The history of Moses is valuable to
Christians, not only as giving us a pattern of fidelity
towards God, of great firmness, and great meekness,
but also as affording us a type or figure of our Saviour
Christ. No prophet arose in Israel like Moses,
till Christ came, when the promise in the text was
fulfilled “The Lord thy God,”
says Moses, “shall raise up unto thee a Prophet
like unto me:” that was Christ. Now
let us consider in what respects Moses resembled Christ,
we shall find that this inquiry is very suitable at
this time of year.
1. First, if we survey the general
history of the Israelites, we shall find that it is
a picture of man’s history, as the dispensation
of the Gospel displays it to us, and that in it Moses
takes the place of Christ. The Israelites were
in the land of strangers, viz. the Egyptians;
they were slaves, hardly tasked, and wretched, and
God broke their bonds, led them out of Egypt, after
many perils, to the promised land, Canaan, a land
flowing with milk and honey. How clearly this
prefigures to us the condition of the Christian Church!
We are by nature in a strange country, God was our
first Father, and His Presence our dwelling-place:
but we were cast out of paradise for sinning, and are
in a dreary land, a valley of darkness and the shadow
of death. We are born in this spiritual Egypt,
the land of strangers. Still we have old recollections
about us, and broken traditions, of our original happiness
and dignity as freemen. Thoughts come across
us from time to time which show that we were born
for better things than to be slaves; yet by nature
slaves we are, slaves to the Devil. He is our
hard task-master, as Pharaoh oppressed the Israelites;
so much the worse than he, in that his chains, though
we do not see them, become more and more heavy every
year. They cling about us and grow; they multiply
themselves, they shoot out and spread forth, and encircle
us, those chains of sin, with many links, minute but
heavy, weighing us down to the earth, till at last
we are mere slaves of the soil, with an evil husbandry,
slaves of that fearful harvest which is eternal death.
Satan is a tyrant over us, and it seems to us useless
to rebel. If we attempt it, we are but overpowered
by his huge might, and his oppressive rule, and are
made twice the children of hell that we were before:
we may groan and look about, but we cannot fly from
his country. Such is our state by nature.
But Moses conducted the Israelites
from the house of bondage to their own land, from
which their fathers had descended into Egypt.
He came to them from God, and, armed with God’s
power, he smote their cruel enemies, led them out
of Pharaoh’s territory, divided the Red Sea,
carried them through it, and at length brought them
to the borders of Canaan. And who is it that
has done this for us Christians? Who but the
Eternal Son of God, our Lord and Saviour, whose name
in consequence we bear? He has rescued us from
the arm of him who was stronger than we; and therefore
I say in this respect first of all, Christ is a second
Moses, and a greater. Christ has broken the
power of the Devil. He leads us forth on our
way, and makes a path through all difficulties, that
we may go forward towards heaven. Most men,
who have deliberately turned their hearts to seek
God, must recollect times when the view of the difficulties
which lay before them, and of their own weakness, nearly
made them sink through fear. Then they were like
the children of Israel on the shore of the Red Sea.
How boisterous did the waves look! and they could
not see beyond them; they seemed taken by their enemies
as in a net. Pharaoh with his horsemen hurried
on to reclaim his runaway slaves; the Israelites sank
down in terror on the sand of the sea-shore; every
moment brought death or captivity nearer to them.
Then it was that Moses said, “Stand still,
and see the salvation of God.” And in like
manner has Christ spoken to us. When our hearts
fainted within us, when we said to ourselves, “How
is it possible that we should attain heaven?”
When we felt how desirable it was to serve God, but
felt keenly the power of temptation; when we acknowledged
in our hearts that God was holy and most adorable,
and obedience to His will most lovely and admirable,
and yet recollected instances of our past disobedience,
and feared lest all our renewed resolutions to serve
Him would be broken and swept away by the old Adam
as mercilessly as heretofore, and that Satan would
regain us, and yet prayed earnestly to God for His
saving help; then He saved us against our fear, surprising
us by the strangeness of our salvation. This,
I say, many a one must recollect in his own case.
It happens to Christians not once, but again and
again through life. Troubles are lightened,
trials are surmounted, fears disappear. We are
enabled to do things above our strength by trusting
to Christ; we overcome our most urgent sins, we surrender
our most innocent wishes; we conquer ourselves; we
make a way through the powers of the world, the flesh,
and the devil; the waves divide, and our Lord, the
great Captain of our salvation, leads us over.
