Leviticus 22
Little by little over many centuries God prepared Israel
for the coming of a holy Priest who would make a holy Offering. There
were many ways for a priest to become unholy and to bring death upon
himself and upon Israel by profaning the Lord's tabernacle. One way
to do this was to assume upon himself the right to take what was not
His from the offerings that were dedicated to the Lord, acting as if
the Lord's portion or the portion that belonged to the worshiper was
the priest's to consume when and where he chose. God spoke to Aaron
through Moses about the restraint that the true priest needed to
possess: “Speak to Aaron and his sons so that they abstain from the
holy things of the people of Israel, which they dedicate to me, so
that they do not profane my holy name: I am the Lord.”
The priest needed to be holy and the offering needed to
be holy. An unholy priest could destroy an otherwise acceptable
offering, and an unacceptable offering brought condemnation upon a
priest and the whole nation, The priest and the offering were
connected, but they also could be distinguished. In this way we might
eventually see Jesus as the perfect Priest and also see His life and
His willing death as the perfectly acceptable Offering to God.
If the Levitical priest had an uncleanness, he would
destroy the goodness of an offering. “That person shall be cut off
from my presence: I am the Lord.” Jesus needed to enter the
presence of the Almighty for us with an acceptable blood sacrifice of
Himself. If He had been cut off from the presence of the Almighty as
an unacceptable Offering, we would have no way to draw near to God
with a full assurance of faith.
We are priests to the Lord, but without Jesus
uncleanness of our sin would mar our service to the Lord. What
swarming thing, what emission, what death, discharge, or leprosy of
evil has threatened us with lost fellowship with God and His people?
Yet we have been made acceptable through the perfect Priest who made
the perfect Offering. He remains faithful, for we are united to Him,
and He cannot deny Himself. If we will just confess our sin, He is
faithful and just to forgive our sin, and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness. May we not grieve the Holy Spirit with pride and a
stubborn rejection of the way of love, for He is ours, and we are
His. He is the Lord who sanctifies us.
In the Old Covenant, the holiness of the priesthood and
the offerings would be marred by an outsider eating food that was
only for the priests and their households. But now there is hope for
nations that were once outsiders to God's worship. A way into a more
permanent priesthood has appeared through Jesus the Messiah. Yet
anyone who would presume to draw near to God today through some other
road than Jesus will find Himself outside the true temple of the
Lord. There is no wisdom in a stubborn rejection of the Lord's good
provision for Jews and Gentiles in His Son.
Our High Priest is holy and His offering of Himself is
without blemish. The acceptable offering in the days of preparation
had to be “of the bulls or the sheep or the goats.” But only the
offering of a perfect Man could pay our real debt. An animal could
never have won heaven for us.
The sin that destroyed mankind came through a man. It
was necessary that the righteousness that redeemed a people for the
Lord would also come from a man.
What was the perfection that was necessary? In the time
before the Messiah's death and resurrection, perfection could be
outward and ceremonial. Not the blind, the disabled, or the
mutilated; no discharge, no itch, no scabs; no limb too long when one
of perfect proportions had been promised; nothing bruised or crushed
or torn or cut could be offered to the Lord. But when the perfect Man
presented His own body for our guilt, He was bruised and crushed and
torn and cut. He possessed a perfection that an animal could never
have accomplished: the full inner righteousness of a sinless man with
a true body and a real soul. On the outside, where man was able to
see, He was an offering from which men hid their faces. On the
inside, where God knows the heart, He was a lamp of purest gold, a
sinless substitute, a perfect and willing gift of love.
He did not come to us through the generosity of Jews or
Gentiles, as if men made Him to be who He was. He gave His Father the
gift of Himself as the perfect Man from heaven.
He was not offered up for death as a child, a natural
innocent, as in some pagan rituals. He spent His youth in quiet and
holy submission to his mother and “father,” but as one who
already knew that God was His real Father, and that the temple as the
house of God was truly His Father's house. But when He was about
thirty years old, He presented Himself publicly with signs and words
from another world. He took His place as our holy Priest. Then He
offered up Himself on the cross as our holy Offering. His death has
become our death. His resurrection is our eternal life. He has
delivered us from the most cruel bondage of sin, death, and even from
the yoke of the ceremonial law that neither we nor the generations
before us could bear. He has saved us, and He is the Lord who
sanctifies us.
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