Exodus 33:12-23 · Moses and the Glory of the Lord
A Glimpse of God
Exodus 33:19-23
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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What would you feel like if you had an appointment with God at 9 A.M. tomorrow? Would you be able to eat for the rest of the day? How much sleep do you think you’d get tonight? You’ve got an appointment with God at 9 A.M. in the morning. He has given you instructions as to where to meet him and what to bring with you.

That was the case with Moses. “Come up in the morning to Mount Sinai,” God said, “and present yourself there to me on the top of the mountain.”

Moses was to bring with tables of stones like the ones on which God had written his testaments. You remember that when Moses came down from the mountain and discovered the peoples’ idolatry in building and worshiping the Golden calf, his anger “burned hot” – that’s the way the Bible puts it, his anger “burned hot” and he threw the precious stones on the ground and broke them. How gracious God is - He’s going to give Moses his testimony on the tablets of stone again. He’s going to meet Moses on the mountaintop.

Now to really understand the full impact of that, we need to get the dramatic circumstance under which this appointment is to take place. Since this is our last sermon in this Exodus series, and since many of you may not have been with us on the whole journey, let’s review. God called Moses and gave him the responsibility of leading the people out of their Egyptian bondage.

When God confronted Moses with this call, Telling Moses what He had in mind, Moses did what most of us would have done - he asked God for a name - a name that would describe God’s character. But God responded, “I AM who I Am” another translation would be, “I will be what I will be.” This meant that who God was would be defined by his deliverance of the people out of captivity, by his leading them into the Promised Land, by his keeping the Covenant that He had made with Abraham. It was on the basis of that promise that Moses took the job.

But a lot of things happened in the meantime - and one of the most disruptive things had just happenend, we talked about in the sermon last Sunday. At Sinai, people fell into idolatry, before a golden calf set up by Aaron. God became angry - so angry that He said to Moses, “Let me alone, that my wrath may wax hot against them, and that I may consume them.”

Then comes one of the most revealing episodes in Moses’ life has just occurred. Moses reveals his own true character - and this is one of the brightest pages in the history of human kind. Moses lays his life on the line for the people whom God has called him to serve. He knows that the people have sinned; he knows that they are stiff-necked as God described them to be; yet he knows a bit about who God is - and he pleads with God. He pleads with his whole life - his life becomes his intercession. Listen to him: “Forgive their sins - If not - blot me I pray thee blot me out of thy book.

What commitment, what leadership, what a revelation of Moses’ commitment – but also of prayer, and a person seeking the mind of God. Moses not only asked that God pardon their sin - he pleads that if someone must be punished for the sins, God will let the people live and lay the penalty for the sins on him. We said early on in this sermon series that what Jesus is to children, Moses is for the Jews. That’s a faint foretelling of Jesus on the cross - “Father, forgive them for they know what they do.”

But then Moses goes even further than that - he becomes even bolder. He could not have asked God for more - he presses to the limit saying, “I pray thee, show me thy glory.”

And that brings us to where we are in our scripture lesson today. “Alright,” God says, “How about tomorrow morning.” Let’s read verses 19-23 of the 33rd

“And he said, “I will make all my goodness pass before you, and will proclaim before you my name ‘The Lord’; and I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious, and will show mercy on whom I will show mercy. But,” he said, “you cannot see me and live.” And the Lord said, “Behold there is a place by me where you shall stand upon the rock; and while my glory passes by I will put you in a cleft of the rock, and I will cover you with my hand until I have passed by; then I will take away my hand, and you shall see my back; but my face shall not be seen.”

So, here we are - where we began - suppose you had an appointment with God tomorrow morning. What would you feel like? I know Moses didn’t sleep that night - for I know I couldn’t sleep if I had a date with God tomorrow morning. If God had promised to tell me something that He’d never told anybody else - I would be wide-eyed all night long. No wonder the scripture says that Moses rose up early in the morning and went up to Mt. Sinai. This was to be the day of days - he was going to get a glimpse of God - if even just his backside.

