Day 8

What the Lord Requires

from the Deuteronomy reading plan


Deuteronomy 9:7-29, Deuteronomy 10:1-22, Micah 6:7-8

BY Melanie Rainer

My family will soon take a vacation to New England, the land I called home for every summer of my childhood and then some. We’ll cross Washington Bridge leaving Manhattan glimmering to the east, and wind through Connecticut’s tree-lined highways. Then we’ll hit the Massachusetts coastline, dotted with perfectly manicured hydrangeas and gray-weathered houses that stand at the sea. Finally, we’ll cross the border into New Hampshire, get off I-93, and I’m there. I know every beat of the drive, every bend of the road. I am at my most “me” when I stand among New Hampshire’s lakes and mountains. I shut off every piece of technology (no social media, no email, no phone), and bask in what is, to me, perfection. 

But we always have to go back to our current home, jolted back into reality. And I’m reminded that the gift of experiencing vacation in your favorite place means that reentry will always be a little painful: laundry, dishes, the flat landscape of my current state and the scorching southern heat, made all the harder because I just experienced something I find to be so very good.

On Mount Horeb, Moses experienced perfection beyond human imagination when he encountered God. The Lord’s radiance was so glorious, Moses had to cover his face. Moses glimpsed the glory of the Lord, the unimaginable sweetness of His perfect goodness. 

And yet when Moses returned to the Israelites, he was jolted back into the reality of a broken world: the Israelites, led by Aaron, had constructed an idol, a golden calf. Moses, who had just tasted and seen the source of all good, saw a people who had turned away from God. Moses knew what they were turning away from, better than almost anyone who has ever lived. So his anger and mourning were deep, as were the Lord’s. The Lord threatened to destroy this people, but Moses begged the God who he had just met face to face to change His mind. 

In today’s reading, Moses recounted this story to a new generation of Israelites as a reminder of a beautiful truth: God is real. He loves His people. And the shalom-filled life God gives in His commands is worth striving for. In Deuteronomy 10:12–22, Moses’s beautiful speech presents the scope of the gospel. He reminds his people of God’s requirements, of the call to follow Him we find in Jesus (Deuteronomy 10:12; Matthew 4:19).  We see precursors of Paul’s instruction for believers to put off their old selves in Moses’s command for the Israelites to no longer be stiff-necked (Deuteronomy 10:16; Ephesians 4). And Peter’s explanation of how God made a people who were once not a people is a parallel to Moses’s reminder that “Your ancestors went down to Egypt, seventy people in all, and now the LORD your God has made you numerous, like the stars of the sky” (Deuteronomy 10:22; 1 Peter 2:10).

Moses’s zeal for the Lord, and earnest prayers born out of knowing the goodness of the Lord offered the Israelites a picture of what it meant for God to renew His covenant with them. Jesus is this God incarnate, who came to earth to write a new covenant and call us to follow after Him. Follow Him, and the sweetness of kingdom life is ours.

Post Comments (51)

51 thoughts on "What the Lord Requires"

  1. Lara Castillo says:

    Maura, I will be praying for you and your family.
    I feel led to share something that may be helpful for your granddaughters. I am part of a wonderful community called the Daily audio Bible. There is a Daily Audio Bible Kids where a sweet boy reads and discusses scripture daily.

  2. Lara Castillo says:

    Maura, I will be praying for you and your family.

  3. Kristen says:

    @Sky Hilton The other devotional I do today had to do with idols. It’s so true that many things start one way and can end up being harmful to us and idolatrous. Here is.a link to the teaching and the More Moments section if you want to check it out:.

  4. Sky Hilton says:

    I have treated so much of technology as an idol over God. I need to disconnect more to connect with God first. May you all have a beautiful night!

  5. Sarah Rose says:

    “It was not His will to destroy you.” After continual rebellion and turning from Him, God did not desire to harm the Israelites. During times of hardship in my own life, I pray I would remember this truth. God prunes us because He loves us, although pruning can feel like destruction at times. I pray we would be surrendered to God and would not become bitter, becoming blind, or forgetting the promises of God when life is difficult. For we are a “stiff necked” people, so in need of God’s patience and pursuit, as we are prone to wandering.

  6. Traci Gendron says:

    ERB – I get up in the morning and do SRT. I have been listening to more christian music at home and in my car. Then I head out into the world and feel that peace diminishing. I can only imagine how Moses felt when he turned and saw the idol that the Israelites made. Especially after such a great encounter with God!

    MAURA – I will pray for you. I was married to a man that seemed Godly and he turned away in such a defiant way I couldn’t believe it. He divorced me for know real reason, but self centeredness. I have been ashamed to admit that I’m married for the third time! But God gave me a wonderful man that He knew I needed. Through that marriage I now live in Colorado. The housing market has skyrocketed. God will provide!

    MELANIE – I donated my kidney to my son. We went through it with flying colors. Praying the same for your father in law.

    SARAH JOY – As I was saying my prayers this morning, I felt that God was telling me my mission is my son. To make sure he turns back to God. That it is the most important thing I can do for him. So, thank you for your comment. It was what I was hearing in my prayers!

  7. Wendy says:

    I always enjoy reading the comments of all the SRT community members who post. I agree with @SarahJoy that the world can feel so overwhelmingly broken recently. I am praying for all of the women, including @Maura, and for all the young girls and young women in this world, now more than ever.

  8. Emily McGrath says:

    I am praying for all my sisters and remembering who God is!! ❤️

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