Exodus 33 — My Presence Shall Go with Thee
God commands Israel to leave Sinai, but says He Himself will not go with them, lest He consume them. The people mourn. Moses pitches the tabernacle of meeting outside the camp; the pillar of cloud descends when he enters. Moses pleads — if your Presence does not go, do not bring us up. God grants the Presence. Moses asks to see His glory. God hides him in the cleft of the rock and passes by.
“If thy presence go not with me, carry us not up hence.”
— Exodus 33:15
- v.1-6 God's threat to withhold His presence
- v.7-11 Moses' tent of meeting outside the camp
- v.12-17 Moses pleads for God's presence
- v.18-23 Moses asks to see God's glory
They mourned. The same people who had so recently worshipped a calf now understood what they would lose without God Himself. Conviction begins to do its work.
Stripping off ornaments was a sign of repentance. The earrings that became the calf were now removed in grief. The very things that made the idol are renounced.
A unique relationship. Moses is the only man in the Old Testament called the friend of God in this way. Numbers 12:8 — with him will I speak mouth to mouth.
Yet in verse 20 God says thou canst not see my face: for there shall no man see me, and live. The face to face speech is a description of intimate communication, not full visual disclosure. Even Moses had not seen what John 1:18 says was reserved for the Son.
Moses' answer to God's offer of land-without-Presence. Then we will not go. The man who could have led Israel into Canaan refused the destination without the divine company.
A defining moment. The believer who values God's blessings more than God Himself has not yet understood salvation. The Promised Land without His Presence is the wrong destination.
The presence of God is what distinguishes His people from all other peoples on earth. Not the land, not the law, not their pedigree — His Presence.
The same remains true. The church's distinctiveness is not in better organization, better preaching, better music, better programs. It is in whether God is actually with us. Take that away and we are like everyone else.
The boldest prayer in the Old Testament. Shew me thy glory. Moses has had every kind of intimacy with God already; he wants more. He wants the unveiled vision.
The prayer of every soul that has tasted God. The more you know Him, the more you ask for more. Satisfaction in His company increases the appetite rather than satiating it.
The limitation Moses had to accept. The full unmediated vision of God's face would destroy a sinful creature. Even Moses, the friend of God, could not bear it.
For the believer the full vision is reserved for the next life. 1 John 3:2 — we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is. The face Moses could not see, the redeemed will see when they have been glorified. Until then, we see through a glass, darkly (1 Corinthians 13:12).
The cleft of the rock — protected, shielded, covered by God's own hand. The picture is striking. God places the man He loves in a rock cleft and covers him with His hand so His passing glory does not destroy him.
For the believer, the Rock is Christ (1 Corinthians 10:4). Hidden in Christ, covered by His hand, we behold what otherwise would consume us. Augustus Toplady's hymn — Rock of Ages, cleft for me, let me hide myself in thee — is Exodus 33:22 in song.
What would you do if God offered you all His blessings without His Presence? The promotion, the relationship, the success, the recognition — without Him? Moses said no. Many believers would say yes without realizing it. Test your heart at the offer. The Presence is the gift. Everything else is wrapping.
Christ is the Rock in whose cleft we are hidden. He is the One in whom all the fullness of the Godhead dwelleth bodily (Colossians 2:9) — and by being in Him, we behold what Moses could only glimpse from behind. Christ's face is the face of God made visible (John 14:9). What Moses asked to see in shadow, we have seen and worshipped in flesh.
God offers Canaan without Himself. The land and the blessing without the Presence. From a worldly perspective this was a generous offer; from a spiritual one it was the worst possible news.
A test of Israel's heart. Did they want the blessing or the Blesser? The answer determines everything. The next verses prove they had learned what mattered.