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Leviticus
Chapter One
Leviticus 1
Chapter Contents
The offerings. (1,2) From the herds. (3-9) From the
flocks, and of fowls. (10-17)
Commentary on Leviticus 1:1,2
The offering of sacrifices was an ordinance of true
religion, from the fall of man unto the coming of Christ. But till the
Israelites were in the wilderness, no very particular regulations seem to have
been appointed. The general design of these laws is plain. The sacrifices
typified Christ; they also shadowed out the believer's duty, character,
privilege, and communion with God. There is scarcely any thing spoken of the
Lord Jesus in Scripture which has not also a reference to his people. This book
begins with the laws concerning sacrifices; the most ancient were the
burnt-offerings, about which God here gives Moses directions. It is taken for
granted that the people would be willing to bring offerings to the Lord. The
very light of nature directs man, some way or other, to do honour to his Maker,
as his Lord. Immediately after the fall, sacrifices were ordained.
Commentary on Leviticus 1:3-9
In the due performance of the Levitical ordinances, the
mysteries of the spiritual world are represented by corresponding natural
objects; and future events are exhibited in these rites. Without this, the
whole will seem unmeaning ceremonies. There is in these things a type of the
sufferings of the Son of God, who was to be a sacrifice for the sins of the whole
world? The burning body of an animal was but a faint representation of that
everlasting misery, which we all have deserved; and which our blessed Lord bore
in his body and in his soul, when he died under the load of our iniquities.
Observe, 1. The beast to be offered must be without blemish. This signified the
strength and purity that were in Christ, and the holy life that should be in
his people. 2. The owner must offer it of his own free will. What is done in
religion, so as to please God, must be done by love. Christ willingly offered
himself for us. 3. It must be offered at the door of the tabernacle, where the
brazen altar of burnt-offerings stood, which sanctified the gift: he must offer
it at the door, as one unworthy to enter, and acknowledging that a sinner can
have no communion with God, but by sacrifice. 4. The offerer must put his hand
upon the head of his offering, signifying thereby, his desire and hope that it
might be accepted from him, to make atonement for him. 5. The sacrifice was to be
killed before the Lord, in an orderly manner, and to honour God. It signified
also, that in Christians the flesh must be crucified with its corrupt
affections and lust. 6. The priests were to sprinkle the blood upon the altar;
for the blood being the life, that was it which made atonement. This signified
the pacifying and purifying of our consciences, by the sprinkling of the blood
of Jesus Christ upon them by faith. 7. The beast was to be divided into several
pieces, and then to be burned upon the altar. The burning of the sacrifice
signified the sharp sufferings of Christ, and the devout affections with which,
as a holy fire, Christians must offer up themselves, their whole spirit, soul,
and body, unto God. 8. This is said to be an offering of a sweet savour. As an
act of obedience to a Divine command, and a type of Christ, this was
well-pleasing to God; and the spiritual sacrifices of Christians are acceptable
to God, through Christ, 1 Peter 2:5.
Commentary on Leviticus 1:10-17
Those who could not offer a bullock, were to bring a
sheep or a goat; and those who were not able to do that, were accepted of God,
if they brought a turtle-dove, or a pigeon. Those creatures were chosen for
sacrifice which were mild, and gentle, and harmless; to show the innocence and
meekness that were in Christ, and that should be in Christians. The offering of
the poor was as typical of Christ's atonement as the more costly sacrifices,
and expressed as fully repentance, faith, and devotedness to God. We have no
excuse, if we refuse the pleasant and reasonable service now required. But we
can no more offer the sacrifice of a broken heart, or of praise and
thanksgiving, than an Israelite could offer a bullock or a goat, except as God
hath first given to us. The more we do in the Lord's service, the greater are
our obligations to him, for the will, for the ability, and opportunity. In many
things God leaves us to fix what shall be spent in his service, whether of our
time or our substance; yet where God's providence has put much into a man's
power, scanty offerings will not be accepted, for they are not proper
expressions of a willing mind. Let us be devoted in body and soul to his
service, whatever he may call us to give, venture, do, or suffer for his sake.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Leviticus¡n
Leviticus 1
Verse 1
[1] And
the LORD called unto Moses, and spake unto him out of the tabernacle of the
congregation, saying,
Moses ¡X
Stood without, Exodus 40:35, waiting for God's call.
The tabernacle ¡X
From the mercy-seat in the tabernacle.
Verse 2
Speak unto the children of Israel, and say
unto them, If any man of you bring an offering unto the LORD, ye shall bring
your offering of the cattle, even of the herd, and of the flock.
There are divers kinds of sacrifices here
prescribed, some by way of acknowledgment to God for mercies either desired or
received; others by was of satisfaction to God for men's sins; others were mere
exercises of devotion. And the reason why there were so many kinds of them was,
partly a respect to the childish state of the Jews, who by the custom of
nations, and their own natural inclinations were much addicted to outward rites
and ceremonies, that they might have full employment of that kind in Gods's
service, and thereby be kept from temptations to idolatry; and partly to
represent as well the several perfections of Christ, the true sacrifice, and
the various benefits of his death, as the several duties which men owe to their
Creator and Redeemer, all which could not be so well expressed by one sort of
sacrifice.
Of the flock ¡X
Or, Of the sheep; though the Hebrew word contains both the sheep and goats. Now
God chose these creatures for his sacrifices, either, 1. In opposition to the
Egyptian idolatry, to which divers of the Israelites had been used, and were
still in danger of revolting to again, that the frequent destruction of these
creatures might bring such silly deities into contempt. Or, 2. Because these
are the fittest representations both of Christ and of true Christians, as being
gentle, and harmless, and patient, and useful to men. Or, 3. As the best and
most profitable creatures, with which it is fit God should be served, and which
we should be ready to part with, when God requires us to do so. Or. 4. As
things most common, that men might never want a sacrifice when they needed, or
God required it.
Verse 3
[3] If
his offering be a burnt sacrifice of the herd, let him offer a male without
blemish: he shall offer it of his own voluntary will at the door of the
tabernacle of the congregation before the LORD.
A burnt sacrifice ¡X
Strictly so called, such as was to be all burnt, the skin excepted. For every
sacrifice was burnt, more or less. The sacrifices signified that the whole man,
in whose stead the sacrifice was offered, was to be entirely offered or devoted
to God's service; and that the whole man did deserve to be utterly consumed, if
God should deal severely with him; and directed us to serve the Lord with all
singleness of heart, and to be ready to offer to God even such sacrifices or
services wherein we ourselves should have no part or benefit.
A male ¡X As
being more perfect than the female, Malachi 1:14, and more truly representing
Christ.
Without blemish ¡X To
signify, 1. That God should he served with the best of every kind. 2. That man,
represented by these sacrifices, should aim at all perfection of heart and
life, and that Christians should one day attain to it, Ephesians 5:27. 3. The spotless and compleat
holiness of Christ.
Of his own will ¡X
According to this translation, the place speaks only of free-will offerings, or
such as were not prescribed by God to be offered in course, but were offered by
the voluntary devotion of any person, either by way of supplication for any
mercy, or by way of thanksgiving for any blessing received. But it may seem
improper to restrain the rules here given to free-will offerings, which were to
be observed in other offerings also.
At the door ¡X In
the court near the door, where the altar stood, Leviticus 1:5. For here it was to be sacrificed,
and here the people might behold the oblation of it. And this farther
signified, that men could have no entrance, neither into the earthly
tabernacle, the church, nor into the heavenly tabernacle of glory, but by Christ,
who is the door, John 10:7,9, by whom alone we have access to
God.
Verse 4
[4] And
he shall put his hand upon the head of the burnt offering; and it shall be
accepted for him to make atonement for him.
He shall put his hand ¡X Both his hands, Leviticus 8:14,18, and Leviticus 16:21. Whereby he signified, 1. that
he willingly gave it to the Lord. 2. That he judged himself worthy of that
death which it suffered in his stead; and that he laid his sins upon it with an
eye to him upon whom God would lay the iniquity of us all, Isaiah 53:6, and that together with it he did
freely offer up himself to God.
To make atonement ¡X
Sacramentally; as directing his faith and thoughts to that true propitiatory
sacrifice which in time was to be offered up for him. And although
burnt-offerings were commonly offered by way of thanksgiving; yet they were
sometimes offered by way of atonement for sin, that is, for sins in general, as
appears from Job 1:5, but for particular sins there were
special sacrifices.
Verse 5
And he shall kill the bullock before the
LORD: and the priests, Aaron's sons, shall bring the blood, and sprinkle the
blood round about upon the altar that is by the door of the tabernacle of the
congregation.
And he ¡X
Either, 1. the offerer, who is said to do it, namely, by the priest; for men
are commonly said to do what they cause others to do, as John 4:1,2. Or, 2. the priest, as it follows, or
the Levite, whose office this was.
Shall sprinkle the blood ¡X Which was done in a considerable quantity, and whereby was signified, 1.
That the offerer deserved to have his blood spilt in that manner. 2. That the
blood of Christ should be poured forth for sinners, and that this was the only
mean of their reconciliation to God, and acceptance with him.
Verse 6
[6] And
he shall flay the burnt offering, and cut it into his pieces.
Pieces ¡X
Namely, the head, and fat, and inwards, and legs, Leviticus 1:8,9.
Verse 7
[7] And
the sons of Aaron the priest shall put fire upon the altar, and lay the wood in
order upon the fire:
Put fire ¡X
Or, dispose the fire, that is, blow it up, and put it together, so as it might
be fit for the present work. For the fire there used and allowed came down from
heaven, Leviticus 9:24, and was to be carefully
preserved there, and all other fire was forbidden, Leviticus 10:1, etc.
Verse 8
[8] And
the priests, Aaron's sons, shall lay the parts, the head, and the fat, in order
upon the wood that is on the fire which is upon the altar:
The fat ¡X
All the fat was to be separated from the flesh, and to be put together, to
increase the flame, and to consume the other parts of the sacrifice more
speedily.
Verse 9
[9] But
his inwards and his legs shall he wash in water: and the priest shall burn all
on the altar, to be a burnt sacrifice, an offering made by fire, of a sweet
savour unto the LORD.
But the inwards shall he wash ¡X To signify the universal and perfect purity both of the inwards, or the
heart, and of the legs, or ways or actions, which was in Christ, and which
should be in all Christians. And he washed not only the parts now mentioned,
but all the rest, the trunk of the body, and the shoulders.
A sweet savour ¡X
Not in itself, for so it rather caused a stink, but as it represented Christ's
offering up himself to God as a sweet smelling savour.
Verse 11
[11] And
he shall kill it on the side of the altar northward before the LORD: and the
priests, Aaron's sons, shall sprinkle his blood round about upon the altar.
North-ward ¡X
Here this and other kinds of sacrifices were killed, Leviticus 6:25, and Leviticus 7:2, because here seems to have been
the largest and most convenient place for that work, the altar being probably
near the middle of the east-end of the building, and the entrance being on the
south-side. Besides this might design the place of Christ's death both more
generally, in Jerusalem, which was in the sides of the north, Psalms 48:2, and more specially, on mount
Calvary, which was on the north-west side of Jerusalem.
Verse 14
[14] And
if the burnt sacrifice for his offering to the LORD be of fowls, then he shall
bring his offering of turtledoves, or of young pigeons.
Turtle-doves ¡X
These birds were appointed for the poor who could not bring better. And these
birds are preferred before others, partly because they were easily gotten, and
partly because they are fit representations of Christ's chastity, and meekness,
and gentleness, for which these birds are remarkable. The pigeons must be
young, because then they are best; but the turtle-doves are better when they
are grown up, and therefore they are not confined to that age.
Verse 15
[15] And
the priest shall bring it unto the altar, and wring off his head, and burn it
on the altar; and the blood thereof shall be wrung out at the side of the
altar:
His head ¡X
From the rest of the body; as sufficiently appears, because this was to be
burnt by itself, and the body afterwards, Leviticus 1:17. And whereas it is said Leviticus 5:8.
He shall ¡X
wring his head from his neck, but shall not divide it asunder, that is spoken
not of the burnt-offering as here, but of the sin-offering.
Verse 16
[16] And
he shall pluck away his crop with his feathers, and cast it beside the altar on
the east part, by the place of the ashes:
With its feathers ¡X
Or, with its dung or filth, contained in the crop and in the guts.
On the east ¡X Of
the Tabernacle. Here the filth was cast, because this was the remotest place
from the holy of holies, which was in the west-end; to teach us, that impure
things and persons should not presume to approach to God, and that they should
be banished from his presence.
The place of the ashes ¡X Where the ashes fell down and lay, whence they were afterwards removed
without the camp.
Verse 17
[17] And
he shall cleave it with the wings thereof, but shall not divide it asunder: and
the priest shall burn it upon the altar, upon the wood that is upon the fire:
it is a burnt sacrifice, an offering made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the
LORD.
He shall cleave the bird through the whole
length, yet so as not to separate the one side from the other.
A sweet savour unto the Lord ¡X Yet after all, to love God with all our hearts, and to love our
neighbour as ourselves, is better than all burnt-offerings and sacrifices.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on
Leviticus¡n
01 Chapter 1
Verse 1
The Lord called unto Moses, and spake.
The origin and authority of Leviticus
These words evidently contain by necessary implication two
affirmations: first, that the legislation which immediately follows is of
Mosaic origin--¡§The Lord spake unto Moses¡¨; and secondly, that it was
not the product merely of the mind of Moses, but came to him, in the first
instance, as a revelation from Jehovah--¡§Jehovah spake unto Moses.¡¨ And
although it is quite true that the words in this first verse strictly refer
only to that section of the book which immediately follows, yet, inasmuch as
the same or a like formula is used repeatedly before successive sections--in
all, no less than fifty-six times in the twenty-seven chapters--these words may
with perfect fairness be regarded as expressing a claim respecting these two
points, which covers the entire book. The words say nothing, indeed, as to
whether or not Moses wrote every word of this book himself; or whether the Spirit
of God directed and inspired other persons, in Moses¡¦ time or afterwards, to
commit this Mosaic Law to writing. They give us no hint as to when the various
sections which make up the book were combined into their present literary form,
whether by Moses himself, as is the traditional view, or by men of God in a
later day. They simply and only declare the legislation to be of Mosaic origin
and of inspired authority. Only, be it observed, so much as this they do affirm
in the most direct and uncompromising manner. (S. H. Kellogg, D. D.)
God speaking
Leviticus is replete with ¡§the gospel of the grace of God.¡¨ While
it paints the blackness of sin, and the depths to which man has fallen, it
paints likewise, in glowing colours, the amazing love of God, in the full,
rich, and complete provision He has made to meet man¡¦s every need in Christ
Jesus our Lord.
I. ¡§the lord . . .
spake.¡¨ So they are God¡¦s words, not man¡¦s, to which we are called to listen in
this deeply instructive book. Then let us give it attentive hearing (Matthew 11:15). Moses here records the
very words of God, and the Holy Spirit alone can bring to our apprehension His
own teaching (John 14:26; John 16:13).
II. The lord spake
unto moses. God had before spoken unto him, specially on two memorable
occasions.
1. From the burning bush (Exodus 3:1-22.), when He came down in
grace to deliver His people Israel from bondage in Egypt--as now He delivers
from the bondage of sin and Satan--revealing Himself as Jehovah, the
self-existent ¡§I AM,¡¨ able to destroy their enemies, and rescue them (Exodus 6:1-30).
2. From Mount Sinai, after the deliverance from Egypt, when the
people had rashly undertaken (apparently in their own strength) to do all that
the Lord had spoken (Exodus 19:8), God spake the words of His
¡§Holy Law,¡¨ the ¡§fiery law¡¨ (Hebrews 12:18-21; Exodus 19:18-20; Romans 7:12; Deuteronomy 33:2). That law showed the exceeding
sinfulness of sin, but provided no way of salvation for those who disobeyed it,
therefore could only condemn (Romans 7:13; Romans 7:10-11), as ¡§all have sinned¡¨ (Romans 3:23), and ¡§sin is the transgression
of the law¡¨ (1 John 3:4), or ¡§lawlessness¡¨
(R.V.); but in the passage before us--
III. The lord spake
¡§out of the
tabernacle of the congregation¡¨; and this tells, not only of deliverance from
bondage, but of the Lord¡¦s dwelling in the midst of His people, as their Leader and Guide (Exodus 13:21; Exodus 40:38), meeting and communing with
His servant Moses from the
mercy-seat (Exodus 25:22; Exodus 30:6; Numbers 7:89), and establishing a medium
for worship and access.
IV. ¡§god hath
spoken unto us by his son,¡¨ who is the Revealer of the Father (John 1:18). But even now, as we listen
to the words of God out of the Tabernacle, it is God speaking to us by His Son;
for the Tabernacle is a type of Jesus. ¡§The glory of the Lord filled the
Tabernacle¡¨ (Exodus 40:34); Jesus is the ¡§Brightness,¡¨
or outshining of God¡¦s glory (Hebrews 1:3). He is the true Tabernacle,
¡§For in Him dwelleth all the
fulness of the Godhead bodily¡¨ (Colossians 2:9). ¡§God was in Christ
reconciling,¡¨ &c. (2 Corinthians 5:19). Christ is the
manifestation of the Father¡¦s love (1 John 4:9-10). He brings untold
glory to God in the salvation of sinners (John 17:4); and the saved ones He will
take to share His glory hereafter (Luke 9:30-31), as the blessed result of
¡§His decease.¡¨
V. The Lord would
speak by the church, also typified by the Tabernacle. It was ¡§sprinkled . . .
with blood¡¨ (Hebrews 9:21); ¡§the Church of God ¡§was
¡§purchased with His own blood¡¨ (Acts 20:28). The Tabernacle was anointed
with holy oil (Exodus 30:25-26; Exodus 40:9); the Church has ¡§an unction
from the Holy One¡¨ (1 John 2:20). The Lord dwelt in the
Tabernacle (2 Samuel 7:6); the Church is
¡§builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit¡¨ (Ephesians 2:21-22). The Spirit reveals
¡§the deep things of God,¡¨ the things of Christ (1 Corinthians 2:10-12; John 16:14-15); the Church is ¡§the
fulness of Him that filleth all
in all¡¨ (Ephesians 1:23); hence it is God¡¦s purpose that ¡§unto the . .
