Sunday
Morning Bible Study
January
11, 2008
Introduction
Moses has spent
most of the last three months up on the mountain in God’s presence.
He’s received
instructions on how to build the Tabernacle and how God is to be worshipped.
When the people
rebelled with the Golden Calf, Moses interceded and reestablished the covenant
between God and Israel.
Now it’s time to stop talking and start doing.
It’s time to build the Tabernacle.
Exodus 35
:1 Then Moses gathered all the congregation of the children of Israel
together, and said to them, "These are the words which the LORD has
commanded you to do:
:2 "Work shall be done for six days, but the seventh day shall be a
holy day for you, a Sabbath of rest to the LORD. Whoever does any work on it
shall be put to death.
:3 "You shall kindle no fire throughout your dwellings on the Sabbath
day."
Lesson
Commit to rest before you work
Some of us see a lot of work ahead and all we can think about is rolling up
our sleeves and getting to work.
First there’s a quick reminder to set aside time to rest and be with God.
I find it interesting that when Moses was on Mount Sinai the first time, just
before he came down God reminded him about the Sabbath (Ex. 31:12-17) – he was
about to build and God said “rest”.
Except he got interrupted with the golden calf.
Don’t forget why all this
work needs to be done.
These people are learning to develop a relationship with God.
The work is all about that relationship.
One of the challenges I’ve been dealing with in my life is with prayer.
Most people don’t have a difficult time seeing that the “work” that I do
for a living is one that involves spiritual things.
Spiritual work requires that we do things
spiritually. Smart, huh? What that means is that I need to be a man of
prayer. I need to have this prayer thing
figured out.
In reality, all of us are in this same “spiritual work”.
We are here on this planet to serve the Lord. We are His hands and feet. Spiritual work requires spiritual power. Pray.
Find that rest in the Lord before you work.
:4 And Moses spoke to all the congregation of the children of Israel,
saying, "This is the thing which the LORD commanded, saying:
:5 'Take from among you an offering to the LORD. Whoever is of a willing
heart, let him bring it as an offering to the LORD: gold, silver, and bronze;
Moses goes on to list all the various things that are going to be needed to
build the Tabernacle. It wasn’t just
about gold, but about the things to build the Tabernacle.
offering
– t@ruwmah – contribution; from ruwm – to rise; to lift off and present
It’s what you
lift up and present to the Lord.
Lesson
Giving to God
We’re going to talk about giving this morning.
I hope that no matter what kind of giving God would challenge us with, we
would see all our giving as giving to God.
When you give to the poor, you are giving to God.
(Prov
19:17 NKJV) He who has pity on the poor
lends to the LORD, And He will pay back what he has given.
:6 'blue, purple, and scarlet thread, fine linen, and goats' hair;
:7 'ram skins dyed red, badger skins, and acacia wood;
Moses goes on to list all the various parts of the Tabernacle, things that
need materials and need to be built.
Lesson
Giving what’s needed
Every once in a while we get offers
from people that they want to give various things to the church.
I’m sure each of the folks have
meant well.
But some of the things aren’t
exactly what is needed.
For example,
several times we’ve had folks offer or actually donate an “organ” (the musical
instrument)
I’ve been thinking
about providing “organ donor cards”.
The things that are being given here are things that are needed to build
the Tabernacle, not just emptying their closets for Spring Cleaning.
:20 And all the congregation of the children of Israel departed from the
presence of Moses.
:21 Then everyone came whose heart was stirred, and everyone whose spirit
was willing, and they brought the Lord's offering for the work of the
tabernacle of meeting, for all its service, and for the holy garments.
(Exo
35:21 NASB) And everyone whose heart
stirred him and everyone whose spirit moved him came and brought the LORD'S
contribution …
stirred – nasa’
– to lift, carry, take;
It wasn’t their heart that was moved, but their heart that did the moving.
willing – nadab
– to incite, impel, make willing
Again, the spirit of these people
impelled them to give.
