Sermon Tone Analysis

Overall tone of the sermon

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Me
Anyone that really knows me knows I am a big dog person… And we have several dogs ourselves, an American bulldog and a pit bull who are both rescues and are such sweethearts, and we also have a Great Dane who is about a year and a half old and we’ve had since he was a puppy.
And having a Great Dane is an experience on its own… He’s a whole different kind of personality… He is super vocal, he is very clingy, he is an attention hog, and he 100% has no clue how big he really is and thinks he’s a lapdog...
But what is really funny about him is that he loves to push the boundaries to see what he can get away with.
The kids’ bedrooms and our guest bedroom is down a hall on one side of our house and the dogs are not allowed in that hall or those rooms.
If we are all in one of the kids’ rooms he will stand right at the doorway of that hallway, literally with his toes right up to the edge of the doorway, and often with one paw over the line—but only one paw… And he’ll have his neck wrapped around the door into the hallway as far as he can possibly get it without putting his body in the hall.
He knows he isn’t suppose to be in the hall, but he’s going to try his hardest to see how far he can push that line...
If we’re in the kitchen cooking or washing dishes or something and he comes in there we tell him to get out the kitchen.
(Talk about how the kitchen/living room/dining room are designed in a sort of circle) He will leave the kitchen into the living room, then loop right back around from the living room into the dining room and try to come in the kitchen where we are through the dining room.
Then we’ll tell him again to get out the kitchen and he’ll try to loop back around again.
Or he’ll stand at the door from the dining room to the kitchen and try to stick his head as far in the kitchen as possible…
And he does stuff like this all the time… He is crazy cute and he is pretty smart… If he were human he’d definitely grow up be a criminal defense lawyer, no doubt about it.
Or he’d be a little kid in the backseat of the car with his finger pointed at his sibling and only a quarter of an inch from their arm screaming, “I’m not touching you!!!”
And if we aren’t paying close attention to him he will absolutely try to get away with anything he possibly can.
And one of the keys to getting him to be obedient is to hold him accountable… If we let him get away with something even just once he’ll think it’s carte blanch to do it whenever he wants.
We
What’s funny is that as I sit here talking about my goofy Great Dane, I can 100% easily interchange my own walk with the Lord with that story…
And I’m sure anyone of us listening to this message today can do the same…
How often has the Lord told us not to do something and yet we want to find every possible way to get right up to the line of actually doing what he said not to do and still be able to say we didn’t actually do it.
How often are we guilty of trying to push the boundaries?
How often are we guilty of trying to see how much sin and exactly what caliber of sin we can get away with?
Or how much of a wrong thing we can kind of justify…?
How often do we try to push the line on living like the world and see how far we can go without losing our faith?
Romantic relationships before marriage are prime examples… We love to see just how close to the line we can get before it’s officially sex… How far we can push things before other people may find out… Or we try to justify things with, “well we’re going to get married at some point anyways...” Or whatever other excuses we can come up with…
Oddly, it’s really amazing how just similar we really can be to a dog…
God
This week we read Parasha Pekudei, Exodus 38:21-40:38, which is our final Parasha of Sefer Shemot.
Pekudei begins with the recording of the weight of the precious materials used in the building of the Mishkan and its furnishings.
This is, in essence, an accounting recording of all the precious metals that were given (in financial equivalency) and how those items were used on the P&L of the construction of the Mishkan Chapter 39 begins with relaying the details put into the production of the priestly garments for Aaron and his sons.
The chapter then ends with the completion of the work of the Tabernacle and two clarifications that B’nei Yisrael had done all the work exactly as Adonai had shown Moses.
Chapter 40, the final chapter of Exodus, details the actual procedures for the assembly of the Tabernacle, followed by the actual raising of the Tabernacle for the very first time.
When Moses completed the work of assembling the Mishkan the Shechinah of Adonai filled the Tabernacle and took up residence there before the entire Nation.
