Leviticus 14
There should always have been considerable value in
appreciating the metaphors of the ceremonial law, such as the various
skin diseases called “leprosy” in Leviticus. These metaphors
could have helped the people to apprehend the depth of the problem of
sin among mankind. But Israel needed much more than the knowledge of
sin. Israel needed healing.
There was a law for the cleansing of lepers, but this
law was a testimony of healing that had occurred. It was not a
protocol to follow in order to heal skin diseases. It certainly was
not a way to heal the soul problems of mankind. It did have value,
especially as a testimony to a great Healer who would one day appear
to Israel.
The ceremonial law anticipated a day when the leprous
person would be cleansed. On that day, he was to be brought to the
priest, but not in a holy place. The priest actually was to go to him
outside the camp. He was to go to the outcast. There he was to look
at the evidence of healing and consider.
If the person was indeed healed, that person and the
priest were to perform a ritual involving two birds. One of the birds
was to be killed, but the other bird would live. The priest would set
the living bird free, but first he would dip it in the blood of the
bird that was sacrificed. Then the priest would take the live bird,
now with the blood of the dead bird on it, and he would sprinkle the
one who had been leprous with the blood of the sacrificed bird.
When Jesus cleansed a leper, He instructed him, “Show
yourself to the priest and offer the gift that Moses commanded, for a
proof to them.” This is part of the procedure He was referring to.
The two birds, the scarlet yarn, the hyssop, the blood of the
sacrificed bird, the other bird dipped in that blood to fly away
free, the washing of clothes, the shaving of the head, the bathing in
water, the return to the camp, the seven days more outside his tent,
more shaving of all hair, more washing of clothes, more bathing in
water, and then more offerings commanded by God... This was how a
person was pronounced “clean.”
The offerings reinforced another message that was a part
of the sacrificial system for all of Israel, whether clean or
unclean. Through these common offerings, rather than through a verbal
declaration, the leper was to acknowledge and testify to this plain
fact: “I need a substitute who will stand in my place. I need an
acceptable guilt offering. I need a whole burnt offering. I need a
grain offering. I need a sin offering.” In the case of the healed
leper, this testimony was to take place on the eighth day after the
ceremony of the two birds. The offerings were made by a man who had
once been unclean, but now was clean. Yet he needed this final
testimony of cleansing connected to these normal offerings for
Israelites who could approach God.
The priest was to bring the man before the Lord at the
entrance to the tent of the meeting. The man would be marked by the
blood of the offering as the priest was marked at the beginning of
his own ministry. The blood was to be put on his right ear, his right
thumb, and the big toe of his right foot. The priest was to sprinkle
some oil from the offering before the Lord, and then to put the oil
on the man in the same three places, from head to toe, with the
remaining oil in the hand of the priest placed on the head of the
man. This new cleansed man was a servant of God through the shedding
of blood and the oil offered up to the Lord.
Finally, the priest was to offer the sin offering, the
burnt offering, and the grain offering in accord with the word of the
Lord for each ceremony. This was what it meant to “make atonement
for him before the Lord.” This was the testimony required by God in
the law. At last the words that he would have longed to hear, “Thus
the priest shall make atonement for him, and he shall be clean.”
Once again, there was a provision for the poor who could
not afford all those animals. Such a man was still fully cleansed
from his leprous disease. He just could not afford the offerings for
his cleansing.
This kind of disease affected individuals and their
personal possessions. It could even attack an entire house. God
indicated that He Himself might put a case of leprous disease in a
house. The owner, when he discovered the problem, was not to hide it,
but to bring the matter to the attention of the priest. Words were
given in the law that fit the situation: “There seems to me to be
some case of disease in my house.” The word “house” was
obviously referring to a physical structure, but it was not an
accident that the same word could be used to refer to the people who
lived together as a family within that structure, and even to the
future generations that would come from those people.
God gave detailed regulations that the priest could use
to discern the condition of a house, and detailed ceremonies for
declaring a house to be “clean.” But who can do more than cleanse
us with a ceremonial ritual? Who can heal us, and bring health back
to our home and to our family line?
The Lord has provided Himself for the necessary
sacrifice. He has brought us into His own household in Jesus Christ.
This great priest was able to discern all that was necessary to
restore His people to right relationship with His Father, and to
bring them into the temple of the Holy Spirit as His royal
priesthood.
Do you have troubles in your life and in your house that
you do not know how to heal? Do not despair. He who cleansed the
leper will not leave you or your house fatally infected with the
disease of sin. He has a new house for you that will stand. He is the
Cornerstone of our eternal dwelling.
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