“Now therefore, I pray, if I have found grace in Your sight, show me now Your way, that I may know You and that I may find grace in Your sight” (Ex. 33:13a).
The sin of Israel did not disrupt the relationship Moses had with God. The Lord still spoke to him face to face, treating him like a dearly loved friend. He did not remove Moses’ call as leader and governor of the people, or his duty to lead them to the Promised Land. But this was not enough for Moses. He wanted the Lord’s presence to be with all the people, not just with him. He wanted the Lord Himself to dwell in their midst, not just the Angel of the Lord (a manifestation of God’s presence) to lead them along the way. So Moses inquired of the Lord, asking Him, “If you still want me to lead this stiff-necked people to Canaan, who will go with me? Who is sufficient except for You?” Moses wanted more for his people than salvation from the curse of Egyptian bondage; he wanted the blessing of God’s presence. When we are saved, we are not only delivered from ruin, but we become entitled to everlasting happiness in the presence of God. This was what Moses wanted for his people, and he wasn’t going to stop interceding for them until he got what he wanted.
Moses interceded on the basis of God’s grace and kindness toward him. God called him by name and showed him much love. He didn’t bother to appeal on the basis of God’s kindness toward Israel because they had estranged themselves so thoroughly from the Lord. Instead, he laid the stress of his plea on what God had said to him, as if he were saying, “Lord, if ever You will do anything for me, do this for Your people. Do it for my sake because You are well-pleased with me.” This was how Jesus presented Himself to His Father on our behalf, as the one in whom God is always well-pleased. It is because of the Father’s favor toward the Son that those with whom He is displeased obtain mercy. We are accepted because we are in Christ.
It is not by our own merit or our own “rags of righteousness” that we are reconciled to God and given everlasting life. It is only through the merit of Christ. Our Savior appealed to the Father on the basis of His being well-pleased with the Son, not simply because He is the Logos, the eternal Son whom the Father has always loved, but also because He lived a sinless life. Christ lived a life that was well-pleasing to the Father because it honored His Law and fulfilled His righteousness, and the Father graciously accepts us because of what the Son has done.
Do you ever fall into the trap of thinking that you need to earn God’s favor, that you can’t go to Him in prayer or worship until you earn the right to do so through good works of some kind? What good works do you trust in to make God love you more? Trust in Christ’s righteousness today and find peace with God.