Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Exodus 35-40, Leviticus 1; 16; 19 -- Part 2 : Dr. Matthew Grey
Episode Date: May 1, 2022Dr. Matthew Grey returns and continues to discuss the sacred rituals, clothing, and the priestly system of the ancient Israelite 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two of this week's podcast.
So let's go ahead and just kind of journey through this.
I think Hank you would ask earlier about what do the average Israelites do?
How do members of other tribes interact with this sacred space?
That kind of speaks to how these different spaces were used.
So I'm going to draw heavily upon a 3D digital reconstruction of the tabernacle that was
recently done by a friend of mine
named Daniel Smith.
He's been very gracious to let us use these images
to help visually facilitate our conversation here.
He has a YouTube channel,
it's called The Messages of Christ,
where he has several videos posted on ancient Israelite
institutions, including a recent video series
on the ancient Tabernacle.
And the ways in which he walks you through it,
I think you'll find very interesting.
They might be a slightly different approach
and represent a different perspective
than what we'll try to do here.
I think these videos will do a lot with,
you know, looking back on this system
and how can we, as later Christians,
find resonance from a Christian perspective.
What we're gonna try to do here
is just try to understand how these spaces functioned
in the context of ancient Israel first.
So let's go ahead and walk through the spaces then.
So let's start with that outer courtyard.
How does the outer courtyard work?
Well, if you are an Israelite who needs to go to the temple
to provide any kind of sacrificial offering,
based on what you'll do is you'll appear at the front
of the tabernacle space.
So the outside curtain will have curtains that themselves
will be accessible by average Israelites.
So the way that ritual activity in the temple works is that an Israelite coming to the temple
will first themselves have to go through a process of ritual purification.
So they'll need to become a ritually pure through certain washings and allowing certain
time to pass.
And once they are ritually clean through their washings, they can now
enter the sacred space, go through with their offering, whether it be a goat or a lamb
or a bird or some of the various offerings they are described in the book of Leviticus.
They would take that offering, they would go through this first curtain, and they would
now find themselves in the outer court.
Now in the outer court, we have two main items of furniture that are listed in the book
of Exodus.
The first one is what's called the altar of burnt offerings.
And then the second item is called the brass labor.
It's a basin of water.
Now that you're in the outer courtyard, you need to find a priest to help facilitate your
sacrificial ritual.
And of course, you know who the priests are because they're set apart by their clothing.
So if you see an ironic priest walking around in his white robe, his cap, and his sash,
and he's barefoot, that's your guy.
Yeah, you can track him down and say,
I've got an offering here.
And together, you will now proceed
through the sacrificial offerings.
Now for these sacrificial offerings,
there's a lot of detail in the book of Leviticus.
Leviticus chapters one through seven
is basically a handbook for how priests
should be offering these sacrifices.
And as we're reading in on their handbook
of sacrificial procedure, we're able to learn a lot
about the different types of sacrifices that were offered.
There are so many details we probably don't have time
to go into here, but there's different sacrifices
and offerings for different occasions and different needs.
There's what are called burnt offerings or whole offerings.
There's peace offerings or well-being offerings. There's what are called burnt offerings or whole offerings. There's peace offerings or well-being offerings.
There's grain offerings.
There's guilt or reconciliation offerings, reparation offerings.
So so many different types of offerings, we probably won't be able to distinguish all of
those here.
But if you want more detail, again, get a good study Bible, read through those first chapters
of Leviticus, and learn about the types of offerings and the procedure, a pretty fascinating stuff to see what constituted the religious experience of
Ancient Israel in this temple space. So let's walk through some of those. Again, there'll be variation depending on the different types of sacrifices
But generally speaking here is how the process worked. If you brought your sacrifice
Let's say you have a lamb or a goat you'll sign down a priest and you and the priest together will proceed to the north side of the altar to begin the
sacrifice itself.
The sacrifice doesn't actually take place on the altar.
The sacrifice takes place to the north of the altar.
And what you'll do is first, you as an offerer will lay your hand upon the head of the
animal and designate it that this is an offering to the God of Israel.
And once you've done that, together you and the priest will hold the animal down and will slaughter the animal
by slitting its throat.
And the priest will catch the blood in a bowl.
You're then somehow gonna hang the carcass up
in the later Jerusalem temple.
There will actually be meat hooks set up there
so you can hang the carcass up on the hook,
drain the rest of the blood,
so the priest will be catching the blood.
And then what you'll do is start slitting the body of the animal, so the priest will be catching the blood. And then what you'll do is start slitting the body of the animal,
slit the hide, you'll open it up, and you'll start pulling out the different fat,
the kidneys, book of Leviticus, describes in great detail all the different inside internal bits of the animal.
You'll actually remove the animal hide, depending on the sacrifice.
Either the priest will take that home as a priestly gift,
or sometimes you will take that home as an offerer.
And now the priest basically functions as a butcher.
I mean, this whole area is like a butcher shop, at this point,
because you now've got the different animal pieces
on the table.
He would have already tossed the blood at the altar,
maybe dabbed the blood on the horns of the altar
or tossed it out at the base of the altar.
But after just disposing of the blood at the altar,
the priest will take the meat of the animal and will ascend the ramp and
will put the meat on top of the altar.
So the altar itself is basically a barbecue pit.
It's described as having a brass grate up on top and there's a fire that's underneath
it.
So the altar is not where you kill the animal, that's soft to the side.
The altar is where you roast the meat of the animal. And depending on the sacrifices, you might burn all of it up. The burnt offering or
the whole offering is where you'll take the different animal parts and you'll burn it all on the
altar. It's just one big roast that goes all the way up and the whole thing goes up to God. And
so the idea of a whole or a burnt offering is that it's all offered up to God. And the whole
thing just burns up.
Other sacrifices, though, like the Shalomim or the peace or the well-being offerings, for example,
Leviticus describes those as not being completely consumed, but by being roasted. And it's like
you're cooking the meat. And once it's done on one side, the priest turns it over and it's done
on the other side. And at that point, the priest will divide up the roasted meat, and you'll actually
eat it. The book of Leviticus describes some of those consumed sacrifices as being divided
where the priest gets the right hand shoulder of the animal, and so the priest will eat
the meat from the right shoulder of the animal, and the one who's coming to make the offering
will eat the left portion of the animal and the one who's coming to make the offering will eat the left
portion of the animal. And so right there in this sacred space, the priest will eat some meat,
you will eat some meat. And I know again, for a modern Christian or modern Latter-day Saint
perspective, this just really seems like an odd way to have a spiritual experience, but this was
a significant religious ritual in the ancient Near East, including
in ancient Israel.
And the idea is, you and God's representative, the priest, together are consuming the flesh
of the sacrificial animal that is providing you with atonement or reconciliation.
