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October 28, 1984
Bethlehem Baptist Church
John Piper, Pastor

THE LORD WHOSE NAME IS JEALOUS
(Exodus 34:10-16)
And he said, "Behold, I make a covenant. Before all your people I will do
marvels, such as have not been wrought in all the earth or in any nation; and all
the people among whom you are shall see the work of the Lord; for it is a
terrible thing that I will do with you.

"Observe what I command you this day. Behold, I will drive out before you the
Amorites, the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the
Jebusites. Take heed to yourself, lest you make a covenant with the
inhabitants of the land whither you go, lest it become a snare in the midst of
you. You shall tear down their altars, and break their pillars, and cut down their
Asherim (for you shall worship no other god, for the Lord, whose name is
Jealous, is a jealous God), lest you make a covenant with the inhabitants of the
land, and when they play the harlot after their gods and make your sons play the
harlot after their gods."

You recall that this is the second time Moses had ascended to Mt. Sinai to receive
the ten commandments from God. Back in chapter 32 he had shattered the first
stone tablets when he saw the people worshipping the golden calf (32:19). Now after
pleading for mercy, that God would spare the people of Israeli, Moses approaches
God again and prays (in Ex. 34:9) that God would take them to be his inheritance.

God responds in 34:10, "Behold I make a covenant." A covenant is God's solemn
promise that he will give the covenant people certain benefits if they will keep the
covenant. Keeping the covenant means obeying the terms of the covenant. So a
covenant involves three things:

promises, which God will perform if the people keep the covenant;
commandments or terms, which the people must keep in order to receive the
promises;
warnings, of what will happen if the covenant is broken.

When God says in 34:10, "Behold I make a covenant" he means that he is willing to
go back and start over with the ten commandments which were the terms or
commandments of his covenant with Israel. Look at 34:27-28, "And the Lord said to
Moses, 'Write these words. In accordance with these words I have made a covenant
with you and with Israel.' And he was there with the Lord 40 days and 40 nights; he
neither ate bread nor drank water. And he wrote upon the tables the words of the
covenant, the ten commandments." So the ten commandments are the terms of the
covenant referred to in 34:10 when God says, "Behold, I make a covenant."

If the ten commandments sum up the terms of the covenant that Israel must
obey, what are the promises of the covenant?

What does God promise to do for his covenant people? The most important answer
to this question comes from looking at what God has just said before verse 10. In
verse 1 he told Moses to cut two tables of stone like the ones he broke and to come
up on Mt. Sinai to hear the words of the covenant. Then in verses 6-7 God comes
down, but before he gives any commandments he reveals what it is about himself
that prompts him to make this covenant -- "The Lord, the Lord a God merciful and
gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, keeping
steadfast love for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin but who will
by no means clear the guilty …"

In other words, before he declares the terms of the covenant he wants to make
perfectly clear that it is a covenant based on mercy and love and forgiveness. So the
very first promise of God's covenant is to mercifully forgive repentant sinners. Verse
7: "forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin." You recall from our sermon on this
verse that the difference between the guilty whose sins God does clear and the
guilty whose sin he does not is the difference between the repentant and the
unrepentant. Those who are broken and humbled by their sin and return for mercy
are forgiven. Those who are not broken but go on presumptuously will not be
forgiven. So the covenant here is based on the merciful willingness of God to forgive
repentant sinners.

We will never understand the unity of the Bible until we understand that the
great covenant made with Israel at Mount Sinai was not a covenant of
works.

Here's what I mean. There are many Bible teachers today who say that this
covenant (Mosaic) pictures God as an employer, the covenant people as
employees, the ten commandments as the job description, and the covenant
blessings as the wages paid to those who earn them by obedience. In other words,
they say, this is not a covenant based on God's mercy but on Israel's merit. The
blessings promised are not freely given, they are earned.

The covenant made with Abraham, they say, and the new covenant sealed by the
blood of Jesus are based on grace and the blessings promised in those covenants
are given freely to faith. But the covenant made on Mt. Sinai is not based on grace,
and its blessings were not to be received by faith. It is a covenant of works because
God only pays its blessings to people who perform duties valuable enough to earn or
merit God's blessing.

