The Bible Recap - Day 040 (Exodus 30-32) - Year 5
Episode Date: February 9, 2023SHOW 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 - Win a trip to Israel! S...OCIALS: 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! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
You may have noticed that we're starting to get into some mentions of offerings and sacrifices
and it may be confusing.
Don't worry about figuring everything out.
Thank God we don't have to do these anymore because Jesus was the final sacrifice.
However, what's important for us to do is think about what all this means. So if you come away from your reading going, I didn't get anything out of this today. Try asking yourself some different
questions. Ask yourself, what is this reveal about God? So maybe you think, okay, God's ordering
lots of very specific sacrifices, what does that tell me about God?
It might tell you a few things. First, that He's talking to humans at all, which is kind of huge. He wants a relationship.
Second, it might reveal that our sins need to be atoned for, and God has a plan to accomplish that.
So today, when we start out, Moses and Joshua are still up on Mount Sinai, the mountain of God, where Moses is hearing
from God for 40 days. They've been up there since chapter 24. God starts out talking about
the incense altar, and we saw that even God's incense is holy and set apart. It can't be used
for anything else. It's a special blend. Later, we'll see this about the anointing oil as well.
This reminds me of a friend I had who refused to tell anyone what kind of perfume she wore so that no one else could buy it. Except God is God, she's a human, and her perfume
is in mass production, so that's entirely different. God also requires a one-time census
tax from the people, half a shackle, which in today's money is about three to six dollars
according to my research. One of the hard things about a census is that people sometimes
get puffed up and arrogant about their numbers. Cities love to boast that they're the largest. Every
religion wants to be the fastest growing. McDonald's advertises their sales number on their
signs. So God attaches a reminder to this tax. This census isn't about you, or making
your numbers larger. This isn't offering to the Lord, to remind themselves that they owe Yahweh
their lives. And by the way, we see that all their lives are worth the same amount, whether
rich or poor. He's pointing their eyes off themselves and onto his goodness in sparing
their lives and pardoning their sins and providing them a place to meet with him.
My God shot almost came from this section on the bronze basin, but I decided on something
else.
I'll share it with you, though.
It occurred to me as I was reading this section that the priests have to go to great
lengths to make sure they're clean.
They have to wash their hands and feed in this basin to make sure they're presentable
so they won't die.
Cleanliness is about purity, and purity is a big deal when it comes to drawing near to
a set apart God.
The phrase cleanliness is next to godliness is not in the Bible, but if it were, it would
probably be in Exodus 30.
Okay, so here's what I loved about the bronze base and all their necessary hygiene rituals.
It took me forward 1500 years to a time when Jesus snelt down and washed the feet of his
disciples, even his betrayer.
There's a point when we realize,
no matter how much cleaning up we try to do,
we can't clean ourselves up.
It'll never be enough.
We still need him to wash us clean,
so that we won't die.
No more bronze basins and fear of death.
Jesus is enough.
But also wash our hands.
Next, God points out two guys to Moses, O'Holiab and Bezalel.
God says he has filled Bezalel with his spirit,
and we know that was a big deal back then,
because this was when God the Spirit did a lot of traveling around.
God says he gave Bezalel ability, intelligence, knowledge, and craftsmanship,
and he says those things are to be used for his glory,
to build the things he wants in his tabernacle complex.
Whatever God commands of us, he equips us to obey.
He gives us whatever we need for the assignment.
He initiates and sustains his plans for us
and for his glory through the work of his spirit.
In addition to initiating work,
God also initiates rest.
He reminds Moses again how important the Sabbath is.
He calls it a sign between them.
And this statement about it being a sign
elevates the Sabbath to the level of circumcision
like in God's covenant with Abraham.
In fact, this conversation with Moses
is called the Sinai covenant.
God says the Sabbath is holy to the Lord
and he calls them to honor it each week.
This is a much higher bar than having your son circumcised when he's barely a week old. God says the Sabbath is holy to the Lord and he calls them to honor it each week.
This is a much higher bar than having your son circumcised when he's barely a week
old.
This is a regularly recurring reminder of who God is to them.
There is a lot to say about the Sabbath, but you don't have time for it today.
So I'm going to try to cover it in a bonus episode for our Patreon family at some point.
