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So, we're going to go to Exodus
right now. We're going to go to Exodus chapter
26. So if you have your Bible, then please turn there, Exodus
26. We're going to look at the whole chapter. I'll read it one
portion at a time today. We've come to the part of Exodus
that is describing the tabernacle and not just the pieces that
will go in the tabernacle, but now the tabernacle itself, this
actual tent of meeting that God would establish in the camp of
Israel as his dwelling place among them. God has told us,
and we saw this in what we prayed from in Revelation just a minute
ago, that God is the one who was, and who is, and who is to
come. Now, I don't know if you've ever
thought through those words before. Maybe you've never heard those
words before. If you've been around church a while, you've
probably heard them. But this is what God calls Himself. That
He was. He was God before we were around.
And He is. He's God right now. And then
he says that he is to come. Part of that means that he will
keep being God in the future, but the way he actually says
it is not the one who will be, as in just a state of future
being. He says he is the one who is
to come, as in a state of future being with us. that He is coming
back. Jesus is coming again. That's
the way that God describes Himself, and that's the way that God is
picturing Himself in the tabernacle. That this God who has always
been God and who continues to be God is coming personally to
His people. He was, He is, and He's coming,
people. He's coming. God is coming. I
want you to know that you will meet God one day. Now, you may
have already met God in the sense that God may have already come
to you and regenerated your soul so that you have been brought
to tearful, genuine repentance of your sin as you've come to
faith in Jesus as the Savior. In that sense, if you're a believer,
you have met God, but you're going to meet Him face to face
one day. Believers, as I say that, that's
an extreme joy to us. that we consider that the One
who has loved us and freed us from our sins by His blood, that
He will be the One who is with us forever and ever, and we get
to enjoy Him forever. We get to do what we were made
to do. to glorify God and enjoy Him forever. I also want you
to know, if you're not a believer, by the way, if you're not a believer,
thank you for watching this live stream. Thank you for doing that.
Maybe that's an evidence right there that God is doing something
in your heart, or in your life, or even just in your circumstances
because your family member talked you into watching it. I don't
know, but I want you to know this, that because God is God, And because you were created
by Him for the purpose of glorifying Him, you will meet Him one day. You will meet Him one day. And
if your faith is not in Jesus, that is a terrifying thing. Those
in the Bible who presumed upon God, who just thought, well,
I can just go up to God, you know what happened to them is
that they died. This happened when Uzzah, who
was probably one of the Levites, he was walking along a road beside
this cart that was carrying the Ark of the Covenant, and he saw
the cart stumbling, and he thought that it would be better for his
hand to touch that Ark of the Covenant than to let it fall
down into the mud. But that Ark of the Covenant
represented the very presence of God, and God said not to touch
it. And God struck him dead. He thought, well, I can just
come before God and it won't matter. I'll do God a favor by
coming to Him. I'll prop up the Ark of the Covenant.
God struck him dead. King Uzziah, similar name to
Uzzah, but a different person and a different era of history. King Uzziah of Israel. He's spoken
of in the Bible as a good king, a king who loved God, a king
who righted many of the things that were wrong in Israel. And
yet, what did he do? He presumed that he could go
straight into the Holy of Holies and offer the priest sacrifices.
And do you know what God did? God struck him with leprosy and
he died from it. Even as somebody who thought,
well, I'm doing the right things, and had some sort of sincerity
even, probably, in his desire to do that. You can't just presume
to come to God. Do you know what will happen
to you if you come into the presence of God without being covered by the
blood of Jesus, by faith? You will die. You will suffer
eternal conscious torment in a place called hell, and rightly
so, because God is holy. God is holy. And you can't come
to a holy God and say, I'm pretty good. I guess I'll be alright.
That's not how it works. That's just not how it works.
But here is what the tabernacle shows us, guys. The tabernacle
shows us that God would make a way for the holy God to come
and to be with and to purify sinful people. so that God Himself
could come and be their God, and they could be His people.
And what it points us to, believer, what it points us to, unbeliever.
It points us to Jesus. It points us to Jesus, who is
the way and the truth and the life, and no one comes to the
Father except through Him. that He's the one who's come
and dwelt and tabernacled among us, and who has made open access
for us who believe in Jesus Christ. The tabernacle was a visual aid
that God gave in the wilderness to show His people something
about the way that God will come, and for us who He comes to not
to be consumed by His righteous wrath, but to be at peace with
him by his gracious love. So let's look first of all at
the very first verse of Exodus chapter 26, where we see God
tabernacling, camping, dwelling with man. It says, verse one
of Exodus 26, moreover, you shall make the tabernacle with 10 curtains
of fine twined linen and blue and purple and scarlet yarns,
you shall make them with cherubim skillfully worked into them.
All right. I want to pause right there,
even before we come to the part where it talks about the 10 curtains.
We'll come to that in the next section. If you're following
along on that sermon outline that I told you to download,
that'll be number two. But first of all, let's just
think about what it means when it says, you shall make the tabernacle.
