Bible Commentary

Exodus 33:1-12

The Pulpit Commentary on Exodus 33:1-12

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

A nation in garb of penitence.

On this section consider—

I. THE CONDITIONED PROMISE (). God has consented to spare the nation. They are to set out forthwith on the journey to Canaan. But his presence is no longer to go with them. He would send an angel. Notice—

1. Everything, in one sense, remains the same. The people are to be conducted to Canaan. They are to inherit the promises. God will drive out their enemies before them. The land will still flow with milk and honey. It will still be able to be said of them, that there is no nation on earth so favoured as they are. Yet,

2. Everything, in another sense, is different. Blessings without God in them are not the same blessings. They want that which gives them their chief value. See below, on .

II. THE SUMMONS TO REPENTANCE (). A command is next given to the people to strip off their ornaments. They are to humble themselves before Jehovah that Jehovah may know what to do with them. This command they obeyed. From this time forward they ceased to wear ornaments. On this observe,

1. Repentance for sin is an indispensable condition of restoration to God's favour. It was required of Israel. It is required of us. There can be no salvation without it (). "Cease to do evil; learn to do well" (, ). Had Israel not repented, Moses would have interceded in vain.

2. Repentance, if sincere, must approve itself by appropriate deeds.—"Bring forth therefore fruits meet for repentance" (). The people put off their ornaments. Ornaments do not become those with whom God is displeased. This act of the people was a first step in obedience.

3. A very imperfect repentance is sometimes accepted by God as a reason for forbearance with the sinner. The people mourned; but their repentance, as events showed, did not amount to a real change of heart. They mourned for "the evil tidings." It was the consequences of their sin which distressed them, more than the sin itself. Yet do them justice. The "evil tidings" was not the loss of any material blessings, hut, solely, the loss of God's presence. There is still good in a heart which feels the withdrawal of God's presence to be a loss to it.

4. It is well that the remembrance of great sins should go with us all our days. Those who have committed them should go softly ever after.

III. THE WITHDRAWAL OF JEHOVAH'S PRESENCE FROM THE CAMP (). Moses, we are next informed, took a tent, possibly his own, possibly one which had hitherto served as a sanctuary, pitched it "without the camp, afar off from the camp," and called it "the tent of meeting." Thither came out every one that sought the Lord. The act was,

1. A symbol of Jehovah's formal withdrawal from the midst of the people.

2. A token that a final decision had not yet been come to as to how God meant to deal with them. Communications were not wholly broken off. Space was left for repentance. God might still be entreated of them. Learn

IV. THE TOKEN OF FAVOUR TO MOSES (). The cloudy pillar descended, and stood at the door of the tabernacle. There the Lord talked with Moses, as a man talketh with his friend. This was

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commentaryMatthew Henry on Exodus 33:1-6Those whom God pardons, must be made to know what their sin deserved. “Let them go forward as they are;” this was very expressive of God's displeasure. Though he promises to make good his covenant with Abraham, in givin…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Israelites Reproved. (b. c. 1491.)THE ISRAELITES REPROVED. (B. C. 1491.) Here is, I. The message which God sent by Moses to the children of Israel, signifying the continuance of the displeasure against them, and the bad terms they yet stood upon with Go…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Exodus 33:1-32The restoration to Divine favour completed. This is a chapter which, beginning very gloomily, ends very gloriously. In the beginning Jehovah seems as if bidding farewell to the people for whom he had done so much; but a…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Exodus 33:1-6EXPOSITION THE THREAT OF GOD'S WITHDRAWAL, AND THE HUMILIATION OF THE PEOPLE. The intercession of Moses, and his offer to sacrifice himself for his people had obtained from God some great concessions, viz.— 1. That the…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Exodus 33:1The Lord said unto Moses. In continuation of what he had said in Exodus 32:33, Exodus 32:34, but possibly at another time; and with the object of fully explaining what had been meant in Exodus 32:34. The land which I sw…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Exodus 33:1-6The hiding of God's face from man. When God hides away his face from his people, it may be— I. AS A JUDGMENT. It was as a judgment that God separated between himself and man after the Fall, and "drove man forth" from th…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Exodus 33:1-11Mercy vailed in judgment. I. GOD'S SEPARATION FROM THE PEOPLE AND ITS EFFECTS. 1. The separation. 2. Its effects. (3) They were troubled by fear of judgment, for the Lord had said, "I will come up into the midst of thee…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Exodus 33:2I will send an angel before thee. Note the change from "my angel" (Exodus 32:34) to "an angel;" which, however, would still have been ambiguous, but for what follows in Exodus 33:3. The angel of God's presence is "an an…Joseph S. Exell and contributors