There is an object at the center of Israel’s worship that most Christians can picture, but few can explain.
It sat at the top of the Ark of the Covenant, inside the innermost chamber of the tabernacle, and then the temple.
Only one man could approach it.
He could only approach it once a year.
When he did, he came with blood.
That object is the mercy seat, and its story runs from a precise set of instructions given to Moses in the wilderness all the way to a word Paul uses to describe Jesus Christ in Romans 3.
Understanding what it was, what it did, and what it pointed toward is essential for any Christian who wants to understand the logic of atonement.
Chapter One: What God Told Moses to Build
The Physical Description
“You shall make a mercy seat of pure gold. Its length shall be two and a half cubits, and its breadth one and a half cubits.” (Exodus 25:17, ESV)
“And you shall make two cherubim of gold; of hammered work shall you make them, on the two ends of the mercy seat.” (Exodus 25:18, ESV)
The mercy seat was not a chair or a throne in any ordinary sense.
It was a lid made of solid gold, the exact length and width of the Ark of the Covenant below it.
Two cherubim, also hammered from gold, rose from each end, their wings spreading upward and inward until they overshadowed the space between them.
Their faces turned downward, looking toward the mercy seat itself.
The Hebrew Word Behind the Name
The Hebrew word translated “mercy seat” is kapporeth, derived from the root kaphar, meaning to cover, to atone, or to make propitiation.
The English phrase “mercy seat” comes from William Tyndale’s 1530 translation, where he chose to render kapporeth in a way that captured both its function and its grace.
Other translations render it “atonement cover” (NIV) or “propitiatory” (following the Latin Vulgate).
Each translation captures part of what the object was: a covering, a place of atonement, a point of meeting between the holy God and a sinful people.
Chapter Two: What the Mercy Seat Did
The Dwelling Place of God’s Presence
“There I will meet with you, and from above the mercy seat, from between the two cherubim that are on the ark of the testimony, I will speak with you about all that I will give you in commandment for the people of Israel.” (Exodus 25:22, ESV)
The mercy seat was not primarily an object of human activity.
It was the designated location of divine presence.
God told Moses that the mercy seat was where he would meet with his people, speak to them, and communicate his commands.
The Shekinah glory, the visible manifestation of God’s presence, appeared above the mercy seat between the cherubim.
For Israel, the mercy seat was not a symbol of a distant God.
It was the throne of a God who had chosen to dwell among them.
The Problem the Mercy Seat Solved
The Ark of the Covenant contained the tablets of the Ten Commandments, Aaron’s rod that budded, and a golden pot of manna.
Below the mercy seat lid, in other words, was the written record of every standard Israel had failed to keep.
The law sat inside the ark.
The mercy seat sat on top of the law.
The arrangement was not accidental.
The covering of atonement rested directly above the record of human failure, and God’s presence rested above both.
This physical arrangement told a theological story: the only way for a holy God to dwell among a people who had broken his law was through an atoning cover placed between his presence and their record of sin.
Chapter Three: The One Day That Defined It
Yom Kippur and the High Priest
“For on this day shall atonement be made for you to cleanse you. You shall be clean before the Lord from all your sins.” (Leviticus 16:30, ESV)
Once a year, on the Day of Atonement, the high priest performed a ceremony unlike anything else in Israel’s calendar.
He bathed, dressed in white linen, and entered the Holy of Holies alone.
He first burned incense so that the cloud of incense covered the mercy seat, protecting him from dying in God’s presence.
He then took the blood of a bull slaughtered as a sin offering for himself and his household.
He sprinkled that blood on the mercy seat and before the mercy seat seven times.
He repeated the process with the blood of a goat offered for the sins of the people.
What the Ritual Was Declaring
The high priest who entered the Holy of Holies carried blood because nothing else would do.
The blood sprinkled on the mercy seat declared that the penalty for sin had been paid by a substitute.
The people’s sins did not disappear.
They were covered.
The blood was placed between the presence of the holy God and the record of human failure below.
For another year, the relationship between God and Israel was sustained not by Israel’s obedience but by the blood of an atoning sacrifice.
The arrangement was powerful, but it was also temporary.
The same ceremony would be required again the following year, and every year after that.
Chapter Four: The Greek Word That Carried Everything Forward
Hilasterion and Its Two Appearances
The Septuagint, the Greek translation of the Hebrew Scriptures, used the word hilasterion to translate kapporeth.
That same word appears twice in the New Testament, and both appearances are significant.
In Hebrews 9:5, the writer describes the furnishings of the tabernacle and refers to “the cherubim of glory overshadowing the mercy seat,” using hilasterion to identify the object.