. might be made known through the Church the manifold wisdom of God¡¨ (Ephesians 3:10, R.V.).
VI. God would speak
through each member of the Church. First He speaks to, and then by them.
He spake to Moses, that he might ¡§speak unto the children of Israel.¡¨ In like
manner He acts now: Have we received blessing to our soul? If so, God would
have us help others (Mark 5:19). (Lady Beaujolois Dent.)
The Tabernacle of the
congregation.
The way of access to God
I. In our approach
to god nothing is left to human invention.
1. There are conditions to our acceptable approach.
2. There are minutely revealed conditions for our approach.
II. For our
rightful approach to him, God has made full and gracious provision.
1. A place for meeting God.
2. A sacrificial basis of acceptance.
3. A mediatorial ministry.
III. By such
arrangements for our acceptable approach, God has laid us under most solemn
obligations to seek him.
1. Shall God wait in vain within the Holy Place, and none draw near?
2. Can sinful man despise the sacrifice of Jesus offered for his
propitiation?
3. With such a Priest within the Holy Place, have we no mediation to
ask, no sins to confess, no offerings to bring? (W. H. Jellie.)
The essential significance of the Tabernacle
The essential significance of the Tabernacle may be inferred from
the names customarily given to it. These names may be divided into three
classes:
1. Those which, like ¡§house,¡¨ ¡§tent,¡¨ ¡§dwelling,¡¨ ¡§dwelling of the
testimony,¡¨ convey the general idea of a place of Divine residence (Exodus 23:19; Exodus 25:9; Exodus 26:36; Exodus 38:21).
2. Those which, like ¡§tent of meeting,¡¨ or ¡§tent-house of meeting,¡¨
express the idea of a meeting-place for God and man (Exodus 27:21; Exodus 39:32).
3. Those which, like ¡§sanctuary,¡¨ draw attention to holiness as an
attribute of the place itself (Exodus 25:8). Now a house where God was,
or was supposed to be, must be a place for worship, and a place for Divine
worship must of necessity be holy ground; thus one fundamental idea lay at the
root of all these appellations, viz., that the Tabernacle was a meeting-place
between Jehovah and His covenant people. There Jehovah was to be thought
peculiarly present, and therefore peculiarly approachable. By the Jew the Lord
God Almighty was not to be sought in woods or fountains or valleys, but in this
house which He had appointed . . . It must be remembered, however, that
approach to Jehovah was conditioned by the terms of the Sinaitic revelation.
Whilst, therefore, the Tabernacle as the dwelling-place of the Most High, was
by the Divine condescension a place where God and the Jew might come together,
that contact was arranged in accordance with the characteristics of the Mosaic
dispensation. The whole structure was a place of meeting where man and God
could congregate; but it was in the court only that the common Israelite could
approach Jehovah, and that by mediation in the person of the appointed priestly
representatives; in the Holy Place, to which the priests alone had access, the
worshippers also approached the throne of Deity by mediation, being admitted,
so to speak, to the anteroom of the Divine audience-chamber by the adoration of
their chief; whilst to the high priest alone, and that after solemn
preparation, was it permitted on one day in the year to pass within the veil,
and gaze unhindered upon that mercy-seat, aglow with gold, where rested the
shadowy cloud of the Shechinah. Further, if the Tabernacle was the appointed
sanctuary where man might
meet with God on the fulfilment of certain conditions, be it noted that the several altars were,
so to speak, the points at which those conditions could be best fulfilled.
Every square inch of the sacred enclosure was a place of meeting between
Jehovah and His people, according to the terms of the Divine revelation: but it
was at the altar of burnt-offering in the court that the non-priestly
worshippers approached most nearly to their God; it was at the golden altar in
the Holy Place that the priests were admitted to closest access; and it was as
he approached most directly the space beneath the outstretched wings of the
cherubim that the high priest drew nearest to the throne of intercession. The
several altars were the shrines, so to speak, of the several sanctuaries, in
which their essence was concentrated, and from which their power radiated. The
essential significance of the peculiar sanctuary of Judaism lay, then, in the
fact that, being the visible dwelling-place of Jehovah, it testified to the
possibility of human approach to God so long as the conditions of the related
laws were observed--these conditions being, so far at least as the theocratic
status of the worshippers was concerned, that the Israelite might come near to
God in the person of His priests in the court, and especially at the altar of
burnt-offering; that in the Holy Place, and especially at the altar of incense, the
priesthood might do homage to Jehovah as enshrined behind the veil; and that in
the Holy of Holies, and especially at the high altar of the mercy-seat, the high
priest might, by careful obedience to the prescribed conditions, occasionally
regard that cloud by which the Almighty condescended to reveal and at the same
time to conceal His presence. (A. Cave, D. D.)
God known in the Tabernacle; or, redemptive relations
The redeemed people of God only know God in the Tabernacle;
and none, who belong not to that Tabernacle on earth, can belong to God in
heaven. All who are ¡§of faith¡¨--all who have fed on the Passover Lamb, belong
to the Tabernacle; but Egypt is the type of the position of all besides. How
important to remember this, when so many efforts are being made to destroy the
distinctions which redemption has constituted, and to speak of man¡¦s natural
condition as having in it the elements of saving relation to God! Men wish to
sweep, as it were, from the earth the Tabernacle and its lessons, and to
sanctify Egypt in the name of God. Israel themselves knew nothing of the
Tabernacle whilst in Egypt: it was a gift reserved for them after they had
entered the wilderness. They were led into the wilderness not merely to learn
its solitude and its sorrows, but to become acquainted with God--His service
and His ways. The holy vessels of the Tabernacle, the inner curtains of blue,
and purple, and scarlet, the priest robed in garments of glory and beauty,
stood in strange contrast with the waste and howling scene around them; yet
faith has still to know the same contrast, whilst learning here respecting
Christ and the various relations in which we stand to God and to Him. The heart
that lingers in Egypt, and refuses, as it were, to enter the wilderness, will
little learn the lessons of the Tabernacle; hut all who recognise how truly
redemption has separated them for ever from that land of nature and of curse,
will find, in the knowledge of the Tabernacle, their daily solace, till the
hour comes for them to enter into the abiding rest. In the Tabernacle we
typically learn the relations of God to His redeemed people. We are there
taught respecting the sacrifice provided for us in Christ--its fulness, its
various relations to God and to ourselves. There we learn the ground on which
we worship and serve Him, meeting Him in the blessings of peace through
redemption. (B. W. Newton.)
God found in His sanctuary
But when the Lord had arranged a tent of meeting with His people,
He spoke to Moses out of the tent of meeting. It is all very well for the man
who is in the wilderness or on the mountain-top, in the line of duty, to listen
for the sound of the Lord¡¦s voice there; but when a man can find his way into
the sanctuary there is where he may expect to be spoken to by the Lord. If he
leaves the sanctuary to wander among the thorn-bushes, or to clamber the
mountain peaks, with the idea that it is in Nature¡¦s temples that he is to find
the God of nature, he will miss a meeting with the covenant-making and covenant-keeping God in
the place of meeting. There is no more likely place to find God than where God
says He may be found; no more hopeful place for meeting God than in God¡¦s
meeting-place. ¡§Thy way, O God, is in the sanctuary!¡¨ Help us to find Thee
there! (H. C. Trumbull.)
The pardoning presence of Jesus
The Tabernacle was a figure of Christ, and was intended to
teach us some important lessons respecting Him. We have in the Tabernacle a
beautiful illustration of one of the precious names of Jesus our Saviour. Just
before He came into our world, the angel Gabriel was sent to Joseph, His
reputed father, to tell him about that wonderful Child that was to be born unto
Mary his wife. And this is what the angel said: ¡§They shall call HIS name
Emmanuel, which being interpreted is, God with us¡¨ (Matthew 1:23). This name is wonderful. It
is full of meaning. But many find it difficult to understand its meaning. And
so God ordered the Tabernacle to be built in the wilderness, that in it He
might dwell among the people, and thus be a figure, or illustration to them of
the way in which Jesus now dwells in the hearts of His people by faith. The
Tabernacle was a definition of this name--Emmanuel. As God was present with the
Israelites in the wilderness, in the Tabernacle, so Jesus is present with His
people in this world. And as we study the different parts of this Tabernacle we
are taught much
that is interesting and profitable concerning the presence of Jesus with His
people. The Tabernacle taught that there was to be pardon connected with His
presence. The brazen altar, or the altar of burnt sacrifice, was the part of
the Tabernacle that taught this lesson. That was the first thing one would see
on entering the court of the Tabernacle. Here the daily sacrifice was offered.
Here the blood of the slain animals was shed, that it might be sprinkled both
on the priests and on the people. No one was allowed to enter the Tabernacle or
to worship God there till he had first been to this brazen altar, and had the
blood of the sacrifice sprinkled upon him. And the great blessing represented
by the shedding and sprinkling of the blood was the pardon of sin. There was no
power in the blood of those animals to put away sin, or to procure pardon. But
it pointed to the blood of Christ, through which alone all pardon comes. And
this is what the Apostle Paul teaches us, when he says that, ¡§without the
shedding of blood there is no remission¡¨ (Hebrews 9:22), or no pardon. If Jesus had
not shed His precious blood there never would have been any pardon for sin. But
that blood was shed. And now there is pardon for all who repent and believe in
Him. His presence with His people is a pardoning presence. ¡§He has power on
earth to forgive sins¡¨ (Matthew 9:6). There is nothing that we
need more than pardon. We are born in sin. We sin every day, and we are always
needing pardon. And it is a blessed thing to know that we can have this pardon
at any time by seeking it in the right way. Jesus is--¡§ready to forgive¡¨ (Psalms 86:5). His promise is that--¡§He
will abundantly pardon¡¨ (Isaiah 55:7). Here is an illustration of
the pardoning power of Jesus. It was told by a sailor who witnessed it, who was
made a Christian by it, and afterwards became a chaplain. ¡§Our vessel lay at
anchor,¡¨ said he, ¡§off the coast of Africa. The yellow fever had broken out on
board, and several of the men had died. It was my duty every morning to go
through that part of the vessel used as a hospital, and see if any of the men
had died during the night. One morning as I was passing through this sick ward,
a poor fellow lying there took hold of me with his cold, clammy hand. I knew
him very well. He was an old shipmate, and one of the wickedest men on board. I
saw in a moment that he had not long to live. ¡¥Oh, Jim,¡¦ he said, ¡¥for God¡¦s
sake, let some one come and read the Bible to me before I die! ¡¥None of the sailors
had a Bible; but at last I found that there was one on board belonging to the
cabin-boy. I told him to get his Bible, and bring it into the sick ward, and
went back there myself. Presently the boy came with a small Bible in his hand.
In the meantime a number of the Kroomen, or native Africans, who were working
on board, gathered round the sick man, not to see him die, but, as one of them
said, ¡¥to see what de good book do for poor Massa Richie.¡¦ I told the boy to
read a chapter. He sat down by the sick man, and, opening at the third chapter
of St. John, he began to read. The poor fellow fixed his eyes on the reader,
and listened most earnestly to every word he spoke. Presently the boy came to
the beautiful words in the sixteenth verse, ¡¥God so loved the world that He
gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish,
but have everlasting life I ¡¥I watched the face of the dying man as these words
were read. I never saw such earnestness and anxiety in any face as were in his.
The boy was going on with the next verse, when the sick man exclaimed, ¡¥Stop my
boy, stop! Bead that verse again, and read it slowly.¡¦ The boy repeated the
verse, and was going on again. But he was interrupted a second and a third time
with the earnest cry, ¡¥Stop, my boy, stop! Read that verse again.¡¦ And when he
had done so a number of times, the dying man said, ¡¥Don¡¦t read any more. That¡¦s
enough.¡¦ And then, as he grew fainter and fainter, we heard him, in a low
voice, repeating to himself those wonderful words, and making his own remarks
on them, ¡¥Whosoever--that means anybody. That means me. Whosoever
believeth. I do believe this. Well, what then? Whosoever believeth shall
not perish. No,
not perish, but have everlasting life. Not perish--not perish--but have
everlasting life.¡¦ These were his last words. With these upon his lips, he
passed away, and entered into heaven--¡¦one pardoned sinner more,¡¦ saved through the precious Mood of
Christ.¡¨ The presence of Jesus which the Tabernacle illustrates is--a pardoning
presence. (Richard Newton, D. D.)
Bring an offering unto the Lord.
The Levitical sacrifices
I. The sacrifices
arising from breach of the covenant--compulsory. Sin and trespass-offerings
(chaps. 4-5). Presumptuous--literally high-handed--sins incurred that
forfeiture(Numbers 15:30; Deuteronomy 17:12). In contrast to these
sins of presumption
1. The sin-offering was for sins of ignorance (chaps. 4., 5.).
2. The trespass-offering (Leviticus 5:14, &c.) differed from
the sin-offering mainly in the character of the sin to be atoned for. It was a
sin calling for ¡§amends¡¨ or compensation.
II. The sacrifices
from within the covenant--voluntary. Omitting the meat-offering (chap. 2.),
which was an adjunct of the other sacrifices, and involved no shedding of
blood, we notice--
1. The burnt-offering. The stated and congregational burnt-offerings
of the day, and week, and year, &c., were compulsory. The occasional
offering, of which we speak here, was voluntary (chap. 1). The burnt-offering
pointed to the entire surrender of a man¡¦s being and life to God. Its
characteristic was its entire consumption arid up-going in a flame to God. It
was equivalent to a prayer, recognising God¡¦s sovereignty, and His claim of service
in all our relations. He who asks, ¡§How can I best serve God?¡¨ will commit his
way to God, and be at peace.
2. The offering vowed: i.e., made as the result of a
preceding vow (Genesis 35:1; 1 Samuel 1:11; 1 Samuel 1:28).
3. The thank-offering, the greatest of the three. The occasions for the
thank-offering were innumerable. Joy as well as sorrow calls to religious
exercise. ¡§In everything give thanks.¡¨ This sacrifice of praise is the one
sacrifice of heaven. (W. Roberts, M. A.)
The giving of the sacrificial laws
I. The very same
voice which proclaimed the commandments on Sinai Is here said to announce the
nature of the sacrifices, and how, when, and by whom they are to be presented.
The unseen King and Lawgiver is here, as everywhere, making known His will.
Those sacrifices which it was supposed were to bend and determine His will
themselves proceeded from it.
II. These words
were spoken to the children of Israel out of the tabernacle. The Tabernacle was
the witness of God¡¦s abiding presence with His people, the pledge that they
were to trust Him, and that He sought intercourse with them.
III. The Tabernacle
is represented as the Tabernacle of the congregation. There, where God dwells,
is the proper home of the whole people; there they may know that they are one.
IV. ¡§Say to the
children of Israel, If any of you bring an offering to the Lord.¡¨ The desire
for such sacrifice is presumed. Everything in the position of the Jew is
awakening in him the sense of gratitude, of obligation, of dependence. He is to
take of the herd and the flock for his offering. The lesson is a double one.
The common things, the most ordinary part of his possessions, are those which
he is to bring; that is one part of his teaching. The animals are the subjects
of man; he is to rule them and make
use of them for his own higher objects; that is another.
V. The victim was
taken to the door of the place at which all israelites had an equal right to
appear; but the man who brought it laid his own hand upon the head of it. He
signified that the act was his, that it expressed thoughts in his mind which no
one else could know of.
VI. The
reconciliation which he seeks he shall find. God will meet him there. God accepts this sign
of his submission. He restores him to his rights in the Divine society.
VII. Now it is that
we first hear of the priests, Aaron¡¦s sons. If there was to be a congregation,
if the individual Israelites were not to have their separate sacrifices and
their separate gods, then there must be a representative of this unity. The
priest was consecrated as a witness to the people of the actual relation which
existed between them and God. (F. D. Maurice, M. A.)
Communion with God by a redeemed people through altar-offerings
I. Altar-offerings
and tabernacle ministries all reach their completion in Christ.
1. In each offering three distinct objects are present: the offering,
the priest, the offerer. Christ is each of and all these: Substitute, Mediator,
Innocent Victim.
2. The difference in the several offerings. Different aspects of
Christ¡¦s offering.
3. The offerer himself also reflects Christ in His diverse aspects.
4. The different grades in the various offerings: bullock, lamb,
dove. Denoting the different estimates and apprehensions formed of Christ by
His people. Some never go beyond the conception of Christ as their Paschal
offering, securing their redemption from Egyptian bondage and death. Others,
however, see Him as their Burnt-offering, wholly devoted to God for them; while
to others He is the passive Lamb, silent and submissive in affliction; and to
others the mourning Dove, gentle and sorrowful in His innocency.
II. Altar-offerings
and tabernacle ministries were designed for Israel¡¦s acceptable communion with
God. The types of Leviticus, in distinction from the types of redemption or
deliverance from doom, give us the work of Christ in its bearing on worship and
communion.
1. They meet the needs of a ransomed people in providing for their
access to God. If they come for consecration they bring the burnt-offerings; if
for grateful acknowledgment of Divine bounty and graciousness, they bring the
food offerings; if for reconciliation, after ignorant misadventure or neglect
of duty or temporary transgression, they bring their peace or
trespass-offering. But they all provide a basis for access to and acceptance
with God.
2. Christ¡¦s work, as connected with the communion of His people, must
be viewed under manifold representations. (A. Jukes.)
