Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Exodus 35-40, Leviticus 1; 16; 19 -- Part 1 : Dr. Matthew Grey
Episode Date: April 30, 2022Where do ancient Near East and modern Western culture meet? Dr. Matthew Grey explores how knowledge and origins of the ancient Israelite temple worship help inform our modern temple language by helpin...g us learn the language of temple worship.View graphics of the presentation on our YouTube Channel:YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelShow Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producers/SponsorsDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: MarketingLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Transcripts/Language Team/French TranscriptsAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-pianoPlease rate and review the podcast.
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study. I'm Hank Smith and I'm John by the way. We love to learn, we love to laugh,
we want to learn and laugh with you. As together, we follow him.
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith and I'm your host.
I am here with my co-host.
Now, listen closely here because this is important
for our lesson today.
He's an ancient tabernacle
when his name is John, by the way.
John, you are, and I mean that in the holiest sense.
He is an ancient tabernacle, John, by the way.
John, welcome.
We're excited this week to be studying the,
I bet you can't guess, the ancient Tabernacle.
Here in Exodus and Leviticus, and we have an expert with us.
Tell everyone who's going to join us.
Yes, we are excited to have Dr. Matthew Gray with us today,
and he is an associate professor of ancient scripture
and an affiliate faculty member
of the Ancient Near Eastern Studies program at BYU.
He was born and raised in Chicago,
served a full-time mission in the California Santa Rosa
mission, and attended BYU where he received a BA
in Near Eastern Studies, and then received an MA in archaeology
and the history of antiquity from Andrews University, PhD in Mediterranean religions,
with a major emphasis on archaeology and history of early Judaism and a minor emphasis on
New Testament studies from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Before being hired by
BYU in the Department of Ancient Scripture, Dr. Gray taught Institute of Religion at the University of Notre Dame at Oxford,
and also at UNC Chapel Hill and Duke, and since being hired at BYU, he's taught courses in the New Testament Gospels,
second half of the New Testament, Jesus in his Jewish context and the archaeology of New Testament Palestine.
For almost 20 years he's been actively involved in archaeological research and publication
relating to the world of the Bible in Israel, Jordan and Italy.
And since 2011, has supervised excavations in the Roman era village in Synagogue at Hukkok
in Israel's Galilee region.
He's been an associate research fellow
at the William F. Albright Institute
for Archaeological Research in Jerusalem
and is a founding co-chair of the Archaeology
of Roman Palestine Program Unit
of the Society of Biblical Literature.
And Dr. Grainis Wife Mary
have three children Priscilla Hannah and John,
currently live in Springville, Utah, Hank.
I'm continually amazed at the people that we bring on here
and how they've been everywhere
in so many different areas where he's been
and so excited to have Matthew Gray with us today.
Welcome to the podcast today, man.
Thank you very much.
It's great to be here with both of you.
John, just on a personal note,
there's just nobody like Dr. Gray.
I consider him a close friend, teach together, BYU,
and if I ever have a question, I know who I can ask.
If it says anything to do with the Bible,
I can go to my friend Matt Gray
and he's gonna give me the answers.
It's like having an encyclopedia
just available at any time with a fun personality.
Oh, that's great kind of you Hank.
I'm not sure what kind of answer you get
in those questions, but it's always great
to have those conversations with you. I've been looking forward to this for
quite a while, just having mad on and I'm just really excited to share him with the rest of the world.
We're grateful that you're here because I think when people encounter these chapters,
there's a great tendency to go, I just don't get this and it's this really old ancient stuff and
what do I do with it? And so hopefully some people will really get some answers today and myself included, I'm ready to take notes.
Okay, well thank you both, you're very kind for having me on, thank you.
Well, Matt, we want to kind of hand over the reins to you and say, how do you want to approach
the ancient tabernacle here? Both we have chapters in Exodus and Leviticus,
and as John and I read through them all, we've learned how to sacrifice animals.
Move blood around.
And let's turn this over to an expert and say, how would you approach this section of Come Follow Me?
Right, yeah, thank you.
So we'll do our best.
As you said, this is very technical, complicated material.
The block of material that we're looking at today, of course, is Exodus, chapter 35 through 40,
Leviticus 1, 16 and 19, and the material
around it is equally as helpful. So in total, we're looking at about 30 chapters worth of materials.
That's extremely complex. It's very technical dealing with the ancient tabernacle in the wilderness,
the ancient Levitical priesthood, the sacrificial rituals of ancient Israel that they would perform in this tabernacle or temple space,
all of which is the foundational material for later Israelite temple worship.
And so I think we might do, is start with just a few background observations first.
Let's kind of set up the context a little bit. Let's talk about the challenges of studying this material
along with the advantages, the reasons why we would want to study this material.
And then I think what we might do is just go thematically through it. This is one of those blocks
of scriptural text that is very difficult to go through chapter for chapter with the cubits
and the measurements and the sacrificial codes and procedures. So I think in this particular case,
taking a step back and seeing bigger pictures and making larger observations might be a useful approach so that later as you're doing personal study or studying in your
Sunday school, you're then able to plug in the specific chapters into that larger picture.
So if that works for you guys, maybe we'll start with some background context and move forward.
This is taking place right after Israel had their major experience with God at Mount Sinai,
which happened in the first part of Exodus.
The experience where God appeared on the mountain, the Israelites were at the base of Mount Sinai,
Moses served as kind of a mediating figure to go back and forth.
And as part of that theophany or experience that they had with God, of course, came the revelation of the Torah itself,
according to the narrative, and all of the laws that sometimes sometimes looking back we call the law of Moses.
And as part of that law of Moses' instruction that was given at Mount Sinai and the narrative comes these several chapters dealing with the logistics of the ancient tabernacle, the ancient priesthood, the ancient sacrificial rituals, and so forth.
And as I said before, all of this ends up having a very close relationship to the later temple
that would exist in Jerusalem.
We've kind of already spoken to this.
I'll just mention again briefly that this is challenging stuff for modern readers, especially
with all the measurements and the sacrificial details and so forth.
I was once told that you're a true biblical scholar when you not only know this material,
but you're actually really excited about it.
So just to articulate why we would want to be interested in this material and why we should
be excited, kind of the value of studying this block of text is, I think, twofold.
First, is simply a scriptural literacy issue.
If you just do the math and count how many chapters of the Torah is included in this block,
if you take not only the assigned scripture blocks for the, come follow me lesson, but
also the material around it.
Again, we're talking about 30 chapters of the Pentateuch or of the Torah.
That's a significant amount that the writer and inspired editors of this text included.
So clearly this was extremely important to them.
And even though it was modern audiences, we tend not to easily connect with some of this
detail for a scriptural literacy sake.
Clearly the writers of scripture and the editors of Scripture wanted us to get to know this
well.
So I think there's a scriptural literacy reason why we would want to study this.
But as Latter-day Saints, I think we have an additional reason why this material in particular
can be extremely valuable to know.