Now, he's already been describing things about it. He's been describing
things that are going to go inside it. He's been describing aspects
of it. But now he says, you're going to make the actual tabernacle
itself. You're going to make the tent.
That's what it was. The tabernacle was a tent. Later
on, during the days of Solomon, it would get replaced by a stone
building. And that stone building was called
the Temple, and it represented all the same things that the
Tabernacle did, just in a more permanent form. Not ultimately
permanent, it got torn down, but in a more permanent form.
What the tabernacle was, it was a tent for God. You can imagine
what was going on as the people of Israel have come out of Egypt,
and they're in the wilderness. They've been wandering for a
couple of months now, and they don't know yet that they're going
to wander for 40 years. They haven't yet provoked God
all the way to the point of that pronouncement yet. But they're
out there camping. They're not ultimately a nomadic
people, but they're in a nomadic stage of their lives, and God
says that he's going to come and have a tent in the middle
of their tents. They're camped all around, there's
12 tribes, and they have a certain way of, this pattern of arrangement
of camping. But God now says, I'm going to
come, and you need to build me the biggest, most important,
most beautiful, most spectacular tent, and you've got all your
little tents, and I'm going to have my big one right in the
middle to show that I am with you. to represent his presence
on the camping trip of the wilderness, right in the middle of his people.
Now think of that. Man walked with God in the Garden
of Eden. Adam and Eve, they walked with
God. But what happened when they sinned against God? Well, they
were terrified. They hid themselves from God.
God made clothing for them out of animal skins in order to cover
up their shame, and then he expelled them from the garden. And they
weren't in his presence anymore. They were kicked out. And you
know what was standing at the edge of that garden to keep them
from coming back in? Well, it was the cherubim. These
angels of God that were tasked with holding these flaming swords
to make sure that they weren't allowed to just waltz right back
in to the presence of God again. Now, man needs to be with God,
but it's also a terrifying thing to be with God as a sinner. This
is what we saw when they first came to Mount Sinai. That's where
they're standing right now, by the way. All the people are at
the base of this mountain called Sinai. Moses has walked up to
the top of this mountain. Moses, their leader. And Moses
is receiving these instructions. This is what we're reading right
now is instructions from God to Moses. But the reason that
the people had asked for Moses to be the one to go and get those
instructions is because they couldn't handle hearing straight
from God. When they first got there, God spoke directly to
all of the people. The lines that he spoke to them
are what we call the Ten Commandments. And when he spoke out of the
mountain, he spoke out of the appearance of fire covering the
top of the mountain, and he spoke with a voice that was so booming
and so loud that the people thought that they would die if they continued
to hear him. And so they begged Moses, please
don't let God speak to us directly anymore. That's the way that
they felt when God was dwelling high up, far off on a mountain
that they could see, and speaking to them. But now you know what
God is saying? He's saying, I'm going to come
and live right in the middle of you, so make me a tent. Make
me a tent in the middle of your campsite. This would be like
if you're in your suburban neighborhood, and you say, well, things are
pretty normal around here, and then God says, make me a mansion
right in the middle of your subdivision, because I want you all to know
that I'm there, and I'm with you, and I see you. That's a
little bit scary. And yet, it's gracious, because
God's going to do this in a way, through this tabernacle, representing
how is it that this terrifying God can come, not in wrath, but
in grace and in peace toward his people. Now, what does this
represent? What does this point us to? Well,
it represents and points us to Jesus. Jesus is the one that
the tabernacle is about. It says in John 1.14, the Word
became flesh, that's Jesus. He has been the eternal Word
of God from eternity past, the second person of the Trinity,
God the Son. He became flesh and dwelt among us. And we have
seen his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full
of grace and truth. When it says, the Word became
flesh and dwelt among us, that word dwelt, it's literally saying
He came and He tabernacled among us. It's just like when God came
down into the tabernacle, except that tabernacling in the wilderness
was pointing forward to the greater reality of God coming in the
flesh, and the person of Jesus, and being right there in the
middle of His people. You know what's happened now
that Jesus has come and he's accomplished his work on earth.
He has lived the perfect life. He has died in the place of sinners
on the cross. He was buried. He was raised
on the third day. And then he ascended into heaven.
