"For there was a tabernacle made; the first, wherein was the
candlestick, and the table, and the shew-bread; which is called the
sanctuary." - Hebrews 9:2
It is blessed to see how Christ was set forth in everything, and by
every way in the ordinances of God, during the first ages of the
church. Surely they had the gospel preached to them in type and shadow,
as we have now in sum and substance. My soul, take thine evening
meditation among the furniture of the outer sanctuary, and see what
emblems they afford of Christ. The tabernacle, which Moses made in the
wilderness, contained, in the first apartment, the things here spoken
of. The candlestick, if without a light, strikingly set forth the
darkness of that dispensation; and if with a light (which seems the
most probable, for the lamps were to be always burning) it shewed that
the Lord himself, who walketh in the midst of the golden candlesticks,
is the light of his people, and the glory of the temple. The next
article noticed is the table, which was probably placed in such a
direction, that the light of the candlestick might shine upon it; by
which we may learn, that in going to the table of the Lord, we must be
directed by his light; for none cometh to the Father but by him, who is
"the way, and the truth, and the life." The table itself, which was of
pure gold, became a most lively type of the ever-blessed Jesus. The
infinite worth and glory of his person, and the eternal merit and
efficacy of his blood and righteousness, may be supposed to be set
forth, by golden representations, as the richest and most valuable
treasure we are acquainted with. And when we add to these, that Jesus
feeds, entertains, supports, nourisheth, and preserves his church and
people, what could so well set forth the royal bounties of his grace,
and the fullness and richness of his house, as that of a golden table,
around which the poor, and the needy, the hungry, and the faint, might
be received and feasted? But the first sanctuary had not only the
candlestick to guide to the Lord, and the golden table to receive the
followers of the Lord, but the shew-bread also, to supply them. This
shew-bread was a beautiful and striking representation of him who is
the bread of life. Twelve loaves, in allusion to the twelve tribes of
Israel, were to be always standing upon it, to intimate the perpetual
appearing of Jesus in the presence of God for his people. They were of
the finest flour, mixed with frankincense; thereby shadowing the purity
of his nature, and the fragrancy of his sacrifice before God. They were
to be renewed every sabbath, to shew that Christ is not only exhibited
in the gospel every day, and all the day, but to be renewed every
sabbath, when his ministers bring forth to the people, out of his
treasury, "things new and old." Those taken away when the new loaves
were brought, were to be eaten by the priests alone, under this Jewish
dispensation; and the same is observed under the new: for the Lord
Jesus hath made all his people "kings and priests to God and the
Father;" and if any that are not his, by his Spirit given to them, eat
at his table, they make the table of the Lord contemptible. Are these
some of the delightful subjects, typified by the furniture of the
tabernacle in the first court? Dost thou behold, my soul, these things,
and through the veil and covering, discover Jesus? Oh! then consider
the vast, the infinite importance of redemption by his blood, whom God
the Spirit thus set forth to the church by types and shadows; and see
thy privilege, and the happiness to which thou art called, when in
reading the old testament, "the veil is done away in Christ."
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