Of the differences between the giving of the moral law, and these
ceremonial laws
1. The moral law contained in the Decalogue was delivered immediately
by God Himself, because it concerned all people; the ceremonial law by Moses,
because it specially concerned the Jews.
2. They differed in the manner; for the Decalogue was written in
tables of stone, but these only in a book; to show that they were perpetual,
these not to endure always.
3. The place was different. The moral law was delivered in Mount
Sinai; the ceremonial out of the Tabernacle, to show that it served only for
the Tabernacle, and was to continue no longer.
4. They differ in the time of delivery. The moral law was delivered
at once; the ceremonies were given at divers times, for Moses had not been able
at once to have received them all.
5. There was some difference in respect of the people, in whose
hearing these laws were delivered. The Decalogue was delivered in Mount Sinai
by a loud, thundering voice, that all might hear; but here at the giving of the
ceremonial law only the heads, princes, and elders came together, particularly
the Levites whom the observations of these ceremonies more nearly concerned. (A.
Willet, D. D.)
Essential significance of the Mosaic injunctions
1. At the root of the essential significance of the Mosaic sacrifices
two ideas lie--viz., the Mosaic idea of presentation, and that of atonement.
2. Carrying in mind these two conceptions of presentation and
atonement which the language of the law associates with every animal sacrifice,
the names and express statements concerning each variety of such sacrifice will
enable us to add their distinguishing to their general characteristics.
(a) The sin-offerings, as their name implies, were offerings for sin.
They may be divided into three classes: those which were presented in processes
of purification; those which had to do with the expiation of precise sins,
whether committed in church or state, by priest or ruler or common Israelite;
and those which had to do with the expiation of undefined sins.
(b) The trespass-offerings were presented in atonement for sins
against God or against man which admitted of compensation. There was in every
trespass-offering the idea of retribution.
3. Without minutely investigating the essential significance of the
various holy days of the Jewish calendar, it is sufficient to call to mind
that, amongst other uses, these holy days were days for ¡§holy convocation.¡¨
They were opportunities specially arranged for a more regular and continuous
attendance upon the means of grace provided by the Tabernacle and its services.
(A. Cave, D. D.)
The Jewish calendar of sacrifice
How laborious, protracted, and intricate a system was this Mosaic
worship by presentation! Yet how imposing! No religious ritual of ancient or
modern times has appealed more forcibly to the eye or the imagination. It was a
stirring and suggestive sight, beyond all question, which greeted such an one
as a Levite, as he stood in early morning within the court of the Tabernacle
ready to perform those more menial offices to which he had been appointed.
Around him ran the white curtains of the sacred enclosure, relieved at regular
intervals by the dull gold of the copper uprights and the gleam of the silver
capitals. A few paces from where he watches, the more favoured members of his
tribe, bearded, clad in their priestly robes of white and their parti-coloured
girdles, are standing barefoot near the altar of burnt-offering, on the hearth
of which the remnants of last night¡¦s sacrifice are still burning, or possibly
purifying themselves at the laver in preparation for their sacred duties. The
lamb for the morning sacrifice is slain and burnt before his eyes; and a few
moments afterwards, the high priest, in his official robes of white and blue,
¡§Holiness to the Lord¡¨ glistening in gold upon his fair mitre, the jewelled
breastplate flashing in the sun, is passing to the Holy Place, the golden bells
and pomegranates at the fringe of his tunic ringing as he goes, Perhaps, as
holy hands draw aside the curtain of the sanctuary, a glimpse is caught of the
consecrated space within, lit by the golden candlestick and hazy with incense from
the golden altar; or, if the interior is sealed, there nevertheless is the tent
of Jehovah, its gorgeous parti-coloured curtain in full view, and its immediate
covering of blue and gold and scarlet and purple worked upon white, with
cherubim, just visible beneath the outer awnings; and the onlooker knew that
within, not far from the ark and the mercy-seat and the Shechinah, which were
hidden behind the veil, the high priest was performing Divine service, and
meeting with Jehovah under exceptional privileges. As private members of the
chosen race come streaming in with their offerings, the more active duties of
the day begin. At one time, one who has inadvertently broken some commandment
of the law is watching the blood of the sin-offering, which he has just brought
and killed with his own hand, as it is smeared in atonement upon the horns of
the altar; at another, the priest is listening over the head of a ram to a
confession of fraud, and computing the amount of monetary indemnity to be paid.
Now a Hebrew woman, but recently a mother, is modestly presenting herself with
her offering of pigeons; and now the high priest is passing through the gate of
the court, attended by a Levite carrying birds and scarlet wool and hyssop--he
has been summoned without the camp to examine a restored leper. Anon an
application is made for the means of purifying some tent where the dead is
lying. Here, in joyful recognition of the Divine favour, a solitary worshipper
is presenting a burnt-offering; there, recumbent upon the holy soil, a whole
family are merrily partaking of the remains of a peace-offering. At one hour a
householder is compounding for the property which he has voluntarily vowed unto
the Lord; the next, a Nazarite, with unshorn hair and beard, is presenting the
prescribed sacrifices for release from his vow. Possibly, as the day advances,
a consecration to the priesthood is impressively performed. And these and other
ceremonies are maintained the whole year round. As the Jewish calendar ran its
course in those times, exceptional, alas I when the religious sense of the
nation was quick and its practice scrupulous, it was as if one long bleat, one
incessant lowing, filled the air; it was as if one long, continuous stream of
sacrificial blood choked the runnels of the court. The year opened with the
evening sacrifice and the new moon celebration, the expiring flames of which
were fed next day by the ordinary morning sacrifice and by a round of
individual presentations, which must sometimes have known no interruption until
the smoke of the evening sacrifice again rose into the air and another day
began. Day after day the customary ceremonial was repeated, till the Sabbath
twilight fell and double sacrifices were slaughtered. On the fourteenth day of
the first month came the solemn celebration of the Passover, when in every
home, with devout recollections and enthusiastic hopes, a Paschal lamb was
spread upon the board. Then followed the seven days of Unleavened Bread, with
their customary and holy-day ritual, bringing at length, after the repeated
diurnal, sabbatic, and mensual formalities, the fuller slaughter of Pentecost.
Day after day, Sabbath after Sabbath, new moon after new moon, the authorised
worship was again continued, until there came a break to the monotony once more
on the first day of the seventh month in the Feast of Trumpets, and on the
tenth day of the same month in the awful and grave procedure of the Day of
Atonement, followed after five days¡¦ interval by the singular and more grateful
worship of the Feast of Tabernacles. The year was afterwards brought to a close
by the common series of daily, weekly, and monthly effusions of blood. (A.
Caves, D. D.)
Divers sacrifices, but one Christ
1. There were many sorts of sacrifices and yet but one Christ to be signified
by them all. This did the Lord in great mercy and wisdom, that so His people,
fully busied and pleased with such variety, might have neither cause nor
leisure to look unto the wicked idolatries of the heathens, according to the
several charges given them of God, ¡§To beware lest they were taken in a snare,
to ask after their gods saying, How did these nations serve their gods, that I
may do so likewise?¡¨ &c. Seeing all the abomination that God hateth, they
did unto their gods, burning both their sons and daughters with fire to their
gods, and the Lord would have them do only what He commanded, putting nothing
unto it, neither taking anything from it.
2. Although Christ be but one, and His sacrifice but one, yet great
is the fruit, and many mercies flow from Him and His death unto us. By Him our
sins are washed out, by Him God¡¦s wrath against us is appeased, by Him we are
adopted and taken for the sons of God and fellow-heirs with Him, by Him we are
justified and endued with the Holy Ghost, enabled thereby to die unto sin and
to live unto righteousness, walking in His holy commandments with comfort, and
longing for our deliverance out of this Vale of misery, ¡§That we may be clothed
with our house, which is from heaven,¡¨ &c. Divers sorts of sacrifices, therefore,
were appointed, to note, by that variety, the variety of these fruits of Christ
to all believers, though He be but one.
3. There were many sorts of sacrifices, that so plainly the Church
might see that these kind of sacrifices were not the true sacrifices for sins.
For if any one had been able to take away sin the others had been in vain added
(see Hebrews 10:1). (Bp. Babington.)
The need of varied sacrifices
The commencing chapters of Leviticus present to us five different
aspects of the sacrificial service of Christ, varied according to the variety
of those needs in us which the grace of the One Sacrifice is designed to meet.
The want of that full and unreserved devotedness which is due on our part to
God, and claimed by Him, but which
is by us never rendered, is met by that abounding grace which has appointed
another, perfect in devotedness and self-renunciation, to be a burnt-offering
in our room. The manifold deficiences in our personal characters--the presence
in them of so much that should be absent, and the absence of so much that
should be present, is met by the presentation of Him for us, the perfectness of
whose character is here typified by the excellency of the meat-offering. The
condition of our nature which is enmity against God, because sin, essential
sin, dwells in it, is met by the efficacy of the peace sacrifice, whereby,
notwithstanding the enmity of our nature, peace with the Holy One becomes our
portion. Sin, even when committed in such intensity of blindness, as that we
understand not the heinousness of that which we are doing, and perhaps mistake it for good--such
sin is met by the sin-offering; or if it be committed knowingly, not under the
blindness of ignorance, but in the wilfulness of a heart that consciously
refuses to be restrained, it is met by the grace of the trespass-offering. Such
are the aspects under which the perfectness of the One Sacrifice is presented
to us in the commencing chapters of Leviticus. The aspects are various, but the
sacrifice is one; just as the colours of the rainbow may, for instruction sake,
be presented to us separately, but the rainbow which they unitedly constitute
is one. After we have learned in distinctness, we combine in unity. Nor is
there any division of the perfectness of the One Sacrifice in its application
to them that believe. From the first moment we believe, the perfectness of
Christ¡¦s sacrifice is in all its totality ours. We may not, perhaps, either
appreciate or understand all that is typified by these various offerings, yet
the united value of them all is reckoned to us by God. (B. W. Newton.)
Origin of sacrifices
It is a little surprising, upon first view, that God should
appoint or sanction rites and services of worship, the observance of which
would make His sanctuary look so much like a solemn slaughter-house. But where
sin is stayed and quenched, there must be blood. Blood is the substance of
life; and as sin involves the forfeiture of life,! ¡§without shedding of blood
there is no remission.¡¨ Hence ¡§almost all things are by the law purged with
blood.¡¨ These bloody rites, however, did not originate with ¡§the law.¡¨ It is a
question with learned men how they did originate. Some refer them to some
primitive enactment of God, and others regard them as the natural outgrowth of
man¡¦s consciousness of sin, and his desire to appease the Divine anger felt to
attend upon it. It is certain that they are nearly as old as man. They date
back to Noah, to Abel, to Adam Himself. They have been found among nearly all
nations. And when God gave commandment to Moses concerning them, they already
formed a part of the common religion of the world. They are not here spoken of
as a new institution, now for the first time introduced, but are referred to
rather as an ancient and well-known element of man¡¦s worship, to which the
Divine Legislator meant only to affix a more specific ritual. That offerings
would, and ought to be made, seems to be taken for granted, whilst these new commands
relate only to the manner in which they were to be made. ¡§If,¡¨ that is, in the
ordinary course of things already familiar, or, ¡§when any man of you shall
bring an offering to the Lord, ye shall bring¡¨ so and so. There is a worship,
at least a disposition to worship, which has descended upon all serious men
from the very beginning. There is a theology even in Nature, and a faculty of
worship or religiousness which is somehow natural unto man. Revelation does not
deny this, but takes it for granted, and often appeals to it, and proceeds upon
it as its original
groundwork. It does not propose to engraft a religious department on man¡¦s
constitution, but recognises such a department as already in existence, and
proposes merely to assist, and guide, and guard it against falsehood, idolatry,
and superstition. ¡§Nature, left to herself, and unassisted by Divine teachings,
certainly wanders into mazes of perplexity, involves herself in error and
blindness, and becomes the victim of folly, full of all sorts of superstition.¡¨
So said the knowing leader of the glorious Reformation; and all the records of
time attest the truth of his statement. Man needs to hear a voice from
heaven--a supernatural word--to guide him successfully to the true God, and to
the right worship of that God. Nature may dispose him to make offerings, and a
common religious consciousness may approve and sanction them; but it yet
remains for God to say what sort of offerings are proper, and how they are to be
acceptably presented. (J. A. Seiss, D. D.)
Redemption by blood offensive to some minds
Redemption by blood is the great theme of the Scriptures, from
beginning to end. It ever and again comes up. God will not permit it to remain
out of sight for a single chapter. No matter what the figure is, it is made
somehow to embrace this. It is repeated at every turn. It stands out boldly at
every step. Every imaginable method is taken to write it deep in the soul, to
engrave it upon the conscience, to fill the whole mind with it, and to make it
the grand centre of all religious thought and belief. It seems greatly to
disgust and offend many that we have so much to say about blood. Some
verily seem to think, and some sceptics have argued, that the Bible cannot be
what it claims to be, because it represents God as appointing and taking
pleasure in such sanguinary arrangements and services. But observe the glaring
inconsistency of such people in shrinking with abhorrence from the bloody
nature of the system which God has arranged for our salvation, whilst they are
yet great admirers of the taste and culture of the men and times we read of in
the classics. They are charmed with the ancient Greeks and Romans, and are ever
putting them forward as our exemplars and guides; and cannot get done talking
about their glorious civilisation; just as if the religion of Greece and Rome
had no sanguinary rites, or involved no dealing in bloody sacrifices. Never was
there a religious system on earth more bloody in its observances, or more
shocking in its sacrificial ritual, than those in vogue among these very Greeks
and Romans, sanctioned and supported by their laws, and advocated by their
greatest men. Their altars flowed, not only with the blood of bulls and goats
and various unclean and disgusting creatures, but with the blood of human
beings, who were annually slain and offered up in religious worship to
propitiate their sanguinary deities. In the worship of Zeus Lycaeus in Arcadia,
human sacrifices were regularly offered for hundreds of years, down to the time
of the Roman Emperors. In Leucas, a man was every year put to death at the high
festival of Apollo. When their great generals went out to war, they first
offered up human victims to gain the assistance of their divinities. Before the
battle of Salamis, Themistocles sacrificed three Persians to Dionysius. The
city of Athens--the very ¡§eye of Greece¡¨--had an annual festival in honour of
the Delian Apollo, at which two persons were every year put to death, the one
for the men and the other for the women, of that renowned metropolis. The neck
of the one who died for the men was surrounded with a garland of black figs,
and the neck of the other with a garland of white figs, and both were beaten
with rods of fig-wood as they were led forth to a place where they were burned alive,
and their ashes cast into the air and sea. And Grecian story tells of many
parents, who laid violent hands upon their children, and offered them up as
bloody sacrifices to their gods. Nor was it much different with the Romans. In
their earlier history it was the custom, under certain contingencies, to
sacrifice to their deities everything born of man or beast between the first
day of March and the last day of April. Even in the latest period of the Roman
Republic, men were sacrificed to Mars in the Campus Martius, by priests of
state, and their heads stuck up at the Regia. I mention these things, not to
vindicate the Levitical rites, of which they were monstrous and wicked
distortions and perversions, but to show the miserable inconsistency of those sceptical
people who denounce the atoning regulations of the Scriptures, and hold up the
taste and ideas of the Greeks and Romans as the true models of what is
beautiful, refined, and elevated. I merely wish to have you know and feel, that
if the Hebrew ritual is to be regarded as offensive to a lofty aesthetic taste,
the ritual of the most polished nations of antiquity was still more offensive
and abhorrent in the utmost degree; and that if the religion of the Scriptures
cannot be received as of God by reason of its connection with scenes of blood,
there is no system of religion upon earth, ancient or modern, that can be so
received; because all others have been equally and still more sanguinary in
their services, and that, too, without any of the deep and affecting moral
meaning of this. And I freely confess that I see nothing in the doctrine of
salvation by blood, or in the Jewish rites, which typified it with so much
strength and clearness, either to offend my taste, to shock my reason, or the
least to interfere with the readiest and fullest acceptation of the Scriptures
as the true revelation of Almighty God. True, I behold in it much that humbles
my pride--that tells me I am a very wicked sinner--that proclaims my native
condition far removed from what God¡¦s law requires--that assures me I am undone
as regards my own strength--and that holds out death and eternal burning as
what I deserve. But all this accords with my conscience, and is re-echoed in
the deepest convictions of my soul. And with it all, it presents to me a plan
of redemption so out of the line of man¡¦s thoughts, so fitted to my felt wants,
and so completely attested by its moral efficacy, that it is itself a mighty
demonstration to my mind of its Divine original. The very fact that the Bible has
but one great subject running through all its histories and prophecies,
ordinances and types, epistles and psalms--that salvation by blood is the focal
point in which all its various lines of light converge--is to me one of the
strongest evidences that it has come from God. When I consider that its writers
lived hundreds and thousands of years apart, that they were found in all walks
of life, and that they wrote in languages foreign to each other, I can find no
way to account for the unity which pervades it but by admitting that these
various writers were all moved and guided by the same high intelligence and
inspired of God. (J. A. Seiss, D. D.)
The ancient ritual
Here is a singular conjunction of the legal and the voluntary.
