Who Cares about Cubits? or, What We Can Learn from the Tabernacle {Guest Post} | The Speckled Goat: Who Cares about Cubits? or, What We Can Learn from the Tabernacle {Guest Post}

5.16.2016

Who Cares about Cubits? or, What We Can Learn from the Tabernacle {Guest Post}

And now for something a little different... I asked (more like begged) my dear friend Cryss to write a post for this series on knowing the Bible, even the confusing parts. 

Why did I ask Cryss? Because she's wise, honest, friendly, and most of all, she has a passion for a particular part of the Bible that I find... challenging. Namely, she loves the Tabernacle-- and I can't make heads or tails of it. Take it away, Cryss!



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It's really tempting to skip over those insane, confusing details in the Bible. Who gives a rip about cubits, anyway? But when we really dig in to the truth of God's Word, we find many hidden gems. Here's what we can learn from all those details in the Bible about the Tabernacle!


First off, I would like to say thank you to Ally for letting me write this post for her blog.

Not only is she an amazing blogger, I am privileged to call her co-worker and most importantly…friend. I love how she is so willing to put her heart out there for the benefit of us, the readers. So…thanks, Ally!

So a little background on me.

My name is Cryss and I am married to a wonderful man and we have two beautiful girls. Like I said above, I am a co-worker with Ally at camp and also work for another non-profit ministry that has a maternity home for unwed young women experiencing an unexpected pregnancy. I get to do the majority of the accounting work for both of these organizations. Yup, I’m a numbers girl =)

I am NOT a theologian by any stretch of the imagination, but I do love the Lord and I love His Word. I hope that I can help shed some light on this topic, but I would encourage everyone to do their own studying and not just take my word for it.

Ally and I had been in a group together when talk turned to the Tabernacle. I guess I may have been a little too passionate about talking about it, because now I find myself here!

Ally presented some questions to me, and I will do my best to answer them. They are:

Why present so much information about the Tabernacle/Temple in the first place? 
Why does it matter, anyway? 


It is true that there is a lot of information presented about the Tabernacle and the Temple.

Exodus 25-30 gives detailed description about all of the items in the Tabernacle, how it should be built (this is where the cubits come in), the garments that the priests should wear and how the priests are to be set aside for their work in the Tabernacle.

1 Kings 5-6 give details about the building of the more permanent structure, the Temple (there are cubits in there too). The Temple was patterned after the Tabernacle and had many of the same elements.

There is quite a bit of detail about each, but more so for the Tabernacle, and I think that is the information that most people get bogged down in.

So why so much information? What I’m going to say here might sound harsh, but I ask you to hang with me for a bit.


Friends, the Bible isn’t always about us.


There I said it.

Can I say that?

I think especially in American Christianity, we are taught that the Bible is God’s Word for us (true!) and that every single sentence should be about us (not true!).

 But, while every single sentence is not about us, every single sentence is about God!

When we are reading the Bible and we come to some of those passages that seem tedious, or way too detail-oriented, instead of asking ourselves, “How does this apply to me and my life?” we should stop and ask, “What is this showing me about God and who He is?”.

Often when answering that question, we will find things that we CAN apply to our own lives as well.

Let’s look at a couple of examples:

First, excerpts from Exodus 26:

Make the tabernacle with ten curtains of finely twisted linen…28 cubits long and four cubits wide…Make curtains of goat hair for the tent over the tabernacle…30 cubits long and four cubits wide.

Have I lost you, yet? Remember the question: "What is this showing me about God and who He is?"


The Bible Tells Us about the Character of God



What does all this stuff about cubits and curtains tell me about God?

Friends, our God is a God of detail! And the details are so important to Him!

He told them the curtains should be 28 cubits long. Not 25. Not 30. Exactly 28.

Why? I have no idea, but I know that He wanted the curtains to be 28 cubits long.

Don’t you think that the God who cares about the cubits of the Tabernacle curtains cares deeply about the details of your life? 

Psalm 139:13 says, “For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb.” 

And Matthew 10:30, “And even the very hairs of your head are all numbered."




The Bible Tells us about God's Work in Us



Another great example: the Lamp Stand in Exodus 25:31-38

Oh this is so beautiful! Again, there is lots of detail here.

“Make a lamp stand of pure gold. Hammer out its base and shaft, and make its flower-like cups, buds and blossoms of one piece with them.” 

Again, God is in the details. He goes on to describe how many cups and buds should be there and where they should be.

The lamp stand was made of pure gold and hammered out of one piece. That seems like a minor detail, but let's dig a little deeper.

It was not made in many pieces and then soldered together, nor was a mold made and melted gold poured in to create the shape.

A master craftsman had to take a large chunk of gold and, using a hammer, pound on it until it took shape.

In Judson Cornwall’s book Let Us Draw Near, he says,

“Being formed into the image of the Son of God may be the church’s highest hope, but it is accomplished with a heavy hammer. Religion pours us into a mold, but God beats us into shape. But we need not fear, for God holds the hammer and gold cannot be bruised or destroyed by beating, only stretched and formed.” (page 94)

Friends, this is what God wants to do for us!

