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Immerse Beginnings Day 112 Year 3 Daily Bible Reading
Description
A House for the God Who Dwells Among Us
God asks for offerings—but only from those whose hearts are moved to give. This is the first principle of the tabernacle: it is built not by compulsion but by generosity. Gold, silver, bronze, fine linen, goat hair, ram skins—the materials are specific because the God who makes galaxies also cares about details. Then come the instructions for the Ark of the Covenant, and the language is extraordinary: ‘I will meet with you there and talk to you from above the atonement cover, between the gold cherubim.’ The God who shook Sinai with thunder will speak in an intimate whisper from between two golden angels on a box carried by poles. This is the great paradox of the tabernacle: the God who cannot be contained by the heavens chooses to dwell in a tent. The table for the bread of the presence, the golden lampstand hammered from a single piece of pure gold—every item is both functional and symbolic. The bread says God provides. The lamp says God illuminates. The ark says God is present. A people who had known only the brick pits of Egypt are now invited to build a house for the Creator of the universe. The slave has become the artisan, and the wilderness has become holy ground.
00:00 Offerings for the Tabernacle
01:00 The Ark of the Covenant
02:00 The Atonement Cover
03:00 The Table of the Presence
04:00 The Golden Lampstand
4 Questions to get your conversations started:
1. What stood out to you this week?
2. Was there anything confusing or troubling?
3. Did anything make you think differently about God?
4. How might this change the way we live?
QUICK START GUIDE
3 ways to get the most out of your experience
1. Use Immerse: Beginnings instead of your regular chapter and verse Bible. This special reader’s edition restores the Bible to its natural simplicity and beauty by removing chapter and verse numbers and other historical additions. Letters look like letters, songs look like songs, and the original literary structures are visible in each book.
2. Commit to making this a community experience. Immerse is designed for groups to encounter large portions of the Bible together for 8 weeks–more like a book club, less like a Bible study. By meeting every week in small groups and discussing what you read in open, honest conversations, you and your community can come together to be transformed through an authentic experience with the Scriptures.
3. Aim to understand the big story. Read through “The Stories and the Story” (p. 329) to see how the books of the Bible work together to tell God’s story of his creation’s restoration. As you read through Immerse: Beginnings, rather than ask, “How do I fit God into my busy life?” begin asking, “How can I join in God’s great plan by living out my part in his story?”
And for more great Bible podcasts for Christians and small groups, check out https://lumivoz.com or search for Lumivoz in your podcast app of choice.