And that as a concept, right, the idea of eating the meat of the sacrifice to animal with God's representative, the priest,
itself will have long-reaching impacts into later Christian,
liturgy, and later Christian ritual in a Christian context. Of course, the bloodless version of this
is the Eucharist, or what Latter-Singles Hoffman called the sacrament. This idea of taking a sacrifice
and eating the flesh of that sacrifice,
along with God's representative, and together partaking of the sacrificial meat of the animal that
died to provide you reconciliation, is a pretty significant ritual of communion. Right? And which is
why in a Christian context, the Eucharist or the communion or the sacrament still performs those
same gestures, only it's a bloodless version of it.
Because looking backwards, Christian would say that the blood was shed by Jesus on the
cross, but we still perform the outlines of that ritual through Eucharist or sacrament
or whatever.
So the concept of eating the sacrificial meat is not as foreign to modern Christians or
modern Latter-day Saints as we might sometimes think.
But in ancient Israel, it was a very physical experience where you're eating this meat.
And then once you finish eating the meat, whatever's left, either the priest will wrap it up and
take it home or the worshipper will take that animal hide maybe and wrap it up and take it home
and finish the meat there. But in any case, the meat is to be consumed in many of these sacrifices.
And not to say because as an archaeologist, we haven't been able to talk about archaeology a lot
in this lesson because this conversation is mostly textual based.
It's just we're just looking at the description of the ancient Torah text.
But as an archaeologist, I think it's very exciting and fascinating that when we do find
archaeological sites where this type of ritual was performed.
So for example, if you go up to Northern Israel today, the site of Tel Dan, where an ancient
Israelite sanctuary was built in later centuries, long after the Tabernacle Narr today, the site of Tel Dan, where an ancient Israelite sanctuary was built in later centuries
long after the Tabernacle narratives, the Northern Kingdom of Israel built a temple to the God of Israel at the site of Tel Dan, and that's been excavated,
and in the outer courtyard of the Tel Dan sanctuary, you can see the altar, very much like what would have existed in Solomon's temple,
but in the rooms off to the side, when they discovered the bones of animals that
had been sacrificed on the altar, they noticed that in certain rooms, the bones were only
the right hand portions of the animals, meaning that there would be certain spaces where
the priests would consume the animal portions that were belonging to them based on Pentatucle
legislation.
And so, it's fun to see archaeological remains of this type of ritual experience, where
you can imagine you eating some of the meat, the priestseding some of the meat, and then discarding the bones.
Somewhere in the courtyard there, an archaeologist later came along and discovered that, at least in other sanctuary settings, but there's nothing, of course, to find from the tabernacle because it was so temporary.
It's fun to see that reflected in the material culture. That's how the sacrifice itself would be conducted. I don't know if you guys have any thoughts on things you want to unpack there before we proceed because we're just now getting started in the
ritual system, but any thoughts so far? This was one of the questions that I had wondered as a kid
was if you just sacrifice it, do you eat it? Do you eat part of it? And I think you helped answer
that. Some of them you said are fully consumed, but some you eat and then I love how you connected that to perhaps before this pass over, the
first pass over, maybe, where they ate the lamb, even to the sacrament where you take part
of that sacrifice.
Yeah, that's the later Christian version of what we're seeing here in ancient Israel.
Yeah, which helps because now you're connecting things that might seem strange to something
we're familiar with, the idea of taking that sacrifice, making it part of us by putting it inside.
There's one more set of rituals
that would have occurred in the outer courtyard,
as the average non-prestly Israelite worshipper,
your job is now done.
You've done your part.
You've brought the animal, you and the priest
have sacrificed it together.
The priest has roasted the meat,
you've maybe eaten the meat,
depending on the specific type of sacrifice.
But at this point, the priest will continue some of his ritual activities moving closer
to the sanctuary itself.
So you remember that the next item of furniture within that outer court space is a basin of
water.
As you could probably imagine, after that sacrificial ritual, the priest is going to have
a lot of blood on his hands and maybe even on his garments as well.
And so before that priest can proceed into
the next sacred space through that curtain into the holy place, the priest will need to
go to this basin of water and wash the sacrificial blood from his hands. So this basin of water
in the temple courtyard, there's no indication that it has anything to do with ritual immersion
or baptism. It's just certainly later Christian ideas that could resonate with a water feature like
this.
But in ancient Israel, this washing basin seemed to be mostly for the washing of the priests,
their hands and their feet and Leviticus as even their garments.
If any blood had gotten on them, they can wash themselves clean of the sacrificial blood
at this basin of water.
And that basin of water then also allows them to perform the necessary ritual
purification washings that would allow them to now enter the next zone of sacredness, which is
the holy place, which is just on the other side of the curtain that you see here in this picture.
For those of you activities of ritual sacrifice and then ritual washing, both the two main
activities that would have occurred in the outer court. This is another great image from Belage that he actually shows us a lot of what we just described.
In fact, this might give us a fun chance to just summarize.
You'll notice here that you see in the reconstruction, you can see the high priest walking around in his garments,
and you can see the other eronic priests walking around in their robes and caps and sashes.
You can see here on the left and the left corner, you can see the artist put in some tables.
Right? That would be the idea. That would be where some of the butcher activity would occur. You can see here on the left, in the left corner, you can see the artist put in some tables, right?
That would be the idea.
That would be where some of the butcher activity would occur.
The slaughtering of the animal, the processing of it.
Then you can see over here on the altar, you can see the priest reaching over and putting
the meat on the altar.
You can see the fire being kindled underneath it.
There he is roasting the meat.
If you go beyond that closer to the sanctuary, you can see a basin of water.
You can see the priest washing the blood from his hands, becoming ritually purified through
that basin of water. You can see the priest washing the blood from his hands, becoming ritually purified through that basin of water. And then once he's been purified, you see another priest
parting that curtain and now going into the holy place, which is the inner court of the actual
tent sanctuary. So it's in this space that now only the eronic priests can access. So I remember
each zone becomes increasingly holy and also increasingly restrictive. The outer court Israelites could be
in the outer court with the priests.
But once you pass through that initial curtain,
now you're into the holy place
and now only the priests can minister
on behalf of Israel in that space,
the closer we get to God's presence.
This is Daniel Smith's digital reconstruction
of what that interior space would look like.
In the holy place or inner court of the temple, The book of Exodus describes three main items of furniture.
There is on the south side the menorah, which is a seven branched golden candlestick.
The description of the text seems to indicate that the menorah is like a tree.
There's a lot of speculation. Is this meant to be like the tree of life?
We mentioned earlier, there's a lot of garden imagery here that connects the tabernacle
space with the paradise of God and the Garden of Eden, Genesis, chapters 2 through 3.
So there's some potential connections here with Genesis.
But in addition to this tree imagery, the seven branches of this golden candlestick or
menorah all support oil lamps.
Right?
So there's oil lamps on top.
And these lamps were meant to be lit by the Aaronic priests every morning and every
evening. So they keep it burning throughout the day. And again, what does it mean? What does it symbolize? In an
ancient Israelite setting, it's probably just has to do with representing the divine presence.
It's the divine light. It's representing God's house that we're maintaining and we're maintaining
His presence in it. So the menorah is a really important item of furniture in the holy place.