And it has to do with the fact that as modern Latter-day Saints, we have a living temple
tradition.
I think this makes us fairly unique in the larger Christian world that we have a living temple tradition. I think this makes us fairly unique in the larger Christian world
that we have building set apart that we designate as temples that we attend to perform sacred rituals
called the endowment where we do very symbolic things, right? Where symbolic clothing and do symbolic
ritual gestures and move within symbolic space to have covenant experiences.
And so as a Latter-day Saints, for whom the temple is central to our religious experience,
we have kind of an issue in relationship with the temple, and unfortunately though, a lot
of young Latter-day Saints in particular find the temple a challenging experience.
So what's supposed to be the center of their religious life ends up becoming a little
bit challenging sometimes, because when they go to the temple, the types of rituals that they experience there are so foreign to what they're used to
from their regular church routine and their daily religious life that when they experience
sacred clothing or sacred gestures or sacred space, it just becomes really foreign to them.
And a lot of ratter day saints, a lot of them don't know how to easily process that.
And they have an experience that sometimes it takes them time to come to terms with and
to wrap their head around.
I'm hearing students talk about phrase temple anxiety.
Sometimes they have anxiety going to the temple because they know that it's special.
They know that it's central to our religious life.
They often just don't know what to make of it and how to learn about it and understand
what they're doing there.
And so I think that one of the most important things
that we can do for not only young Latter-day Saints,
but also anyone going to our modern Latter-day
Saint temples is to develop a temple literacy,
just like we would with a scriptural literacy,
getting to know our scriptural text better,
I think we can develop a temple literacy
that comes from a lot better preparation
than we sometimes offer.
And I'm really grateful to know that church leaders
in recent past, President Nelson, Elder Bennar,
Elder Packer before him had all encouraged a more robust
form of temple preparation.
And so I like to think about temple preparation
for Latter-day Saints, kind of like learning a language.
If you do not spend the time to learn the grammar
and vocabulary of a certain language,
let's say German, and you don't know that language,
but yet you find yourself in Munich. and now you're just surrounded by German language and German culture, you can enjoy aspects of that for sure, but when people start talking to you, it's going to feel like a very foreign experience, and there's going to be a lot of confusion, a lot of misunderstanding, a lot of frustration, and going to the temple, I think, can be a lot like that, where if you do not know the language of the temple, the language of ritual and symbolism, and yet you immerse yourself in this foreign environment,
it's going to feel very confusing, somewhat frustrating even, and that often is not conducive
to any kind of spiritual experience.
And so using that language metaphor then, if learning the language of ritual and symbolism,
the type of things that we would encounter in a temple space, if that is like learning a normal language, that means that we need to pay a certain price
to learn the vocabulary.
We need to learn the grammar.
We need to learn how sentence structure works.
And if we pay the price to learn that language and then go to that space, what was once a very
frustrating and confusing experience can now become a very communicative experience where
it now was said, you not only know what's going on, but it is meaningful to you.
And it's revealing things to you whereas before, it felt like things were being concealed from you.
So I like to think of temple preparation for Latter-day Saints as learning a language, something we need to do.
We need to open the grammar books and start learning how sacred ritual and sacred symbolism works.
And in the terms of temple worship broadly throughout ancient and modern history,
I don't know if there's a better place to go than to this block in the book of Exodus and Leviticus.
So I really think that, again, just to finalize our learning of language metaphor,
I think that this material and Exodus, in a lot of ways, should be the primer.
It should be Temple 101. It's just simply the
origins of ancient Israelite temple worship, how it functioned, how that sacred space worked,
and if we can spend time really getting to know this material, it will be like learning the
vocabulary and grammar of this language that will significantly inform our own modern temple
experience. Beautiful.
That's so important.
As you and I were talking about this earlier, I remember you saying,
you don't have to know everything when you first get started.
But man, if you know a little bit, if you're going to go to Munich and you know
a little bit of German, you're going to have a much better experience than if you know nothing.
Exactly right.
You'll be able to find the bathroom and be able to, you know, find a good restaurant and just
the little tiny things.
And it doesn't take a lot to get started into temple language. And then the more often you go,
I think the more you learn the language, one thing I've been surprised with in the last
few years at BYU is as I've studied the Old Testament, how much more I've understood our
temple experience, our modern temple experience. There's been aha moments as you study the
Old Testament and even the new and go, oh, oh, I'm seeing it now. I'm seeing it more.
We're the ones who I think sometimes separate out the intellectual learning process from
the spiritual experience process. And I think it's really important to note that Joseph Smith,
for example, did not see that false dichotomy. He said for him, learning was part of the
spiritual experience. So it
doesn't come cheaply, but if we can pay the price to learn this language, it makes all
the difference in the world to facilitate profound spiritual experience in that temple space.
But having said that, I do want to make a few nuanced comments about that, though, because
I think it's really important to note that temple literacy for modern Lareda saints definitely
includes looking at the similarities
between the ancient temple
within the book of Exodus and Leviticus
and the modern temple,
but I think it's just as important to recognize the differences.
I think that temple literacy means
that we understand those points of contact
and those points of shared conceptual vocabulary
between the ancient temple of Israel
and the modern Latter-day Saint Temple experience,
but also the significant differences because it really is not exactly a one-to-one comparison.
Sometimes we just automatically assume that everything we would do in a temple today
is exactly what happened anciently, and that's actually not the case. I think there are some really
key differences that we also need to know, because those are extremely instructive. I think that
there are cultural differences when talking about these two different temple systems,
ancient Israel and the modern Latter-day Saint Endowment,
we're talking about one that is literally part
of the ancient Middle East and the other
that is part of the modern Western world.
Those are two very different cultural settings.
And I've always appreciated restoration scripture
emphasizing that God in fact works
with different people of different times
and speaks them according to their language and cultural understanding.
So that's something that we see both in the Book of Mormon, the doctrine and covenants,
has that teaching as well.
And so I think that's observation number one to point out in terms of the differences.
There will definitely be cultural differences, ideas of sacrificial animal slaughter
and incense burning resonates with the spiritual and religious sensitivities
of ancient peoples in a way that it doesn't today.
And there are going to be those cultural differences to be sure.
I think there's also what we might call dispensational differences for lack of a better word.
We need to remember with the ancient temple, we are talking about a time when an ancient
Israelite community is living a Torah-centered community life with a Pentatuc-centered religious system.
And as opposed to modern Laird A.S. who live very much in a Christian setting.
And so we're both coming at this from different maybe dispensational perspectives.
I think that's really important to note, especially in light of some of the things that Joseph Smith revealed,
like Section 84 of the Doctrine and Covenants talks about how the ancient,
eronic priesthood system looks different than the modern,
Melchizedic priesthood system. And so I think that there are those
uh,
sensational differences that we need to be aware of. And then finally, I think that it's
important just to note that when we're talking about the modern temple experience,
how many of Joseph Smith's revelations dealing with the temple include
language like, I'm about to reveal things to you that have not been known since the foundations of the world.