Generation after generation of Bible believers have been trained to believe this view
by the footnotes of the Scofield Reference Bible and now the Ryrie Study Bible. But
I appeal to you to be your own careful, humble reader of the Scripture. Will this view
stand up in Exodus 34? When God says in verse 10, "Behold, I make a covenant!"
right after declaring himself to be a God who is merciful and who forgives iniquity,
transgression, and sin, can we really believe that this covenant is not based on
mercy? Can we really believe that the covenant has no merciful provision for
forgiveness in it? And if it is based on mercy and does provide forgiveness, how can
it be a covenant of works? If a person sins under this covenant and flees to God for
mercy and finds forgiveness how can we say the covenant is based on merit? Is it
merit we offer to God when we plead his mercy and ask for forgiveness?

But perhaps someone will say, "Even employers forgive their employees little
mistakes, but then only keep paying them if they don't make too many blunders;
they have to keep doing work valuable enough to earn their wages. In other words,
maybe this is a covenant of works based on merit even though God shows some
mercy and forgives some sins."

But there are two problems with that.

One is that these so called employees haven't just committed little mistakes. They
blasphemed the "boss" with the golden cow and deserve to be damned for the
outrage of their sin. The main point of Exodus 32-34 is to show that if merit were
basis of God's dealings with this people they would have been destroyed long ago.
The covenant of Exodus 34 is not the rehiring of a secretary who broke the boss's
pencil. It is reunion with a wife who committed open adultery.

There's another reason why we shouldn't think of this covenant as based on merit
and works with a little forgiveness and mercy tossed in. The reason is that the basic
requirement of the covenant is worship not work. But you can't worship an employer
whose needs you are meeting in order to earn his wages. The only kind of being you
can truly worship is one whose fullness meets your needs. If God wanted to be
pictured in this covenant as an employer who pays wages of blessing to employees
who supply him service valuable enough to earn these wages, then he would not
have written a so-called job description requiring worship above all else. You can't
worship an employer who depends on you to meet his needs. So the very content of
the ten commandments contradicts the idea that this covenant is based on Israel's
meritorious service. It is based on God's mercy and it demands worship.

Let's try to see the textual basis for this in Exodus 34:10-16. In verse 10 after
declaring, "Behold, I make a covenant!" God promises to do marvels for all the
nations to see -- and to do them with Israel. In other words, God promises to show
his terrible might before the nations on behalf of Israel. That's his covenant
commitment.

Now what does God command as a response to this promise? Verses 11-13:

"Observe (take note for yourself) what I command you this day. Behold I will drive
out before you the Amorites, the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Perizzites, the
Hivites, and the Jebusites. Take heed to yourself, lest you make a covenant with
the inhabitants of the land whither you go, lest it become a snare in the midst of
you. You shall tear down their altars, and break their pillars, and cut down their
Asherim." All this is an application of the first commandment; "You shall have no
other gods before me."

The reason for tearing down pagan altars is to guard their hearts for Yahweh alone.
The reason for not making covenants with pagan peoples is to escape the snare of
divided loyalties. The commands of the covenant don't describe the services God
needs as an employer. They describe the faithfulness he wants from his wife. It's as
though he said, 'Don't make dates with other men; don't keep the pictures of your
old boyfriends on the dresser, lest they become a snare for you and draw your heart
away from me."

Verse 14 makes plain what the covenant demands from Israel and what image we
should have in our mind. "For you shall worship no other god, for the LORD, whose
name is Jealous, is a jealous God." The demand of the covenant is for single-
minded worship of God alone. And the image created in our mind by the word
"jealous" is the picture of a lover or a husband who gets angry when someone else
competes for the heart of his wife or when her heart goes away after other lovers.

This picture is confirmed by verses 15 and 16 which warn Israel against playing the
harlot with other gods. The demand of the covenant is: don't be a harlot. Don't
commit adultery against God. Don't let your heart turn from him and go after other
things. For your God, your husband, whose name is Jealous is a jealous God.