If we then turned around at a 180 and we're now on the north side of the interior space, we have the table of showbred. Here we have 12 glows
of unleavened bread, along with vessels of wine and probably some cups of incense as well.
And again, this is going to be the table of the Lord. If this is God's house, this is
the dining place of the house, right? Again, in ancient Near Eastern cultures, it was
very common to have food in the house of the deity
is a way to maintain the presence of the deity.
That's an idea that might not resonate with our modern Western thinking as much,
but in the ancient Middle Eastern context of early Israel,
this idea of maintaining God's presence in his house by setting out a feast
where symbolically he and Israel can dine together is pretty significant.
And so every Sabbath, every Saturday, the priests would come and replace these 12 unleavened
loaves and probably eat the previous ones and drink the wine and replace it and keep that
table furnished before the Lord.
So between the menorah and the table of showbred, those are two aspects of God's house that
the priests are tending to on behalf of Israel.
And then finally, the last item of furniture in the holy place is going to be the altar of incense.
So this will be the second altar of the Tabernacle, but this altar is not a sacrificial altar.
This altar is the altar that's placed right in front of the final veil,
and final veil, of course, leading into the holy of holies. But before you get into the holy of
holies, this altar of incense stands right before the curtain, and it seems to be an altar of prayer. As the Israelite priest, the Aaronic priest, would come into
this space and would take incense in their hand, they'd put the incense on this altar, which
itself has a great and a fire underneath it, and would burn the incense. God's throne room is just
on the other side. As the incense is going up, the priest will raise his hands above his head. That's
the ancient gesture of prayer that all ancient cultures used, and as the smoke went up, the priest will race his hands above his head. That's the ancient gesture of prayer that all ancient cultures used.
And as the smoke went up, the hands of the priest would go up,
and the priest would utter prayer on behalf of Israel.
And Rick sees representing Israel to God.
So as you can imagine, the smoke rising, the Israelite priest,
raising his hands above his head, offering prayer on behalf of the community of Israel,
that's going to be the main ritual activity of this particular feature.
And for this feature, I actually should take a step back and notice that in Exodus chapter
29, and Leviticus chapter 9, we are told about what's called the daily offering.
So in addition to all the different ritual activities that's occurring with the different
sacrifices in the courtyard, the different lamp tending and table setting of the holy place, the Pentateuch legislates that twice
a day a communal ritual would be offered by the priests on behalf of Israel. It's called the daily
offering. It would happen every morning around 9 a.m. and every afternoon around 3 p.m.
and every day a lamb would be offered for Israel in the
outer court on behalf of the entire community, the nation of Israel, and then the
priest would come into the holy place and offer incense as the smoke rises as
hands are above his head. He's offering prayer on behalf of Israel to God. That
ritual sequence of sacrifice and prayer at the incense altar would have happened
every morning and every afternoon, and it would conclude by the priests having just represented Israel
to God through the hand raised prayer, the priests will now turn around and represent God
to Israel by emerging from the sanctuary.
So, he's now back into the outer court who will raise his hands above his head again and now pronounce the
priestly blessing of God upon Israel.
So he's represented Israel to God through the prayer, but now he's going to represent God to Israel through the blessing.
And so when he's out in the outer courtyard who will raise his hands and bless Israel after the prayer,
bless Israel with the language of Numbers 6. May the Lord bless you and keep you. May the Lord's face shine upon you and give you peace.
And that twice a day communal ceremony, right? chapter 6, may the Lord bless you and keep you, may the Lord's face shine upon you and give you peace,
and that twice a day communal ceremony, right, meaning community-based ceremony will occur every morning and every afternoon, and we'll include the sacrifice, the prayer, and the blessing. So it's
kind of fascinating to see the daily operations of the temple, both as individuals, but also as kind
of the community prayer service. So it's like, thanks for coming to the temple this morning. We'll
see you this afternoon. That's the general function of this incense altar. It's a prayer altar
that's set before the final veil on our journey into the presence of God. This is really fun stuff.
I mean, I've seen pictures like this before and I've understood a little bit about Yom Kippur,
but just to hear about the daily rituals is really fascinating. If I have my latter day St. Lenzon, I can see a lot of overlay
with the altar right in front of the veil.
Exactly. So with all the differences and the similarities, and together, I think this
is how we work through temple literacy, right? We just understand how this worked in antiquity.
We understand the shared conceptual vocabulary and the differences. And I think all of those
steps are really important temple preparation and temple education or biblical and modern people speaking of shared vocabulary.
Okay, so what did you call it the the basin of water.
Brass labor. I think is what the King James calls it the the raisin labor and they would wash their hands before going into the holy place.
That's right. So what came to mind was that off-quoted scripture mastery, Psalms 24, 3 and 4, who shall
ascend into the hill of the Lord?
You shall go to the holy place, he that hath clean hands and a pure heart.
This was literally clean hands.
Today we can compare that to clean hands, doing good things, not staining yourself with
sin and pure heart, pure intent. So I'm hearing that and I'm going, hey, that's the psalm right there, clean hands,
before going to the holy place and the hill of the Lord, which is the temple, right?
It's the temple. Exactly. That's a great reminder, by the way, that in later
Israelite temple worship. So in other words, as this system developed over the centuries,
within the ancient Israelite community, the ceremonies themselves came to become more elaborate.
Eventually, you had priestly choirs and priestly musicians who would perform, who would chant
the Psalms or specific Psalms in the outer courtyard while the sacrifices were happening.
And so one of the Psalms, these are basically temple hymns.
Many of the Psalms are the temple hymns sung by the
Levitical Choirs in the Outer courtyard to accompany the sacrificial activities. And so several of
these hymns actually contain language that you can easily imagine describing the sacrifices or
describing the ritual purifications. The one that you gave John as a great example of Psalm 24
seems to be a bit of a call and response him. Who shall ascend to the mountain of the Lord? Is one chant? Then the other chant is he that has
clean hands and appear hard. So it almost might have been a call and response baked into the hymn.
But of course these aren't hymns in the modern Protestant four-part harmony sense. These are ancient
Middle Eastern chants, but chanting the words of the Psalms that accompany the sacrifice.
That's a reminder that the temple experience of ancient Israel
within this tabernacle and later Solomon's temple space was just an immersive sensory experience.
And what I mean by that is if you can imagine everything we just described, imagine physically taking that in.
So you go in, there's the butcher shop component here,
there's the barbecue smell coming off the altar here,
literally a roasting lamb meat.
Then you have the incense wafting out from the sanctuary.
And the whole thing is being accompanied
by Levitical Chanting the Psalms.
And the clothing as well.
You can just imagine that the sensory,
you're seeing, you're hearing it, you're smelling it.
It is taking you to a different place.
And again, that speaks to this idea that the temple is the meeting place between our earthly existence and the heavenly realm.
And everything about the sensory experience of this ancient Israelite temple space, it's just taking you away.
It's taking you into the realm of God.
And you can smell it, you can see it, you can hear it.