And he said that it was better for us that he go away from us,
because if he didn't go away, then he wouldn't send the Holy
Spirit. So he's still dwelling with us now because he sent the
Holy Spirit, his very own Spirit, who now indwells individual believers. When you come to faith in Jesus,
the Holy Spirit comes to tabernacle and dwell inside of you. 1 Corinthians
6 says that you do not know that your body is a temple of the
Holy Spirit. The rest of the New Testament,
whenever it talks about the Holy Spirit's temple on earth, it's
not talking about individuals. It's talking about the church,
that we are built up together as living stones, as this dwelling
place for the Holy Spirit, this temple of the Holy Spirit. So
He has come in Jesus. Jesus has come and tabernacled
among us. He's away from us now, but he's
with us now also by the Holy Spirit who indwells us individually
as believers and who indwells us corporately as a church. And one day, we are going to
be in his presence, tabernacling, not camping, but permanently
situated with Him forever and ever, as He will dwell among
His people, and be our God, and we will be His people." Here's
Revelation 21, verses 1 through 3. Then I saw a new heaven and
a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed
away. and the sea was no more. And I saw the holy city, New
Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as
a bride adorned for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from
the throne saying, Behold, the dwelling place of God is with
man. He will dwell with them, and
they will be his people, and God himself will be with them
as their God." Guys, that's what we need. We need to be there
on that day. Don't be one of the ones who
is in the lake of fire on that day, whose name is not found
written in the Lamb's book of life from before the foundation
of the world. Come to faith in Jesus now, because He is the
one who was, and the one who is, and the one who is coming. He is coming, and let that day,
when you meet God, let that day be a day of joy, because you've
already come to Christ. Don't let that be a day of terror.
That's what's mixed together here with the tabernacle. There's
a little bit of terror. God is coming to be with us,
that guy who our whole land shook when he spoke the Ten Commandments
to us from the mountain, but there's also the comfort. God,
my God, my gracious God, He is showing us mercy because He is
making a way to come and to be with us, to be our God and for
us to be His people. And that ultimately comes through
faith in Jesus Christ. Secondly, the tabernacle is picturing
heaven on earth. Let's see a little bit of what
we already saw in verse 1, and I'll read through verse 6 as
well. You make the tabernacle with 10 curtains of fine twined
linen and blue and purple and scarlet yarns. You shall make
them with the cherubim skillfully worked into them. The length
of each curtain shall be 28 cubits. A cubit is a foot and a half.
And the breadth of each curtain, four cubits. All the curtains
shall be the same size. Five curtains shall be coupled
to one another and the other five curtains shall be coupled
to one another. And you shall make loops of blue on the edge
of the outermost curtains in the first set. Likewise, you
shall make loops on the edge of the outermost curtain in the
second set. Fifty loops you shall make on the one curtain, and
fifty loops you shall make on the edge of the curtain that
is in the second set. The loops shall be opposite one another,
and you shall make fifty clasps of gold, and couple the curtains
to one another with the clasps, so that the tabernacle may be
a single whole. Now what you see here is instructions
for the lowest layer of the tent, okay? So if you can picture a
frame tent, a frame tent, and it's gonna describe the frame
later, but you have to have some sort of covering laying over
the top of the tent. Now in the tabernacle, there
were four different coverings. And part of the reason to have
four is so that nobody but the people who were supposed to would
see the bottom layer. And that's what we're describing
right now is the bottom layer. This would have been as you walked
into the tabernacle, and I say you, you and I wouldn't have
been the ones to walk into the tabernacle. We'll talk about
that in just a minute. Almost nobody got to do that.
But those who did get to do that, the priests who went in, what
they would have seen in the walls and draped up onto the ceilings
is this lowest layer. These 10 curtains that were long
and just wide enough so that when they had 10 that were connected
together that it would cover up the whole length and sides
of that structure. But what they looked like, it
said that they're blue and purple and scarlet yarns with fine twined
linen with cherubim skillfully worked into them. So what you
see there is you see these blues and reds and purples with sort
of these golden patterns of angels worked into it. Now there's been
a lot that's been read into these color designs and these loops
and a lot of the things that are listed in this chapter. I
looked at a certain author even this week who I was very hopeful
about. And he began his description
by saying, we shouldn't read things into this design that
are not there. That's been done poorly throughout
history. And then he jumped right into saying, well, the red represents
the blood of Jesus and the blue represents the righteousness
and heaven and all this kind of stuff. It's just, you know,
you can kind of see where somebody's coming from who says that stuff,
but it's just not in the text. And it's the kind of stuff where,
well, if my mind related red to something else, then I would
just relate it to something else. And so we can't just make up
or just go along with all these ideas that are not actually shown
to us in the text of scripture about what this stuff represents.
But what I think we can do is we can look at the general picture
that's painted here, and we can compare it to what the New Testament
says about this, and sometimes even the words about it in the
Old Testament as well, describing the symbolism, and we can say,
hey, this actually meant something. We don't have to throw out all
symbolism, because God tells us some of the symbolism. And
in particular, the patterns that are there, just try to picture
it for yourself what that would have looked like with red and
blue and purple skillfully worked together. We don't know what
exactly the patterns of that looked like. And then also with
these built-in sewn in skillfully crafted pictures
of angels flying around in the middle of that. And this is going
to be to your sides, it's going to be all the way up the walls,
it's going to be up over your head. I mean, just the plain
picture of that, as far as I can imagine, it's a picture of heaven. It's a picture of the night sky,
of the sunset turning into the night and angels flying around.
