The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Moses Comforts the People
Exodus 20:18–21 — Moses Comforts the People. Each verse below carries the full apparatus: the Berean Standard Bible, the vocalized original (tap any word), and a parsed breakdown of every term transcribed from the interlinear. Synthesized commentary, canonical threads, and the reading of Christ gather at the end, over the whole unit.
18When all the people witnessed the thunder and lightning, the sounding of the ram’s horn, and the mountain enveloped in smoke, they trembled and stood at a distance.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·ḵāl hā·‘ām rō·’îm ’eṯ- haq·qō·w·lōṯ wə·’eṯ- hal·lap·pî·ḏim wə·’êṯ qō·wl haš·šō·p̄ār wə·’eṯ- hā·hār ‘ā·šên hā·‘ām way·yar way·yā·nu·‘ū way·ya·‘am·ḏū mê·rā·ḥōq
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-all the-people were-seeing the-voices and the-torches, and the-voice-of the-ram's-horn, and the-mountain smoking; and-the-people saw, and-they-wavered, and-they-stood from-afar.”
Where the English smooths the original
saw ] Heb., more graphically, were seeing . the thunderings (Heb. voices ), &c.] see Exodus 19:16 ; Exodus 19:19 .On the participle and the literal “voices.”
Saw the thunderings, i.e. heard them. One sense is oft put for another, as seeing , Genesis 42:1 , for hearing , Acts 7:12 .
ראים, perceiving: ראה to see being frequently used for perceiving, as being the principle sense by which most of the impressions of the outer world are received (e.g., Genesis 42:1 ; Isaiah 44:16 ; Jeremiah 33:24 ). לפּידם, fire-torches, are the vivid flashes of lightning ( Exodus 19:16 ).
They removed, and stood afar off — Before God began to speak, they were thrusting forward to gaze, but now they were effectually cured of their presumption, and taught to keep their distance.
The delivery of the Ten Commandments by a voice manifestly superhuman impressed the people with an awful fear. They felt the near contact with God to be more than they could bear.Ellicott frames the whole withdrawal (vv. 18–21): the people sent a deputation asking Moses to be their intermediary, and God assented.
19“Speak to us yourself and we will listen,” they said to Moses. “But do not let God speak to us, or we will die.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
dab·bêr- ‘im·mā·nū ’at·tāh wə·niš·mā·‘āh way·yō·mə·rū ’el- mō·šeh wə·’al- ’ĕ·lō·hîm yə·ḏab·bêr ‘im·mā·nū pen- nā·mūṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-they-said to Moses: Speak you with-us, and-we-will-hear; but-let-not God speak with-us, lest we-die.”
Where the English smooths the original
Speak thou (emph.), … and we will hear ] i.e. it is implied, listen and obey (see Deuteronomy 5:27 end ). lest we die ] cf. Deuteronomy 5:25 f.
This they speak from a sense of their own guilt, and of the greatness and holiness of the Divine Majesty, to whom they durst not approach but by a mediator. See Deu 5:27 18:16 Galatians 3:19 .Poole reaches for Galatians 3:19 — the law “ordained through a mediator.”
but let not God speak with us, lest we die; pray to him, that he would not speak immediately, but by a mediator, which they now saw the need of; that there was no drawing nigh to God, nor hearing nor receiving anything from him without one; that his law, as it came from him to them sinful creatures, was a killing letter, and the ministration of condemnation and death
as they heard God speaking to them now, they were apprehensive of instant death also. Even Moses himself, the mediator of the old covenant, did "exceedingly quake and fear" (Heb 12:21).
20“Do not be afraid,” Moses replied. “For God has come to test you, so that the fear of Him may be before you, to keep you from sinning.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’al- tî·rā·’ū mō·šeh way·yō·mer ’el- hā·‘ām kî hā·’ĕ·lō·hîm bā lə·ḇa·‘ă·ḇūr nas·sō·wṯ ’eṯ·ḵem ū·ḇa·‘ă·ḇūr tih·yeh yir·’ā·ṯōw ‘al- pə·nê·ḵem lə·ḇil·tî ṯe·ḥĕ·ṭā·’ū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-Moses said to the-people: Do-not fear; for to-prove you God has-come, and-so-that His-fear may-be upon your-faces, that you-not sin.”
