The book of Exodus. In the first video we
explored chapters 1 through 18, which tell the foundational story of how God
rescued the enslaved Israelites by confronting and defeating Pharaoh while
offering the way of escape through the blood of the Passover lamb. God then
delivered his people by bringing them through the waters of the sea and then
into the wilderness, where surprisingly they grumbled and complained. Now the
second half of the book of Exodus opens as Moses leads Israel to the foot of
Mount Sinai, where God invites the nation of Israel to enter into a covenant
relationship. And here we reach another key moment in the biblical storyline
because this is picking up in developing God's promise to Abraham. So remember
from the book of Genesis, God promised that through Abraham's family, somehow he would restore his blessing to all of the nations. And here we find out more. God says that if Israel obeys the terms
of the Covenant, they will be so shaped by God's laws and teaching and justice
that they will become a kingdom of priests, which means that they will
become God's representatives and show all of the other nations what God is truly
like. Now the people of Israel eagerly accept the offer and so God's presence
appears right on the top of Mount Sinai in the form of clouds and lightning and
thunder. And Moses goes up as their representative and God opens with the
basic terms of the Covenant the famous Ten Commandments. These are like the basic terms of the agreement-- how the Israelites and God are going to relate to each other. And then after this come another collection of commands which fill
out the first 10 in more detail.There are laws about Israel's worship, about social
justice, how they are to live together; all shaping Israel into a nation of
justice and generosity that's different from the other nations.So Moses writes
down all of these laws and he brings them down to the people, who again eagerly agreed to enter into this
covenant with God. And once they do so, God takes the relationship forward
another step. He tells Moses that he wants his holy, divine, good presence to
come and dwell right in the midst of Israel, which develops another aspect of
God's covenant promises. Remember after humanities rebellion in the garden, it was access to God's
presence that was lost. But now it's through the family of Abraham that God's
presence is becoming once again accessible through this covenant
relationship. And first with Israel and then somehow one day to all nations. So
what follows are seven chapters of detailed architectural blueprints about
this sacred tent called the tabernacle. There's the outer courtyard with an
alter and then in the center there's a tent that has an outer room and then inner room and then inside the inner room, which is called the most holy place, is a
golden box called the Ark of the Covenant. And there's angelic creatures
over the top of it. It's the hot-spot of God's presence. Now there's lots of detail in these chapters and it's important to know that every piece has some kind of
symbolic value. All of the flowers, the angels, the gold and jewels-- it all echoes
back to the Garden of Eden-- the place where God and humans lived together in
intimacy. And so the tabernacle is like a portable Eden, so to speak. It's the place where God and Israel can
live together in peace, at least in theory, because right here something goes really, really wrong. Israel breaks the covenant. As Moses is up on the mountain receiving the blueprint for the tabernacle, down below at the camp, the Israelites, they're losing patience. And so they asked Moses's brother Aaron to make
for them a golden calf idol so they can worship it as the God who saved them out
of slavery in Egypt. Now God's presence, it's right there on top of the mountain; they can see it, but here they are below breaking the first two commands of the
Covenant they just agreed to-- no other gods and no idols. Now what follows is
really important. God knows what's happening down below. So he first invites Moses into his own anger and pain and he tells Moses what
he wants to do--just to wipe Israel out. But Moses intercedes by appealing to
God's character. He says, first of all, destroying Israel would be going back on
your covenant promises to Abraham. And then Moses appeals to God's reputation
among the nation's. What would they think if they see you destroy your own people? And so God accepts Moses's intercession and he relents. And while he does bring his judgment on those who
instigated idolatry, he forgives the nation as a whole and promises to renew
his covenant. And it's right here at this point in the story that God for the
first time describes his own character to Moses. He says, "The Lord is merciful
and gracious. He's slow to anger, abounding in covenant faithfulness. He
forgives sin but he will not leave the wicked unpunished." We have this tension: God is full of
mercy but also he must deal with evil if he claims to be good. And above all, God
is faithful to His promises even though it means he knows he's committing
himself to a people who are utterly faithless. And so after renewing the
covenant with Israel, God commissions Moses to go ahead and build the
tabernacle. And once again we get five long chapters describing in detail the
construction of the tabernacle. And it all comes together in the final chapter
where the Tabernacle is finished. God's glorious divine presence comes and
hovers over the tent and our hopes are high. And so Moses, he goes right up to
enter into the tent, and he can't. He actually can't go in and that's how the book ends.
It's really surprising, but not really if you think about it. You can see now how
much Isreal's sin has damaged the relationship with God in more ways than
we realized. So the book opened, remember, with Pharaoh's evil threatening Israel and
threatening God's covenant promise. But now as the book ends, Israel has become
its own worst enemy. It's their sin that is threatening the future of the covenant. And so the question as the book closes is, "How is God going to reconcile this
conflict between his holiness and his goodness in His presence with the
sinful corruption of his own covenant people?" The solution to that problem is
what the next book is about, but for now, that's the book of Exodus.