Torah Portion Shabbat Chol Hamoed Pesach
Torah: Exodus 33:12–34:26; Maftir: Numbers 28:19–25; Haftarah: Ezekiel 37:1–14; Besorah: Revelation 5:1–14
We are in the middle of Passover.
The Seder has already happened. The first night, the retelling, the matzah, the bitter herbs, the four cups. If you celebrate, you’ve already heard the story of the exodus this week.
And now it is Shabbat, the intermediate Shabbat that falls inside the festival, Chol Hamoed, the days that are neither fully festival nor fully ordinary. You’re living between the first night of redemption and the last day of the sea crossing. You’re in the middle of a miracle.
And the Torah reading chosen for this exact moment is not from the Exodus narrative itself. It is not the splitting of the sea or the plague on the firstborn. It is something far more intimate and far more theologically loaded.
God brings us to the mountain. To the cleft in the rock. To the moment after everything shattered and Moses, standing in the rubble of the golden calf disaster, has the utter audacity to ask God to show him His glory.
We are sitting inside Passover, celebrating the greatest act of redemption in Israel’s history, and the Torah reading is about a man who just watched Israel blow it catastrophically and still walked back up the mountain to ask for more of God.
That is a theology of Passover that goes far deeper than the night in Egypt.
The Word: כבוד | Kavod
Moses asks to see God’s kavod (כבוד). We translate it glory, but that English word has been so emptied out by overuse that it almost means nothing anymore. We say the sunset was glorious. We say the concert was glorious. Kavod has never been that casual.
Kavod comes from the root meaning heavy, weighty, substantial. To say something has kavod is to say it has mass. It presses down. It fills space. It cannot be ignored or walked through without being changed by the encounter. When the glory of the Lord filled the Tabernacle in Exodus 40, Moses could not enter because the kavod was too heavy, too full, too present. The space was saturated.
Moses is not asking for a nice experience. He is asking to bear the full weight of God’s presence. And God’s answer is one of the most stunning replies in all of Scripture.
“I will make all My goodness pass before you, and I will proclaim the Name of Adonai before you.” (Exodus 33:19, TLV)
God does not show Moses His full glory directly. Instead, He reveals His goodness and proclaims His Name. Because in the Hebrew worldview, the Name is not a label. The Name is the person. To know the Name is to know the character. And what follows in Exodus 34:6–7 is what Jewish tradition calls the Thirteen Attributes of Mercy, the most concentrated summary of who God is anywhere in the Torah.
Moses asked to see the kavod. God showed him the middot (attributes). At the center of God’s glory is His character, and at the center of His character is His mercy. That is what has weight. That is what the world cannot contain.
Torah: Exodus 33:12–34:26 — Show Me Your Glory
Moses’ Audacious Request (33:12–23)
The context sitting behind these verses is important. Israel has just worshipped a golden calf forty days after standing at Sinai. God told Moses He was going to destroy the people and start over with Moses. Moses talked Him out of it. The tablets have been shattered. The covenant has been broken at the very moment it was given. By any reasonable measure, everything is in ruins.
And Moses walks back up the mountain and opens with: I need to know who is going with us. And if Your presence is not going with us, do not send us from here. Because how will anyone know that we have found favor with You unless You go with us?
This is one of the boldest intercessions in all of Torah. Moses is essentially telling God: if You are not personally present with this people, the whole thing is meaningless. The Promised Land without the Presence is just geography. We would rather stay in the wilderness with You than go to Canaan without You.
God agrees. My Presence will go. I will give you rest.
And then Moses pushes further: show me Your glory.
God says no to that specific request. You cannot see My face and live. But He offers something else: He will put Moses in the cleft of the rock and cover him with His hand while His goodness passes by. Moses will see God’s back but not His face.
The rabbis have wrestled with the back/face distinction for centuries. One beautiful reading is that you cannot see God’s face while you are in the middle of the story. You can only recognize His presence looking backward, in hindsight, once He has passed. This is the theology of the cleft in the rock: you see what God has done, not what He is about to do. Faith moves forward in the dark. Recognition comes in the looking back.
