
Stephanie Solberg has written beautifully on the tabernacle as a type of Jesus Christ:
https://makinghimknown.tv/the-tabernacle-as-a-type-of-christ-part-1/
“I am a truth seeker by nature. My passion is studying God's Word and sharing His Truth with others”.
The Tabernacle as a Picture of Christ: Part 1 – The Outer Court
Introduction – The Tabernacle as a Foreshadowing of Christ
What if I told you that the Tabernacle was more than an ancient place of worship but that its very design and function were meant to point us to Christ?
In this two-part series, we will examine the Tabernacle closely and how every detail foreshadows Jesus. In Part 1, we will explore the outer court—from the gate to the brazen laver. Next, in Part 2, we will step into the inner court and uncover even more meaningful connections to Christ.
God instructed Moses precisely on how to design the Tabernacle because because it was both a copy and shadow of God’s sanctuary in Heaven (Hebrews 8:5). But He also intended everything in the Tabernacle to foreshadow Christ.
God has always desired a relationship with us. The Tabernacle was part of His plan to be with us. After the fall of man but before Jesus, God dwelt in the Tabernacle, then the Temple. After Jesus’ death, we became God’s ” tabernacle.” Later, when we are in heaven, God will dwell with us face to face, as in the Garden of Eden (Revelation 21:3).
Jesus fulfilled God’s purpose for the Tabernacle – He is God with us (Matthew 1:23). The Tabernacle and all that was in it is a beautiful picture of Christ. Each piece of the Tabernacle represents a truth about our Messiah that will draw us closer to Him.
The Tabernacle’s Structure – The Outer Court and the Inner Court
(Exodus 26:33-34)
God designed the Tabernacle as two parts: the outer court and the inner court. The outer court was open to all Israelites. It had one gate, an altar, and a laver. The inner court had two sections, divided by a veil: the Holy Place and the Holy of Holies. Only priests could enter the Holy Place, and only the High Priest could enter the Holy of Holies.
The Outer Court – A Place of Preparation
In Part 1, we focus on the outer court, where people prepare to meet with God.
The Gate – The Only Way In
(Exodus 27:16-19, John 10:9, John 14:6)
The Gate of The Tabernacle
There was only one entrance into the Tabernacle, a gate (Exodus 27:9-19) which faced East, the same direction as the entrance into the Garden of Eden, God’s first dwelling place with man. Anyone seeking God’s presence could enter the gate into the courtyard.
Jesus, the Only Way
As there was only one way into the Tabernacle, there is only one way to God: through Jesus (John 14:6). He is the gate.
Jesus tells us:
“I am the gate; whoever enters through me will be saved” (John 10:9).
“I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6)
All are welcome through the Son!
The Brazen Altar – A Symbol of Sacrifice
(Exodus 27:1-8, Romans 12:1)
The Altar and the Burnt Offering
After entering the Tabernacle gate with their sacrifice, a person would first encounter the altar (Exodus 27:1-8). The fire on the altar never went out; it was continually burning. At the altar, the priests offered the sacrifice as a burnt offering, which would be entirely consumed by fire. There, the blood of the sacrifice was shed to forgive sins.
Jesus, the Perfect Sacrifice
The altar foreshadows the Cross and the once and for all sacrifice that Christ would make on the altar of the Cross for the forgiveness of our sins.
At the altar of the Cross, we also lay down our old life and our disobedient will. Just like the fire consumed the sacrifice, we must let God consume us.
“Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship” (Romans 12:1).
The Brazen Laver – Cleansing Through the Word
(Exodus 30:17-21, Ephesians 5:26, Hebrews 10:22)
The Priests and the Laver
The next thing a person would encounter after the brazen altar was the brazen laver, a sizeable water-filled basin crafted from the women’s bronze mirrors. The priests washed their hands and feet at the laver before entering the Holy Place (Exodus 30:17-21)
The Word of God and Spiritual Cleansing
The laver is more than just a basin; it represents the Word of God. It is like a mirror showing us our true selves.
“For the word of God is living and active, and sharper than any two-edged sword, even penetrating as far as the division of soul and spirit, of both joints and marrow, and able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart” (Hebrews 4:12).
The Word is also like water that washes and cleanses us (John 15:3).
Jesus is the Word of God made flesh (John 1:1, John 1:14). He died to make us clean and lives to sanctify us.
“to make her holy, cleansing her by the washing with water through the word” (Ephesians 5:26).
“Draw near [to God] with a sincere heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water” (Hebrews 10:22).
Conclusion – Jesus, Our Tabernacle
Jesus is the gate to the Father’s house. All are welcome at the altar of the cross. He is our perfect sacrifice, the only one we will ever need. When we come to Jesus, we are washed by the Word of God. We are made clean.
But what lies beyond the outer court?
In Part 2, we will step into the inner court, where only priests could enter. We’ll explore the Holy Place, the veil, and the Holy of Holies – each revealing even more about Christ’s role as our High Priest.