The only arm twisting that’s going on is how they’re twisting their own
arms.
Lesson
The Willing Heart
Be careful here. Don’t let your
unwilling heart be your excuse not to be a giver.
Change your heart. Be a person who
becomes a willing giver.
Paul teaches an important lesson about giving:
(2 Cor
9:7 NKJV) So let each one give as he
purposes in his heart, not grudgingly or of necessity; for God loves a cheerful
giver.
grudgingly
– lupe – sorrow, pain, grief,
annoyance
Sometimes we give because we want this person to stop
being a “pain” to us. We give so they’ll
go away.
of
necessity – anagke –
necessity; from agkale – the curve or inner angle of
the arm, the bent arm
Perhaps
we could call this getting “strong-armed”, or perhaps the picture is of someone getting you in a
headlock.
cheerful
– hilaros (“hilarious”) – cheerful,
joyous; from hileos – merciful
Illustration
Kurt Warner,
the two-time NFL MVP quarterback of the Arizona Cardinals, started a family
tradition he calls The Restaurant Game. The night before he heads out for a
road game, Kurt and his wife take their seven children out to eat a family
dinner. Once the Warner family is seated, one of the children will scan the
dining area like a quarterback looking for potential receivers. When the Warner
child picks a table, Kurt asks the waiter to add that table’s dinner tab to his
own—all anonymously. At a steakhouse before a September game against the New
York Jets, a family of four received a free meal without knowing it came from
an NFL star.
The idea for The Restaurant Game came to Warner and his wife after Warner
led the St. Louis Rams to a Super Bowl victory in 2000. It’s a natural fit for
them. They remember the days before Warner’s NFL career—when Kurt was working a
night shift at a grocery store, and they only had food stamps to feed their
family. With that in mind, giving is a joyful family tradition for the Warners.
“We want our kids to grow up knowing that because of football we are blessed,”
Warner said. “We never want them to lose sight of what it’s really about. Our
circumstances are not the most important thing. It’s what we do with those
circumstances.”
Warner’s motto for life and ministry is “Faith and Family First.” The
Restaurant Game is one way he’s passing that motto on to his children. When
they go out to eat, they always pray and pick up someone’s dinner bill before
they enjoy their own.
Sam McKee,
Vancouver, Washington; source: Karen Crouse, "Warner Sets Example for His
Family and the Cardinals," www.nytimes.com (9-26-08)
Why be a “giver”?
Because God is
a giver. He’s a willing giver.
(John 3:16 NKJV) "For
God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever
believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.
(2 Cor 8:9 NKJV) For you
know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though He was rich, yet for your
sakes He became poor, that you through His poverty might become rich.
You may think that I’m talking about giving because I want you to give to
our church. Then don’t give to our
church, but learn to give.
God is looking for people who will represent Him well. One of the key qualities of God’s character
is that of giving. His love for us is
expressed in His giving.
Illustration
Kevin Miller writes, When I was a kid, my dad told me two stories all the
time. In the first one, a couple goes to Harvard University and asks to see the
president, because they want to give a donation to the university. The
president agrees to see them, but he doesn’t know them, and because they’re
from somewhere way out west, he treats them curtly. After a few moments, the
woman finally turns to her husband and says, “Come, Leland; I think there are
better things we can do with our money.” The man was Leland Stanford, founder (with his wife) of
Stanford University. Even as a child, I understood that the moral of this story
was not, “Be nice to strangers.” Instead, this story was about who has real
power. The moral is, “If you have money, you can tell anyone—even the most
established, respected, or powerful person in the world—to go take a flying
leap.”
