and the people. The covenant is sealed according to the Lord’s words. The representative meal before God shows that covenant is not only obligation but fellowship. Moses’ ascent for the tablets prepares for the covenant’s durable written witness and the tabernacle instructions.
- Covenant words - The Lord’s words are spoken, written, and read to the people.
- Covenant pledge - The people publicly promise obedience to everything the Lord has said.
- Covenant blood - The blood of sacrifice ratifies the covenant between the Lord and Israel.
- Covenant representatives - Aaron, Nadab, Abihu, and seventy elders ascend as representatives of Israel.
- Covenant fellowship - The leaders see God and eat and drink in His presence.
- Covenant tablets - Moses ascends to receive stone tablets written for Israel’s instruction.
- Exodus 19:4-8 - Israel first pledged obedience when the Lord declared their covenant calling.
- Exodus 20:1-17 - The Ten Commandments form the core covenant words that precede ratification.
- Exodus 21:1-23:33 - The Book of the Covenant is the covenant law collection read before the people.
- Exodus 31:18 - The Lord later gives Moses the two tablets of the covenant law, written by the finger of God.
- Exodus 34:27-28 - After the golden calf, the covenant is renewed and Moses again remains before the Lord forty days and forty nights.
Canonical Connections
The phrase becomes central to later biblical covenant theology and is taken up by Jesus at the Lord’s Supper.
Eating in God’s presence anticipates later themes of fellowship meals before the Lord and eschatological banquet hope.
Moses’ unique ascent anticipates the need for mediation fulfilled in Christ.
The cloud of the Lord’s glory continues into the tabernacle and temple presence theology.
The tablets become the written covenant testimony and later expose Israel’s covenant breach.
Moses’ forty days becomes a significant biblical pattern of testing, revelation, and preparation.
Cross References
Moses called to all Israel, and said to them, “Hear, Israel, the statutes and the ordinances which I speak in your ears today, that you may learn them, and observe to do them.” Yahweh our God made a covenant with us in Horeb. Yahweh didn’t...
He said to Abram, “I am Yahweh who brought you out of Ur of the Chaldees, to give you this land to inherit it.” He said, “Lord Yahweh, how will I know that I will inherit it?” He said to him, “Bring me a heifer three years old, a female...
When Abram was ninety-nine years old, Yahweh appeared to Abram and said to him, “I am God Almighty. Walk before me and be blameless. I will make my covenant between me and you, and will multiply you exceedingly.” Abram fell on his face....
For the life of the flesh is in the blood. I have given it to you on the altar to make atonement for your souls; for it is the blood that makes atonement by reason of the life.
Canon-Wide Connections
Cross-reference data: OpenBible.info (CC BY 4.0)
Exodus 24 clarifies the gospel by showing that covenant relationship with God requires revealed word, obedience, sacrifice, blood, mediation, and gracious access. Israel’s covenant is sealed with animal blood, but the people will not keep their pledge. Christ comes as the obedient Son and greater Mediator. At the Lord’s Supper, He identifies His own blood as the blood of the covenant, poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins.
Through His once-for-all sacrifice, sinners are cleansed, brought near, and given true fellowship with God.
- God speaks the covenant - The covenant begins with the Lord’s revealed words, not human religious invention.
- Human obedience is pledged but fragile - Israel promises obedience, but the unfolding story will reveal the need for a better covenant.
- Blood is necessary - The covenant is ratified with blood, pointing to the seriousness of sin and access to God.
- Christ is the greater Mediator - Moses mediates the old covenant · Christ mediates the new covenant.
- Christ’s blood fulfills covenant blood - Jesus’ blood secures forgiveness, cleansing, and covenant fellowship.
- Fellowship with God is grace - The leaders eat before God and are spared · in Christ, believers are brought near by mercy.
- Do not reduce Exodus 24 to ceremony detached from covenant blood.
- Do not treat Israel’s pledge as proof of human ability to keep covenant perfectly.
- Do not preach access to God apart from mediation.
- Do not disconnect the covenant meal from sacrifice and blood.
- Do not flatten the old covenant and new covenant into the same administration without recognizing Christ’s fulfillment.
- Do not handle the Lord’s Supper without the weight of 'blood of the covenant' language.
Primary Emphasis
Exodus 24 contributes profoundly to the biblical theology fulfilled in Christ by introducing the blood of the covenant, mediated access to God, representative fellowship, and the need for covenant obedience. Jesus later takes up covenant-blood language at the Lord’s Supper, identifying His blood as the blood of the covenant poured out for many. Moses mediates the old covenant with animal blood; Christ mediates the new covenant with His own blood.
The covenant meal at Sinai anticipates the deeper fellowship secured by Christ’s sacrifice and consummated in the kingdom of God.
Chapter Contribution
Exodus 24 argues that covenant relationship with the holy Lord requires revelation, response, sacrifice, blood, mediation, and divine permission for fellowship. Israel does not define the covenant; the Lord speaks it. Israel does not vaguely agree; the people hear the written covenant and pledge obedience. The covenant is not sealed by sentiment but by blood.
Israel’s leaders do not force their way into God’s presence; they ascend because God summons them. Moses then enters the glory-cloud to receive further instruction, preparing for the tabernacle where God will dwell among His people.
