Exodus 31
Exodus 31 brings the tabernacle instructions to their close with two final announcements: the appointment of craftsmen filled with God's Spirit, and the solemn command to observe the Sabbath. Bezalel son of Uri is named first — God says He has filled him with the Spirit of God, with wisdom, understanding, knowledge, and all manner of craftsmanship. This is the first explicit mention in Scripture of the Spirit of God filling a person for a specific work, and the work is artistic: carving, weaving, metalworking, stone-setting. Oholiab is named as his assistant. The beauty of the tabernacle is not incidental to its holiness — it is an expression of it. Then God reiterates the Sabbath command with striking force: it is a sign between me and you throughout your generations. The Sabbath is described as a covenant sign — like circumcision — marking Israel as the people who belong to the God who rested. Violating it carries the death penalty, not from divine capriciousness but because the Sabbath defines the rhythm of a redeemed life. The stone tablets, written by the finger of God, are given to Moses. Colossians 2:16–17 later describes the Sabbath as a shadow of what is found in Christ.
Exodus 31:1
Then the Lord said to Moses. After chapters of detailed tabernacle specifications, God now names the people who will execute them. The transition from blueprint to builder is itself a divine act: the one who designed the tabernacle also designates the craftsman to build it. Acts 17:25 says God is not served by human hands as if he needed anything — yet here He commands the construction of a sanctuary and names the craftsmen to build it. The paradox of the omnipresent God requesting a dwelling place is resolved in the incarnation: God who needs nothing chooses to dwell with those He made.
Exodus 31:2
See, I have chosen Bezalel son of Uri, the son of Hur, of the tribe of Judah. Bezalel is named by God before he is introduced to Moses — the appointment is divine before it is human. Hur was the man who helped hold up Moses' arms at Rephidim (Exodus 17:12); the grandson of the man who sustained the intercessor will now build the sanctuary. The generations are connected: the work at Rephidim and the work at Sinai are part of the same covenant story, carried forward in the same family line. God's callings are consistent across generations.
Exodus 31:3
And I have filled him with the Spirit of God, with wisdom, with understanding, with knowledge and with all kinds of skills. The filling with the Spirit of God for artistic craftsmanship is the first explicit reference to a person being filled with the Spirit for a specific task in all of Scripture. The four gifts — wisdom, understanding, knowledge, and all kinds of skills — are the complete toolkit for sacred craftsmanship. Isaiah 11:2 lists the same four qualities as gifts of the messianic Spirit. The Spirit who fills Bezalel for tabernacle building is the same Spirit who will fill the Messiah for covenant governance and believers for ministry.