The second story my father used to tell me went like this: One day a
minister was invited to John
D. Rockefeller’s mansion. As he drove up the winding drive lined with tall
trees, he said, “My, my! This is what the Lord might have done—if he’d had the
money.” As a child, I understood the
moral of this story, too. The minister, who represents belief in God, is
overwhelmed by Rockefeller’s wealth. Not only that, he says God himself doesn’t
have as much money as Rockefeller. Implicit in this claim is that he doesn’t
have as much power, either. Rockefeller is more powerful than God, because
money is more powerful than God.
As you might guess from the stories my dad told me growing up, he spent
most of his life working really hard to make money. But then he made a tactical
error. My mom and I were going to an Episcopal Church service, and he decided
to come along. The priest was full of old-time religion, and he gave an altar
call. Something connected with my dad that day, and he went forward and began
to follow Jesus. He was 60-years-old. He began to read a small, blue King James Bible, and for
the first time in his life, he began giving with real interest. He told me, in
what was a rare sharing of his personal life, “Kevin, I’ve started to tithe,
and it’s been a great adventure.”
My dad suffered a heart attack at age 70. He lay in a hospital bed for 5
days, and then he died. At the funeral home, they laid him in a casket with his
navy blazer and a Lands’ End tie. A woman I’d never seen came up to me and
said, “You don’t know me, but I was in a bad marriage; my husband was beating
me, and I needed to get out to save my life. But I didn’t know what I would do
to support myself. Your dad paid for me to go to junior college and get a
degree, so I could be a dental
hygienist. He paid for the whole thing, and nobody else knew about it. Now I
have a job, and I’m making it. Your dad literally saved my life.”
I wonder what would have been my dad’s legacy if he had kept loving money
and trying to be like Leland
Stanford and John D. Rockefeller. He would have died with a lot of money, but
not a lot of love. Instead, he took a risk. He tried to learn how to “keep his
life free from the love of money.” And when he died, he left behind a woman who
knows every day when she cleans people’s teeth that it’s a miracle she’s still
alive.
Kevin Miller,
in his sermon “Financial Contentment,” PreachingToday.com
:30 And Moses
said to the children of Israel, "See, the LORD has called by name Bezalel
the son of Uri, the son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah;
:31 "and He has filled him with the Spirit of God, in wisdom and
understanding, in knowledge and all manner of workmanship,
:32 "to design artistic works, to work in gold and silver and bronze,
:33 "in cutting jewels for setting, in carving wood, and to work in
all manner of artistic workmanship.
:34 "And He has put in his heart the ability to teach, in him and
Aholiab the son of Ahisamach, of the tribe of Dan.
:35 "He has filled them with skill to do all manner of work of the
engraver and the designer and the tapestry maker, in blue, purple, and scarlet
thread, and fine linen, and of the weaver; those who do every work and those
who design artistic works.
Lesson
Giving your skills
There were going to be a lot of very special things needed to be made.
Giving is not just about giving money, it’s about making all that we have
available to the Lord.
Giving is not just about what you do for the church, it’s what you do for
the Lord.
It might be
mowing a neighbor’s lawn.
Taking a meal
to a friend.
Fixing a
friend’s car.
What do you have to offer the Lord?
Exodus 36
:1-7 More than enough
The people responded so well in giving that Moses had to beg them to stop.
:6 So Moses gave a commandment, and they caused it to be proclaimed
throughout the camp, saying, "Let neither man nor woman do any more work
for the offering of the sanctuary." And the people were restrained from
bringing,
:7 for the material they had was sufficient for all the work to be done;
indeed too much.
Lesson
Proper giving meets the need
When we learn to give under the leading of the Lord, there is more than
enough.
Some of us have excuses as to why we don’t give.
“I don’t have enough to give”
I would remind you of the one person that Jesus commended
on their giving as giving the most – the poor widow woman who gave two pennies
(Luke 2:2-4). The Israelites themselves
are poor slaves.
“My arm is being twisted”. Then
don’t give.
Some of us are too easily swayed to give.
Every time we hear is some financial need, we feel like it’s our job to fix
the problem.
The truth is sometimes we hinder things.
