Jack D. Kilcrease

The Self-Donation of God


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Israel ascend the mountain and have a partial vision of the divine glory or kavod. It must be explained here, in order to clarify our discussion below, what the Old Testament in general means by the kavod or the “glory of the Lord.” Walther Eichrodt gives a helpful and compact definition of the kavod as the “reflected splendor of the transcendent God, a token of the divine glory, by means of which Yahweh declares his gracious presence.”52 Here Eichrodt emphasizes the two most important elements of the kavod as it is frequently used in relationship to God, namely, the kavod is a manifestation of the presence of God, and of divine luminosity. According to Eichrodt, kavod also has a second connotation of referring to a person’s possession of riches, honor, and success. In other words, kavod can also mean glory, honor, or praise given or possessed by a person.53

      Having entered into the presence of the glory of the Lord, the elders return again to the camp, while Moses is called to again ascend to the heights of Sinai in order to see the pattern of the tabernacle and receive the instructions regarding priestly worship (Exod 25–31). Meanwhile, the Israelites come to doubt Moses’s mediatorship and turn to Aaron for help. Aaron’s solution is to cast a golden calf and announce to the camp: “These are your gods [or possibly ‘your God’], O Israel, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt!” (32:4).