Into the Tent

Exodus 25-40

About the Sermon

Social distance is all the rage. It should be, and I don’t need to get into that. None of us like it. But in our relationship with God, spiritual distance is the way things begin, and it’s our doing. He is holy and we are sinful. Whatever we might want to say about that, it’s not him; it’s us. What can be done about it? Surely this is a more insurmountable and serious problem than the coronavirus. And yet God has done something in order that he might dwell with us, in a way that is even better than Eden. This sermon will take us from Exodus 24–40.

About the Series

Exodus is a conversion story—a story that begins with God’s people building cities for this world’s king, and closes with the people of God erecting a tent for the Lord’s presence. How does this people in hard service to Pharaoh find themselves in service to heaven’s king? In the story of Exodus God’s agenda is to make himself known. He makes himself known through how he saves, through what he says to the people he redeems, and through where he settles. Exodus is the story of how Israel came to know God personally. It is also the story of how we come to know God personally.
Exodus is a conversion story—a story that begins with God’s people building cities for this world’s king, and closes with the people of God erecting a tent for the Lord’s presence. How does this people in hard service to Pharaoh find themselves in service to heaven’s king? In the story of Exodus God’s agenda is to make himself known. He makes himself known through how he saves, through what he says to the people he redeems, and through where he settles. Exodus is the story of how Israel came to know God personally. It is also the story of how we come to know God personally.

Sermons in the Series