Bible-Ten Commandments
IDOLATRY AT SINAI
[This story is based on Exodus 32 to 34.]
While Moses was absent it was a time of waiting and
suspense to Israel. The people knew that he had ascended the mount with Joshua,
and had entered the cloud of thick darkness which could be seen from the plain
below, resting on the mountain peak, illuminated from time to time with the
lightnings of the divine Presence. They waited eagerly for his return.
Accustomed as they had been in Egypt to material representations of deity, it
had been hard for them to trust in an invisible being, and they had come to rely
upon Moses to sustain their faith. Now he was taken from them. Day after day,
week after week passed, and still he did not return. Notwithstanding the cloud
was still in view, it seemed to many in the camp that their leader had deserted
them, or that he had been consumed by the devouring fire.
During this period of waiting, there was time for
them to meditate upon the law of God which they had heard, and to prepare their
hearts to receive the further revelations that He might make to them. They had
none too much time for this work; and had they been thus seeking a clearer
understanding of God's requirements, and humbling their hearts before Him, they
would have been shielded from temptation. But they did not do this, and they
soon became careless, inattentive, and lawless. Especially was this the case
with the mixed multitude. They were impatient to be on their way to the Land of
Promise--the land flowing with milk and honey. It was only on condition of
obedience that the goodly land was promised them, but they had lost sight of
this. There were some who suggested a return to Egypt, but whether forward to
Canaan or backward to Egypt, the masses of the people were determined to wait no
longer for Moses.
Feeling their helplessness in the absence of their
leader, they returned to their old superstitions. The "mixed multitude" had been
the first to indulge murmuring and impatience, and they were the leaders in the
apostasy that followed. Among the objects regarded by the Egyptians as symbols
of deity was the ox or calf; and it was at the suggestion of those who had
practised this form of idolatry in Egypt that a calf was now made and worshiped.
The people desired some image to represent God, and to go before them in the
place of Moses. God had given no manner of similitude of Himself, and He had
prohibited any material representation for such a purpose. The mighty miracles
in Egypt and at the Red Sea were designed to establish faith in Him as the
invisible, all-powerful Helper of Israel, the only true God. And the desire for
some visible manifestation of His presence had been granted in the pillar of
cloud and of fire that guided their hosts, and in the revealing of His glory
upon Mount Sinai. But with the cloud of the Presence still before them, they
turned back in their hearts to the idolatry of Egypt, and represented the glory
of the invisible God by the similitude of an ox!
In the absence of Moses, the judicial authority had
been delegated to Aaron, and a vast crowd gathered about his tent, with the
demand, "Make us gods, which shall go before us; for as for this Moses, the man
that brought us up out of the land of Egypt, we wot not what is become of him.
The cloud, they said, that had heretofore led them, now rested permanently upon
the mount; it would no longer direct their travels. They must have an image in
its place; and if, as had been suggested, they should decide to return to Egypt,
they would find favour with the Egyptians by bearing this image before them and
acknowledging it as their god.
Such a crisis demanded a man of firmness, decision,
and unflinching courage; one who held the honour of God above popular favour,
personal safety, or life itself. But the present leader of Israel was not of
this character. Aaron feebly remonstrated with the people, but his wavering and
timidity at the critical moment only rendered them the more determined. The
tumult increased. A blind, unreasoning frenzy seemed to take possession of the
multitude. There were some who remained true to their covenant with God, but the
greater part of the people joined in the apostasy. A few who ventured to
denounce the proposed image making as idolatry, were set upon and roughly
treated, and in the confusion and excitement they finally lost their lives.
Aaron feared for his own safety; and instead of
nobly standing up for the honour of God, he yielded to the demands of the
multitude. His first act was to direct that the golden earrings be collected
from all the people and brought to him, hoping that pride would lead them to
refuse such a sacrifice. But they willingly yielded up their ornaments; and from
these he made a molten calf, in imitation of the gods of Egypt. The people
proclaimed, "These be thy gods, O Israel, which brought thee up out of the land
of Egypt." And Aaron basely permitted this insult to Jehovah. He did more.
Seeing with what satisfaction the golden god was received, he built an altar
before it, and made proclamation, "Tomorrow is a feast to the Lord." The
announcement was heralded by trumpeters from company to company throughout the
camp. "And they rose up early on the morrow, and offered burnt offerings, and
brought peace offerings; and the people sat down to eat and to drink and rose up
to play." Under the pretence of holding "a feast to the Lord," they gave
themselves up to gluttony and licentious revelling.