The covenant is publicly confirmed through divine words, written testimony, pledged obedience, sacrifice, blood, and representative fellowship.
God's presence is real and gracious, yet bounded by holiness; access is granted by summons and guarded by divine order.
Moses functions as the covenant mediator who reports God's words, writes them, applies the blood, and enters the cloud to receive further instruction.
The Lord gives his covenant words verbally and in written form, culminating in stone tablets and instructions received on the mountain.
The covenant is sealed with sacrificial blood, showing the solemnity of belonging to the Lord and the need for atoning covering.
Worship is not self-invented approach but reverent response to God's word, presence, covenant, and appointed means.
The Sinai covenant is formally ratified through word, sacrifice, blood, and public pledge.
The Lord’s words are spoken, written, and read to the people.
Moses mediates between the Lord and Israel, approaching where others cannot.
Burnt offerings and fellowship offerings are central to the covenant ceremony.
Moses sprinkles the people with the blood that ratifies the covenant.
Israel publicly pledges to do everything the Lord has said.
Israel’s representatives see God and eat and drink in His presence by mercy.
The glory of the Lord covers Sinai and appears like consuming fire.
The blood of the covenant and Moses’ mediation point forward to Christ and the new covenant.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Exodus 24 clarifies the gospel by showing that covenant relationship with God requires revealed word, obedience, sacrifice, blood, mediation, and gracious access. Israel’s covenant is sealed with animal blood, but the people will not keep their pledge. Christ comes as the obedient Son and greater Mediator. At the Lord’s Supper, He identifies His own blood as the blood of the covenant, poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins. Through His once-for-all sacrifice, sinners are cleansed, brought near, and given true fellowship with God.
Covenant fellowship with the holy Lord is established by His word, ratified by blood, mediated through His appointed servant, and enjoyed only by His gracious permission.
God’s people must hear, obey, revere the blood of the covenant, receive fellowship as mercy, and approach God only through the Mediator He provides.
Reverence, obedience, gratitude, covenant seriousness, humility, worship, and confidence in God-appointed mediation.
- Read God’s word before making spiritual commitments.
- Examine whether your obedience matches your confession.
- Meditate on the phrase 'blood of the covenant' in light of Christ’s sacrifice.
- Approach God with gratitude for mediated access through Christ.
- Treat the Lord’s Supper as covenant remembrance and proclamation, not empty routine.
- Remember that fellowship with God is mercy, not entitlement.
- Let written Scripture govern worship, discipleship, and community commitments.
- The chapter warns against treating covenant promises lightly, pledging obedience casually, approaching God apart from His appointed mediation, and forgetting that covenant with the holy God is sealed in blood and accountable to His word.
- Treating the covenant ceremony as empty ritual. - The ceremony solemnly ratifies the covenant through word, sacrifice, blood, oath, and representative fellowship.
- Assuming Israel’s pledge is based on vague enthusiasm. - Moses speaks, writes, and reads the covenant words so the people respond to revealed instruction.
- Ignoring the role of blood. - Blood is central to the covenant’s ratification and seriousness.
- Thinking the leaders force their way into God’s presence. - They ascend only by the Lord’s summons and mercy.
- Trying to describe God’s appearance beyond the text. - The text carefully describes what is under His feet, not a full visual form of God.
- Separating covenant fellowship from covenant obedience. - The covenant meal follows the written covenant, pledged obedience, and sacrificial blood.
- Reading Moses’ forty days as a private mystical escape. - Moses ascends to receive instruction for the covenant people, especially the tablets and the tabernacle instructions that follow.
- Do I respond to God’s word with real obedience or only verbal agreement?
- Have I treated covenant commitments lightly?
- Do I understand why blood is necessary for sinners to come near to God?
- Am I trying to approach God on my own terms or through the Mediator He has given?
- Do I receive fellowship with God as mercy rather than entitlement?
- Does worship in my life rest on God’s revealed word or religious feeling?
- How does the blood of the new covenant deepen my gratitude for the Lord’s Supper and Christ’s sacrifice?
- Read the covenant before calling for commitment.
- Teach the seriousness of pledged obedience.
- Keep sacrifice and blood central.
- Clarify mediated access to God.
- Recover reverent covenant fellowship.
- Prepare people for the Lord’s Supper with covenant clarity.
- Value written revelation.
The Lord’s words are declared and then written down by Moses.
Israel’s verbal obedience is solemnized through sacrificial blood.
Blood touches both altar and people, binding the covenant relationship.
The leaders first worship from a distance, then ascend by divine permission.
The holy God does not strike the leaders, and they eat and drink before Him.
After covenant fellowship, Moses enters the cloud for further revelation.
Moses’ ascent prepares for the instructions about the sanctuary where the Lord will dwell among Israel.
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The Lord summons Moses, Aaron, Nadab, Abihu, and seventy elders; Israel pledges obedience to the Lord’s words; Moses writes, builds an altar, offers sacrifices, sprinkles covenant blood, and reads the Book of the Covenant; the people again pledge obedience; Israel’s representatives ascend, behold God, and eat; Moses then ascends higher into the cloud of glory to receive the tablets and further instruction.
