Studies in Exodus No. 36
Exodus 31:1-18
February 5, 2006 PM
By Rev. Dr. Robert S. Rayburn
From: Exodus Series
We have completed the lengthy section of liturgical
regulations, instructions for the manufacture of the tabernacle
and its furnishings as well as some instructions for the divine
worship to be carried on there, a section that began immediately
after the account of the covenant renewal ceremony in chapter 24.
At the end of that chapter we learned that Moses was on the top
of the mountain for 40 days receiving the law from God and these
elaborate liturgical regulations were part of what God gave to
Moses there on the top of the mountain. In the context that is
clear enough, but it is a point that will be made explicitly at
the end of the chapter we read this evening. In v. 18 we will
read: "When the Lord finished speaking to Moses on Mt.
Sinai…"
Text Comment
- v.1
-
This section on the craftsmen is virtually identical to
35:30-36:2. So, we have this section devoted to the craftsman
placed at the end of the instructions concerning those things
they will build or manufacture and another like section
placed at the beginning of the section that narrates the
implementation of these instructions (36:1ff). [Durham,
410]
- v.2
-
The NIV's "I have chosen" is literally "I have called by
name." It is a way of speaking that suggests predestination -
God's special choice for a special purpose - and the NIV's
translation captures that meaning. We are probably to
understand that Bezalel's grandfather was the Hur mentioned
in 17:10 and 24:14, one of Moses' closer colleagues.
Remember, while there is no present evidence for this, later
Jewish tradition made Hur Miriam's husband and so Moses'
brother-in-law.
- v.3
-
"Inborn artistic genius and skill is something that defies
all logical explanation." [Ellison, 166] Why can't I do on a
canvas what Rembrandt or Andrew Wyeth did? It is clear that
hard work at one's craft is only a part of the answer and not
the largest part. But here is more of the answer. God gives
this as a gift through the Holy Spirit. It is interesting and
important to note that the word the NIV translates "skill,"
is the Hebrew word hokmah, "wisdom," that figures so
largely in Proverbs. Its use here helps us to grasp its
meaning there. The artist's "skill" is his ability to see the
finished product in his mind's eye or hear it in his head and
bring it into existence with his hands, whether as a painter,
carver, sculptor, or composer. Well, it is a similar wisdom
or skill that Proverbs envisions: a man or woman who can
see the godly life in his or her mind's eye, and
then bring it into existence, not matter all the difficulties
involved. At one point Michelangelo's great sculpture,
David, was a giant block of marble. The great artist
could see the statue in that block and, with his hands and
tools was able to bring it into being just as he saw it. And
so the godly man and the godly life. That is wisdom. Or, that
is the skill of living rightly and well.
In any case, as we often saw, the materials from which the
Tabernacle, its furniture, the priestly clothing, and the oil
and incense were to be made were the very best. Now, in
keeping with that aim, the craftsmen who were to create these
things must be the very best as well.
- v.5
-
It used to be said by skeptical scholarship that the
sophisticated manufactures required in the instructions of
chapter 25-30 would have been beyond the ability of
Israelites in the 15th century B.C. Now it is known that such
abilities were widely distributed across the ANE.
- v.6
-
Oholiab seems to have been Bezalel's assistant. Bezalel
was from Judah, one of the largest tribes; Oholiab was from
Dan, one of the smallest. The Lord spreads his gifts around;
a point Paul will ring the changes on in 1 Corinthians and
Romans. Like the names of the two Hebrew midwives, preserved
in chapter 1, these two names were preserved. They are
archaic in form and are recollected because of the immensely
important role these two men played.
As the second half of the verse makes clear, these men
were to be over a large number of craftsmen who also were
gifted for the work.
- v.11
-
The list of things that these craftsmen are to create
amounts to a summing up of the material in the previous six
chapters. Everything is to be done according to the Lord's
plan; no creative license is permitted.
- v.13
-
Words derived from the verb shabat ("to rest",
"to cease from work") occur 7 times in the following
paragraph. That is no accident.
