By Derek Prince
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Be encouraged and inspired with this Bible-based sermon by Derek Prince.
Be encouraged and inspired with this Bible-based sermon by Derek Prince.
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The Mercy Seat
We have been dealing with the teaching of the New Testament as to the significance of the tabernacle in the Old Testament. As a matter of fact, as Iâve been teaching myself Iâve come to realize more clearly than ever before that the tabernacle is a pattern of things in heaven. Under the Old Covenant they only had the pattern, the example, the shadow. Under the New Covenant we have the reality. But otherwise, theyâre directly related. The writer of Hebrews says under the Old Covenant the way into the holiest was not yet made plain. Then he says in the New Covenant we have boldness to enter into the holiest. So this is something real. Itâs not metaphorical, itâs not abstract; itâs experiential. We have the right to enter into the holiest. The holiest is absolutely real. Itâs not just an old custom and figure. The Old Testament was the figure. The New Testament, we have the reality. But, the Old Testament is like a man: it shows us the ground plan, it shows us the way.
We studied the tabernacle as a triune building or a triune edifice or construction. The outer court, the holy place, the holy of holies. Weâve compared this to the nature of man: spirit, soul and body. Our destination is there. We start here at the outer gates, the east, with its four pillars which we have likened to the four gospels: Matthew, Mark, Luke and John; the four aspects of Christâs person and nature: the lion, the servant, the man, the eagle the Son of God.
The first thing we come to is the great altar of brass with the blood sacrifice, four sides typifying the cross in four aspects. The first side, the forgiveness of past sins; the second side, the dealing with sin as a spiritual power, putting away sin; the third side, the execution of the old man, the death of the rebel; the fourth side, the presentation of ourselves as a burnt offering to the Lord, total surrender.
We go on from the brazen altar to the brazen laver which was made of brass taken from the looking glasses of the Israelite women typifying the place of the word of God. First of all as a mirror showing us our true inner nature. In brass, the means of our judgment of ourselves. âIf we would judge ourselves we would not be judged of God.â And the water, the cleansing, sanctifying operation of Godâs word. Both are essential. We sum these up in 1John 5:6, Jesus came by water and by blood. Not by water only but by water and by blood. It is the Spirit that bears witness. When we come to this area we have the witness of the Spirit to the blood shed on the cross, to the water of the word. Jesus is the redeemer who died in our place on the cross, shed his blood. Heâs the teacher who cleanses and sanctifies those whom he has redeemed. Ephesians 5, âthat he might cleanse and sanctify the church with the washing of water by the word that he might present it to himself a glorious church.â It is very clear that we are to be in that company which is to be presented to Jesus as the glorious church. We must be cleansed and sanctified with the washing of water by the word. To be redeemed by the blood is essential but not sufficient.
We go on from here into the holy place, the first of the two inner areas through the five pillars which Iâve likened to the five ministries of Jesus: apostle, prophet, evangelist, shepherd, teacher, which are the ministries that operate within this area.
We have the three patterns of the shewbread representing the will set out before God, ground, molded, baked, displayed, sanctified, protected and ordered. Thatâs your will. You can do well to ponder over that, weâll not go into it now.
The candlestick, the source of light: your intellect. You must be renewed in the spirit of your mind. The old worldly ways and thoughts must be purged away. The pure oil of the Holy Spirit must come in in his seven fold manifestation. Being kindled with the fire of dedication, it illuminates your inner being.
When your will and your intellect have been brought into line, you move on to the golden altar of incense which typifies your emotions. They must be purified, controlled, directed, offered up to God in dedication and worship as a sweet savor.
And at this point we come to the dividing line between the holy place of the soul, the holy of holies of the Spirit. The transition is made by the blood from the sacrifice and the incense from the altar. We go in through the blood of the cross with the incense of adoration, praise and worship. There is no other way in through the veil. Those that do not know how to worship have no access beyond the holy place. We come here where there are two items of furniture, the ark that typifies Christ and the mercy seat that typifies the atonement of Christ but also the throne of God.
