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The Temple and the Church’s Mission: A Biblical Theology of the Dwelling Place of God is unavailable, but you can change that!

“Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth.… And I saw the holy city, new Jerusalem.… And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, ‘Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man’ ” (Revelation 21:1–3). G. K. Beale argues that the Old Testament tabernacle and temples were symbolically designed to point to the end-time reality that God’s presence, formerly limited to the Holy of Holies, would be...

founded forever (or from eternity)’.5 The psalmist is saying that, in some way, God designed Israel’s earthly temple to be comparable to the heavens and to the earth. Similarly, the earlier ‘pattern of the tabernacle and the pattern of all its furniture’ was made ‘after the [heavenly] pattern … which was shown … on the mountain’ (Exod. 25:9, 40; cf. Exod. 26:30; 27:8; Num. 8:4; Heb. 8:5; 9:23–24). The following study will attempt to demonstrate that the symbolism of the tabernacle is essentially
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