Help at the Altar of Incense

a priest at the altar of incense

Today, I thought I’d share a bit from my 90-day devotional A Place for Me in God’s Tent. This excerpt comes from Day 74 and centers around the altar of incense in the tabernacle’s holy place. At this point, you would have read about this altar in three earlier devotions. This day’s reading comes from Exodus 40:26โ€“28.



Once more, we stand at the altar of incenseโ€”a piece of furniture that will be separated from the ark by the veil alone. The smoldering coals on this altar arenโ€™t burning sacrifices but incense, raising a sweet and spicy cloud of smoke before our faces.

To keep the embers from going out, Aaron and his sons will have to attend the golden altar morning and evening, freshening the coals and adding more incense. At the heavenly counterpart of this altar, however, Romans 8:34 says Christ is always on duty. There, He pours out fresh incense of prayer before the Father as He pleads for us day and night.

Whenever we go to the place of prayer, whether at the height of noon or in the wee hours of night, we will find our Great High Priest already there. Romans 8:26 says the Holy Spirit will also be helping us at the altar. Heโ€™ll be welling up from our heartโ€™s depth to direct and energize our prayers. More than that, Christ is not only present as Priest but as the altar itself, supporting our incense-filled censer and holding it up before the Lord.

But thatโ€™s not all. Revelation 8:3โ€“4 paints a picture of an angel standing before the heavenly altar. He was โ€œgiven much incense, that he should offer it with the prayers of all the saints.โ€

With the prayers of the saints. Did you get that? We bring our prayers to the Father and pour them out on the altar of prayer, then Christ takes His own pile of incense and dumps it on top of ours. What a cloud of smoke must rise! Can you see it?

When my heart is heavy and my concerns desperate, when my faith seems inadequate to form the right words, what a comfort it is stepping beside someone already busy at the altar. How wonderful to have Him pour His perfect prayers over my feeble ones, turning my wispy plume into a column of smoke rising to heaven.

Reverend Canon Falloon described the scene beautifully in this quote from Frederick Whitfieldโ€™s The Tabernacle Priesthood and Offerings of Israel.

โ€œHere we see Christ engaged in His work above; receiving the prayers of His people into His censer; taking their requests all into His own hand; making them His own; laying them on Himself as their golden altar; adding to them the savor of His own merits, so that they shall not go alone, unaccompanied or unwelcome, into His Fatherโ€™s presence; but . . . shall ascend up before God with a certainty of being heard and accepted there.โ€ 

Next time you go to prayer, remember Jesus is already there. Picture Him standing beside you at the altar of incense as your High Priest. Watch Him pour out the contents of His censer over your prayers on the coals. With His incense on top of yours, how could the smoke escape Godโ€™s attention?

Likewise, the Spirit also helps in our weaknesses. For wedo not know what we should pray for as we ought, but the Spirit Himself makes intercession for us with groaning which cannot be uttered
(Romans 8:26).

Prayer: Lord Jesus, here I am with my little censer of incense. My faith in my own prayers is not great. Let Your Holy Spirit well up within me and help me find words to express whatโ€™s in my heart. Then pour Your incense over mine and carry the smoke of it to our Father.

If you want to spend more time with the Lord in his tabernacle, you can order my devotional here.

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