In the ark there were the two tables of stone with the Ten Commandments, the golden pot with manna and Aaronâs rod that budded. The tables of stone typifying Godâs eternal unchanging law to which we bow in worship and submission as we enter. The golden pot of manna signifying our fellowship, feeding upon Christ in the heart. âHe that eateth me shall live by me,â Jesus said.
Let me point outâwhich I didnât sayâthat the three entrances typify the three aspects of Jesus: the way, the truth and the life. Here he is the life. Christ is our life. What a wonderful statement that is in Colossians 3. âYe are dead, and your life is his with Christ in God.â When Christ, who is our life, shall appear, then the pot of manna will be taken out of the ark. It wonât be the hidden secret communion but the open revelation of Christ. âWhen Christ who is our life shall appear [be seen], then shall ye also appear with him in glory.â
The third thing in the ark is Aaronâs rod, a type of authority that comes by divine revelation and attestation setting apart Aaron as the appointed priest. So the three activities of the Spirit in relationship to God in the holy of holies are worship, fellowship and revelation. Revelation comes by the route of worship and fellowship. Beware of revelation that does not come through worship and fellowship.
Now, weâve dealt with the ark. Letâs look at the mercy seat for a moment, that which covered the ark. Praise God there was a crown around the top of the ark, too. And that crown was to keep the mercy seat in place. So, the mercy seat could never get jolted off the ark. Whence youâre in the ark, youâre under the mercy of Almighty God. Thereâs no other place of mercy but in the ark. The ark is Christ. Outside of Christ: no mercy, no acceptance, no life. But thereâs a crown that always keeps the mercy seat on top of the ark. So if youâre in the ark, youâre under the mercy.
Romans 3:24â25 uses the Greek word for mercy seat though it isnât translated that way in the King James.
âBeing justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus: whom God has set forth to be a propitiation [the Greek word is a mercy seat] through faith in his blood...â
So, Christâs atonement is the mercy seat, the place that covers the broken law, the tables of stone that all of us have been unable to accept and keep. We approach to the mercy seat.
Now, the mercy seat becomes Godâs throne. Hebrews 4:16 says we can come boldly to the throne of grace because God sits on the mercy seat, on Christâs atoning work that covered the broken law.
Then the cherubims, one at each end, their face is inward toward the mercy seat with their wings bowed forward to touch exactly over the middle of the mercy seat represent the place where God reveals his glory. Again we have the same three activities. Worship, fellowship, revelation. The bowed wings of the cherubim are worship. See, position of the body. Their faces toward one another are fellowship, face to face. Then God said where the wings meet and the faces meet, Iâll reveal my glory. We should look, I think, at that scripture there. Exodus 25:22. Weâll read from verse 20 and then I think youâll get the beautiful picture. Exodus 25, beginning at verse 20:
âThe cherubims [thatâs really incorrect because âimâ is the plural anyhow] shall stretch forth their wings on high, covering the mercy seat with their wings, and their faces shall look one to another; toward the mercy seat shall the faces of the cherubim be.â
Thatâs fellowship in God. See, our faces toward one another and toward the mercy seat.
âAnd thou shall put the mercy seat above upon the ark; and in the ark thou shalt put the testimony [thatâs the two tables of stone] that I shall give thee: and there [whereâs that? Over the mercy seat.] I will meet with thee, and I will commune with thee from above the mercy seat, from between the two cherubims which are upon the ark of the testimony, of all things which I will give thee in commandment unto the children of Israel.â
There is the place of revelation. So, we get in this picture of the holy of holies the three activities twice. Worship, fellowship, revelation.
