Moses
The Lord Proclaims His Name and Renews the Covenant
The Lord renews covenant with guilty Israel by revealing His merciful and just name, commanding exclusive loyalty, restoring the tablets, and marking Moses with the radiance of mediated glory.
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 renews covenant with guilty Israel by revealing His merciful and just name, commanding exclusive loyalty, restoring the tablets, and marking Moses with the radiance of mediated glory.
Exodus 34 argues that covenant renewal after sin rests entirely on the Lord’s revealed character. Israel has broken the covenant, but the Lord reveals Himself as compassionate, gracious, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, forgiving sin, yet not clearing the guilty. His mercy does not erase holiness, and His justice does not cancel covenant faithfulness. Therefore Israel must reject idolatry, worship exclusively, keep covenant rhythms, and receive the renewed covenant through Moses the mediator.
Israel, the covenant people redeemed from Egypt, now recovering from the golden calf rebellion through the Lord’s mercy, Moses’ mediation, and covenant renewal.
Mount Sinai, after the golden calf rebellion, after Moses’ intercession for the Lord’s presence, and after Moses’ request to see the Lord’s glory.
The Lord renews covenant with guilty Israel by revealing His merciful and just name, commanding exclusive loyalty, restoring the tablets, and marking Moses with the radiance of mediated glory.
Moses
Israel, the covenant people redeemed from Egypt, now recovering from the golden calf rebellion through the Lord’s mercy, Moses’ mediation, and covenant renewal.
Mount Sinai, after the golden calf rebellion, after Moses’ intercession for the Lord’s presence, and after Moses’ request to see the Lord’s glory.
- Israel has broken covenant, and the question remains whether the holy Lord will continue with them. Moses must ascend again with new stone tablets, and the people must learn that covenant renewal depends entirely on the Lord’s mercy, justice, and sovereign grace.
Ancient covenant renewal often involved tablets, written terms, oaths, warnings, and covenant obligations. Exodus 34 presents covenant renewal not as negotiation between equals but as the holy Lord graciously renewing relationship with a guilty people through mediated mercy.
Exodus 34 answers the crisis of Exodus 32–33. Israel broke the covenant through the golden calf. Moses pleaded for forgiveness and presence. The Lord now reveals His name, renews the covenant, restores the tablets, and sends Moses back with a radiance that testifies to his encounter with the Lord.
The Lord commands Moses to chisel two new stone tablets and ascend Mount Sinai. The Lord descends in the cloud, proclaims His name, reveals His merciful and just character, and Moses worships and intercedes. The Lord renews the covenant, warns Israel against idolatrous alliances, restates key worship obligations, commands Moses to write the covenant words, and Moses remains with the Lord forty days and forty nights.
When Moses descends, his face shines from speaking with the Lord, and he veils his face before the people.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Exodus 34 clarifies the gospel by revealing the deep tension that only Christ finally resolves: the Lord forgives wickedness, rebellion, and sin, yet He does not leave the guilty unpunished. God’s forgiveness is never moral indifference. His justice is never suspended. In the cross of Christ, God shows how guilty sinners can be forgiven without guilt being ignored. Christ bears judgment, secures mercy, mediates the covenant, and reveals the glory of God more fully than Moses’ shining face ever could.
New tablets are prepared after the first tablets were shattered because of Israel’s covenant breach.
The Lord proclaims His mercy and justice, and Moses responds with worship and intercession.
The Lord renews the covenant and warns Israel against idolatrous alliances and worship.
The Lord restates commands concerning festivals, firstborn redemption, Sabbath, sacrifice, and firstfruits.
The covenant words are written, Moses descends with radiant face, and the people receive the commands through a veiled mediator.
- 1-4: The Lord commands Moses to prepare new tablets and ascend Sinai again.
- 5-7: The Lord reveals His character as compassionate, gracious, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, forgiving, yet just.
- 8-9: Moses bows and asks the Lord to go with Israel, forgive them, and take them as His inheritance.
- 10-11: The Lord promises wonders and commands Israel to obey as He drives out the nations.
- 12-17: Israel must reject idolatrous alliances, destroy pagan worship objects, and worship no other god.
- 18-20: Israel must keep Unleavened Bread and redeem the firstborn as a testimony to the Exodus.
- 21-24: Israel must keep Sabbath and appear before the Lord at appointed festivals, trusting Him to guard the land.
- 25-26: The Lord restates commands concerning proper sacrifice, Passover, firstfruits, and covenant distinctiveness.
- 27-28: Moses remains with the Lord forty days and nights as the covenant words are written.
- 29-35: Moses’ face shines after speaking with the Lord, and he veils his face before the people.
Sense to hew, cut, chisel
Definition To cut or hew stone.
References Exodus 34:1, 4
Lexicon to hew, cut, chisel
Why it matters Moses must prepare new tablets after the first tablets were broken.
Sense tablets
Definition Stone tablets bearing the covenant words.
References Exodus 34:1, 4, 28-29
Lexicon tablets
Why it matters The second tablets signify covenant renewal after Israel’s rebellion.
Sense to write
Definition To write or inscribe.
References Exodus 34:1, 27-28
Lexicon to write
Why it matters The Lord writes the covenant words on the new tablets.
Sense to descend, come down
Definition To come down or descend.
References Exodus 34:5
Lexicon to descend, come down
Why it matters The Lord descends in the cloud to proclaim His name to Moses.
Sense cloud
Definition Cloud associated with divine presence and glory.
References Exodus 34:5
Lexicon cloud
Why it matters The Lord descends in the cloud during the revelation of His name.
Pastoral Entry
קָרָא is the great calling word of the Hebrew Bible — the verb that sets God in motion toward people and people in motion toward God. It carries a range of meanings that can seem almost too wide at first: to call out, to name, to summon, to proclaim, to invite, to cry aloud, to read. But behind this breadth lies a single animating reality: the power and intimacy of a voice that addresses by name, that establishes relationship by speaking, and that makes a claim on whoever is addressed.
When God calls, something is always at stake. He calls out the light and the darkness to receive their names. He calls Abraham out of Ur and gives him a new identity. He calls Moses from a burning bush and defines the rest of his life in that exchange. He calls Israel his son in the exodus and declares in the same breath that that calling came before all the people's straying. When the prophets use קָרָא for God's proclaiming, what is proclaimed always carries the weight of God's own authority and character — his mercy, his warning, his name.
When human beings call to God, קָרָא becomes the language of prayer and dependence. The Psalms return again and again to this word: calling on the name of the Lord is the posture of the righteous, the lifeline of the afflicted, the praise of the delivered. To call on God is not merely to petition him. It is to acknowledge his name, to declare who he is, and to place oneself in his presence as one who has no other resource.
The word also carries a distinct public, proclamatory sense. Prophets proclaim; heralds cry out; the reading of the law in the assembly is קָרָא. In these uses the word marks the moment when God's word enters public space and demands a response. Scripture read aloud, commandments declared, warnings issued, grace announced — all of this belongs to the range of קָרָא.
The naming dimension of קָרָא is not a peripheral use but a theological statement: to name something is to call it into its identity. God's naming of things and people is an act of sovereign love, establishing what something is and who someone belongs to. When God says 'I have called you by name; you are mine' (Isaiah 43:1), all three senses of the word converge at once — the personal address, the naming, and the act of claiming as his own.
Sense to call, proclaim
Definition To call out, announce, or proclaim.
References Exodus 34:5-6
Lexicon to call, proclaim
Why it matters The Lord proclaims His own name and character.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense name of the LORD
Definition The revealed name and character of the covenant LORD.
References Exodus 34:5-6, 14
Lexicon name of the LORD
Why it matters The Lord’s name revelation grounds the entire covenant renewal.
Pastoral Entry
רַחוּם (raḥûm) means compassionate, full of compassion, merciful. It is the adjectival form of the verb rāḥam (H7355, to have compassion), and like ḥannûn, it functions almost exclusively as a divine attribute in the OT — this is what God is, not primarily what humans are called to be. The emotional range of the root is important: rāḥam is rooted in the Hebrew word for womb (reḥem), and carries the sense of the deep, visceral compassion a mother has for the child she carried.
When the OT calls God raḥûm, it is naming the quality of God's love for his people as womb-deep, physically felt, irreversibly bonded. In Exodus 34:6, raḥûm appears as the second word of the divine character formula — paired inseparably with ḥannûn: 'a God compassionate (raḥûm) and gracious (ḥannûn), slow to anger, abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness.'
The pairing is theological: ḥannûn is the disposition toward grace-giving; raḥûm is the felt compassion for the vulnerable, suffering, and failing. Together they describe a God who is not distant or unmoved but deeply, maternally responsive to the condition of his people. The most poignant instance of raḥûm theology in the OT is Isaiah 49:15: 'Can a mother forget the baby at her breast and have no compassion (raḥam) on the child she has borne?
Though she may forget, I will not forget you.' God's raḥûm surpasses even the most reliable human love — maternal love — as the standard. When Jonah quotes Exodus 34:6 in chapter 4, the word raḥûm is part of what he found intolerable about God's character. The book ends without resolving Jonah's conflict, leaving the reader to sit with the divine question: how could such compassion be a problem?
Sense compassionate, merciful
Definition Full of compassion or tender mercy.
References Exodus 34:6
Lexicon compassionate, merciful
Why it matters The Lord reveals compassion as central to His covenant character.
Pastoral Entry
חַנּוּן (ḥannûn) is an adjective of divine character: gracious, inclined to bestow favor where it is not deserved. The word appears almost exclusively as an attribute of God in the OT — it is not used of human beings in the same way. Its verbal root is ḥānan (H2603, to be gracious, to show favor), and ḥannûn is the adjective built from that root: the God who is ḥannûn is the God whose revealed covenant posture is grace-giving rather than withholding.
The most important single occurrence of ḥannûn is in Exodus 34:6, the divine self-declaration after the golden calf: 'The Lord, the Lord, a God merciful and gracious (ḥannûn), slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness.' This formula — sometimes called the Thirteen Attributes or the divine character declaration — is the closest thing the Hebrew Bible has to a systematic statement of what God is like.
It is quoted, echoed, and alluded to throughout the OT: in the Psalms as praise, in the prophets as the ground of repentance, and in Jonah as the very theology that drove a prophet to flee his commission. In Jonah 4:2, the prophet quotes this formula back to God as his explanation for why he fled to Tarshish: 'I knew that you are a gracious (ḥannûn) and merciful God, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love, and relenting from disaster.'
Jonah's theology was entirely correct. His problem was not that he misunderstood God's character but that he hated what it meant for Nineveh. ḥannûn is thus the word at the theological center of the book of Jonah: the character of God that the whole narrative forces its central character — and its readers — to reckon with.
Sense gracious
Definition Showing favor, grace, and mercy.
References Exodus 34:6
Lexicon gracious
Why it matters The Lord’s grace is the basis for renewed covenant with guilty Israel.
Sense long of anger, slow to anger
Definition Patient, not quick to wrath.
References Exodus 34:6
Lexicon long of anger, slow to anger
Why it matters The Lord’s patience explains why Israel is not consumed after their rebellion.
Pastoral Entry
חֶסֶד is one of the richest and most theologically freighted words in the Hebrew Bible. English translations reach for it with words like lovingkindness, steadfast love, mercy, loyal love, or covenant faithfulness, and none of these alone carries the full weight. What the word names is a kind of committed, active, loyal goodness that holds fast to a relationship even when it is not obligated to do so. It is not merely warm feeling. It is love that acts, love that costs, love that stays.
In its human dimension, חֶסֶד describes the loyalty owed within covenant bonds, whether between king and servant, between friends, between allies, or within a family. When Jonathan asks David to show him חֶסֶד, he is not asking for sentiment. He is asking for the kind of active, faithful, protecting love that holds when everything else might give way. When David shows חֶסֶד to Mephibosheth for the sake of Jonathan, it is costly, deliberate, and unconditional. It moves before merit is established and remains after circumstances have changed.
In its divine dimension, חֶסֶד becomes the defining word for the character of the God of Israel. He is the God who keeps חֶסֶד to thousands of those who love Him, who does not remove His חֶסֶד from David, whose חֶסֶד endures forever. It is this word that lies behind the great covenant confessions of the Old Testament. When Lamentations says that the steadfast love of the Lord never ceases, the word under that translation is חֶסֶד. When Isaiah promises that God's covenant of peace will not be removed, the word behind that covenant loyalty is חֶסֶד. The word does not describe God's passing affection. It describes His covenantal commitment, active across time, faithful in the face of human failure, and anchored in His own character rather than in our performance.
For the preacher and teacher, חֶסֶד is irreplaceable. It resists every reduction of God's love to sentiment or permissiveness. It insists that God's love is relational, purposeful, and covenant-shaped. It pushes against every view that God's mercy is passive or impersonal. And it raises a direct challenge to every congregation: because you have been the recipients of God's חֶסֶד, what does faithful חֶסֶד look like in how you treat one another?
Sense steadfast love, covenant loyalty
Definition Faithful covenant love, mercy, loyal kindness.
References Exodus 34:6-7
Lexicon steadfast love, covenant loyalty
Why it matters The Lord abounds in covenant love and maintains it to thousands.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Pastoral Entry
אֶמֶת is the Hebrew word that carries what we strain toward with a cluster of English words: truth, faithfulness, reliability, trustworthiness, certainty. No single English term carries its full weight, because אֶמֶת is not merely a claim about what is true or factually reliable. It names what can be depended upon — what will not bend, break, prove hollow, or disappoint. Its root, aman, gives us אָמֵן: the Amen spoken when something is acknowledged as firm, established, and sure. אֶמֶת is the quality of a word or promise or person that has that kind of solidity beneath it.
In its human dimension, אֶמֶת describes the quality of a messenger who actually delivers what was sent, a judge who rules without distortion, a witness whose account is not manufactured, a person whose Yes is genuinely Yes. To live in אֶמֶת is to be the kind of person others can actually stand on — whose words, deeds, and covenantal loyalties cohere. Israel's prophets and wisdom writers treat it as a social and covenantal good: communities built on אֶמֶת hold together; communities that abandon it collapse under the weight of their own distortions.
In its divine dimension, אֶמֶת is one of the defining qualities of YHWH. When Moses asks to see God's glory and is given instead the proclamation of God's name (Exod. 34:6), אֶמֶת appears in the list alongside חֶסֶד — covenant love. The two belong together throughout the Psalms and narrative texts because they name the double certainty at the heart of God's covenant: He is devoted and He is dependable. His chesed will not waver; His emet means that fact itself will not change. God is not unfaithful to His own declared character.
Pastorally, the danger is flattening אֶמֶת into a category of propositional correctness alone. It certainly includes factual truthfulness — lying and deception are its opposites. But the biblical word is richer: it is truth that is lived, embodied, covenant-shaped, and anchored in the character of the God who cannot lie. Teaching אֶמֶת well means showing a congregation that truth is not merely what is right to assert; it is also what is reliable to lean on.
Sense truth, faithfulness, reliability
Definition Truth, firmness, reliability, and faithfulness.
References Exodus 34:6
Lexicon truth, faithfulness, reliability
Why it matters The Lord abounds in faithfulness, making His covenant promises reliable.
Pastoral Entry
נָשָׂא is one of the most load-bearing verbs in the Hebrew Bible. Its root action is the physical act of lifting — raising something from the ground, hoisting it onto the shoulder, carrying it forward — but the word spreads far beyond that simple gesture into nearly every domain of Israelite life and theology. A porter carries a load. An army raises a banner. A priest bears the iniquity of the people. A king lifts the head of a servant in honor. A people receive the name of their God. A worshipper lifts his hands or voice toward heaven. All of this is נָשָׂא.
The pastoral weight of this word concentrates most powerfully in two directions that pull against each other and together reveal the character of God. The first is the burden-bearing use: נָשָׂא describes what a servant does when he takes up something that is not originally his own and carries it on behalf of another. Israel's priests bore the guilt of the congregation before God. The Servant in Isaiah bears the sins and sorrows of others with deliberate, suffering solidarity. This is not an incidental metaphor — it is the whole structure of atonement pressed into a single word.
The second is the forgiveness use: נָשָׂא means to lift sin away, to take it up and remove it. When the psalmist declares his iniquity forgiven and his sin covered, he uses this verb. When Micah celebrates a God who pardons iniquity and passes over transgression for the remnant of his inheritance, he asks: who is a God like this, who lifts iniquity? The answer is always the same: only the God of Israel, whose mercy is not a policy but a Person.
For the preacher, נָשָׂא is a word that refuses to stay abstract. It asks you to imagine weight, posture, movement, and relief. Forgiveness is not merely a verdict; it is the act of lifting what was crushing you and carrying it somewhere else. And the gospel names precisely who has done that lifting and at what cost.
