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Examination · Anakalypsis Editorial

The Temple: From Tabernacle to New Creation

Tracing the theme of God's dwelling place from Eden to the New Jerusalem — where heaven and earth become one

A thematic exploration of the temple motif across the entire Bible — from Eden as the proto-temple where God walked with humanity, through the Tabernacle, Solomon's Temple, the exile's loss, Ezekiel's vision, Jesus' identification of himself as the temple, the church as living temple, and the New Jerusalem where God dwells with his people forever.

If the Bible has a single animating question, it may be this: how can a holy God dwell among sinful people? The entire biblical narrative can be read as the story of God's presence — where it dwells, why it departs, and how it will one day fill all things. The temple is the physical answer to that question in every era: it is the place where heaven and earth overlap, where God makes himself accessible, where the distance between Creator and creature is bridged.

But the temple is not a static institution. It is a developing theme — a thread that begins in a garden, takes shape in a tent, reaches its zenith in a stone building, is lost in judgment, is redefined in a person, is extended to a community, and consummates in a city that needs no temple because God himself is the temple. To trace the temple theme is to trace the plotline of the Bible itself.

The biblical narrative does not begin with a temple — it begins with a garden. But the details of Eden contain unmistakable temple imagery. God "walks" in the garden (Genesis 3:8), using the same Hebrew verb (hithallek) later used of God's presence in the tabernacle. Eden is oriented eastward, and its entrance will be guarded by cherubim — the same creatures that guard the Holy of Holies. Gold, bdellium, and onyx are found there — the same materials that adorn the high priest's garments and the tabernacle itself.

Adam is placed in the garden to "dress it and to keep it" — the Hebrew words 'abad and shamar are the same pair used in Numbers 3:7-8 for the Levitical duty of serving and guarding the tabernacle. Adam is, in effect, the first priest of the first sanctuary. His failure is not merely moral disobedience — it is a failure of priestly vocation. He does not guard the sacred space from the intruder.

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