Exodus 24 is the covenant-ratification chapter of Sinai. The Book of the Covenant is written and read. Israel pledges obedience. Sacrifices are offered. Blood is applied to the altar and the people. The covenant is sealed according to the Lord’s words. The representative meal before God shows that covenant is not only obligation but fellowship. Moses’ ascent for the tablets prepares for the covenant’s durable written witness and the tabernacle instructions.
Exodus 24 clarifies the gospel by showing that covenant relationship with God requires revealed word, obedience, sacrifice, blood, mediation, and gracious access. Israel’s covenant is sealed with animal blood, but the people will not keep their pledge. Christ comes as the obedient Son and greater Mediator. At the Lord’s Supper, He identifies His own blood as the blood of the covenant, poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins.
Through His once-for-all sacrifice, sinners are cleansed, brought near, and given true fellowship with God.
Reverence, obedience, gratitude, covenant seriousness, humility, worship, and confidence in God-appointed mediation.
Focus Points
- Covenant ratification
- Mediation
- Written revelation
- Public obedience
- Sacrifice
- Blood of the covenant
- Representative leadership
- Covenant meal
- Vision of God
- The glory of the Lord
- Tablets of stone
- Cloud and consuming fire
- Forty days and forty nights
- Covenant is based on God’s word
- Obedience is publicly pledged
- Blood ratifies covenant
- Mediation governs access
- Representation before God
- Covenant fellowship is gracious
- The glory of the Lord is consuming
- Instruction continues after ratification
- The mountain becomes a meeting place
- Holy nearness requires divine permission
- Covenant
- Revelation
- Corporate Obedience
- Divine Fellowship
- Divine Glory
- Christological Fulfillment
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Exodus 24:1-18
Exo 24:1-2 These two verses form part of the address of God in Ex 20:22-23:33; for אמר משׁה ואל (“ but to Moses He said ”) cannot be the commencement of a fresh address, which would necessarily require מ אל ויּאמר (cf. Exo 24:12; Exo 19:21; Exo 20:22). The turn given to the expression מ ואל presupposes that God had already spoken to others, or that what had been said before related not to Moses himself, but to other persons.
But this cannot be affirmed of the decalogue, which applied to Moses quite as much as to the entire nation (a sufficient refutation of Knobel's assertion, that these verses are a continuation of Exo 19:20-25, and are linked on to the decalogue), but only of the address concerning the mishpatim , or “rights,” which commences with Exo 20:22, and, according to Exo 20:22 and Exo 21:1, was intended for the nation, and addressed to it, even though it was through the medium of Moses. What God said to the people as establishing its rights, is here followed by what He said to Moses himself, namely, that he was to go up to Jehovah, along with Aaron, Nadab, Abihu, and seventy elders.
At the same time, it is of course implied that Moses, who had ascended the mountain with Aaron alone (Exo 20:21), was first of all to go down again and repeat to the people the “ rights ” which God had communicated to him, and only when this had been done, to ascend again with the persons named. According to Exo 24:3 and Exo 24:12 (? 9), this is what Moses really did.
But Moses alone was to go near to Jehovah: the others were to worship afar off, and the people were not to come up at all.
Exo 24:1-2 These two verses form part of the address of God in Ex 20:22-23:33; for אמר משׁה ואל (“ but to Moses He said ”) cannot be the commencement of a fresh address, which would necessarily require מ אל ויּאמר (cf. Exo 24:12; Exo 19:21; Exo 20:22). The turn given to the expression מ ואל presupposes that God had already spoken to others, or that what had been said before related not to Moses himself, but to other persons.
But this cannot be affirmed of the decalogue, which applied to Moses quite as much as to the entire nation (a sufficient refutation of Knobel's assertion, that these verses are a continuation of Exo 19:20-25, and are linked on to the decalogue), but only of the address concerning the mishpatim , or “rights,” which commences with Exo 20:22, and, according to Exo 20:22 and Exo 21:1, was intended for the nation, and addressed to it, even though it was through the medium of Moses. What God said to the people as establishing its rights, is here followed by what He said to Moses himself, namely, that he was to go up to Jehovah, along with Aaron, Nadab, Abihu, and seventy elders.
At the same time, it is of course implied that Moses, who had ascended the mountain with Aaron alone (Exo 20:21), was first of all to go down again and repeat to the people the “ rights ” which God had communicated to him, and only when this had been done, to ascend again with the persons named. According to Exo 24:3 and Exo 24:12 (? 9), this is what Moses really did.
But Moses alone was to go near to Jehovah: the others were to worship afar off, and the people were not to come up at all.
Exo 24:3-4 The ceremony described in Exo 24:3-11 is called “the covenant which Jehovah made with Israel” (Exo 24:8). It was opened by Moses, who recited to the people “ all the words of Jehovah ” (i. e. , not the decalogue, for the people had heard this directly from the mouth of God Himself, but the words in Exo 20:22-26), and “ all the rights ” (ch. 21-23); whereupon the people answered unanimously (אחד קול), “ All the words which Jehovah hath spoken will we do .
” This constituted the preparation for the conclusion of the covenant. It was necessary that the people should not only know what the Lord imposed upon them in the covenant about to be made with them, and what He promised them, but that they should also declare their willingness to perform what was imposed upon them. The covenant itself was commenced by Moses writing all the words of Jehovah in “ the book of the covenant ” (Exo 24:4 and Exo 24:7), for the purpose of preserving them in an official record.