- v.15
-
The death penalty must be understood in context. As will
be made clear in Leviticus, we are not talking here about the
sins of frailty to which all believers are prone, but about
high-handed sins, sins made in full recognition of God's
demand and in willful repudiation of that demand. The Sabbath
is a sign of the covenant between God and Israel and the sin
of Sabbath-breaking envisaged here is the sin of repudiating
that covenant; a form of apostasy.
- v.17
-
The reason given for keeping the Sabbath is the same given
in the ten commandments (20:11), viz. God's rest as a pattern
for ours. The verb the NIV translates "rested" is cognate
with nephesh, breath or spirit, and is related to
the verb nashaf to pant or breathe hard. [Alter,
450, 492] A translation that catches the vivid
anthropomorphism might be "caught his breath." The Lord
created for six days and caught his breath on the
seventh.
- v.18
-
It seems very unlikely that these tablets contained the
entirety of the covenant, certainly not the detailed
regulations of the last five chapters. They probably
contained, as Christian tradition has assumed, only the
epitome of the covenant found in the Ten Words or Ten
Commandments.
We have encountered the phrase "finger of God" already in
Exodus 8:19 in regard to the plagues. (The Egyptian
magicians, commenting on the plagues that had so far befallen
Egypt, said, "this is the finger of God.") It is a metaphor
for divine causation.
Now we might wonder why a repetition of the Sabbath
commandment, just one out of the ten commandments, an emphatic
reminder that Israel is not to work on the 7th day, but that she
is to keep that day holy, should be placed here. But there are
two very good reasons.
First, a work order has just been issued. The work has been
assigned to craftsman and is soon to begin. Very soon the work
sites will be busy with laborers and craftsmen producing the
Tabernacle, its furniture, and the rest. But, no matter the
sacred nature of the things that are to be made, no work is to be
done on the Sabbath. The Sabbath rest is to be observed even
for the work of building and making the materials that will
provide the context and means of Israel's worship of Yahweh. The
connection between the two paragraphs of chapter 31 is actually
made very explicitly in the Hebrew text. The word "work" that
appears in vv. 14 and 15, when Israel is told not to do any
work on the Lord's holy day, is the same word the NIV
translates as "crafts" in v. 3. It is, in other words, precisely
the work that these craftsmen are to do that is not to be done on
the Sabbath. The Sabbath command follows the work order to ensure
that no one thinks that this work may be done on the Sabbath
day.
As an aside, it is interesting that "The Talmudic
sages…[derived] the thirty-nine primary categories of
labor…forbidden on the Sabbath from the sundry activities
necessary for the assemblage of the Tabernacle and its
furnishings." [Alter, 491] It was rightly understood at least
that there was a direct connection between the instructions for
the manufacture of Israel's holy things and this commandment to
keep the Sabbath day. The very best work, the most sacred work,
even the work that makes the right worship of God possible for
Israel, is not to be done on the Sabbath day. That is the first
reason why we find this reiteration of the Sabbath commandment
placed here.
The second reason is that the Sabbath day will be a day to
contemplate the meaning of the Lord's presence and of his
covenant, it will be a day to practice that worship that has been
described in the previous chapters, it will be a time to assemble
at the Tabernacle and there worship the Lord. Ceasing from work
is not an end entirely in itself. It is what makes possible the
more positive uses of the Lord's holy day.
It is interesting that we have very little information given
us in the Bible about how Israel was to celebrate the Sabbath
day. In Leviticus 23:3 we read that "the seventh day is a Sabbath
of rest, a day of sacred assembly." In that context
other holidays (e.g. Passover, Weeks, Tabernacles) are also
called assemblies and they were times of worship and of the
gathering of the people for worship. The Sabbath, once every
seven days, in other words, is like that. But we are never told
precisely how or where they assembled or what they did when they
assembled. That it was a day for public worship seems to be the
clear implication of such a text but it is not spelled out. In 2
Kgs. 4:23 we learn that it was characteristic to hear a sermon
from a priest or prophet on the Sabbath day, which makes perfect
sense, but such a service is never described either in the law or
in the historical narrative of the Old Testament.
