The Bible Recap - Day 036 (Exodus 19-21) - Year 3

Episode Date: February 5, 2021

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible Recap. About seven weeks after leaving Egypt, the Israelites finally make it to the wilderness of Sinai, at the base of Mount Sinai. We've seen this mountain referred to earlier in Scripture as the Mountain of God, and it's probably also the same place as Mount Horib. It seems to be one of God's favorite places. Here, God calls to Moses from out of the mountain, and Moses passes his words along to the people. These people who, as far as we can tell, seem to complain more than they praise,
Starting point is 00:00:39 promise to do everything God commands of them. We'll see. God says he's going to meet the people at Mount Sinai, so they need to consecrate themselves. This is the same thing he called them to do for the first borns, and it basically means set them apart and prepare them to encounter God. It usually involves a bath and some clean clothes.
Starting point is 00:00:58 And Moses also tells them to abstain from sex during this time, not because women are evil, but because things like seminal fluids and blood are symbols of life and death. As far as their laws for cleanliness are concerned, to be depleted of either of those things, points to the depletion of life, which wasn't considered an appropriate way to honor the presence of the giver of life. When the people come to meet God, they cannot touch the mountain, or they'll die. And if someone does touch it, no one is allowed to touch that person.
Starting point is 00:01:26 That would mean the transfer of both the death sentence that person was carrying and the transfer of the power of God. It's kind of like grabbing somebody who's being electrocuted. God's power is not hypothetical. Being in contact with it has verifiable dramatic effects. You may have noticed that he says they have to kill anyone who touches the mountain. It doesn't say they'll die from touching it. This is
Starting point is 00:01:48 interesting here because it shows us that God regards killing as a different thing than murder. We see this again in 2112 when he says whoever strikes a man so that he dies shall be put to death. I'm not making any kind of political statements about the death penalty here. I'm just pointing out that scripture makes a distinction between murdering someone and killing someone as a penalty, or even as an accident. The reason I'm pointing this out is because some people say God contradicts himself here by telling them to kill someone, then issuing the Ten Commandments only a few verses later.
Starting point is 00:02:19 But the Hebrew phrase in the Ten Commandments is best translated as, you shall not murder. Murder specifically is different than killing in general. The Hebrew word for murder is never used in the Old Testament when referring to war or capital punishment. So here they are at the mountain of God, and on the third day there's a big storm and a loud trumpet blast. God descended on the mountain and fire,
Starting point is 00:02:40 and it was covered in smoke. Oh, there's also an earthquake. Then in the midst of the storm, a fire, smoke, an earthquake, and an ever-increasing, ear-piercing trumpet noise, God tells Moses, come closer. Climb the mountain. The mountain that no one else is allowed to touch.
Starting point is 00:02:56 And Moses does. God has a few things to tell him. Then we hit a section lots of you are familiar with, the 10 Commandments. So I'm only going to hover on a few points. In this section, it appears God is talking to Moses and the people are overhearing the whole thing. God opens by using his personal name with them, I am Yahweh, your God.
Starting point is 00:03:18 He reminds them who he is to them and how he demonstrated his commitment to them. He says, I brought you out of slavery. By the way, we address slavery later and repeatedly when we can give it more time and attention, so stick with us. This is important. If you want more info now, scroll back in your feed to where we posted the February, Reflections, and Corrections episode from last year.
Starting point is 00:03:39 We'll also link to that in the show notes, but if you can wait, we'll be posting that episode again this year at the end of the month. Okay, back to today's text. Here, in his words to Moses and the people, God starts by talking about who he is and who they are to him before telling them his laws. He opens with relationship.
Starting point is 00:04:01 Then he gives these 10 words. That's what they're called in Hebrew, but just because they're called words and not commandments doesn't give them any less weight, they're still the words of God, which is why the translators often call them commandments instead. The first five words are vertical. They show us how to honor God. The second five words are horizontal. They show us how to honor others. The fifth word, which is about how to honor parents, acts as a kind of hinge, which swings in both of these directions. The second word, the one about idols and graven images, it points out our natural inclination to worship things. Everyone worships something. Mostly, we worship what we see regularly.
Starting point is 00:04:42 The challenge for our idolatrous hearts is that Yahweh has no physical form. So in order to worship Him, we have to set aside our human nature, which means setting aside the created things we can see with our eyes. You may wonder about the offenies here. Even though God has no physical form, He does appropriate one from time to time,
Starting point is 00:05:01 but He shouldn't be thought of as attached to or confined to that form. Some people even believe this commandment prohibits having images of Jesus or crosses, and it's definitely true that those things can be worshiped or idolized or treated as though they have magical powers. I've seen it. Honestly, I'm all for getting rid of pictures of Jesus, especially because most of them are Renaissance Jesus, all blonde haired and blue-eyed and European. of Jesus, especially because most of them are Renaissance Jesus, all blond-haired and blue-eyed and European. Anyway, the Israelites would not make any images of humans or animals because of this word. They know the human heart's propensity to worship things, so the only kind of art allowed in Jewish homes or synagogues is geometric art. It's a far cry from the cathedrals we see today.