Sense lifting, bearing, forgiving
Definition To lift, carry, bear away, or forgive.
References Exodus 34:7
Lexicon lifting, bearing, forgiving
Why it matters The Lord forgives wickedness, rebellion, and sin.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Pastoral Entry
עָוֺן is the OT's word for sin as a condition, not just an act. The bent-root behind it — עָוָה, to twist, to make crooked — describes what sustained sin does to a person: it warps the moral shape, bends the character, creates a distortion that becomes structural. This is different from committing an error (חַטָּאת) or staging a rebellion (פֶּשַׁע). עָוֺן is the accumulated state of someone whose life has been bent away from YHWH's design.
The word's range includes the guilt that attaches to that bent condition and even the punishment the condition deserves — making it the most comprehensive of the three primary sin-words. Exod 34:7 places עָוֺן at the head of YHWH's forgiveness declaration: 'forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin.' That ordering matters: the hardest category — the deeply bent condition — leads the list of what YHWH forgives.
Isa 53:6 is the pastoral summit: 'YHWH has laid on him the iniquity of us all.' The Servant does not merely absorb our acts; he bears our עָוֺן — the accumulated, twisted, bent moral state of a whole people. This is why the atonement is genuinely good news: it is not superficial pardon for surface failures but the bearing of the deep-root condition that makes every other sin possible.
Sense iniquity, guilt, wickedness
Definition Iniquity, guilt, or perverse wrongdoing.
References Exodus 34:7, 9
Lexicon iniquity, guilt, wickedness
Why it matters The Lord forgives wickedness but does not treat guilt as insignificant.
Pastoral Entry
פֶּשַׁע is the OT's word for sin in its most deliberate form — not an accident, not a weakness, but a willful act of rebellion against YHWH's authority. The political-revolt root (פָּשַׁע is used of political secession in 2 Kgs 1:1 and 8:20) applied to the God-human relationship says something exact: the sinner is not merely failing a standard but withdrawing loyalty, defecting from the covenant king.
This is why Isa 53:5 is so theologically charged: 'he was pierced for our פְּשָׁעֵינוּ' — the Servant bears specifically the category of sin that is most culpable, most deliberate, most treasonous. The three-term combination in Ps 32:1-2 (פֶּשַׁע, חַטָּאָה, עָוֹן) is a comprehensive taxonomy: transgression (willful rebellion), sin (missing the mark), iniquity (twisted condition).
All three are covered by YHWH's forgiveness, but פֶּשַׁע is the hardest to forgive because it is the most knowing. Mic 7:18 — 'who is a God like you, pardoning iniquity and passing over transgression (פֶּשַׁע) for the remnant of his inheritance?' — makes the passing-over of פֶּשַׁע the most astonishing act of divine mercy in the prophetic testimony.
Sense transgression, rebellion
Definition Rebellion, revolt, or covenant transgression.
References Exodus 34:7
Lexicon transgression, rebellion
Why it matters The Lord forgives even rebellion, which directly describes Israel’s calf sin.
Pastoral Entry
חַטָּאָה is the most theologically dense word in the Hebrew sin vocabulary. The local OT index currently counts about 299 uses, and the word carries a range that no single English translation can capture: it names an offense, habitual sinfulness, the penalty for sin, and the sacrifice that addresses it. BDB summarizes the core semantic as 'a missing of the mark' — the verb חָטָא (H2398) means to miss, to go wrong, to deviate from the path — and the noun form accumulates around that root all the weight of the OT's understanding of what sin is, what it costs, and what it requires.
The most striking feature of חַטָּאָה is that the same word can refer both to the sin and to the sin offering. In Leviticus, the חַטָּאָה is the specific sacrifice prescribed for unintentional sins — the animal whose blood addresses what the worshiper's act has disrupted. This semantic double-occupancy is not an accident of vocabulary; it is a profound theological statement.
The word that names the problem and the word that names the remedy are the same word. The same word field holds the diagnosis and the appointed remedy. This pattern reaches its fulfillment in 2 Corinthians 5:21, where Paul says God made Christ 'to be sin (ἁμαρτίαν, the Greek equivalent) for us' — the one who had no sin became the חַטָּאָה, the sin offering. The OT vocabulary prepares the canonical connection between the named problem and the appointed remedy.
For the preacher, חַטָּאָה is the word that insists sin is never merely a behavior pattern or a disposition. It is an objective disruption that requires an objective remedy — the breach calls for the offering. The 299 occurrences spread across Torah, prophets, writings, and poetry; no part of the Hebrew Bible is untouched by the reality this word names.
Sense sin
Definition Sin, offense, or missing the mark.
References Exodus 34:7, 9
Lexicon sin
Why it matters The Lord forgives sin, and Moses asks forgiveness for Israel’s sin.
Sense will surely not clear
Definition To clear, acquit, or leave unpunished; intensified here as refusal to clear the guilty.
References Exodus 34:7
Lexicon will surely not clear
Why it matters The Lord’s mercy is joined to justice; guilt is not ignored.
Sense to bow down
Definition To bow the head or body.
References Exodus 34:8
Lexicon to bow down
Why it matters Moses responds to the Lord’s self-revelation with humble worship.
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 worship, bow down
Definition To bow in worship or reverence.
References Exodus 34:8
Lexicon to worship, bow down
Why it matters True revelation of God leads Moses to worship.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Pastoral Entry
חֵן is found, not earned. The idiom 'find favor in the eyes of' captures this exactly: Noah does not manufacture his standing before YHWH; he finds it. Gen 6:8 — 'Noah found favor in the eyes of the Lord' — immediately precedes the announcement of the flood: the finding of חֵן is what distinguishes Noah from the generation that perished, and it is YHWH's disposition toward him, not his own achievement.
Exod 33:12-17 is the most theologically developed OT חֵן text: Moses asks YHWH to 'know me and show me your ways, that I may find favor in your eyes.' YHWH's response — 'My presence will go with you, and I will give you rest' — shows that חֵן is the ground of divine presence, not the reward of adequate performance. This is the logic the NT inherits and escalates: Eph 2:8-9 ('by grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works') is the full flower of what חֵן's 'find favor' idiom was already beginning to describe.
Sense favor, grace
Definition Favor or gracious acceptance.
References Exodus 34:9
Lexicon favor, grace
Why it matters Moses appeals to having found favor as he pleads for the Lord’s continued presence.
Sense stiff-necked, stubborn
Definition Stubborn, hard-necked, resistant to submission.
References Exodus 34:9
Lexicon stiff-necked, stubborn
Why it matters Moses confesses Israel’s stubbornness while asking the Lord to go with them.
Pastoral Entry
נָחַל (nachal) is the Hebrew verb for inheriting and taking possession — and at its theological center it is the verb of the land-promise: YHWH gives the land to his people as a nachalah (H5159, inheritance, already companioned) and they nachal it by his gift. The local Hebrew artifact indexes the verb at about 59 occurrences, spanning the range of covenant inheritance: the land given to Israel, the meek inheriting the earth, wisdom as inheritance, and YHWH himself as his people's inheritance.
Psalm 37:11 gives nachal its most famous use: 'But the meek shall inherit (yirshu) the earth and delight themselves in abundant peace (shalom).' The Psalm is a meditation on the apparent prosperity of the wicked (v. 1-2) against the long-term inheritance of the righteous: the wicked will be cut off (v. 9), but those who wait on YHWH shall inherit the land (v. 9, yirshu). The verb here uses the related yarash (H3423, to possess/inherit) rather than nachal itself — but the inheritance-theology is the same. The meek's inheritance is not achieved by force or cunning but received from YHWH as a covenant gift. Jesus quotes this directly in Matthew 5:5.
Deuteronomy 1:38 gives nachal its Joshua-leadership form: 'Joshua the son of Nun, who stands before you, he shall enter there. Encourage him, for he shall cause Israel to inherit (yanchilena, Hiphil of nachal) it.' The Hiphil of nachal is the leadership-of-inheritance: Joshua's task is not to conquer the land for Israel but to cause them to inherit what YHWH is giving. The nachal is always YHWH's prior action; the leader's role is to facilitate the people's reception of the divine gift.
Numbers 26:55 gives nachal its lot-distribution form: 'The land shall be divided by lot. According to the names of their fathers' tribes they shall inherit (yinchalu).' The lot (goral) is the mechanism of the covenant inheritance: random from a human perspective, but from Israel's perspective it is YHWH's determination. Proverbs 16:33 confirms this: 'The lot is cast into the lap, but its every decision is from YHWH.' The nachal by lot means the inheritance is gift, not achievement.
Proverbs 3:35 gives nachal its wisdom-form: 'The wise shall inherit (yinchalu) honor, but shame is the legacy of fools.' In wisdom theology, nachal extends beyond the land to the inheritance of honor, dignity, and a good name — the enduring possession that comes from living wisely before YHWH.
Isaiah 54:3 gives nachal its eschatological-expansion form: 'For you will spread abroad to the right and to the left, and your offspring will possess (yarash) nations and will people the desolate cities.' The inheritance that begins with Canaan expands in the prophetic vision to the nations — the offspring of Zion will inherit what was once only for Israel. This is the Abrahamic-berakah trajectory: the nachalah expands until it covers the earth.
For the preacher, נָחַל (nachal) gives the congregation the grammar of covenant reception: the inheritance is not earned but received. Every possession that YHWH's people hold is a nachal — a gift from the one who gives.
Sense to inherit, possess as inheritance
Definition To possess or receive as inheritance.
References Exodus 34:9
Lexicon to inherit, possess as inheritance
Why it matters Moses asks the Lord to take Israel as His inheritance despite their sin.
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 binding covenant relationship or treaty.
References Exodus 34:10, 12, 15, 27
Lexicon covenant
Why it matters The Lord renews covenant with Israel after the golden calf breach.
Sense wonders, extraordinary acts
Definition Wonderful or extraordinary acts beyond ordinary human power.
References Exodus 34:10
Lexicon wonders, extraordinary acts
Why it matters The Lord promises covenant wonders before all the people.
Pastoral Entry
יָרֵא (yare) is the Hebrew verb for fear and reverence — a single word that covers both the terror-of-the-holy and the reverent-awe-of-the-beloved. The English word 'fear' has lost most of its awe-dimension in modern usage; the Hebrew yare still holds both together: the trembling of one who has encountered real power and the reverence of one who has been undone by holiness. The local Hebrew index currently counts about 329 occurrences in the OT.
Proverbs 1:7 places the fear of the Lord at the beginning of all wisdom: 'The fear of the Lord (yir'at YHWH) is the beginning of wisdom; fools despise wisdom and instruction.' The yir'ah here is not slavish terror but the foundational orientation that rightly orders all other knowledge — seeing reality from beneath God rather than from a position of independent evaluation. The person who fears the Lord has the right starting point for all thinking; the fool who does not fear God has no coherent framework because they have placed themselves at the center.
Genesis 22:12 gives the most concentrated example of yir'ah in narrative: 'now I know that you fear God (yere Elohim), seeing you have not withheld your son, your only son, from me.' The fear of God that Abraham demonstrates is the willingness to obey God absolutely, including in the thing that cost him everything. This is yir'ah as the motivating force of obedience: not the terror of punishment avoided but the awe of the God who is worth obeying even when obedience is the hardest thing imaginable.
The wisdom tradition consistently develops the yir'at YHWH as the orienting principle of human life: it is the beginning of wisdom (Prov 1:7), its crown (Prov 9:10), the thing that prolongs life (Prov 10:27), what keeps one from evil (Prov 16:6), and the source of what the Lord shares with those who fear Him (Ps 25:14). The yir'ah-tradition is the OT's answer to the deepest human question: where do I find the framework for living well? The answer is: in the awe of the God who made you, sustains you, and calls you.
For the preacher, יָרֵא is the word that restores the dimension of awe to the God-relationship — and insists that genuine love of God is not only warmth and affection but also the trembling recognition of who He is.
Sense fearsome, awesome
Definition Fear-inspiring or awesome.
References Exodus 34:10
Lexicon fearsome, awesome
Why it matters The Lord’s work for Israel will be awesome before the nations.
Sense snare, trap
Definition A trap or snare that captures and destroys.
References Exodus 34:12
Lexicon snare, trap
Why it matters Idolatrous covenants would become a trap for Israel.
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 altars
Definition Places of sacrifice or worship.
References Exodus 34:13
Lexicon altars
Why it matters Israel must break down idolatrous altars in the land.
Pastoral Entry
אֲשֵׁרָה can refer either to the Canaanite goddess Asherah herself or to a cultic object associated with her worship, often described as an Asherah pole, sacred tree, or wooden cult-symbol. In some contexts the two meanings overlap, because the object represented or mediated the goddess's presence. The word appears about forty times in the Hebrew Bible, with the exact count depending on how plural and inflected forms are indexed. It is almost always associated with apostasy, idol worship, and Israel's covenant betrayal.
Asherah was a major goddess in Northwest Semitic religion, known especially from Ugaritic texts as the consort of El (the high god) and mother of the gods. She should be distinguished from Astarte/Ashtoreth, though older lexicons sometimes associate or confuse the two; Ashtoreth is a separate Hebrew term (עַשְׁתֹּרֶת). Eighth-century BC inscriptions from Kuntillet Ajrud and Khirbet el-Qom refer to 'YHWH and his Asherah.' Scholars debate whether this phrase refers to the goddess herself or to an Asherah cult-symbol, but either reading shows how deeply syncretistic popular religion had become in some Israelite settings. The OT prophets and historians view this as profound apostasy: not merely the addition of another deity but the distortion of Israel's worship of the Lord through association with Canaanite fertility religion.
Deuteronomy 16:21 contains the foundational prohibition: 'You shall not plant any tree as an Asherah beside the altar of the Lord your God.' The prohibition is specific about the location: beside the altar of the Lord. The danger is not simply worshiping another goddess — it is mixing the worship of the Lord with the Asherah cult. The combination that Deuteronomy prohibits is exactly the combination that the historical books record Israel repeatedly practicing.
The word appears in one of the most dramatic prophetic demonstrations in the OT: Gideon is called to tear down his father's altar to Baal and cut down the Asherah beside it (Judges 6:25-30). When the town demands Gideon's death for it, his father Joash replies: 'If Baal really is a god, he can defend himself' (6:31). The point is not abstract philosophy but prophetic ridicule: a god who must be defended by men is no true god at all. The same exposure applies to the אֲשֵׁרָה beside his altar.
The kings of Judah who introduced or tolerated the Asherah are named as covenant breakers. Manasseh set up an Asherah in the temple itself (2 Kings 21:3, 7) — the ultimate profanation. Josiah's reform involved specifically cutting down and burning Asherah poles (2 Kings 23:4-6, 14-15). The fact that the Asherah had to be cut down by a reforming king suggests it had been standing for a long time — it had become an entrenched feature of the worship landscape, normalized through generations of tolerance and imitation.
Sense Asherah poles
Definition Objects associated with Canaanite goddess worship.
References Exodus 34:13
Lexicon Asherah poles
Why it matters Israel must cut down idolatrous symbols rather than tolerate them.
Sense jealous, zealous
Definition Jealous or zealous for exclusive covenant loyalty.
References Exodus 34:14
Lexicon jealous, zealous
Why it matters The Lord’s name is Jealous because He will not share His worship with other gods.
Cross-language bridge 3 links · View in lexicon
Pastoral Entry
זָנָה is the OT's primary verb for sexual immorality in its broadest sense — harlotry, prostitution, fornication — and in its most theologically freighted sense: the infidelity of a people who have gone after what does not belong to them while remaining bound to the God who called them. With 93 occurrences across the OT, it is one of the most-used moral verbs in the Hebrew Bible, and its sheer frequency reflects how central the covenant-faithfulness it violates is to Israel's identity.
At the literal level, זָנָה describes the woman who gives herself sexually outside the covenant of marriage. Tamar is identified as one who has זָנָה when Judah sees her veiled at the roadside (Gen 38:15). Rahab is הַזֹּנָה — the woman known for this (Josh 2:1). The Mosaic law addresses the practice directly and in some cases connects it immediately to idolatry: do not prostitute your daughter, lest the land fall into prostitution and be filled with depravity (Lev 19:29). The literal and the theological are never far apart.
But the word's theological weight far exceeds its literal referents. Beginning in Exodus (34:15-16), the verb is used for Israel going after other gods — making covenant with the inhabitants of the land and then going whoring (זָנָה) after their gods. Deuteronomy 31:16 records God's own prediction: this people will rise and go whoring (זָנָה) after foreign gods. This is not a borrowed metaphor. It is the governing image of the covenant relationship: Israel is the wife of Yahweh, bound in a marriage established at Sinai, and every turn toward other gods is precisely what this word names.