So in other words, Joseph Smith himself is setting up an expectation that there are things
that are part of the modern temples that were not part of temples in antiquity.
And so I think that those differences are really important to note and to keep our eye on
that, it's just a responsible way to study.
Having noted those cultural, dispensational, and revelatory differences, though, I will say
that there is some really key shared conceptual vocabulary that we can learn by studying how the
ancient Israelite temple functioned in its context, in its time, and in its place, we can learn things
like how sacred space operates, how sacred space can be partitioned out and go from zone to zone, how sacred clothing
works for priests functioning in that sacred set of part space, how ritual gestures and
certain ritual actions can work, and that is the basic vocabulary for later development
and various religious communities, not just Latter-day St. communities, but a Catholic
Mass, a Greek Orthodox service, all of which draw upon that great tradition of ritual and symbolism that's really to start
in this block of material from the Book of Exodus.
So again, just to kind of plug that idea of temple literacy, focusing on both the similarities
and the differences between biblical and restoration temples, as well as the important cultural
context of each.
I think that's just some really important nuanced observations to make before we proceed.
Matt, you've used just a couple of phrases.
I love our listeners to make sure
that we're on the same page when you say Pentateuch.
I mean, we say this one a lot,
but if you could just explain the idea of sacred space,
I love that in what we're looking at,
you could move that, the tabernacle.
We don't have mobile temples now,
but if you could talk about sacred space and
the Pentateuch and the Torah, just quick. Definitely. Yeah, sure. So the words Torah and Pentateuch in some
ways can be interchangeable. Both are references to the first five books of Moses in the Hebrew Bible
or what Christians call the Old Testament. Pentateuch is just the Greek term for the five books
and Torah is the word for for the law or the way or the teaching.
And so those are just two different technical terms that are often used for genesis through
Deuteronomy.
And of course in our conversation today, we're right in the middle of that material.
So when we talk about Torah-based or Pentatucal material, that's what we're talking about.
And so we're going to be focusing on those passages from Exodus, really, frankly, from Exodus 25 through 40, and then Leviticus 1 through 16.
And even though technically our lesson is a little bit slimmer than that, really, it's
that entire block from Exodus 25 through Leviticus 16 that we'll be talking about today.
So everything we're going to be discussing in our overviews of this material comes from
that block of scriptural text from the Torah or the Pentateuch.
And we'll get to sacred space in just one moment. I'll just say again, that's a lot to cover.
So clearly, we won't be able to do everything in exhaustive detail today. So I would strongly
encourage everybody to do what Elder Holland suggested recently in an interview and get a good
study Bible and some good study resources and reference materials and just kind of work your
way through this. I think that's extremely important.
Elder Ballard also recently taught that we need to consult experts
and expert materials in terms of supplemental resources.
And I think it's just extremely valuable to get both
Latter-day Saint and non-Latter-day Saint perspectives
as we're working through it.
I just want to say one more thing before we get to your
really important question, John, about the nature of sacred space.
And that is, how do we interpret this?
Very technical as we go from the different courtyards of the tabernacle.
We're going to talk about the priestly system and clothing.
I think the idea of how to interpret this is also kind of a final observation we want
to make up front because there are a lot of different interpretations from a lot of
different faith communities.
Every time you go online to look into research on the tabernacle, you inevitably come
across a lot of different and very enthusiastic interpretations.
We as Larry St. John are not the only ones to be, perhaps, overly enthusiastic about our look for search for hidden meanings and so forth.
From a Christian perspective, a lot of Christian communities will look back on this material and see references to Jesus or kind of hidden gestures towards the death of Jesus. As a Latter-day Saints, I noticed that a lot of people in our community do a similar approach,
and then sometimes you'll even overlay that with, you know, looking, trying to find meanings
for the Latter-day Saint plan of salvation hidden in here.
And I think those are all really interesting exercises and projects, but I do want to keep
in mind that in the context of ancient Israel, those were probably not the primary ways
to view this material.
And so what we're going to do here, at least as I kind of walk us through this overview,
is not pay attention as much to some of these very different and very enthusiastic interpretations
of potential meanings. What I want to do is really focus on the text itself. What does the text say
about this space and about these rituals, and try to understand it in its ancient Israelite context,
which is an ancient Middle Eastern setting.
So there are going to be some differences
to how we might see that today.
But I think if we can wrap our head around that first,
and spend most of our time with that today,
that historically contextualized and scripturally focused approach,
then listeners or viewers can proceed how they feel best in terms
of other meanings that they find important or significant or that resonate within their modern
faith tradition. So I just wanted to make that final observation about how we might interpret
this material. So let's go ahead and talk about it in terms of its ancient biblical and ancient
Israelite cultural setting. Matt John, before we jump into the actual text itself and the details,
let me ask you something. As a father and as a religion teacher, I want to, I want to help my
students and my children be better prepared for temple experience. Something they've looked
forward to, their entire life, something they've sung about, thought about, been taught about,
they've had pictures of the temple in their room, and yet that first day in the temple
they can come away confused or disappointed.
And that's heartbreaking.
So how do you think this material could help us as parents and grandparents better prepare
our teenagers to become more temple literate?
I think that in the latter days in culture broadly, there is a real reticence to talk about
the temple in any way outside of the temple.
I mean, everyone I was young and getting ready to go to the temple.
Temple preparation basically consisted of someone telling me that the temple is a symbolic
place.
It's sacred and I'm not sure if I can say anything else, so I won't say anything else.
And obviously, I didn't go in very well prepared or very well informed. But the reality is just by even studying this canonized material within the scriptural text,
we are given all sorts of ways to understand sacred space, sacred clothing, sacred rituals,
and just by spending time as parents or grandparents, as teachers of ancient scripture at BYU,
helping our students to become more familiar with this ancient
ritual space and these ancient ritual actions and gestures. That in and of itself is preparing
people to go into the modern Latter Day St. Temple experience, just with a framework to better
process what they're going to experience when they see sacred clothing or sacred rituals
or hand gestures or spaces. So I feel like one of the best resources that we have
for temple preparation has always been right under our nose,
but it's our reticence to say too much
that keeps us from really engaging with this material
in a way that could provide robust and exciting temple preparation
for young Latter-day Saints rather than the throw them into the deep end
and let them figure it out one day.
So I'm a big advocate of integrating a responsible
and contextualized study of the ancient temple
into our modern temple preparation,
recognizing the similarities and the differences,
both are really instructive as we prepare.
I think I probably could have done a better job
of preparing my kids and other people,
like when I was a bishop,
I do remember telling people,
look, you're gonna walk into into about 3000 BC, which is great. This is a restored church and there's things that have always
been part of the gospel that are restored now. But what I want you to do is look for Christ in
every way you can while you're there. I hope that helped him. I think today I learned some things
that maybe I could have done even better, but I always felt like you're going into a world of symbolism
and it was a different way of teaching
and doing things back then and just be,
just knowing that hopefully will help you see,
oh, we're gonna be taught by symbols today
instead of just by words.
