Exodus 33:12-23 · Moses and the Glory of the Lord
Will God Be With Us?
Exodus 33:12-23
Sermon
by King Duncan & Angela Akers
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Have you ever felt desperate for just a few minutes of time by yourself? We all need “alone time” occasionally to clear our head and relieve a little stress. So it is hard to imagine what it is like for prominent people, like the President of the United States, who never get a single moment alone.

There are approximately 1,300 Secret Service agents who serve as the security detail for the President, the Vice President, and their family members. It is their job to ensure that our nation’s most powerful leaders are never alone. In fact, before the President travels anywhere, an advance team of Secret Service agents travels to the location and arranges all the details for a safe, smooth trip. They oversee the preparation of all the President’s meals. If the President has a hobby, such as horseback riding, jogging or hunting, then a few members of his or her security detail also have to learn the finer points of the hobby so they can assist the President in his downtime. (1)

And maybe it’s a good thing Presidents never get alone time. When they are alone, strange things can happen. According to one White House story, early in the days of President Jimmy Carter’s administration, he was using a restroom near the Oval Office and pressed a button that he assumed would flush the toilet. Unfortunately, it was a panic button, meant to summon immediate help in the event of any danger.

Secret Service agents with guns drawn jerked open the bathroom door and swarmed the room, much to President Carter’s embarrassment. (2)

President Ronald Reagan made some of his Secret Service agents dress up as the Easter Bunny so they could guard him at the annual White House Easter Egg roll in 1984. (3)

It takes a special commitment to stick with someone 24 hours per day, seven days a week for years at a time. I would imagine that if the agents do their job well, the President occasionally forgets they are there. It would be easy to take them for granted.

There is an old story about a priest who was trying to teach his congregation a liturgical response to open the worship service. From now on, he would open every worship service with the declaration: “The Lord be with you.” And he taught his congregation to respond: “And also with you.” He practiced it with them until it became natural for them.

The next Sunday, as the priest stood in the pulpit and affixed his lapel mic to his robe, he offhandedly remarked, “There’s something wrong with this mic.”

And his congregation responded with enthusiasm, “And also with you!”

We all want to know that the Lord is with us. That’s why we come to church or pray or read the Bible. We know that there is more to this world than what we experience through our five senses. We want to know that there is a Way, a Truth and a Life far beyond our daily grind. We believe that we find ourselves and the meaning of our lives in knowing God. More than 1,600 years ago, Saint Augustine wrote, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in You.”

So why is it so easy to take God’s presence in our lives for granted? If we really believed that the Almighty God, the I AM, the Creator of the universe is always with us, listening to our prayers, closer than our very breath, wouldn’t we be overwhelmed with wonder and gratitude and joy? And yet, that’s not how we live, is it?

Let me ask you to consider an alternate scenario: what if you could have all the good things in life—the things that we in Christian circles refer to as “blessings”—but you didn’t have God? Would that be enough to make you happy? How long would it take you to notice the absence? What if you could have health and wealth and security and an easy life but you wouldn’t have the presence of God, or any relationship with God? What if God just left you alone?

That’s the issue Moses confronts in our Bible passage today, and that’s the issue that we contend with in our lives as followers of Jesus Christ. Which do we want more, the “blessings” of God or God’s own self?

In Exodus 32, our Bible passage last week, the people of Israel put their faith in Moses instead of in the God he serves. When Moses is away, they build a golden calf as a substitute god, an object of worship. They break the covenant with the God who created them, who called them, who freed them from slavery and restored their identity as God’s chosen people. And the result is separation from God, widespread death and suffering among the Israelites.

In Exodus 33, God tells Moses that He is still going to fulfill His promise to the children of Israel. Not because they deserve it, of course, but because God is always faithful to His promises. They will enter Canaan, the Promised Land, a land flowing with milk and honey. In fact, an angel of the Lord will go before them to drive out the other inhabitants of the land. God has arranged everything to provide abundance, prosperity and safety for His people. The only catch is God will not be going with them.