Jehovah fixes the particulars, but the man himself decides on the act of
sacrificial worship. Observe how the Lord works from the opposite point from
which the first of the Ten Commandments was given. There God called for the
worship: here He leaves the man to offer the worship and proceeds to tell him
how. The preparation of the heart and the answer of the tongue are from God. No
man was at liberty in the ancient Church determine his own terms of approach to
God. The throne must be approached in the appointed way. We are not living in
an era of religious licentiousness. There is a genius of worship, there is a
method of coming before God. God does not ask us to conceive or suggest methods
of worship. He Himself meets us with His time-bill and His terms of spiritual
commerce. God is in heaven and we are upon the earth; therefore should our
words be few. The law of approach to the Divine throne is unchanged. The very
first condition of worship is obedience. Obedience is better than sacrifice,
and is so because it is the end of sacrifice. But see how, under the Levitical
ritual, the worshipper was trained to obedience. Mark the exasperating
minuteness of the law. Nothing was left to haphazard. The worship was to be
offered through mediation. The priestly element pervades the universe; it is
the mystery of life and service. The service was voluntary. Notice the
expression, ¡§He shall offer it of his own voluntary will.¡¨ The voluntariness
gives the value to the worship. We can only pray with the heart. There is in
this great ritual a wonderful mixing of free will and Divine ordination; the
voluntary and the unchangeable; the human action and the Divine decree. We
cannot understand it; if we are able to understand it then it is no larger than
our understanding: so God becomes a measurable God, merely the shadow of human
wit, a God that cannot be worshipped. It is where our understanding fails or
rises into a new wealth of faith, that we find the only altar at which we can
bow, with all our powers, where we can utter with enthusiasm all our hopes and
desires. So we come with our sacrifice and offering, whatever it may be, and
having laid it on the altar, we can follow it no further--free as the air up to
a given point, but after that bounded and fixed and watched and regulated--a
mystery that can never be solved, and that can never be chased out of a
universe in which the infinite and finite confer. The worship of the ancient
Church was no mere expression of sentiment. It was a most practical worship,
not a sentimental exercise; it was a confession and an expiation--in a word, an
atonement. This fact explains all. Take the word ¡§atonement¡¨ out of Christian
theology, and Christian theology has no centre, no circumference, no life, no
meaning, no virtue. If we could read this Book of Leviticus through at one
sitting the result might be expressed in some such words as these--¡§Thank God we
have got rid of this infinite labour; thank God this is not in the Christian
service; thank God we are Christians and not Jews.¡¨ Let not our rejoicing be
the expression of selfishness or folly. It is true we have escaped the bondage
of the letter, but only to enter into the larger and sweeter bondage of the
spirit. The Jew gave his bullock or his goat, his turtledove or his young
pigeon; but now each man has to give himself. We now buy ourselves off with
gold. Well may the apostle exhort us, saying, ¡§I beseech you, therefore,
brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living
sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service.¡¨ Wonderful
is the law which lays its claim upon the ransomed soul--none of us liveth to
himself, and no man dieth to himself; whether we live, we live unto the Lord;
whether we die, we die unto the Lord; living or dying we are the Lord¡¦s. We
have escaped measurable taxation, but we have come under the bond of
immeasurable love. We have escaped the letter, we have been brought under the
dominion of the spirit. Let us be careful, therefore, how we congratulate
ourselves on having escaped the goat-offering and heifer-offering, and
turtledove and young pigeon sacrifices; how we have been brought away from the
technicality and poverty of the letter into the still further deeper poverty of
selfishness. As Christians we have nothing that is our own; not a moment of
time is ours; not a pulse that throbs in us, not a hair of our head, not a coin
in the coffer belongs to us. This is the severe demand of love. Who can rise to
the pitch of that self-sacrifice? (J. Parker, D. D.)
God¡¦s way out of sin
What an important part the word ¡§if¡¨ plays in the opening chapters
of Leviticus! At first we did not seem to see it, but by frequent repetition it
urges itself upon our notice as a term of vital importance in the argument of
the subject, whatever that subject may be. We cannot enter into the subject
except through the gate if. It is God¡¦s word. Through the gate if we
enter into the temple of obedience. Having crossed the threshold, then law
begins to operate. After the if comes the discipline--the sweet, but often
painful necessity. Observe the balance of operation: Man must reply; having
replied, either in one form or the other, necessary consequences follow. It is
so in all life. There is no exception in what is known as the religious
consciousness and activity. The great sea says in its wild waves, ¡§If ye will
walk on me and become citizens of this wilderness of water, then yon must
submit to the law of the country; you must fall into the rhythm of the
universe; you must build your wooden houses or your iron habitations according
to laws old as God; you need not come upon my waters; I do not ask you to come;
when you come I will obliterate your footprints so that no man may ever know
that you have crossed me; but if you come you must obey.¡¨ We have, therefore,
no liberty after a certain time. This is the law of all life. But we never give
up our liberty in response to the laws of the universe without our surrender
being compensated after God¡¦s measure. The law gave great choice of offering.
It said, ¡§If you bring a burnt-offering, bring it of the herd if you have one.
If you have not a herd of cattle, bring it of the flocks; bring it of the flock
of the sheep; but if you are too poor to have a flock of sheep, bring a goat
from the flock of the goats; only in all cases this condition must be
permanent: whatever you offer must be without blemish. But if you have no
cattle, no sheep, no goats, then bring it of the fowls: bring turtledoves or
young pigeons; the air is full of them, and the poorest man can take them.¡¨ Is
that not mercy twice blessed? We are not all masters of cattle that browse upon
the green hills; nor are we all flock-masters, and amongst flockmasters there
are rich and poor. God says, ¡§Let your offering be according to your
circumstances, only without blemish, and it shall be accepted.¡¨ There is no
short and easy method with sin. Men have sought by excess of the very thing
itself to destroy sin, and if they could have gone forward from indulgence to
indulgence, from insanity to insanity, they might have escaped the remorse of
this world; but God has so constituted the universe that men have moments of
sobriety, times of mental and moral reaction, periods in which they see
themselves and their destiny with an appalling vividness, and in those hours it
is found that the sin which began the mischief is still there. There is no way
out of it but God¡¦s way. (J. Parker, D. D.)
What is our offering to the Lord?
¡§If any man of you bring an offering unto the Lord.¡¨ And is there
any man of you who will not bring an offering unto the Lord? Have you brought
an offering to Him? When? What was it? You don¡¦t mean to call that trifle that
you dropped into the contribution-box because you must keep up appearances in
church, you know; you don¡¦t mean to call that your offering unto the Lord! You don¡¦t
mean to call your amount paid for pew-rent--so that you could have your own
independent sittings, and that in the very best place you could get for your
money; you don¡¦t mean to call that your offering to the Lord! Come, now, what
has been your offering unto the Lord--an offering that you could fairly point
the Lord to, in comparison with what He has given to you, and could say,
¡§There, Lord, that is my offering to Thee¡¨? ¡§If any man of you bring an
offering unto the Lord¡¨--well, what is the offering? Let it be fairly
recognised. God wants to know what it is. Can you tell Him? (H. C. Trumbull.)
Sacrifice the one great idea of the Bible
As in Beethoven¡¦s matchless music there runs one idea, worked out
through all the changes
of measure and of key, now almost hidden, now breaking out in rich, natural
melody, whispered in the treble, murmured in the bass, dimly suggested in the
prelude, but growing clearer and clearer as the work proceeds, winding
gradually back until it ends in the keys in which it began, and closes in
triumphant harmony: so throughout the whole Bible there runs one great idea:
man¡¦s ruin by sin, and his
redemption by grace; in a word, Jesus Christ the Saviour. This runs through the
Old Testament, that prelude to the New; dimly promised at the Fall, and more
clearly to Abraham; typified in the ceremonies of the law; all the events of
sacred history paving the way for His coming; the great idea growing clearer
and clearer as the time drew on. Then the full harmony broke out in the song of
the angels, ¡§Glory to God in the highest; on earth peace, goodwill towards
men.¡¨ (H. W. Beecher.)
The ceremonies of the law pointed to Christ
The earth bringeth forth fruit of itself, but first the blade,
then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear (Mark 4:28). So did the blade or herb
spring out of the law of nature; the ear or culm, in the law written; but we
have in the gospel the pure grain or full corn, which is Christ Jesus. Therefore,
as the stalk or ear is of necessary use till the corn be ripe, but the corn
being ripe we no longer use the chaff with it, so till Christ was exhibited in
the flesh, which lay hidden in the blade and spike of the law, the ceremonies
had their use; but since that by His death and passion this pure wheat is
thrashed and winnowed, and by His ascension laid up in the garner of heaven,
they are of no further use (Ephesians 2:15). The Jews were taught by
those shadows
that the body should come, and we know by the same shadows that the body is
come; the arrow moveth, whilst it flies at the mark, but having hit the mark,
resteth in it. (J. Spencer.)
The completed design
Bartholdi¡¦s gigantic statue of ¡§Liberty Enlightening the World,¡¨
occupies a fine position on Bedloes Island, which commands the approach to New York
Harbour. It holds up a torch, which is to be lit at night by electric light.
The statue was cast in portions in Paris. The separate pieces were very
different in appearance, and, taken apart, of uncouth shape. It was only when
all were brought together, each in its right place, that the complete design
was apparent. Then the omission of any one would have left the work imperfect.
In this it was an emblem of Holy Scripture. We do not always see the object of
different portions, nevertheless each has its place, and the whole is a
magnificent statue of Jesus Christ. (The Freeman.)
Outlines of Christ
I was looking one day at some of the paintings of the late
American artist, Mr. Kensett. I saw some pictures that were just faint
outlines; in some places you would see only the branches of a tree and no
trunk, and in another case the trunk and no branches. He had not finished the work.
It would have taken him days, and months, perhaps, to have completed it. Well,
my friend, in this world we get only the faintest outlines of what Christ is. (T.
De Witt Talmage.)
If his offering be a burnt sacrifice.
The burnt-offering
I. In its contrast
to the other offerings.
1. It was ¡§a sweet savour¡¨ offering; as such in perfect contrast with
the sin-offerings. We are not here, therefore, to consider Christ as the
sin-bearer, but as the man in perfectness meeting God in holiness. The thought
here is not, ¡§God hath made Him to be sin for us,¡¨ but rather, ¡§He loved us,
and gave Himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God of a sweet-smelling
savour.¡¨ Jesus, both in the burnt-offering and sin-offering, stood as our
representative. When He obeyed, He obeyed ¡§for us¡¨: when He suffered, He
suffered ¡§for us.¡¨ But in the burnt-offering He appears for us, not as our
sin-bearer, but as man offering to God something which is most precious to Him.
We have here what we may in vain search for elsewhere: man giving to God what
truly satisfies Him. We too often omit this thought when thinking of the
offering of Jesus. We think of His death, but little of His life. We look but
little into His ways. Yet it is His ways throughout His pilgrimage, even to the
way He laid down His life, which God so delights in. Our views are so selfish
and meagre. If we are saved, we seek no further. God, however, puts the
burnt-offering first: for this was peculiarly His portion in Jesus. And just in
proportion as a believer grows in grace, we shall find him turning
intelligently to the Gospels; from them adding to the knowledge he has of the
work of Jesus, greater knowledge of His ways and person; with earnest desire to
know more of the Lord Himself, and how in all things He was ¡§a sweet savour to
Jehovah.¡¨
2. But the burnt-offering was not only ¡§a sweet savour¡¨; it was also
an offering ¡§for acceptance¡¨--that is, it was offered to God to secure the
acceptance of the offerer. So we read--I give the more correct translation--¡§he
shall offer it for his acceptance.¡¨ To understand this, we must recur for a
moment to the position Christ occupied as offerer. He stood for man as man
under the law, and, as under law, His acceptance depended on His perfectness.
God had made man upright; but he had sought out many inventions. One
dispensation after another had tried whether, under any circumstances, man
could render himself acceptable to God. But age after age passed away: no son
of Adam was found who could meet God¡¦s standard. The law was man¡¦s last trial,
whether, with a revelation of God¡¦s mind, he could or would obey it. But this
trial, like the others, ended in failure: ¡§there was none righteous, no, not
one.¡¨ How, then, was man to be reconciled to God? How could he be brought to
meet God¡¦s requirements? One way yet remained, and the Son of God accepted it.
¡§He took not on
Him the nature of angels; but He took the seed of Abraham¡¨; and in His person,
once and for ever, man was reconciled to God. In effecting this, Jesus, as
man¡¦s representative, took man¡¦s place, where He found, man, under law; and
there, in obedience to the law, He offered, ¡§for His acceptance.¡¨
3. The third point peculiar to the burnt-offering was, that a life
was offered on the altar (Leviticus 1:5), in this particular
differing from the meat-offering. Life was that part in creation which from the
beginning God claimed as His. As such--as being His claim on His creatures--it
stands as an emblem for what we owe Him. What we owe to God is our duty to Him.
And this, I doubt not, is the thought here intended. Of course, the offering
here, as elsewhere, is the body of Jesus, that body which He took, and then
gave for us: but in giving God a life, in contradistinction to offering Him
corn or frankincense, the peculiar thought is the fulfilment of the first table
of he Decalogue. Thus the life yielded is man¡¦s duty to God, and man here is
seen perfectly giving it. Am I asked what man ever thus offered? I answer, None
but One--¡§the man Christ Jesus.¡¨ He alone of all the sons of Adam in
perfectness accomplished all man¡¦s duty to Godward; He in His own blessed and
perfect righteousness met every claim God could make upon Him.
4. The fourth and last feature peculiar to
the burnt-offering is, that it was wholly burnt on the altar. In this
particular the burnt-offering differed from the meat and peace-offerings, in
which a part only was burnt with fire; nor did it differ less from those
offerings for sin, which, though wholly burnt, were not burnt upon the altar.
The import of this distinction is manifest, and in exact keeping with the
character of the offering. Man¡¦s duty to God is not the giving up of one
faculty, but the entire surrender of all. So Christ sums up the First
Commandment--all the mind, all the soul, all the affections. ¡§Thou shalt love
the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy
mind.¡¨ I cannot doubt that the type refers to this in speaking so particularly
of the parts of the burnt-offering; for ¡§the head,¡¨ ¡§the fat,¡¨ ¡§the legs,¡¨ ¡§the
inwards,¡¨ are all distinctly enumerated. ¡§The head¡¨ is the well-known emblem of
the thoughts; ¡§the legs¡¨ the emblem of the walk; and ¡§the inwards¡¨ the constant
and familiar symbol of the feelings and affections of the heart. The meaning of
¡§the fat¡¨ may not be quite so obvious, though here also Scripture helps us to
the solution (Psalms 17:10; Psalms 92:14; Psalms 119:70; Deuteronomy 32:15). It represents the
energy not of one limb or faculty, but the general health and vigour of the
whole. In Jesus these were all surrendered, and all without spot or blemish.
II. Its varieties,
that is, the different measures of apprehension with which it may be seen.
There were, then, three grades in the burnt-offering. It might be ¡§of the
herd,¡¨ or ¡§of the flock,¡¨ or ¡§of fowls.¡¨ These different grades gave rise to
several varieties in the offering, the import of which we shall now consider.
1. The first difference is in the animal offered. We have in the
first grade, ¡§a
bullock¡¨; in the second, ¡§a lamb¡¨; in the third, ¡§a turtledove.¡¨ Each of these
animals, from their well-known character, presents us with a different thought
respecting the offering. The bullock, ¡§strong to labour¡¨--for ¡§great increase
is by the strength of the ox¡¨--suggests at once the thought of service, of
patient, untiring labour. In the lamb we have another picture presented to us;
here the thought is passive submission without a murmur; for the lamb is the figure constantly
chosen to represent the submissive,
uncomplaining character of Christ¡¦s sufferings. The turtledove is different
from either of these, and gives again another view of the offering of Jesus. In
this class the thought of labour is lost sight of: the unmurmuring submission,
too, of the lamb is wanting: the thought is rather simply one of mourning
innocence; as it is written, ¡§We mourn like doves¡¨; and again, ¡§Be harmless as
doves.¡¨ It may be asked, What do we learn by ¡§the goat,¡¨ which was sometimes
offered in one of the lower grades of the burnt-offering? If I mistake not,
this emblem suggests a thought of the sin-offering, reminding us of Christ¡¦s
offering as scape-goat.
2. A second distinction between the different grades of the
burnt-offering is, that while in the first grade the parts are discriminated,
in the last this peculiarity is omitted: the bird was killed, but not divided. In the case of the
bullock and the lamb, it is noticed that the offering is ¡§cut into its pieces.¡¨
Here ¡§the legs, the head, the fat, the inwards,¡¨ are all distinctly noticed and
enumerated. In the last case--that of the turtledove--it is otherwise: ¡§he
shall not divide it asunder.¡¨ ¡§The legs, the head, the inwards,¡¨ as we have
already seen, represent the walk, the thoughts, the feelings of Jesus. In the
first grade these are all apprehended: they are all lost sight of in the last.
These grades represent, as I have said, measures of apprehension. Where the
measure of spiritual apprehension is large, a saint will see the offering
dissected: his eyes will be turning constantly to see the walk, the mind, the
affections of Jesus. He will now observe, what once he regarded not, how Jesus
walked, how He thought, what were His feelings. On the other hand, where Jesus
is but little apprehended all the details of His walk and feelings will be
unseen.
3. A third distinction between the different grades of the
burnt-offering is, that while in the first grade the offerer is seen to lay his
hand on the offering, in the other grades this act is not observed. Not a few
see Christ as offering for us without fully realising that His offering was
Himself. They see that He gave up this thing or that; that He gave much for us,
and that what He gave was most precious. But they do not really see that ¡§He
gave Himself,¡¨ that His own blessed person was what He offered. This is clearly
seen in the first grade of the burnt-offering. It is lost sight of, or
unobserved, in the other grades.
4. A fourth distinction, closely allied with the one just considered,
is, that in the first class the offerer is seen to kill the victim--in the last
the priest kills it. In fact, in the last class, the priest does nearly everything,
the offerer is scarcely seen at all; whereas in the first class it is just the
reverse, there are many particulars noted of theofferer. The import of this is
at once obvious, when we see the distinction between the priest and offerer.
The offerer, as I have already observed, sets Christ before us in His person.
