Moses descended and broke the tablets when he saw the
golden calf. He returned to the cloud of glory, carrying new stone tablets
before descending a second time in the glory of the LORD, carrying the new
stone tablets of the renewed covenant.
THIS WEEK'S TORAH PORTION:
Ki Tisa (כי תשא | When you take)
Torah: Exodus 30:11-34:35
Haftarah: 1 Kings 18:1-39
Gospel: Matthew 9:35-11:1
The Word Made Stone
In this Torah portion, Moses descends from Mount Sinai,
ascends the mountain, and descends again. That is to say, he came down from
heaven, returned to heaven, and came down a second time. The first and second
coming of the Messiah follows the same pattern. As the divine Logos descended
from the heavenly glory of the Father to take on flesh and dwell among men, He
came with a purpose: to save Israel and to bring salvation to the world. Just
like Moses at Mount Sinai, the Messiah descended on a rescue mission to call
Israel to repentance and to avert the disaster of judgment. He descended to
renew the covenant between God and His people.
When Moses came down the first time, he carried the Word
of God—not the Word made flesh but the Word made stone— upon the two tablets of
the covenant. In this way the Word descended from the heavens and entered this
lower world: “The tablets were God’s work, and the writing was God’s writing
engraved on the tablets” (Exodus 32:16). The breaking of the tablets allude to
the death of the Messiah:
The letters of the tablet are likened to its soul, while
the tablets themselves are its body. When the soul deserts the body, the body
is ready for burial. When Moshe saw the letters fly off, he broke the tablets.
Our Sages say that the tablets became very heavy in Moshe’s hands after the
letters flew off, just as a man becomes heavier after his death, when his soul
departs. (Tz’enah Ur’enah)
Moses interceded in prayer and fasting on behalf of the
people. He provoked them to repent. Moses said to the people, “Perhaps I can
make atonement for your sin” (Exodus 32:30).
God told Moses to carve out new stone tablets and return
to Him on the mountain. If the tablets that Moses broke allude to the body of
Yeshua which died for the sins of Israel, then we might say that the new
tablets represent His resurrected body—the token of the new covenant. Moses
brought the new tablets back up the mountain. Likewise, Yeshua rose from the
dead in a renewed body and returned to the Father. Just as the new tablets went
back up the mountain, so too, Messiah ascended back to the heavens, back to the
Father.
Moses went back down the mountain with the new tablets.
Likewise, when the Messiah returns, He “will appear a second time, not to bear
sin, but to bring salvation to those who are waiting for him” (Hebrews 9:28,
NIV). Moses’ face radiated the brilliant glory of the LORD. So too, when
Messiah returns, He will come like Moses, in His Father’s glory, in power and
splendor, as He has promised, saying, “For the Son of Man is going to come in
the glory of his Father with his angels” (Matthew 16:27). He comes white as
snow, blazing like the sun, fairest of fair, purest of pure, glory unveiled,
glory revealed.
-First Fruits of Zion
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