Hosea makes this explicit in the most sustained and painful way. God tells Hosea to marry a woman of harlotry because the land commits great harlotry (זָנֹה תִּזְנֶה) by forsaking the Lord (Hos 1:2). Hosea's marriage is not a metaphor for the theology — it is the theology lived in human flesh. What Israel has done to God, Hosea's wife has done to Hosea. And the God who sends Hosea back to his unfaithful wife is the God who will not let Israel go.
Sense to prostitute oneself, commit spiritual adultery
Definition To act unfaithfully, often used for idolatry as spiritual adultery.
References Exodus 34:15-16
Lexicon to prostitute oneself, commit spiritual adultery
Why it matters Idolatry is described as covenant unfaithfulness like prostitution.
Sense cast metal gods, idols
Definition Molten or cast images made as gods.
References Exodus 34:17
Lexicon cast metal gods, idols
Why it matters The command directly confronts the sin of the golden calf.
Sense Festival of Unleavened Bread
Definition The feast commemorating the Exodus through eating unleavened bread.
References Exodus 34:18
Lexicon Festival of Unleavened Bread
Why it matters Covenant renewal preserves Exodus memory in Israel’s worship calendar.
Sense Aviv, month of spring grain
Definition The month associated with Israel’s Exodus from Egypt.
References Exodus 34:18
Lexicon Aviv, month of spring grain
Why it matters The Festival of Unleavened Bread is tied to the time of the Exodus.
Sense first opening of the womb
Definition The first offspring from the womb.
References Exodus 34:19-20
Lexicon first opening of the womb
Why it matters The firstborn belong to the Lord and must be redeemed where commanded.
Pastoral Entry
פָּדָה (padah) is one of the two primary Hebrew verbs for redemption, meaning to ransom or to buy back. Where גָּאַל (gaal, H1350) emphasizes the kinship relationship that creates the obligation to redeem, padah emphasizes the transaction itself: something or someone is held, and a price is paid to secure their release.
The word is used in legal contexts (ransoming a firstborn son, Exod 13:13-15; ransoming an ox that has killed someone, Exod 21:30) and in the great redemptive narrative contexts: YHWH redeemed Israel from Egypt by padah, and the word becomes a technical term for the Exodus event. What happened at the Red Sea was not merely rescue — it was ransom: YHWH paid the full cost of Israel's freedom.
The pastoral significance of padah is that it frames salvation in transactional terms that are not cold or mechanical but weighty and covenantal. Someone paid to bring you out. The question padah repeatedly raises is: what was the price? In the NT, the answer is the blood of Christ — 'you were bought with a price' (1 Cor 6:20) and 'ransomed from the futile ways' (1 Pet 1:18-19) are both NT uses of the padah concept.
Sense to redeem, ransom
Definition To redeem, ransom, or buy back.
References Exodus 34:20
Lexicon to redeem, ransom
Why it matters The firstborn son and certain animals must be redeemed, preserving the memory of redemption.
Sense empty, empty-handed
Definition Empty or without offering.
References Exodus 34:20
Lexicon empty, empty-handed
Why it matters No one is to appear before the Lord empty-handed.
Sense to rest, cease
Definition To stop, cease, or rest.
References Exodus 34:21
Lexicon to rest, cease
Why it matters Israel must rest on the seventh day even during plowing and harvest.
Sense Festival of Weeks
Definition A harvest festival associated with firstfruits of wheat.
References Exodus 34:22
Lexicon Festival of Weeks
Why it matters The covenant calendar includes harvest worship and thanksgiving.
Sense firstfruits
Definition The first and best portion of produce offered to the LORD.
References Exodus 34:22, 26
Lexicon firstfruits
Why it matters The firstfruits belong to the Lord as an act of trust and worship.
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 appear, be seen
Definition To appear before or be seen.
References Exodus 34:23-24
Lexicon to appear, be seen
Why it matters Israel’s men must appear before the Sovereign Lord three times a year.
Sense the Lord LORD, Sovereign LORD
Definition The LORD as master and sovereign ruler.
References Exodus 34:23
Lexicon the Lord LORD, Sovereign LORD
Why it matters Israel appears before the Lord as sovereign owner and covenant God.
Sense write down
Definition To write or record.
References Exodus 34:27
Lexicon write down
Why it matters Moses is commanded to write the covenant words.
Sense ten words, Ten Commandments
Definition The covenant words written on the tablets.
References Exodus 34:28
Lexicon ten words, Ten Commandments
Why it matters The renewed tablets contain the covenant words, commonly called the Ten Commandments.
Sense to shine, send out rays
Definition To shine or emit rays.
References Exodus 34:29-30, 35
Lexicon to shine, send out rays
Why it matters Moses’ face shines after speaking with the Lord.
Pastoral Entry
פָּנִים is the Hebrew word rendered 'face' in most translations, but its reach across the Old Testament is far wider than anatomy. Indexed in the local Hebrew artifact at about 2,127 occurrences, it carries the weight of presence, encounter, orientation, and relational standing. A face turns toward someone or away. It bestows favour or withdraws it. It is the surface of the self most exposed to another, and in Hebrew thought the face is therefore the index of the whole person's attention, disposition, and attitude.
In its most basic use, פָּנִים names the human face as the visible front of the body — the part that meets the world. But from that literal root, the word grows in every direction. To see someone's face is to come into their presence. To seek someone's face is to seek their attention, help, or favour. To fall on one's face is to prostrate oneself in worship, awe, or terror. To hide one's face is to refuse encounter or to express grief and shame. These are not metaphors layered onto a neutral anatomical term; they are the full semantic life of the word as Scripture uses it.
The most theologically charged use of פָּנִים is its application to God. The phrase 'the face of the Lord' (פְּנֵי יְהוָה) is one of the Old Testament's central theological idioms. To seek the face of God is to seek his presence, attention, and blessing — not to attempt to see his physical form. When the Lord's face shines upon his people, it is an image of his grace turned toward them in favour and peace. When his face is hidden, it signals withdrawal of protection, relationship, and mercy. The Aaronic blessing of Numbers 6:24–26, which calls for the Lord's face to shine upon and be gracious to Israel, places the entire wellbeing of God's people inside the word פָּנִים. The face of God is where his covenant mercy lives.
The word also functions prepositionally with extraordinary frequency. לִפְנֵי (before, in the presence of) and מִפְּנֵי (from before, because of, away from the face of) together account for hundreds of occurrences. In this prepositional use, פָּנִים names the sphere of another's presence — spatial and relational at once. To stand before someone is not merely to occupy their vicinity but to enter the relational field they generate.
Pastorally, פָּנִים opens the question of encounter. The whole drama of Scripture — exile and return, hiddenness and revelation, wrath and mercy — is narrated in part through the idiom of God's face. Israel's deepest need was not merely rescue from enemies or provision for hunger; it was to see the face of God turned toward them again. That longing finds its answer in the blessing of Numbers 6, in the priestly psalms, and finally — thematically and christologically — in the face of God made known in the face of Jesus Christ.
Sense face, presence
Definition Face or presence.
References Exodus 34:29-35
Lexicon face, presence
Why it matters Moses’ face reflects the glory of his encounter with the Lord.
Pastoral Entry
יָרֵא (yare) is the Hebrew verb for fear and reverence — a single word that covers both the terror-of-the-holy and the reverent-awe-of-the-beloved. The English word 'fear' has lost most of its awe-dimension in modern usage; the Hebrew yare still holds both together: the trembling of one who has encountered real power and the reverence of one who has been undone by holiness. The local Hebrew index currently counts about 329 occurrences in the OT.
Proverbs 1:7 places the fear of the Lord at the beginning of all wisdom: 'The fear of the Lord (yir'at YHWH) is the beginning of wisdom; fools despise wisdom and instruction.' The yir'ah here is not slavish terror but the foundational orientation that rightly orders all other knowledge — seeing reality from beneath God rather than from a position of independent evaluation. The person who fears the Lord has the right starting point for all thinking; the fool who does not fear God has no coherent framework because they have placed themselves at the center.
Genesis 22:12 gives the most concentrated example of yir'ah in narrative: 'now I know that you fear God (yere Elohim), seeing you have not withheld your son, your only son, from me.' The fear of God that Abraham demonstrates is the willingness to obey God absolutely, including in the thing that cost him everything. This is yir'ah as the motivating force of obedience: not the terror of punishment avoided but the awe of the God who is worth obeying even when obedience is the hardest thing imaginable.
The wisdom tradition consistently develops the yir'at YHWH as the orienting principle of human life: it is the beginning of wisdom (Prov 1:7), its crown (Prov 9:10), the thing that prolongs life (Prov 10:27), what keeps one from evil (Prov 16:6), and the source of what the Lord shares with those who fear Him (Ps 25:14). The yir'ah-tradition is the OT's answer to the deepest human question: where do I find the framework for living well? The answer is: in the awe of the God who made you, sustains you, and calls you.
For the preacher, יָרֵא is the word that restores the dimension of awe to the God-relationship — and insists that genuine love of God is not only warmth and affection but also the trembling recognition of who He is.
Sense to fear, be afraid
Definition To fear, revere, or be afraid.
References Exodus 34:30
Lexicon to fear, be afraid
Why it matters Aaron and Israel fear approaching Moses because of the radiance of his face.
Sense veil, covering
Definition A covering placed over the face.
References Exodus 34:33-35
Lexicon veil, covering
Why it matters Moses veils his radiant face after speaking the Lord’s commands to the people.
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 | H6458פָּסַלQal · Imperative · ImperativeH1961הָיָהQal · Perfect · IndicativeH7665שָׁבַרPiel · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.10 | H3772כָּרַתQal · ParticipleH6213עָשָׂהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/cohortativeH6381פָּלָאNiphal · ParticipleH1254בָּרָאNiphal · Perfect · IndicativeH3372יָרֵאNiphal · ParticipleH6213עָשָׂהQal · Participle |
| v.11 | H8104שָׁמַרQal · Imperative · ImperativeH1644גָּרַשׁQal · Participle |
| v.12 | H8104שָׁמַרNiphal · Imperative · ImperativeH3772כָּרַתQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH935בּוֹאQal · ParticipleH1961הָיָהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.14 | H7812שָׁחָהNitpael · Imperfective |
| v.15 | H3772כָּרַתQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.17 | H6213עָשָׂהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.18 | H8104שָׁמַרQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH398אָכַלQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH3318יָצָאQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.19 | H2142זָכַרNiphal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.2 | H3559כּוּןNiphal · Participle |
| v.20 | H6299פָּדָהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH6299פָּדָהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH6299פָּדָהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH7200רָאָהNiphal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.21 | H5647עָבַדQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH7673שָׁבַתQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH7673שָׁבַתQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.22 | H6213עָשָׂהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.23 | H7200רָאָהNiphal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.24 | H3423יָרַשׁHiphil · Imperfect · Indicative/cohortativeH2530חָמַדQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.25 | H7819שָׁחַטQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH3885לוּןQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.26 | H935בּוֹאHiphil · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH1310בָּשַׁלPiel · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.27 | H3789כָּתַבQal · Imperative · ImperativeH3772כָּרַתQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.28 | H398אָכַלQal · Perfect · IndicativeH8354שָׁתָהQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.29 | H3045יָדַעQal · Perfect · IndicativeH7160קָרַןQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.3 | H5927עָלָהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH7200רָאָהNiphal · Imperfect · JussiveH7462רָעָהQal · Imperfect · Jussive |
| v.30 | H7160קָרַןQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.32 | H5066נָגַשׁNiphal · Perfect · IndicativeH1696דָבַרPiel · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.34 | H5493סוּרHiphil · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH6680צָוָהPual · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.35 | H7160קָרַןQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.4 | H6680צָוָהPiel · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.7 | H5341נָצַרQal · ParticipleH5375נָשָׂאQal · ParticipleH5352נָקָהPiel · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH6485פָּקַדQal · Participle |
| v.9 | H4672מָצָאQal · Perfect · IndicativeH3212יָלַךְQal · Imperfect · Jussive |
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 34 argues that covenant renewal after sin rests entirely on the Lord’s revealed character. Israel has broken the covenant, but the Lord reveals Himself as compassionate, gracious, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, forgiving sin, yet not clearing the guilty. His mercy does not erase holiness, and His justice does not cancel covenant faithfulness. Therefore Israel must reject idolatry, worship exclusively, keep covenant rhythms, and receive the renewed covenant through Moses the mediator.
From new tablets, to divine self-revelation, to Moses’ worship and intercession, to covenant renewal, to warnings against idolatry, to worship obligations, to covenant writing, and finally to Moses’ radiant mediated glory.
- 1.The broken covenant can be renewed only because the LORD commands new tablets.
- 2.The LORD’s covenant renewal is grounded in His own merciful and just character.
- 3.True revelation produces worship and intercession.
- 4.Renewed covenant requires exclusive loyalty and rejection of idolatrous compromise.
- 5.Renewed covenant life is structured by redemption memory, Sabbath rest, festival worship, and firstfruits devotion.
- 6.The restored covenant words and Moses’ radiant face testify that the LORD has truly met with His mediator.
Theological Focus
- Covenant renewal
- Second tablets
- The name of the Lord
- Compassion
- Grace
- Slow to anger
- Covenant love
- Faithfulness
- Forgiveness
- Justice
- Moses’ intercession
- Exclusive worship
- Jealous God
- Idolatry forbidden
- Festivals
- Sabbath
- Firstborn redemption
- Moses’ radiant face
- Veiled glory
- Covenant renewal after failure
- God reveals Himself by His name
- Mercy and justice together
- Revelation leads to worship
- Intercession grounded in God’s character
- Exclusive covenant loyalty
- Idolatry as spiritual adultery
- Redemption remembered in worship
- Sabbath trust
- Glory reflected through mediation
- Divine Self-Revelation
- Mercy
- Covenant Renewal
- Mediation
- Exclusive Worship
- Redemption Memory
- Divine Glory
- Christological Fulfillment
Theological Themes
The new tablets show that the Lord graciously renews covenant after Israel’s rebellion.
The Lord proclaims His name and character rather than allowing Israel to define Him.
The Lord forgives wickedness, rebellion, and sin, yet does not leave the guilty unpunished.
Moses immediately bows and worships after the Lord proclaims His name.
Moses pleads for the Lord to go with Israel and forgive them because of the mercy just revealed.
Israel must worship no other god because the Lord is jealous for His covenant people.
Covenants with idolaters would lead Israel into prostitution after other gods.
The Festival of Unleavened Bread and firstborn redemption keep the Exodus central.
Israel must rest even during plowing and harvest, trusting the Lord over productivity.
Moses’ radiant face reflects his encounter with the Lord and the mediated nature of old covenant glory.
Covenant Significance
Exodus 34 is the formal renewal of covenant after the golden calf. The first tablets were broken because Israel broke covenant. The second tablets demonstrate divine mercy and covenant restoration. The Lord’s self-revelation provides the theological foundation for renewal: He is merciful and just. The renewed covenant includes warnings against idolatrous alliances, festival obligations, Sabbath, firstborn redemption, and sacrificial commands.
Israel’s continued existence as the Lord’s people rests on the Lord’s gracious character and Moses’ mediation.
- Covenant tablets restored - The Lord writes again on new tablets after the first tablets were broken.
- Covenant name proclaimed - The Lord reveals His merciful and just character at the heart of covenant renewal.
- Covenant mediator worships and pleads - Moses bows and intercedes for forgiveness and continued presence.
- Covenant exclusivity required - Israel must make no covenant with idolaters and must worship no other god.
- Covenant worship restated - Israel receives renewed commands concerning festivals, Sabbath, firstborn, sacrifices, and firstfruits.
- Covenant glory mediated - Moses’ shining face testifies to the reality of divine encounter and mediated covenant instruction.
- Exodus 20:1-17 - The covenant words first given at Sinai are restored on the second tablets.
- Exodus 32:19 - Moses shattered the first tablets because Israel had broken covenant through the calf.
- Exodus 33:18-23 - The Lord’s proclamation of His name fulfills His promise to reveal goodness and glory to Moses.
- Deuteronomy 10:1-5 - Moses later recounts the making of the second tablets and their placement in the ark.
- Nehemiah 9:17 - Later Scripture echoes the Lord’s self-revelation as gracious, compassionate, slow to anger, and abounding in love.
Canonical Connections
The proclamation of Exodus 34:6-7 becomes a repeated confession of God’s mercy and justice throughout Scripture.
The second tablets demonstrate the Lord’s mercy after covenant breach.
