God Dwells Among His People in the Tabernacle

Open Your Bible

Exodus 25:1-22, Exodus 26:31-35, Exodus 40:31-38, Numbers 10:33-36, Hebrews 8:1-5

We live in the shadowlands.

Consider the tabernacle, that place of awe and wonder described often in the Old Testament. From cherubim stitched into towering curtains to pillars overlaid with gold, the size and beauty of the tabernacle would have taken our breath away. Yet inside all of that artistry and engineering was something (or better yet, another One altogether) even more spectacular: “They are to make a sanctuary for me so that I may dwell among them” (Exodus 25:8).

Sit in that thought for a moment. Let your imagination try to wrap itself around the fact that the God who spoke the stars into being (Isaiah 40:26), the One who sits “enthroned above the circle of the earth” (v.22), and measures the waters of the earth “in the hollow of His hand” (v.12), chose to dwell in a tent built by human hands. What could speak to God’s love for us and to His desire to be in relationship with us more than this? But as spectacular as the tabernacle must have been and as breathtaking as it would have been to see the cloud of God’s presence descend (Exodus 40:34), it was only a shadow of a coming, greater reality of God’s presence with His people.

God did more than descend in a cloud. He wrapped Himself in human flesh and walked among the people He’d made. Through Jesus, humankind experienced fellowship with God undivided by poles and curtains. Jesus Christ is both the High Priest and sacrifice that we need: holy, innocent, undefiled. In order to be with us, He died “once for all time when he offered himself” (Hebrews 7:27). Our High Priest’s work is finished, and now He sits “down at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens, a minister of the sanctuary and the true tabernacle that was set up by the Lord and not man” (Hebrews 8:1–2).

Yet even as we read about the Son of God walking and talking with people in the Gospels, we’re still just seeing shadows. God’s desire to dwell among the Israelites in the portable tabernacle and Jesus’s willingness to take on flesh and live among humanity both point forward to the ultimate, full reunion of God and His people. The earthly tabernacle was eventually destroyed, and Christ’s human body became His glorified body before He ascended to the right hand of the Father. These are the shadows of the time when “night will be no more; people will not need the light of a lamp or the light of the sun, because the Lord God will give them light, and they will reign forever and ever” (Revelation 22:5). Everything we experience here on earth is merely a shadow of the greater, redeemed reality that is to come in the new heavens and the new earth. We can endure life in the shadows because we know a day is coming when we will fully dwell with Him—and He with us—forever.

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41 thoughts on "God Dwells Among His People in the Tabernacle"

  1. Rhonda J. says:

    Thank you so much Tami C!! Have a great day! You have no choice but to show up each day for school! Sometimes I need that! That is one reason I have my groups of serving…4 days a week I gotta show up! But it still is wearisome sometimes. Thank you for leaving that comment! And all of you all each day..
    -thank you Mercy yesterday!
    -thank you for sharing Traci G..that is so hard and so sweet too that you got to be with her. Prayers for her and her hubby. Praise God he went to church. God will move in him. He might be angry for awhile, but God will soften him.

    Have a blessed day.

  2. Ginny Krawczynski says:

    He descends to the lowly, though He is seated as The Highest!

  3. Mari V says:

    “…. when we were fully dwell with Him-and He with us-forever.”

  4. Traci Gendron says:

    Yesterday I met with an old friend that has been told they have no treatments left for her and she has 6 months to live. We talked a lot about our faith. After 30 some years she finally got her husband to go to church with her. Praise God! It was a beautiful day spent talking and looking back on our lives together. We had some good laughs. As she drove away a huge emotional heaviness weighed on me. I may never see her again here on earth. Please pray for her. Her name is Debbie and her husband is Larry.

  5. Mia Faith says:

    A day is coming…
    Holding on to this!!

  6. Tami C says:

    Rhonda, we posted at the same time. Just read your post. Thank you always for your transparency. I understand how you feel. I “know” these things but they haven’t quite “dropped” into my heart. And I’ll constantly messing us, moving forward, taking a step back, cursing (was it Traci? that admitted that – you aren’t alone), living in my flesh, holding grudges, etc. But like the quote from Joyce Meyer, “I’m not where I want to be but I’m not where I was.” So what do we do? We keep showing up, keep doing the next right thing, repent and move on til the next time we have to repent. Gotta run.. I’m a teacher and bell just rang lol.

  7. Rhonda J. says:

    Oh Katie, Chyrel and CeeGee you summed that up much better than me, ty!

  8. Tami C says:

    Exodus 40:36 the Israelites set out whenever the cloud was taken up from the tabernacle… if the cloud was not taken up, they did not set out..
    This convicted me. How many times do I set out without waiting on the Lord? How many decisions do I make without consulting Him? I want to walk in obedience and move when he tells me to move, stay when he tells me to stay.