Old Testament History: Outline
Old Testament History: Outline
Lesson #6
Exodus 15:22-40:38
Outline
I.
Notes
Exodus 15:22-16:36
With the song of triumph on the other side of the sea, the first part of
the book of Exodus ends. Israel has now become a nation, and it only
remains for this newborn people of God to be consecrated to Him, which
is covered in the second part of the book.
Most of the stations on the journey of Israel have been determined. The
first camping place was probably about a half-hour from from the sea
shore. It was a fertile, well-cultivated area.
Life is a combination of the bitter and the sweet, triumphs and trials.
The circumstances at Marah seemed hopeless, and the Israelites
murmured against God. When our provision stops, we are likely to lose
our faith. The circumstances seemed hopeless. The statute and an
ordinance was that at all times, through seeming impossibilities, God
would send deliverance from above, and Israel could expect this during
their wilderness journey.
When the children of Israel reached Elim, there was a healthy supply of
water, which allowed the Israelites to stay for a month. They soon would
enter an inhospitable desert known as the Wilderness of Sin, where the
provisions which Israel had brought from Egypt began to fail. Their
unbelief broke forth again, but while they murmured against Moses,
they were in reality murmuring against God.
The visible presence of God should have stopped their murmuring, but it
would continue throughout their history with God. Manna was bread
from heaven (Psalm 78:19-27; 105:40). It was very different from
manna which appeared naturally in the desert. Israel could not have
confused the two. To show the generosity of God and His provision for
His people, supplying six pints (an omer) of manna each for two million
people daily would have required four freight trains of sixty cars each.
The hungry Jews were not fed by looking at the manna, admiring it, or
watching others eat it; they had to pick it up and eat it themselves. The
manna, however, could not be gathered on the Sabbath, and an omer
full of manna was placed in a golden pot, which was placed in the Most
Holy Place when the tabernacle was constructed.
Exodus 17:1-18:27
Rephidim was the great battlefield where Israel defeated Amalek. For
three days, since leaving the Red Sea, they would not have passed a
single spring, and while their march through the wilderness was during
April/May, it would have been hot.
Instead of submitting to the tests God was conducting for them (Exodus
15:25; 16:4), Israel began to test the Lord (Psalm 78:56; 106:7, 14,
25, 29). Gods people tempt or test the Lord when they distrust His
grace and providential care, and grumble against Him. Moses would
later warn that the people were not to put God to the test as they did at
Massah (Deuteronomy 6:16). God patiently showed them that there was
no situation that could be so desperate that He would not help them.
The Amalekites were descendants of Esau, closely related to the
Israelites (cf. Deuteronomy 25:17-19). The Israelites had done nothing
to provoke the attack. The gesture of Moses, along with Aarons and
Hurs help, was not merely for psychological effect to inspire the troops
every time they glanced up the hill. Nor does the text specifically claim
that Moses prayed while his hands were raised. Rather, Moses
outstretched arms primarily symbolized his appeal to God. Amalek
would pay dearly for its awful deed. What they had threatened to do to
Israel would be done to them.
If the attack of the Amalekites represented the hostility of the world to
the kingdom of God, the visit of Jethro, which followed Israels victory,
symbolized the opposite tendency. Jethro may be regarded as a kind of
firstfruits of God from among the Gentiles, and the honor he rendered
toward God an anticipation of the fulfillment of the promise in Isaiah
2:3.
The wise advice of Jethro was put into place (Deuteronomy 1:12-18).
The election of the judges was made by the people themselves, and
their appointment was guided by the fear and love of the Lord.
Exodus 19:1-20:17
The Israelites reached the Sinai range in the third month after leaving
Egypt. The plain of Er Rahah was a very suitable camping ground. It has
been calculated that the area could have easily supported two million
people. This mountainous district bears two distinct names in scripture
-- Horeb and Sinai -- the former probably applying to the whole group
of mountains, and the latter to one special mountain in it. The vast
mountain block of Sinai was two miles in length and one mile in
breadth. One mountain, Jebel Musa (the modern Ras Sufsafeh), was in
all probability the Sinai upon which the Lord came down and gave the
ten commandments.
God called Moses to the top of the mountain, and for three days the
people had been prepared by a twofold sanctification (purifications,
symbolic of inward cleansing, and respecting the bounds of the
mountain), and now they stood in readiness at the foot of, although
shut off from, the mountain. This outward sanctification of Israel had
been preceded by inward and spiritual sanctification.
