
Dear brothers and sisters in Christ,
Peace and Love of Christ be with you!
Have
you ever felt the weight of someone else's failure? Have you ever stood in that
painful place where love compels you to plead for someone who's fallen, maybe a
child, a friend, a spouse, even a community?
In
today’s first reading from Exodus, we find Moses in that exact place, a place
of heartbreak, of confrontation, but also of powerful intercessor. It is one of
the most dramatic dialogues in all of Scripture, a moment when divine anger
meets human pleading. But even more than that, it’s a moment where we contemplate
the heart of God and the power of His mercy.
The
scene is dramatic. On the mountain, Moses is enveloped in glory, receiving the
tablets of the covenant. But below, the people he leads, rescued from Egypt by
the mighty hand of God, have quickly turned away. They mold a golden calf and
cry, “This is your god, O Israel.” Then comes the voice of God:
“Go down, because your people, whom
you brought up out of Egypt, have become corrupt.”
The
Hebrew here is revealing. God says: lekh red , “Go down” It’s more than just physical
descent. It’s a symbolic descent from divine communion into the
brokenness of human sin. Moses is called to re-enter the mess, to stand in
the gap.
God
describes Israel as having “turned aside quickly” ; a phrase that
underscores how rapidly human hearts can stray when they lose sight of God.
This is a truth for our own lives too. Even after spiritual highs, moments of
spiritual upliftment, etc., we can
easily fall into old patterns when we do not remain watchful.
“Let
Me Alone…” – The Invitation to Intercede
God
says something surprising: “Now let Me alone, so that My anger may burn
against them and I may destroy them.” (v.10). Does God really need Moses’
permission? No. But here’s the mystery, God is inviting Moses to do what God
Himself wants: to intercede.
And
Moses does. He doesn’t excuse the people. Moses doesn’t argue Israel’s
innocence. Instead, he pleads based on two key things:
God’s
past actions: “Why should your anger burn against
your people, whom you brought out of Egypt with great power and a mighty hand?” The Hebrew beḥozeq
yad , “with a strong hand” , is a term of God’s
redeeming power. Moses reminds God who He is.
God’s
promises to the Patriarchs: “Remember
your servants Abraham, Isaac and Israel...”
Here, the key word is Zakhar, “remember.”
In the Hebrew mind, remembering is not just a mental act; it is a covenantal
action. Moses asks God to remain faithful to His promises, because God’s
identity is wrapped in His mercy and fidelity.
The
key word Moses uses is “zakhar - “remember.” In the Bible, to remember
is not just mental recollection; it’s a covenantal act. Moses is saying:
“Be faithful, Lord, to who You are. Do not abandon them.”
Moses shows us the heart of a true
intercessor: not condemning others from a distance, but standing before God on
their behalf with love.
And
then, in one of the most extraordinary verses of Scripture: “And the Lord
relented from the harm He said He would do to His people.” The Hebrew verb here
is vayyināḥem,
from naḥam–
a word that means to relent, to be moved with compassion, or to
change one’s mind out of deep feeling. It is not that God made a mistake; it
is that God allows His heart to be moved by love and intercession.
Message for us Today
: This passage unveils a profound truth: God is not distant. He is moved by
love, by memory, by intercession. Even when we fall, quickly, shamefully,
deeply, we are not abandoned. We have a Moses, and even more, we
have Jesus, the perfect intercessor.
As Moses stood in the breach, so does Christ: “He is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us.” (Romans 8:34) . In Christ Jesus God has concluded with Humanity a new covenant and everlasting covenant. We are therefore invited to discover or rediscover this New Covenant which we celebrate in a special way in the Holy Eucharist. We are people of Covenant and should be conscious of this every day for there lies the secret of an enduring fidelity to God.
God’s
relenting in this passage shows that His justice is not blind rage but is
always held in tension with mercy. When we pray for others, when we weep, fast,
intercede, and remind God of His promises, we are participating in that same
divine dialogue.
Invitation.
Are
you discouraged by your failures or the failures of those around you? Do you
feel God's anger or absence? Remember this: God listens to intercession. He
relents. He remembers. He restores.
May we all become like Moses, hearts
broken for others, standing between the mountain and the valley, calling heaven
down to earth, believing that mercy is never exhausted, Amen.
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