“And the LORD said to Moses, ‘Write these words, for in accordance with these words I have made a covenant with you and with Israel.” (Exodus 34:27 ESV).
In Exodus 34:27, the LORD spoke to Moses on Mount Sinai following Israel’s sin with the golden calf. Moses received God’s command to record the covenant words for Israel. Earlier, God Himself had written the Ten Commandments on the original stone tablets (Ex. 31:18). However, those tablets were shattered when Moses witnessed Israel’s idolatry, symbolizing the nation’s covenant failure. In this passage, God instructed Moses to write the words of the covenant that He gave him. The second giving of the law demonstrated that although Israel had broken the covenant, the LORD graciously restored it through Moses’ intercession. This episode emphasized Moses’ unique mediatorial role as he stood between a holy God and a sinful people. The event foreshadowed the greater mediation of Christ, who would perfectly secure and fulfill the covenant through His obedience and sacrifice.
We recognize that God’s standards of holiness never change, even when we fail to live up to them. Like Israel, we often break fellowship with God through sin, yet we see His grace displayed in the renewal of the covenant. We are reminded that restoration with God requires a mediator. Just as Moses interceded for Israel, Jesus intercedes for us perfectly and permanently. We are encouraged to respond to God’s grace with repentance, gratitude, and obedience. When we fall short, we can trust that God remains faithful to His promises and invites us back into fellowship through Christ. As we submit our lives to God’s Word and rely on Christ’s mediation, we experience the mercy and faithfulness of God’s grace.
PRAYER: Dear Father, we praise You for Your holiness and unchanging truth. We confess that we often fail to live according to Your Word. Thank You for Your grace that restores us when we fall and for providing Jesus as our perfect Mediator. Help us to cherish Your commands, walk in obedience, and live in grateful response to Your mercy. In Jesus’ name, amen.