Nevertheless, this text in Ex. 31, seems also to confirm the
impression that the Sabbath was a day of worship simply because
this injunction to keep the Sabbath is placed here, at the end of
all the regulations and instructions concerning the worship of
the Tabernacle. Sabbath and Tabernacle go together, as do Sabbath
and priests and Sabbath and sacrifice and Sabbath and prayer
(which, we said, was the special symbolic reference of the
burning of incense). These acts of worship continued throughout
the week - indeed a point is made in the instructions of the
previous chapters that many things happen every day, every day
and every night - but, nevertheless there is a special connection
being drawn between the Sabbath and all of this worship. The
whole body of Israel was to assemble in some way for worship on
the Sabbath day.
Taking the Bible together, that seems uncontroversial. The
Sabbath came into post-exilic Jewish life as a day of worship and
there is no suggestion that such was an innovation and, as we
know, the Sabbath is carried over - with changes of form - into
the new epoch of the life of the Church and there too it is a day
of assembly and a day of worship. Remember, the NT name for the
Sabbath is "the Lord's Day," but that is simply another OT way of
referring to the Sabbath (Isa. 58:13), as we are reminded here in
v. 15. We have been saying all through the previous material that
the worship being there described is, in its substance, the same
as our worship today. Well, in this respect as well. There is a
day appointed for that worship, a day of the assembly of God's
people to worship him.
As one scholar puts it:
"The keeping holy of the seventh day forms an emphatic
reminder that God is the Lord of time, and that no business,
however pressing, must be allowed to keep men from regularly
seeking his fellowship; but the joyful character of that day of
rest also brings home to the worshipper that his God is a
kindly Master, who does not lay on men a yoke too heavy to
bear." [Eichrodt, Theology of the Old Testament, i,
133]
Now, perhaps you are thinking it providential that we should
fall upon a text dealing with the Sabbath day on Super Bowl
Sunday, and, what is more, when the Seahawks are in the Super
Bowl! How many times will that happen? No doubt, across our land
today, in evangelical churches of every stripe, there have been
sermons in which passing reference has been made to the Super
Bowl, there have been sermons in which an effort has been made to
trade on the fact of Super Bowl Sunday in some positive fashion -
you read this last week in the newspaper of the many churches
that were hosting Super Bowl parties and so on - a great many
sermons in which some positive reference will have been made
about watching the Super Bowl later in the day - I'm sure some
churches that still have an evening service cancelled it
precisely so as to allow folk to watch the game - and, no doubt,
there have been a comparatively few services in which the
minister railed against watching TV on the Lord's Day, or
entertaining ourselves by watching others profane the day, or,
more generally, giving in to the worship of sports.
But the burden of our text lies elsewhere, especially given
its position, its place immediately after this lengthy account of
how Israel is to worship God. Turning too quickly to questions of
application - that is, to the casuistry of the Sabbath, questions
of what may and may not be done on the Sabbath day, the
articulating of a principle by which we might answer the thousand
and one questions that people ask was the mistake that the Jews
would later make in Jesus' day. The first questions to ask about
the Lord's Day are not:
- May I go out to eat in a restaurant on the Lord's Day?
- May I watch a TV football game?
- May I take a walk in the woods?
- May I play a game or participate in a sport?
- May I mow my lawn?
The first question to ask is what is the Lord's Day for? Why
has God given me this gift of a holiday once a week? What is the
blessing that I am to seek in the use of this day? Why is this
day different from other days? Only when one has a clear
answer to that question and is convinced of that answer in his
heart can he and will he go on to ask the right questions
concerning the proper keeping of the day and get the right
answers to his questions.
