The Bible Recap - Day 038 (Exodus 25-27) - Year 3
Episode Date: February 7, 2021SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - ...John 20:12 - Video: Tabernacle Tour - Sign up to receive this month’s free resource* *Newsletter email will be sent out on the last day of each month SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
Transcript
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
If you're a fan of home renovation shows or your really into architecture or construction,
today's reading should have been right up your alley.
It included all kinds of furniture and construction details.
Here we have a bunch of former slaves living in the middle of the desert,
and God wants them to build a portable tabernacle where he can dwell with them in the midst of the wilderness.
He calls on them to use all kinds of precious metals and fabrics for this tabernacle.
Where would they get this stuff?
They got it from plundering the Egyptians.
Those things that God blessed them with are used for His glory.
It wasn't just about them having nice things. Those blessings didn't terminate on them.
They served a much bigger purpose. When reading through all this information, I'm sure some of you
are like, this is boring. Why does this have to be so detailed? But then some of you are probably
like, I wish God were this detailed with me about what I'm supposed to do, or maybe some of you even have both of those thoughts.
Hang in there through these details.
Be encouraged that our God is a God of detail.
You want Him to be that way.
Let's touch on a few of the noteworthy things we saw today.
First, the metals used in the construction get more precious the closer you get to the
holy of holies, where God will dwell.
There's gold inside, then silver outside, then bronze the furthest out.
Second, I want to highlight a few things about the arc of the covenant or the arc of the testimony, in case you like visual details like I do. It was almost four feet long, a little more than two
feet wide, and a little more than two feet high. Humans were not supposed to touch this
at all after it was constructed. When they had to relocate the tabernacle as they moved around the
wilderness, they were supposed to carry it with the gold-covered wooden poles. This is reminiscent
of how they weren't allowed to touch the mountain because of the presence of the power of God.
Third, in 2518, we see that the lid of the Ark of the Covenant, which is called the Mercy
Seat, has cherubim, that's the plural of cherub, on it.
If you've seen a picture of a cherub, you've probably seen a naked baby with wings.
As always, forget what you know from Renaissance art and precious moments figurines.
We talked about cherubim not long ago.
They're one of the various types of angelic beings God created. This type is not a messenger angel like the ones that show up as
humans. From the various descriptions of them that we see throughout
Scripture, we see that they have four wings covered in eyes. They likely have
the form and body of a man, but they have four faces. They most often appear as
guardians of holy places like the Garden of Eden, for instance,
and their images also appear in the tabernacle and on the arch of the covenant.
If you're a guardian of a holy place, it's good to have four faces, so you can be watching
in every direction at all times.
The Mercy Seat has two cherubim positioned on opposite ends.
The Mercy Seat is made of pure gold.
This was God's resting place. It was essentially God's throne on earth.
In Exodus 25-22, God says,
There I will meet with you. The word used for meat here means betroth. There I will betroth you to me.
And the word mercy seat is related to the word that means to make a tonement.
There's a lot happening in the language here. And the word mercy seat is related to the word that means to make a tonement.
There's a lot happening in the language here.
This arc of the covenant with the mercy seat on top, it's an important item, and not just
because there's an Indiana Jones movie about it.
One interesting parallel with what we see in the mercy seat descriptions is that it's really
similar to what we see the angels doing when they appear in Jesus' tomb after his resurrection
in John
2012, they were positioned in the same way at opposite ends of Jesus' burial spot.
Finally, I want to point out the golden lampstand.
If you're familiar at all with Jewish culture, you may recognize this as a menorah, which is the Hebrew word for lampstand.
Since it's a symbol of God's presence, it eventually became something
Jewish people kept in their homes as a reminder of this. The standard menorah has six branches
and seven lamps. But there are also special types of menorahs used during the celebration
of Hanukkah. Those have nine branches and are called Hanukias. We're going to be reading
a bit more about the tabernacle and some of its elements here and there over the course
of the next few days.
So if you're visual and you want to see a rendering of what this may have looked like,
we've got a video for you in today's show notes.
If you don't know how to find the show notes on your particular app or platform, try googling
it.
It varies from app to app.
This video shows the potential layout of the courtyard, tabernacle, and interior as well
as the seven pieces of furniture inside.
So go to the show notes and get your HGTV on.
Tomorrow we'll have something for those of you who are more into Project Runway than Fixer
Upper.
What was your God shot today?
The thing that stood out to be most, apart from his attention to detail, is just the
beauty of the fact that he wants to dwell with his people.
These are the people who have sinned against him, doubted him, and keep forgetting all he's done for them.
Yet he wants to be near them always.
This is huge.
And yes, there's a lot of detail
in the section we're reading right now.
But one thing you might have noticed
is that a lot of the layout of the tabernacle
parallels what we saw in Eden,
an East facing entrance, guarded by a cherubim, the burning lampstand symbolizes
the tree of life, and the law or the testimony symbolizes
the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
So when God begins telling them all these details
and tells them he'll come there to dwell with them,
it's a step toward restoring paradise
and all that was lost in the Garden of Eden.
We won't see the fulfillment of this until Christ returns and we have a new heaven and a new
earth, but here in Exodus we see God's advancement in that direction, to dwell with his people
forever, and I can't think of anything better because he's where the joy is.
The Trinity is one of the most foundational truths of our faith.
It can be really confusing, though, and if we aren't careful, we end up putting the
three persons of the Trinity in a blender and mixing them all up together as though they're
the same.
While God the Father, God the Son, and God the Spirit are one, and they are unified in
their will and purpose, they're also distinct in their roles.
We've built out a PDF that talks more about the roles of the persons of the Trinity using examples and scriptures
and we'd love to share that with you.
If you want to get this PDF for free,
all you have to do is go to thebibelrecap.com
forward slash Trinity and submit your email address.
That's thebibelrecap.com forward slash Trinity.
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