And the cacophony of senses that were engaged in ancient Israelite temple worship is pretty remarkable.
The only thing that I've ever seen that has come close to this is if you ever go to a Greek Orthodox
service. I have a lot of holy envy for our Greek Orthodox friends. They absorbed in Greek
Orthodox or Eastern Orthodox liturgy more broadly, have absorbed a lot of this temple imagery.
And so if you go to a Greek or Eastern Orthodox service, you will also see the chanting,
you'll see the iconography, you'll smell see the chanting, you'll see the iconography,
you'll smell the incense, and you'll see the liturgical furniture laid out, bringing you closer
and closer to the space of God. So a lot of this material that we're studying here from the book
of Exodus can also, not just in form, Latter-day Saint Temple practice, this can inform Catholic
mass experience, or the experience of Eastern Orthodox service, because this temple material from
the Old Testament is the foundation of later Jewish and Christian religious worship
in various communities.
And so literacy with this material benefits a lot of different communities today.
Just understand where their forms of worship come from.
Do we know how often an average Israelite would go to the temple or even a Levite?
How often is he going to work in the temple?
Those are really great questions. The book of Exodus and Leviticus, they don't address that directly,
but from other sources and other later Jewish history, we can pull together a basic picture of this.
It seems like for the most part, you would probably only go to the temple a few times in your life.
Depending on where you lived, of course, if you were in Jerusalem, maybe you went much more often.
We read about it in the New Testament, for example, individuals who went to the temple daily. So there are clearly people who lived nearby, who
would attend the temple frequently. But for those who have been Galilee or part of the larger
Mediterranean world, these were pilgrimage events. Maybe once or twice a year, if you could
afford that, you'd go to the temple for a pilgrimage festival. Maybe people couldn't afford even
that. So we don't really know exactly how often people would have gone,
probably dependent on their proximity to the temple,
how often they would have wanted to make that journey down to the temple,
especially the farther away you live.
If you are a Levite or a priest,
by the time you get to the later Old Testament writings,
and certainly by the time of the New Testament,
the Levites in priests themselves had multiplied exceedingly.
There are, you know, priests and Levites living in so many different communities.
So they arranged a system where they would come on rotation during the year.
So any given Levite or priestly family living in whatever village would probably have two
to five weeks a year.
And so these rotating courses, it's sometimes called the 24 priestly courses, each had their
designated time during the year where they would come
Service the temple in these ways and then they would go back home for the rest of the year where they would live in these villages
The New Testament example of a lot of these stories of courses the father of John the Baptist is Echorias
So Zechorias lives in a village outside of Jerusalem
But he's of a priestly course whose rotation is up and they come to the temple for their week or two rotation.
And the lot falls to him, hey, why you're here, by the way, lucky you, you get to be the
one to burn incense at the daily offering.
And so the whole story of Zechariah is as a priest at the altar of incense.
Of course, this is in Herod's temple later on, but at the altar of incense, raising his
hands above his head, the smoke is going up, he's offering the prayer on behalf of Israel
during that daily service.
And that's when Gabriel appears in that moment of theophony. And when he comes out, you'll notice he tries to give the priestly blessing,
he gestures towards it but he can't do it because he's been struck dumb. And so that whole story of
Zechariah serving in the temple is the story of a priest on rotation facilitating these rituals,
having the opportunity to be the incense offerer or the prayer offerer in a daily sacrifice
and coming out to give the blessing, but he can't because he was struck dumb as a result of the exchange with Gabriel.
So that whole story is very much part of this temple system only in a first century version.
I love it too because it tells us of what priesthood he would have had and John the Baptist.
Yeah, so Luke one in first that John the Baptist is born into a priestly family. Yeah, he's not only of the tribe of Levi
But within that tribe. He's an eronic priest
So he is of the line that has that eronic or erinied priesthood
So he would have served at the altar or he would have helped facilitate the sacrifices John's father
Zechariah's did those very things when his course was on rotation
Course of what is it the course of a via?
It says yeah, a via I need you to be my pronouncing gazeteer. Yeah was on rotation. What is it that course of ABA? Abaya?
I need you to be my pronouncing gazeteer.
Yeah, that was fun.
In any case, I hope this has been helpful.
We're not quite finished yet, but as we're going space to space, understanding how the space
functioned, how it operated, trying to get a sense of the experience that an ancient
Israelite would have had in this space as described by the text.
There's one more space, of course, that we want to explore. That will be the space of the Holy of Holies. Hank, you'd mentioned earlier
that even though we're mostly now talking about the daily routine of the temple, there was also
an annual ritual called the Yom Kapoor or the Day of Atonement ritual. And this was the one time
a year when the high priest would part that final veil and go into the Holy of Holies,
which is the holiest and most sacred zone
within the space of the ancient Tabernacle or ancient temple.
Let me make a few observations about the Holy of Holies itself,
and then we'll kind of conclude here in just a few minutes.
But so the Holy of Holies has one item of furniture in it.
It's called the Ark of the Covenant.
Of course, this is an item that is described
by the Book of Exodus, Anleviticus. There are lots of early narratives in the Hebrew
Bible that deal with the Ark of the Covenant. Eventually, it disappears, it is no longer part of
later Jewish temples. But at least in this early Israelite period, the Ark of the Covenant was the
main item of furniture that existed in the Holy of Holies, because the Holy of Holies was viewed as
God's throne room. So if the temple or the Tabernacle is God's house or is his tent, the Holy of Holies
is his throne room.
Just like a palace of an ancient Near Eastern monarch would have a palace with a throne.
Well this is God's palace and his throne room.
So this is a very common idea in ancient Near Eastern temples broadly and in ancient Israel
God had a throne room and it was the Holy
of Holies.
The Ark of the Covenant is covered by an item called the Mercy Seat.
It's a Mercy Seat because it is a throne.
It is God's throne.
It's where God sits and the Ark of the Covenant is his footstool.
And the throne of God where God sits, the Mercy Seat where God dispenses his mercy to his
people on the day of atonement when the high priest
parts that final veil and goes into the holy of holies, it's going to be this item of furniture,
God's throne where God's grace and mercy will be dispensed to his people, to Israel, and where
the high priest will make the final purification rituals for the year to purify the himself and
the sanctuary and the whole community. It's kind of the annual
purging or cleansing of all impurities and all sin that exists just to have a one-sitting-year
house cleaning ritual. And in that ritual, the high priest will go to the Ark of the Covenant
with the mercy seat on it and will offer certain incense and blood gestures here as well.
But before we leave the Ark of the Covenant, though, I do want to point out that the Ark itself
comprises of the box, which is the footstool,
inside the box or some of Israel's sacred relics,
the lid or the mercy seat, the throne of God,
where he sits to dispense his mercy to his community.
And on top of the mercy seat are going to be two Cherubin.
Now, Cherubin are these creatures that are fairly common
in ancient Near Eastern iconography.
They're composite creatures.
They have the bodies of one creature,
and maybe the wings of an eagle or something like that.