Here Christ sits as a king and a priest upon his throne. Letâs look back at Zechariah 6:11â13. This is an Old Testament type and it centers around the man named Joshua who was the high priest at that time. And Joshua is a type of Jesus the great high priest. In fact, the name Joshua is the same as the name Jesusâyouâre probably aware of thatâin Hebrew. So, beginning at verse 11 and going on:
âThen take silver and gold, and make crowns, and set them upon the head of Joshua the son of Josedech, the high priest...â
So Joshua did not just wear a crown, he wore crowns. And in Revelation 19, when Jesus appears in glory thereâs upon his head many crowns, diadems. Not the laurel wreaths of the victor but the diadem of the monarch. So here heâs typified as king of kings and Lord of lords with the many golden crowns upon his head.
âTake silver and gold, and make crowns, and set them upon the head of Joshua [thatâs Jesus] the son of Josedech, the high priest; and speak unto him, saying, Thus speaketh the Lord of hosts, saying, Behold the man...â
Notice first and foremost heâs presented to us as a man, a human being. Thatâs the acacia wood of the ark.
â...whose name is The BRANCH [the title of the Messiah]; and he shall grow up out of his place [as a root out of a dry ground, Isaiah 53:1], and he shall build the temple of the Lord. [Now heâs the builder of Godâs temple, the church.] Even he shall build the temple of the Lord; and he shall bear the glory...â
The full glory of the Lord shall rest upon him. In John 17:
âThe glory which God gavest me I have given them.â
None of us can take that glory individually but the whole body of Christ united will bear the full glory. What he can bear individually, his body can bear collectively. But now, first and foremost, the glory is placed upon him: the king, high priest upon his throne.
âHe shall bear the glory and shall sit and rule upon his throne; and he shall be a priest upon his throne [this is the high priesthood after the order of Melchizedek, king and priest in the one person]; and the counsel of peace [perfect harmony] shall be between them both [the Father and the Son].â
So there is the prophetic picture of Christ in the holy of holies. Thatâs where we approach, thatâs our destination, thatâs the direction in which God has set our faces. I believe it requires a decision on our part to move in.
Now we have altogether, as I pointed out to you, seven ministries. The body building ministries are in this area of revealed truth. Here are the five pillars: apostles, prophets, evangelists, shepherds, teachers. But when you get in here thereâs two ministries that are very little spoken of todayâI think youâll agreeâthe priest and the king. I believe myself, but God has told us itâs time to move in and take our rights in Christ. God wants us to enter into and share with Jesus every one of these ministries.
I was thrilled a few years ago when I began to see the truth about apostles and prophets. Thatâs nothing to the thrill which I feel today when I begin to see the truth about kings and priests. I do believe thereâs an order, weâve got to go that way. If you donât come into the body building I doubt whether youâll ever come into the priest and king ministry. You see, God wants to share all these ministries with us.
Letâs look at the body building ministries first. Romans 5:17:
âFor if by one manâs offense death reigned by one [whoâs the one manâs offense? Adam.]; much more they which receive abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness shall reign [by the last Adam who is] Jesus Christ [and reign where?] in life.â
You believe that means in the next life? I believe it means in this life. But, I believe youâve got to be in there to be able to reign in life.
Letâs look at the comparisons. 1Corinthians 3:9â10, we have the body building ministries shared by the ministers of Christ.
âFor we are laborers together with God: ye are Godâs husbandry [thatâs tillage, farm], ye are Godâs building. [Whoâs ye? Itâs the church, itâs Godâs building.] According to the grace of God which is given to me [as an apostle] as a wise masterbuilder, I have laid the foundation...â
So Paul says we are builders together with God, of Godâs building the temple which is the church. We share in this. He gave some, apostles, prophets, evangelists, shepherds, teachers. But thereâs a higher level.
Now letâs move on to 1Peter 2:9. Speaking to believers:
âYe are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiar people...â
Various different phrases are used but look at the phrase âa royal priesthood.â Whatâs royal refer to? Kings. So we are a kingdom of priests. Weâre kingly priests. What order is that? Melchizedek, who was priest of the most high God, king of righteousness, king of Salem.
Then look on in Revelation 1:5, the second part and going into verse 6:
âUnto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in his blood, and has made us kings and priests unto God and his Father...â
I think the modern translations will say a kingdom of priests, is that right? And then again, Revelation 5:10:
âAnd thou has made us unto our God kings and priests...â
Or a kingdom and priests, or a kingdom of priests.
