Jesus in the Old Testament 020:
Jesus and the Levitical Sacrifices, Pt 2
Thesis: Jesus is not only pictured in the Peace, Sin, and Guilt Offerings, but
He is the “greater than” fulfillment of both.
The fact that these sacrifices were purposefully ineffective in meriting
the forgiveness of intentional sin points to the need for a greater
sacrifice. David articulated the need
for this after his sin with Bathsheba. Jesus expressed his identity as the
greater sacrifice, and the author of Hebrews warns those who would seek to
satisfy the payment for sin in the Old Covenant alone.
- Nutshell w/kids (<5 min)
- The Peace
offering:
- When is
God with you?
- When you
do think about God being with you?
- The Jews
were required to bring God a piece of every animal that they killed for food. Some of that animal would be burned upon the altar for God.
Some would be given to the priests for their food, and some would go home with the family to eat.
In that sense, God and His priests were present at every family meal.
- Jesus
wants to be a part of every moment of our lives, and His work allows us to live even more closely with God. The Holy Spirit lives INSIDE us!
- There are
sacrifices that God commanded for sin as well.
- People had
to bring Bulls, Goats, Sheep, or Birds, kill them, and sprinkle their
blood on the altar.
- God only
allowed them to do this when they accidentally sinned. On purpose sins
were not forgiven this way.
- How is our
faith different?
- Jesus has
done away with all of this for us.
He was the perfect sacrifice that forgives all of our sins.
- Deeper with Adults
- Peace
Offering (Ch 3)
- The normal
vehicle for slaughtering major food animals in Israel. Normal allowance for providing food
for the priests (7:28-36).
- No
allowance for the non-ritual slaughter of livestock in the Torah
(17:1-9) except for wild game (17:13-14)
- A portion
of the animal is burned up as an offering to the Lord (blood and
internal fatty organs, 3:3-5)
- A portion
of the animal is given to the priest as part of his pay an allowance
from God (breast, right thigh)
- The rest
of the animal may be eaten by the worshipper (assumed?)
- Picture
sitting down to a meal with your family.
Any time you have meat on the table, you are sharing some of your
meal with a priest and with the Father as well!
- This has
nothing to do with sin. It is
simply a celebration of one’s place in the community of God’s people.
-
Note that this class of offerings has nothing
to do with sin; in fact, the Talmud states that in the age of the messiah
(when there is no more sin), this will be the only class of offering that is
brought to the Temple.
(Judaism 101, jewfaq.com)
- Sin
Offering (Ch 4:1-5:13)
- First of
two classes of sacrifices for atonement.
The distinction is ambiguous.
Perhaps these have to do with sins that make one unclean before
the Lord.
- Just as in
other offerings, the actual slaughter is done by the penitent worshipper. The handling of blood is done by the priest.
- Some
sacrifices are communal (4:1-21).
Some are individual (4:22-5:13).
- Different
sacrifices allowed based on the means of the offender:
a)
Bulls (4:1-21)
b)
Goats (4:22-31; 5:1-6)
c)
Pigeons or Turtledoves (5:7-10)
d)
Or even grain (5:11-13)
- These
sacrifices are usually supposed to be female members of the herd or flock. Less costly? Or more costly? Debate.
- The
worshipper does not eat any of this offering. Some of the meat is burned upon the altar (blood and fat), and the rest is eaten by the Priest or his relatives (7:5-7).
- Perhaps
“his sons” is meant to be gender-inclusive. Lev 10:14 allows daughters explicitly.
- Guilt
Offering (Ch 5:14-6:7)
- Guilt
offerings are distinguished from sin offerings, but again, the division is hard to pinpoint. Perhaps it has to do with sins that separate people from one another?
- Another
idea is that this deals with sins for which recompense can be made
(5:16; 6:5). 120% repayment.
- These are
always a male ram without blemish.
- Just as
with the sin offerings, these are meant to feed the priests and their families. Nothing is eaten by the penitent worshipper.
- ”Unintentional
Sins” vs. the “High Hand.”
- None of
these sacrifices “cover” sins committed intentionally (4:1, 13, 22, 27;
5:1-5, 14, 17-18; 6:1-5)
- Some of
these things on the list are hard to imagine being done intentionally,
but the text allows that it may be possible.
