The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 30: The Tabernacle and Its Services
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The incense, ascending with the prayers of Israel, represents
the merits and intercession of Christ, His perfect righteousness,
which through faith is imputed to His people, and which can
alone make the worship of sinful beings acceptable to God.
Before the veil of the most holy place was an altar of perpetual
intercession, before the holy, an altar of continual atonement.
By blood and by incense God was to be approached—symbols
pointing to the great Mediator, through whom sinners may
approach Jehovah, and through whom alone mercy and salvation
can be granted to the repentant, believing soul.
As the priests morning and evening entered the holy place
at the time of incense, the daily sacrifice was ready to be offered
upon the altar in the court without. This was a time of intense
interest to the worshipers who assembled at the tabernacle.
Before entering into the presence of God through the ministration
of the priest, they were to engage in earnest searching of
heart and confession of sin. They united in silent prayer, with
their faces toward the holy place. Thus their petitions ascended
with the cloud of incense, while faith laid hold upon the merits
of the promised Saviour prefigured by the atoning sacrifice.
The hours appointed for the morning and the evening sacrifice [p. 354] were regarded as sacred, and they came to be observed as the set
time for worship throughout the Jewish nation. And when in
later times the Jews were scattered as captives in distant lands,
they still at the appointed hour turned their faces toward Jerusalem
and offered up their petitions to the God of Israel. In this
custom Christians have an example for morning and evening
prayer. While God condemns a mere round of ceremonies, without
the spirit of worship, He looks with great pleasure upon
those who love Him, bowing morning and evening to seek pardon
for sins committed and to present their requests for needed
blessings.
The showbread was kept ever before the Lord as a perpetual
offering. Thus it was a part of the daily sacrifice. It was called
showbread, or "bread of the presence," because it was ever
before the face of the Lord. It was an acknowledgment of man's
dependence upon God for both temporal and spiritual food,
and that it is received only through the mediation of Christ. God
had fed Israel in the wilderness with bread from heaven, and
they were still dependent upon His bounty, both for temporal
food and spiritual blessings. Both the manna and the showbread
pointed to Christ, the living Bread, who is ever in the presence
of God for us. He Himself said, "I am the living Bread which
came down from heaven." John 6:48-51. Frankincense was placed
upon the loaves. When the bread was removed every Sabbath, to
be replaced by fresh loaves, the frankincense was burned upon
the altar as a memorial before God.
The most important part of the daily ministration was the
service performed in behalf of individuals. The repentant sinner
brought his offering to the door of the tabernacle, and, placing
his hand upon the victim's head, confessed his sins, thus in figure
transferring them from himself to the innocent sacrifice. By his
own hand the animal was then slain, and the blood was carried
by the priest into the holy place and sprinkled before the veil,
behind which was the ark containing the law that the sinner had
transgressed. By this ceremony the sin was, through the blood,
transferred in figure to the sanctuary. In some cases the blood
was not taken into the holy place; [* See Appendix, Note 6.] but the
flesh was then to be eaten by the priest, as Moses directed the sons
of Aaron, saying, "God hath given it you to bear the iniquity of the
congregation." [p. 355] Leviticus 10:17. Both ceremonies alike symbolized the transfer
of the sin from the penitent to the sanctuary.
Such was the work that went on day by day throughout the
year. The sins of Israel being thus transferred to the sanctuary,
the holy places were defiled, and a special work became necessary
for the removal of the sins. God commanded that an atonement
be made for each of the sacred apartments, as for the altar, to
"cleanse it, and hallow it from the uncleanness of the children
of Israel." Leviticus 16:19.
Once a year, on the great Day of Atonement, the priest
entered the most holy place for the cleansing of the sanctuary. The
work there performed completed the yearly round of ministration.
On the Day of Atonement two kids of the goats were brought
to the door of the tabernacle, and lots were cast upon them,
"one lot for the Lord, and the other lot for the scapegoat." The
goat upon which the first lot fell was to be slain as a sin offering
for the people. And the priest was to bring his blood within
the veil, and sprinkle it upon the mercy seat. "And he shall
make an atonement for the holy place, because of the uncleanness
of the children of Israel, and because of their transgression
in all their sins; and so shall he do for the tabernacle of
the congregation, that remaineth among them in the midst of
their uncleanness."
"And Aaron shall lay both his hands upon the head of the live
goat, and confess over him all the iniquities of the children of
Israel, and all their transgressions in all their sins, putting them
upon the head of the goat, and shall send him away by the hand
of a fit man into the wilderness: and the goat shall bear upon him
all their iniquities into a land not inhabited." Not until the goat
had been thus sent away did the people regard themselves as
freed from the burden of their sins. Every man was to afflict
his soul while the work of atonement was going forward. All
business was laid aside, and the whole congregation of Israel
spent the day in solemn humiliation before God, with prayer,
fasting, and deep searching of heart.
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