â...and we shall reign on the earth.â
I think the Lord made it very clear to me that if you want to be a king, youâve got to be a priest. Itâs a kingdom of priests. The people who qualify for the kingdom are priests. Everybody would like to reign but how many would like to minister as priest? The qualification for reigning is learning to be a priest. When you can serve as a priest you can begin to reign.
Letâs face it, thereâs lots of statements in the scripture we say amen to but they donât work out in our lives. Isnât that right? Weâve been raised up together and made to sit together with him in the heavenlies. Well, we say amen. But is it theoretical or experiential? Weâre kings and priests but are we really living like kings? Letâs be honest. In many cases the answer is no. I really believe God showed me nobody can reign like a king who wonât serve as a priest. Itâs a kingdom of priests. If you want to be in here, the holy of holies, the two ministries are priest and king. Thatâs what God has been aiming at, what he offered Israel. They passed it by. He said, âIâve brought you unto myself on eagleâs wings to be unto me a kingdom of priests.â Exodus 19:6, they would rather choose the tables of stone. They said, âNo, weâll do it ourselves. Weâll go for the laws.â
See, the great tragedy of Godâs heart is heâs always tried to bring his people to himself and theyâve always wanted something more than God. The blessing, the power, the Promised Land, the ministry. God says, âIâm the end, hereâs where it ends. In here. Thereâs nothing in here to seek but me.â Thatâs why many people never come in, because they want something, not God.
I believe the life inside the ark must precede or go before the life upon the throne. Itâs the hidden life in the ark that gives you access to the throne. Thereâs got to be the inner life of worship, bowing before the eternal law. How can you have a lawless person on the throne of God? Itâs ruled out. If you donât submit in prostration before that law of God, you have no access. Youâve got to learn to feed upon the hidden manna. Youâve got to have the rod that buds supernaturally with divine revelation.
See, the thing about the rod was it went through all its phases in one period. It was bud, blossom and fruit. I believe this is true about divine revelation. When God shows you something, the time element isnât there. God knows the end from the beginning. See, if you will accept it, when God showed me this in my mind, not by a vision, he showed me the whole thing as one finished process. I saw every stage of it at the same time. That is spiritual revelation. When we come into the ark we can step up on the mercy seat and sit on the throne. But if you donât go that way youâll never be a king and a priest upon the throne. Jesus wants to share his throne with you but thereâs an appointed way step by step by step. I donât believe you can bypass any of these stages. The way into the holiest, thereâs only one way and thatâs it. Itâs like a map, itâs sketched out so plain that an intelligent child of ten can easily understand once God opens it up.
Now let me seal this teaching about the life within the ark before the life on the throne about suffering. 2Timothy 2:11â12:
âIt is a faithful saying [you can trust it]: For as we are dead in him, we shall also live with him...â
But if weâre not willing to die with him we cannot share his life.
â...and if we suffer, [what will we do?] we will reign...â
But if we donât suffer we cannot reign.
Now I want to say something more about suffering. For years I disliked teaching on suffering. It wasnât because I was totally unwilling to suffer but because I didnât understand a distinction. I saw a lot of Christians doing silly things and using religious language and suffering and it didnât appeal to me. I didnât want to be like them and I still donât want to be like them. I want to point out to you thereâs two totally different kinds of suffering and most Christians are suffering the wrong kind of suffering. Look in 1Peter 4:1â2. This is a remarkable statement. Its depths go beyond my power to expound.
âForasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves likewise with the same mind...â
Youâre going to have to suffer in the flesh. Put on the armor. Be prepared. Donât let it come as a shock.