These are two reasons I have stressed that the covenant of Exodus 34 is not
a covenant of works but is based on mercy.

One is to help us appreciate and benefit from the unity of the Bible. The covenant
made with God's people at Mt. Sinai is the same kind of covenant made with
Abraham and made with us in the death of Christ. It is based on mercy, it provides
forgiveness, it has divine promises and warnings and commandments, and its basic
requirement is single-minded devotion to God alone.

The difference between the covenant with Moses and the New Covenant sealed by
the death of Christ is not that one offers salvation on the basis of merit to be earned
through works while the other offers salvation on the basis of mercy to be received
as a gift through faith. That is not the difference. Both teach us to worship God alone
as God. And you cannot worship God as a sovereign, all-sufficient, merciful God
without trusting him. Therefore, both covenants -- all God's covenants -- are
covenants of grace which we keep by faith.

You don't need to skip over large portions of the Bible saying, "Oh that's Jewish," or,
"that's legalistic." All of it reveals the blessings that come from the grace of God to
be enjoyed by the obedience that comes from faith in God. It is true that the form of
that obedience may change from one period of redemptive history to another (for
example: we don't make animal sacrifices since Christ has given himself for us; and
we don't establish cities of refuge since the people of God is no longer a single
ethnic, political group). But nevertheless the necessity of obedience for covenant
keeping, the origin of obedience in the power of the Holy Spirit, the appropriation of
that power through faith, the goal of obedience in the glory of God -- all these are the
same in all God's covenants throughout the Bible.

I want us to be a people who love and understand the Scriptures. I want us to see
its unified picture of God and experience its power. If, as we believe, this is the
inspired Word of God, everyone of us should devote time and energy to search it
and ponder it and study it and memorize it and pray over it and be changed by it --
all of it including the covenant of Moses.

But there is another reason why I have stressed that the covenant of Exodus
34 is not a covenant of works but is based on mercy. I wanted to make sure
that we saw the jealousy of God in its true context.

God is not jealous like an insecure employer who fears that his employees might
get lured away by a better salary elsewhere. God's jealousy is not the reflex of
weakness or fear.

Instead God is jealous like a powerful and merciful king who takes a peasant girl
from a life of shame, forgives her, marries her and gives her not the chores of a
slave, but the privileges of a wife -- a queen. His jealousy does not rise from fear or
weakness but from a holy indignation at having his honor and power and mercy
scorned by the faithlessness of a fickle spouse.

The ten commandments are not a job description for God's employees. They are the
wedding vows that the peasant girl takes to forsake all others and to cleave to the
king alone and to live in a way that brings no dishonor to his great name.

God is infinitely jealous for the honor of his name, and responds with terrible wrath
against those whose hearts should belong to him but go after other things. For
example, in Ezekiel 16:38-40 he says to faithless Israel, "I will judge you as women
who break wedlock and shed blood are judged, and bring upon you the blood of
wrath and jealousy. And I will give you into the hand of your lovers and they shall
throw down your vaulted chamber … they shall strip you of your clothes and take
your fair jewels, and leave you naked and bare. They shall bring up a host against
you and cut you to pieces with swords."

I urge you to listen to this warning.

The jealousy of God for your undivided love and devotion will always have the last
say. Whatever lures your affections away from God with deceptive attraction, will
come back to strip you bare and cut you in pieces. It is a horrifying thing to use
your God-given life to commit adultery against the Almighty.

But for those of you who have been truly united to Christ and who keep your vows to
forsake all others and cleave only to him and live for his honor -- for you the jealousy
of God is a great comfort and a great hope. Since God is infinitely jealous for the
honor of his name, anything and any body who threatens the good of his faithful wife
will be opposed with divine omnipotence.

God's jealousy is a great threat to those who play the harlot and sell their heart to
the world and make a cuckold out of God. But his jealousy is a great comfort to
those who keep their covenant vows and become strangers and exiles in the world.

...