The priest represents Him in His official character, as the appointed Mediator
between God and man. Where the identity between the offerer and offering is
apprehended, the offerer is seen to kill the offering; that is, Christ is seen
in His person, of His own will laying down His life; as it is written--¡§No man
taketh it from me, but I lay it down of Myself.¡¨ On the contrary, where the
identity of the offering and offerer is unseen or disregarded, the priest is
seen to kill the victim, that is, Christ¡¦s death is seen as the work of the
Mediator; and is connected with His official character as Priest, rather than with His person as the
willing offerer. So with believers, where there is only a limited measure of
apprehension, little is known of Christ save His office as Mediator: He
Himself, His blessed person, is overlooked or but little seen. Such are the
chief varieties of the burnt-offering: how full are they of instruction to the
believer; how clearly do they mark the different apprehensions among saints
respecting the work and person of our Lord! Some, however--I speak of
believers--are content to know nothing of this; and they would rather not be
told their ignorance. They can see but one truth--the Paschal lamb--and
anything further they neither care nor wish for. (A. Jukes.)
The burnt-offering
I. Characteristics.
1. Perfect.
2. Voluntary.
3. Vicarious.
4. Slain by offerer himself.
5. Blood sprinkled.
6. Wholly consumed.
II. Features which
distinguish it from the sin-offering.
1. Nothing is said of the voluntary character of the sin-offering.
Does not this throw light on the agony and prayer of Christ in Gethsemane?
2. Only parts of the sin-offering were to be burnt on the altar of
burnt-offering (Hebrews 4:11-12; Hebrews 13:11-13; 2 Corinthians 5:21). This explains
the suffering of Christ and His cry on the cross--¡§Eloi,¡¨ &c.
III. To observe
these distinctions important, as bearing upon their typical signification.
1. The Epistle to the Hebrews proves that Christ and His work are
typified in the whole Mosaic ritual.
2. The one represents our Lord in His consecration to His Father¡¦s
will; the other, as its name indicates, represents Him as the sin-bearer.
1. As a burnt-offering our Lord is to us an example in our consecration
to God, which should be--
2. As a sin-offering our Lord teaches us how hateful sin was to Him;
yet He endured its imputation, ¡§being made sin for us,¡¨ that we might be made
God¡¦s righteousness in Him. (D. C. Hughes, M. A.)
Significance of the burnt-offering
To be offered--
1. Orderly.
2. Openly.
3. Devoutly.
4. Cheerfully. (F. W. Brown.)
The burnt-offering
I. Consider the
sort of victim required for this sacrifice: a bullock, or a sheep, or, in case
of great poverty, a young pigeon or dove--the very purest, cleanest, and best
of creatures--nothing else would answer. And even these had to be the finest
and most desirable specimens. Pure and perfect as the bright world from which
He came, Christ, our sacrifice, ¡§was holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate
from sinners¡¨--¡§a Lamb without spot¡¨--the first, the purest, the gentlest, and
the best in all the domain of the great God. He was the very Prince of
creation, who knew no sin, neither was guile found in His mouth.
II. Consider next
what was done with the victim selected. If a bullock, the Divine command was,
¡§Kill it before the Lord, and flay it, and cut it into his pieces.¡¨ If from the
flock, the word was ¡§Kill it on the side of the altar northward, and cut it
into his pieces.¡¨ Who was to do this is not clearly specified. Any one, good or
bad, priest or private, the worst or best, may become the executioner of the
Divine sentence. When Jesus was made an offering for us, earth and hell joined
in the infliction of the sacrificial stroke. If a bird, the word of the Lord
was, ¡§Wring off his head, and pluck away his crop with his feathers, and cleave
it with the wings.¡¨ Fit picture this of the end which awaits the unforgiven,
and of what actually befell the blessed Saviour who ¡§was once offered to bear
the sins of many.¡¨ The plucking and tearing off of the skin was to show how
naked the sinner is, and how completely he is exposed to the fires of Divine
wrath, and how unprotected Jesus was when He submitted to bear our sins in His
own body on the tree. But in addition to this terrible mutilation, the victim
was yet to be put upon the altar and burned. The command was, ¡§The priest shall
burn all on the altar.¡¨ And a particular method was also to be observed in this
burning. First, the head and the loose fat were to be placed upon the fire; the
head from without, and the fat from within. After that the legs and the
entrails were to be given to the flames; the outward and the inward together.
Man has a double nature; and in all Divine services, and under all Divine inflictions,
both departments fare alike. We cannot give our bodies to God and reserve our
hearts, nor serve Him in the spirit without bringing that service out into
controlling influence over the flesh also. The whole man must go or nothing.
Nor is the ultimate doom of sin a mere bodily suffering, or the mere consuming
of the exterior members; nor yet mere mental woe and spiritual grief. As the
Saviour says, it is the destruction of ¡§both body and soul in hell.¡¨ Christ as
our sacrifice, suffered not only in the outer man, but in His whole inner and
outer nature conjoined.
III. Consider
further what was to be effected by the presentation of this particular kind of
sacrifice. If the man who brought it would lay his hand upon its head, and so
acknowledge it as that by which he hoped and prayed and trusted to be forgiven,
the Lord said ¡§it shall be accepted for him to make atonement for him.¡¨ That
is, the devoting of such a victim to death and fire was to answer as a
substitute for the death and burning of the sinner himself. What a beautiful
illustration of our reconciliation to God through the death of His Son!
IV. There yet
remains one other particular to be noticed with regard to this atoning
offering; and that is the perfect freedom with which any and every one might
avail himself of its benefits. It was confined to no special time, and demanded
no specific
juncture of affairs. It was as free at one season as at another, and could be
resorted to whenever any one felt himself moved in that way. If the worshipper
could not bring a bullock, a sheep would answer. And if too poor to furnish
either, a dove or pigeon was just as acceptable. There was no reason why any
one should not come and share the benefits of a full expiation through the
burnt-offering of atonement. All that a man wanted was the consent and
determination of his own heart--the motion of ¡§his own voluntary will.¡¨ Now
this was not accidental. It was meant to set forth a great gospel truth. It
tells of the perfect freeness with which one and all may be saved, if only
there is the proper effort made. It was the lifting up of the voice of mercy
even in that remote antiquity, crying, ¡§Come; whosoever will, let him come.¡¨ (J.
A. Seiss, D. D.)
The burnt-offering; or, the Father glorified
I. THE
BURNT-OFFERING is placed first in order, when the Lord spake unto Moses ¡§out of
the Tabernacle,¡¨ teaching that the primary and grand object of Christ¡¦s death
was ¡§the glory of God.¡¨ The burnt-offering may be said to answer to St. John¡¦s
Gospel, where this object is very prominent (see John 12:27-33; John 17:1-4).
1. Atonement, as expiation of guilt, is not the prominent thought in
burnt-offering, yet it is seen there, verifying Hebrews 9:22; and the sprinkling of the
blood testifies to the righteousness of God in accepting the worshipper whose
worship--like all else--needs the atoning blood, being in itself not only
worthless, but tainted with sin; and worship is one prominent feature of
burnt-offering as regards man. Now look at details.
2. Male without blemish. That is, highest order of offering, whether
of herd or flock (Leviticus 1:3; Leviticus 1:10). Nothing with slightest
taint or blemish must be used to represent Christ.
II. Acceptance was
another prominent characteristic of burnt-offering. It was presented that the
offerer might be ¡§accepted¡¨ (Leviticus 1:3). ¡§Lo! I come . . . to do Thy
will, O God¡¨ (Hebrews 10:7; Psalms 40:7), were the words of Jesus. He
presented Himself for acceptance; He was ¡§obedient unto death¡¨ (Philippians 2:8). His sacrifice was that
of devotion and service, as typified in this offering. Thus was the Father
glorified in the death of His beloved Son I See, too, how Father¡¦s love drawn
forth because He laid down His life for sheep (John 10:11; John 10:17), in obedience to Father¡¦s
will (John 6:38-40). Thus the Father¡¦s glory
seen to be bound up in the salvation of ¡§sheep¡¨; and His acceptance of Jesus
ensures theirs (Leviticus 1:4; Ephesians 1:6).
III. Hand upon head
of burnt-offering further shows identification of offerer and offering. The word
rendered ¡§put¡¨ (verse 4) signifies to lean with whole weight, which implies
full reliance, trust, and transfer, so to speak, of whole being to Him, who
both amply met God¡¦s claim to entire devotedness to Him and made atonement for
His people, that is, ¡§covered¡¨ their failures with His atoning merits and
sacrifice. Believers are ¡§in Him¡¨ (1 John 5:20), and thus God sees and
accepts them.
IV. Kill, flay cut
into his pieces (verses 5, 6). Significant actions. Not only death, but all
laid bare to be exposed to searching fire of God¡¦s holiness, and testify to the
perfections of His Christ, whether in part or whole. Believers should look into
Christ, and study His perfections in every detail. There is also a ¡§rightly
dividing the Word of truth (2 Timothy 2:15), which testifies of Jesus the living Word.
Again, His pieces, typifying members of His body, are laid bare before God; all within revealed, i.e.,
¡§naked and opened . . . ¡¨ (Hebrews 4:13), to the Searcher ex hearts
(Psalms 7:9; Luke 16:15); and He requires holiness
within (1 Peter 1:15-16).
V. ¡§the priests,
Aaron¡¦s sons¡¨ (verses 5-8) represent ¡§the Church of God,¡¨ ¡§the children¡¨ (Hebrews 2:13), an holy priesthood¡¨ (1 Peter 2:5): here seen as
worshipping saints, offering to God what most ¡§acceptable¡¨ to Him.
1. They ¡§sprinkle the blood,¡¨ showing ground of acceptable worship (1 Peter 1:2).
2. They ¡§put fire,¡¨ and lay all ¡§in order upon the altar.¡¨ Christ,
the Head, in His entirety, with His rich excellency (fat), offering Him self
(voluntary act), through the eternal Spirit (fire), without spot to God (Hebrews 9:14). ¡§Many waters cannot quench
love¡¨ (Song of Solomon 8:7), such as His,
glowing With the fire of the Spirit, shown in zeal and devotion to the Father s
will. And no work for God, no offering acceptable, except through the fire of
the Spirit (Romans 8:4; Romans 8:8-10; Romans 8:14), sent from above to dwell in
believers, and kindle in them flame of love and zeal, which again ascends to
heaven.
VI. The washing of
inwards and legs (verse 9) rendered the offering typically what Christ is
inherently and intrinsically. Perfectly clean and pure, not only in outward
walk, but inwardly also; in exact accordance with the requirements of a holy
God. Truth, wisdom found in Him who was both (Psalms 51:6; Psalms 15:2; John 14:6; Proverbs 8:11; Proverbs 8:30; 1 Corinthians 1:24).
VII. The priest
shall burn all (verse 13). The whole of the burnt-offering was to be consumed
upon the altar, because exclusively for God. God requires whole-heartedness in
His service; want of devotedness to God is sin; we offend if we keep back part
for ourselves, or for the world, instead of presenting all to Him; and these
failures, sins, shortcomings, are all met by the precious One in the
burnt-offering.
VIII. The ashes
carried forth from beside the altar testify to the completeness of the work
¡§finished¡¨ on Calvary, and to God¡¦s complete acceptance of the perfect
Sacrifice, His own ¡§unspeakable gift¡¨ (2 Corinthians 9:15) to man. The
¡§clean place¡¨ ¡§without the camp¡¨ (chaps. 1:16, 6:10, 11) points to the ¡§new
tomb¡¨ (Matthew 27:58-66), where the body of
Jesus was laid; and He--the risen One--then entered¡¨ into heaven itself, now to
appear . . . ¡¨ (Hebrews 9:24).
IX. ¡§a sweet savour
unto the lord¡¨ (verses 9, 13, 17). As such the ¡§continual¡¨ burnt-offering
ascended (Numbers 28:3-8); and so the fragrant
merits of Christ¡¦s one all-sufficient sacrifice. For ¡§Christ also hath . . .
given Himself for.., a sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling savour¡¨ (Ephesians 5:2). Yes, Jesus, who is
feasting the Father¡¦s eyes and heart, is the one in whom He smells ¡§a sweet
savour¡¨ or ¡§savour of rest¡¨ (Genesis 8:21). (Lady Beau-jolois Dent.)
The burnt-offering
Concerning this offering we note--
I. The principle
that acceptable worship must be in accordance with divine direction. Not now
the blood of bulls and of goats, but the blood of Christ is the sacrifice by
which we come to God (Hebrews 10:9-10). The was is as
distinctly and definitely described under the new dispensation as under the old
(John 14:6). True religion is a revealed
way of approach to God.
II. Its special
significance. Its Hebrew name means, ¡§an ascending.¡¨ The first symbol by which
men sought communion with God expressed a voluntary and entire dedication of
themselves to Him. They declared, by it, their aspiration after Him; their
desire to do His will; their self-surrender to Him. It was this devotion of
soul that made the offering a sweet savour unto Him.
III. The relation of
the burnt-offering to christian worship.
1. This offering suggests the holiness of God.
2. The spirit of acceptable Christian worship: Pure.
3. The character of the acceptable Christian worshipper: Constant
self-devotion to God. (A. E. Dunning.)
The burnt-offering
The burnt-offering was one of what might be called the common law
offerings of mankind. There were two of these at least--the slain and the
burnt-offering. It is not always possible to distinguish these in the early
history of sacrifices. The former was one in which slain beasts were laid upon
the altar in token of man¡¦s fellowship with God; the latter was one where the
animals were burned with fire as incense to Jehovah, expressive of man¡¦s
dependence, obedience, and need of forgiveness. The burnt-offering was the most
significant of all these earlier sacrifices, and probably included at times all
the others. It is fitting for this reason, as well as for its superior
importance, that it occupy the first place in the directions of the sacrificial
code for Israel. The law of burnt-offerings was one which now became invested
with the new sovereignty of a statute. It was not superseded in its
significance or any of its associations, but some of these were emphasised. Branches
grew out of the stalk which had its roots in the first sinner¡¦s heart and the
earliest race history.
I. The idea of
self-surrender underlay the gift
of the burnt-offering. Save on great occasions, like that of a
dedication of the Tabernacle or Temple, this was a voluntary offering. As men
were urged onward
into clearly marked modes of worship they were not deprived of their upward
look. Before there
is expiation or justification there must be a relation of fellowship between
man and his Maker. The burnt-offering was the best symbol of this confidential
self-surrender because it was the sacrifice of a living thing. The blood was
regarded as the vehicle of the life. When the Hebrew came of his own choice
thus before the Lord he made an offering of himself.
II. The idea of
expiation underlay the offering of the burnt sacrifice. The Israelite who came
before the altar to make a burnt-offering laid his hand upon the victim in
token of his desire to have it accepted as a sacrifice for sin. The great
breaches of the moral law were not atoned for by any ceremonial under the
Hebrew code. The most flagrant sins which were atoned for or covered by
sacrifice were those of carelessness, and had reference to a breach of
ceremonial law. Therefore we are justified in emphasising in the burnt-offering
the idea of self-surrender. The expiation of the murderer¡¦s sin must come from
a sacrifice God should make in His own Son. The sinner took refuge with God in
the hope of the holier offering and Mediator God should provide.
III. The acceptable
sacrifice of the burnt-offering requires the mediatorial office. The worshipper
has accepted the offices of God¡¦s mediator. God has received man¡¦s trust, his
surrender, his obedience. The spirit of Abraham with raised hand above his only
son is that which must fill the heart of every true worshipper under the Mosaic
dispensation. He accepts God¡¦s offering as a sacrifice, whether made before the
foundation of the world, at the Tabernacle altar, or on Calvary. Obedience is
the best element man furnishes in the atonement. Obedience to the unseen God is
the arrow of which faith is the bow-string. (W. R. Campbell.)
The gospel of the burnt-offering
I. The offerer was
to bring it to the door of the tabernacle.
1. A voluntary act.
2. This points every way to Christ as the cause of our acceptance
with God. He is both Door and Tabernacle, Altar and Priest.
3. We are to see God in all oar services, in and by Jesus Christ.
4. We are to worship God in His Church.
II. The sinner that
brought the sacrifice was to lay his hand upon the head of it. This ceremony
relates to the confession of sin, and the translation of the guilt of it upon
the sacrifice (Isaiah 53:4-5; 1 John 1:7; 1 John 1:9).
III. The sacrifice
must be killed and slain, and that upon the north side of the altar.
1. The death of Christ (Daniel 9:26; Isaiah 53:10).
2. Christ was killed in Jerusalem and Mount Sion, which was on the
sides of the north.
IV. The blood was
pourer forth at the foot of the altar, and sprinkled upon it round about.
1. Christ¡¦s blood was shed (Isaiah 53:12; Matthew 26:28).
2. Sprinkled (Hebrews 12:24; 1 Peter 1:2).
V. The priest is
to flay it, and cut it into its pieces.
1. This related in general to the sufferings of Christ (Micah 3:2-3; Psalms 22:15-16).
2. As the sacrifice, being dead and slain, did leave a skin for
clothing to the priest by whose hand he died, so Christ, our true sacrifice,
who was led as a lamb to the slaughter, leaves a garment of righteousness to
clothe believers with (Romans 13:14).
3. Whereas the sacrifice in this action was laid open, and the inward
parts of it discovered to open view: so is Christ fully and openly discovered
in the preaching of the gospel (Galatians 3:1).
4. The skin of the sacrifice went to the priest. It was part of his
maintenance (see Corinthians 9:13, 14).
VI. The pieces were
to be salted (Leviticus 2:13; Mark 9:49).
1. This signifies the perpetuity of the covenant of grace.
2. Its wholesomeness.
VII. The legs and
inwards must be washed. So the bodies of believers are said to be washed with
pure water, and their hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience.
VIII. The several
parts of the offering must be laid upon the altar, and burnt with fire, till
consumed. This is the fire of the justice and wrath of God from heaven, which
seized upon Christ; and every part of Him was burnt: His head crowned with
thorns, His side pierced with the spear, His hands and feet with nails, His
whole body did sweat drops of blood, His soul was heavy unto death, yea, burnt
to ashes, as it were, brought to the utmost extremity of misery. His saints
also endure the fiery trial (1 Peter 4:12).