Christ, then, is a second Moses, and greater than
he, inasmuch as Christ leads from hell to heaven,
as Moses led the Israelites from Egypt to Canaan.
2. Next, Christ reveals to us
the will of God, as Moses to the Israelites.
He is our Prophet, as well as our Redeemer.
None was so favoured as Moses in this respect:
before Christ came, Moses alone saw God face to face;
all prophets after him but heard His voice or saw Him
in vision. Samuel was called by name, but he
knew not who called him in the dark night till Eli
told him. Isaiah saw the vision of the Seraphim,
and heard them cry “Holy” before the Lord;
but it was not heaven that he saw, but the mere semblance
of the earthly temple in which God dwelt among the
Jews, and clouds filled it. But Moses in some
sense saw God and lived; thus God honoured him.
“If there be a prophet among you,” said
Almighty God, “I the Lord will make Myself known
unto him in a vision, and will speak unto him in a
dream. My servant Moses is not so, who is faithful
in all Mine house. With him will I speak mouth
to mouth, even apparently, and not in dark speeches,
and the similitude of the Lord shall he behold:”
and on his death we are told, “there arose not
a prophet since in Israel like unto Moses, whom the
Lord knew face to face.” When he was
in the Mount Sinai it is said of him still more expressly,
“The Lord spake unto Moses face to face, as a
man speaketh unto his friend.” In the
Mount he received from God the revelation of the Law,
and the patterns of the holy services which the Jews
were to offer to God; and so, being favoured with
the intimate knowledge of God’s counsels, when
he came down, his face shone with glory. The
Divine majesty was reflected from it, and the people
dared not look upon him. “The skin of his
face shone while he talked with Him. And when
Aaron and the children of Israel saw Moses, they were
afraid to come nigh him.” “And till
he had done speaking with them, he put a veil on his
face.”
Yet, after all, favoured as he was,
Moses saw not the true presence of God. Flesh
and blood cannot see it. Even when Moses was
in the Mount, he was aware that the very fulness of
God’s glory then revealed to him, was after
all but the surface of His infinitude. The more
he saw, the deeper and wider did he know that to be
which he saw not. He prayed, “If I have
found grace in Thy sight, show me now Thy way, that
I may know Thee, that I may find grace in Thy sight;
and God said, My Presence shall go with thee, and
I will give thee rest.” Moses was encouraged
to ask for further blessings, he said, “I beseech
Thee, show me Thy glory.” This could not
be granted, “Thou canst not see My face; for
there shall no man see Me, and live.”
So, as the greatest privilege which he might attain,
Moses was permitted to see the skirts of God’s
greatness “The Lord passed by in
a cloud, and proclaimed the Name of the Lord; and Moses
made haste and bowed his head toward the earth, and
worshipped.” And it was this sight
of the mere apparel in which God Almighty was arrayed,
which made his face to shine.
But Christ really saw, and ever saw,
the face of God, for He was no creature of God, but
the Only-begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the
Father. From eternity He was with Him in glory,
as He says Himself, dwelling in the abyss of the infinite
greatness of the Most High. Not for forty days,
as Moses on the mount in figure, but for ever and ever
was He present as the Counsellor of God, as His Word,
in whom He delighted. Such was He of old, but
at the time appointed He came forth from the Father,
and showed Himself in this external world, first as
its Creator, then as its Teacher, the Revealer of
secrets, the Mediator, the Off-streaming of God’s
glory, and the Express Image of His Person. Cloud
nor image, emblem nor words, are interposed between
the Son and His Eternal Father. No language
is needed between the Father and Him, who is the very
Word of the Father; no knowledge is imparted to Him,
who by His very Nature and from eternity knows the
Father, and all that the Father knows. Such
are His own words, “No man knoweth the Son but
the Father, neither knoweth any man the Father save
the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal
Him.” Again He says, “He that
hath seen Me hath seen the Father;” and He
accounts for this when He tells us, that He and the
Father are one; and that He is in the bosom of
the Father, and so can disclose Him to mankind, being
still in heaven, even while He was on earth.
