Studies in Exodus No. 37
Exodus 32:1-14
February 12, 2006 PM
By Rev. Dr. Robert S. Rayburn
From: Exodus Series
We said, back at 24:11, at the conclusion of the covenant
renewal ceremony narrated in the first 11 verses of chapter 24,
that apart from one major exception the book of Exodus ended
there. The division of the Pentateuch into five books has more to
do – especially in the case of the first four books –
with how much text can be put on a single scroll, rather than
with thematic considerations. The long chapters of regulations
regarding the manufacture of the tabernacle and its furniture
that followed 24:11, if their theme is taken into account, really
belong more with Leviticus than Exodus. Exodus, up to that point,
had been an historical narrative but at 24:12 it became a manual
of worship. True enough, those regulations were what God gave to
Moses while upon the top of Mt. Sinai, and, in that respect, fit
properly into the narrative at that point. But, of course, the
regulations regarding sacrifices with which Leviticus begins were
also given by God to Moses on the mountain. If we are to divide
the material thematically most of Exodus after 24:11
belongs with Leviticus. However, as I said, there is one major
exception, and that is chapters 32-34 which return to narrative.
Indeed, they are the one remaining section of narrative in the
book. These chapters are a narrative of events that occurred
while and immediately after Moses was with God on the top of Mt.
Sinai receiving the Law.
Text Comment
- v.1
-
Moses has been gone by this time almost 40 days. The top
of the mountain had all the while been alive with lightning
and thunder. It was easy for the people to think that he was
dead. Israel explicitly asks for “gods.” Yahweh
seems to have disappeared with Moses. They needed new gods to
help them.
We ask in one of our morning confessions that the Lord
would forgive us for the “pride, hypocrisy, and
impatience of our lives.” Here it was impatience that
undid Israel. They weren’t willing to wait for the
Lord’s will to unfold, no matter that Moses had told
them to wait for his return. No doubt they were also afraid,
as the “who will go before us” indicates. They
were facing the prospect of being stranded in the wilderness
with no one to lead them. [Alter, 493]
- v.2
-
Some have suggested that the narrative can be taken to
suggest that Aaron was stalling, hoping either that the
people’s eagerness to have an idol would dissipate
through the delay required to gather the gold or that they
would lose interest when they realized how much such an idol
would cost.
Later Israel would impose a taboo on gold jewelry because
of the sin she committed here. Before this she wore gold
jewelry. Gold jewelry for men and women is mentioned in
Genesis and earlier in Exodus. But, as 33:4-6 suggests, after
this there was a taboo against such jewelry. That taboo seems
to lie behind Gideon’s conduct as described in Judges
8:24.
- v.4
-
The NIV translates “calf,” perhaps primarily
because we are so used to hearing of the “golden
calf.” The English word “calf” suggests a
gamboling little animal, but the Hebrew term actually refers
to a young bull that has reached adult size, a bull in the
full vigor of its youth. In Gen. 15:19 the word is used to
describe a three-year-old animal. And in Ps. 106:20 –
which is a retelling of this same history – the NIV
renders the same word simply as “bull.” A calf,
as we picture such an animal, would not be a normal image in
ancient idolatry. [Cassuto, 412; Ellison, 169]
The text suggests that the idol was first rough cast in
solid gold and then finished with a tool.
“These are your gods…” raises a
question. The word אלום,
“God,” can be translated, as it always is in
reference to Yahweh, in the singular. But then a singular
verb is used even though the form of the noun is plural. When
that happens, as it does thousands of times in the OT, it is
an instance of what is usually called the “plural of
majesty.” [Cf. Waltke and O’Connor,
Introduction to Biblical Hebrew Syntax, 7.4.3.b] But
here we have a plural verb with elohim which makes
it necessary to translate the noun “gods” not
“God.” But Israel here made only one idol, one
golden bull. Why, then, “gods?” Certainly it is a
parody of 20:2 – “you shall have no other gods
before me” – and perhaps that explains the
plural. We have the same singular idol and plural
“gods” in v. 8. Or perhaps there are thought to
be more than one god represented by the single idol.
