The
One of the great studies in
Scripture is the presence of God in relation to the human race, from the garden
of Eden where God was walking with Adam and Eve in the cool of the day in
Genesis 2 all the way to the end of Revelation 21 where there is no temple and
God is living on the earth with man—Father, Son and Holy Spirit—and this is the
eternal future plan. So from beginning to end we see God with man and we go
through various stages. One of the most important of these is in the temple in
the Old Testament because it is there that God dwells in the midst of His
people Israel, first in the tabernacle and then in the temple itself.
What we have seen is that
Solomon has gained control of the empire that David had established, and once
he has organised things, his structures, divides the kingdom into various
administrative districts, gets his key people in place, then he turns his
attention to two major construction projects. The first was the building of the
temple and then the building of his own palace. It
takes almost twenty years to complete both of these projects. In 1 Kings 8:1
about eleven months has gone by since the completion of the temple. He waits
eleven months until he comes to the right feast day before he dedicates the
temple. He makes sure that it is done at the right time. There are some
tremendous lessons in chapter eight, one of which has to do with worship: the
protocol of worship, the importance of doing everything in a certain kind of appropriate
way because we are not coming to worship somebody who just lives next door,
somebody who is on the same level that we are.
What we see in this whole
episode with the ark being brought into the temple and all of the pomp and
circumstance that is associated with it is that it is not pomp and circumstance
and ceremony for the sake of pomp and circumstance and ceremony. A lot of
people whenever they see certain kinds of ceremony, certain kinds of formal
national ceremonies that involve heads of state, don’t understand where all of
that protocol comes from and why it is important. And if they do that for a
head of state then of course they would do that for God who is the creator God
of the universe. So behind the protocol there are the details of the Law of
Moses. There is the law related to the ark of the covenant
and its transportation and care. There are laws related to the priesthood, laws
related to the basic structure of the tabernacle and the temple, but based on
that framework we see that there is a room for initiative on the part of the
individual to develop worship apart from divine revelation; not a contrasted
one, but what is meant is that when we go into the Old Testament and look at
Exodus and the Mosaic Law we see the detailed descriptions for how everything
in the tabernacle has to be constructed. David did the same thing. Apparently
he had been given revelation from God about how the different aspects of the
temple were to be constructed, and it gets into certain levels of minutia; not every
single thing but it is more than just a general idea of having a nice building.
The building has specific dimensions and there are certain kinds of fabric the
cloth has to be made out of, and certain colours of thread that have to be used
for embroidering the cherubim onto the veil. There are certain kinds of wood
that are supposed to be used and the gold is then laid over the wood. So there
are these specific details that are given because these elements are all
intended to communicate something. Not even Moses or David or the priests
understood how every detail would foreshadow something in the person and work
of Christ. Once it came to the incarnation then some things probably became
very clear and their significance was clear, but what we come away with is that
there is something very important about how people worship.
Notice, there were all those
details on the Old Testament related to the construction of the tabernacle, the
uniforms of the priests, every detail, but there is no instruction on writing
hymns, writing music, on how the choirs or the orchestras that they had would
be put together. This is developed once there is function in a general
framework and is an outgrowth of that as there is focus on the Lord. So there
is room for development within the boundaries that are clearly set by the
ritual of the Old Testament.
The other thing that we will
see in this chapter is looking at Solomon’s prayer of dedication that begins in
verse 22. It is based on Scripture. The whole prayer is a tremendous example of
how a believer can meditate on revealed promises and principles in God’s Word
and then letting the Word of God be the structure and
the vocabulary of the prayers that we pray to God. And in that it is a
tremendous example of the faith-rest drill, because what Solomon is doing in
this prayer is going back to what God said and promised, both in terms of
discipline and in terms of blessing in Leviticus 26 and Deuteronomy 28-30. He
is restating that back to God, claiming those promises and holding God to them.
So as we go through that prayer it is a tremendous example of how to pray, a
tremendous example of how to work through the faith-rest drill.
This chapter starts off
after Solomon has completed the temple, and it is time now to bring the ark of the covenant up from the city of
The significance of the ark of the covenant and why this is important. The ark of the covenant is first constructed by the Israelites
at
Exodus 25:8 NASB
“Let them construct a sanctuary for Me, that I may
dwell among them.” This word “sanctuary” comes from the same root that holiness
comes from; it has to do with that which is set apart. This is a key concept in
worship, a key concept in the Christian life. The Hebrew word qadosh has to do
with that which is set apart for the purpose of God. There is something
distinct about this area because it is for the worship and the service of the
Lord. It is not something that is every-day so we don’t treat it with the same
level of informality or casualness that we treat everything else. The tent of
meeting and all of the instruments there are all qadosh, sanctified as unto the
Lord, because it is here, Exodus 25:22 NASB “There I will meet with
you; and from above the mercy seat, from between the two cherubim which are
upon the ark of the testimony, I will speak to you about all that I will give
you in commandment for the sons of Israel.”
The next point deals with
the things that were placed in the ark: the tables of the Law, Aaron’s rod that
budded, and then a golden jar that contained manna. Upon Moses’ order after the
rebellion at Meribah Aaron was instructed to put two quarts of manna in a jar
and place it before the testimony in the tabernacle as a memorial to God’s
provision. Hebrews 9:4 adds that this jar rested inside of the ark, so perhaps
there was a time when it was kept in the ark and another before the ark. In 1
Kings 8:9 NASB “There was nothing in the ark except the two tablets
of stone which Moses put there at Horeb, where the LORD made a
covenant with the sons of Israel, when they came out of the land of Egypt.
There were specific
regulations in the Mosaic Law regarding travel with the ark. These are given in
Numbers 4:5, 6; Deuteronomy 10:8; 31:25. It was to be covered in a specific
way. Only Levites could carry the ark. They weren’t to touch the ark; they were
to take the poles that were permanently kept through
the rings on the ark and carry it by means of them. When travelling through the
wilderness the ark always went before the people. God always went before the
people. The pillar of cloud by day and the fire by night indicated His
presence.
When they entered into the
land (Joshua 3:6-17) the priests took the ark and walked toward the river
What happened to the ark
during the conquest? The only time that it is mentioned per se in the rest of the book of Joshua is when they marched
around the walls of
From the period of the
Judges to Samuel the ark is located at the city of
By Samuel’s time the ark
has been moved north to the
The ark goes from
There are three principles
that we learn from this.
1. God is never defeated. God is in control. The
Israelites were defeated because of their carnality, but God wasn’t defeated.
So God was demonstrating by what he is doing among the Philistines that He is
very much alive, very much involved, very powerful, and that He wasn’t
defeated, only the Jews were defeated. God’s people, because of sin, may be
defeated.
2. God is greater than anything in history. Whatever is
thrown against Him by whatever system, by whatever civilisation, by whatever
philosophical system, God is always greater.
3. God doesn’t need man to protect or defend Him.
Then the Philistines
decide to make a test just in case this isn’t really a supernatural thing. So
they make a new cart and take two milch cows, cows not trained to pull a cart.
So when two of them are taken that have never been hitched together the normal tendency
is going to be for one to go one way and the other another way. To complicate
matters they have calves that haven’t been weaned, so they want to go back to
the calves. Instead, they work in perfect harmony and they take the cart with
the ark to Beth-shemesh where the people rejoice to
see the ark returned. 1 Samuel
1 Sam