How often, in our own day, is the love of pleasure
disguised by a "form of godliness."! A religion that permits men, while
observing the rites of worship, to devote themselves to selfish or sensual
gratification, is as pleasing to the multitudes now as in the days of Israel.
And there are still pliant Aarons, who, while holding positions of authority in
the church, will yield to the desires of the unconsecrated, and thus encourage
them in sin.
Only a few days had passed since the Hebrews had
made a solemn covenant with God to obey His voice. They had stood trembling with
terror before the mount, listening to the words of the Lord, "Thou shalt have no
other gods before Me." The glory of God still hovered above Sinai in the sight
of the congregation; but they turned away, and asked for other gods. "They made
a calf in Horeb, and worshiped the molten image. Thus they changed their glory
into the similitude of an ox." Psalm 106:19, 20. How could greater ingratitude
have been shown, or more daring insult offered, to Him who had revealed Himself
to them as a tender father and an all-powerful king!
Moses in the mount was warned of the apostasy in
the camp and was directed to return without delay. "Go, get thee down," were the
words of God; "thy people, which thou broughtest out of the land of Egypt, have
corrupted themselves: they have turned aside quickly out of the way which I
commanded them. They have made them a molten calf, and have worshiped it." God
might have checked the movement at the outset; but He suffered it to come to
this height that He might teach all a lesson in His punishment of treason and
apostasy.
God's covenant with His people had been
disannulled, and He declared to Moses, "Let Me alone, that My wrath may wax hot
against them, and that I may consume them: and I will make of thee a great
nation." The people of Israel, especially the mixed multitude, would be
constantly disposed to rebel against God. They would also murmur against their
leader, and would grieve him by their unbelief and stubbornness, and it would be
a laborious and soul-trying work to lead them through to the Promised Land.
Their sins had already forfeited the favour of God, and justice called for their
destruction. The Lord therefore proposed to destroy them, and make of Moses a
mighty nation.
"Let Me alone, . . . that I may consume them," were
the words of God. If God had purposed to destroy Israel, who could plead for
them? How few but would have left the sinners to their fate! How few but would
have gladly exchanged a lot of toil and burden and sacrifice, repaid with
ingratitude and murmuring, for a position of ease and honour, when it was God
Himself that offered the release.
But Moses discerned ground for hope where there
appeared only discouragement and wrath. The words of God, "Let Me alone," he
understood not to forbid but to encourage intercession, implying that nothing
but the prayers of Moses could save Israel, but that if thus entreated, God
would spare His people. He "besought the Lord his God, and said, Lord, why doth
Thy wrath wax hot against Thy people, which Thou hast brought forth out of the
land of Egypt with great power, and with a mighty hand?"
God had signified that He disowned His people. He
had spoken of them to Moses as "thy people, which thou broughtest
out of Egypt." But Moses humbly disclaimed the leadership of Israel. They were
not his, but God's-- "Thy people, which Thou has brought forth . .
. with great power, and with a mighty hand. Wherefore," he urged, "should the
Egyptians speak, and say, For mischief did He bring them out, to slay them in
the mountains, and to consume them from the face of the earth?"
During the few months since Israel left Egypt, the
report of their wonderful deliverance had spread to all the surrounding nations.
Fear and terrible foreboding rested upon the heathen. All were watching to see
what the God of Israel would do for His people. Should they now be destroyed,
their enemies would triumph, and God would be dishonoured. The Egyptians would
claim that their accusations were true--instead of leading His people into the
wilderness to sacrifice, He had caused them to be sacrificed. They would not
consider the sins of Israel; the destruction of the people whom He had so
signally honoured, would bring reproach upon His name. How great the
responsibility resting upon those whom God has highly honoured, to make His name
a praise in the earth! With what care should they guard against committing sin,
to call down His judgements and cause His name to be reproached by the ungodly!
As Moses interceded for Israel, his timidity was
lost in his deep interest and love for those for whom he had, in the hands of
God, been the means of doing so much. The Lord listened to his pleadings, and
granted his unselfish prayer. God had proved His servant; He had tested his
faithfulness and his love for that erring, ungrateful people, and nobly had
Moses endured the trial. His interest in Israel sprang from no selfish motive.
The prosperity of God's chosen people was dearer to him than personal honour,
dearer than the privilege of becoming the father of a mighty nation. God was
pleased with his faithfulness, his simplicity of heart, and his integrity, and
He committed to him, as a faithful shepherd, the great charge of leading Israel
to the Promised Land.