Now what Moses sees on the mountain is important. He saw a cloud, and remember, whenever you see a cloud in the Old Testament - open your eyes wide - because God is close by. While Moses is standing in the crevice of the rock, the Lord passes by - and Moses sees Him - sees Him in the sense of sensing his presence. But what Moses sees is not nearly as important, he hears. Because, as the Lord passes by, He says to Moses - look at it there in verses 6 and 7. The Lord, the Lord, a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in stead fast love and faithfulness, keeping steadfast love for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, but who will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children and the children’s children, to the third and the fourth generation.” (6-7 chapter 34)

Moses glimpse of God becomes an answer to the question of the ages - Who is God? What is God like?

Now what is so remarkable about this is that way back there, near the dawn of our religious history way back then, comes a word about the essence of who God is and what God is like. As time went on, and as the face of God was unveiled in the person of Jesus Christ, the meaning of those words stood out in even bolder relief. Yet, even the only begotten son of God had nothing more final to say than is said in the words of our text - What was left for Jews to do was to incarnate those words that persons might forever believe that what God said He was, He was.

So, it’s appropriate to close this series of sermons on Exodus with this Mt. Everest affirmation of who God is.

A Glimpse of God

Boil it down - distill it to its most precious essence, and what you have is what theologans write volumes about. God is holy love. Lodge that in your mind. Let it be the foundation for your theological speculation about God. More than that, let it be the bed rock truth on which you build your faith, and on which you rest your life. God is holy love

Now we will never know all God is, and whenever some fresh insight and meaning comes to us, like Moses on the mountainside, we bow our heads in humility and awe, and we worship. Harry Johnson told the Administrative Board recently about his granddaughter, McKinsie. He asked her the other day when she was going to be four years old. Her price less response was “I’m going to be four, when I get through being three.”

Unlike McKinsie, we will never get through “being three”, knowing God as holy love. No matter what other revelations come - this is the essence of who God is. Let’s look at those words as they describe God: Holy and Love

The holiness of God is God’s inward character of perfect goodness.

God is perfect goodness, and his purpose is to produce that goodness in you and me – That means he must take sides against all sin, against all badness, against all evil.

There is an old story about President Coolidge, which tells about his coming home from church one day and being asked by his wife what the preacher talked about.

“Sin,” he said.

“Well, what did he say about it?”

“He was against it.”

And so is God. He cannot help being against it, because He is for its opposite: righteousness and holiness. Those facts explain some of the words in the Bible which we have a hard time understanding. The Bible talks about “our Father” and in the same breath, speaks of the “wrath of God.”

That does not mean God loses his temper; it simply describes the reaction of his holiness toward sin. He is bound to be against sin because of who He is. Or the Bible talks about God being a “consuming fire”. That does not mean that God is capricious one moment a Father and the next a consuming fire. It means that because a father of perfect goodness, He cannot put up with badness - just as you cannot put up with anyone’s making improper advances to your daughter.

“In the light of that fact, then, we’re ready to take in the meaning of one of the though words god spoke to Moses. He said in verse 8: “The Lord, the iniquity of the fathers upon the children and upon the children’s children, upon the third and the fourth generation. What He is saying is that, because He is holiness itself, He can never put up with anything that is unholy.

That means you cannot break a law of God to save your life. You’re a fool to try it, because you’ll always be broken by it…One day a Senator stood with his back against the wall of the rotunda in the Capitol, and something fell and struck him on the head. A friend saw what had ha and rushed up to ask what he could do to help. The senator had a kind of cynical sense of humor.

“Go into the senate chamber,” he said, “and have the law repealed.” The senator’s point is well taken.

A man is just a plain dunce who tried to beat the law of God. “The Lord, the Lord God…will by no means clear the guilty.” (John Redhead, Getting to Know God, pp. 25-26).