IX. The ashes must
be carried out of the camp into a clean place (Leviticus 6:10-11; see Hebrews 13:11-13). Christ¡¦s crucified
body was not buried within the city, but placed in a new sepulchre where never
any man lay before (John 19:41). So the dead bodies of all
His saints, when they are spent and consumed to ashes, are regarded and
preserved in the dust by God as sacred relics, and He will raise them up again
unto eternal life. Lessons:
1. See here the difference between God¡¦s ceremonies and men¡¦s. Divine
ceremonies are full of light and spirit; human ceremonies are full of darkness
and vanity.
2. See the fierceness of the wrath of God against sin. It is nothing
but death and blood and slaughter that will appease offended justice.
3. Direction under the guilt of sin what to do, and what course to
take, to make
atonement and reconciliation
between God and thee. Go and bring your sacrifice to the Priest, and by Him unto God.
4. Unspeakable consolation unto them that have taken this course. (S.
Mather.)
The burnt-offering
An offerer comes. Mark what he brings. If his offering be from the
herd, it must be an unblemished male (Leviticus 1:3). It must be the choicest
produce from his pastures--the primest flower from his fields. There must be
strength in fullest vigour, and beauty without one alloy. Such are the
properties required. The purport is distinct. Jesus is here. The victim chosen
before worlds were framed is thus portrayed. Strength and perfection are main
colours in His portrait. We next approach the chambers of the offerer¡¦s heart.
We read, ¡§He shall offer it of his own free will¡¨ (Leviticus 1:3). There is no compulsion.
There is no reluctance. His step is willingness. This is a picture of faith¡¦s
happy actings. Its chariot-wheels move swiftly. It feels sin¡¦s miserable need.
It knows the value of redeeming blood. So it flies, with rapid wing, to plead
it at the mercy-seat. The eager offerer puts his hand upon the victim¡¦s head (Leviticus 1:4). Do any ask the meaning of
this rite? It graphically shows a transfer. Some load oppresses, which is thus
cast off. Some burden passes to another¡¦s person. Here is again the happy work of faith. It brings
all guilt, and heaps it on the Saviour¡¦s head. One sin retained is misery now
and hell at last. All must be pardoned by being brought to Christ. And He is
waiting to receive. The victim, to which sins thus typically pass, must die (Leviticus 1:5). Can Jesus, who in reality
receives our guilt, not lay down life? It cannot be. The holy Word stands sure:
¡§In the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die¡¨ (Genesis 2:17). The sinner¡¦s surety, then,
cannot be spared. He gives His life to pay the debt--to satisfy the wrath--to
bear the curse--to expiate the guilt. O my soul, ¡§Christ died¡¨ is all your
hope--your plea--your remedy--your life. ¡§Christ died¡¨ opens your path to God.
The victim¡¦s blood is sprinkled ¡§round about upon the altar¡¨ (Leviticus 1:5). The blood is evidence
that life is paid. This token then is profusely scattered. The victim is next
flayed (Leviticus 1:6). The skin is torn away.
The sacrificing priest received this as his portion. Here is a picture of that
heaven-pure robe, in which Christ decks each child of faith. His blood, indeed,
removes all curse. But it is obedience, which merits all glory. Because He
died, we live. Because He lived, we reign. The piercing knife divides the limbs. Members are
torn from members, and all the parts, without, within, to which defilement
usually adheres, are diligently washed (Leviticus 1:9). The type of Jesus must be
clean. No shadow of impurity may darken it. The parts thus severed, and thus
washed, are placed upon the altar. Consuming fire is brought. It preys on every
limb. The raging flame devours, until this fuel is reduced to ashes (Leviticus 1:9). Let us now seek the
truth, which echoes from this blazing pile. The Garden and the Cross unfold it.
There Jesus presents Himself, laden with all the sins of all His chosen race. (Dean
Law.)
The burnt-offering
¡§If his offering be a burnt sacrifice of the herd, let him offer a
male, without blemish.¡¨ The essential glory and dignity of Christ¡¦s Person form
the basis of Christianity. He imparts that dignity and glory to everything He
does, and to every office He sustains. We shall see, when we come to examine
the other offerings, that ¡§a female¡¨ was, in some cases, permitted; but that
was only expressive of the imperfection which attached to the worshipper¡¦s
apprehension, and in nowise of any defect in the offering, inasmuch as it was
¡§unblemished¡¨ in the one case, as well as in the other. Here, however, it was
an offering of the very highest order, because it was Christ offering Himself
to God. ¡§He shall offer it of his own voluntary will at the door of the
Tabernacle of the congregation before the Lord.¡¨ The use of the word
¡§voluntary,¡¨ here, brings out, with great clearness, the grand idea in the
burnt-offering. It leads us to contemplate the Cross in an aspect which is not
sufficiently apprehended. We are too apt to look upon the Cross merely as the
place where the great question of sin was gone into and settled, between
eternal Justice and the spotless Victim--as the place where our guilt was
atoned for, and where Satan was gloriously vanquished. Eternal and universal
praise to redeeming love the Cross was all this. But it was more than this. It
was the place where Christ¡¦s love to the Father was told out in language which
only the Father could hear and understand. It is in the latter aspect that we
have it typified, in the burnt-offering; and therefore it is that the word
¡§voluntary¡¨ occurs. The guilty sinner, no doubt, finds in the Cross a Divine
answer to the deepest and most earnest cravings of heart and conscience. The
true believer finds in the Cross that which captivates every affection of his
heart, and transfixes his whole moral being. The angels find in the Cross a
theme for ceaseless admiration. All this is true; but there is that, in the
Cross, which passes far beyond the loftiest conceptions of saints or angels;
namely, the deep-toned devotion of the heart of the Son presented to, and
appreciated by, the heart of the Father. This is the elevated aspect of the
Cross, which is so strikingly shadowed forth in the burnt-offering. ¡§And he
shall put his hand upon the head of the burnt-offering; and it shall be
accepted for him, to make atonement for him.¡¨ The act of laying on of hands was
expressive of full identification. By that significant act the offerer and the
offering became one; and this oneness, in the case of the burnt-offering,
secured for the offerer all the acceptableness of his offering. The application
of this to Christ and the believer sets forth a truth of the most precious
nature, and one largely developed in the New Testament; namely, the believer¡¦s
everlasting identification with, and acceptance in, Christ. ¡§As He is, so are
we, in this world.¡¨ ¡§We are in Him that is true¡¨ (1 John 4:17; 1 John 5:20). Nothing, in any
measure, short of this could avail. ¡§And he shall kill the bullock before the
Lord: and the priests, Aaron¡¦s sons, shall bring the blood, and sprinkle the
blood round about upon the altar that is by the door of the Tabernacle of the
congregation.¡¨ It is most needful, in studying the doctrine of the
burnt-offering, to bear in mind that the grand point set forth therein is not
the meeting of the sinner¡¦s need, but the presentation to God of that which was
infinitely acceptable to Him. Christ, as foreshadowed by the burnt-offering, is
not for the sinner¡¦s conscience, but for the heart of God. Further, the Cross,
in the burnt-offering, is not the exhibition of the exceeding hatefulness of
sin, but of Christ¡¦s unshaken and unshakable devotedness to the Father. Neither
is it the scene of God¡¦s outpoured wrath on Christ the Sin-bearer; but of the
Father¡¦s unmingled complacency in Christ, the voluntary and most fragrant
sacrifice. Finally, ¡§atonement,¡¨ as seen in the burnt-offering, is not merely
commensurate with the claims of man¡¦s conscience, but with the intense desire
of the heart of Christ, to carry out the will and establish the counsels of
God--a desire which stopped not short of surrendering up His spotless, precious
life, as ¡§a
voluntary offering¡¨ of ¡§sweet savour¡¨ to God. ¡§The priests, Aaron¡¦s sons, shall
bring the blood, and sprinkle the blood round about upon the altar that is by
the door of the Tabernacle of the congregation.¡¨ Here we have a type of the
Church, bringing the memorial of an accomplished sacrifice, and presenting it
in the place of individual approach to God. But, we must remember, it is the
blood of the burnt-offering, and not of the sin-offering. It is the Church, in
the power of the Holy Ghost, entering into the stupendous thought of Christ¡¦s
accomplished devotedness to God, and not a convicted sinner, entering into the
value of the blood of the Sin-bearer. ¡§And he shall flay the burnt-offering,
and cut it into his pieces.¡¨ The ceremonial act of ¡§flaying¡¨ was peculiarly
expressive. It was simply the removing of the outward covering, in order that
what was within might be fully revealed. It was not sufficient that the
offering should be, outwardly, ¡§without blemish,¡¨ ¡§the hidden parts¡¨ should be
all disclosed, in order that every sinew and every joint might be seen. It was
only in the case of the burnt-offering that this action was specially named.
This is quite in character, and tends to set forth the depth of Christ¡¦s
devotedness to the Father. It was no mere surface-work with Him. The more the
secrets of His inner life were disclosed, the more the depths of His being were
explored, the more clearly was it made manifest that pure devotion to the will
of His Father, and earnest desire for His glory, were the springs of action in
the great Antitype of the burnt-offering. He was, most assuredly, a whole
burnt-offering. ¡§And cut it into his pieces.¡¨ This action presents a somewhat
similar truth to that taught in the ¡§sweet incense beaten small¡¨ (chap. 16.).
The Holy Ghost delights to dwell upon the sweetness and fragrance of the
sacrifice of Christ, not only as a whole, but also in all its minute details.
Look at the burnt-offering, as a whole, and you see it without blemish. Look at
it in all its parts, and you see it to be the same. Such was Christ; and as
such He is shadowed forth in this important type. ¡§And the sons of Aaron the
priest shall put fire upon the altar, and lay the wood in order upon the fire.
And the priests, Aaron¡¦s sons, shall lay the parts,¡¨ &c. This was a high
position--high communion--a high order of priestly service--a striking type of
the Church having fellowship with God, in reference to the perfect
accomplishment of His will in the death of Christ. As convicted sinners we gaze
on the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, and behold therein that which meets all
our need. The Cross, in this aspect of it, gives perfect peace to the
conscience. But, then, as priests, as purged worshippers, as members of the
priestly family, we can look at
the Cross in another light, even as the grand consummation of
Christ¡¦s holy purpose to carry out, even unto death, the will of the Father.
¡§But his inwards and his legs shall he wash in water: and the priest shall burn
all on the altar, to be a burnt sacrifice, an offering made by fire, of a sweet
savour unto the Lord.¡¨ This action rendered the sacrifice, typically, what Christ was
essentially, pure,
both inwardly and outwardly
pure. The members of His body perfectly obeyed and carried out the counsels of
His devoted heart--that heart which only beat for God, and for His glory, in
the salvation of men. Well, therefore, might the priest ¡§burn all on the
altar.¡¨ It was all typically pure, and all designed only as food for the altar
of God. (C. H. Mackintosh.)
The burnt-offering
In the burnt-offering the atoning element of sacrifice fell into
the background, though not wholly absent; there is no special manipulation of
the blood, as in the sin-offering; all centres on the entire consumption of the
sacrifice upon the altar, which was especially the altar of burnt-offering. The
burnt-offering was, then, peculiarly the offering of worship. And the offerer
was set forth as
being ¡§a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God.¡¨ The principal
burnt-offering under the law was the daily, or continual, burnt-offering (Exodus 29:38-42; cf. Numbers 28:3-8, Leviticus 6:9-12). Nothing was ever
allowed to interfere with this ¡§continual burnt-offering.¡¨ The great national
offering of Israel,¡¨ says Archdeacon Freeman, ¡§the morning and evening lamb,
was simply the ancient burnt-offering, or the Mosaic offering of private persons,
lifted into a new sphere of power and activity. The directions given in the two
eases are, as far as they go (cf. Numbers 28:1-31, with Leviticus 1:1-13)
, perfectly coincident; even to the quantity of flour, wine, and oil. Insomuch
that the lofty powers wielded by the continual sacrifice might well seem at
first sight unaccountable. But they are fully accounted for when we call to
mind the august circumstances with which this particular offering was
surrounded. These, joined to the direct command and promise of God in respect
of it, render an abundant account of the transcendent powers which are ascribed to it. And
though we might on some accounts rather have expected to find the ox or the ram
selected, for their physical superiority and greater value, as the national and
all-containing sacrifice, we easily perceive, from the standing-ground of the
gospel, the superior fitness for this purpose of the feeblest, meekest, and
most unresisting of creatures. At the same time, even as the Divine ¡§strength
was made perfect in the weakness¡¨ of Christ, so this outwardly simple and
single sacrifice was seen, on occasion, to carry within it all that was noble
and powerful in the sacrificial sphere. On each Sabbath it expanded into two
lambs, offered morning and evening; at the new moons, and other feasts, it
became seven lambs, two young bullocks, a ram, and a goat; on each day, during
the Feast of Tabernacles, fourteen lambs, from eight to thirteen bullocks, two
rams, and a goat, became, in a word, ¡§fat burnt sacrifices, with incense of
rams, bullocks, and goats.¡¨ By all these was manifested forth the might that
was veiled under the meekness of the lamb . . . It is of the utmost importance
thus to have pointed out the function and capacities of the ancient
burnt-offering, because the sacrificial work of Christ is to so great a degree
interpreted to us by it, and specially by that loftily empowered instance of
it, the Mosaic continual sacrifice. To this is to be referred whatever is said
in the New Testament, and in the Liturgies, of His giving Himself, as a
most unspeakably acceptable gift to God; as discriminated either from His
¡§giving¡¨ or delivering Himself over for suffering and death, to wicked men and
powers of evil, which is more especially set forth by the sin-offering; or
again, as distinguished from His giving Himself to man as the life of his soul,
which was represented
by the ¡§peace-offering.¡¨ The continual burnt-offering represents also
our Lord¡¦s perpetual presentation of His sacrifice in heaven, that sacrifice
which St. Athanasius calls ¡§a faithful sacrifice, one which remains and does
not pass away.¡¨ (E. F. Willis, M. A.)
The burnt-offering
The leading feature of the burnt-offering consisted in its being wholly
consumed upon the altar. ¡§What have we here but a type of the preciousness
of Jesus, as exhibited in His wholehearted devotedness, His entire consecration
to the will and service of His Father? Is not His language in the fortieth
Psalm, ¡§Lo, I come: in the volume of the book it is written of Me, I delight to
do Thy will, O My God. Yea, Thy law is within My heart¡¨--precisely the language
of the ¡§Burnt-Offering¡¨? Again, in John, ¡§I seek not My own will, but the will
of Him who sent Me.¡¨ Who but Jesus could say, ¡§I do always those things that
please Him¡¨? Isolated acts of devotedness we may and do see exhibited by many
of His followers. But in the Man Christ Jesus we see one who through life, and
in death could say, ¡§My meat and My drink is to do the will of Him who sent Me,
and to finish His work¡¨--One who loved and served ¡§the Lord His God with all
His heart, His soul, His strength¡¨--One, therefore, who met in every respect
the requirements of the type before us. Before the victim for the burnt-offering was
placed upon the altar, it was flayed and cut into pieces, and the parts
thereof, ¡§the head and feet,¡¨ laid ¡§in order upon the wood.¡¨ This was a testing process, and served to try the
animal¡¦s fitness for the sacrifice. Jesus was tried. Tried by man. Tried by
Satan. Tried by God. His thoughts, the feelings of His heart, His words, His
every act--all were laid bare to the eyes of Him with whom He had to do. Yet
all bore the test. The minutest examination of His inner as well as His outer
life failed to disclose aught but consisted with the purest and most perfect
devotion to His Father¡¦s will. He Himself could say, ¡§Thou hast proved Mine
heart, Thou hast visited Me in the night, Thou hast tried Me and shalt find
nothing.¡¨ Whilst His Father from the excellent glory declared, ¡§Thou art My
beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.¡¨ In other words, ¡§I rest in Thee and am
satisfied. My holiness rests in Thee and is satisfied. My justice, My truth,
all the essential attributes which I possess as Jehovah, all are satisfied.¡¨
All My most righteous claims are met to the full. Thou art unto Me a perfect
burnt-offering. ¡§A sacrifice of a sweet-smelling savour.¡¨ But not only was the
burnt-offering one of a ¡§sweet-smelling savour¡¨ to God, it was rich also in
results towards the offerer. It stood in his stead. All its perfectness was
regarded as if it had been his. In its acceptance he was accepted. So with
Christ¡¦s sacrifice (see Ephesians 5:2; Romans 5:19). (F. H. White.)
The burnt-offerings aptly commence the sacrificial laws
First, they were probably the oldest form of sacrifice. In the
next place, they had the very widest application, and could be presented by any
person without distinction, a point which is the more significant as the
offerer, sharing the sacred functions with the priests, had to perform several
important parts of the ceremony himself. And lastly, though originally designed
to convey merely the worshipper¡¦s awe and his unconditional surrender to the
Divine supremacy, they were, in the Levitical code, invested with the character
of atonement (Leviticus 1:4), and were not only
commanded on specified occasions, but left to the spontaneous impulse of the
heart that yearns for peace and for the expiation of sins known to the
transgressor alone. They were therefore meant to serve the highest ends of an
inward religion. Thus modified, they marked a decided progress in the path of
spiritual faith; they were, in fact, the forerunners of the expiatory offerings
which form the very crowning point of the sacrificial system, and beyond which,
even at the very next step, the mind leaves the fetters of the ceremonial law
and enters the purer regions of freedom and elevation. Hence the Levitical
holocausts lead us to a time when the deeprooted tendencies towards pagan
idolatry had been conquered, and the intellectual efforts of the more
thoughtful and more gifted among the Hebrews had been rewarded by the
establishment of a religious creed, which, however far removed from absolute
truth, and however repugnant to the true attributes of the Deity and the
requirements of philosophy and reason, at least permitted the exercise of noble
and exalted humanity, and even facilitated, more than any of the preceding and
most of the later systems of theology, an insight into the moral government of
the world, and the higher aims of human existence. Thus the very beginning of
the Book reveals unmistakably the time and purposes of its composition, and
forms the first link in that great chain of evidence which leads to the most
pregnant and most interesting historical results. (M. M. Kalisch, Ph. D.)
