Exodus 38 builds the altar and basin and stretches linen around a measured court. A careful ledger ties personal ransom to the very bases of God’s house, teaching atonement, cleansing, boundary, and integrity.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Exodus 38 builds the altar and basin and stretches linen around a measured court. A careful ledger ties personal ransom to the very bases of God’s house, teaching atonement, cleansing, boundary, and integrity.
Exodus 37 moves from blueprint to holy furniture: ark and mercy seat, table, lampstand, and incense altar. The chapter shows mercy enthroned and beauty serving truth as God prepares to dwell among His people.
Exodus 36 turns forgiven generosity into fabric and frame. Artisans craft the tabernacle exactly as God commanded while gifts overflow, preparing the way for glory to fill the tent.
Exodus 35 moves from Sabbath to freewill offerings to Spirit-filled craftsmanship. A forgiven people rest, give, and build so that God’s dwelling will rise among them, pointing ahead to a greater and lasting nearness.
Exodus 27 moves worship into the open: a bronze altar meets the worshiper first, linen walls gather a public square of holiness, and clear oil keeps the lamp burning through the night. Together they train a redeemed people to approach by sacrifice, assemble with order, and live by steady light.
Exodus 26 turns mercy into architecture. Layered fabrics, golden frames in silver bases, and a guarding veil shape a portable home where God lives with His people. The pattern on the mountain trains the church in reverent, unified worship and hope for fuller nearness.
Exodus 25 begins God’s dwelling among His people with willing gifts and precise patterns. At the mercy-seat God meets and speaks, bread remains before Him, and the lamp never goes out.
At Sinai, Israel vows obedience, is sprinkled with blood, and shares a meal in God’s presence. Moses enters the cloud for forty days as the Lord prepares to dwell among His people.
At Sinai, the Lord speaks the Ten Words to a rescued people, shaping worship, time, and neighbor-love under His redeeming grace. The chapter ends with simple altar instructions that keep devotion humble and God-centered.
On the far shore, Israel sings the Lord’s victory and names Him as strength, salvation, and King. In the desert, He heals bitter water and teaches obedience, proving that worship and trust belong together on the road.
Exodus 13 turns rescue into a way of life. Consecrate the firstborn, teach the story with bread and words, carry Joseph’s bones, and follow the pillar that never leaves.
Exodus 12 moves redemption into the home: a spotless lamb, blood on doors, bread without yeast, and a nation ready to go. See how God judges idols, shelters His people, and sets a lifelong vigil that points to the greater Lamb.
God announces one more plague and a certain release. Silver and gold are promised, Moses departs in righteous anger, and a night of judgment and quiet protection is set that will teach generations to know the Lord.
Locusts consume what hail spared and darkness that can be felt halts Egypt, while Israel has light. Exodus 10 shows why worship can’t be negotiated and why these signs must be told to our children.
Livestock die, bodies suffer, and hail shreds fields—yet God shields Goshen and invites Egyptians who fear His word to shelter. Learn how Exodus 9 proclaims, in power and mercy, that the earth is the Lord’s.