The next day, early in the morning, he built an altar at the foot of the mountain, and erected twelve boundary-stones or pillars for the twelve tribes, most likely round about the altar and at some distance from it, so as to prepare the soil upon which Jehovah was about to enter into union with the twelve tribes. As the altar indicated the presence of Jehovah, being the place where the Lord would come to His people to bless them (Exo 20:24), so the twelve pillars, or boundary-stones, did not serve as mere memorials of the conclusion of the covenant, but were to indicate the place of the twelve tribes, and represent their presence also.
Exo 24:3-4 The ceremony described in Exo 24:3-11 is called “the covenant which Jehovah made with Israel” (Exo 24:8). It was opened by Moses, who recited to the people “ all the words of Jehovah ” (i. e. , not the decalogue, for the people had heard this directly from the mouth of God Himself, but the words in Exo 20:22-26), and “ all the rights ” (ch. 21-23); whereupon the people answered unanimously (אחד קול), “ All the words which Jehovah hath spoken will we do .
” This constituted the preparation for the conclusion of the covenant. It was necessary that the people should not only know what the Lord imposed upon them in the covenant about to be made with them, and what He promised them, but that they should also declare their willingness to perform what was imposed upon them. The covenant itself was commenced by Moses writing all the words of Jehovah in “ the book of the covenant ” (Exo 24:4 and Exo 24:7), for the purpose of preserving them in an official record.
The next day, early in the morning, he built an altar at the foot of the mountain, and erected twelve boundary-stones or pillars for the twelve tribes, most likely round about the altar and at some distance from it, so as to prepare the soil upon which Jehovah was about to enter into union with the twelve tribes. As the altar indicated the presence of Jehovah, being the place where the Lord would come to His people to bless them (Exo 20:24), so the twelve pillars, or boundary-stones, did not serve as mere memorials of the conclusion of the covenant, but were to indicate the place of the twelve tribes, and represent their presence also.
Exo 24:5 After the foundation and soil had been thus prepared in the place of sacrifice, for the fellowship which Jehovah was about to establish with His people; Moses sent young men of the children of Israel to prepare the sacrifices, and directed them to offer burnt-offering and sacrifice slain-offerings, viz. , שׁלמים, “ peace-offerings (see at Lev 3:1) for Jehovah, ” for which purpose פּרים, bullocks, or young oxen, were used.
The young men were not first-born sons, who had officiated as priests previous to the institution of the Levitical priesthood, according to the natural right of primogeniture, as Onkelos supposes; nor were they the sons of Aaron, as Augustine maintains: they simply acted as servants of Moses; and the priestly duty of sprinkling the blood was performed by him as the mediator of the covenant. It is merely as young men, therefore, i.
e. , as strong and active, that they are introduced in this place, and not as representatives of the nation, “by whom the sacrifice was presented, and whose attitude resembled that of a youth just ready to enter upon his course” ( Kurtz , O. C. iii. 143). For, as Oehler says, “this was not a sacrifice presented by the nation on its own account. The primary object was to establish that fellowship, by virtue of which it could draw near to Jehovah in sacrifice.
Moreover, according to Exo 24:1 and Exo 24:9, the nation possessed its proper representatives in the seventy elders” ( Herzog's Cyclopaedia). But even though these sacrifices were not offered by the representatives of the nation, and for this very reason Moses selected young men from among the people to act as servants at this ceremony, they had so far a substitutionary position, that in their persons the nation was received into fellowship with God by means of the sprinkling of the blood, which was performed in a peculiar manner, to suit the unique design of this sacrificial ceremony.
Exo 24:6-8 The blood was divided into two parts. One half was swung by Moses upon the altar (זרק to swing, shake, or pour out of the vessel, in distinction from הזּה to sprinkle) the other half he put into basins, and after he had read the book of the covenant to the people, and they had promised to do and follow all the words of Jehovah, he sprinkled it upon the people with these words: “ Behold the blood of the covenant, which Jehovah has made with you over all these words .
” As several animals were slaughtered, and all of them young oxen, there must have been a considerable quantity of blood obtained, so that the one half would fill several basins, and many persons might be sprinkled with it as it was being swung about. The division of the blood had reference to the two parties to the covenant, who were to be brought by the covenant into a living unity; but it had no connection whatever with the heathen customs adduced by Bähr and Knobel , in which the parties to a treaty mixed their own blood together.
For this was not a mixture of different kinds of blood, but it was a division of one blood, and that sacrificial blood, in which animal life was offered instead of human life, making expiation as a pure life for sinful man, and by virtue of this expiation restoring the fellowship between God and man which had been destroyed by sin. But the sacrificial blood itself only acquired this signification through the sprinkling or swinging upon the altar, by virtue of which the human soul was received, in the soul of the animal sacrificed for man, into the fellowship of the divine grace manifested upon the altar, in order that, through the power of this sin-forgiving and sin-destroying grace, it might be sanctified to a new and holy life.
In this way the sacrificial blood acquired the signification of a vital principle endued with the power of divine grace; and this was communicated to the people by means of the sprinkling of the blood. As the only reason for dividing the sacrificial blood into two parts was, that the blood sprinkled upon the altar could not be taken off again and sprinkled upon the people; the two halves of the blood are to be regarded as one blood, which was first of all sprinkled upon the altar, and then upon the people.