- v.5
-
Aaron makes matters still worse by building an altar.
Israel had as yet no altar. The one described in chapter 27
had not yet been built. So Aaron is taking in hand to develop
an entire cult without divine guidance, indeed, in direct
violation of God’s law. He is going to worship Yahweh
in precisely that way Israel has been forbidden to use.
“…to the Lord,” that is, “to
Yahweh,” suggests that, whatever the people were
thinking by asking for “gods,” Aaron himself was
not intending to exchange the worship of Yahweh for the
worship of some other god. He meant merely to worship Yahweh
in a more accessible way, in that way common to the peoples
of that time and place. Israel didn’t want to be
different from the peoples around her; she wanted to be the
same. Just as later she would want a visible rather than an
invisible king; now she wants a visible god to worship. The
bull was to serve as a sign of Yahweh’s presence,
perhaps as the throne on which he sat. A bull was often in
ANE worship a cultic seat for a god. The god was thought to
sit on it. So the bull was not thought to be the god himself,
but was, as his throne or seat, a visible representation of
the god. That, anyway, seems to have been Aaron’s
thought; the people went further.
- v.6
-
The NIV’s “revelry,” is a word that
suggests in such a context a drunken orgy, which, after all,
was the sort of thing closely associated with ANE worship,
especially that worship featuring bulls. Such behavior would
have been understood in religious terms by the people –
it was part of fertility worship – but God was holy and
had expressed in the Ten Commandments the implications of his
holiness for worship. It is the divine holiness that explains
the severe reaction that follows.
- v.7
-
In a statement thick with sarcasm, the Lord refers to
Israel as Moses’ people whom Moses
had brought out of Egypt. The Lord is, as it were, disavowing
a connection to these people, like a mother in a grocery
store who doesn’t want to be identified as the parent
of those misbehaving and whining children.
- v.9
-
“Stiff-necked” is a farmer’s metaphor
for an ox or a horse that won’t respond to the rope
when tugged. It means “stubborn” and
“willful.”
- v.10
-
Yahweh offered Moses the opportunity to be the one, the
single one through whom the promise made to Abraham would be
fulfilled. He would be, as it were, a new Abraham. Heady
stuff! What is more, Moses had already learned something
about the Israelites: how difficult they would prove to be,
how little thanks he would receive for his leadership, and
how jealous others would be of his position.
- v.13
-
You will notice that Moses’ reply is quite different
from the modern sentimentality we would be likely to hear
from church leaders. He doesn’t excuse their conduct or
find reasons for it. He accepts the harsh judgment the Lord
has made about Israel and her behavior and pleads instead
God’s honor and his promises.
- v.14
-
The NIV’s relented is literally
“repented” (נחם). It is an
anthropomorphism – the action of God described in human
terms – but is very important and meaningful. It does
not mean that God changed his mind, in the sense that we do,
of course, in the sense that he came to believe that what he
had formerly planned to do would be a mistake. “It
means, in biblical language, that he now embarked on a
different course of action from that already suggested as a
possibility, owing to some new factor which is usually
mentioned in the context. In the Bible, it is clear that
God’s promises and warnings are always conditioned on
man’s response: this is most clearly set out in Ezekiel
33:13-16,” but is made clear in many texts (e.g. Isa.
38:1-6). In other words, in biblical parlance genuinely
conditional promises and intentions are often stated in
absolute terms. So, Moses didn’t alter
God’s purpose; he carried it out. He was Godlike
himself in sharing God’s mind and God’s purpose.
[Cole, 217]
We have a commentary on this history in Psalm 106. In vv.
19-21 we read:
At Horeb they made a calf and worshipped an idol cast from
metal.
They exchanged their Glory for an image of a bull, which eats
grass.
They forgot the God who saved them, who had done great things
in Egypt.