It's almost a feeling like if you go to the planetarium, That
you go in there, and it's dark, and it starts to light up, and
you're inside, but you're getting a picture of the heavens in front
of you. That's kind of what was going on with this. Now again,
you could just say, oh, well, that's just the way that Pastor
Daniel thinks about it. That's just what he thinks it
looks like. Well, let me give you some scripture from the New
Testament about this. It says that in Hebrews 8.5,
that the tabernacle was, quote, a copy and shadow of the heavenly
things. Now, some would take that to
mean, well, every single description of every single part of the construction
process must be some kind of a symbol of a spiritual thing. Well, I don't think that that's
quite what it says, but I do think it's saying here, hey,
this is intended to be a picture of heaven. and to give somebody
who walked in there a feeling of, hey, I'm not about earthly
things anymore. I'm about the God of heaven who
lives here, that his real dwelling place is in the heavens, and
that I'm getting just a tiny glimpse of it here on earth.
Here's what it says in Hebrews 9, 23 and 24, it was necessary
for the copies of heavenly things, that's what it's called, copies
of heavenly things, to be purified with these rites. But the heavenly
things themselves, now in Hebrews he's moving from the copies from
the tabernacle to think about, let's think about real heaven.
The heavenly things themselves needed to be purified with better
sacrifices than the ones that would happen there, than these.
For Christ has entered, not into holy places made with hands which
are copies of the true things, but into heaven itself, now to
appear in the presence of God on our behalf. So as we have
that blue and purple and scarlet and the pictures, the angels,
there's the little picture there on earth of, hey, a priest is
going into something of the heavenly presence of God to work on behalf
of the people. And it's a little picture, according
to Hebrews 9, to show us the real substance that's casting
the shadow. That real substance is Jesus.
Jesus is the great high priest who walked not into the tabernacle
or the temple, but into the real heaven itself to offer the perfect
sacrifice of himself on our behalf. The tabernacle gave a little
picture that we need to look to Jesus. What did Jesus do when
he walked into the real tabernacle, to the real temple, to the real
heaven on our behalf? Well, it says Ephesians 2.6 that
God raised us up with Jesus and seated us with him in the heavenly
places in Christ Jesus. We, believer, when you have come
to faith in Jesus, You have a seat in heaven with Jesus right now. We don't see it yet, but we set
our minds there. Just like the Israelites themselves,
they weren't able to see inside of that tabernacle. They never
got a glimpse in there, unless they happened to be one of the
very few priests who got to go inside. And yet they were constantly
wondering, what does it look like in there? What's going on
in there? I wish I could just see that table and that candelabra. I wish I could see the Ark of
the Covenant. I wish I could see the beautiful designs on
those beautiful curtains that are blocked from our view by
the outer layers. And you know what? We don't see
heaven yet, but we have a seat there. And we have an advocate
there with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous, who is
interceding for us. Our place there is settled. And
Colossians 3 says, set your minds on the things that are above
and not on the things that are on earth. So that's part of what
we're called to as Christians, considering the tabernacle. Boy,
those beautiful things that are covered up that look like heaven.
I want to set my mind on what I can't see yet, the real heaven.
We have come to something now. that is better than these copies. It says in Hebrews 12, 22 to
24, you have come, that's you who believe, you have come to
Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, to the heavenly
Jerusalem, and to innumerable angels in festal gathering, and
to the assembly of the firstborn who are enrolled in heaven, and
to God, the judge of all, and to the spirits of the righteous
made perfect, and to Jesus, the mediator of a new covenant. One
of the things that tells us that it's not just you, believer.
It is you and all your brothers and sisters in Christ, and we
have come to this assembly of God on earth that pictures the
assembly of God in heaven. That's part of why it hurts not
to have church right now, because God intends the assembly of the
saints on earth to be a picture for us and for the world. of
the true assembly in heaven. We get a little taste every time
we come together as a church of what it's going to be like
to come together in heaven. And I hope that this is making
your hearts long for that on earth, and I hope that it's making
your hearts long for that even more in heaven as we're apart
from each other right now. But what we're called to be,
what we are, we're a little picture of heaven as a church, and we're
called to set our hearts on the better picture. that's pictured
at the tabernacle, that is where Jesus has gone into the heavens
themselves with a better sacrifice. Third, we have building with
the instruction manual. I'm gonna read a big chunk here.
I'm gonna read a big chunk of construction instructions. So
get yourself ready and pay attention. You're going to want to zone
out. Please don't. Chapter 26, verse
seven. through 30. I'm going to read that big chunk
right now. You shall also make the curtains of goats hair. for
a tent over the tabernacle. Eleven curtains you shall make.