But look for Christ in those symbols.
That's how I used to try to prepare people.
But I think what we're doing today could be even more specific.
I'm excited to hear Matt how you take some of the language
in these chapters and prepare people for hearing similar things
in our modern temple experience.
Okay, so the first observations that I think we should make
about the ancient Israelite tabernacle is, first of all, the nature of tabernacle space.
I think it's really instructive.
I just wanted to highlight three main aspects of this.
The first one is John, what you would have to about earlier, the idea of sacred space.
What is sacred space?
The word sacred or holy in ancient Hebrew is kadoch.
The word means literally something that is set apart or different from all of its
surrounding.
So if something or some one or some day is holy or sacred, it literally means it's set
apart from everything around it.
And the image that we're bringing up on the screen here is a wonderful artistic reconstruction
of the way in which the tabernacles described in the book of Exodus.
This is done by an archaeological illustrator named Balak Balaj
who's a Hungarian artist who does wonderful artistic
reconstructions of all sorts of archaeological discoveries
from the biblical world.
And his website is called archaeologyillistrated.com.
Some wonderful images.
We're gonna use a few of his images today
just to help to visually make sense of what we're describing
here.
But if you look at this first image,
which is an artistic reconstruction of the tabernacle in its space out there in the Sinai desert,
you'll notice that this space is physically set apart by a series of outer curtains. All the tents
in the background, that's where the Israelites will live in these desert wanderings in the narrative.
That's their daily, what's called profane or secular space,
that's where they're cooking their meals,
that's where they're living their lives.
But by these outer tent curtains,
this is taking certain space and setting it apart,
making it wholly dedicated to the God of Israel.
And this space is now the sacred space of God's dwelling.
So that's observation number one is sacred space,
is set apart space.
For those who are listening, you can come to our YouTube channel, look up follow him on YouTube
and you can see our interview here or you could also come to our website follow him.co, follow him.co.
Okay Matt, let's get back to what we were describing here. So just two or three more observations about
the nature of this tabernacle space first and then we'll talk about a little bit of its functionality. So once we've identified this as sacred or set apart space, holy, set apart to the
God of Israel, the next observation is that the way that the book of Exodus describes this space
is that it's God's dwelling. As we know, this is going to be the portable version of the later
stationary temples that will be built in Jerusalem in the later biblical periods as
kind of proto-temple space or sacred space. This was seen in ancient Israel as God's dwelling. This is his tent
So if Israelites dwell in their tents in the desert
God dwells among his people by living in his tent or his house later on the
Stationary permanent temple in Jerusalem will be referred to as the house of the God of Israel.
So this is God's dwelling place. And so there's going to be a lot of language in these Exodus and Leviticus chapters about God dwelling with his people in his tent.
I will dwell among you. I will be your God. You will be my people. This is all very central to the covenantal language of ancient Israel. And so in addition to seeing this as God's house,
it would have been seen in ancient Israel.
Sometimes we also can see images here
of the original garden.
You know, there's a lot of similarities
in the way that the tabernacle will be decorated
and the way the garden of Eden is described
in the narratives of Genesis chapters two and three.
And so that combined idea of this being God's house,
God's dwelling place, and that God's house or dwelling place
is very much adorned like the garden of the book of Genesis.
I think those are two really important observations
to make about the nature of this sacred space
as seen through the eyes of ancient Israel.
And then finally, the last thing I'll say about the nature
of this space is that if this place
is seen as God's house or God's tent or God's dwelling among the larger community of Israel,
that makes this sacred or set apart space the meeting place between the heavenly realm and the
earthly realm. So this idea of seeing temple space as the meeting of heaven and earth, this is where
Israel comes to commune with the
God of Israel. This is the one place on earth that you can enter and in its sacred nature,
it's set apart to allow you to commune with the heavenly realm. So between the ideas of being
God's house and God's dwelling place, kind of a lot of garden imagery here, but also the idea of
the temple or the tabernacle space as being the meeting
place between heaven and earth. That way, by the way, it kind of functions like the mountain
narratives of a lot of the earlier Genesis stories where patriarchs would go to mountains,
build altars, but it's that same idea of where heaven and earth meet. And so I think that all of
those observations would feel very at home in ancient Israel, and certainly there's a lot of those
concepts that would still resonate with modern Latter-day Saints going to the temple today as God's house, as holy space, as the meeting
place between heaven and earth and as the place where you can go to commune with the God of your
community. I've heard it said before, Matt, that you've got these two circles, heaven and earth,
in the garden before the fall, they're overlapping, and then you have the fall and they separate,
and then you can bring them back together and where they touch,
you know, where they're starting to come back together and they overlap. You could call that
little area of the two circles, the temple. I've seen that on the Bible project.
So certainly the creation stories and the Garden of Eden stories from the Book of Genesis
definitely have a lot of imagery that resonates with the ways in which these writers describe the sacred space of the Tabernacle.
So there's definitely a connection between Tabernacle space and creation and Edenic space in the Hebrew Bible, and frankly a lot of the Tabernacle design and description was itself patterned after Israel's experience at Mount Sinai. This place where they would come to meet God, God was at the top of the mountain, they were at the bottom of the mountain, and in that story of Exodus 19 through 24, there's
basically three zones of sacred space on that mountain. There's Israel at the bottom where they
would offer the sacrifices, there's the place in the middle where certain individuals like Aaron
and some of the elders would go, and then there's the highest part of that mountain, which is where
Moses would encounter the God of Israel to facilitate that theophany and that
covenant-making experience. In a lot of ways, that cosmic mountain experience that Israel had at
Mount Sinai will itself be replicated in this Tabernacle temple space. It's like the Tabernacle
allows the Sinai experience to continue to be a living, ever-present reality among Israel going forward, to kind of keep them connected with the God that appeared to them Mount Sinai experience to continue to be a living ever-present reality among Israel going forward,
to kind of keep them connected with the God that appeared to them out Mount Sinai. So yeah, a lot of
temple, a lot of mountain, garden, imagery, heaven and earth meeting, it's a lot of really powerful
imagery here, both for ancient Israel, and I also think for modern later days' saints as well.
And I don't mean to jump ahead here, but so then think about the temple then in Jesus' day.
It wasn't one of the courts called the Court of Gentiles. I mean, is there also a three-part division there then in Solomon's
temple? Yeah, that's a great question. So in later temples as built in Jerusalem,
there would be additional courtyards. They were added to the original three courtyards of the tabernacle
space. So by the time you get to the temple in the days of Jesus and the first century, the temple of Herod, in that case,
still had the tripartite or threefold spaces of the ancient Israelite temple.
They were still the outer court of sacrifice, the inner court with the menorah and the table of showbred, and then the holy of holies.
Of course, the covenant was gone by them.