As Moses and Joshua came down from the mount, the
former bearing the "tables of the testimony," they heard the shouts and outcries
of the excited multitude, evidently in a state of wild uproar. To Joshua the
soldier, the first thought was of an attack from their enemies. "There is a
noise of war in the camp," he said. But Moses judged more truly the nature of
the commotion. The sound was not that of combat, but of revelry. "It is not the
voice of them that shout for mastery, neither is it the voice of them that cry
for being overcome; but the noise of them that sing do I hear."
As they drew near the encampment, they beheld the
people shouting and dancing around their idol. It was a scene of heathen riot,
an imitation of the idolatrous feasts of Egypt; but how unlike the solemn and
reverent worship of God! Moses was overwhelmed. He had just come from the
presence of God's glory, and though he had been warned of what was taking place,
he was unprepared for that dreadful exhibition of the degradation of Israel. His
anger was hot. To show his abhorrence of their crime, he threw down the tables
of stone, and they were broken in the sight of all the people, thus signifying
that as they had broken their covenant with God, so God had broken His covenant
with them.
Entering the camp, Moses passed through the crowds
of revellers, and seizing upon the idol, cast it into the fire. He afterward
ground it to powder, and having strewed it upon the stream that descended from
the mount, he made the people drink of it. Thus was shown the utter
worthlessness of the god which they had been worshipping.
The great leader summoned his guilty brother and
sternly demanded, "What did this people unto thee, that thou hast brought so
great a sin upon them?" Aaron endeavoured to shield himself by relating the
clamours of the people; that if he had not complied with their wishes, he would
have been put to death. "Let not the anger of my lord wax hot," he said; "thou
knowest the people, that they are set on mischief. For they said unto me, Make
us gods, which shall go before us: for as for this Moses, the man that brought
us up out of the land of Egypt, we wot not what is become of him. And I said
unto them, Whosoever hath any gold, let them break it off. So they gave it me:
then I cast it into the fire, and there came out this calf." He would lead Moses
to believe that a miracle had been wrought--that the gold had been cast into the
fire, and by supernatural power changed to a calf. But his excuses and
prevarications were of no avail. He was justly dealt with as the chief offender.
The fact that Aaron had been blessed and honoured
so far above the people was what made his sin so heinous. It was Aaron "the
saint of the Lord" (Psalm 106:16), that had made the idol and announced the
feast. It was he who had been appointed as spokesman for Moses, and concerning
whom God Himself had testified, "I know that he can speak well" (Exodus 4:14),
that had failed to check the idolaters in their heaven-daring purpose.
He by whom God had wrought in bringing judgements
both upon the Egyptians and upon their gods, had heard unmoved the proclamation
before the molten image, "These be thy gods, O Israel, which brought thee up out
of the land of Egypt." It was he who had been with Moses on the mount, and had
there beheld the glory of the Lord, who had seen that in the manifestation of
that glory there was nothing of which an image could be made--it was he who had
changed that glory into the similitude of an ox. He to whom God had committed
the government of the people in the absence of Moses, was found sanctioning
their rebellion. "The Lord was very angry with Aaron to have destroyed him."
Deuteronomy 9:20. But in answer to the earnest intercession of Moses, his life
was spared; and in penitence and humiliation for his great sin, he was restored
to the favour of God.
If Aaron had had courage to stand for the right,
irrespective of consequences, he could have prevented that apostasy. If he had
unswervingly maintained his own allegiance to God, if he had cited the people to
the perils of Sinai, and had reminded them of their solemn covenant with God to
obey His law, the evil would have been checked. But his compliance with the
desires of the people and the calm assurance with which he proceeded to carry
out their plans, emboldened them to go to greater lengths in sin than had before
entered their minds.
When Moses, on returning to the camp, confronted
the rebels, his severe rebukes and the indignation he displayed in breaking the
sacred tables of the law were contrasted by the people with his brother's
pleasant speech and dignified demeanour, and their sympathies were with Aaron.
To justify himself, Aaron endeavoured to make the people responsible for his
weakness in yielding to their demand; but notwithstanding this, they were filled
with admiration of his gentleness and patience. But God seeth not as man sees.
Aaron's yielding spirit and his desire to please had blinded his eyes to the
enormity of the crime he was sanctioning. His course in giving his influence to
sin in Israel cost the life of thousands. In what contrast with this was the
course of Moses, who, while faithfully executing God's judgements, showed that
the welfare of Israel was dearer to him than prosperity or honour or life.