The Psalmist sums up the incident of the golden calf by saying
that Israel exchanged the Living God – their Glory, the
manifestation of whose glory was still visible to them on the top
of the Mountain – for an idol, a common ANE idol, a mere
man-made statue. And they did that because they forgot the Lord,
Yahweh, and forgot his salvation.
We’ll look more closely at the anatomy of Israel’s
sin next time. Tonight I want to consider it as an instance of
Israel’s unbelief. It is unbelief, after all. It is not
first disobedience; it is first unbelief. The particular sin that
Israel committed is the sin that all unbelievers commit. They
worship the creature rather than the Creator, as Paul puts it in
Romans 1. But that worship stems from unbelief.
It is a point of great importance as is proved by the fact
that it is mentioned so often in the Bible. Israel in the
wilderness – no matter the ten plagues, no matter the
crossing of the Sea of Reeds on dry land, no matter the manna, no
matter the appearance of the glory of Yahweh to them at Sinai
– Israel in the wilderness was an unbelieving, a faithless
people. Yahweh, no matter all that he had done and said, was
little more than an idea that passed quickly through the transoms
of their minds. And the Lord can do the most spectacular things
and they will have no effect if people don’t have
faith.
Here, in our narrative, that point is underscored and in
an emphatic way already in v. 1 by the total absence of
Yahweh in the people’s speech. They speak as if
Moses brought Israel out of Egypt on eagles’
wings. They speak as if Moses’ absence is the thing they
ought to worry about. And then, to make it worse, Israel says in
v. 4, standing before the idol of the bull that Aaron had made,
“These are your gods, O Israel, who brought you up out of
Egypt.” Where is the Lord in their minds? What of him?
Nothing! The entire book has been a powerful study in
the presence of the Lord and Israel seems to have no sense
whatsoever of his presence. He has disappeared from their view as
if he never were. We are nonplussed and wonder how this can be;
but, the fact is, it happens all the time.
I remember being struck by this when, in seminary, I had my
first EE experience. Some of you are familiar with Evangelism
Explosion, the witnessing technique developed by D. James
Kennedy of our Coral Ridge PCA church in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
The trainee is taught to begin by asking certain questions of the
people one is calling on and talking to. In my experience, most
of the people I called on in suburban St. Louis, claimed to be
Christians of one stripe or another. Sometimes they would even
give quite decisive confessions of faith in Christ as the Son of
God. But when they were asked:
“If you were to die tonight and you were to stand
before Christ and he were to ask you, ‘Why should I let
you into my heaven?’ what would you say? they almost
invariably gave the same answer. “I’ve been a good
person; I’ve tried to live an honorable life; I’ve
never killed anybody; I’ve taught my children to be good
people; I’ve met my obligations; and so on.”
Here are people who say they believe in Jesus Christ, even
people who say that he is the Son of God. But when it comes time
to confess their faith, they don’t mention him at all. His
life and work, his death on the cross don’t feature in any
serious way in their understanding of their lives. We ask: how
can this be? How can someone know to say that Christ is the Son
of God and then answer a question about salvation and not mention
him at all? It seems absurdly illogical, unreasonable, and
incongruous. But, fact is, this is always and everywhere the
nature of the unbelieving heart. The impression that God leaves
on the heart and mind is so shallow, so weak, that it vanishes
like the mist in the heat of the sun. Any little thing puts God
and Christ right out of mind. Moses’ 40 day absence is
enough to make them forget the plagues, the parting of the Sea,
the manna, even the pyrotechnics going on at that moment at the
top of the mountain.