In the blood sprinkled upon the altar, the natural life of the people was given up to God, as a life that had passed through death, to be pervaded by His grace; and then through the sprinkling upon the people it was restored to them again, as a life renewed by the grace of God. In this way the blood not only became a bond of union between Jehovah and His people, but as the blood of the covenant, it became a vital power, holy and divine, uniting Israel and its God; and the sprinkling of the people with this blood was an actual renewal of life, a transposition of Israel into the kingdom of God, in which it was filled with the powers of God’s spirit of grace, and sanctified into a kingdom of priests, a holy nation of Jehovah (Exo 19:6).
And this covenant was made “upon all the words” which Jehovah had spoken, and the people had promised to observe. Consequently it had for its foundation the divine law and right, as the rule of life for Israel.
Exo 24:6-8 The blood was divided into two parts. One half was swung by Moses upon the altar (זרק to swing, shake, or pour out of the vessel, in distinction from הזּה to sprinkle) the other half he put into basins, and after he had read the book of the covenant to the people, and they had promised to do and follow all the words of Jehovah, he sprinkled it upon the people with these words: “ Behold the blood of the covenant, which Jehovah has made with you over all these words .
” As several animals were slaughtered, and all of them young oxen, there must have been a considerable quantity of blood obtained, so that the one half would fill several basins, and many persons might be sprinkled with it as it was being swung about. The division of the blood had reference to the two parties to the covenant, who were to be brought by the covenant into a living unity; but it had no connection whatever with the heathen customs adduced by Bähr and Knobel , in which the parties to a treaty mixed their own blood together.
For this was not a mixture of different kinds of blood, but it was a division of one blood, and that sacrificial blood, in which animal life was offered instead of human life, making expiation as a pure life for sinful man, and by virtue of this expiation restoring the fellowship between God and man which had been destroyed by sin. But the sacrificial blood itself only acquired this signification through the sprinkling or swinging upon the altar, by virtue of which the human soul was received, in the soul of the animal sacrificed for man, into the fellowship of the divine grace manifested upon the altar, in order that, through the power of this sin-forgiving and sin-destroying grace, it might be sanctified to a new and holy life.
In this way the sacrificial blood acquired the signification of a vital principle endued with the power of divine grace; and this was communicated to the people by means of the sprinkling of the blood. As the only reason for dividing the sacrificial blood into two parts was, that the blood sprinkled upon the altar could not be taken off again and sprinkled upon the people; the two halves of the blood are to be regarded as one blood, which was first of all sprinkled upon the altar, and then upon the people.
In the blood sprinkled upon the altar, the natural life of the people was given up to God, as a life that had passed through death, to be pervaded by His grace; and then through the sprinkling upon the people it was restored to them again, as a life renewed by the grace of God. In this way the blood not only became a bond of union between Jehovah and His people, but as the blood of the covenant, it became a vital power, holy and divine, uniting Israel and its God; and the sprinkling of the people with this blood was an actual renewal of life, a transposition of Israel into the kingdom of God, in which it was filled with the powers of God’s spirit of grace, and sanctified into a kingdom of priests, a holy nation of Jehovah (Exo 19:6).
And this covenant was made “upon all the words” which Jehovah had spoken, and the people had promised to observe. Consequently it had for its foundation the divine law and right, as the rule of life for Israel.
Exo 24:6-8 The blood was divided into two parts. One half was swung by Moses upon the altar (זרק to swing, shake, or pour out of the vessel, in distinction from הזּה to sprinkle) the other half he put into basins, and after he had read the book of the covenant to the people, and they had promised to do and follow all the words of Jehovah, he sprinkled it upon the people with these words: “ Behold the blood of the covenant, which Jehovah has made with you over all these words .
” As several animals were slaughtered, and all of them young oxen, there must have been a considerable quantity of blood obtained, so that the one half would fill several basins, and many persons might be sprinkled with it as it was being swung about. The division of the blood had reference to the two parties to the covenant, who were to be brought by the covenant into a living unity; but it had no connection whatever with the heathen customs adduced by Bähr and Knobel , in which the parties to a treaty mixed their own blood together.
For this was not a mixture of different kinds of blood, but it was a division of one blood, and that sacrificial blood, in which animal life was offered instead of human life, making expiation as a pure life for sinful man, and by virtue of this expiation restoring the fellowship between God and man which had been destroyed by sin. But the sacrificial blood itself only acquired this signification through the sprinkling or swinging upon the altar, by virtue of which the human soul was received, in the soul of the animal sacrificed for man, into the fellowship of the divine grace manifested upon the altar, in order that, through the power of this sin-forgiving and sin-destroying grace, it might be sanctified to a new and holy life.
In this way the sacrificial blood acquired the signification of a vital principle endued with the power of divine grace; and this was communicated to the people by means of the sprinkling of the blood. As the only reason for dividing the sacrificial blood into two parts was, that the blood sprinkled upon the altar could not be taken off again and sprinkled upon the people; the two halves of the blood are to be regarded as one blood, which was first of all sprinkled upon the altar, and then upon the people.
