The Witness in the Wilderness
Acts 7:39-45
To whom our fathers would not obey, but thrust him from them, and in their hearts turned back again into Egypt,…


I. OUR FATHERS HAD THE TABERNACLE. They had it moving as well as resting. I know not what ancient story or wondrous myth can approach in majesty the record of that long, tedious, and sacred march, imagination quite fails in the attempt adequately to realise either the moving or the resting. There are those who believe that those mystic inscriptions on the red rocks of Sinai date from that very time. Who will dare to say that it is not so — the whole story heaves with miracle. There was the mysterious shrine; it was, as the word literally translated means, a house of skins; but within were the palpitations of ineffable splendour, heraldries which accumulated in wealth as the pilgrims advanced on their journey. The tabernacle rested, surrounded by the tents of the tribes, and the pillar of cloud rested over the shrine. Probably many of the journeyings were accomplished during the night. Then, in the advance of the tabernacle, moved first the tents of Ephraim and Manasseh, with the sacred sarcophagus, enshrining the bones of the great Patriarch Joseph, strange and weird monument of his faith in the ultimate destiny of the exiled nation; and then as the strange caravan began to move, would rise the cry, "Thou that dwellest between the cherubim shine forth," and the pillar of the white cloud became a fixed red flame, a fire shooting forth a guiding light. So onward they passed until the Jordan was passed, then the tabernacle of testimony rested on the heights of Shiloh.

II. BUT IT WAS ALL A PARABLE — a Divine shadow of that great invisible and spiritual society, the yet more mysterious Ecclesia, "the Church throughout all ages," on its mighty march through Time, with all its attendant omens and prodigies — for such is the Church everywhere a witness in the wilderness; such are all its varieties of ordinance. "Ye are My witnesses, saith God, that I am the Lord." It is the perpetual remonstrance against the sufficiency of the seen and temporal; it is a perpetual witness for the unseen and the eternal; it is a perpetual testimony for the existence of a spiritual perpetuity and continuity; it is a mysterious procession; infinite aspirations are infused into the soul of man. A transcendent idea; it is embodied and takes its shape ix what is called the Church. The tabernacle of testimony is the story of the Church and the soul — a witness for faith. The invincible assurance that all contradictions have interpretations, and that in all disappointments there lies latent a Divine satisfaction waiting to be born. Thus it is that we do not make our faith — our faith makes us, not we it. "By their fruits you know them." A world with no tabernacle of Divine testimony has a philosophy which only sees the worst, which goes on declaring its dreary monologue that this is the worst of all possible worlds, that sleep is better than waking; and death is better than sleep; a creed full of negatives, whose disciples carry a perpetual note of interrogation on their features, and who write and read books to propose the question, "Is life worth living?" — in the presence of such thoughts, the sky shuts down upon us, there is no motive in life — as Emerson well says, "this low and hopeless spirit puts out the eyes, and such scepticism is slow suicide."

(E. Paxton Hood.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: To whom our fathers would not obey, but thrust him from them, and in their hearts turned back again into Egypt,

WEB: to whom our fathers wouldn't be obedient, but rejected him, and turned back in their hearts to Egypt,




The Tabernacle of Witness
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