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Heaven on Earth

Since the Israelites could not bear seeing Moses go to the mountain, the God upon the mountain came down to the Israelites.

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© Berthold-Werner, Wikimedia Commons. Licence: CC BY-SA 4.0.

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Heaven on Earth

© Berthold-Werner, Wikimedia Commons. Licence: CC BY-SA 4.0. Source
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Heaven on earth... Looking rather like a model, this is in fact St Catherine’s Monastery at the foot of Mount Sinai, a Greek Orthodox monastery founded by the Emperor Justinian in the 6th century. For more information, visit St Catherine’s Monastery Website. Up above on the summit, Moses saw the sanctuary of heaven itself, and returned to the foot of the mountain to pitch a tent for an earthly sanctuary “according the the pattern he saw upon the mount”.

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Episode 9 of 11 in the Series The Story of Moses

Introduction

Moses’s long absences on Mount Sinai are putting too great a strain on the Israelites, so instead of demanding that Moses come to the mountain, God comes down to Moses, meeting him in a makeshift temple at the mountain’s foot.

AS a lasting reminder to Israel that God had not forgotten them, Moses now pitched a special tent at some distance from the camp, the Tent of the Congregation.* Inside was a temple fit for the presence of God in the desert, with furniture of wood and beaten gold, decorated with sculpted fruits and angels.* The pillar of cloud and fire that had guided them stood by the door.

There Moses went to speak with God, there sacrifices were offered, and there Joshua remained day and night. So frequently did Moses speak with God there, as friend to friend, that his face shone, and he was compelled to wear a veil to save others from being blinded.*

Moses also returned to the mountain peak, to collect two new stone tablets with God’s law written upon them afresh, and once more he bound Israel to obey it, and forsake all other laws and gods. These stone tablets were kept in a wooden Ark within the tent.*

Next Moses and the Twelve Spies
Based on Exodus 33-39.

See Exodus 33. God will lead the Israelites but adds: “I will not go up in the midst of thee; for thou art a stiffnecked people: lest I consume thee in the way”. Hence the tent is pitched outside the camp.

The carvings of the temple here and in Jerusalem played a key part in the Christian arguments in favour of religious art, during the 8th and 9th centuries. See The Restoration of the Icons. The cloth and gold came from the ornaments given to the Israelites by the Egyptians.

This is picked up by St Paul, who applies it to Jews who do not accept Jesus as the Messiah. The Israelites, says Paul, were never quite able to bear the brightest truths of revelation, right from the time of Moses – even their own Scriptures shine too brightly for their hearts’ eyes. But Jesus takes the veil away, and we may look unveiled upon the glory of the Lord in Scripture as in a mirror. See 2 Corinthians 3:12-18. Perfect love even takes away the need for a mirror: see 1 Corinthians 13:11-13. This is a very special grace known in the Eastern Churches as ‘theoria’, when the heart of man is filled overwhelmingly with God’s energies, a fruit of the tradition of watchful prayer known as ‘hesychia’. It was championed, among others, by St Gregory of Sinai (?1260s-1346) though it is very much older.

This Ark of the Covenant held the two tablets of stone, and was kept for generations, being part of the Temple of Solomon consecrated in 966 BC. It was lost to history when the Temple was sacked by the Babylonians in 586 BC. Some Jewish sources say it was taken with other sacred vessels to Babylon, but others say it was hidden, along with a jar of manna.

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Word Games

Spinners Find in Think and Speak

For each group of words, compose a sentence that uses all three. You can use any form of the word: for example, cat → cats, go → went, or quick → quickly, though neigh → neighbour is stretching it a bit.

This exercise uses words found in the accompanying passage.

1 Face. Night. Pitch.

2 Gold. Law. Temple.

3 Beat. Camp. Obey.

Variations: 1. include direct and indirect speech 2. include one or more of these words: although, because, despite, either/or, if, unless, until, when, whether, which, who 3. use negatives (not, isn’t, neither/nor, never, nobody etc.)

Confusables Find in Think and Speak

In each group below, you will find words that are similar to one another, but not exactly the same. Compose your own sentences to bring out the similarities and differences between them, whether in meaning, grammar or use.

This exercise uses words found in the accompanying passage.

1. A lot. Much. 2. Ally. Friend. 3. Angel. Angle. 4. At last. Lastly. 5. Desert. Dessert. 6. Door. Gate. 7. Novel. New. 8. Shine. Polish. 9. Spoke. Spoken.

Opposites Find in Think and Speak

Suggest words or phrases that seem opposite in meaning to each of the words below. We have suggested some possible answers; see if you can find any others.

This exercise uses words found in the accompanying passage.

1. Beat. 2. Desert. 3. Fit. 4. Keep. 5. More. 6. New. 7. Remain. 8. Stand. 9. Written.

Show Useful Words (A-Z order)

Variations: 1.instead of opposites, suggest words of similar meaning (synonyms). 2.use a word and its opposite in the same sentence. 3.suggest any 5 opposites formed by adding un-.

Add Vowels Find in Think and Speak

Make words by adding vowels to each group of consonants below. You may add as many vowels as you like before, between or after the consonants, but you may not add any consonants or change the order of those you have been given. See if you can beat our target of common words.

wry (5)

See Words

awry. wary. weary. wiry. wry.

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