Now, we could go to other texts to begin to fashion an answer
to that question, but we have a text before us and we should pay
attention to the answer given here. And the answer given here is
that the Sabbath is a sign between God and us. Later, in
v. 16, the Lord says that the Sabbath is to be observed "as a
lasting covenant." And again, in v. 17, "It will be a sign
between me and the Israelites." Now what does that mean? Well it
seems that sign and covenant go together. It is a sign and a
covenant or, as we would say, it is a sign of the
covenant between the Lord and his people. That is an easy
conclusion to reach because there are other things are signs
of the Lord's covenant with his people. You remember that
this is the way that the rainbow is described in Gen. 9: it is a
sign of the covenant that God made with Noah. And in a similar
way circumcision is described as a sign of the covenant that God
made with Abraham and his seed. But what then is a sign of the
covenant?
Well, interestingly, the Hebrew word for sign
(אות) covers the same semantic range as does
the English word sign. It can refer to a signboard or
standard; it can refer to some visible mark, as that the Lord
placed on Cain. Or the word can be used to refer to miracles,
which, as you remember, John also calls "signs" in his Gospel. In
all of these uses and others, a sign is something that stands
for something, that represents something. A sign
communicates something. A stop sign at a street corner stands for
a very particular set of instructions about what drivers must do
at that spot. It communicates those instructions in a visible
way. A miracle is a sign precisely because it makes visible God's
power and faithfulness. It communicates something very important
about God or about Christ or about his apostles. One thing stands
for another thing. One thing reveals another. The mark on Cain's
forehead stood for the Lord's protection. Anyone who saw that
mark knew that if he harmed Cain he would have to answer to God.
The mark communicated a promise God had made.
And it did so in the way of reminder. A sign in its biblical
use is often a means to prevent something from being forgotten.
For example, in Exodus 13, in the context of instructions for the
celebration of the Passover, we read:
"On that day tell your son, I do this because of what the
Lord did for me when I came out of Egypt. This observance will
be for you like a sign on your hand and a reminder on your
forehead that the law of the Lord is to be on your lips. For
the Lord brought you out of Egypt with his mighty hand. You
must keep this ordinance at the appointed time year after
year."
The Passover was a sign designed to preserve in the active
memory of succeeding generations of Israelites what the Lord had
done to redeem them from bondage and the debt they owed to him
that could be repaid in no other way but in a faithful, obedient
life of service.
Or take another example. Remember how when Israel crossed the
Jordan river on dry ground, each of twelve men appointed for the
purpose, one for each tribe of Israel, was to take a large stone
from the riverbed and carry it to the other side where a cairn, a
monument would be erected to preserve the memory of what God had
done bringing his people finally into the Promised Land. Joshua
explained:
"Go over before the ark of the Lord your God into the middle
of the Jordan. Each of you is to take up a stone on his
shoulder, according to the number of the tribes of the
Israelites, to serve as a sign among you. In the future, when
your children ask you, 'What do these stones mean?' tell them
that the flow of the Jordan was cut off before the ark of the
covenant of the Lord…. These stones are to be a memorial
to the people of Israel forever." [Josh. 4:5-7]
The purpose of the sign was to keep fresh in Israel's mind the
power and faithfulness of the Lord - truth that they were
inclined to forget as her history provided dismal proof often
enough. The purpose of the sign was to keep certain knowledge
real, living, and powerful in Israel's heart and life. All the
signs of the covenant have this function of bringing to
remembrance the Lord's making a covenant with his people, keeping
that covenant, and the meaning of that covenant. They also all
serve to confirm the reality of that covenant to a new generation
of God's people. You will have noticed the emphasis on that here
in Exodus 31. We read once of the lasting covenant and twice of
the generations to come.
So, in saying that the Sabbath will be a sign the
Lord is saying that it will serve as an important demonstration,
pledge, reminder of Israel's special relationship with Yahweh
but, even more, it will serve as a way of keeping that
knowledge, that relationship a living thing in Israel's heart and
life.