Of all the sins that God will punish, none are more
grievous in His sight than those that encourage others to do evil. God would
have His servants prove their loyalty by faithfully rebuking transgression,
however painful the act may be. Those who are honoured with a divine commission
are not to be weak, pliant time-servers. They are not to aim at self-exaltation,
or to shun disagreeable duties, but to perform God's work with unswerving
fidelity.
Though God had granted the prayer of Moses in
sparing Israel from destruction, their apostasy was to be signally punished. The
lawlessness and insubordination into which Aaron had permitted them to fall, if
not speedily crushed, would run riot in wickedness, and would involve the nation
in irretrievable ruin. By terrible severity the evil must be put away. Standing
in the gate of the camp, Moses called to the people, "Who is on the Lord's side?
let him come unto me." Those who had not joined in the apostasy were to take
their position at the right of Moses; those who were guilty but repentant, at
the left. The command was obeyed. It was found that the tribe of Levi had taken
no part in the idolatrous worship. From among other tribes there were great
numbers who, although they had sinned, now signified their repentance. But a
large company, mostly of the mixed multitude that instigated the making of the
calf, stubbornly persisted in their rebellion. In the name of "the Lord God of
Israel," Moses now commanded those upon his right hand, who had kept themselves
clear of idolatry, to gird on their swords and slay all who persisted in
rebellion. "And there fell of the people that day about three thousand men."
Without regard to position, kindred, or friendship, the ringleaders in
wickedness were cut off; but all who repented and humbled themselves were
spared.
Those who performed this terrible work of judgement
were acting by divine authority, executing the sentence of the King of heaven.
Men are to beware how they, in their human blindness, judge and condemn their
fellow men; but when God commands them to execute His sentence upon iniquity, He
is to be obeyed. Those who performed this painful act, thus manifested their
abhorrence of rebellion and idolatry, and consecrated themselves more fully to
the service of the true God. The Lord honoured their faithfulness by bestowing
special distinction upon the tribe of Levi.
The Israelites had been guilty of treason, and that
against a King who had loaded them with benefits and whose authority they had
voluntarily pledged themselves to obey. That the divine government might be
maintained justice must be visited upon the traitors. Yet even here God's mercy
was displayed. While He maintained His law, He granted freedom of choice and
opportunity for repentance to all. Only those were cut off who persisted in
rebellion.
It was necessary that this sin should be punished,
as a testimony to surrounding nations of God's displeasure against idolatry. By
executing justice upon the guilty, Moses, as God's instrument, must leave on
record a solemn and public protest against their crime. As the Israelites should
hereafter condemn the idolatry of the neighbouring tribes, their enemies would
throw back upon them the charge that the people who claimed Jehovah as their God
had made a calf and worshiped it in Horeb. Then though compelled to acknowledge
the disgraceful truth, Israel could point to the terrible fate of the
transgressors, as evidence that their sin had not been sanctioned or excused.
Love no less than justice demanded that for this
sin judgement should be inflicted. God is the guardian as well as the sovereign
of His people. He cuts off those who are determined upon rebellion, that they
may not lead others to ruin. In sparing the life of Cain, God had demonstrated
to the universe what would be the result of permitting sin to go unpunished. The
influence exerted upon his descendants by his life and teaching led to the state
of corruption that demanded the destruction of the whole world by a flood. The
history of the antediluvians testifies that long life is not a blessing to the
sinner; God's great forbearance did not repress their wickedness. The longer men
lived, the more corrupt they became.
So with the apostasy at Sinai. Unless punishment
had been speedily visited upon transgression, the same results would again have
been seen. The earth would have become as corrupt as in the days of Noah. Had
these transgressors been spared, evils would have followed, greater than
resulted from sparing the life of Cain. It was the mercy of God that thousands
should suffer, to prevent the necessity of visiting judgements upon millions. In
order to save the many, He must punish the few. Furthermore, as the people had
cast off their allegiance to God, they had forfeited the divine protection, and,
deprived of their defence, the whole nation was exposed to the power of their
enemies. Had not the evil been promptly put away, they would soon have fallen a
prey to their numerous and powerful foes. It was necessary for the good of
Israel, and also as a lesson to all succeeding generations, that crime should be
promptly punished. And it was no less a mercy to the sinners themselves that
they should be cut short in their evil course. Had their life been spared, the
same spirit that led them to rebel against God would have been manifested in
hatred and strife among themselves, and they would eventually have destroyed one
another. It was in love to the world, in love to Israel, and even to the
transgressors, that crime was punished with swift and terrible severity.
