Sermon Tone Analysis

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Text: Ex 32:1-14, 30-34
Theme: As Moses interceded for the Israelites, Jesus intercedes for us.
Doctrine: Intercession of Christ
Image: golden calf
Need: set their hearts on other things
Message: give up your golden calves
 
*Golden Calves*
Exodus 32:1-14, 30-34
*Intro*
Aaron scanned the camp as people prepared for dinner.
He was still elated over their escape from Egypt, and all the signs and wonders God had used against the Egyptians.
It had been three months and a bit now since they left Egypt, and here they were at Sinai.
They had set up a rather orderly camp, and people were beginning to get the hang of things.
A vast array of tents filled the valley and little white trails of smoke began to pop up everywhere he looked.
Turning from the camp, Aaron looked toward the mountain.
He still trembles when he looks at the mountain, though not like the first time he saw it.
Something scared him awake the morning of the third day of being camped below Mount Sinai.
Since Aaron woke up earlier than most people, it was normally quiet, but this morning there was lots of noise.
Thunder sounded so close that it shook the ground and nearly knocked him off his cot.
He stepped out of his tent and took at look at the mountain.
It was covered in a thick cloud and there was a very loud trumpet blast from somewhere on the mountain.
By now everyone had gotten out of their tents in various orders of disarray, and were staring, mouths open, at the mountain.
Everyone was trembling.
Moses led us all out of the camp to meet with God.  they gathered at the foot of the mountain, extremely curious about what was going on, but filled with dread at such an awesome sight.
As if the thunder and the trumpet weren't enough, suddenly a fire descended on the mountain and smoke began billowing up from it like it was a giant furnace or something.
The trumpet grew louder, and louder, until finally Moses spoke and God answered him.
God called Moses up to the mountain, but warned that none of the people were to go up with him.
That day we made a covenant with God, sealed with the blood of young bulls.
We committed ourselves to doing all that God had said, but who could blame us.
Most of our heads hurt from the noise and the smoke coming from the mountain.
Moses then went up the mountain to talk with God.
He just walked right into that thick cloud, and approached the fiery peak.
Well, that was all quite a while ago now.
Its been almost forty days since that happened.
*Page 1: Israelites make God in an image to their liking.*
Since Moses had left Aaron in charge of the people at the base of the mountains things had gone rather well.
The camp had run smoothly, and there had been nothing much to complain about.
Moses had been gone for a long time though, and the people began to get restless.
It was surprising that they so quickly became used to the cloud, fire, and smoke on top of the mountain.
It had seemed so frightening to them the first time it happened that they were all shaking.
But for forty days and nights nothing had happened to them, so they began to discount it and get about the business of life.
Then one morning the people had had enough.
They were sick and tired of waiting for Moses to come down from the mountain.
He had been gone almost as long as he had been their leader, and they wanted something they could see.
They wanted something to lead them.
They were sick of waiting.
So they all went to Aaron and gathered around him.
“Make us gods who will go before us,” they said.
“We don't know what has happened to Moses.
He left, and put you in charge, didn't he?  Now give us what we want.”
Aaron was now in a very awkward situation.
Did he give into the people's request and go against the law of God which had been given to them only 40 days earlier, or did he oppose them and risk losing his job or even his life.
He remembers some of the disputes the people had with Moses, those didn't end very well.
People usually ended up dying.
So this is what Aaron does.
He demands the gold earrings that the wives, sons and daughters were wearing, all the stuff which they had plundered Egypt for, he demands it be brought to him.
He does this hoping that this will be too much for their vanity to give up.
If they refuse his request then he doesn't have to make the calf, and the people can't blame him.
(Keil and Delitzsch) 
He goes about his work the rest of the day and forgets about the discussion, thinking he has solved his first major obstacle.
Low and behold, at the end of the day, when Aaron returned to his tent he finds that all the people had donated their jewellery, and placed it in a huge heap in front of his tent.
Now he is really stuck.
He had pretended like he was going to give them what they wanted, and now his plan has back fired.
Well, if he turns them down now the whole camp will probably break out against him, so he gives into their demands.
He builds a wooden image of a calf, he melts down all their gold and casts it into sheets.
He then took these sheets of gold and covered the wooden image with it.
When the golden calf was completed, the people gathered around Aaron's tent, eagerly awaiting the unveiling.
Aaron puled the calf out of his tent into the middle of the camp and when the cloth covering the calf is pulled off, the people gasp at the brilliance of the sun glinting off the gold of the idol.
“Here are your gods, who brought you out of Egypt.”
Aaron himself was somewhat amazed at how the thing had turned out, now that he could see it in the sunshine.
Seeing the reaction of the people, he decided that he had better make sure the people still worshipped the right God.
So he built an altar in front of the calf and announced, “Tomorrow there will be a festival to the LORD, to Yahweh.”
So the next day, all the people got up early, hardly able to contain their enthusiasm.
They remembered the festivals that the Egyptians had to their gods, and this was their opportunity to do the same.
They sacrificed offerings to the calf and they sat down to eat and drink.
Then they got up and engaged in all the immoral acts of the pagans in their worship.
The people were not satisfied with the recent memory of the events of the Exodus, nor were they satisfied with the incredible fireworks display going off 24~/7 on the top of the mountain above them.
They were not satisfied with the words of God which they had received.
They wanted something else.
They wanted to change God into something they could understand, into something they could more easily worship, into something they were more comfortable with.
The Israelites wanted something they could see, something they could feel, to go before them, to lead them, to give them hope and confidence for what lay ahead.
They wanted to have some surety of the future, of what was coming next.
They turned away from the true God who was revealing his glorious presence to them, toward this block of wood covered in gold.
They turned away from the God who had led them out of Egypt, to an inanimate object which could lead them nowhere.
Meanwhile, at the top of the mountain, God told Moses, “Go down from this mountain, because your people, the people you brought up from Egypt have become corrupt.
They have made an idol, they have sacrificed to it, and they have bowed down to it.
Leave me alone so that I can destroy them.
I will fulfil my promises to Abraham through you, but these people have broken my covenant, and they must pay.
They are a stiff-necked people.
They are stubborn, the refuse to respect my authority.
” 
*Page 2: We make God in an image to our liking.
*
We too are stubborn, we are obstinate, we are rebellious against the authority of God over our lives.
We like to live our lives as if we could mould God to any image we please.
Some people have problems with thinking about God as a person, and so they think he is some kind of spiritual force which permeates all of existence.
Others have problems thinking about God as a Trinity.
They cannot understand how three can be one, and one can be three, so they claim that Jesus was just a man helped by God, and that the Holy Spirit is really just God.  “There is only one person, not three,” they say.
Various others have difficulties with how God has revealed himself in the scriptures, and so they try to cast God into an image more their liking.
This is very dangerous.
Too often we attach things to God which are not as he has revealed himself.
God has revealed himself to us in the scriptures, and we ought to do all that we can to try to understand him as he has revealed himself, not as we imagine him.
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