Studies in Exodus No. 35
Exodus 30:1-38
January 29, 2006 PM
By Rev. Dr. Robert S. Rayburn
From: Exodus Series
We continue with the regulations God gave Moses for the
sanctuary, its furniture, the priests and the sacrifices they
would offer.
Text Comment
- v.1
-
The incense altar is first mentioned here, even though
other furniture to be placed in the sanctuary was described
in chapter 25. In a similar way, there was no mention of the
laver in the description of the Tabernacle courtyard; it is
given here in chapter 30. It is not clear why the material is
organized as it is. This altar had the form of a square
pillar (approx. 1 ½ ft. square and 3 ft. tall),
overlaid with gold, with horns at the corners, and rings at
the corners through which poles could be placed when it was
moved with the rest of the sanctuary and its furniture. After
the description of the altar, we are given the rules for the
manufacture of the incense itself in vv. 34-38.
As with so much else in the architecture of the Tabernacle
and its furniture, such an incense altar was a commonplace of
ANE temples. A number of them have been unearthed by
archaeologists.
In any case, here is some proof of the fact that the term
altar could be used of any raised platform for the purpose of
worship and not simply for the table-like structure on which
the meat and fat of sacrificial animals were cooked. So it
wasn't entirely unbiblical for fundamentalists to refer to
the invitation for seekers to come forward to the front of
the church as the "altar call." There was invariably a table
there at the front and it could certainly be called an altar
if this platform for burning incense could be called an
altar.
- v.5
-
The construction of the incense altar features the finest
gold everywhere. Elsewhere in the Pentateuch it is referred
to simply as "the altar of gold." It's proximity to the
symbol of God's throne accounts for all the gold. The main
altar, further away in the center of the courtyard, could be
overlaid with bronze (27:2).
- v.6
-
Hebrews 9:4 reckons the incense altar to belong to the
Most Holy Place. It was, for practical purposes placed in the
Holy Place, because it had to be tended daily, whereas the
High Priest, and only he, entered the Most Holy Place but
once a year. But it belongs with the Ark because "the incense
symbolized the prayers of the people going up to the throne
of God in their midst" (Rev. 5:8). [Ellison, 162]
- v.8
-
Every morning and every evening this altar was to be
tended at the same time as the lamps.
- v.9
-
There was a practical concern here, as well. This small
altar was inside the sanctuary and only incense was
appropriate to burn in that enclosed space. Many things are
left unsaid. How was the incense burned on the gold altar,
for example? Probably a bowl was placed on the altar
containing the incense and it was burned in the bowl.
- v.10
-
This is the only reference to the ritual of the Day of
Atonement in the book of Exodus. On that day the incense
altar was purified as well as blood sprinkled on the Ark
itself.
- v.12
-
The first such census taken is reported in Numbers 1, in
fact, the numbering of the people gives that book its
name.
We have already read in Exodus 13:13 that each Israelite
first-born son belonged to Yahweh and had to be redeemed by
sacrifice. Israel as a whole is also viewed as God's
first-born son, as we read still earlier in Ex. 4:22. This
provision extends that principle. Whenever there is a census,
each adult male must pay a ransom for himself. The census, as
we read in Numbers 1, concerned the number of men available
for the army. There seems to be some danger presupposed here,
a danger of death that is averted by the payment of this
ransom. There is an association of danger with a census
elsewhere in the Bible. Remember David's census and the
plague that was the result of it. The particular danger is
nowhere identified. Does it have to do with sins committed in
taking the census itself, or sins having to do with
war-making: either the danger of death in battle or of
committing sins common to soldiers in war? No one knows for
sure.
- v.16
-
The small amount demanded (the best guess from
archaeological and literary evidence is that the amount
specified is pretty small change; one scholar's best guess is
5.7 grams or .2 oz. [Durham, 403]) - and from rich and poor
alike - confirms the symbolic nature of the ransom. The fact
that the money was used for the costs of the Tabernacle and
its worship demonstrates how gifts to the Lord are invariably
used for the blessing and benefit of his people. This is the
origin, by the way, of the Jewish temple tax that was still
required of Jewish males annually in the time of Jesus. To
add insult to injury it was paid to the Romans.
But here the tax also reminds every Israelite of his equal
access to God at the Tabernacle, no matter his wealth or
station in life.
- v.17
-
The rites of cleansing with water, one of which was
mentioned in the previous chapter (29:4) required a ready
supply and the laver was for this purpose. In Solomon's
temple, larger and busier by far, there were ten such lavers
in addition to the "sea," a still much larger reservoir for
water. Each of Solomon's ten lavers held 243 gallons of water
and stood eight feet high. This would have been much smaller.