The length of each curtain shall be thirty cubits, and the breadth
of each curtain four cubits. The eleven curtains shall be
the same size. You shall couple five curtains by themselves,
and six curtains by themselves, and the sixth curtain you shall
double over at the front of the tent. You shall make fifty loops
on the edge of the curtain that is the outermost in one set,
and fifty loops on the edge of the curtain that is the outermost
on the second set. You shall make 50 clasps of bronze
and put the clasps into the loops and couple the tent together
that it may be a single whole. And the part that remains of
the curtains of the tent, the half curtain that remains shall
hang over the back of the tabernacle. And the extra that remains in
the length of the curtains, the cubit on the one side and the
cubit on the other side shall hang over the sides of the tabernacle
on this side and that side to cover it. And you shall make
for the tent a covering of tan ram skins and a covering of goat
skins on top. You shall make upright frames
for the tabernacle of acacia wood. Ten cubits shall be the
length of a frame, and a cubit and a half the breadth of each
frame. There shall be two tenons in each frame for fitting together,
so shall you do for all the frames of the tabernacle. You shall
make the frames for the tabernacle 20 frames for the south side,
and 40 bases of silver you shall make under the 20 frames, two
bases under the one frame for its two tenons, and two bases
under the next frame for its two tenons, and for the second
side of the tabernacle on the north side 20 frames. And there
are forty bases of silver, two bases under one frame, and two
bases under the next frame. And for the rear of the tabernacle
westward you shall make six frames. And you shall make two frames
for the corners of the tabernacle in the rear. They shall be separate
beneath, but joined at the top, at the first ring. Thus shall
it be with both of them. They shall from the two corners,
form of the two corners. And there shall be eight frames
with their bases of silver, 16 bases, two bases under one frame,
and two bases under another frame. You shall make the bars of acacia
wood. for the frames of the one side of the tabernacle and five
bars for the frames of the other side of the tabernacle and five
bars for the frames of the side of the tabernacle at the rear
westward. The middle bar halfway up the frames shall run from
end to end. You shall overlay the frames
with gold and shall make their rings of gold for holders for
the bars and you shall overlay the bars with gold. Then you
shall erect the tabernacle according to the plan for it that you were
shown on the mountain. All right. That was some construction
instructions. And to help us picture that,
I brought this model. So my son Ben made this model. He's 10 years old right now.
And we were trying to figure out how old he was when he made
this. I think he was seven or eight, possibly. And so what
you see here is you have the outer courtyard of the tabernacle,
which would have been very large. that's going to be described
later on. Then within here, this is the place where the altar
and the basin would have gone, where the sacrifices were happening,
and there were some pieces that represented that in the model,
and I didn't want to lose those, so I left those in their proper
place at home today. But what we just read about here
was the construction of this piece right here, the tent of
the tabernacle. Now what you see, I don't know
how well you can see this on the camera at home, but the way
that you would have seen it, just like here, is on the very
outside you just see these animal skins draped over. And that's
essentially all that anybody sees unless they're standing
on the east side where the sun shines. And if they're standing
on the east side where the sun shines, especially in the morning,
they're gonna get a brilliant view of these five golden pillars
that are at the front that would light up in the sunrise and have
something of an entrance, just a grand entrance there to the
dwelling place of God. It's something where you're looking
around here and you see, well, that's a big tent. And then you
catch a glimpse a little bit over the fence of the courtyard
of just the grandeur of somebody lives there. This is not just
any tent. This is an amazing place. And within there, there were
four different layers of this covering. So we already described
the first one. The bottom layer is the one that
would have formed the inner walls and ceiling of the tabernacle
that would have only been seen by the priests. Above that there
was a covering of goat's hair. Now some people read lots of
different meanings into why goats hair, what's the spiritual meaning
of that? Probably it's just because it was a protective layer to
make sure that that really fine linen underneath didn't get messed
up. And then above that there was a layer of these ram skins,
and then above that there was this final layer. I believe it
says goat skins in the translation that I just read. Some people
think that it means badger skins. Some people think that it means
dolphin skins or manatee skins. It's some sort of animal skin,
but what this would have done is on the outside you just got
a sort of a raw looking protective layer. It's going to be waterproof.
It's going to keep everything inside safe through the sun and
the sandstorms and everything that's coming. in the direction
of this moving campsite. But with all of that, what you
have is you have hidden underneath the beauty and the grandeur of
what is going on. There's instructions that we
read for the pillars and these sort of ladder-like structures
around the side that are going to hold it up. But that's the
general idea of it. I would encourage you, if you
never have or if you haven't recently, you can go on YouTube
and just type in design of the tabernacle and there's lots of
people who have made these fantastic videos. Of course, there's illustrations
all over the place, lots of study bibles have this, but I really
like those videos where you can kind of get this animated sort
of like fly-through picture of what the tabernacle would have
looked like and where they lift up the different layers. so you
can see what was inside, which they wouldn't have been able
to do as the Israelites that time to see inside. But with
all of that, I want to think a little bit here about just
the tediousness of these instructions. What we just read with these
tedious instructions, this is a place where when we come to
these things, we think to ourselves, I know that all Scripture is
God-breathed and is useful for us, that it's intended to make
us complete in Christ, to build us up, to train us in righteousness,
and yet, this is directions, and these are harder to follow
than what I get for my Ikea furniture. I mean, this is tedious stuff.