Next, we move on to a scene many of you are familiar with.
Moses has been up on the mountain for almost six weeks.
The people grow restless and impatient,
maybe even wondering if he's died up there.
He's old.
They appeal to Aaron to make them a god.
In verse one, we see that they perceive this to be a delay.
They don't recognize it as God's timing.
They were too steeped in their unbelief
to acknowledge God's plan. They don't recognize it as God's timing. They were too steeped in their unbelief to acknowledge
God's plan, they wanted their own. Then, Aaron, who had just seen God eight chapters ago, complies,
not just building the calf, but building an altar in front of it, too. Maybe he's jealous of Moses
and wants to usurp his leadership. Maybe he wants the people to like him, who knows. Then he ordains a feast unto the Lord.
That's weird.
This sounds like the monolatory we talked about on day 37,
where people would mingle their worship of God with other things.
And remember, this is Aaron, the guy who helped perform miracles in front of Pharaoh,
the guy God appointed as high priest,
and here he is, melting down earrings to make a calf out of gold,
the same material that was to be
used for the holiest places where he would serve God in his tabernacle. And then the people
attribute their deliverance from Egypt a few months ago to this thing that moments earlier was in
their ears and on their fingers. I don't know what bothers me more, the fact that it's idolatrous
or the fact that it's irrational. But I do know what should bother me more.
It's idolatrous or the fact that it's irrational. But I do know what should bother me more.
Meanwhile, up on the mountain, God lets Moses end on what's happening down there.
God is angry and he says he wants to destroy the people and start over with just Moses.
But Moses appealed to God based on God's promises, which are irrevocable, and based on God's
character, which is unchangeable.
And God relents.
Do I think God really planned to kill him?
No, I don't.
I think this was a test for Moses, an opportunity for him to be reminded of God's promises and
character, because he's going to need it in the days and weeks and years ahead.
When Moses and Joshua go down the mountain with the two tablets, the one's God has carved and
written the testimony on with his own hand. Moses sees what has happened and he throws the tablets and breaks them in a rage. These are the people he had just defended to God. He destroys
the calf and rebukes the people, meanwhile Aaron acts dodgy. He shifts the blame and lies
and evades responsibility, and this chapter does not end pretty.
Moses asks the people where their hearts are. Are their hearts with God or not? This is
their chance to repent of breaking at least the second commandment and possibly
the first as well.
A covenant they all agreed to abide by.
The Levites are all in, but for the ones who aren't, Moses commanded their death.
Only 3,000 died, which compared to the approximately 3 million who were all about the calf.
That's a small number who were unrepentant and who died. Those who repented, lived. This may seem harsh, but remember,
these were to be a set apart people, the people of the covenant, the people the Messiah
would be born through, and now three thousand of them were worshipping their jewelry instead
of Yahweh. It was merciful of God that the other 2,997,000 lived.
So, what was your God shot today? I was struck by God's timing. I noticed that in
32-1, the people call his timing a delay, but that in verse 8, God's as they have turned
aside quickly. What they perceived as delay, he called quick. They're worshipping a golden calf,
meanwhile, he's making plans to be near them and agreeing to spare their lives. I wonder
how many times I doubt his timing and feel like he's forgotten my agenda and decide to
take matters into my own hands. How often do I find something else to worship when he seems
to be holding out on me? I want to trust his timing, his so-called delays.
Most of all, I want to trust his heart toward me.
He has spared my life since breath number one, and he made plans to wash me clean and
to draw near to me.
I cannot get enough of his nearness, because he's where the joy is. Reading the Bible every day is hard sometimes, but here you are.
If you want to make this process easier for yourself and help increase your chances
of not dropping this new habit on the days when things are tough, the best way to do that
is to subscribe.
That way you don't have to go find us, we come to you, free delivery.
All you have to do is go to our main page
where every are listening right now and click Subscribe.
We'll see you tomorrow and every day after that.
One of my favorite things to do is lead teaching tours
of Israel and it's about to get even better
because now I'm partnering with Hope Media Group
and its ministries, including WayNation.com
to give you a chance to join me on one of these trips for free.
To find out more, click the link in today's show notes
or text the word trip to 67101.