The golden altar of incense
1. While just outside
the veil or the second curtain the golden altar of incense belongs to the
furniture of the holy of holies. It was placed outside because the golden altar
of incense was constantly used, whereas the ark and the mercy seat was used
once a year.
2. The golden altar of
incense depicts Jesus Christ after His strategic victory, seated at the right
hand of the Father as the King of kings and royal high priest.
3. The basic
ingredients of the golden altar include not only its construction of wood and
gold but a crown, fire, and incense. So there are five articles in the
structure of the golden altar: wood, the humanity of Christ; plated with gold,
the deity of Christ - therefore the altar itself is wood-gold, or a picture of
the hypostatic union; then three more articles: a crown, fire, and incense.
4. The crown kept the
fire from falling to the ground. The principle: the fire represent s judgement
of Christ on the cross for our sins, and the crown kept this fire from falling
to the ground.
5. Since the fire is
held up by the crown, the crown means resurrection, ascension, and session. And
when the fire was burning all the time, and the crown was holding it up,
altogether it represented the strategic victory of our Lord Jesus Christ — His
death, burial, resurrection, and session.
6. The validity of the
work of Christ on the cross is found in resurrection, ascension, and session,
the strategic victory of the angelic conflict. Therefore, the incense
represents several things. First of all, that the work of Christ on the cross
is acceptable and therefore a part of the victory of our Lord. The incense
refers to propitiation, so does the mercy seat — everything related to the holy
of holies refers to propitiation. In addition to that, the incense represents
prayer. First, the prayers of our Lord Jesus Christ making intercession for us,
and secondly, the prayers of the royal priesthood and their dynamics in phase
two, Church Age.
7. While the horns on
the brazen altar speak of sacrifice and refuge the horns on the golden altar
speak of power and prayer.
8. The golden altar
also had rings for carrying it. The rings and the staves of the golden altar
have significance. The rings speak of the perfection of God’s plan of grace,
while the staves or the golden rods that carried it indicate the world-wide
ministry of prayer. There is no place prayer cannot go.
9. Therefore the
golden altar represents the concept of prayer in the utilisation of divine
resources.