â...for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin...â
Isnât that an astonishing statement! Iâm not sure that I can fully expound it but Iâll tell you, suffering in the flesh, I donât mean it means necessarily lashes across your back. It might. It could come to that. But, I think it means the continual denial of that carnal nature in me thatâs going to assert itself every way it can and has got to be put to death, in a sense, by stages. Now I know itâs done on the cross. I fully acknowledge that, I preach that about as clearly as anybody I know. Itâs done on the cross but itâs got to be worked out in you and me. You come to the end of one problem with the old man and say, âThere you are, itâs dead.â And a completely different problem emerges. You wrestle with that one and itâs agonizing.
Letâs say youâre a spiritual woman married to an unspiritual man. Youâve got every temptation to tell him all about it, tell him how to do it, push him around. You can do it. But you know that it isnât scriptural. So you decide you wonât and sure enough, he does the wrong thing. You get over that one and he does the wrong thing again. Thereâs something inside you boiling, bursting. Thatâs suffering. If youâre doing that in obedience to the word of God, itâs doing you good. When youâve suffered long enough youâll be dead! Glory to God!
I mean, I know areas in me that have died. Ten years ago they were very much alive. Today you could do anything. That particular thing wouldnât get any reaction from me. See, what it means to be dead to sin is this, this is my definition and Iâve got it in one of my books. Sin has no more attraction for you. Sin produces no more reaction from you. Sin has no more control over you. Every one of those statements is true about a dead man. He doesnât react to anything. As long as youâre reacting, you may be under control but youâre not dead. But if you go on long enough youâll end up deadâin that areaâand then say, âPraise the Lord, itâs done.â God says, âWe move on to the next area. What about your children? When they provoke you, when they do the things you donât want them to do?â You manage your husband, youâve surmounted that problem. Now weâll take the children.â
And basically, I think youâll agree with me. God usually deals with us most severely through the people closest to us. Thatâs the way he can really put the screw on. I mean, I can back off from somebody at a distance but when itâs my wife, thatâs on my doorstep. Or when itâs my husband, thatâs on your doorstep. I donât claim to be able to interpret that passage completely, Iâve puzzled it over in my mind for years. âHe that hath suffered in the flesh has ceased from sin.â But I think there does come a time when thereâs just no more reaction. Youâre dead, youâve ceased. Thereâs no tendency to sin there in that respect any longer.
Now thatâs the kind of suffering we have to go through. Everybody has to go through it. Jesus went through it, Iâll show you that in a moment. Itâs the denial of the ego. Itâs the denial of the carnal nature. Itâs the denial of anything thatâs opposed to the will of God. Verse 2 is beautiful. When youâve been through verse 1 and said ouch, go on to verse 2:
âThat he should on longer live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lust of men, but to the will of God.â
Do you want to live in the flesh to the lust of men or do you want to live to the will of God? Well, youâve got to go through this process. Arm yourself with that mind. Donât let it come as a shock. Youâre going to suffer. I donât mean people are going to pick up stones and throw them at you. I mean youâre going to have to deal with something inside you which hurts.
But then letâs look on in 1Peter 4:15â16:
âBut let none of you suffer as a murderer, or as an evildoer...â
Isnât that remarkable when thatâs written to Christians? Must have been Charismatics! Well, they were. All the early Christians were Charismatics.
â...or as a busybody in other menâs matters.â
You see, thereâs all sorts of suffering which doesnât do you any good. If you suffer as a murderer or a thief, thatâs not redemptive, that doesnât change you into the likeness of Christ.
Most of you are not likely to suffer as a literal murderer though the Bible says he that hateth his brother in his heart is a murderer already. And a lot of people suffer for that. But thatâs not redemptive. You can hate somebody for years and years and suffer agonies, itâs not doing you any good. Itâs not redemptive suffering. Donât deceive yourself and say after Iâve suffered long enough it will be all right. It wonât. What you need is not to go on suffering, you need to repent.
But if you ask me the real problem that most of you are likely to face, itâs suffering as a busybody. You may be shocked at that statement but most religious people are liable to be busybodies. Let none of you suffer as a busybody. If your nose is too long, a little piece may get snipped off! That will be suffering but it wonât be redemptive suffering. Itâll do you no good.