In Zechariah 13:9 it says, “This third I will bring into the fire; I will refine them like silver and test them like gold. They will call on my name and I will answer them; I will say, ‘They are my people,’ and they will say, ‘The Lord is our God.’”

 And Jesus quotes Isaiah 42:3 when He says in Matthew 12:20, “A bruised reed he will not break, and a smoldering wick he will not snuff out, till he leads justice to victory.”



Sometimes the refining process can be difficult, painful even, but oh the beauty that comes from our lives when we allow the Holy Spirit to work on us.

Then we, like the lamp stand, will be able to show light to the world!



So if I haven’t convinced you already that there is some really wonderful stuff inside all that detail (or you didn’t get that from Ally’s previous post about genealogies) there is one other really important thing to remember:



The Bible always points us to Jesus.



We are blessed with being able to see the whole Bible from this side of the cross.

I’m sure when God was giving out all those instructions, they didn’t make much sense to the people at the time, but the symbolism that we can see from this side of the cross shows us that nearly everything that God was doing in the Old Testament points us to Jesus the Messiah!

I had the privilege to be able to spend one year at a Bible school after I had completed my Bachelor’s degree. I saved my notes.

The pastor, Pastor Stime, taught a class on the first five books of the Bible (The Pentateuch), and really made me fall in love with all this detail that is in so much of the Old Testament.

I want to leave you with a couple of things that he taught us.

Remember the passage I referenced above that talked about the curtains being made of linen and goats hair?

In Exodus 25:13 it goes on to talk about a covering that would go over the curtains that would be skins dyed red and then an additional covering over that one that would be made from durable leather (or animal skin).

(Okay, Cryss, where are you going with this?)

When we skim past this, we miss the symbolism here that God is giving.
The linen shows the divinity of Christ.
The goats’ hair shows the humanity of Christ.
The red covering shows us the Blood of Christ shed for us.
The durable leather outer covering gives the tent an appearance like any other tent, just like Jesus looks like any human man. 

The Tabernacle coverings show us that Jesus looks just like us, but underneath is His divinity.

Cool, huh?

God had the Tabernacle constructed so that He could live amongst the people, to meet and speak with them.

People were able to approach God by the bringing of sacrifices to the Tabernacle.

But Jesus, God in the flesh, has become the sacrifice so that we can approach God.

Now God doesn’t have to live in the Tabernacle or Temple. Because of Jesus’ death on the cross, there are no more barriers to Him and we can approach God freely. Through His Holy Spirit He can dwell in us instead of a tent. This is good news!

It's really tempting to skip over those insane, confusing details in the Bible. Who gives a rip about cubits, anyway? But when we really dig in to the truth of God's Word, we find many hidden gems. Here's what we can learn from all those details in the Bible about the Tabernacle!



Can we still have a living and active faith in Jesus without knowing all this?

Of course!

But, I believe that knowing this rich beauty from the Old Testament gives us a much fuller, richer view of who God is- when we know that He had a plan for Jesus to come, and was giving glimpses of that to people for generations. 

This leads me to trust that God has a great big plan for my life as well. 

When I am in the middle of something hard, I may not see it, but when I look back on those experiences I can see that God has been in the details. What comfort this brings!




Friends, I would encourage you to dig a little deeper when you come to those hard, boring, detail-rich areas of the Bible. You never know what nuggets of truth you may find that could change your life.



Thank you so much for sharing this with us, today Cryss! What a beautiful, creative, and powerful God we serve! 

This post is linked up to Tell His Story, Kristin Hill Taylor, and Grace and Truth



Related Posts:


when the Bible makes no sense confusing The Bible is clear- a light to my feet Genealogies in the Bible and why they matter


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10 comments :

  1. I love the point about the Bible not being about us. So true!

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    1. Isn't that great? It's a reminder I need to hear so often!!

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  2. Yes! You are so right! Love this post. Oh, to love God more and more so that spending time in His word is a pure delight as we learn more and more about HIM!

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  3. WOW WOW WOW It is awesome that I picked this blog to write about this because this past Sunday for children's church we talked about the tabernacle and how it was built and how holy God wanted to connect with us. But Cryss, you took it one step further. I am going to share this with my fellow children's church leader because she will like this! Also Ally, I can see that devotions are your thing on your blog. Can you come over to mine and tell me what you think about my style of writing devotions. I am new at this but I want to learn. visiting from #tellhisstory #7

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    1. Hi, Kristina! Isn't it funny how often times, God brings up the same theme or same topic over and over? So cool.

      I'd love to connect with you-- I didn't see your e-mail address on your blog-- could you send me an e-mail, maybe? thespeckledgoatblog(at)gmail.com.

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  4. This is a fantastic and very insightful post! Thank you for sharing and God bless you and your ministry!

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  5. That's a great perspective. Bible really is our Basic Instructions Before Leaving Earth.

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  6. I love that question - what is this showing me about God? And being reminded that God loves details opens our eyes to what an amazing God we have. We only have to look at the features of a flower, or the precision with which our bodies work to be in awe of our heavenly Father.

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  7. God is in the details! So many words of wisdom and insight wrapped into this writing.

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  8. This is so cool! I'm so glad I know that there is so much more in those passages than simple building instructions :)

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