The Thirteen Attributes of Mercy (34:6–7)
Moses carves new tablets, goes back up Sinai, and this time God proclaims His own Name to Moses. These are the words:
“Adonai, Adonai, God, compassionate and gracious, slow to anger, and abundant in lovingkindness and truth, keeping lovingkindness for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, yet by no means leaving the guilty unpunished.” (Exodus 34:6–7, TLV)
Thirteen attributes. Jewish tradition has recited these words in every Yom Kippur liturgy for millennia. They appear in the prayers during the High Holy Days. They are the theological bedrock of Jewish prayer in times of crisis because they are the Torah’s own answer to the question: what is God actually like?
He is compassionate. He is gracious. He is slow to anger, which in Hebrew is erekh apayim, literally long of nose, which is how ancient Hebrew described someone who takes a long time to lose their temper. He abounds in chesed, lovingkindness, the covenant loyalty that does not quit. He forgives iniquity, transgression, and sin. Three different Hebrew words for three different kinds of wrongdoing, covered by one act of divine pardon.
And then the caveat: yet by no means leaving the guilty unpunished. This is not a contradiction. It is completeness. God’s mercy doesn’t require Him to pretend sin doesn’t exist. His forgiveness addresses the sin fully, not by ignoring it but by bearing it. This is exactly the tension the rest of Scripture, including the Besorah this week, will resolve.
The Covenant Renewed and the Three Festivals (34:10–26)
God seals a new covenant with Israel. He will do wonders no one has seen. He drives out the nations. He warns against idolatry and intermarriage with pagan cultures. And then He commands the three pilgrimage festivals: Pesach, Shavuot, and Sukkot.
The placement is everything. Mercy is proclaimed. The covenant is renewed. And then immediately, the calendar. This is the Torah’s sequence: first forgiveness, then festival. First the restoration of relationship, then the sacred time that marks it. You do not get to Passover until you have had the Exodus and you don’t fully understand the Exodus until you have been in the cleft of the rock and heard who God says He is.
Maftir: Numbers 28:19–25 — The Passover Offerings
The Maftir returns us to the priestly instructions for Passover itself: the burnt offerings, the grain offerings, the sin offering, the specific details of what is brought to the altar each day of the festival.
After the theological heights of Exodus 34, Numbers 28 might feel like a total gear shift into logistics. But the sequence is intentional. The character of God is proclaimed. The covenant is renewed. And then the community’s response takes shape in specific, concrete, daily acts of offering. Theology always has to come home to practice. God’s mercy is proclaimed on the mountain and lived out at the altar.
Seven days. Daily offerings. The festival is not just one night of storytelling. It is a week of sustained, daily return to what God did and who He is because of it.
Haftarah: Ezekiel 37:1–14 — Can These Bones Live?
Ezekiel is in Babylon. Jerusalem has fallen. The Temple is in ruins. The people are in exile. By every visible measure, the covenant nation of Israel is over. Done! Dead and scattered and dry.
And the hand of the Lord sets Ezekiel down in a valley full of bones. The text is specific: they are very dry. Not recently deceased. These are old, rickety bones. Not possibly revivable by ordinary means. Dry. The Hebrew is emphasizing that there is nothing left that ordinary processes could work with. This situation is beyond human help.
God asks him: son of man, can these bones live?
Ezekiel gives the only honest answer available: Adonai, only You know.
That answer is itself a kind of faith. He doesn’t say no. He dosn’t say yes out of forced optimism. He says: the answer to that question is outside my category of knowledge. Only You know if dry bones can live again. And that positioning, that settled acknowledgment that the miracle is entirely God’s domain, is what makes room for what happens next.
God tells him to prophesy to the bones. Speak to them. Tell them the word of the Lord. And Ezekiel does.