But beyond those three main sacred zones of Herod's temple, then we're also added
additional courtyards that did not exist in the earlier Israelite period like the Court
of Women or the Court of the Gentiles. And it's all part of Herod's attempt to expand
the temple complex in ways that included much more of the social and economic dynamics
of Jerusalem. But the same threefold sacred zones of the ancient Israelite temple were still very much in place at the center of Herod's temple complex.
I love what you said. Sacred means set apart, means kadosh. This is as some set apart space.
I think I've often heard it explain. This was like a portable temple, a portable sacred space as they moved around in the wilderness
until they could find a permanent home type of thing.
Yeah, this is the house of God dwelling with them in his tent as the Israelites are living in their
tent and as they get settled into the promised land and start building their own permanent homes,
then God gets his own permanent home in the space of the Jerusalem temple.
Pick up maybe where we left off then. So we had just gone through a few preliminary observations
about the nature
of tabernacle space, the idea of sacred space, God's dwelling, and the meeting place of heaven
and earth. So this next image, again, produced by Belagio Balac, who does a great artistic
reconstruction of aspects of the outer court of the ancient tabernacle. This gives us an
opportunity to make a few preliminary observations about the functionality of this tabernacle space.
Like, what actually happened here? What was the purpose of the rituals that would be performed
in this space? And for here, I think it's useful to mention basically three general observations.
Number one, because this is seen in its ancient Near Eastern context as the House of God or the
dwelling tent of God and its house, a lot of the rituals of this space reviewed by the ancient
Israelites as rituals that were designed to maintain God's presence. We want to do things that will not
only allow God to be comfortable living among us, but that will encourage him to be living among us.
And one of the differences between an ancient Israelite mindset and probably a modern Christian or
later they say mindset would be that in this ancient setting, one of the ways in which you
attract the God of Israel to keep him in his house is by offering certain things
that provide a sweet savor or a pleasing odor. There's a lot of that language that
the book of Exodus uses to describe the smell of the barbequeing meat or the
smell of the incense rising from the incense altar, all of which were used to maintain the presence of the God of Israel in this space.
It's a very common idea in the ancient Middle East.
The actual smell you're talking about.
Exactly. Yeah, it was very common in the ancient Near East
to imagine the God of the community living in God's house.
But if it's his house, he needs a table and he needs food and he needs things that will
keep him wanting to come back
And so as part of that ancient Middle Eastern culture the Israelites were very attuned to that
Sensitivity which is if this is God's house we need to keep him happy
We need to make sure that he is constantly smelling the barbecue and smelling the incense and so it's anytime in the book of Exodus or Leviticus
You read language of the pleasing odor or a sweet saver, that's very common ancient
Near Eastern language for maintaining the presence of the deity in that space.
So that's one observation. They need to maintain God's presence. The second functionality of
this space, meaning the purpose of the ritual activities in this space, was to provide sacrifices,
or to offer sacrifices, that would provide Israel with the necessary purification to be in
God's presence, the holiness, concepts, the idea of a ritual purity are very important
to these ancient Israelite communities.
And the idea that to maintain God's presence among us, we need to be ritually pure and maintain
those standards of holiness.
And so these sacrificial rituals that would be performed in the outer court of the tabernacle
were often designed
to provide purity or sanctification or even languages of reconciliation and atonement.
Out of all the biblical material, both old and new testaments, Exodus and Leviticus have
by far the most references to ideas of atonement and reconciliation, all in the concepts of the
sacrificial rituals that would occur in this temple space.
So that's kind a functionality number two.
And then functionality number three is this is also going to be the space of priestly
mediation.
What I mean by that is in ancient Israel, not everybody within the community could enter
the sacred space of God's house and perform certain rituals in this ancient Israelite setting.
There was one group of priests that were set apart based on their lineage.
And this set apart group of Levites or Aaronic or Aaronite priests were set apart to be mediators
between Israel and God, their intercessors.
So the idea being that the rituals of this space were designed to be facilitated by these priestly mediators
who would represent Israel through some ritual actions.
They would represent Israel to God, but then through other ritual actions, they would represent
God to Israel.
And so there is this mediating link between Israel and God, between heaven and earth, and this
set apart priesthood system of Exodus and Leviticus is designed to have these
priests as that mediating link.
And as you can probably imagine, centuries later in the context of early Christianity,
looking back on this material, you can imagine new testament writers finding both in the
sacrificial rights of atonement and in the idea of priestly mediation, some really great metaphorical
vocabulary to help understand the death of Jesus.
Jesus is our great mediator or our great high priest.
He's the great intercessor between the community and God, between heaven and earth, or Jesus's
death is like the great atoning sacrifice.
He's like that animal only.
It's in some bigger eternal sense. That's going to be the language that new
Testament writers will use looking back on this space and using the functionality of this tabernacle space to provide them with all sorts of
rich vocabulary to try to make sense of Jesus's death and his role in a post crucifixion and post-resurrection world.
I've noticed that in the book of Hebrews that the writer of the book of Hebrews is very much interested in making those connections
between the ancient Tabernacle and Jesus, is that right?
That's exactly right.
Yeah, the book of Hebrews is the new testament version
of what we're reading today.
So Hebrews, again, centuries later
in a post-crucifixion context,
will look back on this Tabernacle material,
the rituals of sacrificial atonement, and the rituals of priestly mediation.
And we'll use those aspects of the ancient Tabernacle to describe Jesus.
So Jesus is our great high priest, or he's our great atoning sacrifice.
Hebrews is a great example of a new testament commentary on the Tabernacle material we're reading today. I love this idea of the priest mediating not only representing Israel to God,
but sometimes representing God to Israel.
And I don't know, it just sent me to Alma 13.
Remember this verse, the priests were ordained after the order of his son in a manner
that thereby the people might know in what manner to look forward to his son for redemption.
And whenever I've read Alma 13, and I'm just talking about Melchizedek, though, Melchizedek priesthood, but it sounds like if you watch what the priest do,
you will learn something about what Jesus does. Is that a fair interpretation of that?
Do you think?
Yeah, I think so. I think Alma 13 is playing very much in the same rhetorical space as the book of
Hebrews, right? In fact, it's drawing a lot of language, a lot of similar language between Hebrews
and Alma 13, a lot of the order of Melchizedek as opposed to the order of Aaron, the idea of
a great mediating high priest rather than the earthly shadow of that ultimate priest.
So there's a lot of language there in Alma 13 that resonates very well with what we see
in Hebrews as a kind of a Christian commentary on this space.
How we do now is walk through both the priestly mediation part in a little bit more detail
and then shift over to the sacrificial rituals themselves as we walk through the different
court yards.
If that sounds like a good plan, let's go ahead and start.
Let's look at the priest a little more carefully.
