Leviticus 20
Idolatry was not allowed in Israel. The Promised Land
was not to be a place where individual conscience ruled. It was not a
nation where travelers with different religious traditions had the
freedom to worship God in their own way. The Lord, the God of heaven
and earth, had expressed His sovereign power by taking this small
territory and announcing that He was giving it to a chosen people,
the descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Visitors would be
welcomed there, but not to worship foreign Gods. The Lord insisted on
this.
Certain foreign religious practices were worthy of
special mention as having nothing to do with the way of life in
Canaan under God's reign. One of these was the religious offering of
your children to be killed before a pagan deity. The penalty was
death for those who participated in such abominations. If the person
was foolishly spared by his clan, they all became implicated in this
evil.
The death penalty was also required in the case of an
Israelite who turned to the occult in order to communicate with
demons or with the dead in an effort to uncover the secret things
that belong to the Lord. To be put to death was to be cut off from
the assembly of Israel on earth. The people of God were to imitate
His holiness. These prohibitions were important for Israel's safety.
The one who cursed father and mother deserved death. This was also
the case for the one engaging in prohibited sexual practices. In the
case of consensual sex prohibited by the Lord's statutes, both
parties were to be put to death.
There might be some practices that would carry a penalty
less than death, and there was some ambiguity about the sanction in
certain cases, yet this much was clear: a guilty party in matters of
sexual misconduct had to “bear his iniquity.” This was a
different world than those places where the expression of personal
passions was seen as a virtue. The consequences for lack of
self-control in Israel were very serious. In one case it might mean
that those involved would “be cut off from among their people.”
In another it was simply said that they would “bear their
iniquity.” In yet another those who were in the wrong would “die
childless.” All of this would be an affront to those who believed
in their right to do whatever they chose to do with their own bodies.
The Israelite was never told by God that he owned his own body. He
had been bought by God out of the land of Egypt through the blood of
the Passover lamb. He was not his own.
The land that the Lord was giving to Israel was
described as holy and alive. It was a land that was capable of
vomiting out the people in it. The behavior of the people could
sicken the land enough to expel them from living there. But if the
people would be holy as God was holy, they would live in perfect
peace in the land.
The land was a good land, but it was a place for those
who lived in imitation of their good God. To enjoy the land's milk
and honey the people needed to live in accord with the statutes of
heaven's God and not according to the customs of the nations.
The holy God of Israel had separated His people from
those of other nations. Therefore they needed to eat a certain way,
and worship a certain way, and think about the future a certain way
as people who trusted the word of their God. They could not live
according to pragmatism, finding by trial and error those things that
they judged to work best. They could not live by democracy according
to the will of the majority. The land would not put up with that.
They could not live as anarchists or as radical libertarians, where
the choice of each individual or group was allowed the most free
reign. They lived as children of God in God's house, on God's
property, according to God's rules.
The alternative to this pathway of radical obedience to
the Lord was to be cut off from Israel. Israel was the kingdom of
God. This was not up for discussion. It was the Lord's fact,
regardless of what Israel thought about it or what any of the
surrounding nations thought.
When Jesus came to save us, He came preaching and
teaching the kingdom of God. The kingdom that He established with His
death and resurrection was not just for the land of Israel. It was
the kingdom of God's reign over heaven and earth. Like Israel under
the law, it would have to be a place where God's Word was the last
word. It was a kingdom of those who had been redeemed by the blood of
the Lamb, a people who had been bought by Jesus.
But it was also a kingdom where the fullness of
obedience would be granted to the people as a gift. We do not see
that yet in ourselves, but those in heaven experience it now, and all
of God's children will experience it one day. Christ has won this
with His life and death. The church should live as the kingdom of God
in accord with the full New Testament Word today here on earth. We
need to set our hearts on Christ and on the land that is above. We
will live best here below today when we eagerly long for the fullness
of a renewed life that is already reserved for us in the heavens.
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