Tradition tells us that the building of the Mishkan is a symbolic partnership between Israel and Adonai in a work of recreation.
Particularly in recreating a dwelling for the Presence of God within His creation.
What’s really interesting about this concept is something we find in our Parasha this week that is dynamically unique but also extremely important in our walk as disciples of Yeshua today.
And as we do I want us to keep this principle in mind:
One of the most important realities that should be present in the life of a follower of Yeshua is obedience and accountability to the Word of the Lord.
(Repeat)
So let’s dive into the text together…
Bezalel, Oholiab and those working with them in building the Tabernacle and furnishings have now officially completed all their work.
They hav built everything prescribed according to the very intricate specifications Moses saw in the heavenlies when he was upon Mount Sinai in the Cloud of Glory.
They did everything exactly as Adonai had prescribed through Moses.
The following verses state that all of the items prescribed by HaShem for the assembly of the Tabernacle was brought to Moses.
Then runs through a detailed check list of everything that was made and its purpose in the Mishkan.
Now let’s skip down to verse 42…
Now, remember a few moments ago I mentioned Jewish tradition likens the assembly of the Mishkan to a second creation of sorts, and specifically a partnership between Israel and Adonai in recreating a dwelling for the Presence of God among His creation.
Well here’s where things begin to get interesting.
God prescribed everything to be done in a very specific fashion, and this is by no means a surprise as the whole purpose was to be a holy dwelling for the Shechinah.
So, B’nei Yisrael followed all the design specs laid before them by Moses from the Lord.
When they finished their work Moses looked everything over and was pleased with the work.
The Torah says that Moses saw the work and blessed them.
Rabbinic tradition postulates that Moses’ blessing over Israel was as follows, “May the Divine Spirit rest upon the work of your hands.”
So here the fun part about all of this, and we’re going to see this twice in Pekudei, but this is the first.
In the Creation account we read in Bereshit we see God’s divinely orchestrated seven day creation period, six days in which He spoke something into existence and the seventh day He rested and established the eternal Shabbat.
As He created He declared His creation good, culminating in looking over his entire creation and proclaiming it is very good.
As we read through Exodus 39 we read the detail of each part of the work that was done in building the Tabernacle.
With each and every section of what was created for the Tabernacle the section is closed out with the phrase Ka’asher tzivah Adonai et-Moshe, “as Adonai commanded Moses.”
And this occurs a total of seven times throughout Exodus 39, it described the work that was done followed by the statement that the work was done exactly as Adonai commended Moses.
Then, following the seventh time we read verses 42 and 43
Much like Adonai rested from His work of creation, Bezalel, Oholiab, and B’nei Yisrael rest from their work of creation for HaShem.
And just as Adonai proclaimed all His creation is very good, Moses declares the work of Israel for the Mishkan very good by proclaiming a blessing over the people.
Then we transition to Exodus 40, the closing chapter of Exodus in which we read about Moses and the Kohanim actually setting up the Tabernacle.
Then as we read through the rest of Exodus 40 we see a similar breakdown as we saw in Exodus 39 with there being sectioned breakdowns of the work as it was being done.
And just like we see with Exodus 39, with each section describing the work that was being done it is followed with the phrase K’kol Asher tzivah Adonai oto kein asa, “just as Adonai had commanded him.”
And here again we see something very interesting, this phrase occurs seven times in chapter 40 in describing that Moses did everything just as HaShem commanded him.
This occurs seven times, just as Adonai created for seven days (technically six days with the seventh day being a day of rest in which He established/created the eternal Shabbat).
These seven times we see of the Torah specifically describing Moses doing the work exactly as Adonai commanded is then followed by the Lord’s own declaration of this act of recreation being very good.
The JPS Torah commentary on Exodus says this about the Shechinah resting upon the Mishkan:
“The function of the Tabernacle was to create a portable Sinai, a means by which a continued avenue of communication with God could be maintained.
As the people move away from the mount of revelation, they need a visible, tangible symbol of God’s ever-abiding Presence in their midst.