Where the English smooths the original
Fear not — That is, Think not that this thunder and fire are designed to consume you. God is come to prove you — To try how they would like dealing with God immediately, without a mediator, and so to convince them how admirably well God had chosen for them in putting Moses into that office. Ever since Adam fled, upon hearing God’s voice in the garden, sinful man has not been able to bear either to speak to God, or hear from him immediately.
Moses first of all took away the false fear of death by the encouraging answer, "Fear not," and then immediately added, "for God is come to prove you." נסּוּת referred to the testing of the state of the heart in relation to God, as it is explained in the exegetical clause which follows: "that His fear may be before your faces, that ye sin not."
The motive of fear is, no doubt, a low one; but where we can appeal to nothing else, we must appeal to it. Israel was still a child, only fit for childish discipline; and had to be directed by the harsh voice of fear, until it had learnt to he guided by the tender accents of love.
for God is come to {o} prove you, and that his fear may be before your faces, that ye sin not. (o) Whether you will obey his precepts as you promised in Ex 19:8.
But doubtless God spake what gave him relief—restored him to a frame of mind fit for the ministrations committed to him; and hence immediately after he was enabled to relieve and comfort them with the relief and comfort which he himself had received from God (2Co 1:4).JFB reads Moses’ comfort to the people through 2 Corinthians 1:4 — the comforted comforter.
21And the people stood at a distance as Moses approached the thick darkness where God was.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
hā·‘ām way·ya·‘ă·mōḏ mê·rā·ḥōq ū·mō·šeh nig·gaš ’el- hā·‘ă·rā·p̄el ’ă·šer- šām hā·’ĕ·lō·hîm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-the-people stood from-afar, and-Moses drew-near to the-thick-darkness where God was.”
Where the English smooths the original
"So the people stood afar off" (as in Exodus 20:18 ), not "went far away,"K&D guard the verb: the people hold their distance, they do not depart.
And Moses drew near unto the thick darkness . As the people drew back, Moses drew near. The display which drove them off, attracted him. He did not even fear the "thick darkness" - a thing front which human nature commonly shrinks. Where God was, he would be.
and they have an observation that the word rendered "drew near" is transitive, and should be translated, "he was brought near" or, "made to draw nigh"Gill reports a rabbinic reading of the Niphal stem; the natural sense is active “drew near.”
thick darkness ] ‘ǎrâphel , the word, mostly poetical ( Psalm 18:9 , 1 Kings 8:12 ), used in Deuteronomy 4:11 ; Deuteronomy 5:22 [Heb. 19].
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
The scene opens on the whole people perceiving the unbearable. The Hebrew is deliberately strange: rō’îm ’eṯ-haq-qōlōṯ — “seeing the voices.” One sense is made to stand for all. Matthew Poole records the idiom plainly: “Saw the thunderings, i.e. heard them. One sense is oft put for another.” Cambridge sharpens it — “the thunderings (Heb. voices)” — and Keil & Delitzsch ground it: rā’āh “to see” is “frequently used for perceiving, as being the principle sense by which most of the impressions of the outer world are received.” The objects pile up — voices, fire-torches (lappîdim, which K&D render “fire-torches… the vivid flashes of lightning”), the voice of the ram’s-horn, and a whole mountain ʻāšēn, “smoking.” Faced with it, the verbs collapse the crowd backward: way-yānuʻû, “they wavered / swayed to and fro” (Cambridge), and way-yaʻamḏû mê-rāḥōq, “they stood afar off.” Benson catches the reversal exactly: “Before God began to speak, they were thrusting forward to gaze, but now they were effectually cured of their presumption, and taught to keep their distance.” (Provenance: the literal renderings and root-claims are this tool’s, drawn from the Berean parse; the named lines are verbatim from the cited public-domain works.)
Out of the terror comes a request that will shape the rest of Scripture. “You speak with us, and we will hear; but let not God speak with us, lest we die.” The emphatic pronoun ’attāh and the cohortative wə-nišmāʻāh (“and we will surely hear”) make it a binding pledge — Cambridge notes the “hear” here means “listen and obey.” Benson reads it as a formal compact: “Hereby they obliged themselves to acquiesce in the mediation of Moses.” Gill names the theology underneath: they “now saw the need” of a mediator, “that there was no drawing nigh to God… without one,” because the law “as it came from him to them sinful creatures, was a killing letter, and the ministration of condemnation and death.” Poole reaches across the canon to the same point, citing “Galatians 3:19” — the law “ordained through a mediator.” And Jamieson, Fausset & Brown press the parallel that the New Testament itself draws: “Even Moses himself, the mediator of the old covenant, did ‘exceedingly quake and fear’ (Heb 12:21).” The people are right about their danger and right about their remedy — they need someone to stand between. (Provenance: the cross-references to Galatians and Hebrews are the commentators’ own, quoted as theirs; the grammatical notes are this tool’s reading of the parse.)