The Lord’s jealousy requires exclusive covenant loyalty and rejection of idols.
The Lord forgives sin yet does not clear guilt, a tension ultimately resolved in Christ’s atoning work.
The radiance and veil of Moses become central to Paul’s teaching on old covenant and new covenant glory.
The glory Moses reflected is surpassed by the glory revealed in Christ.
Cross References
Now king Solomon loved many foreign women, together with the daughter of Pharaoh, women of the Moabites, Ammonites, Edomites, Sidonians, and Hittites; of the nations concerning which Yahweh said to the children of Israel, “You shall not go...
Those who are wise will shine as the brightness of the expanse. Those who turn many to righteousness will shine as the stars forever and ever.
These are the statutes and the ordinances which you shall observe to do in the land which Yahweh, the God of your fathers, has given you to possess all the days that you live on the earth. You shall surely destroy all the places in which...
Observe the month of Abib, and keep the Passover to Yahweh your God; for in the month of Abib Yahweh your God brought you out of Egypt by night. You shall sacrifice the Passover to Yahweh your God, of the flock and the herd, in the place...
Since then, there has not arisen a prophet in Israel like Moses, whom Yahweh knew face to face,
When Yahweh your God brings you into the land where you go to possess it, and casts out many nations before you—the Hittite, the Girgashite, the Amorite, the Canaanite, the Perizzite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite—seven nations greater and...
Know therefore that Yahweh your God himself is God, the faithful God, who keeps covenant and loving kindness with them who love him and keep his commandments to a thousand generations, and repays those who hate him to their face, to...
On the third day, when it was morning, there were thunders and lightnings, and a thick cloud on the mountain, and the sound of an exceedingly loud trumpet; and all the people who were in the camp trembled. Moses led the people out of the...
“You shall have no other gods before me. “You shall not make for yourselves an idol, nor any image of anything that is in the heavens above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth: you shall not bow...
Moses went up on the mountain, and the cloud covered the mountain. Yahweh’s glory settled on Mount Sinai, and the cloud covered it six days. The seventh day he called to Moses out of the middle of the cloud. The appearance of Yahweh’s...
Moses said to God, “Behold, when I come to the children of Israel, and tell them, ‘The God of your fathers has sent me to you,’ and they ask me, ‘What is his name?’ what should I tell them?” God said to Moses, “I AM WHO I AM,” and he said,...
Now Yahweh said to Abram, “Leave your country, and your relatives, and your father’s house, and go to the land that I will show you. I will make of you a great nation. I will bless you and make your name great. You will be a blessing. I...
Tear your heart, and not your garments, and turn to Yahweh, your God; for he is gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and abundant in loving kindness, and relents from sending calamity.
He prayed to Yahweh, and said, “Please, Yahweh, wasn’t this what I said when I was still in my own country? Therefore I hurried to flee to Tarshish, for I knew that you are a gracious God, and merciful, slow to anger, and abundant in...
“Therefore be very courageous to keep and to do all that is written in the book of the law of Moses, that you not turn away from it to the right hand or to the left; that you not come among these nations, these that remain among you;...
Yahweh’s angel came up from Gilgal to Bochim. He said, “I brought you out of Egypt, and have brought you to the land which I swore to give your fathers. I said, ‘I will never break my covenant with you. You shall make no covenant with the...
Yahweh is a jealous God and avenges. Yahweh avenges and is full of wrath. Yahweh takes vengeance on his adversaries, and he maintains wrath against his enemies. Yahweh is slow to anger, and great in power, and will by no means leave the...
He said, “Now hear my words. If there is a prophet among you, I, Yahweh, will make myself known to him in a vision. I will speak with him in a dream. My servant Moses is not so. He is faithful in all my house. With him, I will speak mouth...
Now please let the power of the Lord be great, according as you have spoken, saying, ‘Yahweh is slow to anger, and abundant in loving kindness, forgiving iniquity and disobedience; and he will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the...
Canon-Wide Connections
Cross-reference data: OpenBible.info (CC BY 4.0)
Exodus 34 clarifies the gospel by revealing the deep tension that only Christ finally resolves: the Lord forgives wickedness, rebellion, and sin, yet He does not leave the guilty unpunished. God’s forgiveness is never moral indifference. His justice is never suspended. In the cross of Christ, God shows how guilty sinners can be forgiven without guilt being ignored. Christ bears judgment, secures mercy, mediates the covenant, and reveals the glory of God more fully than Moses’ shining face ever could.
- God initiates restoration - The Lord commands new tablets after Israel shattered the covenant.
- God reveals mercy - The Lord proclaims Himself compassionate, gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in love and faithfulness.
- God upholds justice - The Lord does not leave the guilty unpunished.
- Mediation remains necessary - Moses worships, intercedes, and receives the covenant words for the people.
- Exclusive worship follows grace - The mercy of covenant renewal requires the rejection of idols.
- Christ fulfills mercy and justice - At the cross, God forgives sinners while judging sin in the substitute.
- Christ reveals greater glory - Moses reflects glory after speaking with God · Christ reveals the glory of God in His own face.
- Do not preach forgiveness as if God simply ignores guilt.
- Do not preach justice as if God is reluctant to show mercy.
- Do not separate covenant renewal from repentance and exclusive loyalty.
- Do not turn God’s jealousy into petty emotion.
- Do not treat Moses’ glory as final rather than preparatory.
- Do not miss the way Exodus 34 prepares for Christ’s cross, mediation, and glory.
Primary Emphasis
Exodus 34 contributes to the biblical theology fulfilled in Christ by revealing the Lord as merciful and just, forgiving sin without treating guilt lightly. The tension between forgiveness and justice ultimately requires atonement. Christ fulfills this by bearing sin so that God is both just and the one who justifies those who have faith. Moses’ radiant but veiled glory points forward to the greater glory revealed in Christ, in whose face the knowledge of the glory of God shines.
Chapter Contribution
Exodus 34 argues that covenant renewal after sin rests entirely on the Lord’s revealed character. Israel has broken the covenant, but the Lord reveals Himself as compassionate, gracious, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, forgiving sin, yet not clearing the guilty. His mercy does not erase holiness, and His justice does not cancel covenant faithfulness. Therefore Israel must reject idolatry, worship exclusively, keep covenant rhythms, and receive the renewed covenant through Moses the mediator.
The covenant-renewal pattern points toward Christ, who secures covenant forgiveness and forms a people cleansed from idols.
The divine character revealed here is climactically displayed in Christ’s cross, where forgiveness and justice meet.
Moses’ reflected and veiled glory points forward to the surpassing glory revealed in Christ.
The replacement tablets show that the Lord is restoring covenant relationship after Israel’s rupture.
Moses’ radiant face reflects the glory associated with speaking with the Lord.
The Lord’s name is Jealous, expressing his holy claim over his redeemed people and refusal to share worship with idols.
The Lord reveals his own name and character, defining himself rather than being defined by human speculation.
Israel must worship no other god because the Lord alone is their covenant God.
Israel fears even reflected glory, showing the seriousness of divine holiness.
The Lord forgives wickedness, rebellion, and sin, making Israel’s continued life possible.
The commands come after mercy, showing that grace renews loyalty rather than removing obedience.
The Lord does not leave the guilty unpunished, so mercy never means moral indifference.
Moses mediates the Lord’s commands to Israel after receiving them in the Lord’s presence.
Moses worships and pleads for the Lord’s presence, forgiveness, and covenant possession of Israel.
The Lord declares himself compassionate and gracious toward the undeserving.
The Lord is slow to anger, showing restraint toward a stiff-necked people.
Unleavened Bread and firstborn redemption keep the exodus deliverance central to Israel’s life.
Feasts, firstborn consecration, Sabbath, offerings, and prohibitions are commanded by the Lord.
The radiance is connected to divine speech; Moses communicates what the Lord commanded.
Israel must avoid treaties and practices that would draw them into idolatrous worship.
The Lord abounds in covenant love and faithfulness, preserving mercy for thousands.
The veil marks mediated access and becomes significant for later biblical reflection on old-covenant glory.
The Lord proclaims His own name and character to Moses.
The Lord reveals Himself as compassionate, gracious, slow to anger, and forgiving.
The Lord does not leave the guilty unpunished.
The Lord restores the covenant through new tablets and renewed commands.
Moses receives the renewed covenant and intercedes for Israel.
Israel must worship no other god and must reject idolatrous alliances.
Israel must rest on the seventh day, even during plowing and harvest.
The festivals and firstborn redemption preserve memory of the Exodus.
Moses’ radiant face reflects the glory of speaking with the Lord.
The mercy, justice, covenant mediation, and glory of this chapter are fulfilled in Christ.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Exodus 34 clarifies the gospel by revealing the deep tension that only Christ finally resolves: the Lord forgives wickedness, rebellion, and sin, yet He does not leave the guilty unpunished. God’s forgiveness is never moral indifference. His justice is never suspended. In the cross of Christ, God shows how guilty sinners can be forgiven without guilt being ignored. Christ bears judgment, secures mercy, mediates the covenant, and reveals the glory of God more fully than Moses’ shining face ever could.
The Lord renews covenant with sinners by revealing Himself as merciful and just, calling His people to exclusive loyalty, and restoring mediated fellowship through His covenant word.
God’s people must not presume on mercy, compromise with idols, forget redemption, neglect rest, or mistake reflected glory for the fullness that is revealed in Christ.
Repentance, worship, reverence, exclusive loyalty, trust, gratitude, obedience, humility, and hunger for the glory of God.
- Meditate slowly on Exodus 34:6-7 as the Lord’s own proclamation of His name.
- Confess sin without minimizing it, while pleading the mercy God Himself reveals.
- Identify any idolatrous alliance, affection, habit, or compromise that must be destroyed.
- Build worship rhythms around redemption, not mere religious activity.
- Practice Sabbath trust when life feels most urgent.
- Bring first and best offerings to the Lord rather than leftovers.
- Ask the Lord to shape you through communion with Him so that your life reflects His glory.
- Look beyond Moses’ veiled glory to the unveiled glory of God in Christ.
- The chapter warns against treating mercy as permission to sin, entering idolatrous alliances, worshiping other gods, making idols, neglecting Sabbath trust, withholding what belongs to the Lord, and forgetting that the Lord forgives sin while still judging guilt.
- Treating Exodus 34:6-7 as mercy without justice. - The Lord reveals Himself as forgiving but also as one who does not leave the guilty unpunished.
- Treating God’s jealousy as insecurity. - The Lord’s jealousy is His holy covenant claim over the people He redeemed.
- Assuming covenant renewal means Israel’s sin no longer matters. - Renewal is gracious, but the commands against idolatry and compromise are intensified.
- Separating festivals from redemption memory. - Unleavened Bread is tied directly to Israel’s deliverance from Egypt.
- Treating Sabbath as optional during busy seasons. - The Lord specifically commands Sabbath rest even during plowing and harvest.
- Thinking Moses’ shining face makes him divine. - Moses reflects glory from speaking with the Lord · he remains the mediator, not the source of glory.
- Ignoring the old covenant limitation expressed by the veil. - The veil shows the weight and limitation of mediated glory before the fuller revelation in Christ.
- Do I know the Lord according to His own self-revelation, or according to my assumptions?
- Do I receive God’s mercy while still taking His justice seriously?
- When God reveals Himself, do I respond with worship and surrender?
- Can I confess sin honestly while still pleading for mercy?
- What covenant compromises or idolatrous alliances need to be broken decisively?
- Do my rhythms of worship keep redemption central?
- Do I trust the Lord enough to rest even when work feels urgent?
- Does time with the Lord leave any visible evidence in my character, speech, and ministry?
- Preach God’s name as God reveals it.
- Hold mercy and holiness together.
- Call people to worship after revelation.
- Confront idolatrous compromise clearly.
- Teach holy jealousy as covenant love.
- Recover Sabbath as trust.
- Lead people from reflected glory to Christ’s glory.
The broken covenant is met by the Lord’s gracious command to prepare new tablets.
The Lord answers Moses’ desire to see glory by revealing His goodness and covenant name.
Moses hears the Lord’s name and immediately bows in worship.
Moses’ worship becomes renewed pleading for the Lord to forgive and dwell with Israel.
The Lord’s covenant mercy demands rejection of idolatry and rival gods.
The Exodus shapes Israel’s festivals, firstborn redemption, and firstfruits devotion.
Moses descends from communion with the Lord visibly marked by reflected glory.
The veiled glory of Moses anticipates the greater glory revealed in Christ.
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The Lord commands Moses to chisel two new stone tablets and ascend Mount Sinai. The Lord descends in the cloud, proclaims His name, reveals His merciful and just character, and Moses worships and intercedes. The Lord renews the covenant, warns Israel against idolatrous alliances, restates key worship obligations, commands Moses to write the covenant words, and Moses remains with the Lord forty days and forty nights.
When Moses descends, his face shines from speaking with the Lord, and he veils his face before the people.
Exodus 34 is the formal renewal of covenant after the golden calf. The first tablets were broken because Israel broke covenant. The second tablets demonstrate divine mercy and covenant restoration. The Lord’s self-revelation provides the theological foundation for renewal: He is merciful and just. The renewed covenant includes warnings against idolatrous alliances, festival obligations, Sabbath, firstborn redemption, and sacrificial commands.
Israel’s continued existence as the Lord’s people rests on the Lord’s gracious character and Moses’ mediation.
Exodus 34 clarifies the gospel by revealing the deep tension that only Christ finally resolves: the Lord forgives wickedness, rebellion, and sin, yet He does not leave the guilty unpunished. God’s forgiveness is never moral indifference. His justice is never suspended. In the cross of Christ, God shows how guilty sinners can be forgiven without guilt being ignored. Christ bears judgment, secures mercy, mediates the covenant, and reveals the glory of God more fully than Moses’ shining face ever could.
Repentance, worship, reverence, exclusive loyalty, trust, gratitude, obedience, humility, and hunger for the glory of God.
Focus Points
- Covenant renewal
- Second tablets
- The name of the Lord
- Compassion
- Grace
- Slow to anger
- Covenant love
- Faithfulness
- Forgiveness
- Justice
- Moses’ intercession
- Exclusive worship
- Jealous God
- Idolatry forbidden
- Festivals
- Sabbath
- Firstborn redemption
- Moses’ radiant face
- Veiled glory
- Covenant renewal after failure
- God reveals Himself by His name
- Mercy and justice together
- Revelation leads to worship
- Intercession grounded in God’s character
- Exclusive covenant loyalty
- Idolatry as spiritual adultery
- Redemption remembered in worship
- Sabbath trust
- Glory reflected through mediation
- Divine Self-Revelation
- Mercy
- Mediation
- Redemption Memory
- Divine Glory
- Christological Fulfillment
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Exodus 34:1-9
Exo 34:1-8 When Moses had restored the covenant bond through his intercession (Exo 33:14), he was directed by Jehovah to hew out two stones, like the former ones which he had broken, and to come with them the next morning up the mountain, and Jehovah would write upon them the same words as upon the first, and thus restore the covenant record. It was also commanded, as in the former case (Exo 19:12-13), that no one should go up the mountain with him, or be seen upon it, and that not even cattle should feed against the mountain, i.
e. , in the immediate neighbourhood (Exo 34:3). The first tables of the covenant were called “tables of stone” (Exo 24:12; Exo 31:18); the second, on the other hand, which were hewn by Moses, are called “tables of stones” (Exo 34:1 and Exo 34:4); and the latter expression is applied indiscriminately to both of them in Deu 4:13; Deu 5:19; Deu 9:9-11; Deu 10:1-4.
This difference does not indicate a diversity in the records, but may be explained very simply from the fact, that the tables prepared by Moses were hewn from two stones, and not both from the same block; whereas all that could be said of the former, which had been made by God Himself, was that they were of stone, since no one knew whether God had used one stone or two for the purpose. There is apparently far more importance in the following distinction, that the second tables were delivered by Moses and only written upon by God, whereas in the case of the former both the writing and the materials came from God.
This cannot have been intended either as a punishment for the nation (Hengstenberg), or as “the sign of a higher stage of the covenant, inasmuch as the further the reciprocity extended, the firmer was the covenant” ( Baumgarten ). It is much more natural to seek for the cause, as Rashi does, in the fact, that Moses had broken the first in pieces; only we must not regard it as a sign that God disapproved of the manifestation of anger on the part of Moses, but rather as a recognition of his zealous exertions for the restoration of the covenant which had been broken by the sin of the nation.
As Moses had restored the covenant through his energetic intercession, he should also provide the materials for the renewal of the covenant record, and bring them to God, for Him to complete and confirm the record by writing the covenant words upon the tables. On the following morning, when Moses ascended the mountain, Jehovah granted him the promised manifestation of His glory (Exo 34:5.)
