Today, I am reading and commenting on Exodus 30-32.
Usually I skip over the the first part of this passage and write something about Aaron, the golden calf, or Moses’ reaction to it, but this time I want to touch on something else first. God tells Moses that no one may use a perfume which smells similar to the anointing oil for the priests and no one may burn an incense which smells similar to the holy incense, aside from priests doing so as part of the priestly duties. I never really thought of the significance of that before today. Over the last fifty years science has come to understand that smells trigger thoughts, memories, and emotions in ways which bypass our rational thought processes. God gave this command regarding the holy anointing oil and the holy incense because He wanted those scents to only be associate with worship of Him. Once those scents were used for worship within the Tabernacle, those who worshiped there would unconsciously associate them with the Holy. If those scents were used in other settings two things could result. On the one hand, if people only smelled those scents in places of genuine worship of God, those scents would help them focus more clearly on God when they smelled them. On the other hand, people might be given a sense of righteousness while doing that which was sinful if those scents were present there. What all of that made me realize is that we could use scents today to aid in our worship of God.
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.