The second appearance is in Romans 3:25.
What Paul Did With the Word
“God presented Christ as a sacrifice of atonement, through the shedding of his blood, to be received by faith.” (Romans 3:25a, NIV)
“Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood.” (Romans 3:25a, KJV)
The Greek word translated “sacrifice of atonement” or “propitiation” in Romans 3:25 is hilasterion, the same word used for the mercy seat in the Greek Old Testament.
Paul was not reaching for a vague description of Christ’s death.
He was making a precise typological claim: Jesus Christ is the mercy seat.
The object that sat atop the ark, where blood was sprinkled, and God’s presence rested, was pointing forward to a person who would do what the gold lid and animal blood never could.
Chapter Five: What the Mercy Seat Became
The Shadow and the Substance
“For Christ has entered, not into holy places made with hands, which are copies of the true things, but into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God on our behalf.” (Hebrews 9:24, ESV)
The book of Hebrews draws the explicit comparison between the annual Yom Kippur ritual and the once-for-all sacrifice of Christ.
Aaron’s sons entered an earthly Holy of Holies year after year with the blood of animals.
Christ entered the true sanctuary in heaven with his own blood, securing not a temporary covering but an eternal redemption.
The mercy seat made of gold was a copy.
The true mercy seat is Christ himself.
The Meaning for the Christian
Every element of the Old Testament mercy seat finds its fulfillment in Jesus.
The high priest who sprinkled blood: Christ is both the priest and the sacrifice.
The blood that covered human sin: Christ’s blood does not cover sin year by year but takes it away entirely.
The place where God met his people: in Christ, God has come to dwell among humanity not in a tent or a temple but in flesh.
The law inside the ark, the record of human failure, stands below.
The atoning work of Christ stands above it.
And the presence of God, no longer confined to a golden room in the wilderness, is now available to everyone who comes through faith.
A Prayer at the Mercy Seat
Lord, I come not with the blood of animals but through the blood of Your Son. The barrier that once kept sinful people from Your presence has been removed. Not covered for a year, but taken away.
Thank You for giving me a mercy seat I can approach without fear. A High Priest who does not have to return. A covering that does not need to be reapplied.
Let me never treat lightly what it cost.
In Jesus’ Name, Amen.
Frequently Asked Questions About the Mercy Seat in the Bible
What is the mercy seat in simple terms?
The mercy seat was the solid gold lid placed on top of the Ark of the Covenant, flanked by two golden cherubim. It was God’s designated dwelling place among Israel, where the high priest sprinkled blood once a year on the Day of Atonement to cover the nation’s sins.
Where is the mercy seat mentioned in the Bible?
It is first described in Exodus 25:17–22, where God gives Moses detailed construction instructions. It appears throughout Leviticus in connection with the Day of Atonement rituals. The New Testament references it in Hebrews 9:5 and uses the same Greek word, hilasterion, in Romans 3:25 to describe Jesus Christ.
What does the mercy seat symbolize in the Bible?
It symbolizes the meeting point where God’s holiness and human sinfulness are reconciled through atonement. The law lay inside the ark; God’s presence rested above it. The blood sprinkled on it declared the penalty of sin met, allowing a holy God to dwell among a failing people.
Is Jesus the mercy seat?
In Romans 3:25, Paul uses hilasterion, the same Greek word the Septuagint uses for the mercy seat, to describe Christ. The connection is deliberate: Jesus is the true mercy seat, where God’s justice and mercy fully meet, and through whose blood atonement is made once for all.
What was the role of the high priest at the mercy seat?
Once a year on Yom Kippur, the high priest entered the Holy of Holies alone, burned incense, then sprinkled blood on the mercy seat seven times. Hebrews presents this as a foreshadowing of Christ, who entered heaven’s true sanctuary with his own blood to secure permanent redemption.
Sources
Ryken, Philip Graham. Exodus: Saved for God’s Glory. Preaching the Word. Crossway, 2005.
Enns, Peter. Exodus. NIV Application Commentary. Zondervan, 2000.
Hays, J. Daniel. The Temple and the Tabernacle. Baker Books, 2016.
What Is the Mercy Seat? GotQuestions.org.
What Is the Mercy Seat? Bible Study Tools.
The Mercy Seat: Connecting the Dots. Ligonier Ministries.
The Mercy Seat Explained. Crosswalk.
What Is the Mercy Seat? Christianity.com.
The Mercy Seat and Atonement. Desiring God.
Gentry, Peter, and Stephen Wellum. Kingdom Through Covenant. Crossway, 2012.