Whatâs the kind of suffering that is redemptive? Iâll show you. Itâs Hebrews 5:8â9. Iâve been in this way over 30 years, my wife has been in it 40. Listen to us a little bit because there arenât any new mistakes. And why should you make all the same mistakes all over again? Thereâs no progress made by making all the same mistakes again. Hebrews 5:8â9, talking about Jesus:
âThough he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered...â
Whatâs the key word? Obedience. If you suffer in obedience, that will conform you to the image of Christ. But if youâre suffering as the result of disobedience, donât kid yourself itâs going to do you any goodâexcept maybe stop you being disobedient is all it could do. Thatâs the negative result, you may get tired of disobedience. The suffering thatâs redemptive, the suffering that weâve got to go through to reign with him is the suffering that comes from obedience. He learned obedience by the things which he suffered. He learned what it was to obey by suffering as a result of obeying. If you obey, you will suffer. Youâll be a partaker of the sufferings of Christ.
I could not understand that statement by the apostle Paul. I mean, I read it and I believed it was in the Bible. Philippians 3:10:
âThat I may know him and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of his sufferings...â
Can you really say you want that? I was honest with myself. âLord,â I said, âI havenât got to the place where I can say amen for that one and I wonât try to be religious and say what I donât mean.â But Iâm beginning to because Iâve begun to see it in a totally different light. You see, Iâve seen religious people suffer, and theyâre unattractive. Very. But the sufferings of Jesus didnât make him unattractive. There was a beauty in him. Why? Because it was the result of submission to the will of the Father and obedience. Donât go out and indulge yourself and be proud and stubborn and disobedient and then say âIâm suffering and itâs doing me good.â It wonât do you any good at all. None whatever unless it stops you being disobedient. Itâs the suffering that comes from obedience.
Listen, donât call your sickness your cross. Do you mind my saying that? A cross is something that can be taken up or put down. You donât have to carry your cross. Jesus said, âIf you want to follow me, then you can take it up.â Your husband isnât your cross because you canât take him up and put him down. You might laugh, Iâve met many women that told me their husband was their cross. If I were somebodyâs cross, Iâd be cross, believe me! If my wife had that attitude toward me it wouldnât make for a harmonious marriage.
Now, if youâll turn to Leviticus 23 there are seven feasts of Jehovah, or the Lord, ordained under the Mosaic covenant. They all have tremendous significance for us as Christians. Iâll go through them very quickly. The Passover which was immediately followed by the seven day feast of Unleavened Bread [which is still observed by the Jews today.] The first fruit, the waving before the Lord by the priest of the first stalk of corn that grew up and had completed ears in it. Then Pentecost. Pentecost means fifty. Pentecost followed fifty days after this one, thatâs why itâs called Pentecost. Itâs also called the feast of the wheat harvest. Then we get to the seventh month and there are three feasts in the seventh month. The first day of the seventh month thereâs a feast called the blowing of trumpets. On the tenth day of the seventh month thereâs the feast called the Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur which is the Hebrew for the day of atonement which is what the Jews still call it today. And then the last of all the feasts, on the fifteenth day of the seventh month, the feast of tabernacles, or booths. So called because every Israelite was supposed to go out and make a kind of tent of tree branches and live under it seven days.
Now, in Exodus 23 God said there are three feasts every year for which every male must come up to Jerusalem. Thatâs the feast of unleavened bread, the feast of Pentecost and the feast of tabernacles. That immediately throws particular emphasis on the feast of tabernacles.
Now, turning to the New Testament we find that some of these feasts are historically fulfilled in Christ. 1Corinthians 5:7 says:
â...Christ our passover has been sacrificed for us...â
And then it says:
â...therefore let us keep the feast of unleavened bread...â
So the death of Jesus on the cross exactly fulfilled the passover. What I want to emphasize is it was not approximate, it was to a day and an hour that the fulfillment in the New Covenant came of Old Covenant truth in the type of the feast.