According to 38:8 it seems that this object was solid metal
and not wood overlaid with bronze. It would have been fitted
with taps to enable the water to flow over the hands and feet
of the priests. Its location between the altar and the
sanctuary meant that before priests entered the Holy Place to
trim the lamps, to place bread on the table, or to offer
incense, they would ritually wash themselves. To have
attended to these chores with soiled hands and feet would
have been an insult to the majesty of God.
- v.22
-
This oil was mentioned in the previous chapter as the oil
to be used for the ordination of the priests.
- v.25
-
The spices mentioned, only some of which can be certainly
identified, were, if the known ones are anything to go by,
the finest: the rarest, the most expensive, and the most
aromatic. Some came from distant lands (India and South Asia
for example). Israel may well have had them in the wilderness
because they were part of the plunder carried from Egypt. But
there were traders in spices always traveling back and forth
through this part of the world.
- v.33
-
The popularity of such perfumes for both cosmetic and
medicinal use made this strict prohibition necessary. A fine
perfumed oil like this would be highly sought after. But the
very best belonged to the Lord.
- v.34
-
Once again the spices mentioned are rare and
expensive.
- v.35
-
The salt may have been to secure easier burning or may
have been used to preserve the mixture, if, as v. 36 seems to
suggest, a large amount was mixed at one time and then
amounts taken from the store day by day for burning on the
altar.
- v.36
-
While the anointing oil was "holy" (the NIV's sacred in v.
31), this incense is "most holy," because of its proximity to
the presence of Yahweh represented by the Ark. As we have
seen, that is a principle often represented in these
instructions. The closer to God, the greater the demand for
holiness. "In front of the Testimony" means simply in front
of the Ark itself (which held the Testimony, that is the two
tablets of the covenant), that is, on the Holy Place side of
the curtain that separates the Most Holy Place from the Holy
Place.
Now, as we have been pointing out, Lord's Day evening after
Lord's Day evening, while we have been making our way through
these liturgical regulations, they embody fundamental principles
of worship and life, principles that are timeless and bind us
today as surely as they did Israel in the ancient epoch. Outward
forms may have changed, but life and worship, at bottom, remain
the same, because God is the same, man is the same, salvation is
the same, and the nature of faith and of believing life is the
same.
Tonight it is no different. Once again we have set before us a
fundamental fact of worship and of life. Remember, worship and
life are tightly drawn together in the Bible. In a great many
ways not only is worship the engine of life, and life something
to be offered up in worship, but the principles of both are the
same. If, as we have sometimes said, a rightly ordered worship
service here on a Lord's Day morning can be described as the
"story of one's life" told in an hour, we are as much as saying
that the rules, principles, and practices of true Christian
worship define our lives. Therefore, how well we observe that
worship shapes our lives for weal or woe.
The fact of worship and of life that is set before us here is,
especially, that of prayer and, so, of communion with God. We
made the point this morning, from Matt. 28:20 that it is the
essential feature of the Christian life that it is a life lived
in communion with God and Christ. We know him, person to
person. Life lived in the active experience of that personal
knowledge of the Lord is true Christian living. Well, in a happy
providence, we have that point made in another way, but also
powerfully, in these liturgical regulations that we have read in
Exodus 30. Now, to be sure, that point is made in every one of
these regulations. They are all about - all of these regulations
in all this section of Exodus, as is the book as a whole - all
about the presence of God. These are all means by which
the presence of the Yahweh with his people is known, experienced,
preserved and protected, and practiced. The laver and its water,
for example - the requirement of cleansing before approaching the
divine majesty - certainly speaks to the way in which believers
should practice the presence of God; the reverence with which
they ought to approach him, the fear and care with which they
ought to live before him.
But I want to pay special attention to the altar of incense.
There is little doubt that incense - the combination of spices
that filled a room with a pleasantly aromatic smoke when burned -
is both an offering to God in general - remember the
meat of the sacrificial animal cooked on the altar also produced
a pleasing aroma for the Lord - and an image of prayer in
particular. Rising smoke is a natural image of prayer,
speech going up to God, and a pleasant smell still more so.
In Numbers 16:46, we find incense used "to make atonement" for
the people when God threatened to destroy them because of their
participation in Korah's rebellion. But the context certainly
seems to suggest that what is really being represented there is
prayer for the people's pardon.
Still more clearly, in Psalm 141: 2 we read:
"May my prayer be set before you like incense…"
And, still more explicitly, in Rev. 8:3-4:
"Another angel, who had a golden censer, came and stood at
the altar. He was given much incense to offer, with the prayers
of all the saints, on the golden altar before the throne. The
smoke of the incense, together with the prayers of the saints,
went up before God from the angel's hand."
That text is the more significant because of the Bible's
teaching that the sanctuaries of Israel on earth were patterned
after the Lord's sanctuary in heaven. If incense was a symbol of
rising prayers in that heavenly sanctuary, then it certainly must
have been in the earthly sanctuary.