These are very common in ancient Near Eastern iconography
as guardians of the divine throne.
So in any context, whether it be Mesopotamian or Egyptian
or Israelite, the throne of the deity is guarded
by these angelic creatures.
And to get into the throne,
you have to pass through these creatures.
In fact, it's the same angelic guardian figures, these cherubing that guard God's throne
on the mercy seat or on the Ark of the Covenant.
You'll notice that according to Exodus and Leviticus, those very same images are embroidered
on the temple veil.
Because, again, once you're passing through that final temple veil
into the Holy of Holies, you are entering God's throne room. But that's where he sits. That's where
he lives. And very common in ancient, the ancient Near East was to have these guardian figures,
people with legal wings or lion bodies or whatever, these cherubing figures guarding the way. And so
the priest has to go through the veil, passing these guardian figures,
to get into the presence of God,
which itself is a throne room, flanked by the Cherubim.
So again, a lot of really important cultural differences
today in Christian and Latter-day Saint communities,
we don't tend to resonate with the Cherubim images.
We have our own versions of this idea
of angelic sentinels at the throne of God
or the presence of God you need to pass the angels who stand as sentinels to get into God's presence.
The ancient Middle Eastern or ancient Israelite version of that are cherubing.
These guardian figures around God's throne that you need to pass in order to get into God's presence.
And so on the day of atonement, the high priest who by the way is now dressed down on the day of atonement.
This is all from Leviticus 16.
If you want that full annual ritual described, the high priest will dress down. He'll take remove his blue robe and some
of the other items. The F out is gone, but he'll just be in his priestly white robe, white cap and
sash, and he will bring in incense and blood through that veil, passing those guardian creatures
into the presence of God will offer the incense of the whole Holy of Holies is now filled with the
incense smoke, again, signifying the divine presence. The book of Exodus says that when the high
priest approaches the ark of the covenant, I will meet you there. In other words, that's where I
will talk with you. That's where I will appear to you. And so because God's presence was often seen
as so holy, the high priest would fill the whole room with incense. So it's again, you're kind of
clouding God's presence a little bit or maybe even protecting himself from the power of God's holiness or the
power of God's presence. But in any case he's got the incense, he dabs the blood on the Ark of
the Covenant and then proceeds out of the Holy of Holies back into the outer court where he'll
perform a series of other rituals, the scapegoat rituals and other rituals that would ritually
purify the tabernacle himself, the community of Israel, and that once
a year, liturgical experience is the only time the year that the Holy of Holies would have
been accessed only by that high priest.
So what we've just done then is we've just walked through the major spaces of the ancient
tabernacle, the outer court, the inner court or holy place, and the holy of Holies, just
to get a sense of what's in these places, how did these places
function on a daily basis or even sometimes on an annual basis with a larger community ritual
like the day of atonement. And I hope this just been a helpful journey through this experience.
I think by taking a step back and looking at the big picture, see how it's all laid out,
trying to understand it in its original context, that makes reading these chapters a lot easier.
Because now you're able to go chapter for chapter and read, oh, this is the sacrificial process
for this offering, or oh, this is the priestly clothing for that moment, or whatever. And now
you're able to plug it into the bigger picture. Oh, this is great. I have a couple of questions.
You do this the word cherubim. And I know that sometimes the Old Testament,
I'm thinking particularly of like the call of Isaiah
in Isaiah 6 talks about seraphim.
Are cherubim and seraphim,
they're angelic beings both, right?
Are they the same?
I think they're similar, but they are slightly different.
So in Isaiah chapter 6,
this of course, Isaiah is living in a day
when there was a permanent temple in Jerusalem. So everything that chapter 6, this of course, Isaiah is living in a day when there was a permanent
temple in Jerusalem. So everything that we've just seen here in a portable, temporary,
temp-based condition, of course, is later standardized in the Jerusalem temple, Solomon's Temple
will be constructed. And it's during the later centuries or two of Solomon's Temple that we get
Isaiah. In Isaiah chapter 6 is his prophetic call narrative.
It's his moment where he's called by the God of Israel
and given this message.
And he experiences a vision.
It's really hard to know from the text.
Is he actually in the temple?
Like is Isaiah a priest who's actually in Solomon's temple
and experiencing this physically?
Or is he having a vision?
It's really hard to say.
If it's a visionary experience
that might tap into later Jewish ideas of there being a heavenly temple.
So meaning the earthly temple is simply the earthly shadow of the heavenly reality, which is the temple in heaven, in which case several Old Testament early Jewish writers will have visionary experiences where they go to the heavenly temple, which the earthly temple is simply a counterpart. It's possible that Isaiah might be having an early vision of the heavenly temple, in which case he's brought up,
and he sees the heavenly version of this.
He sees God actually on his throne in the heavenly holy of Holies, dressed in similar temple robes, by the way,
his robes fill the temple, and surrounding God's throne room are Sarah-feme, which are angelic creatures.
They don't necessarily need to look exactly like the Cherubim, the lion body and the eagle wings,
but they are angelic figures who are on fire, because the word Saraph in Hebrew means to be on fire.
So the Sarah-feme are the fiery angels around God's throne.
So it's like the Cherubim guarding the Ark of the Covenant, but only it's the fiery creatures surrounding God's throne.
And they're singing hymns.
Holy, holy, holy is the Lord, God Almighty, right?
They're singing these hymns in the heavenly throne room or the heavenly holy of holies.
And in Isaiah's call narrative, it's one of those seraphim, the fiery guardians of God's
throne, who goes to the incense altar, right in front of that final veil, and takes some
of the burning coals of the incense and places it on Isaiah's lips and purifies Isaiah's lips and gives him
that empowerment that now allows Isaiah to go preach his message. So the prophetic call
narrative of Isaiah is very much in a temple setting. Whether you're the earthly temple in Jerusalem
or a visionary experience in the heavenly temple, but he is commissioned in a temple setting
to begin his prophetic work.
Yeah, that's what this kept reminding me of.
The Book of Mormon wants us to know about Isaiah's call too,
and it, because it's in there.
In the Book of Mormon, it calls them seraphim,
because it's plural, the I.M. right, in Hebrew,
but in the Old Testament King James, it calls them seraphoms. It puts an asset at the end of it.
That's kind of funny to see the quirkiness of translation come out there.
Yeah, which is I tell my students that's like saying geese's. But the other thing I wanted to
mention was that we hear some of our own hymns in some of the things we've talked about. I had the
hymn of I stand all amazed going through
my mind. I will praise an ador at the mercy seat. You've taught us the mercy seat was the top of the
Ark of the covenant where the Lord sat, right? That's right. It's the throne of God. Yeah, so cool.
So when people sing that hymn, they can think of what we've just talked about. I will praise an ador
at the mercy seat until it has glorified thrown
I kneeled his feet. Just to kind of wrap up our survey then of this material, in Exodus chapter 40
and maybe part of Leviticus chapter 9, we get a description of how this entire system was
constructed and then finally dedicated literally a sanctified or handed over to the Lord to be his
dwelling place. And in Exodus chapter 40 we are told that this is going to be the moment of dedication.