- It could
be that some of these things are done out of weakness and deception and
the “when he realizes his guilt” phrase is the moment when his
conscience informs him that he really did violate the laws of the Lord.
- The Day of
Atonement covers all sins that are rightly repented. Lev 16:20-22
- For those
who commit an intentional, or “high-handed” sin, there is no sacrifice.
Numbers 15:27-31 Terrifying.
a)
High-handed, fist raised in
rebellion
b)
Unrepentant posture.
- David’s
example: Psalm 51
a)
David’s plea is to God’s mercy,
not the sacrificial system.
b)
He knows that there is no
sacrifice fitting his sin (vs 15-17)
c)
He acknowledges that if God were
to cut him off for his sins, that God would be justified in doing so (vs 4-5).
d)
Several phrases are used in
Hebraic parallelism to cast light on the loving power of God to forgive sin:
(1)
Blot out (vs 1)
(2)
Wash me thoroughly (vs 2)
(3)
Cleanse me (vs 2)
(4)
Purge me with hyssop (vs 7) is a
reference to the plant’s use in cleansing ceremonies (Lev 14:6; Num 19:6).
(5)
Wash me (vs 7)
(6)
Hide your face from my sins (vs 9)
(7)
Blot out (vs 9)
(8)
Create in me a clean heart (vs 10)
(9)
Renew a right spirit (vs10)
(10)
Deliver me (vs 14)
e)
The Holy Spirit, who resided on
David from his anointing as a young boy is mentioned in vs 11.
(1)
David knows that he was taken from
Saul, and he is afraid that this might happen to him.
(2)
Difference between old and new
covenant relationship with the Holy Spirit.
f)
Jesus is here by name.
(1)
Vs 12: Restore to me the joy of
your Yeshua, Jesus.
(2)
Vs 14: Deliver me from blood
guiltiness, O God, O God my Yeshua, Jesus.
g)
After he asks for forgiveness,
David praises God for his mercy, communicated through the prophet Nathan.
- The
unforgivable sin, blasphemy of the Holy Spirit
- In Matthew
12:22-32
a)
A clear work of God to save is
rejected by men and ascribed to some other source.
b)
Jesus tells them that to reject
the work of God’s spirit and speak evil against Him is unforgivable.
(1)
It is Jesus who wins your
salvation, but it is the Holy Spirit who draws you to that work, applies it to
your life, and seals you for redemption.
(2)
If you reject the work of the Holy
Spirit to save you, you cannot be saved by that work.
- In Hebrews
10:26-39
a)
The law provides no sacrifice for
those who sin willfully (Lev 4-6).
b)
The only recompense allowed is for
that person to throw themselves on the mercy of God (Psalm 51).
c)
Jesus’ work is the avenue of mercy
available to provide the forgiveness which the law cannot. It was the mercy of God worked in Christ that
the sinner clings to, in the OT or NT (Psalm 51).
d)
If Jesus’ work is seen as
insufficient and is not trusted, then the Spirit who sanctifies (Heb 10:29)
will not do His work, and the person is lost, with only the expectation of
judgment.
e)
Does this mean you can lose your
salvation?
(1)
No, it means that people are
damned because they were never saved in the first place.
(2)
I, We, He, You Pronouns
(3)
“Receiving knowledge of the truth”
does not mean it was embraced.
(4)
“By which he was sanctified” is in
contrast to having rejected that work.
It would have happened, had the Spirit not been rejected.
(5)
This warning is addressed to those
who are leaving the body of believers (vs 24-25) due to persecution.
(6)
Those who remain in the faith
despite persecution demonstrate their authentic salvation by doing so (vs
32-39).
- Application:
- We can
enjoy the constant fellowship of God through the sacrifice of Jesus!
- Our sins
are costly and separate us from God.
- Jesus does
for us what the Old covenant was impotent to do.
- If we do
not let Jesus do His work or the Holy Spirit apply it to our lives, we
are without hope.
Discussion
Questions:
- Do we come
to family meals with the expectation that God is dining with us? What would look differently if we did?
- Do we take
our sin seriously, or do we treat the work of Jesus lightly?
- How would
you live differently if God only forgave your “mistakes,” not your “on
purpose” sins?
- Spend a few
moments as a family unit thanking God that all your sins have been forgiven.
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