Starting point is 00:05:42 Not long ago, when an artist erected a statue of David and Jerusalem, some of the locals who love David broke its nose off because they take the second commandment seriously. I wanna say a bit about the word jealous here because in this passage, God says, I the Lord your God and Majellis God. God's jealousy here is not like our jealousy, not at all.
Starting point is 00:06:07 The Hebrew word used to describe God's jealousy here is only used in reference to God. The meaning it carries is more like protective or zealous. God is protective of and zealous for his relationship with us. God's jealousy is entirely different than the kind of jealousy you and I feel. The word used to describe that kind of jealousy carries more of a connotation of envy, like Joseph's brothers felt toward him. In the third word, we see how seriously God takes his name. There are lots of layers to this word, but I want to point out too in particular.
Starting point is 00:06:41 This word prohibits any kind of insincere or frivolous use of his name, because it suggests we're not taking it seriously. Personally, I don't even like to use the acronym OMG because of what it represents. God takes personal offense to anything that diminishes his character or personhood, which is the next thing I want to point to. As we've talked about before, God's names represent his character and his actions. So taking the name of God in vain could also correspond to doubting that he is who he says he is, disbelieving his character. Many of us may have never misused God's name in our speech, but if we've doubted God's
Starting point is 00:07:18 character in our hearts, this verse calls us out. After God finished these ten words, 2018 tells us the people saw the storm and the trumpet and the smoke and they were afraid. Then Moses responds with something that sounds completely contradictory. He says, do not fear. For God has come to test you that the fear of Him may be before you, that you may not sin.
Starting point is 00:07:41 So which is it Moses? Should we be afraid or not? You're sending mixed messages. The first use of fear in Moses' statement, do not fear, carries the meaning of dread. It's the same word used in Genesis 310 where Adam sinned and he was afraid so he hid from God. That kind of fear drives us away from God. In scripture, this kind of fear is sin adjacent. It's either a response to sin or it leads to sin or both. That is the kind of fear Moses is telling them not to do. Then he says, God has come to test you that the fear of him may be before you,
Starting point is 00:08:17 that you may not sin. This is a different word for fear in Hebrew. It carries the meaning of reverence and awe and its joy adjacent. It has the meaning of reverence and awe, and its joy adjacent. It has the effect of drawing us to God. The fear of God is comprised primarily of delight and awe. It moves us toward Him. It's the way we feel about the Grand Canyon. We take long trips to get to it, to stand on the edge of it with our eyes and mouths open wide, taking it all in, while simultaneously being fully aware that it has the power to kill us. All into light and respect.
Starting point is 00:08:52 That's the kind of fear we're supposed to have toward God. And as Moses said, that kind of fear keeps us from sinning against him. It produces righteousness in us. We have to reframe the way we think of the fear of the Lord because most of us picture it as him throwing out lightning bolts on any sinners who dare to darken the door of a church. That's not what it is.
Starting point is 00:09:13 And when we think of it in that way, we malign his character, which is, as we just talked about, a kind of taking his name and vein. We hit a section in chapter 21 that is just a general outline of how to live in society with civility and respect for each other. It's aiming to establish ideas of justice and morality that will promote a culture that thrives. In general, it seems to be less about how to treat people and more about how to handle those who mistreat people.
Starting point is 00:09:40 It reveals God's desire to protect and respect life, including life in the womb, because all life points to the giver of life, and especially humans who are made in God's image. Speaking of which, what was your God shot today? I loved in 195 through 6 where he called Israel his treasured possession, and he told them they were a kingdom of priests. Priests are mediators, so if the Hebrew nation is a kingdom of priests, that means there has to be someone else on the other side of them that needs to be connected with God through them.
Starting point is 00:10:12 This is all a part of God's plan to use the Israelites and Jesus specifically as a way to connect himself to the other nations of the world who are not Israelites. God shows the Israelites as his people in order to make a way for the people of the disinherited nations to be adopted into his family. He's not exclusive, he's just specific.
Starting point is 00:10:32 He's drawing people from all nations to him through Christ, and he's where the joy is. [♪ Music playing in background, music playing in background, are you following us on social media? We're on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest. You can find it all linked in the show notes. We post encouraging messages related to everyday's content, and we'd love to stay connected with you in this way to help encourage you and give you an opportunity to encourage
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