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mount-sinai

2 studies tagged with mount-sinai.

TorahExodus 25:1-22

That I May Dwell Among Them

Exodus Exodus 25:1-22

The glory that dwelt on Sinai now means to travel. Exodus 25 opens the tabernacle with one clause that governs everything after it — 'make me a sanctuary, and I will dwell in their midst' — the single verse in the canon where the dwelling-verb meets the sanctuary-noun. The structure must be built to a pattern shown on the mountain, and at its dead center stands the kapporet, the atonement-cover, where two cherubim overshadow the one point at which God promises 'I will meet with you.' The mercy seat is the most restricted object in the sanctuary — one man, one day, behind two veils — and the word the Septuagint chose for it, hilasterion, surfaces in only two New Testament verses: one names the old cover, the other names the Christ whom God 'set forth' in public view. The dwelling commanded here is real, but not yet consummated.

TorahExodus 24:1-18

The Blood of the Covenant

Exodus Exodus 24:1-18

The Book of the Covenant has been read aloud; now it is cut in blood. Moses throws half the blood on the altar and half on the people and declares, 'Behold the blood of the covenant' — the one verse in the canon where the blood-dashing verb meets the word covenant. Seventy-four men then ascend, behold God with the prophetic-vision verb used of him nowhere else, and eat and drink under a pavement of sapphire. The glory settles as devouring fire; Moses enters the cloud for forty days. And the oath sworn at the foot of the mountain is broken at the foot of the same mountain within those forty days — which is why the blood that ratifies a covenant Israel cannot keep already points beyond itself to 'the blood of the eternal covenant.'