There's a lesson there in itself, just in the tedious nature of
what it is. There is a temptation to be bored
with this, and yet God gave us these specific instructions,
and God gave Moses and these people these specific instructions
for his purposes, for his glory. He didn't say, well, I'm just
going to only give you the juicy parts. I'm only going to give
you the parts that are really interesting to you. God is not
seeker sensitive. God is not saying, I'm going
to just find the parts that are going to really rile people up. And let's just get rid of these
instructions and put in a bunch of zip lines. And that'll really
get people excited. No, he has a pattern. And it
says in verse 30 that he has an exact pattern. He said to
Moses, you shall erect the tabernacle according to the plan for it,
that you are shown on the mountain. So as we have all of these detailed
writings, and now if you were an actual construction person,
you would probably say, this is not detailed enough. I need
more details than this if I'm going to know exactly how to
do this. Well, Moses had that. He got to look at a picture,
apparently, according to verse 30, of exactly what this was
supposed to look like. He saw it for himself. And so
he had the written instructions and he also had the memory of
the picture that God showed him of here is what this is supposed
to look like. And it mattered to God. It mattered
not just that they had some system of worship, not just that they
had some sort of place that represented his presence, but that they do
it according to his design. and the tedious nature of that
shows that God is glorified in our following tedious instructions
about unglorious, unexciting things. I say unglorious, I mean
unglamorous. We tend to want things things
to think about and to do that are exciting, that are glamorous.
But if God calls us to be faithful in the things that are tedious
and that are not glamorous, it is still for the glory of God. It is still so that we can glorify
God and enjoy Him forever. We may think to ourselves, well,
I'm going to have more joy in God if I just skip to the exciting
parts. Well, no, that's not the way
to have joy in Jesus. We trust and obey, for there's
no other way to be happy in Jesus than to trust and obey, says
the old hymn. And this is part of it. We trust
God. We come to a part of the scriptures where we say, well,
that's not the most exciting verse I've ever read. I trust
that what God says is true, and I want to follow God and what
He says is right. He calls us to be faithful in
those things for His glory. If God has said that something
needs to be a certain way, then He said it for His glory, and
we can do it for His glory. Now, most directly applying this
for us, This shows us that as Christians that we need to take
even the parts that are not exciting to us about how the church ought
to be arranged and built up, to take those things seriously.
Most directly, now that Christ has come, the tedious instructions
for the tabernacle relate to the proper ordering of the church
according to the commands and examples of the Bible. The tabernacle
led to the temple, the temple pointed to Jesus, And it still
points to Jesus, all of it points to Jesus, but while Jesus is
away from us again, he said that we're representing him in his
body, the church, in his building, the church, in his temple for
now, the church. It says in 1 Corinthians 3.10,
and we talked about this a couple of weeks ago, but I just want
to reiterate this. According to the grace of God given to
me, like a skilled master builder, I laid the foundation. Paul's
saying, I came in and I was the one that God used to plant this
church, to preach the gospel here and to get this church in
Corinth started. He said, I laid the foundation
of this building that is the church. And he says, and someone
else is now building on it, and let each one take care how he
builds on it. So when we see tedious instructions
for the building of the tabernacle and the building of the temple,
we need to remember it matters to God how we arrange and do
His place of worship. And we need to look intently
to the commands and the examples of the Bible to take seriously
what they say. Just one example, this came up
on Thursday. If you watch the Thursday live
stream devotionals, we just started Philippians in those, Thursdays
at noon. And here's just a verse that came up this week, Philippians
1.1, Paul and Timothy, servants of Christ Jesus to all the saints
in Christ who are at Philippi with the overseers and deacons.
Now we say to ourselves, well, is that the greatest, most exhilarating
verse from my faith that I've ever read? Well, probably not. And yet it gives us some instructions
there. It says, here's what a church is. It's the saints who are in
Christ Jesus. A church is to be a gathering
of believers, those who are saints. It is to be those of us who have
decided that we are together as believers, regenerate church
membership built in right there, and that there are two offices
that God has appointed within the church, overseers and deacons. Deacons we know, overseers are
also called pastors or also called elders. So we see that, and we
also see that there's multiple deacons in one church, and multiple
overseers, multiple elders in one church. And that's something
that we are striving toward here at our church as well, is to
have multiple elders. And when we have discussions
like that, some would say, well, okay, that's all right, but let's
get back to the gospel. You know what, I agree, I agree.
The gospel is the diamond of our faith, alright? Nobody was
going to claim, hey, whether or not we get all of the instructions
just right for the tabernacle, that's going to be the deciding
factor for whether or not God is our Savior. Nobody thought
that, I don't think. Maybe some people thought that.