Moses’ answer turns on a single Hebrew root used twice. “Do not fear (tîrā’û)… so that His fear (yir’āṯô) may be upon your faces.” The same word both forbids one fear and commands another. Keil & Delitzsch trace the pastoral move: Moses “first of all took away the false fear of death by the encouraging answer, ‘Fear not,’ and then immediately added, ‘for God is come to prove you.’” The verb is nassôṯ, “to put to the proof” (Cambridge) — and the Geneva Bible names its object: God came to prove “whether you will obey his precepts as you promised in Ex 19:8.” The terror is not cruelty but discipline. The Pulpit Commentary is unflinching about its level: “The motive of fear is, no doubt, a low one; but where we can appeal to nothing else, we must appeal to it. Israel was still a child… directed by the harsh voice of fear, until it had learnt to be guided by the tender accents of love.” Benson reaches all the way back to Eden: “Ever since Adam fled, upon hearing God’s voice in the garden, sinful man has not been able to bear either to speak to God, or hear from him immediately.” (Provenance: the wordplay on the root yārē’ is this tool’s observation from the parse; every quoted sentence is verbatim and attributed.)
The unit closes on a stark, two-clause antithesis. “The people stood from afar” — mê-rāḥōq, the very phrase that ended v. 18, framing the whole scene in an inclusio of distance. “And Moses drew near to the thick darkness” — hā-ʻărāp̄el, the poetic word for the gloom where God veils His glory (Cambridge: “mostly poetical, Psalm 18:9, 1 Kings 8:12”). Ellicott states the hinge: “the same manifestation which repelled the people attracted Moses.” The Pulpit Commentary draws it to a point: “As the people drew back, Moses drew near. The display which drove them off, attracted him… Where God was, he would be.” Even here the text guards against presumption: the verb niggaš is a Niphal, and Gill preserves the old reading that it “should be translated, ‘he was brought near’ or, ‘made to draw nigh’” — Moses enters the darkness not by his own daring but as one drawn. The mountain that was a wall to a nation is a door to the mediator. (Provenance: the inclusio and the Niphal observation are this tool’s, from the parse; Gill reports a rabbinic tradition, quoted as such.)
Read under the rule that Scripture alone is the final authority — and offered as a reading to be tested, not a verdict to be trusted — this passage is the Bible’s own anatomy of why we need a mediator, and what mediation is for. First, the law in itself terrifies. The unmediated voice of God does not draw sinful flesh in; it drives it back to the edge of the plain. The people’s instinct — “let not God speak with us, lest we die” — is not faithlessness but accurate self-knowledge, and the New Testament endorses it: this is the mountain that “may be touched” and “burned with fire,” set against the “Mediator of a new covenant” (Hebrews 12:18–24). Second, the fear has a purpose, and the purpose is holiness, not despair. God comes “to prove you… that His fear may be before your faces, that ye sin not.” Terror is the schoolmaster, not the verdict. Third, the mediator goes where the people cannot. Moses drew near the thick darkness while the nation stood afar — and even he was, by the older reading, “made to draw nigh.” No man approaches the consuming holiness of God on his own nerve. The pattern set here is fulfilled, not repeated, in the One who entered not a darkness but the true Holy Place, and who bids His people draw near with confidence (Hebrews 10:19–22). Weigh this against the text; keep only what the Word supports.
The mountain that was a wall to the nation was a door to the mediator — and the door has a name.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The adjective ʻāšēn, “smoking,” used here of the whole mountain, is one of the rarest words in the Hebrew Bible — it occurs in only two verses anywhere, here and Isaiah 7:4, where Isaiah calls Rezin and Pekah two “smoking firebrands” about to be quenched. The shared lexeme is genuine and vanishingly rare (frequency 2), and the Verifier, keying on that rarity, returns “verbal.” Held honestly, we downgrade it. Rarity makes a verbal link possible, but a shared adjective is not a quotation: there is no claim that Isaiah is citing Exodus, and the sense diverges sharply — Sinai smokes with the descending presence of God (cf. Exodus 19:18), while Isaiah’s two kings smoke like firebrands already guttering out. So the basis is recorded as a rare lexeme, but the tier is held to structural/thematic, and the reader is invited only to see the contrast: the smoke of the living God versus the last smoke of doomed kings.