The bones rattle. They come together. Sinews appear. Flesh covers them. Skin covers that. But there’s still no breath in them. The structure is restored but the life is absent. This is the first stage: form without spirit.
Then God tells Ezekiel to prophesy to the ruach, to the breath, to the wind, to the Spirit. The Hebrew word is the same for all three. Come from the four winds, God says. Breathe upon these slain that they may live. And the ruach enters, and they stand, an exceedingly great army.
God explains the vision. These bones are the whole house of Israel. They’re saying: our bones are dried up, our hope is lost, we are cut off. The vision is an answer to their despair. God will open their graves. He will bring them back to the land. He will put His Spirit in them and they will live.
On Passover, we are celebrating the Exodus. But Ezekiel’s valley of dry bones is asking: what does Passover mean for a people who feel like there’s nothing left? What does the God who brought Israel out of Egypt do with a valley of scattered, dry, seemingly finished remnants?
The answer is the same thing He did in Egypt. He breathes into the bones the same ruach Elohim, Spirit of God, that hovered over the waters at creation. He makes dry things live because He is not limited by what He finds when He arrives.
Besorah: Revelation 5:1–14 — Worthy Is the Lamb
John is caught up in a vision of the heavenly throne room. God sits on the throne holding a scroll sealed with seven seals, written on both sides. A mighty angel asks with a loud voice: who is worthy to open the scroll and break its seals?
And no one answers. No one in heaven. No one on earth. No one under the earth. No creature anywhere in creation has the standing, the credentials, the character to open what God holds in His hand. And John weeps.
This is not a small moment. The scroll contains the purposes and plan of God for creation, the full story of redemption, the decrees of heaven. And creation in its entirety cannot produce even one being worthy to open it. The answer to the question of history is sealed, and nothing that exists can unseal it by its own merit.
Then one of the elders says: stop weeping. The Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, has prevailed. He is worthy to open the scroll.
John turns to see the Lion. And what he sees instead is a Lamb, standing as though it had been slain.
The Lion that prevailed is the Lamb that was slaughtered. The one who conquered is the one who was killed. The worthiness comes not from military victory or accumulated power but from sacrificial death and resurrection. This is the most audacious theological reversal in all of Revelation, and it is stated quietly: John expected a lion and saw a lamb. That gap is the entire gospel.
The Lamb has seven horns, perfect power, and seven eyes, perfect perception. The same ruach that Ezekiel called from the four winds is here described as seven Spirits of God sent out into all the earth. The Lamb stands, which means He is alive, though He bears the marks of slaughter. He takes the scroll from the right hand of God, and the entire court of heaven falls down in worship.
The elders hold golden bowls full of incense. The text tells us what the incense is: the prayers of the saints. Every prayer ever prayed, every cry from a valley of dry bones, every Moses in the cleft of the rock asking to see God’s glory, every desperate intercession over a shattered covenant, every please, please, please... is in those bowls. And it rises as incense before the Lamb.
And they sing a new song:
“Worthy are You to take the scroll and to open its seals, for You were slain and purchased for God with Your blood men from every tribe and tongue and people and nation. You made them a kingdom and kohanim to our God, and they shall reign upon the earth.”
(Revelation 5:9–10, TLV)
There it is. The Passover lamb of Exodus 12 pointed to this. The sacrifices of Leviticus pointed to this. The dry bones given ruach in Ezekiel’s valley pointed to this. The thirteen attributes of mercy that God proclaimed in the cleft of the rock on Sinai pointed to this.
The Lamb who was slain and stands is the answer to the question no creature could answer. He is the one Moses was ultimately asking to see when he asked to see the kavod.
The worship builds. Thousands upon thousands of angels join in. Then every creature in heaven and earth and under the earth and in the sea adds their voice. The whole creation, the bones now breathing and standing, joins the chorus:
“To the One sitting on the throne and to the Lamb be blessing and honor and glory and power forever and ever!” (Revelation 5:13, TLV)
And the four living creatures say: Amen. And the elders fall down and worship.