When we're talking about the priesthood that functioned
within this ancient tabernacle space, we need to remember that there are a few key differences
between how ancient Israel viewed its priestly system and how modern Latter-day Saints with
you priesthood today. One of those key differences is that in ancient Israel priesthood was based
on lineage rather than issues of morality or ethics or
righteousness or even feeling called to certain priesthood offices. We're talking about a group of
Levites and priests that were set apart based on lineage. To understand this ancient priestly
system, we have to remember that out of all the 12 tribes of Israel, the Torah separated
one of those tribes, the tribe of Levi as the group that would be the priestly mediators
for the rest of the community. I think it's helpful to imagine it as three concentric circles.
If you imagine the outer circle being the larger tribe of Levi, if you were born into the
tribe of Levi, you were by definition a Leviate. And among all those
Leviates, they would be the temple servants. The Leviates would be the ones who would
set up and take down the tabernacle accoutrements, and they would be the ones who would mop up
the courtyard floors at the end of the day. And later Israelite history, they would be
the ones to sing hymns, to accompany the various sacrifices. Those were all the ways in which Levites were the temple servants. Now within the larger tribe
of Levi, those Levites who were descended from Aaron were called the Aaronic or Aaronide
priests. They were the ones who were set apart to be the ritual specialists. So if the
larger Levite tribe would be the temple servants, the eronic or erinied priests
within that tribe would be the ritual specialists who would help facilitate sacrifice, who would
help facilitate the incense burning, and who would actually perform the rituals that mediated
between Israel and God.
So, that's the difference between the Levites and the Aaronic priests. Within that Aaronic
priestly circle would be one final circle in the middle of the first born of Aaron, that
line was designated as the line of high priests. And this is a phrase that to let modern
Loday Saints call us to mind ideas of Melchizedek priesthood office, that's not what we're talking
about here. When the Old Testament or Hebrew Bible talks about Aaronic high priests,
what they're referring to is the presiding Aaronic priest. And that presiding Aaronic priest
was typically taken, or at least ideally drawn, from the line of Aaron's firstborn.
And that Aaronic high priest or presidingiding Aaronic priest, would be the one
who would function as the ultimate mediator between Israel and God. He would be the one who,
once a year, would go through the veil into the Holy of Holies to make a tonement or intercession
or purification for all the community of Israel. Those are the three concentric circles to understand
how the ancient Israelite priesthood function.
Some similar vocabulary to what we might use today, but in terms of how it actually functions,
it does look quite different.
So just a quick review then.
So we have the Levites in the outer circle as the temple servants.
Among those Levites, the Aaronic priest says the ritual specialists, actually performing
the ceremonies on behalf of Israel, then the presiding Aaronic priest or Aaronic high
priest as being the ultimate mediator
of this lineage-based system. Matt, if I'm of the tribe of Ephraim or Manasseh or something,
I don't work in the temple. That's right. What I come over, what I come over and look
inside, what would I be doing? So in just a minute, we'll shift over to how do these actual spaces
work, like how does the outer court work and the inner court, and there at that point we'll see how
non-Levites among the Israelite community, how they would interact with the space, but within
the space itself it's the Levites, the priests, and the high priest who will be doing all of the
work of intercession or mediation between the community and the God of Israel. And they were
different clothes, correct? They did. Yeah, and so that's the final observation I want
to make about the Levitical or Areronic priest is the way in which they were set apart in the Pentateuch,
or in the Torah. And in Leviticus, chapters eight and nine, and in Exodus 28, 29, and 39 and 40.
So there's actually, you know actually about six whole chapters here.
If you want to learn more about the ancient priesthood
and how they were ordained and how they were consecrated,
how they were set apart, Exodus 28, 29, 39 through 40,
and Leviticus 8 through 9, is the material
where it will now summarize.
So the way in which Aaronic priests and Aaronic high priests
were set apart or consecrated
actually had a really interesting series of rituals starting with a washing in water.
So to set them apart, they would be washed with water, then they would be clothed in sacred
clothing.
And again, sacred meaning set apart clothing, clothing that will look different than
anyone else in the community.
We'll talk more about that clothing in just a moment. And then finally, after they were washed with water
and dressed in sacred clothing,
they were then finally anointed with consecrated oil.
And then there would be a whole series of sacrifices
that would be performed after that,
but it was that series of rituals
that would set them apart to function.
Now, they were naturally born into a priestly system,
but before they
began their ministry within the tabernacle space, they would have to go through those set-apart
rituals of being washed, clothed, anointed, and then offer certain sacrifices. And once they've
gone through that process, they are now formally sanctified or ordained to be able to function
in this tabernacle space. So, what I want to do, though, is having mentioned the general rituals
of setting these priests apart,
I do want to take just a minute and look at the clothing
that set them apart.
So after they were washed and before they were anointed,
they would be dressed in sacred clothing
that is described in Exodus and Leviticus.
This is another one of those moments
where it's not exactly the same as what we would do
in the temple today, but there is a lot of shared
conceptual vocabulary in how these ancient priests would do in the temple today, but there is a lot of shared conceptual vocabulary
in how these ancient priests were dressed for this temple space
and how sacred clothing in a modern Latter-day St. Temple might work as well.
So let me just give you a few quick examples. Let's start with the Aaronic priests.
For those who are being set apart to be the ritual specialists or the Aaronic or Aaronite priests,
they would be dressed in the following items.
And this is all directly from
Exodus 28 and 29. They would be dressed first in a white robe, a long white robe that would
physically set them apart from anyone else. And I think it's important to point out that that
is different than how most people would dress. I know we're used in our Bible art, especially in our
Jesus art, we're used to seeing Jesus walking around in a long white robe. That's just not historically accurate.
Most people would have worn other types of clothing.
The only people in Israelite or Jewish antiquity that you would see walking around in long
white robes are the priests functioning in the temple.
So that set them apart because it was different.
Most people did not wear long white robes, but the priests did.
So they were given long white robes of priesthood.
Then they were given a cap to go on their heads.
And you can see, by the way, I've highlighted two
of the figures of priest and a high priest
from that earlier belage painting of the Tabernacle courtyard.
So we've enlarged those just so we can envision
how each one are dressed.
We're now talking about the one on the left,
of course, the eronic priest.
So after dressing them in the long white robe of priesthood, they were then given a cap, or sometimes you can translate it as a turban or a bonnet,
but it's a cap that would go on their head. And then the third piece of clothing would be a sash
that would go around their waist. So the three main items of clothing would be the white robe,
the white cap, and the white sash. And other than that, the priest would be bare white robe, the white cap, and the white sash.
And other than that, the priests would be barefoot because the space in which they're
functioning is sacred space.
Holy set apart space, very much like Moses at the Burning Bush, right?
You might remember at the Burning Bush, Moses will take off your sandals because the ground
on which you're standing is holy sacred ground.
And Temple or Tabernacle space was seen as holy sacred ground as well. And so so just like Moses at the Burning Bush, these eronic or eranide priests would function
barefoot on sacred space. And then the final piece of clothing that the eronic priest would wear
is what the, I think the King James calls it, linen breaches, which is basically something that again
is very unique in the ancient world and that is underwear. Most people in the ancient world did
not have underwear. That's just, that's a very modern article of clothing. But in ancient
Israel, the priests did wear underwear and I said the text sometimes call them linen breaches or
linen undergarments. The idea was that they went from the waist down to about the knees.