The description of this unparalleled occurrence is in perfect harmony with the mysterious and majestic character of the revelation. “ Jehovah descended (from heaven) in the cloud, and stood by him there, and proclaimed the name of Jehovah; and Jehovah passed by in his sight, and proclaimed Jehovah, Jehovah God, merciful and gracious, ” etc. What Moses saw we are not told, but simply the words in which Jehovah proclaimed all the glory of His being; whilst it is recorded of Moses, that he bowed his head toward the earth and worshipped.
This “sermon on the name of the Lord,” as Luther calls it, disclosed to Moses the most hidden nature of Jehovah. It proclaimed that God is love, but that kind of love in which mercy, grace, long-suffering, goodness, and truth are united with holiness and justice. As the merciful One, who is great in goodness and truth, Jehovah shows mercy to the thousandth, forgiving sin and iniquity in long-suffering and grace; but He does not leave sin altogether unpunished, and in His justice visits the sin of the fathers upon the children and the children’s children even unto the fourth generation.
The Lord had already revealed Himself to the whole nation from Mount Sinai as visiting sin and showing mercy (Exo 20:5.) But whereas on that occasion the burning zeal of Jehovah which visits sin stood in the foreground, and mercy only followed afterwards, here grace, mercy, and goodness are placed in the front. And accordingly all the words which the language contained to express the idea of grace in its varied manifestations to the sinner, are crowded together here, to reveal the fact that in His inmost being God is love.
But in order that grace may not be perverted by sinners into a ground of wantonness, justice is not wanting even here with its solemn threatenings, although it only follows mercy, to show that mercy is mightier than wrath, and that holy love does not punish til sinners despise the riches of the goodness, patience, and long-suffering of God. As Jehovah here proclaimed His name, so did He continue to bear witness of it to the Israelites, from their departure from Sinai till their entrance into Canaan, and from that time forward till their dispersion among the heathen, and even now in their exile showing mercy to the thousandth, when they turn to the Redeemer who has come out of Zion.
Exo 34:1-8 When Moses had restored the covenant bond through his intercession (Exo 33:14), he was directed by Jehovah to hew out two stones, like the former ones which he had broken, and to come with them the next morning up the mountain, and Jehovah would write upon them the same words as upon the first, and thus restore the covenant record. It was also commanded, as in the former case (Exo 19:12-13), that no one should go up the mountain with him, or be seen upon it, and that not even cattle should feed against the mountain, i.
e. , in the immediate neighbourhood (Exo 34:3). The first tables of the covenant were called “tables of stone” (Exo 24:12; Exo 31:18); the second, on the other hand, which were hewn by Moses, are called “tables of stones” (Exo 34:1 and Exo 34:4); and the latter expression is applied indiscriminately to both of them in Deu 4:13; Deu 5:19; Deu 9:9-11; Deu 10:1-4.
This difference does not indicate a diversity in the records, but may be explained very simply from the fact, that the tables prepared by Moses were hewn from two stones, and not both from the same block; whereas all that could be said of the former, which had been made by God Himself, was that they were of stone, since no one knew whether God had used one stone or two for the purpose. There is apparently far more importance in the following distinction, that the second tables were delivered by Moses and only written upon by God, whereas in the case of the former both the writing and the materials came from God.
This cannot have been intended either as a punishment for the nation (Hengstenberg), or as “the sign of a higher stage of the covenant, inasmuch as the further the reciprocity extended, the firmer was the covenant” ( Baumgarten ). It is much more natural to seek for the cause, as Rashi does, in the fact, that Moses had broken the first in pieces; only we must not regard it as a sign that God disapproved of the manifestation of anger on the part of Moses, but rather as a recognition of his zealous exertions for the restoration of the covenant which had been broken by the sin of the nation.
As Moses had restored the covenant through his energetic intercession, he should also provide the materials for the renewal of the covenant record, and bring them to God, for Him to complete and confirm the record by writing the covenant words upon the tables. On the following morning, when Moses ascended the mountain, Jehovah granted him the promised manifestation of His glory (Exo 34:5.)
The description of this unparalleled occurrence is in perfect harmony with the mysterious and majestic character of the revelation. “ Jehovah descended (from heaven) in the cloud, and stood by him there, and proclaimed the name of Jehovah; and Jehovah passed by in his sight, and proclaimed Jehovah, Jehovah God, merciful and gracious, ” etc. What Moses saw we are not told, but simply the words in which Jehovah proclaimed all the glory of His being; whilst it is recorded of Moses, that he bowed his head toward the earth and worshipped.
This “sermon on the name of the Lord,” as Luther calls it, disclosed to Moses the most hidden nature of Jehovah. It proclaimed that God is love, but that kind of love in which mercy, grace, long-suffering, goodness, and truth are united with holiness and justice. As the merciful One, who is great in goodness and truth, Jehovah shows mercy to the thousandth, forgiving sin and iniquity in long-suffering and grace; but He does not leave sin altogether unpunished, and in His justice visits the sin of the fathers upon the children and the children’s children even unto the fourth generation.
The Lord had already revealed Himself to the whole nation from Mount Sinai as visiting sin and showing mercy (Exo 20:5.) But whereas on that occasion the burning zeal of Jehovah which visits sin stood in the foreground, and mercy only followed afterwards, here grace, mercy, and goodness are placed in the front. And accordingly all the words which the language contained to express the idea of grace in its varied manifestations to the sinner, are crowded together here, to reveal the fact that in His inmost being God is love.
But in order that grace may not be perverted by sinners into a ground of wantonness, justice is not wanting even here with its solemn threatenings, although it only follows mercy, to show that mercy is mightier than wrath, and that holy love does not punish til sinners despise the riches of the goodness, patience, and long-suffering of God. As Jehovah here proclaimed His name, so did He continue to bear witness of it to the Israelites, from their departure from Sinai till their entrance into Canaan, and from that time forward till their dispersion among the heathen, and even now in their exile showing mercy to the thousandth, when they turn to the Redeemer who has come out of Zion.
Exo 34:1-8 When Moses had restored the covenant bond through his intercession (Exo 33:14), he was directed by Jehovah to hew out two stones, like the former ones which he had broken, and to come with them the next morning up the mountain, and Jehovah would write upon them the same words as upon the first, and thus restore the covenant record. It was also commanded, as in the former case (Exo 19:12-13), that no one should go up the mountain with him, or be seen upon it, and that not even cattle should feed against the mountain, i.
e. , in the immediate neighbourhood (Exo 34:3). The first tables of the covenant were called “tables of stone” (Exo 24:12; Exo 31:18); the second, on the other hand, which were hewn by Moses, are called “tables of stones” (Exo 34:1 and Exo 34:4); and the latter expression is applied indiscriminately to both of them in Deu 4:13; Deu 5:19; Deu 9:9-11; Deu 10:1-4.
This difference does not indicate a diversity in the records, but may be explained very simply from the fact, that the tables prepared by Moses were hewn from two stones, and not both from the same block; whereas all that could be said of the former, which had been made by God Himself, was that they were of stone, since no one knew whether God had used one stone or two for the purpose. There is apparently far more importance in the following distinction, that the second tables were delivered by Moses and only written upon by God, whereas in the case of the former both the writing and the materials came from God.
This cannot have been intended either as a punishment for the nation (Hengstenberg), or as “the sign of a higher stage of the covenant, inasmuch as the further the reciprocity extended, the firmer was the covenant” ( Baumgarten ). It is much more natural to seek for the cause, as Rashi does, in the fact, that Moses had broken the first in pieces; only we must not regard it as a sign that God disapproved of the manifestation of anger on the part of Moses, but rather as a recognition of his zealous exertions for the restoration of the covenant which had been broken by the sin of the nation.
As Moses had restored the covenant through his energetic intercession, he should also provide the materials for the renewal of the covenant record, and bring them to God, for Him to complete and confirm the record by writing the covenant words upon the tables. On the following morning, when Moses ascended the mountain, Jehovah granted him the promised manifestation of His glory (Exo 34:5.)
The description of this unparalleled occurrence is in perfect harmony with the mysterious and majestic character of the revelation. “ Jehovah descended (from heaven) in the cloud, and stood by him there, and proclaimed the name of Jehovah; and Jehovah passed by in his sight, and proclaimed Jehovah, Jehovah God, merciful and gracious, ” etc. What Moses saw we are not told, but simply the words in which Jehovah proclaimed all the glory of His being; whilst it is recorded of Moses, that he bowed his head toward the earth and worshipped.
This “sermon on the name of the Lord,” as Luther calls it, disclosed to Moses the most hidden nature of Jehovah. It proclaimed that God is love, but that kind of love in which mercy, grace, long-suffering, goodness, and truth are united with holiness and justice. As the merciful One, who is great in goodness and truth, Jehovah shows mercy to the thousandth, forgiving sin and iniquity in long-suffering and grace; but He does not leave sin altogether unpunished, and in His justice visits the sin of the fathers upon the children and the children’s children even unto the fourth generation.
The Lord had already revealed Himself to the whole nation from Mount Sinai as visiting sin and showing mercy (Exo 20:5.) But whereas on that occasion the burning zeal of Jehovah which visits sin stood in the foreground, and mercy only followed afterwards, here grace, mercy, and goodness are placed in the front. And accordingly all the words which the language contained to express the idea of grace in its varied manifestations to the sinner, are crowded together here, to reveal the fact that in His inmost being God is love.
But in order that grace may not be perverted by sinners into a ground of wantonness, justice is not wanting even here with its solemn threatenings, although it only follows mercy, to show that mercy is mightier than wrath, and that holy love does not punish til sinners despise the riches of the goodness, patience, and long-suffering of God. As Jehovah here proclaimed His name, so did He continue to bear witness of it to the Israelites, from their departure from Sinai till their entrance into Canaan, and from that time forward till their dispersion among the heathen, and even now in their exile showing mercy to the thousandth, when they turn to the Redeemer who has come out of Zion.
Exo 34:1-8 When Moses had restored the covenant bond through his intercession (Exo 33:14), he was directed by Jehovah to hew out two stones, like the former ones which he had broken, and to come with them the next morning up the mountain, and Jehovah would write upon them the same words as upon the first, and thus restore the covenant record. It was also commanded, as in the former case (Exo 19:12-13), that no one should go up the mountain with him, or be seen upon it, and that not even cattle should feed against the mountain, i.
e. , in the immediate neighbourhood (Exo 34:3). The first tables of the covenant were called “tables of stone” (Exo 24:12; Exo 31:18); the second, on the other hand, which were hewn by Moses, are called “tables of stones” (Exo 34:1 and Exo 34:4); and the latter expression is applied indiscriminately to both of them in Deu 4:13; Deu 5:19; Deu 9:9-11; Deu 10:1-4.
This difference does not indicate a diversity in the records, but may be explained very simply from the fact, that the tables prepared by Moses were hewn from two stones, and not both from the same block; whereas all that could be said of the former, which had been made by God Himself, was that they were of stone, since no one knew whether God had used one stone or two for the purpose. There is apparently far more importance in the following distinction, that the second tables were delivered by Moses and only written upon by God, whereas in the case of the former both the writing and the materials came from God.
This cannot have been intended either as a punishment for the nation (Hengstenberg), or as “the sign of a higher stage of the covenant, inasmuch as the further the reciprocity extended, the firmer was the covenant” ( Baumgarten ). It is much more natural to seek for the cause, as Rashi does, in the fact, that Moses had broken the first in pieces; only we must not regard it as a sign that God disapproved of the manifestation of anger on the part of Moses, but rather as a recognition of his zealous exertions for the restoration of the covenant which had been broken by the sin of the nation.
As Moses had restored the covenant through his energetic intercession, he should also provide the materials for the renewal of the covenant record, and bring them to God, for Him to complete and confirm the record by writing the covenant words upon the tables. On the following morning, when Moses ascended the mountain, Jehovah granted him the promised manifestation of His glory (Exo 34:5.)
The description of this unparalleled occurrence is in perfect harmony with the mysterious and majestic character of the revelation. “ Jehovah descended (from heaven) in the cloud, and stood by him there, and proclaimed the name of Jehovah; and Jehovah passed by in his sight, and proclaimed Jehovah, Jehovah God, merciful and gracious, ” etc. What Moses saw we are not told, but simply the words in which Jehovah proclaimed all the glory of His being; whilst it is recorded of Moses, that he bowed his head toward the earth and worshipped.
This “sermon on the name of the Lord,” as Luther calls it, disclosed to Moses the most hidden nature of Jehovah. It proclaimed that God is love, but that kind of love in which mercy, grace, long-suffering, goodness, and truth are united with holiness and justice. As the merciful One, who is great in goodness and truth, Jehovah shows mercy to the thousandth, forgiving sin and iniquity in long-suffering and grace; but He does not leave sin altogether unpunished, and in His justice visits the sin of the fathers upon the children and the children’s children even unto the fourth generation.
The Lord had already revealed Himself to the whole nation from Mount Sinai as visiting sin and showing mercy (Exo 20:5.) But whereas on that occasion the burning zeal of Jehovah which visits sin stood in the foreground, and mercy only followed afterwards, here grace, mercy, and goodness are placed in the front. And accordingly all the words which the language contained to express the idea of grace in its varied manifestations to the sinner, are crowded together here, to reveal the fact that in His inmost being God is love.
But in order that grace may not be perverted by sinners into a ground of wantonness, justice is not wanting even here with its solemn threatenings, although it only follows mercy, to show that mercy is mightier than wrath, and that holy love does not punish til sinners despise the riches of the goodness, patience, and long-suffering of God. As Jehovah here proclaimed His name, so did He continue to bear witness of it to the Israelites, from their departure from Sinai till their entrance into Canaan, and from that time forward till their dispersion among the heathen, and even now in their exile showing mercy to the thousandth, when they turn to the Redeemer who has come out of Zion.
Exo 34:1-8 When Moses had restored the covenant bond through his intercession (Exo 33:14), he was directed by Jehovah to hew out two stones, like the former ones which he had broken, and to come with them the next morning up the mountain, and Jehovah would write upon them the same words as upon the first, and thus restore the covenant record. It was also commanded, as in the former case (Exo 19:12-13), that no one should go up the mountain with him, or be seen upon it, and that not even cattle should feed against the mountain, i.
e. , in the immediate neighbourhood (Exo 34:3). The first tables of the covenant were called “tables of stone” (Exo 24:12; Exo 31:18); the second, on the other hand, which were hewn by Moses, are called “tables of stones” (Exo 34:1 and Exo 34:4); and the latter expression is applied indiscriminately to both of them in Deu 4:13; Deu 5:19; Deu 9:9-11; Deu 10:1-4.
This difference does not indicate a diversity in the records, but may be explained very simply from the fact, that the tables prepared by Moses were hewn from two stones, and not both from the same block; whereas all that could be said of the former, which had been made by God Himself, was that they were of stone, since no one knew whether God had used one stone or two for the purpose. There is apparently far more importance in the following distinction, that the second tables were delivered by Moses and only written upon by God, whereas in the case of the former both the writing and the materials came from God.
This cannot have been intended either as a punishment for the nation (Hengstenberg), or as “the sign of a higher stage of the covenant, inasmuch as the further the reciprocity extended, the firmer was the covenant” ( Baumgarten ). It is much more natural to seek for the cause, as Rashi does, in the fact, that Moses had broken the first in pieces; only we must not regard it as a sign that God disapproved of the manifestation of anger on the part of Moses, but rather as a recognition of his zealous exertions for the restoration of the covenant which had been broken by the sin of the nation.
As Moses had restored the covenant through his energetic intercession, he should also provide the materials for the renewal of the covenant record, and bring them to God, for Him to complete and confirm the record by writing the covenant words upon the tables. On the following morning, when Moses ascended the mountain, Jehovah granted him the promised manifestation of His glory (Exo 34:5.)
The description of this unparalleled occurrence is in perfect harmony with the mysterious and majestic character of the revelation. “ Jehovah descended (from heaven) in the cloud, and stood by him there, and proclaimed the name of Jehovah; and Jehovah passed by in his sight, and proclaimed Jehovah, Jehovah God, merciful and gracious, ” etc. What Moses saw we are not told, but simply the words in which Jehovah proclaimed all the glory of His being; whilst it is recorded of Moses, that he bowed his head toward the earth and worshipped.
This “sermon on the name of the Lord,” as Luther calls it, disclosed to Moses the most hidden nature of Jehovah. It proclaimed that God is love, but that kind of love in which mercy, grace, long-suffering, goodness, and truth are united with holiness and justice. As the merciful One, who is great in goodness and truth, Jehovah shows mercy to the thousandth, forgiving sin and iniquity in long-suffering and grace; but He does not leave sin altogether unpunished, and in His justice visits the sin of the fathers upon the children and the children’s children even unto the fourth generation.