The whole structure is anointed, the priest are anointed with oil.
And with this, the divine presence becomes manifest as a cloud coming down from heaven and
as fire coming down from the sky.
Following this remarkable dedication, which itself is a theophany, it's a manifestation
of the God of Israel among
his people, we now get this image of God dwelling among his
people as a pillar of smoke by day and a pillar of fire by
night. So both of those images appear in the dedication
narrative of the Tabernacle in Exodus and maybe a little bit
in Leviticus 9 as well. And after that, the cloud of smoke and the pillar of fire
became very important images to early Israel,
to within early Judaism and even within later Christian
and Latter-day St. circles of the notion of the presence
of God dwelling among you, all coming from that
dedicatory moment of the Tabernacle, an event
that was replicated in some ways with the dedication
of Solomon's Temple as well.
So it's a fascinating way to conclude the narrative.
Having now just described all the details of the measurements and the different types of fabrics
and the clothing and the sacrificial rituals to set it all up,
to anoint it, to dedicate it to God, make it holy space.
And then as part of that dedication, God enters his house as symbolized by the pillar of smoke
and the pillar of fire.
It's a pretty powerful symbol that reminded Israel that God was with them.
Well, I hope that this has been a helpful overview of the ancient tabernacle system and the ancient
priesthood system to conclude that I just wanted to make a few final observations that I hope
will be helpful going forward.
As I mentioned at the very beginning, there's lots of different ways that modern faith communities can interpret the significance of these features that can see meaning in these
features from where they are standing. The way that we've tried to approach it here is by trying
to stay close to what's in the text of Exodus and Leviticus, like what's actually in the text of
the Torah, and then try to situate that within its original ancient Near Eastern context.
What would this stuff have looked like and been experienced like by ancient Israel themselves
within their cultural setting?
Having said that though, obviously later communities and other communities will look back on this
material and find other ways to make sense of it or other layers of significance to them. So for example, in the book of Mormon,
we have Jacob, who in from his Nephite perspective, he looked at this material as being very messianic.
Right? So in the book of Mormon, you get it, this idea that the rituals of the ancient temple were
Messiah-focused. Right? And so in Jacob's writings, he talks about how we felt that these things pointed our minds
to the future Messiah who would come and save us.
And that's a really powerful lens for some communities to look at this material.
I do want to point out is probably not the lens that the ancient Israelites themselves
had on most naturally or most easily.
There's just not a lot of direct evidence in the Torah, in the Pentateuch, or in other
early Jewish writings that when Israelites or early Jews would evidence in the Torah, in the Pentateuch, or in other early Jewish writings
that when Israelites or early Jews would go to the temple, go through the sacrificial rituals
that they saw messianic significance. They are seeing rituals of purification. They're seeing rituals
of reconciliation. They're seeing rituals that would allow the God of Israel to continue to dwell
among them. And those are very powerful concepts within their time and place.
But other communities can take off that lens
or maybe keep that lens on,
but put on a different lens.
And that is the lens of Jesus, right?
So in later communities, not necessarily the Old Testament,
at least as far as we have record of,
as far as we know it, we don't know how many Israelites
went to the ancient temple and saw Messianic meaning there.
But within the Nephi community, they definitely did. So Jacob tells us that the lens that he had on was a lens of Christ. So he
would say Jacob, a book of Mormon writer on another part of the world, another part of the planet,
well, would say that through their understanding, through their revelations, they would see some of
this as pointing their souls to Jesus. But even within Nephite rhetoric, we're pretty regularly reminded that most
people probably didn't see it that way, right? When Lehigh talks about a Messiah in 1st
Nephite chapter 1 and 2, most people in Jerusalem had no idea what he's even talking about. What
do you even mean by that? So that gives the impression that most of those people going
to Solomon's Temple were not thinking messianically, but Lehi was and Nephi was and Jacob was.
So that's one community who their interpretive approach to this tabernacle was messianic.
Having said that, the strongest biblical parallel to seeing this material in a messianic way
is going to be by early Christians.
If we fast forward to the time of the New Testament, that is where we have a group of followers
of Jesus.
Jesus, the Messiah, who has now died on a cross and was resurrected, and that group of early
Jesus followers has to find a way to make sense of why Jesus had to die.
More than that, they've got to find ways to tell others why Jesus's death has meaning.
For those early Christians looking back onto
the tabernacle, they found an enormous amount of riches of metaphorical language that they
could use to describe Jesus, right? They could use to find meaning in Jesus' death. So how
do we understand Jesus' death? Why does that matter? Well, you know, it's like in the
Old Testament temple, it's like in the Jerusalem temple or the ancient tabernacle, you know how they would perform rituals of sacrifice to provide reconciliation
or purification? Well, Jesus' death is like that. And next thing you know, you start to get really
great early Christian imagery of Jesus as our ultimate atoning sacrifice, using language drawn
from this ancient temple system,
but then applying it to Jesus. And the same thing with the idea of a mediating priest. So not only did early Christians look back on the tabernacle and see imagery of sacrificial atonement
that could help inform the way they viewed Jesus's death, but they could also look back on the
rituals of priestly mediation. And say, well, Jesus is like that.
Just like the ancient high priest mediated between Israel and God or between heaven and
earth, well, that's what Jesus is.
He's like our great high priest.
He's like the ultimate version of that.
And so I just wanted to help us become a little more sensitive to the ways that we're interpreting
this material.
Restoration Scripture acknowledges that God can speak
to different people's in different times and places,
according to their cultural understanding.
So I don't think we need to manipulate
the original significance of this tabernacle system
to appreciate the ways in which it could also apply
to other faith traditions.
We can easily find ourselves looking back on this and saying,
wow, there's a lot about that
that resonates with me as I try to make sense
of the death of Jesus.
Or as I try to articulate why Jesus had to die,
well, it's like a sacrificial atonement.
What is Jesus doing right now?
Well, it's like he's a high priest
meeting, mediating for us at the throne of God.
And I think the best early Christian example of this
is the letter to the Hebrews.
Hebrews is by far the most extensive New Testament treatment of a Christ-centered reading of this
tabernacle material. So for example, Hebrews chapters 4 through 7 takes all of this mediating
high priest imagery. And Jesus is the ultimate high priest. So if in a Christian or a modern holiday saint setting,
you've ever heard Jesus referred to as your great high priest
of good things to come.
Exactly, that's quoting the letter to the Hebrews,
which basically says, look, the high priest of the Jerusalem temple
or the high priest of the ancient tabernacle
was simply the earthly shadow of the ultimate heavenly reality, which is Jesus.
So Hebrews 4 through 7, and visions are being a heavenly temple, playing with the old
platonic notions of types and shadows. So the idea that the real temple is in heaven,
and the real mediating high priest is Jesus. And what we just saw here on the earth was
the earthly shadow of the heavenly reality.