The burnt-offering
Here we are so accustomed to fall short of God¡¦s glory, and
failure in glorifying Him is so much regarded as the necessary law of our
condition, that even believers find it difficult to look on failure in
devotedness as sin--sin that needs atonement as much as their most dire
transgressions. Even after we have owned the blood of the Paschal Lamb as delivering from the judgment
due to our natural condition, and after we have recognised the necessity of the
Holy One bearing the curse earned by our transgressions, we nevertheless fail
to estimate the want of perfect devotedness as being positive sin; and hence
the appreciation of our own condition, as well as of the grace that meets it,
becomes proportionately enfeebled. In order to correct this error--an error
fatal to all right apprehension of God, and our relation both to His holiness
and to His grace--the first lesson given to us in the Tabernacle respects the
whole burnt-offering. In other offerings part was sometimes given to the
priest, sometimes to the offerer; but the burnt-offering was all (the skin only
excepted) rendered to God, and all burnt upon His altar. In the burnt-offering,
therefore, there was a distinct recognition of the righteous claim of God on
the unreserved devotedness of His creatures; but it was also the confession
that that claim was responded to by none. When an offerer presented a victim to
be accepted in his room, the very act of substitution implied that the offerer
acknowledged himself to be destitute of the qualifications which were found in
his offering; otherwise substitution would not be needed, for the offerer would
stand in his own integrity. There was the confession, too, that the absence of
these qualifications involved guilt--guilt deserving death; for otherwise the
offering would not have been substitutionally slain--¡§killed before Jehovah¡¨;
and lastly, there was the acknowledgment that because no unreserved devotedness
had been found in him, he needed an offering to be wholly given in his stead as
¡§a sweet savour of rest before Jehovah.¡¨ The burnt-offering therefore may be
regarded as the type of Christ in respect of that full, unreserved devotedness
of service which caused Him, as the servant of Jehovah, in all things to
renounce Himself, and to render every energy, and every feeling, and finally
His life itself, as a whole burnt-offering unto God. (B. W. Newton.)
Right use of the grace of the burnt-offering
To use aright the grace of the burnt-offering requires, whilst we
remain in the flesh, continued watchfulness: else we may sit down under the
shadow of its mercies and slumber. When protection in the earth was by the
especial gift of God granted to Cain, the opportunities which that protection
gave were instantly used by him against God. It may be said, what else could be
expected from the unregenerate heart of Cain? But it must be remembered that
unregenerate energies are still found in the flesh even of the regenerate. ¡§In
our flesh no good thing dwelleth,¡¨ but sin--essential sin--is there. ¡§The flesh
lusteth against the spirit.¡¨ And although the protection vouchsafed to Cain was
a temporary mercy only, and although no burnt-offering spread the power of its
acceptance over his guilty head, and therefore in him unregeneracy might be
expected to work and to bring forth its proper fruits, yet what shall we say of
another--him who is first mentioned in Scripture as standing by the side of a burnt-offering
altar? Noah offered whole burnt-offerings, and the Lord smelled a sweet savour
of rest and made a covenant of blessing, and under it Noah rested: but to what
did he devote his energies? To planting a vineyard for himself and cherishing
its fruits, till he drank the wine thereof and became drunken and dishonoured.
Can there be any other result, when the Church, forgetting its high and
separate calling, finds its chief present use of the grace of redemption, in
trying to sanctify to itself mere earthly joys? It was otherwise with the
Apostle Paul. Who knew, as he, the value of the burnt-offering and the joy of
its acceptance? Yet to him, ¡§to live was Christ¡¨; and he laboured on till he
could say, ¡§I have fought the good fight, I have kept the faith, I have
finished my course with joy.¡¨ And why this difference? It was because the
apostle better understood that the only true place of blessing was ¡§the new
creation.¡¨ His soul followed, as it were, the offering to the place into which
its sweet savour ascended--even above the heavens. (B. W. Newton.)
Inferior offerings permitted
One offerer might bring a bullock--another an offering from the
flock--another only an offering of fowls. There was evidently much mercy in
this provision; for if poverty, or even disinclination, prevented an Israelite
from bringing the highest offering, he was permitted to bring a lesser, in
order that he might not be deprived entirely of the blessings connected with
the burnt-offering. Antitypically, there ought to be in believers sufficient
enlargement of faith to form a proper conception of Christ as the
burnt-offering; bat if this be wanting, there may be a more feeble power of
faith, not without its value, which is able to apprehend partially. Such a
character of faith is likely to be prevalent at an hour of general weakness
like the present. The superior worth of the bullock, as contrasted with the
lesser offerings, is doubtless the point chiefly to be rested on. But there
seems a peculiar suitability in such a type as the bullock, when our minds are
directed to Christ as the Servant of Jehovah. If we are to consider the
strength, the patience, the submissiveness, which characterised His service, or
the value of that service in result, the bullock is evidently a far fitter type
than either the sheep or the dove. When the offering was from the flock, and
yet more, when it was taken from the fowls, we find, as might be expected, the
ceremonies indicating far less distinct and discriminative apprehension of the
value of the burnt-offering than in the former case. A distinct recognition of
Him and His perfections, to whom the offering was rendered, was most material.
Accordingly, in offering the bullock the offerer presented it ¡§at the door of
the Tabernacle of congregation before Jehovah,¡¨ and killed it ¡§before Jehovah.¡¨
Great prominency is thus given to ¡§Jehovah¡¨; but in this second case there is
no such presentation before Jehovah, no laying the hand on the head of the
victim, no mention of its being presented for acceptance or for atonement. It
was killed also in a different place, not simply ¡§before Jehovah,¡¨ but ¡§on the
side of the altar northward before Jehovah.¡¨ In the former case the offerer
advanced to the door of the Tabernacle of congregation before Jehovah; as if
recognising Him, and all His attributes in their totality; but in this second
case he slew the victim, not in front of the altar, or at the altar, but on the
side of the altar northward--indicating, apparently, that his attention was
directed, not to the manner in which all the attributes of God were recognised
by the altar, as it looked eastward and westward, northward and southward; but
that it was fixed peculiarly on its relation to Jehovah in some of His
attributes. To speak generally the deficiency in this second class of offerings
may be described thus: An insufficient apprehension of Him to whom the offering
is brought. Insufficient appreciation of the value of the offering itself, both
in its life and in its death. Thoughts not sufficiently discriminative as
regards the altar, and the qualities that attach to the offering as there
burned. Seeing, then, it is the great object of these ceremonies to expand
truth, and to give distinctness of apprehension, that object fails of being
attained, just in proportion as there is deficiency of apprehension or
confusion of thoughts that should be distinguished. This is still more manifest
in the offering from the fowls. (B. W. Newton.)
¡§Kill it on the side of the altar northward¡¨
One obvious reason seems to be this--there was a necessity, for
the sake of order, that there should be a separate place for killing the oxen
and the sheep. No quarter of the heavens was sacred; and since, at other times,
the sacrifice was presented on the east side, a variety like this answered the
purpose of proclaiming that Jesus is offered to any soul in any nation, east or
north, i.e., from east to west, north to south; His death is presented to the view
of all, to be
behoved ¡§by men as, soon as they see it.¡¨ Look unto Me and be ye saved, all
ends of the earth. (A. A. Bonar.)
The complete offering of self required by God
Give to God ourselves or nothing; and to give ourselves to Him is
not His advantage bat ours. The philosopher said to his poor scholar, who told
him he had nothing but himself to give: ¡§It is well,¡¨ said he; ¡§and I will
endeavour to give thee back to thyself better than I received thee.¡¨ Thus doth
God with us, and
a Christian makes himself his daily sacrifice; he renews this gift of himself
every day to God, and, receiving it every day bettered again, still he hath the
more delight to give it, as being fitter for God the more it is sanctified by
former sacrificing. Now that whereby we offer all other spiritual sacrifices,
and even ourselves, is love. That is the holy fire that burns up all, sends up
our prayers and our hearts and our whole selves, a whole burnt-offering to God.
(Archbp. Leighton.)
Worthy offerings
There are some of the heathens that worship the sun for a god, and
they would offer to the sun
somewhat suitable; and therefore because they did so much admire at the
swiftness of the motion of the sun, they would not offer a snail but a flying
horse, a horse with wings. Now a horse is one of the swiftest creatures, and
one of the strongest to continue in motion for a long time together; then,
having added wings to the horse, they conceived he was suitable to be a
sacrifice for the sun. So when we come to God to worship Him, to sanctify Him,
to call upon His name, we must not bring the bare calves of our lips, but the fervency
of our hearts; we must behave ourselves so as to give Him the glory that is fit
for such a God to have. (J. Spencer.)
The best to be sacrificed
The Persian metal-workers will use little or no alloy with their
gold, professing to despise, as base and beneath the name of gold, the metal
alloyed with silver or copper employed by European and American jewellers, even
though it be eighteen carats fine. Christ deserves the best of our best. (Sharpened
Arrows.)
Hearty offerings
It is said of the Lacedaemonians, who were a poor and homely
people, that they offered lean sacrifices to their gods; and that the Athenians
who were a wise and wealthy people, offered fat and costly sacrifices; and yet
in their wars the former always had the mastery over the latter. Whereupon they
went to the oracle to know the reason why those should speed worst who gave
most. The oracle returned this answer to them: ¡§That the Lacedaemonians were a
people who gave their hearts to their gods, but that the Athenians only gave
their gifts to their gods.¡¨ Thus the heart without a gift is better than a gift
without a heart. But both are desirable. (T. Secker.)
The motive in offering
There may be many things that move, and yet their motion is not an
argument of life: a windmill, when the wind serveth, moveth, and moveth very
nimbly too, yet this cannot be said to be a living creature; no, it moveth only
by an external cause, by an artificial contrivance; it is so framed that when
the wind sitteth in such or such a corner it will move, and so, having but an
external motor and cause to move, and no inward principle--no soul within it to
move it--it is an argument that it is no living creature. So it is also, if a
man see another man move, and move very fast in those things which of
themselves are the ways of God, you shall see him move as fast to hear a sermon
as his neighbour doth, as forward and as hasty to thrust himself and bid
himself a guest to the Lord¡¦s table (when God hath not bid him) as any. Now the
question is, What principle sets him at work? If it be an inward principle of life,
out of a sincere affection and love to God and His ordinances that carrieth him to
this, it argueth that man hath some life of grace; but if it be some wind that
bloweth on him, the wind of state, the wind of law, the wind of danger, of
penalty, the wind of fashion or custom, to do as his neighbours do: if these,
or the like, be the things that draw him thither, this is no argument of life
at all; it is a cheap thing, it is a counterfeit and dead piece of service. (J.
Spencer.)
He shall put his hand upon the head.
Putting the hand upon the head of the sacrifice
Two matters were essential in the sacrifices of the ceremonial
law; and you have them both in our text: ¡§He shall put his hand upon the head
of the burnt-offering,¡¨ and ¡§He shall kill the bullock before the Lord.¡¨ The
appropriation by the offerer and the death of the offering are most fitly
joined together, and must neither of them be overlooked. Let us on the present
occasion look at the leading act of the offerer: ¡§He shall lay his hand upon
the head of the burnt-offering.¡¨ All that goes before is important, but this is
the real sacrificial act so far as the offerer is concerned. Before he reached
this point, the person who presented the offering had to make a selection of
the animal to be brought before the Lord. It must be of a certain age, and it
must be without blemish; and for this latter reason a careful examination had
to be made; for the Lord would not accept a sacrifice that was lame, or broken,
or bruised, or deficient in any
of its parts, or in any way blemished. He required an offering
¡§without spot.¡¨ Now I invite all those who seek reconciliation with God to look
about them, and consider whether the Lord Jesus Christ be such an atoning
sacrifice as they need and as God will accept. After you have well examined His
blessed person and His spotless character if you arrive at the conclusion that
He is a fit and acceptable sacrifice for you to present before the Lord, then I
long that you may take the much more practical step, and accept the Lord Jesus
to be your representative, your sin-offering, your burnt-offering, your
substitute, and your sacrifice. Happily you have not to find a sacrifice as the
Jew had to supply a bullock; God has provided Himself with a perfect sacrifice;
that which you have to bring to God, God first brings to you. Happily, there is
no need for you to repeat the examination through which the Lord Jesus passed
both at the hands of men, and of devils, and of God, when He was tested and
tried and examined, and even the prince of this world found nothing of his own
in Him. You have to attend to this one thing, namely, the laying of your hands
upon the sacrifice provided for you. To the Jew it was a sacrifice to be slain,
to you it is a sacrifice already offered; and this you are to accept and
recognise as your own. I pray from my inmost soul that you may immediately do
that which was meant by laying the hand upon the victim¡¦s head. What did that
mean?
I. It meant four
things, and the first was confession.
1. He that laid his hand upon the head of the offering made
confession of sin. Your touch of Jesus must be the touch of one who is consciously
guilty. He belongs not to you unless you are a sinner. Confession of gin is no
hard duty to some of us, for we can do no other than acknowledge and bemoan our
guilt f Here we stand before Thee self-condemned, and with aching hearts we
each one cry, ¡§Have mercy upon me, O God, according to Thy lovingkindness.¡¨ Do
any of you refuse to make confession of guilt? Then do not think it hard if,
since according to your own proud notions you are not sinners, the Lord should
provide for you no Saviour I Should medicine be prepared for those who are not
sick? Wherefore should the righteous be invited to partake of pardon? Why
should a righteousness be provided for the innocent? Our true place is that of
sinners: we plead guilty to the dread indictment of God¡¦s holy law, and
therefore we are glad to lay our hand upon the head of the sinner¡¦s Saviour and
sacrifice.
2. In this act there was also a confession of self-impotence. ,Oh,
what can we do without Christ? I like what was said by a child in the Sunday
School, when the teacher said, ¡§You have been reading that Christ is precious:
what does that mean?¡¨ The children stayed a little while, till at last one boy
replied, ¡§Father said the other day that mother was precious, for ¡¥ whatever
should we do without her? ¡¥¡§ This is a capital explanation of the word
¡§precious.¡¨ You and I can truly say of the Lord Jesus Christ that He is
precious to us, for what should we do, what could we do without Him? Because we
are so deeply conscious of our own self-impotence we lean hard upon His all-sufficiency. If you
could read the text in the Hebrew you would find it runs thus: ¡§He shall put his hand upon the
head of the burnt-offering, and it shall be accepted for him to make a cover
for him¡¨--to make atonement for him. The word is copher in the
Hebrew--a cover. Why, then, do we hide behind the Lord Jesus? Because we feel
our need of something to cover us, and to act as an interposition between us
and the righteous Judge of all the earth. If the Holy One of Israel shall look
upon us as we are He must be displeased; bat when He sees us in Christ Jesus He
is well pleased for His righteousness¡¦ sake.
3. There was a further confession of the desert of punishment. When a
man brought his bullock, or his goat, or his lamb, he put his hand on ii, and
as l e knew that the poor creature must die he thus acknowledged that he
himself deserved death.
II. Secondly, the
laying on of hands meant acceptance. The offerer by laying his hand upon the
victim¡¦s head signified that he acknowledged the offering to be for himself.
1. He accepted, first of all, the principle and the plan. Far too
many kick against the idea of our being saved by substitution or
representation. Why do they rebel against it? Why should I complain of that
which is to deliver me from destruction? If the Lord does not object to the
way, why should I? God grant that no one may hold out against a method of grace
so simple, so sure, so available! But, then, mind.
2. After you have accepted the plan and the way, you must not stop
there, but you must go on to accept the sacred person whom God provides. It
would have been a very foolish thing if the offerer had stood at the altar and
said, ¡§Good Lord, I accept the plan of sacrifice; be it burnt-offering or
sin-offering, I agree thereto.¡¨ He did much more than that; he accepted that
very bullock as his offering, and in token thereof placed his hand upon it. I
pray you beware of resting satisfied with understanding and approving the plan
of salvation. I heard of one who anxiously desired to be the means of the
conversion of a young man, and one said to him, ¡§You may go to him, and talk to
him, but you will get him no further, for he is exceedingly well acquainted
with the plan of salvation.¡¨ When the friend began to speak with the young man,
he received for an answer, ¡§I am much obliged to you, but I do not know that
you can tell me much, for I have long known and admired the plan of salvation
by the substitutionary sacrifice of Christ.¡¨ Alas! he was resting in the plan,
but he bad not believed in the Person. The plan of salvation is most blessed,
but it can avail us nothing unless we believe. What is the comfort of a plan of
a house if you do not enter the house itself? What is the good of a plan of
clothing if you have not a rag to cover you? The offerer laid his hands
literally upon the bullock: he found something substantial there, something
which he could handle and touch; even so do we lean upon the real and true work
of Jesus, the most substantial thing under heaven. We come to the Lord Jesus by
faith, and say, ¡§God has provided an atonement here, and I accept it; I believe
it to be a fact accomplished on the Cross that sin was put away by Christ, and
I rest on Him.¡¨ Yes; you must get beyond the acceptance of plans and doctrines
to a resting in the Divine person and finished work of the blessed Lord Jesus
Christ, and a casting of yourself entirely upon Him.
III. But thirdly,
this laying of the hand upon the sacrifice meant not only acceptance, but also
transference.