The Lord had already revealed Himself to the whole nation from Mount Sinai as visiting sin and showing mercy (Exo 20:5.) But whereas on that occasion the burning zeal of Jehovah which visits sin stood in the foreground, and mercy only followed afterwards, here grace, mercy, and goodness are placed in the front. And accordingly all the words which the language contained to express the idea of grace in its varied manifestations to the sinner, are crowded together here, to reveal the fact that in His inmost being God is love.
But in order that grace may not be perverted by sinners into a ground of wantonness, justice is not wanting even here with its solemn threatenings, although it only follows mercy, to show that mercy is mightier than wrath, and that holy love does not punish til sinners despise the riches of the goodness, patience, and long-suffering of God. As Jehovah here proclaimed His name, so did He continue to bear witness of it to the Israelites, from their departure from Sinai till their entrance into Canaan, and from that time forward till their dispersion among the heathen, and even now in their exile showing mercy to the thousandth, when they turn to the Redeemer who has come out of Zion.
Exo 34:1-8 When Moses had restored the covenant bond through his intercession (Exo 33:14), he was directed by Jehovah to hew out two stones, like the former ones which he had broken, and to come with them the next morning up the mountain, and Jehovah would write upon them the same words as upon the first, and thus restore the covenant record. It was also commanded, as in the former case (Exo 19:12-13), that no one should go up the mountain with him, or be seen upon it, and that not even cattle should feed against the mountain, i.
e. , in the immediate neighbourhood (Exo 34:3). The first tables of the covenant were called “tables of stone” (Exo 24:12; Exo 31:18); the second, on the other hand, which were hewn by Moses, are called “tables of stones” (Exo 34:1 and Exo 34:4); and the latter expression is applied indiscriminately to both of them in Deu 4:13; Deu 5:19; Deu 9:9-11; Deu 10:1-4.
This difference does not indicate a diversity in the records, but may be explained very simply from the fact, that the tables prepared by Moses were hewn from two stones, and not both from the same block; whereas all that could be said of the former, which had been made by God Himself, was that they were of stone, since no one knew whether God had used one stone or two for the purpose. There is apparently far more importance in the following distinction, that the second tables were delivered by Moses and only written upon by God, whereas in the case of the former both the writing and the materials came from God.
This cannot have been intended either as a punishment for the nation (Hengstenberg), or as “the sign of a higher stage of the covenant, inasmuch as the further the reciprocity extended, the firmer was the covenant” ( Baumgarten ). It is much more natural to seek for the cause, as Rashi does, in the fact, that Moses had broken the first in pieces; only we must not regard it as a sign that God disapproved of the manifestation of anger on the part of Moses, but rather as a recognition of his zealous exertions for the restoration of the covenant which had been broken by the sin of the nation.
As Moses had restored the covenant through his energetic intercession, he should also provide the materials for the renewal of the covenant record, and bring them to God, for Him to complete and confirm the record by writing the covenant words upon the tables. On the following morning, when Moses ascended the mountain, Jehovah granted him the promised manifestation of His glory (Exo 34:5.)
The description of this unparalleled occurrence is in perfect harmony with the mysterious and majestic character of the revelation. “ Jehovah descended (from heaven) in the cloud, and stood by him there, and proclaimed the name of Jehovah; and Jehovah passed by in his sight, and proclaimed Jehovah, Jehovah God, merciful and gracious, ” etc. What Moses saw we are not told, but simply the words in which Jehovah proclaimed all the glory of His being; whilst it is recorded of Moses, that he bowed his head toward the earth and worshipped.
This “sermon on the name of the Lord,” as Luther calls it, disclosed to Moses the most hidden nature of Jehovah. It proclaimed that God is love, but that kind of love in which mercy, grace, long-suffering, goodness, and truth are united with holiness and justice. As the merciful One, who is great in goodness and truth, Jehovah shows mercy to the thousandth, forgiving sin and iniquity in long-suffering and grace; but He does not leave sin altogether unpunished, and in His justice visits the sin of the fathers upon the children and the children’s children even unto the fourth generation.
The Lord had already revealed Himself to the whole nation from Mount Sinai as visiting sin and showing mercy (Exo 20:5.) But whereas on that occasion the burning zeal of Jehovah which visits sin stood in the foreground, and mercy only followed afterwards, here grace, mercy, and goodness are placed in the front. And accordingly all the words which the language contained to express the idea of grace in its varied manifestations to the sinner, are crowded together here, to reveal the fact that in His inmost being God is love.
But in order that grace may not be perverted by sinners into a ground of wantonness, justice is not wanting even here with its solemn threatenings, although it only follows mercy, to show that mercy is mightier than wrath, and that holy love does not punish til sinners despise the riches of the goodness, patience, and long-suffering of God. As Jehovah here proclaimed His name, so did He continue to bear witness of it to the Israelites, from their departure from Sinai till their entrance into Canaan, and from that time forward till their dispersion among the heathen, and even now in their exile showing mercy to the thousandth, when they turn to the Redeemer who has come out of Zion.
Exo 34:1-8 When Moses had restored the covenant bond through his intercession (Exo 33:14), he was directed by Jehovah to hew out two stones, like the former ones which he had broken, and to come with them the next morning up the mountain, and Jehovah would write upon them the same words as upon the first, and thus restore the covenant record. It was also commanded, as in the former case (Exo 19:12-13), that no one should go up the mountain with him, or be seen upon it, and that not even cattle should feed against the mountain, i.
e. , in the immediate neighbourhood (Exo 34:3). The first tables of the covenant were called “tables of stone” (Exo 24:12; Exo 31:18); the second, on the other hand, which were hewn by Moses, are called “tables of stones” (Exo 34:1 and Exo 34:4); and the latter expression is applied indiscriminately to both of them in Deu 4:13; Deu 5:19; Deu 9:9-11; Deu 10:1-4.
This difference does not indicate a diversity in the records, but may be explained very simply from the fact, that the tables prepared by Moses were hewn from two stones, and not both from the same block; whereas all that could be said of the former, which had been made by God Himself, was that they were of stone, since no one knew whether God had used one stone or two for the purpose. There is apparently far more importance in the following distinction, that the second tables were delivered by Moses and only written upon by God, whereas in the case of the former both the writing and the materials came from God.
This cannot have been intended either as a punishment for the nation (Hengstenberg), or as “the sign of a higher stage of the covenant, inasmuch as the further the reciprocity extended, the firmer was the covenant” ( Baumgarten ). It is much more natural to seek for the cause, as Rashi does, in the fact, that Moses had broken the first in pieces; only we must not regard it as a sign that God disapproved of the manifestation of anger on the part of Moses, but rather as a recognition of his zealous exertions for the restoration of the covenant which had been broken by the sin of the nation.
As Moses had restored the covenant through his energetic intercession, he should also provide the materials for the renewal of the covenant record, and bring them to God, for Him to complete and confirm the record by writing the covenant words upon the tables. On the following morning, when Moses ascended the mountain, Jehovah granted him the promised manifestation of His glory (Exo 34:5.)
The description of this unparalleled occurrence is in perfect harmony with the mysterious and majestic character of the revelation. “ Jehovah descended (from heaven) in the cloud, and stood by him there, and proclaimed the name of Jehovah; and Jehovah passed by in his sight, and proclaimed Jehovah, Jehovah God, merciful and gracious, ” etc. What Moses saw we are not told, but simply the words in which Jehovah proclaimed all the glory of His being; whilst it is recorded of Moses, that he bowed his head toward the earth and worshipped.
This “sermon on the name of the Lord,” as Luther calls it, disclosed to Moses the most hidden nature of Jehovah. It proclaimed that God is love, but that kind of love in which mercy, grace, long-suffering, goodness, and truth are united with holiness and justice. As the merciful One, who is great in goodness and truth, Jehovah shows mercy to the thousandth, forgiving sin and iniquity in long-suffering and grace; but He does not leave sin altogether unpunished, and in His justice visits the sin of the fathers upon the children and the children’s children even unto the fourth generation.
The Lord had already revealed Himself to the whole nation from Mount Sinai as visiting sin and showing mercy (Exo 20:5.) But whereas on that occasion the burning zeal of Jehovah which visits sin stood in the foreground, and mercy only followed afterwards, here grace, mercy, and goodness are placed in the front. And accordingly all the words which the language contained to express the idea of grace in its varied manifestations to the sinner, are crowded together here, to reveal the fact that in His inmost being God is love.
But in order that grace may not be perverted by sinners into a ground of wantonness, justice is not wanting even here with its solemn threatenings, although it only follows mercy, to show that mercy is mightier than wrath, and that holy love does not punish til sinners despise the riches of the goodness, patience, and long-suffering of God. As Jehovah here proclaimed His name, so did He continue to bear witness of it to the Israelites, from their departure from Sinai till their entrance into Canaan, and from that time forward till their dispersion among the heathen, and even now in their exile showing mercy to the thousandth, when they turn to the Redeemer who has come out of Zion.
Exo 34:1-8 When Moses had restored the covenant bond through his intercession (Exo 33:14), he was directed by Jehovah to hew out two stones, like the former ones which he had broken, and to come with them the next morning up the mountain, and Jehovah would write upon them the same words as upon the first, and thus restore the covenant record. It was also commanded, as in the former case (Exo 19:12-13), that no one should go up the mountain with him, or be seen upon it, and that not even cattle should feed against the mountain, i.
e. , in the immediate neighbourhood (Exo 34:3). The first tables of the covenant were called “tables of stone” (Exo 24:12; Exo 31:18); the second, on the other hand, which were hewn by Moses, are called “tables of stones” (Exo 34:1 and Exo 34:4); and the latter expression is applied indiscriminately to both of them in Deu 4:13; Deu 5:19; Deu 9:9-11; Deu 10:1-4.
This difference does not indicate a diversity in the records, but may be explained very simply from the fact, that the tables prepared by Moses were hewn from two stones, and not both from the same block; whereas all that could be said of the former, which had been made by God Himself, was that they were of stone, since no one knew whether God had used one stone or two for the purpose. There is apparently far more importance in the following distinction, that the second tables were delivered by Moses and only written upon by God, whereas in the case of the former both the writing and the materials came from God.
This cannot have been intended either as a punishment for the nation (Hengstenberg), or as “the sign of a higher stage of the covenant, inasmuch as the further the reciprocity extended, the firmer was the covenant” ( Baumgarten ). It is much more natural to seek for the cause, as Rashi does, in the fact, that Moses had broken the first in pieces; only we must not regard it as a sign that God disapproved of the manifestation of anger on the part of Moses, but rather as a recognition of his zealous exertions for the restoration of the covenant which had been broken by the sin of the nation.
As Moses had restored the covenant through his energetic intercession, he should also provide the materials for the renewal of the covenant record, and bring them to God, for Him to complete and confirm the record by writing the covenant words upon the tables. On the following morning, when Moses ascended the mountain, Jehovah granted him the promised manifestation of His glory (Exo 34:5.)
The description of this unparalleled occurrence is in perfect harmony with the mysterious and majestic character of the revelation. “ Jehovah descended (from heaven) in the cloud, and stood by him there, and proclaimed the name of Jehovah; and Jehovah passed by in his sight, and proclaimed Jehovah, Jehovah God, merciful and gracious, ” etc. What Moses saw we are not told, but simply the words in which Jehovah proclaimed all the glory of His being; whilst it is recorded of Moses, that he bowed his head toward the earth and worshipped.
This “sermon on the name of the Lord,” as Luther calls it, disclosed to Moses the most hidden nature of Jehovah. It proclaimed that God is love, but that kind of love in which mercy, grace, long-suffering, goodness, and truth are united with holiness and justice. As the merciful One, who is great in goodness and truth, Jehovah shows mercy to the thousandth, forgiving sin and iniquity in long-suffering and grace; but He does not leave sin altogether unpunished, and in His justice visits the sin of the fathers upon the children and the children’s children even unto the fourth generation.
The Lord had already revealed Himself to the whole nation from Mount Sinai as visiting sin and showing mercy (Exo 20:5.) But whereas on that occasion the burning zeal of Jehovah which visits sin stood in the foreground, and mercy only followed afterwards, here grace, mercy, and goodness are placed in the front. And accordingly all the words which the language contained to express the idea of grace in its varied manifestations to the sinner, are crowded together here, to reveal the fact that in His inmost being God is love.
But in order that grace may not be perverted by sinners into a ground of wantonness, justice is not wanting even here with its solemn threatenings, although it only follows mercy, to show that mercy is mightier than wrath, and that holy love does not punish til sinners despise the riches of the goodness, patience, and long-suffering of God. As Jehovah here proclaimed His name, so did He continue to bear witness of it to the Israelites, from their departure from Sinai till their entrance into Canaan, and from that time forward till their dispersion among the heathen, and even now in their exile showing mercy to the thousandth, when they turn to the Redeemer who has come out of Zion.
Exo 34:9-10 On this manifestation of mercy, Moses repeated the prayer that Jehovah would go in the midst of Israel. It is true the Lord had already promised that His face should go with them (Exo 33:14); but as Moses had asked for a sign of the glory of the Lord as a seal to the promise, it was perfectly natural that, when this petition was granted, he should lay hold of the grace that had been revealed to him as it never had been before, and endeavour to give even greater stability to the covenant.
To this end he repeated his former intercession on behalf of the nation, at the same time making this confession, “For it is a stiff-necked people; therefore forgive our iniquity and our sin, and make us the inheritance. ” Moses spoke collectively, including himself in the nation in the presence of God. The reason which he assigned pointed to the deep root of corruption that had broken out in the worship of the golden calf, and was appropriately pleaded as a motive for asking forgiveness, inasmuch as God Himself had assigned the natural corruption of the human race as a reason why He would not destroy it again with a flood (Gen 8:21).
Wrath was mitigated by a regard to the natural condition. - נחל in the Kal , with an accusative of the person, does not mean to lead a person into the inheritance, but to make a person into an inheritance; here, therefore, to make Israel the possession of Jehovah (Deu 4:20; Deu 9:26, cf. Zec 2:12). Jehovah at once declared (Exo 34:10) that He would conclude a covenant, i.
e. , restore the broken covenant, and do marvels before the whole nation, such as had not been done in all the earth or in any nation, and thus by these His works distinguish Israel before all nations as His own property (Exo 33:16). The nation was to see this, because it would be terrible; terrible, namely, through the overthrow of the powers that resisted the kingdom of God, every one of whom would be laid prostrate and destroyed by the majesty of the Almighty.
Exo 34:9-10 On this manifestation of mercy, Moses repeated the prayer that Jehovah would go in the midst of Israel. It is true the Lord had already promised that His face should go with them (Exo 33:14); but as Moses had asked for a sign of the glory of the Lord as a seal to the promise, it was perfectly natural that, when this petition was granted, he should lay hold of the grace that had been revealed to him as it never had been before, and endeavour to give even greater stability to the covenant.
To this end he repeated his former intercession on behalf of the nation, at the same time making this confession, “For it is a stiff-necked people; therefore forgive our iniquity and our sin, and make us the inheritance. ” Moses spoke collectively, including himself in the nation in the presence of God. The reason which he assigned pointed to the deep root of corruption that had broken out in the worship of the golden calf, and was appropriately pleaded as a motive for asking forgiveness, inasmuch as God Himself had assigned the natural corruption of the human race as a reason why He would not destroy it again with a flood (Gen 8:21).
Wrath was mitigated by a regard to the natural condition. - נחל in the Kal , with an accusative of the person, does not mean to lead a person into the inheritance, but to make a person into an inheritance; here, therefore, to make Israel the possession of Jehovah (Deu 4:20; Deu 9:26, cf. Zec 2:12). Jehovah at once declared (Exo 34:10) that He would conclude a covenant, i.
e. , restore the broken covenant, and do marvels before the whole nation, such as had not been done in all the earth or in any nation, and thus by these His works distinguish Israel before all nations as His own property (Exo 33:16). The nation was to see this, because it would be terrible; terrible, namely, through the overthrow of the powers that resisted the kingdom of God, every one of whom would be laid prostrate and destroyed by the majesty of the Almighty.
Exo 34:11-16 To recall the duties of the covenant once more to the minds of the people, the Lord repeats from among the rights of Israel, upon the basis of which the covenant had been established (ch. 21-23), two of the leading points which determined the attitude of the nation towards Him, and which constituted, as it were, the main pillars that were to support the covenant about to be renewed.
These were, first , the warning against every kind of league with the Canaanites, who were to be driven out before the Israelites (Exo 34:11-16); and, secondly , the instructions concerning the true worship of Jehovah (Exo 34:17-26). The warning against friendship with the idolatrous Canaanites (Exo 34:11-16) is more fully developed and more strongly enforced than in Exo 23:23.