As the people were roused to see the enormity of
their guilt, terror pervaded the entire encampment. It was feared that every
offender was to be cut off. Pitying their distress, Moses promised to plead once
more with God for them.
"Ye have sinned a great sin," he said, "and now I
will go up unto the Lord; peradventure I shall make an atonement for your sin."
He went, and in his confession before God he said, "Oh, this people have sinned
a great sin, and have made them gods of gold. Yet now if Thou wilt forgive their
sin--; and if not, blot me, I pray Thee, out of Thy book which Thou hast
written." The answer was, "Whosoever hath sinned against Me, him will I blot out
of My book. Therefore now go, lead the people into the place of which I have
spoken unto thee: behold, Mine Angel shall go before thee: nevertheless, in the
day when I visit, I will visit their sin upon them."
In the prayer of Moses our minds are directed to
the heavenly records in which the names of all men are inscribed, and their
deeds, whether good or evil, are faithfully registered. The book of life
contains the names of all who have ever entered the service of God. If any of
these depart from Him, and by stubborn persistence in sin become finally
hardened against the influences of His Holy Spirit, their names will in the
judgement be blotted from the book of life, and they themselves will be devoted
to destruction. Moses realised how dreadful would be the fate of the sinner; yet
if the people of Israel were to be rejected by the Lord, he desired his name to
be blotted out with theirs; he could not endure to see the judgements of God
fall upon those who had been so graciously delivered. The intercession of Moses
in behalf of Israel illustrates the mediation of Christ for sinful men. But the
Lord did not permit Moses to bear, as did Christ, the guilt of the transgressor.
"Whosoever hath sinned against Me," He said, "him will I blot out of My book."
In deep sadness the people had buried their dead.
Three thousand had fallen by the sword; a plague had soon after broken out in
the encampment; and now the message came to them that the divine Presence would
no longer accompany them in their journeyings. Jehovah had declared, "I will not
go up in the midst of thee; for thou art a stiff-necked people: lest I consume
thee in the way." And the command was given, "Put off thy ornaments from thee,
that I may know what to do unto thee." Now there was mourning throughout the
encampment. In penitence and humiliation "the children of Israel stripped
themselves of their ornaments by the mount Horeb."
By the divine direction the tent that had served as
a temporary place of worship was removed "afar off from the camp." This was
still further evidence that God had withdrawn His presence from them. He would
reveal Himself to Moses, but not to such a people. The rebuke was keenly felt,
and to the conscience-smitten multitudes it seemed a foreboding of greater
calamity. Had not the Lord separated Moses from the camp that He might utterly
destroy them? But they were not left without hope. The tent was pitched without
the encampment, but Moses called it "the tabernacle of the congregation." All
who were truly penitent, and desired to return to the Lord, were directed to
repair thither to confess their sins and seek His mercy. When they returned to
their tents Moses entered the tabernacle. With agonising interest the people
watched for some token that his intercessions in their behalf were accepted. If
God should condescend to meet with him, they might hope that they were not to be
utterly consumed. When the cloudy pillar descended, and stood at the entrance of
the tabernacle, the people wept for joy, and they "rose up and worshiped, every
man in his tent door."
Moses knew well the perversity and blindness of
those who were placed under his care; he knew the difficulties with which he
must contend. But he had learned that in order to prevail with the people, he
must have help from God. He pleaded for a clearer revelation of God's will and
for an assurance of His presence: "See, Thou sayest unto me, Bring up this
people: and Thou hast not let me know whom Thou wilt send with me. Yet Thou hast
said, I know thee by name, and thou hast also found grace in My sight. Now
therefore, I pray Thee, if I have found grace in Thy sight, show me now Thy way,
that I may know Thee, that I may find grace in Thy sight: and consider that this
nation is Thy people."
The answer was, "My presence shall go with thee,
and I will give thee rest." But Moses was not yet satisfied. There pressed upon
his soul a sense of the terrible results should God leave Israel to hardness and
impenitence. He could not endure that his interests should be separated from
those of his brethren, and he prayed that the favour of God might be restored to
His people, and that the token of His presence might continue to direct their
journeyings: "If Thy presence go not with me, carry us not up hence. For wherein
shall it be known here that I and Thy people have found grace in Thy sight? is
it not in that Thou goest with us? So shall we be separated, I and Thy people,
from all the people that are upon the face of the earth."
And the Lord said, "I will do this thing also that
thou hast spoken: for thou hast found grace in My sight, and I know thee by
name." Still the prophet did not cease pleading. Every prayer had been answered,
but he thirsted for greater tokens of God's favour. He now made a request that
no human being had ever made before: "I beseech Thee, show me Thy glory."