So for the letter to the Hebrews, for that author, the priestly system of the tabernacle
was a way to make sense of Jesus only that is an earthly shadow of the heavenly reality.
So Jesus is our great high priest.
So any of that language of Jesus as your great mediator or your great intercessor or Jesus
standing at God's throne and making
intercession for you as we speak, that's allowing us to with boldness and confidence approach
the throne of God and receive that grace and time of need.
All of that language is taken from the tabernacle, material of Exodus, but it's the letter
to the Hebrews saying that from his perspective, Jesus was the ultimate version of that.
And similarly, our Hebrews chapters 8 through 10 does the same thing only now with the
sacrifices.
So this whole idea of Jesus's death as being our ultimate atoning sacrifice is again,
that's Hebrews' way of saying that the earthly sacrifices of the ancient temple system,
or the ancient tabernacle system, were simply the earthly shadows of the heavenly reality,
the ultimate heavenly reality was Jesus's death.
Everything on earth was just a shadow of it.
And so I just wanted to point that out
because a lot of times as modern Christians
or as modern Larday Saints,
we want to just jump right into this ancient material
and just start imposing our own symbolic worldview onto it.
And that has meaning,
that there's a reason why we so naturally feel that impulse.
But I just wanted to be a little bit,
help us be a little bit more sensitive,
a little more nuanced in the way we approach this.
We do not need to rob the ancient Israelite meaning
of this material by imposing our interpretation.
I think we should appreciate both,
both what it meant to ancient Israelites
in their time and place and culture and what it can mean to us.
So I just wanted us to be careful in the way that we interpret a lot of these things that
we can both appreciate original context and modern resonance.
This is just good scripture study skills.
The idea of let's see it in its original place and its original form as clearly as we can.
And then if we want to put a Christian lens or
a lot of day saint lens on it, we can't. We just need to realize we're doing it. I noticed when Matthew
records that the Savior yielded up the ghost in Matthew 27, verse 50, he immediately goes to the
veil of the temple. He says, the veil of the temple was rent in two from the top to the bottom. So
he's connecting the death of Christ to the temple to the tabernacle.
Probably the idea that the the Holy of Holies is now more open than it was before.
Open to God. Yeah, that's another, that's a fascinating example of, so Hebrews is the one who does this most extensively,
but throughout other early Christian or New Testament writings, you have other Christian writers who are also
Exploring some of these connections between Jesus's death and the sacrifice. You get a lot of that in John
Jesus's death is like the sacrificial land. The Lamb of God.
God is for your sins. So there's a lot of that imagery in the gospel of John again going back to this system
But in the synoptic gospels Matthew, Mark and Luke
Matthew in particular as you said that is a fascinating example of how it might be exploring the connection of Jesus and the priest, right? Because remember
the daily sacrifice was every 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. at which times the priest would be at the
incense altar before the veil with his hands up raised, offering his prayer. The synoptic
tradition, Matthew, Mark and Luke, placed Jesus on the cross at 3 p.m. at the very moment
when Jesus, or the priest would have been at the altar of incense, offering
that hands raised prayer, just like Jesus on the cross.
And then when Jesus adores his final prayer, Matthew describes it the veil of the temple
rens.
Matthew clearly is exploring that connection, that symbolic connection between what Jesus'
death just accomplished in opening
up the way to the presence of God for humanity.
And so he doesn't come out inexplicitly, say, thus Jesus is our great high priest.
Hebrews does that.
But Matthew and a few other texts certainly seem to be exploring connections early on, as
those early Christians themselves are trying to make sense of Jesus' death.
And this tabernacle, temple, priesthoodhood setting just gave them so much language to work with
to try to understand why did Jesus have to die?
And what does that mean for us?
Do you have a few minutes to tell us
about what you see in the restoration with Joseph Smith,
reaching back and pulling some of these things forward?
Because even in the Kirtland temple,
don't you see some of this idea of there's a courtyard?
Do you think that's meant to be there?
That little, do you enter the Kirtland temple? There's that little 10-foot space before you enter
another area and then they could curtain off another area. Yeah, exactly. With the curtains in between.
Absolutely. And this is maybe a really great point to end on. I'm assuming we have a predominantly
Latter-day Scene audience for this podcast. Although I hope that others could be listening and
enjoy this conversation, because I think there's so much about this ancient temple
material that could inform Catholic experience or an Eastern Orthodox experience or even other
types of faith experiences. But from Latter-day St. We have a modern temple tradition. It's at the
center of our religious life. I think you're absolutely right. Part of our temple literacy,
to harken back to our opening segment, Part of our temple literacy is understanding how this ancient temple worked, how the similarities, the shared conceptual vocabulary can inform
a Latter day saint temple experience, but also looking at the differences. So for Joseph Smith,
as he is trying to create a temple-centered community in 19th century America, I think we have several
sources of inspiration for him. I think he himself is obviously living in a post-Jesus era.
He's Christian, so he's going to see a lot of
Christological imagery in ancient temple practices.
He wants to try to incorporate some of that
into the Latter-day Saint Temple experience.
I think that in later periods,
especially when he gets in Navu and others,
he's got the book of Abraham and
other cultural interactions that he's having
that are definitely informing the way he's going to construct the the ultimate endowment
that Latter-day Saints will will today experience. I think lots of sources of
inspiration are flowing into that. A lot of those sources, of course,
indicating some of the differences between modern and ancient temples. Those
are just as important to know as the similarities. But in terms of this biblical
material in particular, I think it's pretty clear that from an early stage in Joseph Smith's own temple thinking,
and his own temple revelations, that this biblical material plays a really key role.
So in Kurtlin, the first time Joseph has the community build an actual temple, you'll notice it's probably not a coincidence that he was studying Hebrew with Joshua Saceius,
and he's reading through a lot of Old Testament in Hebrew, and at that very time in 1835 and to early 1836, the very time the
Kurtland Temple is being built and eventually dedicated, they start performing ritual washings and anointing,
drawing upon the exact language from Exodus 28 and 29 and Leviticus 8 and 9.
So, Joseph Smith very much saw himself as bringing back some of those ancient priestly rituals
from the Old Testament temple incorporating them into a Latter-day Saint context, and then
that, of course, also will influence his use of sacred space.
I think Hank, you just mentioned that the way he developed the Kurtland Temple, it's
fascinating because on its exterior, it's very, very 19th century America, in the exterior
of the Kurtland Temple.
In its interior use of space, it's very Protestant,
in that it's benches meant for preaching and listening,
but he also divides it into three zones.
And each zone is separated by a curtain
that can be moved at its various times,
and at various sacred moments,
the curtains are set up to make the back part,
essentially a holy of holies,
just like the ancient biblical temple.