Unbelief is a principle that dominates the mind. It crowds out
the truth that cannot be seen. It hardens the soul so that it
will not receive an impression from the glory of the Lord. What
Israel did at the foot of Mt. Sinai is only a striking example of
what the scientist does who studies the incredible complexities
and perfections of nature and thinks about all of it without even
a passing thought of God, the Creator, whose fingerprints are
everywhere he looks. You know the famous story about the man who
is certain that he is dead. He is sent to a psychiatrist but to
no avail. No matter how much evidence the psychiatrist piles up,
the man will not believe that he is alive. Finally, the
psychiatrist hits on an idea. He sets the man to studying the
circulatory system and what happens at death. He pounds these
facts into the man’s head until his patient accepts without
reservation the fact that dead men do not bleed. He gets the man
to admit to him that dead men do not bleed and then, in a flash,
takes out a pin and pricks the man in the arm. As the blood wells
up on the man’s arm, his face goes white and he whispers,
“Dead men bleed after all!”
Well, this is just like that. The preposterousness of standing
at the foot of a mountain alive with thunder and lightning, a
mountain far removed from Egypt to which they had been carried,
as it were on eagles’ wings, through the parted waters of
the Sea of Reeds, having eaten that morning food miraculously
appearing on the ground, I say, the preposterousness of planning
to use gold the Egyptians willingly gave them the night of the
tenth plague – because they were terrorized by
Yahweh’s wrath – to make an idol to some other god
than Yahweh, never occurred to them. Without faith they were
locked in a dream world and could not tell.
Do you children remember the Narnia story The Silver
Chair? In Lewis’ The Silver Chair, the
beautiful witch/queen of the Underworld nearly convinces the
children from the Overworld that her own rather dismal kingdom is
the only reality and theirs but an imagined dream. The children
feel vaguely that there is something of great importance they
must remember but can’t quite recollect what. Indeed there
is. They have been sent on a mission by Aslan, the great King of
Narnia. But, at the moment, all they can think of is the
thrum-thrum-thrum of the Queen’s mandolin and her
lulling voice. “The sun? There is no sun. You have seen my
lamps and imagined that there was a sun.”
To prevent the enchantment of the children the Marsh-wiggle,
their simple but sound-thinking companion, reminds them that if
the Queen’s Underworld is the real world and the only
world, it’s a pretty dismal world; indeed, if, as she says,
Aslan and Narnia are only a dream, well that dream is better than
her reality. At that point the children, who were sinking under
the spell of the Queen’s words, rally to the
Marsh-wiggle’s words and make their escape. Faith can tell
a good story from a bad one; truth from fiction. [In Kilpatrick,
Psychological Seduction, 122, 142-143] But the
Israelites never woke up. No Marsh-wiggle brought them to their
senses. They fell under the Witch/Queen’s spell.
Or, put the irrationality of unbelief in a more adult way.
Unbelief leads a person to rail against the God who isn’t
there for having created such an unjust world or even to rail
against God for not existing! It is as preposterous as John
Stuart Mill, the English philosopher, expressing his religious
skepticism this way:
“I will call no being good, who is not what I mean
when I apply that epithet to my fellow creatures, and if such a
being can sentence me to hell for not so calling him, to hell I
will go.” [Cited in A. Guelzo, Abraham Lincoln,
107]
One could call such a statement simply empty literary flourish
– after all, the one who doesn’t believe in the
existence of a just and holy God need hardly worry about that
non-existent God sending him to hell – but, in fact,
it is the kind of utterly inconsistent and incongruous things
unbelievers say all the time. It is at one and the same time a
confession of God and a denial of his existence; a denial of
divine justice and a solemn complaint against divine justice at
the same time. It is a statement about God in the form of a
denial of everything we know about God. It is Israel saying that
she had been delivered from Egypt and, in the same breath,
looking for some gods to credit with the achievement! It is
sports announcers talking about being thankful on Thanksgiving
Day with seemingly no awareness that thanksgiving requires there
to be someone to whom we owe the blessings of our lives. Looking
straight at the top of the mountain, alit with lightning and loud
with thunder, Israel said, “Let’s make a bull and
find some other gods to worship.” For reasons that seemed
entirely sufficient to her – indeed, for reasons upon which
probably she never seriously reflected – she warmly,
seriously, intentionally confessed her faith in other gods
– gods just like the Egyptians had – and forgot all
about Yahweh who had rendered the Egyptian gods nothing but bad
jokes. She found herself in the wilderness needing guidance and
forgot all about how she got there. It is this inability to
reckon with reality, this tendency to deny it at the very moment
one is confessing it that explains why the Bible is never
tolerant of unbelief. All unbelief is in various ways the
defiance of the obvious.
