Verse explainer
This is God's own self-definition — not a human description of God, but the name God chose to proclaim about himself at the most critical moment in Israel's history.
And the LORD passed by before him, and proclaimed, The LORD, The LORD God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering, and abundant in goodness and truth,
BSBThen the LORD passed in front of Moses and called out: "The LORD, the LORD God, is compassionate and gracious, slow to anger, abounding in loving devotion and faithfulness,
The plain meaning
Moses had just witnessed Israel's worst failure: the golden calf. The covenant lay in pieces — literally, the stone tablets were smashed (32:19). Moses asked to see God's glory (33:18), and this is God's answer. Rather than a visual spectacle, God passes by and speaks his own name as an interpretation: Jehovah is merciful, gracious, slow to anger, and overflowing with covenant-love and faithfulness. The word "proclaimed" signals that this is a formal declaration, not casual description. These attributes aren't abstract theology — they are the ground on which a broken covenant can be renewed (v. 10). The verse doesn't stand alone: v. 7 adds that he keeps mercy for thousands and also does not leave the guilty unpunished, holding both grace and justice together. This self-announcement became the most-quoted passage about God's character in the entire Hebrew Bible, echoed in Numbers, Nehemiah, Psalms, Jonah, and Joel.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
Clarke argues that this proclamation is God's own interpretation of the divine name Jehovah — answering Moses' request to see God's glory not with a vision but with a declaration of character. He identifies eleven distinct attributes in vv. 6–7, each a facet of what the name Jehovah actually means: from tender compassion and free grace to patient longsuffering, abundant goodness, and unfailing truth.
Gill stresses that the repetition — "The LORD, the LORD" — is meant to fix Moses' full attention before the content of the proclamation. He reads "merciful" as the most tender, affectionate dimension of God's character, "gracious" as pure unmerited favour displayed in election and redemption, and "longsuffering" as the patience by which God waits on his people without abandoning them — each attribute organically connected to the others.
JFB observes a deliberate contrast with the earlier Sinai theophany, where God revealed himself in majesty as "I AM" (3:14). Here, on the eve of covenant renewal after the golden calf, he reveals himself in grace and goodness — the attributes most needed at that moment. The timing is the message: pardon is being offered, and the character behind that pardon is now formally named.
The word behind it
Translated "goodness" (KJV) or "loving devotion" (BSB), chesed is the richest relational word in Hebrew. Gesenius defines it as a combination of kindness, loyalty, and covenant faithfulness — love that does not abandon. It is not simply emotion; it is committed, obligated love that persists through failure. Here it qualifies what kind of God is speaking into the wreckage of a broken covenant.
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