Threads Across All Four Readings
The glory is the character. Moses asked to see God’s kavod, His weight, His glory. God showed him His goodness and proclaimed His name. The Lamb in Revelation is worshipped not for power alone but for worthiness, a character-based claim. What has weight in the kingdom of God is always character before force.
Mercy makes the covenant survive. Israel broke the covenant forty days after it was made. The Thirteen Attributes of Mercy are God’s own answer to the question: what happens to a covenant when the weaker party fails? He forgives. He renews. He does not start over with better material. He works with the broken pieces. Because He is who He is.
Ruach is the difference between structure and life. Ezekiel’s bones came together, sinews and flesh and skin formed, but there was still no breath. The structure of religion, of covenant, of even correct theology can be assembled without life in it. The ruach of God is what makes the structure breathe. You can have every bone in the right place and still be a valley of dry bones.
The answer to every human crisis is the Lamb. No creature was found worthy. The scroll stayed sealed. The purposes of God seemed unreachable. And then the Lamb stepped forward. On the Intermediate Shabbat of Passover, surrounded by the week’s celebration of deliverance from Egypt, Revelation 5 is saying: what happened at the Exodus was real and it was right and it was not enough. The full answer is the Lamb who was slain and stands.
My Final Thoughts
We are in Chol Hamoed, the middle days. Not the beginning, not the end. The in-between.
And the Torah reading chosen for this in-between Shabbat is about a man in an in-between moment. Moses is past the Exodus, past the covenant at Sinai, past the catastrophe of the golden calf.
The sea has been crossed. The tablets have been shattered and the new ones are not yet written. He is standing in the wreckage of what should have been the greatest spiritual moment in history, and he asks God to show him His glory.
What I love about Moses in this passage is that he does not pretend the wreckage is not real. He doesn’t perform optimism. He says: I need to know who is going with us. I need to see something. Show me Your glory.
And God doesn’t shame him for asking. God doesn’t say the people don’t deserve it, or you should be grateful for what you’ve already gotten, or this is not the time for that kind of request. God says: I will make My goodness pass before you. Let Me show you who I am.
This is what Passover is actually about. Not just the night in Egypt. Not just the plagues and the blood on the doorposts and the sea parting. Passover is about the character of the God who did all of that. The kind of God who makes dry bones breathe. The kind of God who answers the question no creature could answer by sending a Lamb.
Ezekiel asked: can these bones live? Moses asked: show me Your glory. John wept because no one was worthy to open the scroll.
God designed exactly zero of those questions to stay unanswered.
The Thirteen Attributes of Mercy are what God says about Himself when He has every right to say something else. Compassionate. Gracious. Slow to anger. Abounding in lovingkindness. Forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin. This is the kavod. This is the weight of God. This is what Moses saw from the cleft in the rock.
And in Revelation 5, standing in the throne room where all of history converges, what causes all of creation to bow is not power alone. It is worthiness. The Lamb who was slain is the only one in the universe with the standing to open what is sealed, because He is the living embodiment of everything God proclaimed to Moses on the mountain.
He is the kavod made flesh.
Worthy is the Lamb.
Hebrew Letter Lesson for the Week: Ayin (ע)
The Basics of Ayin
Sound: A guttural throat sound, often transliterated as a silent “a” or “e” in English, though in Hebrew it carries a distinct voiced quality from deep in the throat
Numerical Value: 70
Appearance: Ayin looks like two branches meeting at a single point below, like two eyes set in a face, or like a person bending down to see something at ground level.
How Ayin Is Written
ע
Ayin is the eye. In Hebrew, the word ayin means both the letter and the word for eye. The letter is the eye. The eye is the letter. That’s not a coincidence. In a language where letters carry meaning, the letter that looks like two eyes is the letter that means seeing, perceiving, understanding what is true.
