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Moses and the Old Covenant
1.
God promised to bless Abraham's
descendants and give them the land of Canaan. But first, they had to move into Egypt, and
then become enslaved. About how many years would they be in Egypt? Ex. 12:40.
Comment: Abraham's descendants moved to Egypt.
Although the stories of what they did there and how they escaped are
interesting, they are not directly related
to our topic of interest, so we will skip them and pick up the story at Mt. Sinai.
2. What kind of covenant did God
offer to make with the Israelites? Ex. 19:3-6. Did the blessings
depend on obedience? Verse 5. Did the people agree to make the covenant? Verse 8.
Comment: In this covenant, the promises would be
given if the people obeyed. God had already rescued the people from slavery, but
further blessings depended on their obedience. The people promised to obey, but
their promise seems to have been based more on fear than on faith. They did not understand
what God would require of them, and they did not understand their own inability to do all
that the Lord said. During the journey from Egypt to Sinai, the people had already
disobeyed God several times, and they would disobey again soon after Sinai and repeatedly
in the years to come.
In this covenant, Moses was the mediator. God
spoke the words to Moses, and the people were able to listen to God talking to Moses
(verse 9). Moses spoke on behalf of the people, and he told them what God said (verse 25).
3. What did God command? Ex.
20:1-17. How did the people respond?
Comment: God spoke the Ten Commandments, and the people were
afraid. They wanted God to speak to Moses only, rather than hear God directly. As
mediator, Moses would thereafter tell them the words of God and they would not have to
hear God's voice.
4. Did God command altars for
worship? Verses 24-26. Did he prescribe rules for Israelite slaves? Ex. 21:1-11. Did the
covenant also include rules about death penalties and other punishments for crimes
against human life and limb? Verses 12-32. Were there regulations for crimes against a
person's property? Ex. 21:3322:15. Were more penalties prescribed for mistreating
other people? Verses 16-27.
5. Did God demand ownership of
certain people and animals? Verses 29-30. Did he make restrictions on agriculture? Ex.
23:10-11. Did he restrict the workweek? Verse 12. Did he require annual festivals? Verses
14-17. Did Moses then report all these words to the people? Ex. 24:3. Did the people agree
to obey? Same verse. Did Moses repeat all the commands, and the people repeat their
agreement? Verse 7. How did Moses signify that the covenant had been formally ratified?
Verse 8.
Comment: The covenant included laws about worship, economics
and civil courts. It included general principles of human relationship with God and with
neighbor, and it included some specific details of how those principles should be applied
in specific situations. All these different types of laws were mixed together in the covenant.
The covenant was completed by a ceremony of sprinkling blood.
Moses said, "This is the blood of the covenant that the Lord has made with you.'' God
then promised to give Moses some tablets of stone on which the laws were written (verse
12).
6. Did God continue to add commands
to the covenant that had been made? Ex. 25:1-22. What did the Israelites do while God was
speaking to Moses? Ex. 32:1-6.
Comment: God gave very detailed instructions for the
tabernacle and the way the Israelites were to worship him. These details fill several
chapters of Exodus and contrast sharply with the Israelites' impatience and idolatry. As
God said, they were a stiff-necked people, stubbornly disobedient (verse 9). God was
willing to destroy them all, but Moses, acting as a mediator, asked for mercy (verses
10-11, 31-32). When Moses saw the idolatry and revelry, he became angry, too. He broke the
tablets (verse 19) and destroyed the idol (verse 20).
7. Since Moses had broken the
tablets of the covenant, what did God command him to do? Ex. 34:1. Did God again make a
covenant with Moses? Verse 10. Did he use the exact same words as before? Verses 10-26.
What did he write on the tablets of stone? Verse 28.
Comment: The words of the covenant — the Ten Commandments
— were written on the stone tablets. Exodus 20:1-17 (the Ten Commandments) formed the
beginning of the covenant, and Exodus 20:2423:33 was also included in the covenant. When God
restated the covenant in chapter 34, he mixed some of the Ten Commandments in with other
regulations from chapters 21-23. The Bible does not put any stress on the precise order
and structure of the covenant. All of God's commands were to be kept, for all were
given with divine authority.
The worship regulations in Exodus 2530, even though
they were given after the covenant had been ratified, were also part of Israel's covenant
with God. So were the additional rules found in other writings of Moses, such as the book
of Leviticus. Deuteronomy is a restatement and expansion of the same covenant. Some
regulations expand on the concept of worshiping God; other regulations expand on the
concept of holy time; and others give details on how people should treat their neighbors.
They were all part of the same covenant.
As we know, the rituals and sacrifices found in Leviticus do
not apply to Christians today. Christians do not have to enforce the civil laws and
punishments commanded in Exodus. But why — why is it that Christians, who should obey God, do
not observe these laws that were clearly given by God? To understand, let's move forward in our study
—
from the covenant mediated by Moses to the covenant mediated by Jesus Christ.
To the next study in this series
Back to home page of Old Testament Laws
Written by Michael Morrison; copyright 1997 by author
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