Lite commentary
This passage belongs to the tabernacle instructions given to Israel under the Mosaic covenant. The Lord was dwelling among His redeemed people, but His nearness was holy, ordered, and mediated through priests. The altar of incense was made of acacia wood overlaid with pure gold. It was small and square, fitted with horns, and carried with poles like the other holy furnishings. Its gold covering and its location inside the holy place showed that it belonged to the sacred sphere of the sanctuary.
The altar was placed in front of the inner curtain, before the ark and the atonement lid where the Lord said He would meet with Moses. This location matters. The altar stood at the threshold of the Most Holy Place. It brought priestly service near to God’s presence, but it did not remove the boundary of the veil. Israel could draw near only in the way God provided.
Aaron was to burn fragrant incense on this altar every morning and again around sundown when he tended the lamps. Incense therefore belonged to the daily rhythm of ordered worship before the Lord “throughout your generations.” The passage does not invite speculation about every detail of incense symbolism. Its main concern is that worship be regular, reverent, and obedient to God’s command.
The Lord also strictly limited the altar’s use. No unauthorized, or “strange,” incense was to be offered on it. It was not to be used for burnt offerings, grain offerings, or drink offerings. The incense altar was not the same as the bronze altar in the courtyard. Even actions that belonged elsewhere in Israel’s worship could become disobedience if brought into the wrong place or done in the wrong way.
Once each year Aaron had to make atonement on the altar’s horns with blood from the sin offering. This did not mean the altar was morally guilty. It means that the altar, as a holy object used in the worship of sinful people, had to be ritually purified and consecrated. The yearly repetition showed Israel’s ongoing need for cleansing. The closing statement, “It is most holy to the Lord,” explains why exact obedience mattered: this altar belonged wholly to God.
Key truths
- God’s presence with His people is gracious, but never common or casual.
- Worship in the tabernacle was regulated by God’s word, not by human preference.
- The incense altar had a distinct holy purpose and was not to be confused with other sacrificial altars.
- Even holy service required cleansing because sinful people were approaching the holy God.
- The altar’s position before the veil showed both nearness to God and the continuing need for mediated access.
Warnings, promises, and commands
- Make the altar of incense according to the Lord’s instructions.
- Place it before the curtain, near the ark and the atonement lid, where the Lord would meet with Moses.
- Aaron must burn incense on it morning and evening as a regular offering before the Lord throughout Israel’s generations.
- Do not offer unauthorized incense on it.
- Do not offer burnt offerings, grain offerings, or drink offerings on it.
- Once each year Aaron must make atonement on its horns with blood from the sin offering.
Biblical theology
In the Mosaic covenant, the tabernacle was the Lord’s appointed dwelling among Israel, and the altar of incense belonged to that holy system of priestly mediation. It taught that covenant fellowship with God required ordered worship, holy boundaries, and blood-bought purification. In the larger biblical story, this contributes to the pattern that later points to the need for a perfect priest, a cleansed sanctuary, and final access to God through atoning blood, fulfilled in the Messiah without erasing the altar’s original role in Israel’s worship.
Reflection and application
- This passage does not require Christians to recreate the incense altar, but it does call us to treat God’s holiness with reverence.
- We should not invent worship according to our own desires while ignoring what God has revealed about acceptable approach to Him.
- Regular religious activity does not remove our need for cleansing; sinners need atonement even when engaged in holy service.
- The distinction between authorized and unauthorized offerings warns us not to treat God’s commands as interchangeable or optional.
- We should avoid uncontrolled symbolism and let the passage’s own emphasis stand: God provides access, but on His holy terms.