Spiritual Meaning of Ayin
Ayin is the letter of vision, of perception, of seeing what is actually there as opposed to what we fear is there or hope is there. The rabbis distinguished between two kinds of seeing: ayin tova, a good eye, and ayin ra, an evil eye. These phrases in Jewish thought do not describe magical curses. They describe orientations of the soul. The person with an ayin tova looks at the world generously, sees abundance, sees possibility, sees the goodness of God in what is before them. The person with an ayin ra looks at the world with scarcity and suspicion, sees threat and lack and grievance wherever they turn.
Moses had an ayin tova in the deepest possible sense. He looked at a valley of shattered covenant, a people who had failed catastrophically, and he saw: a God who was still willing to renew. His eye was oriented toward what God could do rather than what Israel had done.
Ayin’s numerical value is seventy, and seventy is one of the Torah’s most significant numbers. There are seventy nations in the table of nations in Genesis 10. There are seventy elders of Israel. There are seventy years of Babylonian exile. Seventy is the number of fullness, of the complete diversity of human experience all converging toward a single source.
There is a profound connection between ayin and this week’s Torah portion. Moses asks to see God’s kavod and God shows him His goodness and proclaims His Name. What Moses sees in the cleft of the rock is not the fullness of God’s face, which no human can survive, but it is enough to reorient everything. The ayin of Moses is trained on the right thing, and he comes down the mountain radiant. His face literally shines because of what his eyes have been turned toward.
Ezekiel’s vision is also a story of ayin. God asks: what do you see? Ezekiel sees a valley of very dry bones. He doesn’t minimize what he sees. He doesn’t pretend the situation is better than it is. He simply refuses to let what he sees be the final word, because he knows the One who is asking the question already knows the answer.
A Little Nugget The Hebrew word for spring, as in a spring of water, is also ayin. The same word that means eye means water source. This is not coincidental in a language where letters and meaning are inseparable. A traditional insight drawn from ayin is that what we consistently look toward shapes the source from which our life flows.. Direct your eye toward God and the water flows outward. Direct it toward lack, threat, and grievance, and you become the very dryness you fear. Ezekiel’s bones were dry because the source had been cut off. In a poetic sense, the same God who sees His people in their valley is the One who breathes life into them.
Application
On the Intermediate Shabbat of Passover, standing between the first night of the festival and the crossing of the sea, the letter ayin is asking: what are you looking at?
Are you looking at the dry bones in your life and letting that be the final image? Are you looking at the shattered tablets and forgetting that new ones are already being carved? Are you looking at the sealed scroll and weeping, or are you listening for the elder who says stop weeping, the Lamb has prevailed?
An ayin tova doesn’t require you to pretend the valley isn’t full of bones. Moses saw the wreckage clearly. Ezekiel reported what he actually saw. John acknowledged that he wept. Ayin tova is not toxic positivity. It is the discipline of seeing what is real and then also seeing what God is doing in it.
Ask yourself this week:
What in my life am I looking at with ayin ra, with scarcity and fear, when God is calling me to look at it with ayin tova?
Is my vision of God big enough to include what feels like a valley of dry bones right now? Or has my ayin gotten small?
What would it look like to come down from this Passover week with a radiant face, because of what my eyes have been turned toward?
Show me Your glory. This is the prayer of the ayin. And God always answers it with goodness.
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Weekly Practice
This week, as you continue in the days of Passover, practice the discipline of the ayin tova. Choose one area of your life that has been heavy with scarcity or fear or grief, one valley that feels full of dry bones, and intentionally name three evidences of God’s goodness in it or around it. Not to dismiss the pain, but to train your eye to see both. Then sit with Exodus 34:6–7 and read the Thirteen Attributes slowly, letting each one land in the specific area you named. Let God show you His goodness while you wait in the cleft of the rock.
Bible Study Questions
Moses asks to see God’s kavod, His glory, and God shows him His goodness and proclaims His character. What does it mean that the weight and glory of God is His character before it is His power? How does that change what you are actually asking for when you pray to see God’s glory?