All of these chapters we have been considering lately had to
do - as the entire book of Exodus does - with the presence of
God. How that presence is to be practiced; how it is to be
preserved. Nothing matters more than that Yahweh should remain
with Israel and that his presence should be her blessing and her
salvation. That is the meaning, the blessing, and the privilege
of being in Covenant with the Lord. And the Sabbath is a sign of
that presence, of that relationship that Yahweh has forged with
his people.
Well, it is no different today. You know and I know that the
thing we are always forgetting to our great loss and to our shame
is precisely the presence of the Lord with us. We live our lives
and day after day, for hours on end sometimes, we virtually
forget altogether that the Lord is with us and that our
relationship with him is the only supremely and eternally
important fact about us. That is what we must remember.
To the extent that our sense of God's presence, our conviction
that we belong to him, our assurance that he loves us as his
children and his people, to the extent that our understanding
that the meaning of our lives is to be found in our relationship
to the Lord, to that extent anything and everything that
keeps such knowledge and such conviction and such understanding
alive in our hearts is supremely important.
And the Sabbath does that, as every serious Christian can and
will attest. Where would we be, how forgetful would we become of
everything important if we did not have the Lord's Day, if we
were not reminded of so much that is precious and important when
we are at worship on the Sabbath day? Here we remember that we
have a Creator to whom we owe our life! We are not our own. That
point is emphasized here as we are reminded that our Sabbath rest
is patterned after the Lord's following his creation of the world
in six days. Elsewhere the Sabbath will also be a reminder of our
redemption. The rationale for Sabbath-keeping given in Deut. 5,
in the second giving of the ten commandments, is not God's
resting after creation but his having redeemed Israel from
bondage in Egypt. We are not our own in that way either; we were
bought with a price.
But you get the point. As Cotton Mather put it, "If you look
through the world, you shall see that men's religion is as their
Sabbath is. The Sabbath is the engine by which, by the Bible, the
remembrance of God is kept alive." [Several Sermons,
80]
The great tragedy of the modern American evangelical Sabbath
is not that Christian people go out for dinner on Sunday or to a
football game but that, in losing the day, they are losing their
sense of who they are, of how fundamental to everything they are
and can ever be is the covenant that God has made with his
people. It is because we desperately need such a sign and because
the Sabbath is a sign of God's covenant with us that Thomas
Shepard, the pilgrim father, could write:
"It is easie to demonstrate by Scripture and argument as
well as by experience that religion is just as the Sabbath is,
and decayes and growes as the Sabbath is esteemed; the
immediate honor and worship of God which is brought forth and
swaddled in the first three commandments, is nurst up and
suckled in the bosome of the Sabbath." [These
Sabbaticae, 13]
In the same way, Spurgeon tells this story. In the house of a
friend in Newcastle, his host remarked:
"There is a fine view from the top window, sir, if you could
but see it; we can see Durham Cathedral from here on a Sunday."
"On a Sunday," I said, "how is that?" "Well, you see all that
smoke down there, all those furnaces, and so on; they are all
stopped on a Sunday, and then, when the air is clear, we can
see Durham Cathedral." [Faith in all its Splendor,
22]
Well, so for all of us. We can lose sight of God and his
presence and of the cross and of heaven through all the smoke
bellowing up from the distractions of this world and then Sunday
comes and we gather for worship and the air clears and we see,
not Durham Cathedral, but our lives in relationship to God and
the heavenly country. We forgot sometimes for hours or days
without end that nothing matters but the presence of the Lord
with us and we remember that fact on the day of assembly. This is
what Samuel Johnson called "wear[ing] off…the worldly soil
contracted in the week." [In Whyte, Walk, Character, and
Conversation, 274]
It is precisely this real effect that the Sabbath has
on the faith of Christian people, when rightly used, that led
Voltaire to say, "If you wish to destroy the Christian religion
you must first destroy the Christian Sunday." [Cited in Solberg,
Redeem the Time, 301] And that is precisely what they
sought to do at the time of the French Revolution. The believing
Thomas Shepard was more pithy: "keep this, keep all; lose this,
lose all." [300; citing Theses Sabbaticae, pref.]