Exodus Unfiltered: Part 5 – Building & Belonging (Exodus 25–40)
- Layne McDonald
- Dec 29, 2025
- 5 min read
Ever been part of a group project that felt like it was going to fall apart before it even got started? You know the feeling: everyone's excited at first, but then someone drops the ball, deadlines get missed, and suddenly you're wondering if this thing will ever actually come together.
That's kind of where we find ourselves in the final stretch of Exodus. The Israelites have been through slavery, plagues, a dramatic Red Sea escape, mountain-shaking encounters with God, and now... it's time to build something. Not just anything: they're about to construct the most important building project in human history. And spoiler alert: they're going to mess it up spectacularly before they get it right.
Welcome to Part 5 of Exodus Unfiltered, where we're diving into chapters 25-40. If you've been following along with this series, you've watched God's people journey from bondage to freedom, from chaos to covenant. Now we get to see what happens when God says, "Let's build a place where we can hang out together."
The Blueprint Phase (Exodus 25-31)
Picture this: Moses is up on Mount Sinai for what feels like forever (40 days, to be exact), and God is giving him the most detailed construction manual ever written. We're talking measurements down to the cubit, specific materials, colors, even the exact way to arrange the furniture. God isn't just saying "build me a nice place": He's giving Moses the blueprint for His earthly headquarters.
The Tabernacle wasn't going to be some thrown-together tent. This was a mobile sanctuary designed to travel with a nomadic people, complete with an outer court, holy place, and most holy place. Every piece had meaning, every measurement had purpose.

Personal Reflection Question: Think about a space in your life that feels sacred to you: maybe your prayer corner, a favorite chair, or even your car during your commute. What makes that space special for connecting with God?
Small Group Discussion:
What do you think it would have been like to receive such detailed instructions for building God's house?
How do you think the people felt knowing God wanted to dwell among them?
What does it mean to you that God desires to have a specific place to meet with His people?
The Plot Twist Nobody Saw Coming (Exodus 32-34)
Just when you think this is going to be a nice, straightforward construction story, boom: everything goes sideways. While Moses is getting the sacred blueprints, the people down below are having their own building project. They're making a golden calf and throwing the ancient equivalent of a frat party.
Talk about missing the point. Here's God designing an elaborate place to meet with them, and they're crafting an idol to worship instead. It's like getting ready to propose to someone and finding out they're already dating your neighbor.
Moses comes down the mountain, sees the chaos, and literally breaks the stone tablets. The first set of the Ten Commandments becomes ancient confetti. Three thousand people die that day because of their rebellion.
But here's where the story gets really interesting: and here's your middle hook: God doesn't give up. After Moses intercedes, pleads, and basically refuses to leave God's presence without His people, something beautiful happens. God gives Moses new tablets. The construction project gets back on track. The relationship isn't over; it's being rebuilt.
Group Discussion Questions:
Why do you think the people turned to idol worship so quickly?
Have you ever been in a situation where you had to intercede for someone who had messed up? How did that feel?
What does Moses's persistence in pleading for the people teach us about advocacy and friendship?
The Actual Building Phase (Exodus 35-40)
After the golden calf disaster and the covenant renewal, it's time to actually build this thing. And here's what I love about this part: everybody gets involved. This isn't a project for the spiritually elite or the professionally religious. Regular people with regular skills start creating something extraordinary.
Bezalel and Oholiab become the lead contractors, but they're not working alone. People bring gold, silver, bronze, fabrics, oils, spices: whatever they have. Women spin thread. Men cut wood. Everyone contributes according to their ability and willingness.

The construction takes months, but when it's finished, something incredible happens. In Exodus 40:34-35, "the cloud covered the tent of meeting, and the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle. Moses was not able to enter the tent of meeting because the cloud settled on it, and the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle."
God moves in. Literally.
Personal Reflection Questions:
What gifts or skills do you have that could be used in God's work today?
When have you experienced God's presence in a tangible way?
How does it change your perspective knowing that God wants to dwell with His people?
What This Means for Your Small Group
The Tabernacle story isn't just ancient history: it's a blueprint for community. Notice how the building project required everyone's participation. Some people gave materials, others gave skills, still others gave time and energy. The beauty was in the diversity of contributions working toward a unified purpose.
Your small group is kind of like a modern tabernacle project. You're creating a space where God can meet with people, where His presence can be experienced, where community happens. Some of you are natural encouragers (you bring the gold). Others are practical helpers (you bring the technical skills). Some are prayer warriors (you bring the incense). All of it matters.
Small Group Application Questions:
How is our group creating space for God's presence?
What unique contribution does each person bring to our community?
Where do we see God's glory showing up in our time together?
How can we better invite God's presence into our gatherings?
The Full Circle Moment
Here's your final hook, and it's a big one: We've journeyed through five parts of Exodus Unfiltered together. We started with a people in bondage, watched them experience miraculous deliverance, saw them receive God's law, witnessed their epic failures and God's incredible grace, and now we've seen them build a place where the Creator of the universe chooses to dwell.
The story that began with "the Israelites groaned in their slavery" ends with "the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle." From cry to glory. From bondage to belonging. From scattered slaves to a people with whom God chooses to make His home.
But here's the thing: your story is still being written. The same God who delivered Israel, who gave them His law, who forgave their failures, and who came to dwell among them is the same God who wants to be present in your life, in your small group, in your everyday ordinary moments.

The Tabernacle was never meant to be the end goal. It was meant to be a picture of something bigger: God's desire to be with His people. Today, through Christ, we are the temple. We are the place where God's presence dwells. We are both the builders and the building.
Final Group Challenge: Over the next week, pay attention to moments when you sense God's presence. Share those moments when your group meets again. Look for God showing up in ordinary conversations, everyday kindness, and the simple act of people choosing to gather in His name.
The Exodus journey doesn't end when the Tabernacle is built. It continues every time God's people choose to create space for His presence, every time we build community that reflects His character, every time we remember that we belong to Him and He chooses to belong to us.
That's the beauty of building and belonging: it's not about having the perfect structure or the ideal circumstances. It's about making room for God to move in and making space for each other to belong. The construction project continues, one conversation at a time, one gathering at a time, one act of faithfulness at a time.
Ready to continue building? Join us for our next study series, and discover how the journey that began in Exodus continues to shape God's people today. Because the best construction projects are the ones that never really end( they just keep getting more beautiful.)

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