Then when Jesus rose from the dead he became the first fruit. Now itâs Christ risen from the dead and become the first fruit. The first stalk of corn to grow up out of the earth after the seed had been buried, thatâs a type of Jesus. He resurrected the day after the sabbathâwhich is in line with thisâand then they were to count seven sabbaths and the next day which would be a Sunday on our calendar, fifty days, Pentecost. Now Pentecost, as you know, as the word indicates to us, was fulfilled on the day of Pentecost when the Holy Spirit came. Again, it was not fulfilled approximately, it was fulfilled to a day and an hour. When the day of Pentecost was fully come, at the third hour of the day. Okay? 9:00 oâclock in the morning.
Now, thereâs a kind of interval and the climax all comes in the seventh month which basically is the harvest month. By our calendar, Passover falls approximately in March. The Day of Atonement usually comes in September. So youâve got a span of approximately seven months from March to September. The rest of the year is blank as far as the feasts are concerned. So, the first day of the seventh month is the feast of blowing of trumpets. Blowing of trumpets means stirring, activity, proclamation, warning, preaching, somethingâs going to happen, get ready.
Then the tenth day of the first month is the only day on which anybody ever entered into the holy of holies under the Old Covenant. The Day of Atonement, the high priest went for one short period with the blood of the sacrifice from the brazen altar with the censer full of incense from the golden altar, he went in long enough to sprinkle the blood seven times on the mercy seat, seven times before the mercy seat. Having done that he hurried out because if he tarried there he would die. And he had on the bottom of his long beautiful, blue robe bells and pomegranates. And as he moved around inside the holy of holies, the bells tinkled. And Iâll tell you, the Israelites listened for those bells because they told the Israelites that their high priest was still alive. If he died, they had not been accepted. Then their sacrifice was ineffective, they were not reconciled to God, their sins were not covered.
Well, letâs just take the type of that, itâs too beautiful to miss over. Jesus with his heavenly blue robe as our heavenly high priest entered in. And praise God, did you hear the bells tinkling? He isnât dead. Hallelujah. How many of you know heâs still alive? You heard the bells tinkle. Do you know what the tinkling of the bells means? It means our high priest has been accepted there for us. So itâs all right, the covenant is sealed, God has accepted it. If the priest died, it was the rejection not just of the high priest but the whole nation and their sacrifices and their whole religious system.
Now what Iâm saying is this: The only time that anybody ever got into the holy of holies was on the Day of Atonement. Then, almost immediately afterwards came the Feast of Tabernacles. There are things I donât understand and I appreciate the training of the Baptist preachers: donât preach opinions, preach facts. Thatâs a pretty good principle. But Iâm going to go just a little beyond fact and leave you to form your own opinion. The Feast of Tabernacles is the third feast for which every male had to go up, it was obligatory. Each of the other two feasts has been fulfilled to a day and an hour exactly. I mean, no speculation, no ifâs or butâs. Something inside me convinces me that this feast must be fulfilled likewise to a day and to an hour. It is sure that this is the climax, the last of the seven feasts.
Now itâs called ingathering but it was not the process of gathering in the harvest, it was relaxation and celebration after the harvest had been gathered in, as I understand it. I believe what the Charismatic movement is doing is getting us ready for the Feast of Tabernacles. I mean, there are many, many other preachers that have had the same witness. But what I want to suggest to you is thereâs a definite link up between atonement and tabernacle. Only after the holy of holies had been entered could they celebrate the Feast of Tabernacles.
What Iâm suggesting to you is this is true experientially. We have to move out of the holy place into the holy of holies. Weâve got to move beyond this realm and into this realm which has been available to us since Jesus rose from the dead before the age can be consummated. Something has got to happen. But I do believe, in a certain sense, Iâm right on the dot on Godâs calendar when I start to tell you that weâve got to get into the holiest. I believe itâs a kind of ultimatum from God that Iâm giving you today. We have been long enough outside the veil. Weâve got to move in and immediately within a short, unspecified period following, glory to God, with the penetration of the veil thereâll come the culmination of the ages.
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