But He said, “You cannot see My face; for no man shall see Me, and live” (Ex. 33:20).
In answer to Moses’ request to see His glory, God partly gave him what he asked for. He denied that which Moses was not ready to bear—beholding the face of God. A full discovery of the glory of God would quite overpower the faculties of any mortal man in this present state of existence. It would overwhelm him because man, being sinful, is unworthy of it, and being weak, he cannot possible bear it. And finally, because man is guilty of sin, he could only dread seeing God’s glory. This was certainly the reaction of Isaiah when he beheld some of the glory of God in the temple. His only response was, “Woe to me for I am undone.” It is because of God’s compassion that He holds back the face of His throne and spreads a cloud upon it (Job 26:9).
God has said that here in this world His face will not be seen. That is an honor reserved for the future state of our existence, and is to be the bliss of holy souls just as it will be the torment of unholy ones. Matthew Henry speculates that, should men see God’s face in this world, they would not be content to live without it. “There is a knowledge and enjoyment of God which must be waited for in another world, when we shall see Him as He is (1 John 3:2).”
However, God did grant Moses his request in part. He promised to make all His goodness pass before him. He had previously shown Moses many manifestations of His goodness in caring for Israel in the wilderness, but now He would reveal the source of that goodness. Moses asked to see God’s glory, but God said that He would show him His goodness. God’s goodness is His glory, and He wants us to know Him by the glory of His mercy more than by the glory of His majesty, for we must fear even the Lord and His goodness (Hos 3:5). This goodness is sovereign, for in the dispensing of it God shows mercy to whom He pleases, and withholds it according to His will.
Even in this, Moses needed protection from the consuming glory of the Lord. God placed him in the cleft of the rock, which reminds us of Christ’s protection of us. It is in the cleft of this rock that we are secured from the wrath of God, which would otherwise consume us. God then passed by, allowing Moses to see His back side. This was all God would allow because we are not ready to see His face. While in this body, we see only in part, but in heaven we will see face to face.
When you are in love with someone, don’t you want to know everything about him or her? That is the way your relationship with God should be. You should long for the day when you see Him as He is, when all shadows are removed and you dwell in His light. Meditate today on this hope. Look forward to it with joy and anticipation.