Nobody thinks, well, if we don't get everything exactly right
according to the instructions of the New Testament for how
we order the church, then we're all going to be lost. We don't
think that. The gospel is the point. We believe in God's grace
alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone. The way God has
arranged it in the Old Testament is that the beauty of this dwelling
place of God among man, It's demonstrating God's willingness
to save sinners. It is showing off the gospel
in the tabernacle, in the wilderness. And what the church does is it
shows off the gospel. So you can think of it that it's
like a diamond ring. And the diamond, the diamond
is what's beautiful. The diamond is what makes it
valuable and amazing. And God has also given a setting
for the diamond. And so you had the gospel with
the setting of the tabernacle in the Old Testament, the gospel
with the setting of the church in the New Testament. If we get
the setting wrong, the gospel is still the gospel. It's still
going to save sinners, and yet we can draw attention to it and
just show off the beauty of the gospel by doing the setting,
by doing church in the way that God has said that it should be
done. So we want to do those things
that may seem non-essential, may even be non-essential, and
yet God's given us instructions about them, even if those things
are unglamorous. We want to do that to make the
diamond of the gospel look awesome. Number four, we've got restricted
access. Restricted access that's represented
here in the tabernacle. Look at verse 31. It says, you
shall make a veil of blue. A veil. This is a covering, this
is a curtain that people are not to pass except in very specific
circumstances. Make a veil of blue and purple
and scarlet yarns and fine twined linen. It shall be made with
cherubim skillfully worked into it. And you shall hang it on
four pillars of acacia overlaid with gold, with hooks of gold
on four bases of silver and you shall hang the veil from the
clasps and bring the ark of the testimony in there within the
veil. And the veil shall separate for you the holy place from the
most holy place. You shall put the mercy seat
on the ark of the testimony in the most holy place. And you
shall set the tabernacle, excuse me, you shall set the table outside
the veil and the lamp stand on the south side of the tabernacle
opposite the table. And you shall put the table on
the north side. You shall make a screen for the entrance of
the tent, blue and purple and scarlet yarns and fine twined
linen embroidered with needlework. and you shall make for the screen
five pillars of acacia, and overlay them with gold. Their hooks shall
be of gold, and you shall cast five bases of bronze for them."
What you have here is you have instructions about these tents,
these veils within the tent, these veils of separation, these
veils of exclusivity, these veils of restricted access. You had
two veils that were described. The second one that was described,
I'll just show you again right here. It's this first veil as
you were on the outside of the, if you're standing in the courtyard
or even peering over the fence from the outside, then you would
see this right here where there's these beautiful pillars in front,
but then behind the pillars there's this mysterious veil of blue
and purple and scarlet, and it looks beautiful. Now there are
no cherubim worked into that one. There are cherubim worked
into the next veil that represent something like those cherubim
guarding the the Garden of Eden after Adam and Eve were kicked
out. This is restricted access. That first veil, it guarded the
entrance to the tabernacle itself. Only priests could go into that
first room. They would go in there on a regular
basis to make sure that they tended the lamps on the lampstand,
that the oil kept burning with this light before the table.
They would go in there to change out the bread of the presence.
once a week that represented the presence of God with His
twelve tribes of Israel. But only once a year could anyone
go past that second veil, not just into the holy place of the
outer room, but into the holy of holies of the inner room where
the Ark of the Covenant sat. The high priest could go in there
once a year on the Day of Atonement to sprinkle the blood of the
sacrifice on the mercy seat of God. There was no opening in
the middle. There was no door in this. We
don't know exactly how they went through. They would have had
to go through on the side somehow. It wasn't built in such a way
as to let people go through easily. Not the inner veil, not the outer
veil either. There was a restriction here.
If you were not one of the Jewish people, not one of the Hebrew
people, you might not have been allowed in the camp at all. If
you were allowed in the camp and you managed to come along
as some of those Gentiles did when they escaped Egypt, then
you would have been allowed somewhere around. Some of the Jewish people
would have come into the courtyard, they would have brought their
sacrifices on behalf of their families and their tribes. The
priests and the Levites would have been working in that courtyard.
But then, even the Levites themselves, unless they were priests, they
couldn't go in at all. And even the priests, they could
only go into the outer room unless it was the one man, the high
priest, could go into the inner room only once a year. And as
I said earlier, all the rest of the people would have looked
and would have thought, what does it look like in there? I
can only imagine. I can't see. I can't see the
Ark of the Covenant. They would have never seen the Ark of the
Covenant, even when they took up the tent and moved, because
it was wrapped in cloths before they did that. That's what it
tells us in the book of Numbers. They wouldn't have seen it. It
was restricted. Right there is built in something
of the holiness of God. You cannot just presume to come
to God. You can't just barge in to the
presence of God. You can't just show up to God
and say, God, here I am, take me. Because we are sinners, and
he is holy, and the wages of sin is death. But in Christ,
we have the free gift of God, which is eternal life. And Jesus,
by His body and in His shed blood, He has torn open the veil. He has opened up free access
to the inner places because He is our great High Priest. The
temple and the tabernacle, they represented that it is hard to
get to God. Not anybody can just stroll up
there. And that's still the case in a sense. because you can't
just go up to God. But if you are in Christ Jesus,
if you are a believer in Jesus, then you are united with Christ
and He has brought you in. You're there already if you're
in Jesus. You're not even on the outside
waiting to go in. He has brought you already. He has applied His saving work
to you by faith and brought you into the presence of God, not
for judgment, but for gracious peace and forgiveness and life
and joy in his glory forever and ever. When Jesus died, it
says in Matthew 27.51. By the way, on your outline,
I wrote the wrong verse, but it's Matthew 27.51. It says,
Behold, when Jesus had died, the curtain of the temple was
torn in two from top to bottom, and the earth shook, and the
rocks were split. Remember, I said there was no
entryway in the middle of the curtain. You would have had to
find some way around it if you were one of those special people
who went in. Well, what Jesus did, He ripped it down the middle.
