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Offering

DAY 4 OF 4

Your Sacred Table

Make a table of acacia wood—two cubits long, a cubit wide and a cubit and a half high. — Exodus 25:23

In our home, Friday nights are reserved for intimate Shabbat meals with just our family. However, at our Shabbat meals on Saturday, we love to host many guests at our table, some friends and some complete strangers. Having guests brings us tremendous joy, and providing a nourishing meal for them brings holiness to our home.

In this week’s Torah portion, we read about the holy items created for serving God in the Tabernacle and then later in the Temple. Among those items was the altar on which sacrifices were offered in order to achieve atonement for our sins. Now that the Temple has been gone for thousands of years, we attain atonement through prayer and repentance instead. However, according to the Jewish sages, there is another option. They taught: “As long as the Temple stood, the altar atoned for Israel, but now a man’s table atones for him.”

This idea is based on a verse from the Book of Ezekiel where the prophet beholds a vision of the Third Temple. In describing the vision, Ezekiel said, “There was a wooden altar three cubits highThe man said to me, ‘This is the table that is before the LORD’” (Ezekiel 41:22). What starts out as the altar in the vision becomes the table by the end of the verse. Today’s tables are the altars of ancient times, and our homes are now the sanctuaries in which we serve God and receive His blessings.

Specifically, we draw down four types of blessings from using our tables in the service of God. Scripture specifies that the table in the Tabernacle had to be constructed out of acacia wood, in Hebrew, shittim. The word shittim is an acronym for four words: Shalom (peace), Yeshuah (salvation), Tovah (goodness), and Mechilah (forgiveness). When we give to others by providing food at our tables, we receive so much more in return.

Whether we serve a simple cup of tea to one person or we serve an entire meal to dozens of people, our tables are sacred. They are a powerful vehicle through which we can spread God’s light and receive His blessings.

For more on the Bible, the Jewish roots of your Christian faith, and how you can support Israel, visit our Learn Center.

Scripture

About this Plan

Offering

For millennia, God’s people have been carrying out a weekly Bible study plan. Every year, they read through the Torah from Genesis to Deuteronomy. In synagogue each week, they read and study a Bible passage—the weekly parshah. This week’s parshah is called “Terumah,” which is Hebrew for “offering,” and covers Exodus 25:1–27:19.

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We would like to thank International Fellowship of Christians and Jews for providing this plan. For more information, please visit: https://ifcj.org

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