Thursday, January 05, 2006

Insights from Exodus 25

Our dear friends,

I sensed from the Lord that I am to share my Quiet Time from this morning so that it may minister to someone who reads this blog. So here it is. And I plan to do more sharing here every few days about the lessons I have learned through this trial. (FYI, we go for blood work Monday the 9th and should know on the 13th during the appointment with the oncologist/hematologist whether or not Deb has gotten into a complete remission. Please continue praying for complete remission.)

My A-Team began to meet again today after several months off, due to Deb’s illness and holidays. It was good to be back. I knew that the news paper would be a temptation to skip my Quiet Time due to Texas’ great comeback victory for a national Championship last night, so I confessed that and prayed against it. God answered that prayer immediately! Lance took my newspaper with him as he left.

My assigned reading for the day began in Exodus 25 (keep in mind that I tell new believers to begin reading their Bible from GN 1- EX 24 and skip the rest of Exodus which is pretty boring as it deals with instructions on building the Tabernacle). I read the first 16 verses and decided to skip all the “boring” material for once (I have read my Bible through many times so my conscience was clear – I thought!). However, I decided to skip Leviticus, and Numbers too. As I was turning on toward Deuteronomy I sensed the Lord’s displeasure and His summoning me back to EX 25. So I surrendered and went back.

Amazingly, He allowed me to read it with fresh eyes this time. I only got through 22 verses today as He opened my eyes to symbolism I had always missed before, I guess because I was in a hurry to rush through the “boring parts.” Let me share with you the insights.

Ex 25 v. 2 “Tell the people of Israel to bring me their sacred offerings.”

What we offer to God is sacred, whether it is our tithes plus, or our possessions, or time or talent because it is offered to Him. It is holy. It is set apart for a sacred purpose. God’s purpose.

Ex 25 v. 3-7
The Israelites offered precious metal, fine cloth and skins, special wood (keep in mind how little of this wood could be found in the desert and how much would be needed for cooking, sacrifices and building the Tabernacle), olive oil (how precious this too would be in the desert), spices and precious stones. God wants our best too, the first of our income and time.

Now v.8 gets exciting! “…build me a holy sanctuary so I can live among them.”

Doesn’t that ring a bell? Jn 1:14 says that Jesus tabernacled or dwelt among men. God dwelt among the Israelites in his shekinah glory as a cloud by day and a fire by night as He led them through the desert. Remember God’s shekinah glory descended from heaven and filled Solomon’s Temple as God’s dwelling place among his people until their sinfulness caused him to “divorce” his bride Israel and send them into exile (sounds like Eph 4:30 where our sin can grieve the Holy Spirit who dwells within us, doesn’t it?). Remember there was a 400 year period of prophetic silence until John the Baptist appeared to prepare the way for God’s shekinah glory to appear among his people in the form of Jesus, God robed in flesh.
Ex 25:10 says that the Ark of the Covenant (the box that held the stone tablets of the 10 commandments which was God’s basic covenant law for Israel to keep in order to be blessed) was to be made of wood and overlaid inside and out with pure gold.

Interestingly enough, Jesus, God’s human box containing his covenant words for all mankind, was a carpenter who worked with wood and died on a wooden cross, and his spirit was overlaid inside and out with pure sinless flesh.

Ex 25:16 says to place the 10 commandments written on the two stone tablets inside the box. Remember that God’s own finger inscribed that stone (Ex 31:18; 34:1). Later on, in Jeremiah 31:33-4 God prophesies through Jeremiah that after the exile and restoration, the day will come when God will write his laws no longer on stone, but on the tablets of his peoples’ hearts and put them in their minds, and the Hebrews writer is telling us that is what happened in New Testament times through Jesus and the Holy Spirit. That is why it is so important for us to dig into His Word, so that God can write it on our hearts.

Ex 25:17-20 speaks of the ark’s cover being the place or seat of atonement and two cherubim (images of angels with wings) stand at each end of the ark and spread their wings over it covering it. Recall that only the high priest, once per year on the Day of Atonement, would enter the Holy of Holies where the ark sat, which sort of also symbolized God’s throne and his presence there, and the High Priest would sprinkle blood on the mercy seat or atonement seat to deal with the sins of the people for that year.

This foreshadows LK 24:4 where two angels in the tomb announced to the women that Jesus had been raised from the dead. His own blood sprinkled the cross and the empty tomb.

But get this next verse! – Ex 25:22 – God says to Moses, “I will meet with you there and talk to you from above the atonement cover…From there I will give you my commands for the people of Israel.”

Isn’t that what happens in our Christian lives? God meets with us at the cross and the empty tomb. When we approach God’s throne of grace in confessional repentance, Christ’s blood has already made atonement for our sins, God forgives us and grants us mercy and grace and restores us into right relationship with him. He cleanses us. He speaks to us from His Word [even often causing a text we (may have read many times but never seen or internalized) to jump off the page and into our hearts] and through prayer or however He chooses to call attention to his message to us which then requires a faith/trust reaction on our part to be obedient to his command for our next step in our faith walk with Him.

In this journey called life we have to TRUST God’s leading. He usually shows us a direction He wants us to go in life, but then only allows us to clearly see one step at a time into the future. And our future is put on hold until we take that one step in trusting obedience. Then he shows us the next step to take in obedience to his will so that he can shape us and mold us into spiritual beings that look more and more like Jesus, his perfect Son.

Remember that Hebrews 5:8 says that Jesus learned obedience through his suffering. Let us not be surprised when God allows us to suffer in this life. Even if the Enemy means to discourage or destroy us with that painful experience, God in his all powerful might and wisdom will use that painful experience:

to chip away our rough edges in order to turn us into a diamond like being that will brightly reflect his glory from deep inside us in spite of our obvious flaws;

to boil away the impurities in our character that try to contaminate us;

to cut dangerous, infectious-like sin out of our sinful hearts;

to separate us from deadly rebellion;

to pull us away from distractions that threaten to sidetrack us from our mission of serving God.

Regardless of what crucible or pressure cooker you find yourself in, trust God to use it for your cleansing and strengthening as he transforms you from a sinner into a saint. (Romans 12:1-2)

May God bless you,
Duane

2 Comments:

At 1/06/2006 10:08 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thank you Duane that hit the spot I needed that.Duane Philip will be 18 the 15th of this month oh how they grow up .Our prayers are still with your family.
In his love ,
Ricky and Becky

 
At 1/07/2006 6:14 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thank you for those insights Duane--I feel like a beggar who was invited to feast at the White House! Trials do help us hear God in new ways--there's a Scripture in Job about how we will listen in our pain. I know you and Debbie are faithful listeners and obedient servants and are a blessing to so many people! I'm just praising God for his work in you both and continuing to pray for complete remission.

 

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