When He died, God ripped it. Was it to let people in? Was
it to let God out? Both. It was both. It was to
show that there is free, unrestricted access to God for all who are
in Christ Jesus. He made the way for us to be
with God. It says this explicitly in Hebrews
10, 19 through 22. Therefore, brothers, since we
have confidence to enter the holy places by the blood of Jesus,
by the new and living way that he opened for us through the
curtain, that is through his flesh, and since we have a great
priest over the house of God, let us draw near with a true
heart and full assurance of faith, with our hearts sprinkled clean
from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water. Guys, that is good news. James
says that as believers in Jesus, draw near to God and He will
draw near to you. in peace and in love. He will
wrap His arms around you. You won't come to Him as a terrifying
judge, but you'll come to Him as a loving Father. Your heart
will be crying out, Abba, Father, and He will see you as His perfect
child, because you're united to His perfect Son, Jesus. We
come by the blood of Jesus, by the new and living way, through
His flesh, and He's brought us in. Now, we come to Him right
now. You can come to Him right now.
I want to tell you this too. If you are on the outside looking
in, if your faith is not in Christ, you can come to Him right now.
Not by just presuming that you can. That's not what I'm saying.
Not by just saying, God forgives sinners, so He better let me
in. That's not what I'm saying. I'm saying you can come to Him
right now by repenting of your sin, by believing in Jesus, by
turning to Christ the Savior. And if you throw yourself on
the mercy of Jesus, He will give you His mercy and His grace,
and He will usher you in to the presence of God in peace and
in joy, and you'll be there with Him forever and ever. I do want
to mention that the dimensions that are listed here that we
saw earlier about the holy of holies, That is a cubic design. You had, I'm gonna speak in terms
of feet instead of cubits, but you've got about 45 feet long
and 15 feet wide of this tabernacle. And then within that, there's
the inner room. It's the Holy of Holies. It's 15 feet by 15
feet by 15 feet. 10 by 10 by 10 cubits. It is
a cube. That carries over into the temple.
It is a cube on the inside. There is only one other place
in the Bible that's described as having cubic dimensions. The
only other cube in the Bible, besides the Holy of Holies, is
the New Jerusalem. It's in Revelation 21, as God
is talking about where it is that he will dwell with his people,
in person, in the flesh, forever and ever. In the New Jerusalem
it says, the city lies four square, its length the same as its width.
He measured the city with his rod, 12,000 stadia, which is
well over 1,000 miles. Its length and width and height
are equal. Why does it say it's length and width or height or
equal? It's because in Christ we are going to be in the very
presence of God forever and ever and ever, and we'll be there
in peace through faith in Jesus who has ushered us in. So as
we can't see into the tabernacle, every time you look at a model
of the tabernacle and you see this, and you see, well, I thought
it was gonna look exciting, but it just looks like this weird
animal skin tent thing, and I don't see anything particularly interesting.
We all have to, just looking from the outside, you have to
just imagine what's in there. Well, keep your heart set on
what's in there, and keep your heart set on what it pictures. Keep your heart set on where
you really are, where your great high priest really is right now.
Set your mind on heavenly things, and not on things that are on
earth. Draw near to God in Christ, and He will draw near to you.
Let me pray for us. God, I thank You that Jesus has
gone into the heavenly places, that He's gone not into the shadows
and copies, but into the real thing. And He's come and He has
broken open the veil by His death for us. God, I thank You that
He has come as the High Priest and the Sacrificial Lamb at the
same time. I thank you that he is the one
mediator between God and man, and I thank you that as those
who are united to Jesus, that we have free access into the
Holy of Holies forever and ever. God, we look forward to that.
We look forward to being in your presence in gracious peace through
the blood of Jesus. God, I pray for any who are not
in Christ right now. Lord, they may not even understand
what I'm talking about when I say not in Christ, but God, I pray
for those whose faith and hope and love are not centered on
Jesus alone. God, I pray that you would cause
them to forsake whatever those things are centered on and to
lay aside their love of sin and to love Christ who died for their
sin. God, I pray that as those who
have been redeemed by the Lamb, that you would just cause us
to rejoice in knowing that He is coming again to take us directly
into your presence for all time. And it's in Jesus' name I pray,
amen.
The Tabernacle
Series Exodus
| Sermon ID | 62120136395086 |
| Duration | 53:08 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | Exodus 26 |
| Language | English |
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