Exodus 20:18 · Isaiah 7:4
basis: shared rare lexeme H6226 ʻâshên (occurs in only 2 verses in the OT) — confirmed by the Verifier, which rates it ‘verbal’ on rarity; downgraded here by hand to structural, because the two uses share an adjective, not a quotation (Sinai’s smoking mountain vs. Isaiah’s smoking firebrands), and no citation is claimed
Two of the Sinai theophany’s instruments — the lappîdim (“torches / firebrands,” v. 18) and the shôp̄ār (“ram’s-horn,” v. 18) — reappear paired in Gideon’s night attack, where three hundred men hold torches in jars and blow trumpets to scatter Midian (Judges 7:16, 20). The shared lexemes are real (lappîd, freq 12; shofar, freq 63). Held honestly: this is shared imagery, not a citation — Gideon’s torches and horns deliberately stage a terror that imitates the LORD’s own; the panic of Midian echoes, faintly, the trembling at Sinai. A structural-motif link riding on two confirmed verbal lexemes.
Exodus 20:18 · Judges 7:16 · Judges 7:20
basis: shared lexemes H3940 lappîyd (in 12 vv) + H7782 shôwphâr (in 63 vv), per the Verifier; motif of theophanic torches-and-trumpets re-staged as holy war, not a quotation
The same word lappîd (“torch / firebrand,” v. 18) names the “flaming torch” that, with a smoking firepot, passed between the pieces in Genesis 15:17 — God Himself sealing the covenant with Abraham in fire and smoke. Held honestly: the verifier returns “verbal” on lexeme rarity (lappîd, 12 verses), but this is a shared theophanic motif rather than a quotation. Both texts show God present as fire amid smoke at a covenant moment — at Sinai over a mountain, at Genesis 15 between the severed pieces. The promise to Abraham and the law at Sinai burn with the same fire.
Exodus 20:18 · Genesis 15:17
basis: shared lexeme H3940 lappîyd (in 12 vv) per the Verifier; the Verifier rates the rare lexeme ‘verbal’, but downgraded here to structural — it is a shared fire-and-smoke covenant theophany, not a verbal quotation
ʻărāp̄el, the “thick darkness” Moses entered (v. 21), is a mostly-poetic word for the gloom that veils God’s presence. It binds this scene to the parallel Sinai narratives of Deuteronomy 4:11 and 5:22 (the same event retold), and runs forward to the cloud that filled Solomon’s temple — “The LORD said that he would dwell in the thick darkness” (1 Kings 8:12) — and to the storm-theophany of 2 Samuel 22:10, where God “bowed the heavens” with “thick darkness under his feet.” The shared lexeme is confirmed; in Deuteronomy it is the same event, so the link there is as tight as a cross-reference can be.
Exodus 20:21 · Deuteronomy 4:11 · Deuteronomy 5:22 · 1 Kings 8:12 · 2 Samuel 22:10
basis: shared lexeme H6205 ʻărâphel (in 15 vv) per the Verifier (Deut 4:11 and 5:22 retell the same Sinai event; 1 Kings 8:12 and 2 Sam 22:10 carry the same motif of God dwelling in thick darkness)
Hebrews 12:18–21 takes up this exact scene — the blazing, smoking mountain, the trumpet, the voice the people “entreated that the word should not be spoken to them any more” — and sets it against Mount Zion and the new covenant. It even quotes Moses’ own dread, “I exceedingly fear and quake” (Hebrews 12:21), the line both Ellicott and Jamieson-Fausset-Brown cite in their notes on this passage. Why this is not tiered ‘verbal’: the link runs Greek (Hebrews) ↔ Hebrew (Exodus), so it cannot rest on shared Strong’s numbers; the Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme and returns “flagged.” The connection is nonetheless strong and explicit — Hebrews is consciously expounding this very theophany — so it is recorded as a structural/thematic link, argued from the NT author’s own use, not asserted from a lexeme.