Just as the priest is the intermediary between God and man, so Israel
weeks as that of the first harvest, and the feast of tabernacles as that of
the final ingathering of the year.
Israels religious festivals were tied to the agricultural year in a series of
sevens. The seventh day was the Sabbath and the seventh year was
the Sabbatical Year. The Feast of Unleavened Bread was celebrated for
seven days after Passover. The seventh month opened with the Feast of
Trumpets and included the Day of Atonement and the Feast of
Tabernacles.
The judgments which the Lord commanded His people were then
appropriately followed by promises (Exodus 23:20-33). First and
foremost, the promise of the personal presence of God was given to
them. The Israelites were to obey Him, and every contact with idolatry
and idolaters was to be avoided.
When the people had accepted the covenant, Moses wrote it down in the
book of the covenant. The covenant was inaugurated by sacrifice, the
sprinkling of blood, and a sacrificial meal. Under the law of Moses, God
determined how near people could be to Him. But under grace, we are
the ones who determine our nearness to God. The elders worshiped God
afar off (Exodus 24:1), but we today are invited to draw
near (Hebrews 10:22; James 4:8).
Exodus 25:1-33:23
Now that God had set apart His people unto Himself, it was necessary
that they have a place where He could meet with them and dwell among
them. For 40 days and 40 nights, God revealed to Moses the tabernacle,
the priesthood, and the services which would be celebrated. God
showed Moses every detail to indicate that every detail had a special
meaning (symbol and type), and therefore could not be altered in any
way (cf. Acts 7:44; Hebrews 8:5).
The order in which the Tabernacle and its furniture was given to Moses
was very appropriate. The arrangement was from within outwards. The
ark was discussed first, then the table of shewbread and the golden
candlestick. Next the dwelling itself was described, and then the altar of
burnt offering along with the court that would surround it.
The prolonged absence of Moses frightened the people. Israel did not
mean to forsake God, but only to serve Him under the symbol of Apis,
the sacred calf (Exodus 32:4-5). As Gods anger burned against His
people, Moses underwent a trial of his singleness of purpose and
faithfulness to his mission. God wanted to kill the people and start over
with Moses. However, he interceded on their behalf. It was Gods glory
that was at stake in this situation. The Jews never knew the price Moses
paid to be their leader, and they appreciated him so little!
On that day, 3,000 died by the sword of Levi. The golden calf was
destroyed and its ashes were sprinkled in the water of which Israel had
to drink, symbolizing that everyone had to bear the fruits of their sin.
The account of the peoples repentance and of Gods forgiveness forms
one of the most precious parts of this history. The first manifestation of
their repentance was the permanent putting away of their ornaments.
Next, Moses moved a tent (probably his own) outside the camp and the
Lord descended to speak to Moses. When the people saw this, they
worshiped God.
Moses learned that the deepest mystery of Gods grace lay not in Gods
national, but in His individual dealings of divine mercy. What Moses saw
when God passed by was the afterglory, the luminous reflection of what
God really was.
Exodus 34:1-40:38
The covenant relationship between God and Israel was now fully
restored. Moses was commanded to bring to the mountain two more
tablets so God could write down the ten commandments again. The
Israelites were required to stay away from the Canaanites and their
idolatry completely, and to observe the service of God in the way
described by Him (Exodus 34:11-26).
Aaron and the Israelites were afraid of the reflection of divine glory
which caused Moses face to shine. Therefore, Moses used a covering for
his face while speaking to them, and he only removed it to speak to the
Lord. Paul refers to this when he contrasted the Old Testament glory
with the enduring glory of the New Testament (2 Corinthians 3:7).
The amount of gold and silver actually used is specifically mentioned in
Exodus 38:24-26. Scholars have estimated that the people used nearly
a ton of gold, about 3 1/4 tons of silver and 2 1/4 tons of bronze.
The Israelites manifested true spiritual devotion when it came to the
construction of the tabernacle. Because of this devotion, all of the work
regarding the tabernacle and its services was completed within six
months.
The final act of setting up the tabernacle was the visible presence of
God settling in the Most Holy Place, between the cherubim above the
mercy seat. As long as it stayed, Israel stayed. When it rose up, Israel
followed.