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Introduction Chapters 1 and 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapters 8 and 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapters 13 and 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapters 17 and 18 Chapter 19 Chapter 20 Chapter 21 Chapters 22 to 25 Chapters 26 to 29 Chapter 30 Chapter 31 Chapters 32 and 33 Chapters 34 to 36 |
The pure golden candlestick and its light
Chapter 8 speaks of the candlestick.* The lamps were to make
the light shine from it, and cause that light to be diffused around
and before it. This is the case when that which is the vessel of the
Holy Spirit shines with the light of God. Whether it be Israel or the
church, it throws light before it. "Let your light so shine
before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father
which is in heaven." It is because the profession of the
Christian is clear and unequivocal that men, seeing his good works,
know to whom to attribute them. The candlestick was of pure gold only,
beaten work; it was properly divine, and that only, God's light in the
sanctuary. The twelve loaves, connected with what was divine, were the
government of God in man; the table was of wood, though overlaid with
gold; the number we have seen as marking divine government, but in
man, specially true of Israel, but the testimony of God in light is
purely divine. The purification of the Levites and their consecration to Jehovah's service
We have next the purification of the Levites and their consecration
to the service of Jehovah. This prefigures the consecration of the
members of the church to God for service. The Levites were sprinkled,* then shorn like the lepers, and their clothes washed, all their
manifested life purified according to the purification of the
sanctuary, their ways suited to the service of God. After that the
whole people laid their hands upon them, and they laid theirs upon the
sacrifices. In the offerings which accompanied their consecration
there was no peace-offering, because it was a question of service and
not of communion; but the sacrifices which represented the efficacy of
the atonement, and the devotedness unto death of the Lord Jesus, were
offered, and characterised the ground and nature of their
service. They are the double character of the death of Christ. The
meat-offering was there also with the burnt-offering; all that
constituted Christ as an offering to God, glorifying God in death as
regards sin, bearing sins, and also in living perfection and
devotedness fully tried in the fire, were found. In the application
the sin-offering comes first. The people's identification with the LevitesThe children of Levi belonged to Jehovah as His redeemed, having been saved, when He judged sin, and themselves offered as an offering to Jehovah. The laying on of hands identified with the victim the person who did so. If it were an offering for sin, the offering was identified with the sinner in his sin; if it were a burnt-offering, the offerer was identified with the value of the consecration to God's glory of the victim in respect of sin. Romans 15:16 is an allusion to this consecration of the Levites, and considers the church as thus offered to God from among the Gentiles. The Israelites having also laid their hands upon the Levites, the whole people were, so to speak, identified in this consecration with them, as an offering made by them to Jehovah, so that the Levites represented them before Him.
We find here again, what we have already seen, that the Levites
were given to Aaron and his sons, as the church is given to Christ,
the true Priest and Son over the house of God, to be used in the
service of the house. They were first offered by Israel to Jehovah for
His service by Aaron the priest (ver. 11); it was a wave-offering
(tenupha); that is, they were presented before the Lord as consecrated
to Him. Then (ver. 13) they were set before Aaron and his sons, and so
under their hand given to the Lord, wholly given to Him instead of the
firstborn (vers. 16-19). How solemn and perfect is the offering up of
the servant of the Lord to Him, according to the purification of the
sanctuary and all the value and true character of Christ's offering of
Himself to God, and the divine judgment of sin.* Israel under the difrect Fatherly government of God in the wilderness
The passover, the memorial of redemption, and in consequence the
symbol of the unity* of the people of God, as an assembly redeemed by Him, is obligatory during the journey through the wilderness.** Only God makes a provision, in grace and forbearance, for those who
were not able to keep it according to His will, to whom it had
reference. But these provisions of forbearance and grace kept continually present the idea of a redeemed people and one under the direct fatherly government of God. Besides this we have the precious declaration that God Himself conducted His people by His presence. At His commandment they pitched; at His commandment they journeyed. They kept the charge of Jehovah, according to the commandment of Jehovah. God grant that we, who have His Spirit, may thus be led in all things, to stay or to go entirely under His immediate direction! If we are near God in His communion, we shall be guided by His eye; if not, we shall be guided by His eternal providence, as horses, and mules, with bits and bridles, that we may not stumble.
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