The reason why priests were unique in wearing this underwear, this undergarment,
linen breaches from their waist and to their knees.
It's because, as part of their duties in the outer court, they would often ascend a ramp
that would bring the sacrificial meat up to the altar.
And as you can imagine, if you're gathered in the temple courtyard and you're seeing this
priest walking up a ramp, there is a very real potential that you can see more than you
wanted to see in that particular setting.
And so the languages to cover their nakedness, they were given linen breaches as that they could
minister the altar without any concern about being exposed in a way that most people probably
just didn't want to experience that day when they went to the temple.
So those are the main items of clothing, the robe, the cap, the sash, barefoot, and then the linen breaches.
That's the clothing that set priests apart to function in
the space of the temple. So if you were an Israelite going to the tabernacle space and you wanted to
interact with the priest for a sacrifice, that's how you would know, to get their attention as
based how and how they were addressed. Now the high priest had additional items of clothing to set
him apart in his particular role, and you'll notice from the image on the right. And again, this is all from Exodus 28 and 29 and 39 and 40 that the high priest or Aaronic or presiding Aaronic priest
had the exact same clothing as the regular priest. He also had the long white robe, the white cap.
He was barefoot. He had the linen breeches on underneath as well. But he would have additional
clothing to further set him apart. And the text describes the following.
Number one, he was given a blue coat to go over his white robe.
And at the hem of that blue coat would be sewn in miniature palmagranites and bells that would rotate all around the hams of his garments. Pomegranates, of course, is a very powerful fertility image in the ancient world.
You pop it open, lots of seeds in there,
and so the idea of fertility and bounty
is definitely inherent in the pomegranates
that are on the robe.
Other images that could deal with fertility
in the ancient biblical world, of course,
would be fig leaves or those types of things.
But in this case, it's a pomegranate
because of the seeds that are inside.
So it's kind of a fertility symbol in the bells, of course,
so you can constantly hear the high priest no matter where he is functioning within the
tabernacle space, kind of making that slight noise there. But in addition to that blue robe with
the palm of granites and bells at the hams, the high priest also had item of clothing that the
text calls an aphod. An aphod is, it's basically an apron. It's a piece of cloth that wraps around
your front.
And in this particular case, the A-Fodd had various colors woven in and out. So it's this A-Fodd
or apron that would wrap around the front of the high-prease, it'd be over everything else.
And the A-Fodd was connected to a couple items. Number one, it was connected to a breastplate.
And so the breastplate would be fastened onto the aphod or this apron that he would wrap around
himself had a breastplate that had 12 stones, a precious stone, set into plate. And each one of the
stones had an inscription naming one of the tribes of Israel. Similarly, on the shoulder pieces of
the aphod were stones that were set that also had inscribed the names of the tribes of Israel, only with six on one shoulder and six on the other.
So between the inscribed stones on the breastplate and the inscribed stones on the shoulder, the high priest bore the names of Israel into his tabernacle rituals.
So again, it's the idea that he represents Israel to God as shown by these inscribed stones. So I think that's a really interesting observation
about this particular item of clothing. And of course, it's also, Latter-day Saints are often
interested to note that it's also a pouch underneath the breastplate that contains two other stones
called the urim and thummum. So the high priest would have access to these two stones. It's really
hard from the text of the Bible to know exactly how these functioned, but they do seem to have
performed some kind of divinatory role.
I mean, they somehow indicated God's will to the high priest in certain ways.
We don't know if they were like little pebbles or like they were dice, later Jewish tradition
indicated that they would light up and offer revelations in some interesting ways.
And so there's a lot of interesting later legendary explanations for how the Eurom and
Thumbin worked, but we don't know for sure from the text of Exodus,
but all we know is that there are these divinatory stones
that are placed within the pouch under the breastplate
that somehow gave the high priest access
to ascertain the will of God in various circumstances.
So those are the main items that are associated
with the aphod, the apron, the breastplate,
the shoulder stones, inscribed with the names
of the tribes of Israel.
And I'll just point out one other thing
about the a-fod before we finish this segment.
And that is, I know it's really easy as modern readers
to read through the coloring and the fabrics
and all these kind of things.
But in this case, it's actually an important observation
to make, to read those details because,
if you read the details carefully,
you'll notice that the coloring and fabric
of the a-fod matches exactly the coloring
and fabric of the templephod matches exactly the coloring and fabric of the temple veil
inside the holy place.
So it seems like the high priest garments themselves
signified that he had special access to the temple veil.
So it's almost like the aphod,
the garment to the high priest,
and the temple veil match in both the color and material,
suggesting that the high priest will have access
to that space, at least once a year on the day of atonement.
Beyond those items of clothing then, the final items that we'll mention is, the high priest did have the white cap as well, but the high priest had a gold plate that would go on the front of the cap, and it was that gold plate that was inscribed Kodeshla Yahweh or Kodeshla Adonai, a holiness to the Lord, and the idea being that not only does
he bear the names of Israel on him through the breastplate and the shoulderstone, so he
represents Israel to God, but he also represents that has the name of God sealed on his forehead.
So he also represents God to Israel as well.
So he's that ultimate mediator in the names of both Israel and the God of Israel are inscribed
on his person in the form of his sacred clothing.
And these were close to be worn, Matt. Do we know in the temple space only? Or did they wear this around camp?
No, as far as we can tell, the text doesn't go into great detail about this, but certainly in later Judaism,
this would be clothing that would only be worn in the sacred space of the temple.
So, we don't know how this would work in the tabernacle,
but in later temple structures like Solomon's Temple
and Herod's Temple, they were actually adjacent storage rooms
where the priest would go and remove their sacred clothing,
put on their street clothing,
and then go back into society,
back into the community.
So, as far as we could tell,
it probably would have been the same assumption
in the book of Exodus that the priest and the high priests
had their own tents and had their own street clothes
that they would have lived in, but when they functioned as the priest and the high priests had their own tents and had their own street clothes that they would have lived in.
But when they functioned as priest or as the high priest, it's this clothing that would have set them apart to facilitate the rituals in that sacred space.
I like this idea. It's set apart clothing for a set apart that's right.
That's appropriate to that place. It's set apart. And I like that idea.
place it's set apart. And I like that idea. I just wanted to point out to our listeners that there's a similar graphic to the one that you're showing on page 85 in the Come
Follow Me manual that shows kind of that there's three priests that are outside that are
all in white and the one that is inside the inner part of the tent is the one that is
the picture that you have on the right with the dark or blue, the breastplate. So the, what did you call them, the presiding high priest?
Yeah, those were in white. Are the eronic or erinide priests, and the one individual who is
dressed in the additional garments would be the presiding eronic priest, what we sometimes call
the high priest. So not meaning an office in the mechezetic priest of the way we use it today,
but the presiding eronic priest is called the high priest.