In the blood sprinkled upon the altar, the natural life of the people was given up to God, as a life that had passed through death, to be pervaded by His grace; and then through the sprinkling upon the people it was restored to them again, as a life renewed by the grace of God. In this way the blood not only became a bond of union between Jehovah and His people, but as the blood of the covenant, it became a vital power, holy and divine, uniting Israel and its God; and the sprinkling of the people with this blood was an actual renewal of life, a transposition of Israel into the kingdom of God, in which it was filled with the powers of God’s spirit of grace, and sanctified into a kingdom of priests, a holy nation of Jehovah (Exo 19:6).
And this covenant was made “upon all the words” which Jehovah had spoken, and the people had promised to observe. Consequently it had for its foundation the divine law and right, as the rule of life for Israel.
Exo 24:9-11 Through their consecration with the blood of the covenant, the Israelites were qualified to ascend the mountain, and there behold the God of Israel and celebrate the covenant meal; of course, not the whole of the people, for that would have been impracticable on physical grounds, but the nation in the persons of its representatives, viz. , the seventy elders, with Aaron and his two eldest sons.
The fact that the latter were summoned along with the elders had reference to their future election to the priesthood, the bearers of which were to occupy the position of mediators between Jehovah and the nation, an office for which this was a preparation. The reason for choosing seventy out of the whole body of elders (Exo 24:3) is to be found in the historical and symbolical significance of this number.
“ They saw the God of Israel . ” This title is very appropriately given to Jehovah here, because He, the God of the fathers, had become in truth the God of Israel through the covenant just made. We must not go beyond the limits drawn in Exo 33:20-23 in our conceptions of what constituted the sight (חזה Exo 24:11) of God; at the same time we must regard it as a vision of God in some form of manifestation which rendered the divine nature discernible to the human eye.
Nothing is said as to the form in which God manifested Himself. This silence, however, is not intended “to indicate the imperfection of their sight of God,” as Baumgarten affirms, nor is it to be explained, as Hoffmann supposes, on the ground that “what they saw differed from what the people had constantly before their eyes simply in this respect, that after they had entered the darkness, which enveloped the mountain that burned as it were with fire at its summit, the fiery sign separated from the cloud, and assumed a shape, beneath which it was bright and clear, as an image of untroubled bliss.
” The words are evidently intended to affirm something more than, that they saw the fiery form in which God manifested Himself to the people, and that whilst the fire was ordinarily enveloped in a cloud, they saw it upon the mountain without the cloud. For, since Moses saw the form (תּמוּנה) of Jehovah (Num 12:8), we may fairly conclude, notwithstanding the fact that, according to Exo 24:2, the representatives of the nation were not to draw near to Jehovah, and without any danger of contradicting Deu 4:12 and Deu 4:15, that they also saw a form of God.
Only this form is not described, in order that no encouragement might be given to the inclination of the people to make likenesses of Jehovah. Thus we find that Isaiah gives no description of the form in which he saw the Lord sitting upon a high and lofty throne (Isa 6:1). Ezekiel is the first to describe the form of Jehovah which he saw in the vision, “as the appearance of a man” (Eze 1:26; compare Dan 7:9 and Dan 7:13).
“ And there was under His feet as it were work of clear sapphire (לבנת, from לבנה whiteness, clearness, not from לבנה a brick), and as the material (עצם body, substance) of heaven in brilliancy, ” - to indicate that the God of Israel was enthroned above the heaven in super-terrestrial glory and undisturbed blessedness. And God was willing that His people should share in this blessedness, for “ He laid not His hand upon the nobles of Israel, ” i.
e. , did not attack them. “ They saw God, and did eat and drink, ” i. e. , they celebrated thus near to Him the sacrificial meal of the peace-offerings, which had been sacrificed at the conclusion of the covenant, and received in this covenant meal a foretaste of the precious and glorious gifts with which God would endow and refresh His redeemed people in His kingdom.
As the promise in Exo 19:5-6, with which God opened the way for the covenant at Sinai, set clearly before the nation that had been rescued from Egypt the ultimate goal of its divine calling; so this termination of the ceremony was intended to give to the nation, in the persons of its representatives, a tangible pledge of the glory of the goal that was set before it. The sight of the God of Israel was a foretaste of the blessedness of the sight of God in eternity, and the covenant meal upon the mountain before the face of God was a type of the marriage supper of the Lamb, to which the Lord will call, and at which He will present His perfected Church in the day of the full revelation of His glory (Rev 19:7-9).
Exo 24:12-18 prepare the way for the subsequent revelation recorded in ch. 25-31, which Moses received concerning the erection of the sanctuary. At the conclusion of the covenant meal, the representatives of the nation left the mountain along with Moses. This is not expressly stated, indeed; since it followed as a matter of course that they returned to the camp, when the festival for which God had called them up was concluded.
A command was then issued again to Moses to ascend the mountain, and remain there (והיה־שׁם), for He was about to give him the tables of stone, with (ו as in Gen 3:24) the law and commandments, which He had written for their instruction (cf. Exo 31:18).
Exo 24:9-11 Through their consecration with the blood of the covenant, the Israelites were qualified to ascend the mountain, and there behold the God of Israel and celebrate the covenant meal; of course, not the whole of the people, for that would have been impracticable on physical grounds, but the nation in the persons of its representatives, viz. , the seventy elders, with Aaron and his two eldest sons.