The Thirteen Attributes of Mercy include the statement that God by no means leaves the guilty unpunished alongside His forgiveness. How do you hold those two realities together? Why does true mercy require that tension rather than dissolving it?
Moses saw God’s back rather than His face. The rabbis suggest this means you recognize God’s presence in hindsight, looking back, more than in the middle of the moment. Where in your own story can you now see what you could not see while you were in it?
In Ezekiel 37, the bones come together and flesh forms, but there is still no breath. The structure is restored before the life arrives. Why does God do it in stages? What does this say about how restoration works, both nationally and personally?
No creature in heaven or earth was found worthy to open the scroll. John wept. Then the Lamb stepped forward. What does it mean for your daily life that the answer to the universe’s most important question was not found in creation but brought into it?
The golden bowls of incense in Revelation 5 are identified as the prayers of the saints. Every prayer ever prayed is in those bowls before the throne. How does that image change how you think about the prayers you have prayed that seem unanswered?
The new song in Revelation 5:9–10 praises the Lamb for making His people a kingdom and kohanim, priests, to God. This echoes Exodus 19:6. In what ways are you living as a priest right now, representing God to the world around you and representing the world before God?
Reflection Questions
Moses asked to see God’s glory in the aftermath of the golden calf disaster. Have you ever experienced a moment of spiritual collapse that ironically drove you to ask for more of God rather than less? What happened?
Ezekiel was asked: can these bones live? He answered: only You know. Where in your life is God asking you that same question right now? And can you answer honestly, with the same humility Ezekiel had, rather than either false hope or settled despair?
Ayin tova and ayin ra describe two orientations of the soul toward the world. Which one do you default to, and in what specific situations does your eye tend to go toward the darker view? What has shaped that pattern?
The Lamb is described as having been slain and yet standing. The wound is still visible; He is not pretending it did not happen. What does it mean that the resurrected Yeshua carries the marks of His suffering rather than erasing them? What does that say to you about your own wounds?
We are in Chol Hamoed, the in-between days. The festival has started but is not finished. Where in your life are you in an in-between season right now, past the beginning but not yet at the end? What does this week’s Torah portion speak into that place?
Action Challenges
Read Exodus 34:6–7 out loud slowly every morning for the rest of the week. Let one attribute land per day: compassionate, gracious, slow to anger, abounding in lovingkindness, abounding in truth, keeping lovingkindness for thousands, forgiving iniquity, forgiving transgression, forgiving sin. Sit with each one for a full day.
Identify one place in your life where you have the bones-without-breath situation: the form and structure are in place but the life seems to have left. Name it honestly. Then prophesy to it. Speak the word of the Lord over it the way Ezekiel did, not because the outcome is guaranteed but because that is what faith looks like before the ruach arrives.
Write a prayer using the Thirteen Attributes of Mercy as your framework. Not a general prayer, but a specific one about a specific situation. Let the proclamation of who God is become the structure of your asking.
Revelation 5:8 says the golden bowls of incense are the prayers of the saints. This week, write down or collect prayers you have prayed that have not been answered. Put them somewhere visible. Let them be your reminder that they are in the bowls before the throne, not lost, not forgotten, not fallen on deaf ears.
Practice ayin tova in one specific relationship or situation this week. Whatever you see when you look at it normally, intentionally spend five minutes looking for what is good, what is growing, what is redeemable. Not to dismiss what is hard but to train the eye toward the whole picture. Write what you find.
If this study stirred something in you during this Passover week, share it with a friend who needs to be reminded that God designed exactly zero of their hardest questions to stay unanswered.
And if it left you wanting to go slower and deeper into the Word, I’ve got a whole room for that.
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Tree of Life (TLV) – Scripture taken from the Holy Scriptures, Tree of Life Version*. Copyright © 2014,2016 by the Tree of Life Bible Society. Used by permission of the Tree of Life Bible Society.