But you can’t stop there. In this glimpse of God, we see something else. Alongside the holiness of God is the love of God. Listen again to this marvelous word that God speaks to Moses:

“The Lord, the Lord God is merciful and gracious, long-suffering and abundant in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin.”

A woman took a friend with her when she went to a photographer to have her picture made. The beauty parlor had done its best for her. She took her seat in the studio and fixed her pose. While the photographer was adjusting his lights, just before he pressed his bulb, she said to him, “Now be sure to do me justice.” The friend said, with a twinkle in her eye, “my dear, what you need is not justice, but mercy.”

Sometimes we feel imposed on by the universe and say to our selves, “There’s no justice in the world.” We think if only we could receive our just deserts, we would ask for nothing more. Well, the holiness of God guarantees justice. But suppose there were justice in God and nothing more. Suppose we got just what we deserve and only what we deserve. What would be your score with God on that basis?” (Redhead, Ibid.)

It doesn’t take long for us, as we look at our life, to realize that what we need is not justice, but mercy. And our text tells us that what we need is ours. It’s ours because, the Lord, the Lord God, is merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth. Now He will not clear the guilty when your child puts his finger into the fire, it will be burned. No matter how much you love him, you cannot banish the burn, but you can forgive him. You can tell him that, even though he disobeyed you by playing with fire, now that he is sorry for his disobedience, you will forgive him and not hold it against him anymore, It is, thus that, while God is forced to visit our iniquity on us because of His holiness, He is still merciful and gracious and forgiving. (Redhead, Ibid.)

I hope that it has happened with you, as it has happened with me. When you love somebody, you can’t stand for anything to come between you. If you really love a wife or a child or a friend and something happens to bring about estrangement, something poisons the relationship, or gets you at “odds” with one another, you really can’t rest in your love. You can’t have peace - you can’t have any meaning until that estrangement is dissolved. And the way that estrangement is dissolved, usually, is you go to that person, and you tell that person how much you love him or her. You tell her you love her enough to forgive, and that you want to be forgiven. And sometimes it’s the tears of knowing that love is there which melts down the barrier standing between us and another. And when that happens, you can sleep. You have peace; joy returns to the relationship.

I think that’s especially true between children and parents. And that’s the reason I said a few weeks ago that I believe that a parent who has a wayward child can understand the love of God better than anyone else. That parent knows how much he loves His child, even in his waywardness down on his face to worship God when he realizes that God loves him in an even greater and deeper way. So that’s who God is - Holy Love.

Let me close by simply saying that Moses knew that and you and I need to learn it.

In Mark Connolly’s classic play, “Green Pastures,” there’s a moving scene in which Moses watches his people as they go into the promised land. You know that Moses was not able to go into the promised land. That seems to be one of the tragedies of the whole story. Having given his life to deliver the people out of bondage, to forego moving into the promised land.

The setting is Mt. Moab. From the mountain, Moses can look across the horizon and see the destination, but he knows that he’s not going to be with them. His day is coming to an end. Joshua has already taken his place.

In Mark Connolly’s play on stage, Moses sits disconsolate on a rock as the twelve tribes pass by to receive his final blessing. They march off toward the land of Canaan. As they go, the old campaigner’s shoulders sag and his head bows low. With every sound of those retreating footsteps, the light grows dimmer and dimmer. The stage is almost in total darkness.

But suddenly, you’re aware that Moses is not alone. There’s somebody else on stage, behind him. The presence walks over to where Moses is sitting. Gently, he lays his hand on his shoulder. Without looking up, Moses knows who it is. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, his shoulders began to straighten and he raises his head. He says, “Youse wid me, Lawd, ain’t ya? Youse wid me.” And back conies the answer, “Cose ah is, my chile; cose ah iz.”

That’s what we need to know isn’t it? That the Holy God is a God of love, and He’s with us. Because He is.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Maxie Dunnam