But its power no one can deny. Unbelief is a force sufficient
to deafen Israel’s ears to the thunder, to blind her eyes
to lightening, to wipe her mind clear of the memories of past
days and months and the astonishing things that had happened. Her
religious impulse, expressed in her interest in finding new gods,
was, in fact, not faith seeking understanding but unbelief
seeking satisfaction apart from Yahweh. In modern life and
in so much speaking about God and religion, faith is
regarded as a thing that everyone shares – the question is:
faith in what? Everyone has faith, but they place their faith in
different things. That is the common view.
And, of course, there is a sense in which that is true.
Everyone must believe certain things to be true because so much
of human life and thought depends upon what cannot be seen or
demonstrated in a laboratory.
But there is, at the same time, a fundamental biblical
perspective according to which everyone is either a believer or
an unbeliever. One has faith or not. That is the only
alternative. It is another way of saying that there is one God
and one truth, and so there can be only one faith. Israel had so
many privileges, but she did not have faith. Her religious
conceptions were not the expression of faith but of unbelief.
Listen to this from the late Dr. Edmund Clowney.
“Most people think of religions as man’s quest
for God. In reality, religions provide ways of escape from God.
He may be promoted to a high God, that tribal religion can
worship spirits of trees or of leopards. He may be screened off
by a ceiling of laws and ordinances so the self-righteous can
earn heaven on points. God may be dissolved in the yin and yang
of natural forces so that we are no longer accountable to him
personally. Or he may be reduced to the divine in everything,
the god-in-us of New Age spirituality. [Preaching Christ in
all the Scriptures, 80]
The God of the Bible, however, the true and living God, is not
one from whom men can escape. He cannot be defined out of
meaningful existence. He is there! Always there! He has left the
stamp of his existence on our very natures. And his will comes to
pass. Israel may reject him, but, as we will see as the chapter
continues and the account unfolds, she cannot escape him. She
must answer for her rebellion. She will be punished severely for
it.
In the NT this is over and over again the judgment made about
the world that does not embrace the Gospel – it has no
faith – and it is the judgment made about those in the
church who do not genuinely and sincerely trust and obey the
Lord. They are unbelievers. In the Bible, to say that
someone does not have faith is the same thing as saying that they
do not know God. That was Israel’s problem. They had seen
Yahweh at work but they did not know him.
So the author of Hebrews tells us, speaking about Israel in
the wilderness,
“For we also have had the gospel preached to us just
as they did; but the message
they heard was of no value to them, because those who heard it
did not combine it with faith.”
And Paul says the same thing in several different places: that
this generation of Israel was an unbelieving people. He writes in
1 Cor. 10:
“For I do not want you to be ignorant of the fact,
brothers, that our forefathers were all under the cloud and
that they all passed through the sea. They were all baptized
into Moses in the cloud and in the sea. They all ate the same
spiritual food and drank the same spiritual drink; for they
drank from the spiritual rock that accompanied them, and that
rock was Christ. Nevertheless, God was not pleased with most of
them; their bodies were scattered over the desert.”
What Paul means is, of course, that Israel, for all her
privileges, lacked faith in Christ. She saw Christ, but she
didn’t believe in him. And that made all the difference in
the world. It made the difference between God’s acceptance
and his wrath, between Israel’s triumph in the Promised
Land and her perishing in the wilderness.