Accordingly, the Blessed Apostle draws
a contrast between Moses and Christ to our comfort;
“the Law,” he says, “was given by
Moses, but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ.”
In Him God is fully and truly seen, so that He is
absolutely the Way, and the Truth, and the Life.
All our duties are summed up for us in the message
He brings us. Those who look towards Him for
teaching, who worship and obey Him, will by degrees
see “the light of the knowledge of the glory
of God in His face,” and will be “changed
into the same image from glory to glory.”
And thus it happens that men of the lowest class and
the humblest education may know fully the ways and
works of God; fully, that is, as man can know them;
far better and more truly than the most sagacious
man of this world, to whom the Gospel is hid.
Religion has a store of wonderful secrets which no
one can communicate to another, and which are most
pleasant and delightful to know. “Call
on Me,” says God by the prophet, “and I
will answer thee, and show thee great and mighty things
which thou knowest not of.” This is no
mere idle boast, but a fact which all who seek God
will find to be true, though they cannot perhaps clearly
express their meaning. Strange truths about
ourselves, about God, about our duty, about the world,
about heaven and hell, new modes of viewing things,
discoveries which cannot be put into words, marvellous
prospects and thoughts half understood, deep convictions
inspiring joy and peace, these are a part of the revelation
which Christ, the Son of God, brings to those who
obey Him. Moses had much toil to gain from the
great God some scattered rays of the truth, and that
for his personal comfort, not for all Israel; but
Christ has brought from His Father for all of us the
full and perfect way of life. Thus He brings
grace as well as truth, a most surprising miracle
of mercy from the freeness of the gift, as well as
a true wisdom from its fulness.
And yet, alas! in spite of all this
bounty, men called Christians, and how many! live
heartlessly, not caring for the gracious benefit.
Look at the world. Men begin life with sinning;
they quench the early promise of grace, and defile
their souls; they block up the entrances of the spiritual
senses by acts of sin, lying and deceit, intemperance,
profaneness, or uncleanness, by a foolish
and trifling turn of mind, by neglect of
prayer when there is no actual vice, or
by an obstinate selfishness. How many are the
ways in which men begin to lose sight of God! how
many are the fallings away of those who once began
well! And then they soon forget that they have
really left God; they still think they see His face,
though their sins have begun to blind them. Like
men who fall asleep, the real prospect still flits
before them in their dreams, but out of shape and
proportion, discoloured, crowded with all manner of
fancies and untruths; and so they proceed in that dream
of sin, more or less profound, sometimes
rousing, then turning back again for a little more
slumber, till death awakens them. Death alone
gives lively perceptions to the generality of men,
who then see the very truth, such as they saw it before
they began to sin, but more clear and more fearful:
but they who are the pure in heart, like Joseph; or
the meek among men, like Moses; or faithful found
among the faithless, as Daniel; these men see God
all through life in the face of His Eternal Son; and,
while the world mocks them, or tries to reason them
out of their own real knowledge, they are like Moses
on the mount, blessed and hidden, “hid
with Christ in God,” beyond the tumult and idols
of the world, and interceding for it.
3. This leads me to mention a
third point of resemblance between Moses and Christ.
Moses was the great intercessor when the Israelites
sinned: while he was in the mount, his people
corrupted themselves; they set up an idol, and honoured
it with feasting and dancing. Then God would
have cut them off from the land of promise, had not
Moses interposed. He said, “Lord, why
doth Thy wrath wax hot against Thy people? Turn
from Thy fierce wrath, and repent of this evil against
Thy people.” In this way he gained
a respite, and then he renewed his supplications.
He said to the people, “Ye have sinned a great
sin; but now I will go up unto the Lord: peradventure
I shall make an atonement for your sin.”
Then he said to their offended Creator, “Oh,
this people have sinned a great sin, and have made
them gods of gold. Yet now, if Thou wilt, forgive
their sin.”
Here Moses, as is obvious, shadows
out the true Mediator between God and man, who is
ever at the right hand of God making intercession,
for us; but the parallel is closer still than appears
at first sight. After Moses had said, “If
Thou wilt, forgive their sin,” he added, “and
if not, blot me, I pray Thee, out of Thy book, which
Thou hast written.” He was taken at his
word. Observe, rather than Israel should forfeit
the promised land, he here offered to give up his
own portion in it, and the exchange was accepted.