Flavio Barbiero and his brother Claudio, who worked with professor Emmanuel Anati in the Negev, around (Mount) Har Karkom, have brilliantly reconstructed the ancient Hebrew Tabernacle from the very ground upon which it stood.
This verifies the veracity of the biblical account about the Tabernacle, and it also assures that the region of Har Karkom is where the Exodus Israelites had dwelt.
Flavio Barbiero writes (pp. 55-63):
THE CAVE OF TREASURES ON MOUNT HOREB
(1) THE CAVE OF TREASURES ON MOUNT HOREB
[I, Damien Mackey, cannot reproduce some of Flavio Barbiero’s illustrations]
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The Tabernacle
…. One day, Moses came down from the sacred mountain with good news: the Lord had asked that a sanctuary be built for him, a mobile tent in which he could reside and follow his favourite people in all their movements:
"This is the thing which the Lord commanded: take ye from among you an offering unto the Lor: whoever is of a willing heart, let him bring it, an offering on the Lord; gold, and silver, and brass, and blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine linen, and goats’ hair, and rams’ skins died red, and badgers’ skins, and shittim wood, and oil for the light, and spices for anointing oil, and for the sweet incense, and onix stones to be set for the ephod and the breastplate.
And every wise hearted Among you shall come, and make all that the Lord hath commanded; the tabernacle, his tent, and his covering, his taches and his boards, his bars, his pillars, and his sockets, the ark and the staves thereof, with mercy seat and the veil of the covering, the table and the staves, and all his vessels, and the shewbread, the candlestick also for the light, and the incense altar, and his staves, and the anointing oil, and the sweet incense, and the hanging for the door at the entering in of the tabernacle, the altar of 55 the burnt offering, with his brasen grate, his staves and all his vessels, the laver and his foot, the hangings of the court, his pilar, and their sockets, and the hanging for the door of the court, the ins of the tabernacle, and pins of the court, and their cords, the clothes of service, to do service in the holy place, the holy garments for Aaron the priest, and the garments of his sons, to minister the priest’s office." (Exodus 35,4 - 35)
Thus begins one of the most detailed and elaborate accounts of the entire book of Exodus: the construction of what the Hebrew text calls "miqdas", i.e. holy or sanctuary, and "Mishkan", dwelling. These terms are variously translated as Tabernacle, Tent of Meeting, Tent of Assembly, Sanctuary, and Dwelling in the desert. Many terms to indicate what was a real mobile temple.
The temple-tent had exceptional importance in the history of Israel. The entire people worked for eight months on the realisation of the project and used all their technical resources and all the materials brought from Egypt for this purpose to do something truly grandiose, worthy of a people who aspired to conquer their territorial state. It was a great effort, but around that temple, the tribes of Israel acquired awareness of their identity and strength and found the determination and energy to conquer Palestine. In short, it was thanks to the tent temple that the tribes of Israel became a nation, and the Mosaic law became a religion.
I was impressed by the importance given by the biblical text to this extraordinary artefact, but I was above all struck by the accuracy with which all its components are described, reporting their dimensions and function with precision, to the point of making it irresistible for me, an engineer, the temptation of making a model of it. ….
I made each single piece on a scale of 1 cubit = 1 cm and then assembled everything, following the instructions provided by the text. The result was the model shown in the following figure:
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56 Figure 21 - Original reconstruction of the tent temple made based on data provided by Exodus. (Plan published in the author's book "The Bible without Secrets", Rusconi 1988)
A large tent of 50 x 100 cubits, sustained by 48 supports, with a courtyard in front of equal size, divided into two parts; the first of 50 x 15 cubits, where the altar of the burning offerings and the basin for sacred ablutions were positioned, the second, of 50 x 85 cubits, where the people could attend the sacrifices.
Everything fitted perfectly with the description, was technically flawless, and correctly accounted for every single piece described. In short, I did not doubt that this reconstruction was correct, except for a few details that do not appear in the text, like the exact arrangement of the supports, the precise positioning of the objects inside, and so on.26
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Figure 22 – The model in scale 1 cubit = 1 cm of the temple-tent of Moses, built by the author by assembling the individual components described in Exodus.
The model gave the idea of a temple worthy of a great God, as was precisely Moses' intention. It was very different from the models proposed by classical exegesis, of which countless examples can be found online and in literature, representing it as a strange construction of 10 x 30 cubits inside an enclosure of 50 x 100 cubits.
I was sure that my reconstruction was correct, also because I had discovered that the models proposed by traditional exegesis all originate from an inaccurate reconstruction by Flavius Josephus 27, who heavily forces the biblical text to obtain a 1 to 2 scale model of Solomon's temple.