So let me ask you again: is it enough to have the Promised Land but without the presence of God?

In verse 12 of our passage today, Moses says to the Lord, “You have been telling me, ‘Lead these people,’ but you have not let me know whom you will send with me. You have said, ‘I know you by name and you have found favor with me.’ If you are pleased with me, teach me your ways so I may know you and continue to find favor with you. Remember that this nation is your people.”

Do you hear the deepest yearning of Moses’ heart? In his opinion, there is no blessing that compares to knowing God and God’s ways. Do we believe that too?

Clinical psychologist Larry Crabb writes in his book Shattered Dreams, “The highest dream we could ever dream, the wish that if granted would make us happier than any other blessing, is to know God, to actually experience Him. The problem is that we don’t believe this idea is true. We assent to it in our heads. But we don’t feel it in our hearts.” (4)

Moses believed this because he had experienced it. He had been in God’s presence and experienced God’s goodness. Even though he had witnessed God perform awesome miracles on behalf of His people, if Moses had to choose between God’s awesome miracles or God’s continuing presence, it was no contest. He wanted to know God.

The Lord replied, “My Presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.”

That sounds like a lovely, comforting assurance from God. There are just two little problems with it. Professor Dennis Olson of Princeton Theological Seminary says that our English translation of this first phrase is wrong. The Lord says to Moses, “My Presence will go,” but there is no “with you.” Bible translators added the “with you,” but it’s not there in the original Hebrew. The Lord may be going to Canaan, but He will not be going with His people. (5)

And Pastor Stan Mast explains our second problem, which shows up in the second phrase “. . . and I will give you rest.” Mast makes the point that in the Hebrew language, the word “you” in this phrase is in the singular. The Lord is offering to go with Moses and give him rest. But what about the children of Israel? Has their sin separated them forever from the Lord? (6) Has God finally given up on Israel?

Alison Green, a journalist for Inc.com, wrote an article on the strange and funny ways that people have resigned from their jobs. In the article, she wrote about one man who quit his office job and left an out-of-office email message full of stupid quotes he had collected from his bosses and senior executives. Anytime anyone sent him a professional email, they would automatically receive his out-of-office email with the stupid quotes from the company’s senior management.

It took more than a week for the IT department at his company to disable his email account. (7)

Would you have blamed Moses if he had chosen to quit? Would you have blamed God if He had given up on us? It must have been tempting to both Moses and God to throw up their hands and to walk away. They had endured the complaining and the idolatry and the recklessness of the Israelites for long enough. God was giving Moses a way out. “It’s okay, Moses. You don’t have to lead these stiff-necked people anymore. I’ll withdraw my presence from them, but everything will work out fine for you.”

But Moses said to the Lord, “If your Presence does not go with us, do not send us up from here. How will anyone know that you are pleased with me and with your people unless you go with us? What else will distinguish me and your people from all the other people on the face of the earth?”

Moses made his choice crystal clear: all the blessings of the Promised Land mean nothing if God is not with them.

The greatest blessing in life is knowing God and living in God’s presence. That was God’s original plan for humanity, and it is still God’s plan that will be accomplished when God’s Kingdom is established on the earth. “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in You.”

As Moses discovered, to truly know God, we must know God’s glory and God’s goodness. Dr. Nicholas J. Schaser defines God’s glory as “a concrete manifestation of divine presence that interacts with people.” Glory and goodness are the essential, integral, definitive qualities of God. They cannot be separated from one another because they are God’s very nature. When Moses asked to see God’s glory, the Lord replied, “I will cause all my goodness to pass in front of you, and I will proclaim my name, the LORD, in your presence. I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion.”

In spite of their unfaithfulness, in spite of their sins, God shows them mercy and compassion. And God does the same thing for us today, even though we don’t deserve it any more than they do. God’s character never changes. That is why more than 1,400 years after God led the Israelites into the Promised Land, God’s glory would be revealed again in the person of Jesus Christ. As the apostle John would write about Jesus’ coming into the world, “And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only Son, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth” (John 1:14).

