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These devotions are part of the Follow the Word Bible reading program at St. John Lutheran Church in Cypress, Texas. This year we are reading through the Scriptures together, listening for how God speaks through his Word day by day. I hope you will join me on this journey.
Today’s readings are Numbers 7-9, Psalm 68.
Numbers 7:89-8:4
And when Moses went into the tent of meeting to speak with the Lord, he heard the voice speaking to him from above the mercy seat that was on the ark of the testimony, from between the two cherubim; and it spoke to him.
8 Now the Lord spoke to Moses, saying, 2 “Speak to Aaron and say to him, When you set up the lamps, the seven lamps shall give light in front of the lampstand.” 3 And Aaron did so: he set up its lamps in front of the lampstand, as the Lord commanded Moses. 4 And this was the workmanship of the lampstand, hammered work of gold. From its base to its flowers, it was hammered work; according to the pattern that the Lord had shown Moses, so he made the lampstand.

We may rightly think of God’s holiness as his majestic purity, righteousness, and glory. Behind the word holy, and all of those attributes is the idea that God is different. Indeed, God is really different.
I think about that as I consider the character of God as revealed in this section of Numbers in contrast to the news I’ve been watching recently – especially the coverage of the war in the Middle East. Destruction, death, violence, chaos, blame, recrimination, and terror run rampant. These are the products of man’s whims and ways. We dream up ways to harm each other.
Man rebels against God. We align ourselves with the thief who comes to steal, kill, and destroy. We go our own way, determine for ourselves what is good and evil. The results? Families are fractured. Relationships are ruptured. Peace is destroyed. Joy is stolen. Hope is killed.
But God is really different. He is the author of peace, joy, grace, love, and blessing. Not only so, but he offers man the opportunity to embrace those blessings by means here of the Tabernacle with its mercy seat, lampstands, and ark of the covenant.
The mercy seat was the gold cover of the Ark of the Covenant where the presence of the LORD was revealed between the cherubim. It is the place from which God speaks to Moses and guides Israel during their journey in the wilderness (Numbers 7:89). It represents both God’s holiness and his mercy — the place where atonement is made and where God meets with his people.
God does not want man to remain in a state of unholy separation from himself. He provides a manner by which he can speak to his people from the place of his mercy. I love the image of the wings of the cherubim spread over this very special place. After the fall, cherubim guard the entrance to Eden (Genesis 3:24). Their wings covering the mercy seat symbolize the holiness of God being guarded, emphasizing that sinful people cannot casually approach God’s presence.
We no longer hear from God by means of the Tabernacle’s mercy seat. We have an even better place of his voice. The mercy seat was the place where the atoning blood was sprinkled and where God met his people in mercy — a reality that ultimately points us to Christ. He spoke words of mercy, grace, and forgiveness from between two thieves, and opened the way for all who look to him to hear a voice of kindness and welcome. Jesus promises in Jon 6:37, “Whoever comes to me I will never cast out.”