The Israelites, when received into the covenant with Jehovah, were not only to beware of forming any covenant with the inhabitants of Canaan (cf. Exo 23:32-33), but were to destroy all the signs of their idolatrous worship, such as altars, monuments (see Exo 23:24), and asherim , the idols of Astarte, the Canaanitish goddess of nature, which consisted for the most part of wooden pillars (see my Comm.
on 1Ki 14:23), and to worship no other god, because Jehovah was called jealous, i. e. , had revealed Himself as jealous (see at Exo 20:5), and was a jealous God. This was commanded, that the Israelites might not suffer themselves to be led astray by such an alliance; to go a whoring after their gods, and sacrifice to them, to take part in their sacrificial festivals, or to marry their sons to the daughters of the Canaanites, by whom they would be persuaded to join in the worship of idols.
The use of the expression “go a whoring” in a spiritual sense, in relation to idolatry, is to be accounted for on the ground, that the religious fellowship of Israel with Jehovah was a covenant resembling the marriage tie; and we meet with it for the first time, here, immediately after the formation of this covenant between Israel and Jehovah. The phrase is all the more expressive on account of the literal prostitution that was frequently associated with the worship of Baal and Astarte (cf.
Lev 17:7; Lev 20:5-6; Num 14:33, etc.) We may see from Num 25:1. how Israel was led astray by this temptation in the wilderness.
Exo 34:11-16 To recall the duties of the covenant once more to the minds of the people, the Lord repeats from among the rights of Israel, upon the basis of which the covenant had been established (ch. 21-23), two of the leading points which determined the attitude of the nation towards Him, and which constituted, as it were, the main pillars that were to support the covenant about to be renewed.
These were, first , the warning against every kind of league with the Canaanites, who were to be driven out before the Israelites (Exo 34:11-16); and, secondly , the instructions concerning the true worship of Jehovah (Exo 34:17-26). The warning against friendship with the idolatrous Canaanites (Exo 34:11-16) is more fully developed and more strongly enforced than in Exo 23:23.
The Israelites, when received into the covenant with Jehovah, were not only to beware of forming any covenant with the inhabitants of Canaan (cf. Exo 23:32-33), but were to destroy all the signs of their idolatrous worship, such as altars, monuments (see Exo 23:24), and asherim , the idols of Astarte, the Canaanitish goddess of nature, which consisted for the most part of wooden pillars (see my Comm.
on 1Ki 14:23), and to worship no other god, because Jehovah was called jealous, i. e. , had revealed Himself as jealous (see at Exo 20:5), and was a jealous God. This was commanded, that the Israelites might not suffer themselves to be led astray by such an alliance; to go a whoring after their gods, and sacrifice to them, to take part in their sacrificial festivals, or to marry their sons to the daughters of the Canaanites, by whom they would be persuaded to join in the worship of idols.
The use of the expression “go a whoring” in a spiritual sense, in relation to idolatry, is to be accounted for on the ground, that the religious fellowship of Israel with Jehovah was a covenant resembling the marriage tie; and we meet with it for the first time, here, immediately after the formation of this covenant between Israel and Jehovah. The phrase is all the more expressive on account of the literal prostitution that was frequently associated with the worship of Baal and Astarte (cf.
Lev 17:7; Lev 20:5-6; Num 14:33, etc.) We may see from Num 25:1. how Israel was led astray by this temptation in the wilderness.
Exo 34:11-16 To recall the duties of the covenant once more to the minds of the people, the Lord repeats from among the rights of Israel, upon the basis of which the covenant had been established (ch. 21-23), two of the leading points which determined the attitude of the nation towards Him, and which constituted, as it were, the main pillars that were to support the covenant about to be renewed.
These were, first , the warning against every kind of league with the Canaanites, who were to be driven out before the Israelites (Exo 34:11-16); and, secondly , the instructions concerning the true worship of Jehovah (Exo 34:17-26). The warning against friendship with the idolatrous Canaanites (Exo 34:11-16) is more fully developed and more strongly enforced than in Exo 23:23.
The Israelites, when received into the covenant with Jehovah, were not only to beware of forming any covenant with the inhabitants of Canaan (cf. Exo 23:32-33), but were to destroy all the signs of their idolatrous worship, such as altars, monuments (see Exo 23:24), and asherim , the idols of Astarte, the Canaanitish goddess of nature, which consisted for the most part of wooden pillars (see my Comm.
on 1Ki 14:23), and to worship no other god, because Jehovah was called jealous, i. e. , had revealed Himself as jealous (see at Exo 20:5), and was a jealous God. This was commanded, that the Israelites might not suffer themselves to be led astray by such an alliance; to go a whoring after their gods, and sacrifice to them, to take part in their sacrificial festivals, or to marry their sons to the daughters of the Canaanites, by whom they would be persuaded to join in the worship of idols.
The use of the expression “go a whoring” in a spiritual sense, in relation to idolatry, is to be accounted for on the ground, that the religious fellowship of Israel with Jehovah was a covenant resembling the marriage tie; and we meet with it for the first time, here, immediately after the formation of this covenant between Israel and Jehovah. The phrase is all the more expressive on account of the literal prostitution that was frequently associated with the worship of Baal and Astarte (cf.
Lev 17:7; Lev 20:5-6; Num 14:33, etc.) We may see from Num 25:1. how Israel was led astray by this temptation in the wilderness.
Exo 34:11-16 To recall the duties of the covenant once more to the minds of the people, the Lord repeats from among the rights of Israel, upon the basis of which the covenant had been established (ch. 21-23), two of the leading points which determined the attitude of the nation towards Him, and which constituted, as it were, the main pillars that were to support the covenant about to be renewed.
These were, first , the warning against every kind of league with the Canaanites, who were to be driven out before the Israelites (Exo 34:11-16); and, secondly , the instructions concerning the true worship of Jehovah (Exo 34:17-26). The warning against friendship with the idolatrous Canaanites (Exo 34:11-16) is more fully developed and more strongly enforced than in Exo 23:23.
The Israelites, when received into the covenant with Jehovah, were not only to beware of forming any covenant with the inhabitants of Canaan (cf. Exo 23:32-33), but were to destroy all the signs of their idolatrous worship, such as altars, monuments (see Exo 23:24), and asherim , the idols of Astarte, the Canaanitish goddess of nature, which consisted for the most part of wooden pillars (see my Comm.
on 1Ki 14:23), and to worship no other god, because Jehovah was called jealous, i. e. , had revealed Himself as jealous (see at Exo 20:5), and was a jealous God. This was commanded, that the Israelites might not suffer themselves to be led astray by such an alliance; to go a whoring after their gods, and sacrifice to them, to take part in their sacrificial festivals, or to marry their sons to the daughters of the Canaanites, by whom they would be persuaded to join in the worship of idols.
The use of the expression “go a whoring” in a spiritual sense, in relation to idolatry, is to be accounted for on the ground, that the religious fellowship of Israel with Jehovah was a covenant resembling the marriage tie; and we meet with it for the first time, here, immediately after the formation of this covenant between Israel and Jehovah. The phrase is all the more expressive on account of the literal prostitution that was frequently associated with the worship of Baal and Astarte (cf.
Lev 17:7; Lev 20:5-6; Num 14:33, etc.) We may see from Num 25:1. how Israel was led astray by this temptation in the wilderness.
Exo 34:11-16 To recall the duties of the covenant once more to the minds of the people, the Lord repeats from among the rights of Israel, upon the basis of which the covenant had been established (ch. 21-23), two of the leading points which determined the attitude of the nation towards Him, and which constituted, as it were, the main pillars that were to support the covenant about to be renewed.
These were, first , the warning against every kind of league with the Canaanites, who were to be driven out before the Israelites (Exo 34:11-16); and, secondly , the instructions concerning the true worship of Jehovah (Exo 34:17-26). The warning against friendship with the idolatrous Canaanites (Exo 34:11-16) is more fully developed and more strongly enforced than in Exo 23:23.
The Israelites, when received into the covenant with Jehovah, were not only to beware of forming any covenant with the inhabitants of Canaan (cf. Exo 23:32-33), but were to destroy all the signs of their idolatrous worship, such as altars, monuments (see Exo 23:24), and asherim , the idols of Astarte, the Canaanitish goddess of nature, which consisted for the most part of wooden pillars (see my Comm.
on 1Ki 14:23), and to worship no other god, because Jehovah was called jealous, i. e. , had revealed Himself as jealous (see at Exo 20:5), and was a jealous God. This was commanded, that the Israelites might not suffer themselves to be led astray by such an alliance; to go a whoring after their gods, and sacrifice to them, to take part in their sacrificial festivals, or to marry their sons to the daughters of the Canaanites, by whom they would be persuaded to join in the worship of idols.
The use of the expression “go a whoring” in a spiritual sense, in relation to idolatry, is to be accounted for on the ground, that the religious fellowship of Israel with Jehovah was a covenant resembling the marriage tie; and we meet with it for the first time, here, immediately after the formation of this covenant between Israel and Jehovah. The phrase is all the more expressive on account of the literal prostitution that was frequently associated with the worship of Baal and Astarte (cf.
Lev 17:7; Lev 20:5-6; Num 14:33, etc.) We may see from Num 25:1. how Israel was led astray by this temptation in the wilderness.
Exo 34:11-16 To recall the duties of the covenant once more to the minds of the people, the Lord repeats from among the rights of Israel, upon the basis of which the covenant had been established (ch. 21-23), two of the leading points which determined the attitude of the nation towards Him, and which constituted, as it were, the main pillars that were to support the covenant about to be renewed.
These were, first , the warning against every kind of league with the Canaanites, who were to be driven out before the Israelites (Exo 34:11-16); and, secondly , the instructions concerning the true worship of Jehovah (Exo 34:17-26). The warning against friendship with the idolatrous Canaanites (Exo 34:11-16) is more fully developed and more strongly enforced than in Exo 23:23.
The Israelites, when received into the covenant with Jehovah, were not only to beware of forming any covenant with the inhabitants of Canaan (cf. Exo 23:32-33), but were to destroy all the signs of their idolatrous worship, such as altars, monuments (see Exo 23:24), and asherim , the idols of Astarte, the Canaanitish goddess of nature, which consisted for the most part of wooden pillars (see my Comm.
on 1Ki 14:23), and to worship no other god, because Jehovah was called jealous, i. e. , had revealed Himself as jealous (see at Exo 20:5), and was a jealous God. This was commanded, that the Israelites might not suffer themselves to be led astray by such an alliance; to go a whoring after their gods, and sacrifice to them, to take part in their sacrificial festivals, or to marry their sons to the daughters of the Canaanites, by whom they would be persuaded to join in the worship of idols.
The use of the expression “go a whoring” in a spiritual sense, in relation to idolatry, is to be accounted for on the ground, that the religious fellowship of Israel with Jehovah was a covenant resembling the marriage tie; and we meet with it for the first time, here, immediately after the formation of this covenant between Israel and Jehovah. The phrase is all the more expressive on account of the literal prostitution that was frequently associated with the worship of Baal and Astarte (cf.
Lev 17:7; Lev 20:5-6; Num 14:33, etc.) We may see from Num 25:1. how Israel was led astray by this temptation in the wilderness.
Exo 34:17-26 The true way to worship Jehovah is then pointed out, first of all negatively, in the prohibition against making molten images, with an allusion to the worship of the golden calf, as evinced by the use of the expression מסּכה אלהי, which only occurs again in Lev 19:4, instead of the phrase “gods of silver and gold” (Exo 20:23); and then positively, by a command to observe the feast of Mazzoth and the consecration of the first-born connected with the Passover (see at Exo 13:2, Exo 13:11, and Exo 13:12), also the Sabbath (Exo 34:21), the feasts of Weeks and Ingathering, the appearance of the male members of the nation three times a year before the Lord (Exo 34:22, see at Exo 23:14-17), together with all the other instructions connected with them (Exo 34:25, Exo 34:26). Before the last, however, the promise is introduced, that after the expulsion of the Canaanites, Jehovah would enlarge the borders of Israel (cf.
Exo 23:31), and make their land so secure, that when they went up to the Lord three times in the year, no one should desire their land, sc. , because of the universal dread of the might of their God (Exo 23:27).
Exo 34:17-26 The true way to worship Jehovah is then pointed out, first of all negatively, in the prohibition against making molten images, with an allusion to the worship of the golden calf, as evinced by the use of the expression מסּכה אלהי, which only occurs again in Lev 19:4, instead of the phrase “gods of silver and gold” (Exo 20:23); and then positively, by a command to observe the feast of Mazzoth and the consecration of the first-born connected with the Passover (see at Exo 13:2, Exo 13:11, and Exo 13:12), also the Sabbath (Exo 34:21), the feasts of Weeks and Ingathering, the appearance of the male members of the nation three times a year before the Lord (Exo 34:22, see at Exo 23:14-17), together with all the other instructions connected with them (Exo 34:25, Exo 34:26). Before the last, however, the promise is introduced, that after the expulsion of the Canaanites, Jehovah would enlarge the borders of Israel (cf.
Exo 23:31), and make their land so secure, that when they went up to the Lord three times in the year, no one should desire their land, sc. , because of the universal dread of the might of their God (Exo 23:27).
Exo 34:17-26 The true way to worship Jehovah is then pointed out, first of all negatively, in the prohibition against making molten images, with an allusion to the worship of the golden calf, as evinced by the use of the expression מסּכה אלהי, which only occurs again in Lev 19:4, instead of the phrase “gods of silver and gold” (Exo 20:23); and then positively, by a command to observe the feast of Mazzoth and the consecration of the first-born connected with the Passover (see at Exo 13:2, Exo 13:11, and Exo 13:12), also the Sabbath (Exo 34:21), the feasts of Weeks and Ingathering, the appearance of the male members of the nation three times a year before the Lord (Exo 34:22, see at Exo 23:14-17), together with all the other instructions connected with them (Exo 34:25, Exo 34:26). Before the last, however, the promise is introduced, that after the expulsion of the Canaanites, Jehovah would enlarge the borders of Israel (cf.
Exo 23:31), and make their land so secure, that when they went up to the Lord three times in the year, no one should desire their land, sc. , because of the universal dread of the might of their God (Exo 23:27).
Exo 34:17-26 The true way to worship Jehovah is then pointed out, first of all negatively, in the prohibition against making molten images, with an allusion to the worship of the golden calf, as evinced by the use of the expression מסּכה אלהי, which only occurs again in Lev 19:4, instead of the phrase “gods of silver and gold” (Exo 20:23); and then positively, by a command to observe the feast of Mazzoth and the consecration of the first-born connected with the Passover (see at Exo 13:2, Exo 13:11, and Exo 13:12), also the Sabbath (Exo 34:21), the feasts of Weeks and Ingathering, the appearance of the male members of the nation three times a year before the Lord (Exo 34:22, see at Exo 23:14-17), together with all the other instructions connected with them (Exo 34:25, Exo 34:26). Before the last, however, the promise is introduced, that after the expulsion of the Canaanites, Jehovah would enlarge the borders of Israel (cf.
Exo 23:31), and make their land so secure, that when they went up to the Lord three times in the year, no one should desire their land, sc. , because of the universal dread of the might of their God (Exo 23:27).
Exo 34:17-26 The true way to worship Jehovah is then pointed out, first of all negatively, in the prohibition against making molten images, with an allusion to the worship of the golden calf, as evinced by the use of the expression מסּכה אלהי, which only occurs again in Lev 19:4, instead of the phrase “gods of silver and gold” (Exo 20:23); and then positively, by a command to observe the feast of Mazzoth and the consecration of the first-born connected with the Passover (see at Exo 13:2, Exo 13:11, and Exo 13:12), also the Sabbath (Exo 34:21), the feasts of Weeks and Ingathering, the appearance of the male members of the nation three times a year before the Lord (Exo 34:22, see at Exo 23:14-17), together with all the other instructions connected with them (Exo 34:25, Exo 34:26). Before the last, however, the promise is introduced, that after the expulsion of the Canaanites, Jehovah would enlarge the borders of Israel (cf.
Exo 23:31), and make their land so secure, that when they went up to the Lord three times in the year, no one should desire their land, sc. , because of the universal dread of the might of their God (Exo 23:27).