God never gives up on His people. God never stops trying to restore humanity. That is the greatness and the goodness and the awesome nature of God. That is God’s glory. There is no blessing that compares to knowing God and living in God’s presence.

Back in the mid-1800s, one of America’s most influential pastors was D.L. Moody. He pastored a large and vibrant church in Chicago. On a trip to England, Moody met a young English preacher named Henry Moorhouse. As a courtesy, Moody invited Moorhouse to preach at his church if Moorhouse ever came to the U.S.

Imagine D.L. Moody’s surprise when, sometime later, he got a telegram from Moorhouse saying that he would be in Chicago on the following Sunday. Moody had forgotten about the invitation. But since he would be away preaching at another church, he allowed Henry Moorhouse to preach that Sunday in Chicago.

A week later, Moody returned to his church to discover that the church board had invited Moorhouse to preach every night that week. And his text every single night was John 3:16, “For God so loved the world that He sent His One and Only Son that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” Every single night, Henry Moorhouse had preached the message that God loves sinners.

D.L. Moody was scandalized by this. But when he objected, his wife suggested he hear Moorhouse’s message first. That night, as D.L. Moody listened to Henry Moorhouse preach on the love of God, he came to know God in a whole new way. And it changed his life. He would later write about this moment, “I never knew up to that time that God loved us so much. This heart of mine began to thaw out, and I could not keep back the tears.  It was like news from a far country.  I just drank it in.”

Later, Moody would tell his friends, “I have never forgotten those nights. I have preached a different Gospel since, and I have had more power with God and man since then.” (8)

Our circumstances, good or bad, aren’t a measure of God’s blessings. Our health, wealth, happiness, security or success aren’t a measure of God’s blessings. Knowing God and living in God’s presence—those are the greatest blessings in life. It is in God that we find the Way, the Truth and the Life. It is in God that we find ourselves and our purpose. “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in You.”


1. “12 Fast Facts About the Secret Service,” Starr Wright, USA, January 11, 2021, https://wrightusa.com/en/Articles/12-Fast-Facts-About-the-Secret-Service.

2. “5 Slapstick Stories from the Secret Service” by Ryan Menezes, Cracked.com, January 10, 2023. https://www.cracked.com/article_36538_5-slapstick-stories-from-the-secret-service.html.

3. “9 Fantastic Easter & Bunny Stories,” Suzanne Ripleys.com April 3, 2015. https://www.ripleys.com/weird-news/easter-stories/.

4. Larry Crabb, Shattered Dreams: God’s Unexpected Pathway to Joy by Larry Crabb, (Waterbrook Press: Colorado Springs, Colo.), 2001, 2010.

5. “Commentary on Exodus 33:12-23” by Dennis Olson, Workingpreacher.org, October 22, 2017, https://www.workingpreacher.org/commentaries/revised-common-lectionary/ordinary-29/commentary-on-exodus-3312-23-4.

6. “Exodus 33:12-23 Commentary” Sermon Commentary for Sunday, October 18, 2020, by Stan Mast, Center for Excellence in Preaching. https://cepreaching.org/commentary/2020-10-12/exodus-3312-23-2/.

7. “The Employee Who Resigned Via Cod and Other Tales of Dramatic Resignations. Readers share their most memorable resignation stories.” By Alison Green Inc.com https://www.inc.com/alison-green/the-employee-who-resigned-via-cod-other-tales-of-dramatic-resignations.html?utm_source=join1440&utm_medium=email.

8. “The Man Who Loved John 3:16” by Robert J. Morgan, Posted on: September 22, 2009, https://www.robertjmorgan.com/devotional/the-man-who-loved-john-316/.

ChristianGlobe Network, Inc., Collected Sermons Fourth Quarter 2023, by King Duncan & Angela Akers