God did not rebuke his request as presumptuous; but
the gracious words were spoken, "I will make all My goodness pass before thee."
The unveiled glory of God, no man in this mortal state can look upon and live;
but Moses was assured that he should behold as much of the divine glory as he
could endure. Again he was summoned to the mountain summit; then the hand that
made the world, that hand that "removeth the mountains, and they know not" (Job
9:5), took this creature of the dust, this mighty man of faith, and placed him
in a cleft of the rock, while the glory of God and all His goodness passed
before him.
This experience--above all else the promise that
the divine Presence would attend him--was to Moses an assurance of success in
the work before him; and he counted it of infinitely greater worth than all the
learning of Egypt or all his attainments as a statesman or a military leader. No
earthly power or skill or learning can supply the place of God's abiding
presence.
To the transgressor it is a fearful thing to fall
into the hands of the living God; but Moses stood alone in the presence of the
Eternal One, and he was not afraid; for his soul was in harmony with the will of
his Maker. Says the psalmist, "If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will
not hear me." Psalm 66:18. But "the secret of the Lord is with them that fear
Him; and He will show them His covenant." Psalm 25:14.
The Deity proclaimed Himself, "The Lord, The Lord
God, merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth,
keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, and
that will by no means clear the guilty."
"Moses made haste, and bowed his head toward the
earth, and worshiped." Again he entreated that God would pardon the iniquity of
His people, and take them for His inheritance. His prayer was granted. The Lord
graciously promised to renew His favour to Israel, and in their behalf to do
marvels such as had not been done "in all the earth, nor in any nation."
Forty days and nights Moses remained in the mount;
and during all this time, as at the first, he was miraculously sustained. No man
had been permitted to go up with him, nor during the time of his absence were
any to approach the mount. At God's command he had prepared two tables of stone,
and had taken them with him to the summit; and again the Lord "wrote upon the
tables the words of the covenant, the Ten Commandments."
During that long time spent in communion with God,
the face of Moses had reflected the glory of the divine Presence; unknown to
himself his face shown with a dazzling light when he descended from the
mountain. Such a light illumined the countenance of Stephen when brought before
his judges; "and all that sat in the council, looking steadfastly on him, saw
his face as it had been the face of an angel." Acts 6:15. Aaron as well as the
people shrank away from Moses, and "they were afraid to come nigh him." Seeing
their confusion and terror, but ignorant of the cause, he urged them to come
near. He held out to them the pledge of God's reconciliation, and assured them
of His restored favour. They perceived in his voice nothing but love and
entreaty, and at last one ventured to approach him. Too awed to speak, he
silently pointed to the countenance of Moses, and then toward heaven. The great
leader understood his meaning. In their conscious guilt, feeling themselves
still under the divine displeasure, they could not endure the heavenly light,
which, had they been obedient to God, would have filled them with joy. There is
fear in guilt. The soul that is free from sin will not wish to hide from the
light of heaven.
Moses had much to communicate to them; and
compassionating their fear, he put a veil upon his face, and continued to do so
thereafter whenever he returned to the camp from communion with God.
By this brightness God designed to impress upon
Israel the sacred, exalted character of His law, and the glory of the gospel
revealed through Christ. While Moses was in the mount, God presented to him, not
only the tables of the law, but also the plan of salvation. He saw that the
sacrifice of Christ was pre-figured by all the types and symbols of the Jewish
age; and it was the heavenly light streaming from Calvary, no less than the
glory of the law of God, that shed such a radiance upon the face of Moses. That
divine illumination symbolised the glory of the dispensation of which Moses was
the visible mediator, a representative of the one true Intercessor.
The glory reflected in the countenance of Moses
illustrates the blessings to be received by God's commandment-keeping people
through the mediation of Christ. It testifies that the closer our communion with
God, and the clearer our knowledge of His requirements, the more fully shall we
be conformed to the divine image, and the more readily do we become partakers of
the divine nature.
Moses was a type of Christ. As Israel's intercessor
veiled his countenance, because the people could not endure to look upon its
glory, so Christ, the divine Mediator, veiled His divinity with humanity when He
came to earth. Had He come clothed with the brightness of heaven, he could not
have found access to men in their sinful state. They could not have endured the
glory of His presence. Therefore He humbled Himself, and was made "in the
likeness of sinful flesh (Romans 8:3), that He might reach the fallen race, and
lift them up. From Patriarchs and Prophets Chapter 28
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