The gold, silver and textiles procured in Egypt were used to build and embellish the temple-tent. The 48 supports were covered with gold, as well as the four columns that supported the "veil" and the five columns at the entrance, and all of them were placed on silver bases. The bases of the 60 columns delimiting the courtyard, instead, were made of copper. The altar of sacrifices was also covered with copper, as well as the basin for ablutions.
The Ark of the Covenant was covered in gold, as well as the table of the loaves and the altar of incense, while the seven branched candlestick was made of solid gold. In short, a real treasure, even if the total weight was ten times less than what a certain tradition would like to credit.28
When the Jews left the mountain, they took the temple with them to Palestine. But such an artefact, erected on a terrain like that of Har Karkom, must necessarily have left a clear imprint.
I had to look for the imprint of the Tabernacle rather than the treasure of the Jews to be sure that this was the right place for our search.
The imprint of the tabernacle29
The hammada30 preserves unchanged the imprint of every tent that has been erected there in the last tens of thousands of years. If Har Karkom is really the place where Moses led the Jews and if the biblical account really has historical content, then necessarily the imprint of the Tabernacle as described by Exodus had to be found there.
This assumption has guided my brother Claudio and my research since our first arrival in the valley.
According to Ex. 33, 7, the Tabernacle had been erected "out of the camp, away from it." In addition, it had to be close to the water, not far from the only well in the valley, Beer Karkom.
Figure 23 - The print of the Tabernacle at Beer Karkom
The area in which to concentrate the research, therefore, was rather narrow, and the results were immediate. It was enough to climb a hill near the well to identify, on the edge of the wadi, the imprint of the tabernacle, clear and unmistakable.
My brother and I outlined the print with a plastic ribbon, following the plan of construction of the temple-tent obtained from Exodus. The match turned out to be perfect. The centre of the tabernacle, on the back, was marked by a small pile of stones.
The alignments of the supporting stanchions show up clearly; the Holy and the Holy of Holiest were perfectly squared and cleaned of stones, as well as the courtyard in front, in the centre of which there was a stone about twenty centimetres high, that was put next to the altar of sacrifices to allow priests to easily access the grill.
Even the passages most frequented by the priests were evident because they had been cleaned of the stones that had been moved to the sides and at the back of the Holy of Holies. The position and the size of each object, from the brazier to the basin of ablutions, the table of the loaves and the altar of incense, was marked by pebbles that had been placed around them. The menorah, instead, was placed on a large boulder in the centre of the left nave (shoulders to the entrance), in front of a gap in the row of supporting stanchions. At the same height, there was also a gap in the opposite row of stanchions that delimited the right nave, with the table of loaves positioned in its centre.
At dawn and dusk, the plastic ribbon shone, tracing the plan of the Tabernacle on the ground with light. It was a fantastic, almost magical vision: an artifact erected in that same place more than 3,000 years ago was resurrected before our eyes. It was an indescribable emotion. Those lines had been traced on the ground by Moses himself, and in that rectangle of light, the destiny of all mankind had been changed.
Figure 244 - Reconstruction of the Tabernacle on the original imprint
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Figure 255 - A ribbon stretched along the alignments of the imprint outlines the exact plan of the tabernacle
Thanks to the imprint on the ground we were able to reconstruct the Tabernacle in its true dimensions and shape, exactly as and where it was erected by Moses for the first time. Therefore, I could correct the minor errors inevitably committed during my first reconstruction (Fig. 21).
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Figure 26 - Exact plan of the temple-tent of Moses obtained from the imprint left in the place where it was first erected, near Beer Karkom
From the imprint, the measurements of the tabernacle could be established with an error of a few centimetres, which allowed us to determine the value of Moses' cubit precisely".
The imprint gave the following measurements for the tabernacle: a width of 14.6 metres and a length of about 29 meters. The inner courtyard was about 4.5 meters long and 14.5 meters wide.
According to the account of Exodus, the Tabernacle was 50 cubits wide and 100 long, so Moses used a cubit of about 29.2 cm in size. The length of the supporting stanchions, and consequently the height of the tabernacle, was thus about 2.9 meters. The size of all objects in the temple, from the Ark to the altar of sacrifices, is also scaled down accordingly.
The following day we took Prof Anati to the hill from which the plan traced by the light of the rising sun could be seen, explaining to him what it was. He took some photographs, and then he made a single comment: "It looks like a UFO."
Anati obviously knew those imprints well but, due to their square shape, he had classified them as "prints of Roman military tents."
We never knew what he meant, but we felt we had achieved a significant result for our research. The print's position, shape and other characteristics were such that there could be no doubt that it had been left precisely by the tent described with such detail and accuracy in Exodus, that is, by the Tabernacle of Moses. The probability of a casual coincidence was practically nil.
It finally gave us certainty on two fundamental points:
1.- that the Exodus account is based on actual facts and is reliable
2.- that the Karkom valley is precisely where the events narrated by Exodus took place, and therefore, the sacred mountain of Moses had to be located in the valley itself.