Yeah, I think that's a better way to understand
the function of this particular individual
within that Israelite priestly system.
This seems like he's decked to the nines.
Is that what I'm supposed to see here?
He is, this is nice stuff.
He's got gold thread and purple dye
that I know was difficult to get in that time.
So he looks good.
Yeah.
I love that everything means something.
All of those stones represent a tribe.
According to the narrative in Exodus,
yeah, Aaron is the first high priest who has set apart.
He's the first one to be washed,
to be dressed in these items of clothing,
to then be anointed,
and then perform a series of sacrifices
to initiate his high priesthood. The way that Exodus and Levit a series of sacrifices to initiate his high priesthood.
The way that Exodus and Leviticus described the continuous nature of that high priesthood is that it was meant to be Aaron's first born son
who would then continue in that office. And now in later Israelite and early Jewish history, of course,
this was always a very contested office. It didn't always pass down from eldest to eldest as originally intended.
There are certain moments where the second born of that first born line
or even later the intertestamental period occasionally this would become
a position of political appointment.
And in the later biblical world, the office of a high priest could be very contested
and become even the object of a lot of sectarian disagreement over who was the legitimate high priest.
And those are all things that feed into the conversations
of Jewish sectarianism and the time of Jesus.
And so maybe during New Testament year,
we can revisit that conversation
and talk about the nature of this priestly system
in the New Testament period.
But at least in the book of Exodus and Leviticus,
this is the ideal of how this system
is supposed to function.
This is great.
It's such an interesting thing.
I mean, here they are.
They're brought out of Egypt.
And the Lord says, we're going to build this structure with these clothes, with this,
and this is going to be how I am going to teach you, right, and communicate with you.
But I love the idea of set apart clothes, because why do we have to dress up for church?
If somebody walked in in a t-shirt and flip flops,
which happened on my mission all the time,
we would love them and welcome them in, of course.
But if you can, it's nice to have set apart clothing
for a set apart experience.
I love that idea here.
I think the holiness concept is so important in so many ways.
I mean, there's so much about our life as Latter-day Saints,
which by the way, the word saint means the holy ones.
It means the set of parted ones.
And holiness, sacredness, and sanctification,
all that's all the same word in Hebrew,
and in Greek, by the way.
And so all of those words indicate a set of partiness.
And so whether it be a set of part day
or a set of part space or a set of part people,
I mean, that's the whole idea of holiness,
holiness to the Lord, or keeping a day holy, or whatever. Yeah, I think it's a really important concept to recognize.
And frankly, I think it's a concept that helps us to realize why so much of the mosaic
law feels so arbitrary. The whole dietary law, you know, why do you keep kosher? It's
not because there's anything eternally significant about not eating pork products. It's because
they needed something to set them apart. Don't eat pig because everyone else around you does.
And I think that we have a lot of those holiness laws today as well.
Frankly, I don't know if you guys have agreed that they're not.
I wonder if the word of wisdom is basically a holiness law.
I mean, there's nothing eternally significant about not drinking wine and Jesus drank it.
Section 27 says we get to drink it again at the second coming.
But the idea is that we need something to set us apart, right?
Something to set make us different from everything around us.
Everybody drinks coffee.
Exactly.
If that's something, it's a holiness law.
Something I can use to teach my children, why do we dress up?
Because this is different.
What we're doing, this is the Sabbath day.
It's different.
It is set apart from the rest of the week.
And now we're going to go to church and it's set apart from the other places we go during the week, like the grocery store and America first credit. It is set apart.
So everything we're doing is a little different. And we can show our sign to God as president
Nelson has reminded us that Zeekele 2020 Matt, let me ask you one thing. Is this like
anything they've seen before? Is this like anything out of Egypt? Is this I mean, is this a hall just so brand new that they're going?
What are we doing?
It is Egyptians had temple endowment stuff. Yeah, that's right. Yeah, that's a great question. It's unique
There are certain things about that it's unique, but not entirely unique
So in the larger ancient Near Eastern culture that they're living in
Mesopotamians had temples, Canaanites had alter space, Egyptians had temples,
and all of these had priestly ephesians
who ministered in the sacred spaces.
And so the idea of sacred space,
God dwelling here, we need to perform rituals
to keep his attention,
and we have certain people set apart
in their clothing to perform ritual.
None of that is unique.
That is the ancient Middle Eastern world
that Israelites are part of.
This is just now focusing on,
let's now make this into the cult of the God of Israel.
And of course, not cult in the modern negative sense, but just in the ritual system sense.
If you're studying ancient Near Eastern studies, a lot of this is going to sound very familiar
in many cultures. You know, he's speaking to them in their language in the way they would understand.
I just wonder if this was all they're going, what are we doing? Yeah, now this all would have
been very, very comfortable to them, I think. All right, so now that we've discussed the Levitical priesthood and how the Levites and
Aronic priest and High Priest are set apart and how they function, what I think we'll do
now is now let's turn to the Tabernacle space itself.
And in this case, this gives us an opportunity to look at how the space is laid out and
how the different zones of this space work.
Again, going back to that idea
that we've been discussing of holiness or set-up heart space. As you can see from this artistic
reconstruction, the tabernacle is going to be set-up heart space that itself will be divided up into
three zones. This demarcation of sacred space, there's going to be an outer court, which is outside
the inner sanctuary, then within the tenth sanctuary is going to be an inner court, which is outside the inner sanctuary, then within the tenth sanctuary
is going to be an inner court or a holy place, and then beyond that, on the furthest inside
is going to be the holy of holies.
And each one of these spaces increase in degrees of holiness.
Right?
So these are zones of sacrality, or zones of holiness that become increasingly strict, the closer
you get to the holy of Holies.
Which again represents the presence of God.
It's just another brief reminder that this space that we're not looking at is meant to
represent God's presence, and that the rituals in this space are meant to maintain that presence,
and to maintain the holiness that the God of Israel emanates.
And so it needs to be a place of ritual purity, ritual purification,
and holiness as rituals proceed further and further into the space called the Holy of Holies.
So again, as modern Latter-day Saints, again, just to keep our eyes on the similarities and the
differences, there's a lot of differences here between this ancient Israelite setting and our
modern Latter-day Saints temples. But there's also a lot of shared conceptual vocabulary. The idea
of sacred space that itself is partitioned off into certain zones.
You actually move space to space.
And each space, you pass through a curtain or a veil or a partition that gets you into
the next space.
And then it gets you into the next space until you finally get into the throne room of
God, the presence of the deity in the Holy of Holies.
And so I think there's a lot about just the nature of this space, taking a step back
and just seeing how it functions and seeing how it operates that itself is instructive,
both biblically and in the restoration.
What I thought we'd do now is let's just go space by space.
I thought we would do a quick overview of what's the furniture and main activities of the
outer court, then we'll go to the inner court, and then we'll go to the Holy of Holies just
to get a feel for how these particular spaces worked.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
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