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graciously gives himself without human cooperation or merit (40). An imitation god keeps God at a safe distance or reduces God to one object among others. As a result, Israel’s own conceit and self-justification can continue unabated.68

      Beyond being the representative of God and Israel before Israel, Moses also takes up the function of representing God and Israel before God. Returning again to the activity of Moses on Sinai before his reception of divine glory, we are told that YHWH informs Moses of the golden calf apostasy going on in the camp. God proposes to Moses that he annihilate the Israelites and make Moses into a great nation (32:10). Moses pleads with God to not destroy the Israelites and to “Remember Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, your servants, to whom you swore by your own self” (32:13, emphasis added). Here Moses stands before YHWH as both a representative of Israel, pleading with God concerning the sin of the people and as God before God by wielding God’s own Word of grace against his Word of judgment. In this, he becomes a type of Christ’s self-offering to and advocacy before the Father. After going down from the mountain and disrupting the apostasy, Moses again returns to the Lord and in a supreme act of mediation, offers his own life as a sin offering (32:31–32). This atoning mediation fails though because God declares in his anger that those who have sinned against him will pay with their own lives (v. 34). Moses shows himself to be inferior to Christ, whose self-offering was accepted by the Father. Neither is Moses himself ultimately saved from condemnation. According to Numbers, he is not allowed to enter the Promised Land because of an incident in which he abuses his role as mediator (Num 20:1–13). Much as the law cannot bring humanity into the rest of redemption (vita passive), Moses, the mediator of law, could not bring Israel into God’s rest (Heb 2:16–19).

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