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ALONE
WITH GOD
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Spiritual Answers and Reasons
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THE TRUE
TABERNACLE
"According
to the pattern showed to thee in the mount."-HEBREWS
viii. 5.
THERE were three stages by
which Moses, the man of God, ascended into the Mount. To
the first, he went in company with Aaron, Nadab, and Abihu,
and seventy elders of the children of Israel, the chosen
representatives of the people. "And they saw the God
of Israel; and there was under his feet as it were a paved
work of a sapphire stone, and as it were the body of
heaven in his clearness; they saw God, and did eat and
drink" (Exod. xxiv. 10, 11). This eating and drinking
was evidently a symbol of friendship and peace, based upon
the shedding of the blood, which is recorded in the
previous verses. We, too, may see God, and eat of the
flesh and drink of the blood of the Son of Man, on the
basis of that precious blood by which we have been made
nigh.
When this feast was over, the voice of
God called Moses up to a higher range, a further steep. He
first bade the elders tarry where they were; and then,
accompanied only by Joshua, he rose up, and went into the
mount of God, on which the cloud brooded, steeped and
bathed in the glory of the Lord, like the long bars of
cloud in the brilliance of a setting sun.
But on the seventh day, even Joshua was
left behind. God called unto Moses out of the cloud. And
Moses went up further into the mount, deeper and yet
deeper into the heart of the burning glory. All his senses
were keenly awake to the scenes around him, and entranced;
each the channel for tides of rapturous enjoyment, without
pain, without self-consciousness, without the paralysis of
fear, as if one were borne ever onward by a tide of glory
and music, each movement of which was rapture. "And
Moses was in the Mount forty days and forty nights."
During that time minute instructions
were given Moses concerning the Tabernacle, which was to
be erected on the plains below. Those instructions are
given in Exod. xxv., xxvi.,xxvii., and are exceedingly
minute. But nothing was left to human fancy. Beginning
with the ark and its mercy-seat as the throne of God, the
instructions pass through the table of shittim wood, the
candlestick with its seven branches, the boards and
curtains and hangings, until they end at the great brazen
altar in the court of the Tabernacle, where God and the
sinner met. Is not this also the path trodden by the Lord
himself, the substance of all these types, who came from
the bosom of the Father to the cross of Calvary, the
brazen altar where he put away the sins of men?
But, in addition to the minute
description thus given, there appears to have been
presented to the mind of Moses some representation of the
things which he was bidden to construct. It was as if the
eternal realities which had dwelt forever in the mind of
God took some visible shape before his vision. The unseen
became visible. The eternal took form. A pattern was shown
him. He trod the aisles of the true Tabernacle. He beheld
the heavenly things themselves. And it was after this
pattern that he was repeatedly urged and commanded to
build. "According to all that I show thee, after the
pattern of the Tabernacle, and the pattern of all the
instruments thereof, even so shall ye make it" (Exod.
xxv. 9, 40; xxvi. 30; xxvii. 8).
THE JEWISH RITUAL DESERVES DEVOUT
STUDY. It is always interesting to study methods of
religious worship, even though the rites have become
obsolete, the altars deserted, and the dust of priest and
votary has long since mingled in the sand of the desert or
the verdure of the glade. Who can look unmoved at the
gigantic monuments which rear themselves in the dense
forests of Central Mexico, the remnants of an age of
giants who have passed away, giving no clew to the symbols
or hieroglyphs which they have carved? Who can walk
unmoved through the stone circles of Stonehenge, Keswick,
or Penmaenmawr, and not fall into pensive musings?
For this reason, if for no other, the
Levitical ritual would ever be possessed of intrinsic
interest. When we think of the noble spirits who have
bequeathed us our most precious religious records, who
sang in the Psalms, and wept in the Lamentations, and
flashed with the ecstasy of Messianic prediction and
prophecy; and all of whom were trained in the system of
which the Tabernacle was the focus and heart, we cannot
fail to examine it with holy and reverent curiosity, as if
one should visit the nursery or schoolhouse where loved
and honored teachers spent their earliest years.
But there is a yet deeper interest
here. For we are told that these things were made after
the pattern of things in the heavens. Every knob, and
tache, and curtain, and vessel, and piece of furniture,
had some analogue, some spiritual counterpart of which it
was the rude and material expression. Through these
examples and shadows there is no doubt that the ancient
saints caught glimpses of the eternal realities. We infer
this, because there is such a similarity between their
religious life, as expressed in their writings, and our
own. But if they, who had nothing but the type to guide
them, were able to discern so many deep and holy lessons
through its medium, how much more evidently should we be
able to see the grand principles of redemption in the
ancient ritual, when before us have passed the scenes of
Bethlehem, Calvary, the Garden of Arimathea, and the
Ascension Mount!
Sometimes in a shadow we may see
details of workmanship which otherwise in the substance we
might have missed. One of the most wonderful achievements
of the present day is sun-photography, by which
photographs are obtained of the sun-disk under certain
conditions. And it is obviously much easier to investigate
the nature of the sun from such photographs than to study
it amid the unbearable glory of his presence. The eye may
quietly pursue its investigations undazzled and unabashed.