Exo 34:17-26 The true way to worship Jehovah is then pointed out, first of all negatively, in the prohibition against making molten images, with an allusion to the worship of the golden calf, as evinced by the use of the expression מסּכה אלהי, which only occurs again in Lev 19:4, instead of the phrase “gods of silver and gold” (Exo 20:23); and then positively, by a command to observe the feast of Mazzoth and the consecration of the first-born connected with the Passover (see at Exo 13:2, Exo 13:11, and Exo 13:12), also the Sabbath (Exo 34:21), the feasts of Weeks and Ingathering, the appearance of the male members of the nation three times a year before the Lord (Exo 34:22, see at Exo 23:14-17), together with all the other instructions connected with them (Exo 34:25, Exo 34:26). Before the last, however, the promise is introduced, that after the expulsion of the Canaanites, Jehovah would enlarge the borders of Israel (cf.
Exo 23:31), and make their land so secure, that when they went up to the Lord three times in the year, no one should desire their land, sc. , because of the universal dread of the might of their God (Exo 23:27).
Exo 34:17-26 The true way to worship Jehovah is then pointed out, first of all negatively, in the prohibition against making molten images, with an allusion to the worship of the golden calf, as evinced by the use of the expression מסּכה אלהי, which only occurs again in Lev 19:4, instead of the phrase “gods of silver and gold” (Exo 20:23); and then positively, by a command to observe the feast of Mazzoth and the consecration of the first-born connected with the Passover (see at Exo 13:2, Exo 13:11, and Exo 13:12), also the Sabbath (Exo 34:21), the feasts of Weeks and Ingathering, the appearance of the male members of the nation three times a year before the Lord (Exo 34:22, see at Exo 23:14-17), together with all the other instructions connected with them (Exo 34:25, Exo 34:26). Before the last, however, the promise is introduced, that after the expulsion of the Canaanites, Jehovah would enlarge the borders of Israel (cf.
Exo 23:31), and make their land so secure, that when they went up to the Lord three times in the year, no one should desire their land, sc. , because of the universal dread of the might of their God (Exo 23:27).
Exo 34:17-26 The true way to worship Jehovah is then pointed out, first of all negatively, in the prohibition against making molten images, with an allusion to the worship of the golden calf, as evinced by the use of the expression מסּכה אלהי, which only occurs again in Lev 19:4, instead of the phrase “gods of silver and gold” (Exo 20:23); and then positively, by a command to observe the feast of Mazzoth and the consecration of the first-born connected with the Passover (see at Exo 13:2, Exo 13:11, and Exo 13:12), also the Sabbath (Exo 34:21), the feasts of Weeks and Ingathering, the appearance of the male members of the nation three times a year before the Lord (Exo 34:22, see at Exo 23:14-17), together with all the other instructions connected with them (Exo 34:25, Exo 34:26). Before the last, however, the promise is introduced, that after the expulsion of the Canaanites, Jehovah would enlarge the borders of Israel (cf.
Exo 23:31), and make their land so secure, that when they went up to the Lord three times in the year, no one should desire their land, sc. , because of the universal dread of the might of their God (Exo 23:27).
Exo 34:17-26 The true way to worship Jehovah is then pointed out, first of all negatively, in the prohibition against making molten images, with an allusion to the worship of the golden calf, as evinced by the use of the expression מסּכה אלהי, which only occurs again in Lev 19:4, instead of the phrase “gods of silver and gold” (Exo 20:23); and then positively, by a command to observe the feast of Mazzoth and the consecration of the first-born connected with the Passover (see at Exo 13:2, Exo 13:11, and Exo 13:12), also the Sabbath (Exo 34:21), the feasts of Weeks and Ingathering, the appearance of the male members of the nation three times a year before the Lord (Exo 34:22, see at Exo 23:14-17), together with all the other instructions connected with them (Exo 34:25, Exo 34:26). Before the last, however, the promise is introduced, that after the expulsion of the Canaanites, Jehovah would enlarge the borders of Israel (cf.
Exo 23:31), and make their land so secure, that when they went up to the Lord three times in the year, no one should desire their land, sc. , because of the universal dread of the might of their God (Exo 23:27).
Exo 34:17-26 The true way to worship Jehovah is then pointed out, first of all negatively, in the prohibition against making molten images, with an allusion to the worship of the golden calf, as evinced by the use of the expression מסּכה אלהי, which only occurs again in Lev 19:4, instead of the phrase “gods of silver and gold” (Exo 20:23); and then positively, by a command to observe the feast of Mazzoth and the consecration of the first-born connected with the Passover (see at Exo 13:2, Exo 13:11, and Exo 13:12), also the Sabbath (Exo 34:21), the feasts of Weeks and Ingathering, the appearance of the male members of the nation three times a year before the Lord (Exo 34:22, see at Exo 23:14-17), together with all the other instructions connected with them (Exo 34:25, Exo 34:26). Before the last, however, the promise is introduced, that after the expulsion of the Canaanites, Jehovah would enlarge the borders of Israel (cf.
Exo 23:31), and make their land so secure, that when they went up to the Lord three times in the year, no one should desire their land, sc. , because of the universal dread of the might of their God (Exo 23:27).
Exo 34:27 Moses was to write down these words, like the covenant rights and laws that had been given before (Exo 24:4, Exo 24:7), because Jehovah had concluded the covenant with Moses and Israel according to the tenor of them. By the renewed adoption of the nation, the covenant in ch. 24 was eo ipso restored; so that no fresh conclusion of this covenant was necessary, and the writing down of the fundamental conditions of the covenant was merely intended as a proof of its restoration.
It does not appear in the least degree “irreconcilable,” therefore, with the writing down of the covenant rights before Knobel ).
Exo 34:28 Moses remained upon the mountain forty days, just as on the former occasion (cf. Exo 24:18). “ And He (Jehovah) wrote upon the tables the ten covenant words ” (see at Exo 34:1).
Exo 34:29-35 The sight of the glory of Jehovah, though only of the back or reflection of it, produced such an effect upon Moses’ face, that the skin of it shone, though without Moses observing it. When he came down from the mountain with the tables of the law in his hand, and the skin of his face shone אתּו בּדבּרו, i. e. , on account of his talking with God, Aaron and the people were afraid to go near him when they saw the brightness of his face.
But Moses called them to him, - Viz. first of all Aaron and the princes of the congregation to speak to them, and then all the people to give them the commandments of Jehovah; but on doing this (Exo 34:33), he put a veil upon (before) his face, and only took it away when he went in before Jehovah to speak with Him, and then, when he came out (from the Lord out of the tabernacle, of course after the erection of the tabernacle), he made known His commands to the people.
But while doing this, he put the veil upon his face again, and always wore it in his ordinary intercourse with the people (Exo 34:34, Exo 34:35). This reflection of the splendour thrown back by the glory of God was henceforth to serve as the most striking proof of the confidential relation in which Moses stood to Jehovah, and to set forth the glory of the office which Moses filled.
The Apostle Paul embraces this view in 2Co 3:7. , and lays stress upon the fact that the glory was to be done away, which he was quite justified in doing, although nothing is said in the Old Testament about the glory being transient, from the simple fact that Moses died. The apostle refers to it for the purpose of contrasting the perishable glory of the law with the far higher and imperishable glory of the Gospel.
At the same time he regards the veil which covered Moses’ face as a symbol of the obscuring of the truth revealed in the Old Testament. But this does not exhaust the significance of this splendour. The office could only confer such glory upon the possessor by virtue of the glory of the blessings which it contained, and conveyed to those for whom it was established.
Consequently, the brilliant light on Moses’ face also set forth the glory of the Old Covenant, and was intended both for Moses and the people as a foresight and pledge of the glory to which Jehovah had called, and would eventually exalt, the people of His possession.
Exo 34:29-35 The sight of the glory of Jehovah, though only of the back or reflection of it, produced such an effect upon Moses’ face, that the skin of it shone, though without Moses observing it. When he came down from the mountain with the tables of the law in his hand, and the skin of his face shone אתּו בּדבּרו, i. e. , on account of his talking with God, Aaron and the people were afraid to go near him when they saw the brightness of his face.
But Moses called them to him, - Viz. first of all Aaron and the princes of the congregation to speak to them, and then all the people to give them the commandments of Jehovah; but on doing this (Exo 34:33), he put a veil upon (before) his face, and only took it away when he went in before Jehovah to speak with Him, and then, when he came out (from the Lord out of the tabernacle, of course after the erection of the tabernacle), he made known His commands to the people.
But while doing this, he put the veil upon his face again, and always wore it in his ordinary intercourse with the people (Exo 34:34, Exo 34:35). This reflection of the splendour thrown back by the glory of God was henceforth to serve as the most striking proof of the confidential relation in which Moses stood to Jehovah, and to set forth the glory of the office which Moses filled.
The Apostle Paul embraces this view in 2Co 3:7. , and lays stress upon the fact that the glory was to be done away, which he was quite justified in doing, although nothing is said in the Old Testament about the glory being transient, from the simple fact that Moses died. The apostle refers to it for the purpose of contrasting the perishable glory of the law with the far higher and imperishable glory of the Gospel.
At the same time he regards the veil which covered Moses’ face as a symbol of the obscuring of the truth revealed in the Old Testament. But this does not exhaust the significance of this splendour. The office could only confer such glory upon the possessor by virtue of the glory of the blessings which it contained, and conveyed to those for whom it was established.
Consequently, the brilliant light on Moses’ face also set forth the glory of the Old Covenant, and was intended both for Moses and the people as a foresight and pledge of the glory to which Jehovah had called, and would eventually exalt, the people of His possession.
Exo 34:29-35 The sight of the glory of Jehovah, though only of the back or reflection of it, produced such an effect upon Moses’ face, that the skin of it shone, though without Moses observing it. When he came down from the mountain with the tables of the law in his hand, and the skin of his face shone אתּו בּדבּרו, i. e. , on account of his talking with God, Aaron and the people were afraid to go near him when they saw the brightness of his face.
But Moses called them to him, - Viz. first of all Aaron and the princes of the congregation to speak to them, and then all the people to give them the commandments of Jehovah; but on doing this (Exo 34:33), he put a veil upon (before) his face, and only took it away when he went in before Jehovah to speak with Him, and then, when he came out (from the Lord out of the tabernacle, of course after the erection of the tabernacle), he made known His commands to the people.
But while doing this, he put the veil upon his face again, and always wore it in his ordinary intercourse with the people (Exo 34:34, Exo 34:35). This reflection of the splendour thrown back by the glory of God was henceforth to serve as the most striking proof of the confidential relation in which Moses stood to Jehovah, and to set forth the glory of the office which Moses filled.
The Apostle Paul embraces this view in 2Co 3:7. , and lays stress upon the fact that the glory was to be done away, which he was quite justified in doing, although nothing is said in the Old Testament about the glory being transient, from the simple fact that Moses died. The apostle refers to it for the purpose of contrasting the perishable glory of the law with the far higher and imperishable glory of the Gospel.
At the same time he regards the veil which covered Moses’ face as a symbol of the obscuring of the truth revealed in the Old Testament. But this does not exhaust the significance of this splendour. The office could only confer such glory upon the possessor by virtue of the glory of the blessings which it contained, and conveyed to those for whom it was established.
Consequently, the brilliant light on Moses’ face also set forth the glory of the Old Covenant, and was intended both for Moses and the people as a foresight and pledge of the glory to which Jehovah had called, and would eventually exalt, the people of His possession.
Exo 34:29-35 The sight of the glory of Jehovah, though only of the back or reflection of it, produced such an effect upon Moses’ face, that the skin of it shone, though without Moses observing it. When he came down from the mountain with the tables of the law in his hand, and the skin of his face shone אתּו בּדבּרו, i. e. , on account of his talking with God, Aaron and the people were afraid to go near him when they saw the brightness of his face.
But Moses called them to him, - Viz. first of all Aaron and the princes of the congregation to speak to them, and then all the people to give them the commandments of Jehovah; but on doing this (Exo 34:33), he put a veil upon (before) his face, and only took it away when he went in before Jehovah to speak with Him, and then, when he came out (from the Lord out of the tabernacle, of course after the erection of the tabernacle), he made known His commands to the people.
But while doing this, he put the veil upon his face again, and always wore it in his ordinary intercourse with the people (Exo 34:34, Exo 34:35). This reflection of the splendour thrown back by the glory of God was henceforth to serve as the most striking proof of the confidential relation in which Moses stood to Jehovah, and to set forth the glory of the office which Moses filled.
The Apostle Paul embraces this view in 2Co 3:7. , and lays stress upon the fact that the glory was to be done away, which he was quite justified in doing, although nothing is said in the Old Testament about the glory being transient, from the simple fact that Moses died. The apostle refers to it for the purpose of contrasting the perishable glory of the law with the far higher and imperishable glory of the Gospel.
At the same time he regards the veil which covered Moses’ face as a symbol of the obscuring of the truth revealed in the Old Testament. But this does not exhaust the significance of this splendour. The office could only confer such glory upon the possessor by virtue of the glory of the blessings which it contained, and conveyed to those for whom it was established.
Consequently, the brilliant light on Moses’ face also set forth the glory of the Old Covenant, and was intended both for Moses and the people as a foresight and pledge of the glory to which Jehovah had called, and would eventually exalt, the people of His possession.
Exo 34:29-35 The sight of the glory of Jehovah, though only of the back or reflection of it, produced such an effect upon Moses’ face, that the skin of it shone, though without Moses observing it. When he came down from the mountain with the tables of the law in his hand, and the skin of his face shone אתּו בּדבּרו, i. e. , on account of his talking with God, Aaron and the people were afraid to go near him when they saw the brightness of his face.
But Moses called them to him, - Viz. first of all Aaron and the princes of the congregation to speak to them, and then all the people to give them the commandments of Jehovah; but on doing this (Exo 34:33), he put a veil upon (before) his face, and only took it away when he went in before Jehovah to speak with Him, and then, when he came out (from the Lord out of the tabernacle, of course after the erection of the tabernacle), he made known His commands to the people.
But while doing this, he put the veil upon his face again, and always wore it in his ordinary intercourse with the people (Exo 34:34, Exo 34:35). This reflection of the splendour thrown back by the glory of God was henceforth to serve as the most striking proof of the confidential relation in which Moses stood to Jehovah, and to set forth the glory of the office which Moses filled.
The Apostle Paul embraces this view in 2Co 3:7. , and lays stress upon the fact that the glory was to be done away, which he was quite justified in doing, although nothing is said in the Old Testament about the glory being transient, from the simple fact that Moses died. The apostle refers to it for the purpose of contrasting the perishable glory of the law with the far higher and imperishable glory of the Gospel.
At the same time he regards the veil which covered Moses’ face as a symbol of the obscuring of the truth revealed in the Old Testament. But this does not exhaust the significance of this splendour. The office could only confer such glory upon the possessor by virtue of the glory of the blessings which it contained, and conveyed to those for whom it was established.
Consequently, the brilliant light on Moses’ face also set forth the glory of the Old Covenant, and was intended both for Moses and the people as a foresight and pledge of the glory to which Jehovah had called, and would eventually exalt, the people of His possession.
Exo 34:29-35 The sight of the glory of Jehovah, though only of the back or reflection of it, produced such an effect upon Moses’ face, that the skin of it shone, though without Moses observing it. When he came down from the mountain with the tables of the law in his hand, and the skin of his face shone אתּו בּדבּרו, i. e. , on account of his talking with God, Aaron and the people were afraid to go near him when they saw the brightness of his face.
But Moses called them to him, - Viz. first of all Aaron and the princes of the congregation to speak to them, and then all the people to give them the commandments of Jehovah; but on doing this (Exo 34:33), he put a veil upon (before) his face, and only took it away when he went in before Jehovah to speak with Him, and then, when he came out (from the Lord out of the tabernacle, of course after the erection of the tabernacle), he made known His commands to the people.
But while doing this, he put the veil upon his face again, and always wore it in his ordinary intercourse with the people (Exo 34:34, Exo 34:35). This reflection of the splendour thrown back by the glory of God was henceforth to serve as the most striking proof of the confidential relation in which Moses stood to Jehovah, and to set forth the glory of the office which Moses filled.
The Apostle Paul embraces this view in 2Co 3:7. , and lays stress upon the fact that the glory was to be done away, which he was quite justified in doing, although nothing is said in the Old Testament about the glory being transient, from the simple fact that Moses died. The apostle refers to it for the purpose of contrasting the perishable glory of the law with the far higher and imperishable glory of the Gospel.
At the same time he regards the veil which covered Moses’ face as a symbol of the obscuring of the truth revealed in the Old Testament. But this does not exhaust the significance of this splendour. The office could only confer such glory upon the possessor by virtue of the glory of the blessings which it contained, and conveyed to those for whom it was established.
Consequently, the brilliant light on Moses’ face also set forth the glory of the Old Covenant, and was intended both for Moses and the people as a foresight and pledge of the glory to which Jehovah had called, and would eventually exalt, the people of His possession.