Shewbread
(Exodus 25:30; 35:13; 39:36) etc. literally “bread of the face” or “faces.” Shew-bread was unleavened bread placed upon a table which stood in the sanctuary
together with the seven-branched candlestick and the altar of incense. See (Exodus 25:23-30) for description of this table. Every Sabbath twelve newly baked loaves, representing the twelve tribes of Israel, were put
on it in two rows, six in each, and sprinkled with incense, where they remained till the following Sabbath. Then they were
replaced by twelve new ones, the incense was burned, and they were eaten by the priests in the holy place, out of which they
might not be removed, The title “bread of the face” seems to indicate that bread through which God is seen, that is, with
the participation of which the seeing of God is bound up, or through the participation of which man attains the sight of God
whence it follows that we have not to think of bread merely as such as the means of nourishing the bodily life, but as spiritual
food as a means of appropriating and retaining that life which consists In seeing the face of God.