The fact that the latter were summoned along with the elders had reference to their future election to the priesthood, the bearers of which were to occupy the position of mediators between Jehovah and the nation, an office for which this was a preparation. The reason for choosing seventy out of the whole body of elders (Exo 24:3) is to be found in the historical and symbolical significance of this number.
“ They saw the God of Israel . ” This title is very appropriately given to Jehovah here, because He, the God of the fathers, had become in truth the God of Israel through the covenant just made. We must not go beyond the limits drawn in Exo 33:20-23 in our conceptions of what constituted the sight (חזה Exo 24:11) of God; at the same time we must regard it as a vision of God in some form of manifestation which rendered the divine nature discernible to the human eye.
Nothing is said as to the form in which God manifested Himself. This silence, however, is not intended “to indicate the imperfection of their sight of God,” as Baumgarten affirms, nor is it to be explained, as Hoffmann supposes, on the ground that “what they saw differed from what the people had constantly before their eyes simply in this respect, that after they had entered the darkness, which enveloped the mountain that burned as it were with fire at its summit, the fiery sign separated from the cloud, and assumed a shape, beneath which it was bright and clear, as an image of untroubled bliss.
” The words are evidently intended to affirm something more than, that they saw the fiery form in which God manifested Himself to the people, and that whilst the fire was ordinarily enveloped in a cloud, they saw it upon the mountain without the cloud. For, since Moses saw the form (תּמוּנה) of Jehovah (Num 12:8), we may fairly conclude, notwithstanding the fact that, according to Exo 24:2, the representatives of the nation were not to draw near to Jehovah, and without any danger of contradicting Deu 4:12 and Deu 4:15, that they also saw a form of God.
Only this form is not described, in order that no encouragement might be given to the inclination of the people to make likenesses of Jehovah. Thus we find that Isaiah gives no description of the form in which he saw the Lord sitting upon a high and lofty throne (Isa 6:1). Ezekiel is the first to describe the form of Jehovah which he saw in the vision, “as the appearance of a man” (Eze 1:26; compare Dan 7:9 and Dan 7:13).
“ And there was under His feet as it were work of clear sapphire (לבנת, from לבנה whiteness, clearness, not from לבנה a brick), and as the material (עצם body, substance) of heaven in brilliancy, ” - to indicate that the God of Israel was enthroned above the heaven in super-terrestrial glory and undisturbed blessedness. And God was willing that His people should share in this blessedness, for “ He laid not His hand upon the nobles of Israel, ” i.
e. , did not attack them. “ They saw God, and did eat and drink, ” i. e. , they celebrated thus near to Him the sacrificial meal of the peace-offerings, which had been sacrificed at the conclusion of the covenant, and received in this covenant meal a foretaste of the precious and glorious gifts with which God would endow and refresh His redeemed people in His kingdom.
As the promise in Exo 19:5-6, with which God opened the way for the covenant at Sinai, set clearly before the nation that had been rescued from Egypt the ultimate goal of its divine calling; so this termination of the ceremony was intended to give to the nation, in the persons of its representatives, a tangible pledge of the glory of the goal that was set before it. The sight of the God of Israel was a foretaste of the blessedness of the sight of God in eternity, and the covenant meal upon the mountain before the face of God was a type of the marriage supper of the Lamb, to which the Lord will call, and at which He will present His perfected Church in the day of the full revelation of His glory (Rev 19:7-9).
Exo 24:12-18 prepare the way for the subsequent revelation recorded in ch. 25-31, which Moses received concerning the erection of the sanctuary. At the conclusion of the covenant meal, the representatives of the nation left the mountain along with Moses. This is not expressly stated, indeed; since it followed as a matter of course that they returned to the camp, when the festival for which God had called them up was concluded.
A command was then issued again to Moses to ascend the mountain, and remain there (והיה־שׁם), for He was about to give him the tables of stone, with (ו as in Gen 3:24) the law and commandments, which He had written for their instruction (cf. Exo 31:18).
Exo 24:9-11 Through their consecration with the blood of the covenant, the Israelites were qualified to ascend the mountain, and there behold the God of Israel and celebrate the covenant meal; of course, not the whole of the people, for that would have been impracticable on physical grounds, but the nation in the persons of its representatives, viz. , the seventy elders, with Aaron and his two eldest sons.
The fact that the latter were summoned along with the elders had reference to their future election to the priesthood, the bearers of which were to occupy the position of mediators between Jehovah and the nation, an office for which this was a preparation. The reason for choosing seventy out of the whole body of elders (Exo 24:3) is to be found in the historical and symbolical significance of this number.
“ They saw the God of Israel . ” This title is very appropriately given to Jehovah here, because He, the God of the fathers, had become in truth the God of Israel through the covenant just made. We must not go beyond the limits drawn in Exo 33:20-23 in our conceptions of what constituted the sight (חזה Exo 24:11) of God; at the same time we must regard it as a vision of God in some form of manifestation which rendered the divine nature discernible to the human eye.