Some folks don’t need for you to take care of them, they
need to take care of themselves.
What works out best is when we all learn to pay attention to how God wants us to give, and we respond to
Him – not the other things that are twisting our arms or our minds.
What about us as a church? How does
giving work in our church?
If you’ve been a part of our church for some time you know that we try our
best not to twist arms when it comes to giving.
How are we doing?
What are our expenses as a church?
We pay $52,800 a year in rent.
We pay about $10,000 a year in utilities.
I am the only full time staff person, my salary is $44,000
a year.
Laurie, Dave, Dan, and Joy are all part time, their
salaries total about $54,000 a year.
Caleb, Daniel, and Deb are very part time, and earned a
total of $12,000.
We have sent about $41,000 out to the sixteen different
Mission groups that we support.
Our
total expenses for the year were $259,000.
This year our income
was about $246,000, about $22,000 less than the previous year – we too as a
church are affected by the economy.
This year we are about $13,000 short of our expenses and
so we are dipping into our savings to cover our costs.
Why am I sharing all this with you?
Because you’re a bad church and need to give more? Nope.
An important part
of discipleship is learning to examine needs, listen to the Lord, and respond
to Him (not me).
If you feel I’m twisting your arm, hold on to your wallet.
If you feel guilty and think that our shortfall is all
your fault, hold on to your wallet.
If you are beginning to wonder if that prompting you’ve been
feeling from the Lord about giving has been correct, then do what God leads.
If you are
giving properly, then we have all we need as a church. If we are still falling short, then perhaps
we need to tighten our belts.
36:8 – 39:43
Building
From here on out, we will see the actual building of the Tabernacle and all
it’s parts. Since we covered each of
these items in detail in Exodus 25-31, we won’t go into the detail here.
The Tent itself
is put together.
The Ark of the
Covenant.
Table of Showbread
Menorah
Altar of
Incense
Oil and Incense
Altar of Burnt
Offering
Laver
The Priestly
Garments
38 :21-31 Precious Metals Accounted
(Exo 38:24 NKJV) All the gold that was used in all the work of
the holy place, that is, the gold of the offering, was twenty-nine talents and
seven hundred and thirty shekels, according to the shekel of the sanctuary.
More than a ton of gold was given.
Used in the furniture inside the
Tabernacle like the Ark, the table, incense altar, and menorah
About four tons of silver was
given.
Most of the silver was used for the
bases for the Courtyard fence
About 2.5 tons of brass was given.
Used in the metal things outside
the Tabernacle, like the laver and the altar of burnt offering.
Exodus 40
Moses sets up the whole Tabernacle and anoints every part with oil – a
picture of the Holy Spirit being involved in everything. When Moses is done, God responds:
(Exo
40:34-38 NKJV) Then the cloud covered
the tabernacle of meeting, and the glory of the LORD filled the tabernacle.
{35} And Moses was not able to enter the tabernacle of meeting, because the
cloud rested above it, and the glory of the LORD filled the tabernacle. {36}
Whenever the cloud was taken up from above the tabernacle, the children of
Israel would go onward in all their journeys. {37} But if the cloud was not
taken up, then they did not journey till the day that it was taken up. {38} For
the cloud of the LORD was above the tabernacle by day, and fire was over it by
night, in the sight of all the house of Israel, throughout all their journeys.
Lesson
God’s presence in obedience
When Moses returned from Sinai the first time, the people had gone into
idolatry with the golden calf.
God’s response
was to stay as far away as possible.
Now the people have responded to all that God has been teaching them about
who He is and how they are to relate to Him.
This time God
responds with His presence.
Don’t confuse getting that bonus at work or buying that new car with God’s
blessing. Don’t think that because you
lost your job that you must have some secret sin.
We don’t need financial prosperity.
We need God’s presence.
We may be heading into a time when very few are well off
financially. As long as we have the
Lord, we’ll be okay.