Exodus 20:18 · Exodus 20:19 · Hebrews 12:18 · Hebrews 12:19 · Hebrews 12:21
basis: cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew): no shared Strong’s possible, so never ‘verbal’; the Verifier returned ‘flagged — no shared lexeme’, but Hebrews 12:18–21 explicitly expounds this Sinai theophany and quotes the scene, so the structural link is argued from the NT text itself
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
At the foot of the burning mountain a whole nation discovers, in terror, that it cannot stand before God unmediated — “let not God speak with us, lest we die” — and asks for a man to stand between. Gill names the recognition: they “now saw the need” of a mediator, “that there was no drawing nigh to God… without one.” Moses answers the cry and draws near the thick darkness in their place. But Moses is only the shadow. The New Testament sets this very scene beside its fulfillment: Israel came to a mountain that “burned with fire,” but believers “have come… to Jesus the mediator of a new covenant” (Hebrews 12:18–24). The people at Sinai longed for one who could go where they could not; the longing is answered in the Mediator who entered not a darkness but heaven itself (Hebrews 9:24).
Exodus 20:19 · Exodus 20:21 · Hebrews 12:18 · Hebrews 12:24 · 1 Timothy 2:5
Gill reads the people’s dread theologically: the law, “as it came from him to them sinful creatures, was a killing letter, and the ministration of condemnation and death.” Paul will use the same Sinai memory for the same point — the letter “kills,” and the glory of the law was a “ministration of death” (2 Corinthians 3:6–7). The terror of Exodus 20 is the law doing its proper work: exposing sin, driving sinners back, proving the heart (“God is come to prove you… that ye sin not”). And that work has an end beyond itself — to shut the people up to a mercy they cannot supply. Where the law set the nation “afar off,” the gospel bids the same kind of people “draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith” (Hebrews 10:22), because a better Mediator has passed through the veil first.
Exodus 20:18 · Exodus 20:20 · 2 Corinthians 3:6 · Galatians 3:19 · Hebrews 10:22
Into the people’s dread Moses speaks the first word of the gospel’s cadence: “Fear not.” It is a fragile comfort here, propped on “a low motive” (Pulpit Commentary), fit for a people “still a child.” But the phrase is the LORD’s own signature, and it will be spoken again with nothing low in it at all — by the angel at Bethlehem (“Fear not… a Saviour,” Luke 2:10), and by the risen Christ to those who fall before His glory (“Fear not… I am the first and the last,” Revelation 1:17). At Sinai the command to fear not stood beside a mountain that drove sinners away; in Christ the same command is spoken by the One who took the terror in their place. This typological tracing of ‘fear not’ across the canon is this tool’s synthesis — held more loosely than the mediator-typology above; weigh it against the texts.
Exodus 20:20 · Luke 2:10 · Revelation 1:17
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.
Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). The named voices are quoted verbatim from public-domain commentaries on Exodus 20:18–21, attributed in place: Charles Ellicott, Joseph Benson, Matthew Henry, Albert Barnes, Jamieson-Fausset-Brown, Matthew Poole, John Gill, the Geneva Study Bible, the Cambridge Bible, the Pulpit Commentary, and Keil & Delitzsch — drawn from Biblehub. (Spurgeon’s Treasury of David is the featured voice for the Psalms; this is an Exodus narrative unit, so he does not appear.)
The Hebrew is the Masoretic tradition; the transliterations, parsings, literal word-for-word renderings, and the “where the English smooths the Hebrew” notes are this tool’s own work (⚙) — careful but fallible. Check them against a lexicon (BDB, HALOT) and a standard grammar.
On the cross-references: three threads (Isaiah 7:4, Judges 7, Genesis 15:17) are built on the Verifier’s computed shared Strong’s lexemes. The Verifier rates the rare word lappîd and the very rare ʻāšēn as “verbal,” but all three have been downgraded by hand to structural/thematic, because shared rare vocabulary is not the same as quotation — none of these texts cites Exodus, and the recorded basis says so plainly. The Hebrews 12:18–21 link is cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew); it therefore cannot rest on Strong’s numbers and is never tiered “verbal.” The Verifier returns “flagged — no shared lexeme” for it; it is recorded here as structural/thematic because the author of Hebrews is demonstrably and explicitly expounding this Sinai scene (and quotes Moses’ dread, the line Ellicott and JFB themselves cite). The provenance of that NT engagement is not in doubt; the basis is the NT text’s own use, argued in the open rather than asserted from a lexeme. Two marks govern everything: ✦ = a named, public-domain human source, quoted; ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)
✦ = human, public-domain source, quoted and named. ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. Flagged cross-references are left visible on purpose — the verifier working in the open. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)