Now what is so important about all of this is the dramatic
consequences of the presence or absence of faith. Israel
didn’t have it and easily slipped into the worship of idols
even after all the Lord had done for her; even after all she
had herself experienced of God’s love and power. There
was no faith to arrest her apostasy, her rebellion against God,
her defiance of his will, her betrayal of his grace and goodness
to her. Aaron, strangely enough, had the very faith that
Israel did not. He didn’t act like it; he adorned his
faith very poorly. He succumbed to temptation in a despicable
way. But he never lost sight of Yahweh. He never lost
the conviction in his heart that Yahweh was the true God and the
savior of his people. He never rejected the Lord. He thought he
could let Israel worship the true God in the same way idolaters
worshipped their so-called gods, but it was Yahweh, the Lord, he
wanted them to worship. And because of that, though his work was
burned up, as we shall see, he was himself saved, though as by
fire.
Aaron and Israel in this scene are like the molecules of water
perched at the very tip of the continental divide. They stand
right next to one another; perhaps they even touch one another;
but one falls away to the East and one to the West; one goes to
the Atlantic and one to the Pacific. They are so close at the
beginning of their journey, but so far apart at the end. The
difference in the life of men is like that. Men’s conduct
may seem not so very different, but one man falls to the side of
faith and the other to the side of unbelief and they end up,
inevitably, a universe apart from one another.
We wish, of course – you and I wish – that our
faith were always producing its proper effects. Years ago in
Scotland there was a famous young football star named Tommy
Walker. He was a Christian and an outspoken Christian. A certain
well-known football referee was writing about his experiences in
a series of articles in a Scottish newspaper. In one of them he
mentioned Tommy Walker and said, “When I’m refereeing
a match in which Tommy Walker is playing, I know that I have only
twenty one players to watch, because Tommy would never do a dirty
thing.” [In William Barclay, A Spiritual
Autobiography, 95] Well, that is the kind of difference
faith makes. But, alas it doesn’t always make such a
difference, in Tommy Walker’s life or in Aaron’s. But
finally it does and it makes all the difference in the world.
Aaron had faith; Israel did not and that single difference
made all the difference. Aaron looked for a moment as if he were
with Israel in her unbelief; but he was not. “Faith,”
the Puritan Thomas Watson said, “is the master-wheel; it
sets all the other graces running.” [In Packer, Quest
for Godliness, 181] When faith is absent, the entire machine
stops. That’s what happened at the foot of Mt. Sinai.
Israel turned away from God, but, at the last, Aaron pulled
back.
When this episode, or Israel’s entire sojourn in the
wilderness, is referred to elsewhere in the Bible – in
Psalm 106 or in Hebrews or in 1 or 2 Corinthians – it is
always with a view to warning us of the absolute necessity of
faith. See what a difference it makes when there is no faith.
Don’t allow yourselves to be faithless. Put your trust in
the Lord and keep it there! And, as Paul in 1 Cor. 10
and as the author of Hebrews, “if you think you are
standing firm, be careful that you don’t fall.”
Aaron at the last knew, knew very well, what Israel had
already forgotten, that they were in the wilderness because of
what Yahweh had done for them and that he had proved himself to
them as the one and only God. There could be no deserting him. He
stumbled in the face of temptation, but he never completely lost
sight of the Lord. He had faith and it came to his rescue.
This is key and we must never forget it. We tend to worry
first and most about conduct. But in conduct Aaron and the
Israelites were not that different. The crucial issue is
faith. We should always be most concern about faith, about our
faith, about the faith of our children, our friends. If there is
faith it will eventually tell on the conduct. If there is no
faith, no amount of right conduct will help. We must pray for
nothing so much as true and living faith. We must come to worship
with a view to feeding and nourishing our faith. We must examine
ourselves, as Paul said, to see if we are in the faith. And we
must practice our faith. We must put our faith into action and
teach our children to do the same. If we have living faith
everything else will come to us; everything else will fall into
place. Without faith we can do everything else and it won’t
amount to anything. Keep your eyes fixed on Yahweh. That is the
secret to everything!