True worship is prayer; it is real communication with God.
That fact is expressed in the Bible by the use of "prayer" as a
synonym for worship, especially corporate worship. The sanctuary,
for example, is referred to as a "house of prayer" in both the OT
and the NT. The apostles went up to the temple, we read in Acts
3:1, at "the time of prayer," which means, at the time of the
afternoon service. When the apostles, in proposing the office of
deacon, say of themselves in Acts 6:4, "we will give our
attention to prayer and the ministry of the word," the
grammatical usage in that Jewish context strongly suggests that,
by "prayer," (literally "the prayer," for the article is used)
they meant not the act of praying itself as might be done by an
individual alone but "the public worship of the church."
In other words, true worship always and in every way trades on
the reality of God's presence. It is done in
consciousness of God's presence. It is given to a
present God. It takes the form of a conversation with
God, a dialogue with God, that is only possible because God is
present with his people, as really present as if he were
visibly present. That is what is meant by saying that worship is
prayer. That is what the Anglicans meant when they
called their manual of public worship, The Book of Common
Prayer.
Incense is a symbol. We are right to say that. But in the
history of Christian worship the word and the idea of
symbol have been taken in two very different ways. Many
modern Christians - whether they have ever reflected on this or
not - if they think about it will admit that, for them, a symbol
is a representation of something, an illustration of a reality,
calling to our minds something that is assumed to be
missing. The symbol represents something that is not there!
But the more biblical sense of symbol is that of the
visible manifestation of something that is present! Incense
stands for a present God receiving the prayers of his people who
are speaking to him in consciousness of his presence.
And it is one of the most basic ways for us, each one of us,
to examine ourselves in regard to our participation in worship,
morning and evening on the Lord's Day here at Faith Presbyterian
Church. Am I at prayer from beginning to end? Am I conscious of
and am I treating with the presence of Yahweh himself? Am I
talking to him, listening to him, enjoying being with him? Do I
have a sense of coming into his presence and leaving his presence
when I come into this house and leave it after worship? It is not
enough to reply that God is everywhere. The Israelites knew that.
Moses knew that. But they had no doubt that they came nearer to
God in a real sense, in a sense that was important to them
and important to God when they came to the sanctuary and
participated in worship.
Otherwise why would David say on one occasion that "he saw God
in the sanctuary" and on another that the one thing he wished for
most of all was that he could remain in the house of the Lord all
the days of his life and there gaze upon the beauty of the Lord
and seek him in his temple? And why would another say "I rejoiced
with those who said to me, 'Let us go the house of the
Lord'"?
It is fundamental to all that God intends for us in worship
and all that we need from his worship that we come to it
conscious of his presence and intending that it should be prayer
- all of us at prayer - from beginning to end.
That is the main point. But let me finish with one implication
of this teaching about worship at prayer to a present God in
Exodus 30. The incense altar was made of pure gold, the very
finest gold. It was glorious. The spices that were combined to
make the incense were themselves the rarest and the most
expensive. God deserves our best! And he deserves our
best all the more when we are at prayer!
God is always accessible and he may be approached with a shout
or a cry or a whisper. That is true. But there is a familiarity
with God in modern evangelical prayer that does not preserve the
reverence that we owe to the high God when we come into his
presence and speak to him. Have you noticed, for example, the
prayers of Holy Scripture? They are full of emotion, to be sure,
but they are nevertheless, prayers offered in a high register.
Some of them are among the most beautiful of all the creations of
human literature. They were all prayers for worship in the house
of the Lord. Many of them may have originated in highly private
and individual circumstances, such as David's Psalm 51, but they
were, nevertheless, and are even in translation, careful and
beautiful works of human utterance. They are, in a literary form,
what the incense altar was in physical form: the best that could
be offered to the Lord.
I remember years ago hearing Gordon Clark speak in the
Covenant College chapel. He recommended that young Christians
learn to pray by memorizing the Psalms. "The use of the Psalms,"
he said, "will eliminate all three of the [common defects of
prayer]: a superabundance of petitions, crudity of language, and
a lack of reverence."
It is something for all of us to think about. We find it so
easy to fall into ruts in our speech to God; in our prayer. I
know I do. We find it easy to speak to him with half a mind. We
do not think ahead of time of what we will say, as we certainly
would if we were to be given an audience with some great man,
perhaps nowadays even with some celebrity. But this should not
be. The speaking we do to God should be the best of which we are
capable. It should be the most careful, the most deliberate, and
the most reverent. Our prayer should be like that altar of
gold.
The promise of all of God's Word is that time and energy we
invest in the worship of God, in true and living prayer together
with the saints, will always be richly repaid. He is present and
the offerings we present to him, when we present them with faith
and sincerity and true intention, are a pleasing aroma to him.
How blessed is that man, that woman, whose prayers the Lord loves
to hear!