So we may better understand some of the details of
Christ's work, as we study Leviticus, than when we stand
with the apostles amid the marvels of the cross, or with
the Seer amid the supernal blaze of Apocalyptic vision.
Turn not lightly then from the Book of
Leviticus, which shadows forth the Gospel; and, indeed,
gives much of the terminology, the phrases and symbols, to
be afterward employed. Beneath the teaching of the same
Holy Spirit as taught Moses of old we explore the sacred
meanings which underlie ark and propitiatory; fine twined
linen and blue; candlestick and table; altar of incense
and altar of burnt-offering; basin and vessel and snuffer.
Each is like a hook in the divine household, to which God
has attached a sacred meaning, and which will yield up its
secret to those who reverently ask and seek and knock.
Adapting some memorable words, we may say: "The
invisible things of God, from the construction of the
Tabernacle, are clearly seen, being understood by the
things that were made, even his eternal purpose of
redemption."
THE TRUTHS OF THE GOSPEL ARE ETERNAL
REALITIES. We must not think that they are ever destined
to pass away, as the Jewish types did. They cannot. They
are the heavenly things themselves. They are the true, the
ideal, the divine. They have always been what they are.
They always will be what they are. We may yet have to see
much deeper into them; we may need to be taught them in
yet higher methods of divine communication. We may have to
be lifted on to a loftier region of experience in order to
comprehend them. But they are essentially and forever
settled, the granite of eternal fact. Any structure built
on them shall last forever. The Jews had only the example,
we have the reality; they the picture, we the person; they
the shadow, we the substance.
It is interesting to feel that Moses
saw no other truth in God's revelation than what Paul saw;
though to Moses it shaped itself in the Tabernacle with
its layers of skins, whilst to Paul it took shape in
glowing trains of splendid argument and rhetoric. But ever
in the mind and thought of God there has been the same
distinction between holiness and sin; ever the need of
sacrifice, even unto death; ever the demand for shed life,
as the only means through which the sinner may approach
his holy Majesty; ever the requirements of the incense of
praise, the bread of obedience, the light of an
illuminated character; ever the priest to make
intercession; and ever the aisles and courts and spaces
dedicated to worship and intercourse, lofty as the
fellowship between the Father and the Son.
Calvary is no novelty, nor the
Priesthood, nor the work of Jesus; they represent the
shining forth of eternal facts in the deepest nature of
God. To ignore them is to miss union with God on the most
fundamental laws and processes of his being. The Lamb was
slain before the foundation of the world: and lie appears
in heaven still bearing the marks of his death, "a
Lamb as it had been slain."
OUR PLACE OF WORSHIP. We must needs
assemble ourselves in places of assembly with fellow
Christians; but in point of fact not one of them is
essential to true worship. The type has passed, and we
know that the Jewish Tabernacle is no more. But what do we
see? Men are trying to reproduce it, or to invent a
substitute for it. Ah, how greatly they misconceive our
true position! We certainly neither need the Jewish
Tabernacle nor any substitute; because we are constituted
priests of the heavenly tabernacle, which no human hand
ever reared, and which is the meeting place between God
and all true hearts, yea, of all who love God.
"Neither in this mountain, nor yet at Jerusalem,
shall ye worship the Father." When we meet a company
of our fellow Christians, we are not to think of them as
the whole of those with whom we worship. The true
worshiper is one of a great festal throng, which is
filling the spiritual temple. We are but part of a
congregation consisting of all the sainted dead, and the
believing living, in all communions, and throughout the
universe of God. The prisoner, the traveler, the invalid,
the mother, the nurse- a11 meet there in unison, and
worship God together. All are priests, and yonder is the
High-Priest, who has passed through the heavens and ever
lives to make intercession. "A minister of the true
tabernacle." How ridiculous do those appear to such
an assembly who arrogate to themselves priestly
pretensions, and who would make us believe that they are
repeating the sacrifice of Christ! In this temple at least
they are not wanted, for Christ is here to offer the
sacrifice himself.
THE TRUE PATTERN OF OUR LIFE IS
SUGGESTED HERE. We have many plans and schemes and
patterns; but how often abortive and disappointing! Would
that we could spend long periods with God in the mount,
getting his pattern of our life and work! There is nothing
higher for us than to build up some resemblance to God's
eternal thought. All structures built on that scheme will
stand forever. And God will ever find material, more than
enough, for those who dare to be singular, because they
are true to the pattern which he shows on the mount. And
if it be asked what that pattern is which God will show us
in the mount of communion, we may reply: it is the life
and character and work of Jesus Christ our Lord; the model
and exemplar and pattern of all that is true and just and
pure and lovely and of good report. See that thou make thy
life on this pattern, which God waits to show thee in the
mount. God calls thee to it, and he will enable thee to
perform.
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