Text: 2 Samuel 6:6-7
OT Text Referred to: Exodus 19:12-13
Subject: The untouchable holy — Sinai's touch-prohibition propagated to the Ark (Uzzah)
Source: Theoretical
Reference Type: Echo
Connection Method(s): Redemptive-Historical Progression + Longitudinal Theme
Significance: Sinai forbade touching the holy mountain on pain of death — "Be careful not to go up on the mountain or touch its base. Whoever touches the mountain shall surely be put to death" (Exod 19:12-13). The same lethal-holiness principle migrates to the Ark, God's enthroned presence now carried toward the land: when Uzzah "reached out and took hold of the ark of God… the anger of the LORD burned against Uzzah, and God struck him down on the spot… and he died there beside the ark" (2 Sam 6:6-7). The mountain and the Ark are two loci of the one enthroned glory, and approaching that glory on fallen terms — even with a steadying, well-meant hand — brings death in both. The episode shows that the Sinai prohibition was not a one-time mountain rule but the abiding logic of God's holiness among a sinful people; the Ark is portable Sinai. This OT-internal propagation of the touch-prohibition is precisely what the incarnation reverses: the untouchable Holy One becomes the God whom "our hands have touched" (1 John 1:1) and who invites, "Touch Me and see" (Luke 24:39). The death that any touch of the holy deserved was borne by the incarnate Word, so that in Him touch now communicates life rather than judgment — Christ the holy God made, in mercy, handle-able. See TT 184 — Sensory Access and TT 009 — Ark of the Covenant.