Exodus 26:1-14
The Lord commands the tabernacle curtains and coverings so His dwelling place will be beautifully formed, carefully joined, and properly covered according to His design.
Scripture Text
26:1 “Moreover You shall make the tabernacle with ten curtains of fine twined linen, and blue, and purple, and scarlet, with cherubim. You shall make them with the work of a skillful workman.
26:2 The length of each curtain shall be twenty-eight cubits, and the width of each curtain four cubits: all the curtains shall have one measure.
26:3 Five curtains shall be coupled together to one another, and the other five curtains shall be coupled to one another.
26:4 You shall make loops of blue on the edge of the one curtain from the edge in the coupling, and You shall do likewise on the edge of the curtain that is outermost in the second coupling.
26:5 You shall make fifty loops in the one curtain, and You shall make fifty loops in the edge of the curtain that is in the second coupling. The loops shall be opposite one another.
26:6 You shall make fifty clasps of gold, and couple the curtains to one another with the clasps. The tabernacle shall be a unit.
26:7 “You shall make curtains of goats’ hair for a covering over the tabernacle. You shall make eleven curtains.
26:8 The length of each curtain shall be thirty cubits, and the width of each curtain four cubits: the eleven curtains shall have one measure.
26:9 You shall couple five curtains by themselves, and six curtains by themselves, and shall double over the sixth curtain in the forefront of the tent.
26:10 You shall make fifty loops on the edge of the one curtain that is outermost in the coupling, and fifty loops on the edge of the curtain which is outermost in the second coupling.
26:11 You shall make fifty clasps of bronze, and put the clasps into the loops, and couple the tent together, that it may be one.
26:12 The overhanging part that remains of the curtains of the tent—the half curtain that remains—shall hang over the back of the tabernacle.
26:13 The cubit on the one side and the cubit on the other side, of that which remains in the length of the curtains of the tent, shall hang over the sides of the tabernacle on this side and on that side, to cover it.
26:14 You shall make a covering for the tent of rams’ skins dyed red, and a covering of sea cow hides above.
The Lord commands the tabernacle curtains and coverings so His dwelling place will be beautifully formed, carefully joined, and properly covered according to His design.
The Lord’s dwelling among Israel is not improvised or casual; even the fabric, loops, clasps, layers, measurements, and coverings of the tabernacle are governed by His revealed pattern, because His holy presence requires ordered obedience.
God’s people must receive His presence with reverence, honor His boundaries, submit worship to His word, and give thanks for the access opened in Christ.
- Sacred inner beauty The innermost curtains create a beautiful, cherubim-marked holy interior.
- Protective tent coverings Goat-hair curtains and outer coverings protect the sanctuary structure.
- Portable stability Frames, bases, rings, and bars form a stable yet movable dwelling place.
- Holy separation The veil separates the Holy Place from the Most Holy Place, guarding the ark and atonement cover.
- Ordered worship space The table, lampstand, and entrance curtain are arranged according to the Lord’s revealed pattern.
The Lord gives Moses instructions for the inner curtains of the tabernacle, the goat-hair tent coverings, the protective outer coverings, the upright frames and bases, the crossbars, the veil separating the Most Holy Place from the Holy Place, the placement of the ark, table, and lampstand, and the entrance curtain for the tent.
Exodus 26 argues that divine presence among the covenant people requires ordered holy space. The Lord graciously dwells among Israel, but His nearness is not common, casual, or self-designed. The curtains create beauty and heavenly symbolism. The coverings protect the sanctuary. The frames establish a stable dwelling. The veil guards the Most Holy Place and separates it from the Holy Place. The furniture is arranged according to the Lord’s command. The chapter shows that worship must be structured by revelation because the holy God determines how He dwells among His people.
Theological logic
- The LORD’s dwelling is marked by sacred beauty and cherubim imagery.
- The holy dwelling is protected by ordered layers of coverings.
- The tabernacle is portable yet stable, built with divinely specified structure.
- The veil establishes a holy boundary between the Holy Place and the Most Holy Place.
- The ark and atonement cover belong in the Most Holy Place behind the veil.
- The table, lampstand, and entrance curtain order access and service in the Holy Place.
- Do not treat the tabernacle curtain details as meaningless construction filler.
- Do not allegorize every measurement, loop, clasp, color, and covering beyond what the text supports.
- Do not detach the curtains from the tabernacle’s purpose as the Lord’s dwelling among Israel.
- Do not treat the tabernacle as a humanly designed religious building; it follows the pattern revealed by God.
- Do not collapse the tabernacle directly into modern church architecture without moving through Christ and the broader biblical dwelling theme.
- Do not ignore the distinction between the inner beautiful curtains and the outer protective coverings.
- Do not use the passage to promote aesthetic luxury apart from obedience, holiness, and divine purpose.
- The details serve the theology of divine presence, holiness, beauty, order, and obedient worship.
- The passage should be read first as sanctuary instruction within Exodus. Later canonical connections should follow stable biblical themes, not speculative symbolism.
- The tabernacle is commanded by grace after redemption and covenant ratification. It is not a human achievement that forces God to dwell with Israel.
- The text presents a specific covenant dwelling designed by the Lord for Israel in the exodus-Sinai stage of redemptive history.
- The sanctuary is built according to divine command, reminding God's people that worship is received from God before it is offered to God.
- The materials, colors, craftsmanship, and symmetry show that beauty is not waste when it serves God's presence and God's revealed purpose.
- The curtains become one tabernacle through intentional joining, offering a strong pastoral image for covenant life shaped by obedience, not mere proximity.
- The tabernacle is a dwelling, but also a guarded holy space. Pastoral teaching should preserve both God's gracious nearness and His majestic holiness.
- The measurements and materials are not filler. They teach careful attentiveness to the Word of the Lord.
- Read Exodus 26 as theology in architecture, not as disposable detail.
- Ask where worship or ministry has drifted into preference rather than revealed pattern.
- Meditate on the veil as a sign of God’s holiness and human need.
- Give thanks that Christ opens access without reducing God’s holiness.
- Treat sacred practices with renewed seriousness and joy.
- Let the beauty of worship serve reverence rather than performance.
- Remember that God’s presence with His people is both comfort and holy weight.
Reverence, obedience, restraint, humility, gratitude, careful worship, and confidence in God-given access.
- Veil and guarded access : The veil becomes a central biblical symbol of restricted access to the Most Holy Place until Christ opens the way.
- Tabernacle pattern and heavenly realities : The tabernacle is made according to the mountain pattern and later interpreted as an earthly copy related to heavenly realities.
- Cherubim and holy guarding : Cherubim imagery connects the tabernacle with guarded access to sacred space.
- Most Holy Place : The inner sanctuary becomes the focal point of atonement and the Lord’s enthroned presence.
- God dwelling with His people : The tabernacle structure participates in the larger biblical theme of God dwelling among His people.
- Holy Place service : The table and lampstand placement prepares the later priestly service described in Torah and reflected in Hebrews.
Exodus 26:1-14 shows that God graciously provides a dwelling place among His people, but that access to His holy presence is carefully structured and covered. The tabernacle’s layered holiness anticipates the need for a greater mediator and a better access. In Christ, the true dwelling of God with humanity is revealed, and through His flesh and blood believers are brought near to God, not by fabric or ritual architecture, but by fulfilled atonement and resurrection life.