And it's, of course, it's behind that curtain that Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery have some of their most sacred
revelatory experiences encountering Jesus and other divine beings. And it's very much the sacred
space of theophany behind the curtain. That's all the conceptual idea that's drawn right from
the Old Testament. So even though he never does bring in the blood sacrifices, of course, he,
as a Christian, would see that as being done away within Jesus. He definitely brings in a lot of
the priestly language, although Joseph Smith will build upon Aaronic or Levitical priesthood language
and say, well, now let's add to that a higher order of priesthood that did not exist in antiquity,
at least in Jewish antiquity, this idea of the order of Melchizedek. So Joseph's definitely
expanding upon those concepts, but at the end of the day, Melchizedek. So Joseph is definitely expanding upon those concepts,
but at the end of the day, when Temple Endowment experiences revealed to him in Nauvoo,
there's gonna be a lot of similar forms. He will dress up the not only the men, but also the women
in robes, in caps, and sashes. In other words, one of the key differences is that Joseph will take that
concept of priesthood, and even the concept of sacred priesthood clothing to be used in sacred space,
and he'll apply it very much to the Navu temple and down it, but he'll expand upon it.
Now he sees it in a Melchizedic priesthood framework, a fullness of the gospel framework from his perspective,
and that is a framework in which not only do hereditary, eronic men wear these sacred vestments,
but all women and men of faith are washed, anointed, dressed in the robes of priesthood.
And so Joseph is definitely building upon a biblical foundation.
The biblical text is clearly informing his temple thinking
and his temple revelations.
But the final product that Joseph Smith reveals to us
as a Latter-day Saint community is very much expanded
with a Jesus-centered, a Melchizedic priesthood-framed version
of what we saw in the Old Testament,
which so again that just speaks to the need to understand the similarities, but also the
differences.
And it's in both that we come to increase our temple literacy as Bible readers, but
also as modern temple-going Latter-day Saints.
Matt, this has been fantastic.
And I think I like this idea of we are becoming more temple literate, especially when it comes to the old Testament tabernacle.
Here you are, a Bible scholar and a Latter-day saint. I think our listeners would be interested in
in just your journey about those two worlds that you've experienced here for the last few
couple decades, right? So for me, the journey of both faith and scholarship, I think really began when
I became active in the church when I was in high school.
I had gone to church when I was younger, my family had been members of the church, but for me,
kind of that moment of conversion that convinced me to be a believing, practicing, loud, I was saying,
actually came through the process of study. As a junior or senior in high school, I started really studying scripture for the first time, started studying church history for the first time. And for me, it was the process of learning
that became itself a defining spiritual experience. And so when I went on my mission, one of my
favorite things to do was not only to talk about the gospel message with others, but to study.
We read a lot as missionaries. This was back in an earlier day when you had a little more flexibility there, perhaps.
So I read a ton and studied a ton as a missionary. And for me, the process of study is not a dichotomy. Sometimes we're the ones to dichotomize that where we say,
well, you can be intellectual and learn stuff over here, but we really want to feel the spirit over here.
I just think for Joseph Smith, that was a totally false dichotomy. And so for Joseph Smith, we have this prophetic figure who's having visions and revelations,
and as part of that visionary and revelatory experience, he hires a Jewish scholar of Hebrew to
come teach him Hebrew verbs and Hebrew grammar because he felt that learning through the best books,
as he put it, would actually make him a better prophet.
So for Joseph, there never seems to have been any dichotomy
between feeling the spirit and learning
in an academic or an intellectual way
as he's going through his work on the Bible.
He seems to be reading biblical commentaries
and learning from the scholars of his day
and learning languages, all of which he's incorporating
into his spiritual experience.
And so I say early on and all the way through my time as a missionary and as an undergraduate,
I always really resonated with that, that dual approach of, I guess, what other Maxwell
called being a disciple scholar.
Once I got off my mission, I wanted to keep studying the world of scripture.
I ended up landing mostly in the world of the Bible, although I, I'm still fascinated by
early church history.
I still love the early, early days of the restoration.
I'm trying to keep up with some of the great work
that our Joseph Smith papers colleagues have done there and other great historians. But I just
kind of find myself gravitating more and more to the world of the Bible. I spent some time in the
Holy Land as an undergraduate went to the B. Bayou Drusome Center. So I came out of that experience
convinced I wanted to go into biblical studies, eventually with a focus in archaeology and the
social history of religionism.
So I went off to graduate school.
I spent eight years in graduate school,
two years at Andrews, one year at Oxford,
and five years at Chapel Hill,
working through two masters in a PhD.
And through the process, of course,
naturally you're being taught how to think critically
and how to read texts critically
and how to critically analyze faith traditions of the past.
And it's inevitable that you're gonna take those skills that you're learning and start looking at your own faith tradition with those skills.
And all of a sudden, you start reading your own scripture a little more deeply in your
own religious experience, a little more analytically.
And to be sure, that process can be a lot of wrestling.
It can include a lot of wrestling, a lot of previous assumptions that I had had.
All of a sudden, are very challenged, and I have to kind of think through that.
So there are definitely some moments of wrestle and challenge. I think those are necessary moments.
I don't think that the process of becoming a disciple, scholar, comes easily or cheaply.
It comes through a lot of soul searching and a lot of wrestling and a lot of needing to process new information.
So as I come to realize, oh, the biblical text is more complicated than I once thought.
Or maybe these authorship issues are a little more nuanced than I once thought, or those
types of questions. Definitely, there's a lot of challenge to previous assumptions.
But I think in the process, at least from my experience, and I recognize that different
people have different experiences, my experience was that that process of wrestling and working
through the faith and the scholarship issues, the moments of strength, but also the moments of tension.
At the end of the day, I think produced a much more mature and pliable faith for me than
what I had as a missionary, like probably most of us.
We're very black and white in our thinking.
And there's definitely truth, right?
We affirm truth, but at the same time, I think a mature, viable faith is what helps us to navigate the complexities of
scholarship. And I think the end result is someone who is an
informed disciple scholar, someone who can be all in on their
faith and their discipleship, and who can also be responsible
with scholarship, be informed in scholarship, be maybe more
nuanced sometimes in the way we approach certain scriptural
passages or certain traditions.
And I think that that is exactly the type of process that we need to go through in order
to be effective teachers in the church and teachers in God's kingdom to have an informed
faith, an informed discipleship.
So for me, that's been something that's kind of developing from the time I started being
coming active as a latter-day saint and has just continued to grow with a lot of struggles, a lot of
wrestle up to down, but I think that the end results, and I'm not a final product by
any means.
None of us are finished products.
We're still in process, but I have thoroughly been enriched by the challenges of combining
faith and scholarship and hope to continue to do both in the years ahead.
John, what a great day we've had today with Dr. Gray, what a blessing to better understand
the ancient tabernacle. I feel like I could walk around the tabernacle and know my way around
a little bit more, right? Who's doing what and why?
And I feel more complemented that you referred to me as an ancient tabernacle at the beginning.
That's why because I knew we were going to walk away with such a great feeling about it.
Dr. Gray, thank you so much for being with us.
We wanna thank all of our listeners.
We wanna thank our executive producers,
Steve and Shannon Sornson and our sponsors,
David and Verla Sornson,
and we hope all of you will join us next week
on our next episode of Follow him. you