Exodus 26
New Covenant worshipers of God are surrounded by a great
cloud of witnesses. See Hebrews 12:1. The tabernacle, the movable
house of God that the Lord told Moses to build, once made the
invisible world of heavenly witnesses visible, in shadows, to those
who worshiped the Lord. The tent of God had angels, cherubim, woven
into the fabric of the curtains that formed the tent. God showed
Moses what it should look like and then told Him to make it according
to that pattern.
In Hebrews 12, the great cloud of witnesses are not only
angelic observers. The Old Testament worshipers of Hebrews 11
together with the New Testament children of the Lord who have more
recently entered His heavenly household are seeing the church today
from heaven. They are witnesses on high from a place where clouds are
not a sign of confusion or deception, but of the divine presence. God
and His heavenly host see. They are not deceived when people are
deceiving others and even themselves. Because we are seen by this
heavenly cloud, we are told to “lay aside every weight, and sin
which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that
is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our
faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross,
despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of
God.”
The tent of the assembly of God's people on earth, even
during the Old Testament days, was a place of holiness. It was not a
tent of tolerating or encouraging sin by sophisticated talk of
supposed freedoms that defile the body of Christ. Especially now that
Christ, who is our life, has appeared, we should be moving from glory
to glory through the Word and Spirit of God. We should be perfecting
holiness in the fear of God. See 2 Corinthians 7:1.
The curtains that formed the covering of the framed
structure of the assembly of heaven on earth were twenty-eight
cubits long. They were large enough to go up one wall of the frame
of the tabernacle, over the top, and down the other side of the
frame. The width of each curtain was only four cubits, but these
curtains were connected with each other in two groups of five
curtains each, connecting curtain to curtain with clasps of gold.
On top of these curtains was a second set of coverings,
made out of goats' hair. This set had an extra curtain beyond the
number of the linen curtains underneath. That extra curtain was
doubled over at the front of the tent. Clasps of bronze were to be
made that would be put into the loops of gold, making the tent into a
single whole. There would be an extra part of the tent curtains, a
half curtain, hanging over the back of the tabernacle, and extra
length that would hang over the sides. All of this was to be covered
by another covering of rams' skins and then a final covering of
goatskins on top.
This moveable tent house of God needed frames on which
the curtains could be hung up, first on one wall, then over the top,
and continuing down the other wall. These structural frames of the
tabernacle would be made of acacia wood. The walls would be fifteen
feet high. Each section of the frame would be fit together with the
next, with special bases to provide stability for the frames. In
addition there would be bars going along the tabernacle walls
horizontally making all the frames into a sturdy whole. These bars
would be thread through rings in the panels. Whatever might be a
challenge for us to imagine about this structure is a result of our
not having seen what Moses saw on the top of the mountain. The Lord
said to Moses, “You shall erect the tabernacle according to the
plan for it that you were shown on the mountain.”
The curtains and frames of the tabernacles spoken of so
far provided the structure of this special place of Old Covenant
worship. But there was one interior curtain that was of great
significance. This curtain was called the veil, and it separated the
tabernacle into two spaces, the Holy Place and the Most Holy Place.
As with the outer curtains, cherubim were woven into the
veil. This heavenly curtain was a dividing wall that could not be
easily breached. God was to be especially present in the Most Holy
Place. In that cubic area, 15 feet high, 15 feet wide, and 15 feet
long, Moses was to place the mercy seat on top of the ark of the
covenant. On the other side of the veil, in the Holy Place, Moses
would place the lampstand and the table for the holy bread. This part
of the tabernacle was to be twice as large as the Most Holy Place, 15
by 15 by 30 feet long.
The final special curtain was the screen at the entrance
of the tabernacle. This screen was at the gateway to the Lord's
movable house. This tent was to be made according to the Lord's
instruction. It was a tent for God. But when God came to dwell with
us as our Redeemer, he took up a different tent, the tent of a human
body, as his residence.
The human body, like the Old Testament tabernacle, was
to be an impressive though simple setting for God. But this Old
Testament tent, with its layers of curtains, and a single golden
lampstand with seven lamps would be a place of shadows, as the Old
Covenant people eagerly waited for the lights to be turned on. Now
Christ has come, and His Holy Spirit dwells within His church. With
the death of Jesus, who tented with us, the Old Testament veil has
been torn in two, and we have been granted bold access to God. The
day of shadows is over. The Light of the World has come.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home