It is not surprising, then, that the same phenomenon as occurred at Sinai, related in Exodus 24:15-17, now repeats itself.
It will recur at the dedication of Solomon’s Temple, as is narrated in 1 Kings 8:10-11.
The cloud is the manifest token of the immediacy of the Divine Presence.”
Now, all of this is vitally important because in order for Moses and B’nei Yisrael to create a habitation for the Presence of the Lord to dwell among His creation they had to follow precise specifications.
They had to do everything exactly as the Lord revealed to Moses on the Mountain.
Another way to word this would be in order for Israel to be a dwelling place for the Presence of Adonai they had to be obedient and accountable to the Word of the Lord.
This is specifically why we see this interaction with the creation narrative in Parasha Pekudei.
In a way, this is an act of redemption of both the Golden Calf scenario and the fall of humanity creating a barrier between God’s Presence and His creation.
One of the most important realities that should be present in the life of a follower of Yeshua is obedience and accountability to the Word of the Lord.
See, when God created the world, when God spoke all things into existence—including mankind—He did so for the distinct purpose of His Presence dwelling with us.
I think this is specifically seen in the fact that Adonai came to walk with Adam and Chava in the middle of the day in the Garden, and I highly doubt this was the first time this had occured which is why they decided to hide when they realized they were naked.
They realized they had done something wrong and were trying to cover up their actions.Kind of like when I hear crashing sound from my kids’ room and go to check on them and find out what the noise was and they’re sitting their with the proverbial “deer in a headlights look” and with whatever fell sitting in the middle of the floor and they quickly say, “I don’t know what happened...”
But because of humanity’s sin Adonai could no longer dwell with us in the same way He had up to that point.
We could no longer have free access to the Divine Presence.
At Mount Sinai we see a dramatic shift to this reality when God reveals His Shechinah to Israel and speaks directly to them.
Then we build and worship the Golden Calf and put God through the same mess we did in the Garden… Our actions were, in essence, an action of rejecting the Presence of God yet again, whether B’nei Yisrael realized it fully or not.
And because of the Golden Calf the Lord wanted to remove His Presence from us once again.
But what was it that was ultimately the problem at hand? Was it not the fact that Israel was not being obedient and accountable to the Word of God?
And just like with Adam and Chava who God spoke directly to when He said you can eat freely of any plant in the Garden, just don’t eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil or you will die.
Then they chose to reject His Word because of the temptation of the enemy.
We see the same exact scenario with Israel and the Golden Calf at Mount Sinai.
God specifically told Israel to have know God’s aside from Him...
And what is it Israel does?
The reject the Word of the Lord and build and worship the Golden Calf.
And just like Adam and Chava who reject the Word of God right in front of Him (as the purpose to the Garden was to dwell in His Presence), Israel rejects the Word of the Lord right in front of Him too… Very literally at the base of Mount Sinai where they encountered the Shechinah and Bat Kol in the first place, and where they could still see the Shechinah upon the mountain right in front of Him…
So when Adonai commands Israel to build the Mishkan, a means of reestablishing His literal Presence dwelling with His creation once again, He is very specific with the blue prints, very specific with the details of how it should be done.
And it is obvious that Israel actually really wanted His Presence to dwell with us because the Torah tells us that they were very intentional to do everything exactly as God commanded through Moses.
To be exact, as with the story of creation which was intended to be a habitation for the Lord which was a seven day process, the act of building the Mishkan which was intended to be a habitation for the Presence of the Lord we see the pattern of seven again.
Seven times in chapter 39 does the Torah specifically say Israel did everything Ka’asher tzivah Adonai et-Moshe, “as Adonai commanded Moses.”
And, as any good leader should do, Moses leads by example and we see that in chapter 40 we see the pattern of seven all over again as Moses is assembling the Mishkan as seven times the Torah says Moses did everything K’kol Asher tzivah Adonai oto kein asa, “just as Adonai had commanded him.”
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