He was excluded, dying in sight, not in enjoyment
of Canaan, while the people went in under Joshua.
This was a figure of Him that was to come.
Our Saviour Christ died, that we might live: He
consented to lose the light of God’s countenance,
that we might gain it. By His cross and passion,
He made atonement for our sins, and bought for us
the forgiveness of God. Yet, on the other hand,
observe how this history instructs us, at the same
time, in the unspeakable distance between Christ and
Moses. When Moses said, “Blot me, I pray
Thee, out of Thy book,” God did not promise
to accept the exchange, but He answered, “Whosover
hath sinned against Me, him will I blot out of My book.”
Moses was not taken instead of Israel, except in
figure. In spite of Moses, the sinful people
were plagued and died, though their children entered
the promised land. And again, Moses, after all,
suffered for his own sin. True, he was shut
out from Canaan. But why? Not in spite
of his having “done nothing amiss,” as
the Divine Sufferer on the cross, but because he spake
unadvisedly with his lips, when the people provoked
him with their murmurings. The meek Moses was
provoked to call them rebels, and seemed to arrogate
to himself the power and authority which he received
from God; and therefore he was punished by dying in
the wilderness. But Christ was the spotless
Lamb of God, “who, when He was reviled, reviled
not again; when He suffered, He threatened not, but
committed Himself to Him that judgeth righteously.”
And His death is meritorious; it has really gained
our pardon.
Moreover, it is well to observe now
apparently slight a fault it was for which Moses suffered;
for this shows us the infinite difference between
the best of a sinful race and Him who was sinless, the
least taint of human corruption having in it an unspeakable
evil. Moses was the meekest of men, yet it was
for one sudden transgression of the rule of meekness
that he suffered, all his former gentleness, all his
habitual humbleness of mind, availed him nothing.
It was unprofitable, and without merit, because it
was merely his duty. It could not make up for
a single sin, however slight. Thus we see how
it would be with us if God were extreme to mark what
is done amiss: and thus, on the other hand, we
see how supremely holy and pure that Saviour must
be whose intercession is meritorious, who has removed
from us God’s anger. None can bring us
to Him but He who came from Him. He reveals
God, and He cleanses man. The same is our Prophet
and our Priest.
We are now approaching the season
when we commemorate His death upon the cross:
we are entering upon the most holy season of the whole
year. May we approach it with holy hearts!
May we renew our resolutions of leading a life of
obedience to His commandments, and may we have the
grace to seal our good resolutions at His most sacred
Supper, in which “Jesus Christ is evidently
set forth crucified among us.” It is useless
to make resolves without coming to Him for aid to
keep them; and it is useless coming to His table without
earnest and hearty resolves; it is provoking God “to
plague us with divers diseases, and sundry kinds of
death.” But what shall be said of those
who do neither the one nor the other, who
neither vow obedience, nor come to Him for grace? who
sin deliberately after they have known the truth who
review their sins in time past in a reckless hard-hearted
way, or put them aside out of their thoughts who
can bear to jest about them, to speak of them to others
unblushingly, or even to boast of them, and to determine
on sinning again, who think of repenting
at some future day, and resolve on going their own
way now, trusting to chance for reconciliation with
God, as if it were not a matter to be very anxious
about? This state of mind brings upon man a
judgment heavier than all the plagues of Egypt, a
judgment compared with which that darkness which could
be felt is as the sun’s brightness, and the
thunders and hail are as the serene sky, the
wrath to come.
Awake, then, my brethren, with this
season, to meet your God, who now summons you from
His cross and tomb. Put aside the sin that doth
so easily beset you, and be ye holy even as He is
holy. Stand ready to suffer with Him, should
it be needful, that you may rise together with Him.
He can make bitter things sweet to you, and hard ways
easy, if you have but the heart to desire Him to do
so. He can change the Law into the Gospel.
He can, for Moses, give you Himself. He can
write the Law on your hearts, and thereby take away
the hand-writing that is against you, even the old
curse which by nature you inherit. He has done
this for many in time past. He does it for many
at all times. Why should He not do it for you?
Why should you be left out? Why should you not
enter into His rest? Why should you not see
His glory? O, why should you be blotted out
from His book?