Nothing is said as to the form in which God manifested Himself. This silence, however, is not intended “to indicate the imperfection of their sight of God,” as Baumgarten affirms, nor is it to be explained, as Hoffmann supposes, on the ground that “what they saw differed from what the people had constantly before their eyes simply in this respect, that after they had entered the darkness, which enveloped the mountain that burned as it were with fire at its summit, the fiery sign separated from the cloud, and assumed a shape, beneath which it was bright and clear, as an image of untroubled bliss.
” The words are evidently intended to affirm something more than, that they saw the fiery form in which God manifested Himself to the people, and that whilst the fire was ordinarily enveloped in a cloud, they saw it upon the mountain without the cloud. For, since Moses saw the form (תּמוּנה) of Jehovah (Num 12:8), we may fairly conclude, notwithstanding the fact that, according to Exo 24:2, the representatives of the nation were not to draw near to Jehovah, and without any danger of contradicting Deu 4:12 and Deu 4:15, that they also saw a form of God.
Only this form is not described, in order that no encouragement might be given to the inclination of the people to make likenesses of Jehovah. Thus we find that Isaiah gives no description of the form in which he saw the Lord sitting upon a high and lofty throne (Isa 6:1). Ezekiel is the first to describe the form of Jehovah which he saw in the vision, “as the appearance of a man” (Eze 1:26; compare Dan 7:9 and Dan 7:13).
“ And there was under His feet as it were work of clear sapphire (לבנת, from לבנה whiteness, clearness, not from לבנה a brick), and as the material (עצם body, substance) of heaven in brilliancy, ” - to indicate that the God of Israel was enthroned above the heaven in super-terrestrial glory and undisturbed blessedness. And God was willing that His people should share in this blessedness, for “ He laid not His hand upon the nobles of Israel, ” i.
e. , did not attack them. “ They saw God, and did eat and drink, ” i. e. , they celebrated thus near to Him the sacrificial meal of the peace-offerings, which had been sacrificed at the conclusion of the covenant, and received in this covenant meal a foretaste of the precious and glorious gifts with which God would endow and refresh His redeemed people in His kingdom.
As the promise in Exo 19:5-6, with which God opened the way for the covenant at Sinai, set clearly before the nation that had been rescued from Egypt the ultimate goal of its divine calling; so this termination of the ceremony was intended to give to the nation, in the persons of its representatives, a tangible pledge of the glory of the goal that was set before it. The sight of the God of Israel was a foretaste of the blessedness of the sight of God in eternity, and the covenant meal upon the mountain before the face of God was a type of the marriage supper of the Lamb, to which the Lord will call, and at which He will present His perfected Church in the day of the full revelation of His glory (Rev 19:7-9).
Exo 24:12-18 prepare the way for the subsequent revelation recorded in ch. 25-31, which Moses received concerning the erection of the sanctuary. At the conclusion of the covenant meal, the representatives of the nation left the mountain along with Moses. This is not expressly stated, indeed; since it followed as a matter of course that they returned to the camp, when the festival for which God had called them up was concluded.
A command was then issued again to Moses to ascend the mountain, and remain there (והיה־שׁם), for He was about to give him the tables of stone, with (ו as in Gen 3:24) the law and commandments, which He had written for their instruction (cf. Exo 31:18).
Exo 24:13-14 When Moses was preparing to ascend the mountain with his servant Joshua (vid., Jos 17:9), he ordered the elders to remain in the camp (בּזה i.e., where they were) till their return, and appointed Aaron and Hur (vid., Exo 17:10) as administrators of justice in case of any disputes occurring among the people. דּברים מי־בעל whoever has matters, matters of dispute (on this meaning of בּעל see Gen 37:19).
Exo 24:13-14 When Moses was preparing to ascend the mountain with his servant Joshua (vid., Jos 17:9), he ordered the elders to remain in the camp (בּזה i.e., where they were) till their return, and appointed Aaron and Hur (vid., Exo 17:10) as administrators of justice in case of any disputes occurring among the people. דּברים מי־בעל whoever has matters, matters of dispute (on this meaning of בּעל see Gen 37:19).
Exo 24:15-17 When he ascended the mountain, upon which the glory of Jehovah dwelt, it was covered for six days with the cloud, and the glory itself appeared to the Israelites in the camp below like devouring fire (cf. Exo 19:16); and on the seventh day He called Moses into the cloud. Whether Joshua followed him we are not told; but it is evident from Exo 32:17 that he was with him on the mountain, though, judging from Exo 24:2 and Exo 33:11, he would not go into the immediate presence of God.
Exo 24:15-17 When he ascended the mountain, upon which the glory of Jehovah dwelt, it was covered for six days with the cloud, and the glory itself appeared to the Israelites in the camp below like devouring fire (cf. Exo 19:16); and on the seventh day He called Moses into the cloud. Whether Joshua followed him we are not told; but it is evident from Exo 32:17 that he was with him on the mountain, though, judging from Exo 24:2 and Exo 33:11, he would not go into the immediate presence of God.
Exo 24:15-17 When he ascended the mountain, upon which the glory of Jehovah dwelt, it was covered for six days with the cloud, and the glory itself appeared to the Israelites in the camp below like devouring fire (cf. Exo 19:16); and on the seventh day He called Moses into the cloud. Whether Joshua followed him we are not told; but it is evident from Exo 32:17 that he was with him on the mountain, though, judging from Exo 24:2 and Exo 33:11, he would not go into the immediate presence of God.