Exodus 23
Exodus 23 completes the Book of the Covenant with laws about justice, the land, and three annual feasts, before closing with God's promise of conquest and guidance. Justice must not be perverted by following the crowd, accepting bribes, or showing partiality to the poor in their suit — fairness is not the same as favoritism. Even an enemy's wandering ox must be returned. Every seventh year the land rests and the poor may eat what grows on its own. The Sabbath is observed weekly, and the reason given here is not theological but humanitarian: your servant and the foreigner may be refreshed. Three pilgrimage feasts — Unleavened Bread, Harvest, and Ingathering — structure the agricultural year as liturgical time. Then God promises His angel to go ahead of Israel into the land, and warns against worshipping the gods of the nations they displace or making covenants with them. Obedience will bring blessing; compromise will bring a snare. The chapter ends with a vision of territorial expansion stretching from the Red Sea to the Euphrates — a promise whose full dimensions Israel will only partially inhabit. Galatians 3:19 and Hebrews 2:2 both reflect on the role of angels in covenant mediation.
Exodus 23:1
Do not spread false reports. Do not help a guilty person by being a malicious witness. The Book of the Covenant continues with laws governing speech and witness. False reports and malicious testimony corrupt justice at its source — the testimony on which decisions rest. Proverbs 6:16–19 lists a false witness who pours out lies among the seven things God detests. The prohibition is specific to the legal context — a witness who lies destroys the innocent — but its principle extends to every form of false speech about another person. Ephesians 4:25 says put away falsehood and speak truthfully to your neighbor, for we are all members of one body. The social fabric of the covenant community depends on truthfulness in every form of public speech.
Exodus 23:2
Do not follow the crowd in doing wrong. When you give testimony in a lawsuit, do not pervert justice by siding with the crowd. The prohibition on crowd-following in matters of justice is one of the most countercultural provisions in the Torah. Public opinion, social pressure, and the desire for approval are named as threats to the integrity of justice. Romans 12:2 says do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. The renewed mind that can resist the crowd's pressure in Romans 12 is the same mind that can give honest testimony against the crowd's verdict in Exodus 23. The pressure to conform to collective wrongdoing is recognized as a specific moral hazard — and resisting it is a specific covenant obligation.
Exodus 23:3
And do not show favoritism to a poor person in a lawsuit. The prohibition against showing favoritism to the poor in a legal case is the counterweight to the protections given to the poor throughout the legal code. Justice requires equal treatment: not prejudice against the poor and not prejudice in favor of them. Leviticus 19:15 makes this explicit: do not pervert justice; do not show partiality to the poor or favoritism to the great, but judge your neighbor fairly. The tendency to romanticize poverty as moral virtue is as much a distortion of justice as despising the poor. The covenant community's commitment to justice requires that every person — poor or rich, foreigner or native — is judged by the same standard.