Exodus: Who Is the LORD?

Caleb Nelson
Exodus: Who Is the LORD?

The newest sermons from Harvest Reformed Presbyterian Church on SermonAudio.

  1. 10/29/2023

    Building, Furnishing, and Servicing the Tabernacle

    Virtually no one has died on a commercial US flight since 2014. Flying is just about the safest thing you can do these days. Why is that? My friends, if there is a single word that explains this near-miracle, it is the word "checklist." Before any plane is allowed to get off the ground, every last system and feature on that plane is meticulously gone over and checked off. Nothing is left to chance in the maintenance, repairs, fueling, piloting, routing, loading, or anything else. It's all written down on a lot of clipboards and checked off piece by piece by the ground crew and pilots. Why do I bring this up? Because we have looked verse-by-verse at the instructions for building the tabernacle. Now, we have this huge section, three chapters long, that describes in numbing detail how every last instruction was carried out. You may find this strange, uncouth, hard to follow — maybe you even skipped to Leviticus, and then on to Numbers, last time you got to this place in reading through the Bible. But here's the thing: worshiping God is important. It's incredibly important. It's so important that it's worth checking to be sure that every element of it is in place. In short, this section of Exodus is the checked-off preflight checklist. Before the tabernacle can be put into service, before God can move into it, the checklist has to be completed. That's what this passage is about. What we'll see in it is that Israel carried out to the letter God's instructions for His dwelling place; how much more will Christ carry out God's will for His dwelling place!

    26 min
  2. 10/08/2023

    Giving to God

    The Tabernacle used one ton of gold, two tons of silver, and three tons of bronze — and it was portable! Now, don't worry. There is no one-to-one correlation between the building campaign and generosity recorded in these chapters and the building campaign and generosity that our church may be called upon to participate in. There is a correlation, of course. But it's different than you are probably thinking. Let me put it negatively first: This passage does not give our church a warrant to ask you to dig deep and contribute time and money for a building. What does it do? Well, as I trust you know by now (this is our 119th sermon on Exodus), the tabernacle was God's dwelling place. He lived there and moved in that tent alongside His people as they lived in tents and moved from place to place in the wilderness. Today, God does not dwell in any tent or temple made with hands. He dwells in His people; we are the temple of the living God. This passage warrants us in asking you to support the church, to build up the dwelling place of God by investing time and money in your fellow saints. Now, a building can be part of that. You can and should invest in your fellow saints by paying for them to have a place to meet. But the tabernacle was not a place for Israel to assemble; it was not big enough inside for more than a few people, for it was a private residence rather than a public building. Anyway, the upshot is that what the OT says about contributing to the temple relates to giving to God's dwelling place, which in our NT context means giving to your fellow saints. Well, we will see that through Israel's generosity, God's tent was built among His people.

    21 min

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The newest sermons from Harvest Reformed Presbyterian Church on SermonAudio.

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