1. The offerer had confessed his sin, and had accepted the victim
then presented to be his sacrifice, and now he mentally realises that his guilt
is by Divine appointment to pass over from himself to the sacrifice. Of course
this was only done in type and figure at the door of the Tabernacle; but in our
case the Lord Jesus Christ as a matter of literal fact has borne the sin of His
people. ¡§The Lord hath made to meet on Him the iniquity of us all.¡¨ ¡§Who His
own self bare our sins in His own body on the tree.¡¨ ¡§Christ was once offered to
bear the sins of many.¡¨ But do we by faith pass our sins-from ourselves to
Christ? I answer, No: in some senses, no. But by faith he that accepts Christ
as his Saviour agrees with what the Lord did ages ago, for we read in the book
of Isaiah the prophet, ¡§The Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all.¡¨
2. The laying of the hand upon the head of the sacrifice meant a
transference of guilt to the victim, and, furthermore, a confidence in the
efficacy of the sacrifice there and then presented. The believing Jew said,
¡§This bullock represents to me the sacrifice which God has provided, and I
rejoice in it because it is the symbol of a sacrifice which does in very deed
take away sin.¡¨ There are a great number of people who believe in the Lord
Jesus Christ after a fashion, but it is not in deed and in truth, for they do
not believe in the actual pardon of their own sin: they hope that it may one
day be forgiven, but they have no confidence that the Lord Jesus has already
put away their sin by His death. ¡§I am a great sinner,¡¨ says one, ¡§therefore I
cannot be saved.¡¨ Man alive, did Christ die for those who are not sinners? What
was the need of a Saviour except for sinners? Has Jesus actually borne sin, or
has He not? If He has borne our sin, it is gone; if He has not borne it, our
sin will never depart. What does the Scripture say? ¡§He hath made Him to be sin
for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in
Him.¡¨ If, then, Christ did take the sinner¡¦s sin, it remains not upon the sinner
that believeth.
IV. Once more, this
laying of the hand upon the head of the victim meant identification. The
worshipper who laid his hand on the bullock said, ¡§Be pleased, O great Lord, to
identify me with this bullock, and this bullock with me. There has been a
transferring of my sin, now I beseech Thee let me be judged as being in the
victim, and represented thereby.¡¨ Now consider that which happened to the
sacrifice. The knife was unsheathed, and the victim was slain. He was not
merely bound, bat killed; and the man stood there and said, ¡§That is me; that
is the fate which I deserve.¡¨ The poor creature struggled, it wallowed in the
sand in its dying agonies, and if the worshipper was a right-minded person, and
not a mere formalist, he stood with tears in his eyes, and felt in his heart,
¡§That death is mine.¡¨ I beseech you when you think of our blessed Lord to
identify yourselves with Him. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Nothing but laying the hand on the sacrifice will suffice
Now, suppose that the Jew, who went up to the Tabernacle and to
the altar, when he came there had been content to talk about the sacrifice
without personally placing his hand on it. To talk of it would be a very proper
thing to do; but suppose that he had spent all his time in merely discoursing about
the plan of a sacrifice, the providing of a substitute, the shedding of blood,
the clearance of the sinner through sacrificial death; it would have been a
delightful theme, but what would have come of it? Suppose he had talked on and
on, and had gone away home without joining in the offering, he would have found
no ease to his conscience; he would, in fact, have done nothing by going to the
house of the Lord. I am afraid that this is what many of you have done
hitherto. You are pleased to hear the gospel, you take pleasure in the doctrine
of substitution, and you know true doctrine from the current falsehoods of the
hour: for all which I am very glad; but yet you are not saved, because you have
not taken Christ to be your own Saviour. You are like persons who should say,
¡§We are hungry; but we admit that bread is a very proper food for men, besides
which we know what sort of food makes bone, and what makes muscle, and what
makes flesh.¡¨ They keep on talking all day long about the various qualities of
food: do they feel refreshed? No. Is their hunger gone? No. I should suppose
that, if they are at all healthy, their appetite is increased, and the more
they talk about food the more sharp set they become. Why, some of you here have
been talking about the bread of heaven for years, and yet I am afraid you are
no more hungry than you used to be. Do go beyond talking about Christ, and
learn to feed upon Christ. Come, now, let us have done with talk, and come to
deeds of faith. Lay hold on Jesus, who is set before you in the gospel:
otherwise, dear friend, I fear you will perish in the midst of plenty, and die
unpardoned, with mercy at your gate. Suppose, again, that the Israelite instead
of talking with his friends, had thought it wise to consult with one of the priests.
¡§Might I speak with you, sir, a little? Have you a little room somewhere at the
back where you could talk with me, and pray with me?¡¨ ¡§Yes,¡¨ says the priest,
¡§what ails you?¡¨ ¡§My sin lies heavy upon me.¡¨ The priest replies, ¡§You know
that there is a sacrifice for sin; a sin-offering lieth at the door, and God
will accept it at your hands.¡¨ But you say, ¡§I beg you to explain this matter
more fully to me.¡¨ The priest answers, ¡§I will explain it as well as I can; but
the whole of my explanation will end in this one thing--bring a sacrifice, and
over its head confess your sin, and let an atonement be made. The sin-offering
is what God has ordained, and therefore God will receive it. Attend to His
ordinance and live: there is no other way. Fetch your offering; I will kill it
for you, and lay it on the altar and present it to God.¡¨ Do you say to him, ¡§I
will call again to-morrow, and have a little more talk with you¡¨? Do you again
and again cry, ¡§To-morrow¡¨? Do you go again and again into the inquiry-room?
Oh, sir, what will become of you? You will perish in your sin; for God has not
appointed salvation by inquiry-rooms and talks with ministers, but by your
laying your own hand upon the sacrifice which He has appointed. If you will
have Christ; you shall be saved; if you will not have Him, you must perish, all
the talking to you in the world cannot help you one jot if you refuse your
Saviour. But I see another Israelite, and he stands by his offering, and begins
to weep and groan, and bewail himself. I am not sorry to see him weep, for I
trust he is sincerely confessing his guilt; but why does he not place his hand
on the sacrifice? He cries and he sighs, for he is such a sinner; but he does
not touch the offering. The victim is presented, and in order that it may avail for him, he
must lay his hand upon it; but this vital act he neglects and even refuses to
perform. ¡§Ah,¡¨ he says, ¡§I am in such trouble, I am in such deep distress,¡¨ and
he begins starting a difficulty. You hunt that difficulty down, but there he
stands, still groaning and moaning, and producing another difficulty, and yet
another, world without end. The sacrifice is slain, but he has no part in it,
for he has not laid his hand upon it, and he goes away with all the burden of
his guilt upon him, though the sacrificial blood has reddened the ground on
which he stood. That is what some of you do. You go about lamenting your sin,
when your chief lament should be that you have not believed on the Son of God.
If you looked to Jesus you might dry your eyes and bid all hopeless sorrows
cease; for He gives remission of sins to all penitents. Your tears can never
remove your sins; tears, though flowing like a river, can never wash away the
stain of guilt. Your faith must lay her hand on the head of the Lord¡¦s
sacrifice, for there and there only is there hope for the guilty. Observe that
the Israelite had to put his hand upon a victim which was not slain as yet, but
was killed afterwards. This was to remind him that the Messiah was not yet
come; but you have to trust in a Christ who has come, who has lived, who has
died, who has finished the work of salvation, who has gone up into the glory,
and who ever liveth to make intercession for transgressors. Will you trust Him
or will you not? I cannot waste words; I must come to the point. John Bunyan
says that one Sunday when he was playing the game of tip-cat on Elstow Green,
as he was about to strike the cat with the stick, he seemed to hear a voice
saying to him, ¡§Wilt thou leave thy sins and go to heaven, or wilt thou keep
thy sins and go to hell?¡¨ This morning the voice from heaven sounds forth this
question, ¡§Will you trust in Christ and go to heaven, or will you keep apart
from Him and go to hell? for thither you must go unless Jesus becomes your
Mediator and your atoning sacrifice. Will you have Christ or no? I hear you
say, ¡§But¡¨--O that I could thrust your ¡§buts¡¨ aside. Will you have
Christ or not? ¡§Oh, but¡¨--Nay, your ¡§buts¡¨ ought to be thrown into
limbo; I fear they will be your ruin. Will you trust Christ or not? If your
answer is, ¡§I trust Him with all my heart,¡¨ then you are a saved man. I say not
you shall be saved; but you are saved. ¡§He that believeth in Him hath
everlasting life.¡¨ (C. H. Spurgeon.)
He shall put his hand upon the head of the burnt-offering
If we want an offering of ours accepted of God, we must show it in
some way. If we want a share in that which another offers, we must let that be
manifest also. It is not for us to stand off, or to sit upright, while the
minister prays, or the choir sings, ourselves having no part in the service of
prayer or song. We must in some way put our hand on the head of that offering,
and say Amen, or join--feebly and unmelodiously though it may be--in the
chorus. If we fail of this, we fail of any share in the offering and in its
benefits. The Lord wants us to rest confidently on His provisions of grace for
us. He wants us to lean hard on the Substitute offered and accepted in our
behalf. We are not able to stand alone. God understands that very well. But we
ought to be able to lean on a sure support. That support is provided. Do you
rest on it? (H. C. Trumbull.)
For the sake of the substitute
I was led into the church of Dr. Kirk, at Boston, when some
special meetings were going on. I did not know my right hand from my left in
spiritual things. While the doctor was preaching I got angry, for I thought he
was telling the people all about me, and I thought it was very impudent of him
to do so. I determined that I would never enter that church again. However, I was
there next Sunday. Then I went to the prayer-meeting, and got behind a pillar,
but a kind gentleman came and gave me a seat. On coming out, although it was
not cold weather, I pulled my coat-collar up that I might not be recognised.
When I began to be anxious and to pray, I would not say ¡§for Jesus¡¦ sake.¡¨ I
did not understand it. I said, ¡§It ain¡¦t for Jesus¡¦ sake; I want it for my own
sake.¡¨ I could not see what ¡§Jesus¡¦ sake¡¨ had to do with it. I was in Boston
the other day, and saw the old settee I used to sleep on. I had a good mind to
bring it home as a relic; perhaps I may yet. I went home one night and knelt
down by that settee full of trouble, and I cried out, ¡§O God! for Jesus¡¦
sake take this load off me.¡¨ In a moment it was gone; and I thank God that
then, twenty-five years ago, Jesus became my personal Friend, and He has been
my Friend ever since. (D. L. Moody.)
Substitution
A friend of mine was master in a school of black children in
Jamaica. He had made a law that every lie told in school should be punished by
seven strokes on the palm with a strap. One day Lottie Patti told a lie, and
was called up to receive the seven strokes. Lottie was a poor little thing, and
pain was terrible to her. But the master must enforce his law. So Lottie had to
hold out her hand and receive the seven strokes. But her cry of pain when she
had received the first went to the master¡¦s heart. So he looked to the forms on
which the boys were seated, and asked, ¡§Is there any boy will bear the rest of
Lottie¡¦s punishment?¡¨ And as soon as the words were out of his lips up started
a bright little fellow called Jim, and said, ¡§Please, sir, I will!¡¨ And he rose
from his seat, stepped up to the desk, and received, without a cry, the six
remaining strokes. What moved this brave boy to bear Lottie¡¦s punishment? It
was his gentle heart. And it was the vision of a heart gentler still which
filled the master¡¦s
eyes with tears that day, and made him close his books, and bring his scholars
round about his desk, and tell them of the Gentle One who long ago bore the
punishment of us all. (Alex. Macleod, D. D.)
Laying the hand on the victim
The offerer indicated thereby both the surrender of his ownership
of the victim and the transfer to it of the feelings by which he was influenced
in performing this act of dedication to the Lord. From the practice which
obtained during the second Temple, we know that the offerer himself laid both
his hands between the two horns of the animal whilst alive, and that no proxy
could do it. If several offered one sacrifice, each one laid his hand
separately on the victim, confessing his sins and saying, ¡§I have sinned, I
have committed iniquity, I have transgressed and I have done this and this, but
I repent before Thee, and this is my atonement.¡¨ (C. D. Ginsburg, LL. D.)
The substituting sacrifice
In dealing with this lesson the teacher may group his
illustrations around the substitute, the accepted offering, and the completed
sacrifice. During a recent European war a young man was drawn by conscription
for the army. He was very unwilling to join, but the law of his country decreed
that he must go unless he could find some one to take his place. At last a
friend came forward, went to the front in his stead, and was shot down in his
first battle. That was substitution; the volunteer died for his friend. In a
fog on one of the American coasts the fishermen heard the steam-whistle of an
ocean steamer that was coming direct for the rocks. Out some of them went in a
fishing-boat, sailed in before the steamer, shouted words of warning to the
captain, saved the ship, and were run down and drowned. They gave their lives
for the lives of the passengers on the steamship. That is the law of life--life
out of death. The life and liberty of a nation are bought in fields of blood
and sacrifice. The death of a mother becomes the occasion of the salvation of a
hitherto thoughtless son. Even the continued life of individuals is bought by
the slaughter of countless cattle. In picturing out the ceremonies described in
the lesson, emphasise the substitutionary offering of a perfect victim. Only,
in applying the type to Christ, remember that the meaning of His death for us
is greater and fuller than that of any type or illustration. If you tender a
clipped coin in payment of what you buy, it will be refused; it is not full
value. If a man offer to become bail for an accused person, and it is shown
that his property cannot cover the amount of bail, his offer is refused. If a college
professor were about to take a week¡¦s vacation, it is not likely that the offer
of an illiterate man to fill his place till he returned, would be accepted. So
the sacrifice that redeems a human soul must be perfect and without blemish.
The typical perfect burnt-offering pointed to the accepted offering of the perfect
antitype Christ. Picture out the scene at the burning of the offering--the
sprinkled blood, the parted body, the smoke rising from the burning fat. The
wounded man does not realise how dangerous a thing that slight wound in the arm
is, till he sees the surgeons standing around, and notes the preparations made
for cutting the limb off. So the sinner must have realised what a terrible
thing sin was, when he saw the bloody sacrifice and the burning fire. Should
our hatred and fear of sin be any less when we look upon the completed
sacrifice at Calvary? (American Sunday School Times.)
To make atonement for him--
Atonement
In this word ¡§atonement¡¨ we are introduced to one of the key-words
of Leviticus, as indeed of the whole Scripture. The Hebrew radical originally
means ¡§to cover,¡¨ and is used once (Genesis 6:14) in this purely physical
sense. But commonly, as here, it means ¡§to cover¡¨ in a spiritual sense, that
is, to cover the sinful person from the sight of the Holy God, who is ¡§of purer
eyes than to behold evil.¡¨ Hence, it is commonly rendered ¡§to atone,¡¨ or ¡§to
make atonement¡¨; also, ¡§to reconcile,¡¨ or ¡§to make reconciliation.¡¨ The thought
is this: that between the sinner and the Holy One comes now the guiltless
victim; so that the eye of God looks not upon the sinner, but on the offered
substitute; and in that the blood of the substituted victim is offered before
God for the sinner, atonement is made for sin, and the Most Holy One is
satisfied. And when the believing Israelite should lay his hand with confession
of sin upon the appointed victim, it was graciously promised: ¡§It shall be
accepted for him,¡¨ &c. And just so now, whenever any guilty sinner, fearing
the deserved wrath of God because of his sin, especially because of his lack of
that full consecration which the burnt-sacrifice set forth, lays his hand in
faith upon the great Burnt-offering of Calvary, the blessing is the same. For
in the light of the Cross, this Old Testament word becomes a sweet New
Testament promise: ¡§When thou shalt rest with the hand of faith upon this Lamb
of God, He shall be accepted for thee, to make atonement for thee.¡¨ This is
most beautifully expressed in an ancient ¡§Order for the Visitation of the Sick,¡¨
attributed to Anselm of Canterbury, in which it is written: ¡§The minister shall
say to the sick man, Dost thou believe that thou canst not be saved but by the death of
Christ? The sick man answereth, Yes. Then let it be said unto him, Go to, then,
and whilst thy soul abideth in thee, put all thy confidence in this death
alone; place thy trust in no other thing; commit thyself wholly to this death;
cover thyself alway with this alone And if God would judge thee, say, Lord, I
place the death of our Lord Jesus Christ between me and Thy judgment; otherwise
I will not contend or enter into judgment with Thee. And if He shall say unto
thee that thou art a sinner, say, I place the death of our Lord Jesus Christ
between me and my sins. If He shall say unto thee, that thou hast deserved
damnation, say, Lord, I put the death of our Lord Jesus Christ between Thee and
all my sins; and I offer His merits for my own, which I should have, and have
not.¡¨ And whosoever of us can thus speak, to him the promise speaks from out
the shadows of the tent of meeting: ¡§This Christ, the Lamb of God, the true
Burnt-offering, shall be accepted for thee, to make atonement for thee.¡¨ (S. H.
Kellogg, D. D.)
The blood of Christ
¡§The sacrifice which Jesus Christ offered for His people was
better than zany or all offered under the Levitical law; for they all combined
in Him. It was a richer sacrifice by far in itself, for in the Levitical
sacrifice there was only the principle of brute life; but in Christ¡¦s not only
human, but holy, and more, it was Heavenly blood, and so much higher in
intrinsic value. His was no involuntary sacrifice, no accidental death; for
while sentence was pronounced in Pilate¡¦s hall yet ¡§it pleased the Lord to
bruise Him.¡¨ His sacrifice of Himself procures a more thorough cleansing, for
it is no ritual or ceremonial cleanness, but a purged conscience, and eternally
settles the question of sin. It brings the soul at once into freedom to serve
God; the cleansed spirit is brought into delightful service for the Redeemer;
it sweeps all time in its efficacy, and is yet to have a more glorious
consummation; for our High Priest is in the Holy Place just now, but the
curtain will be drawn before long, and He shall come with stretched-out hands
bearing the print of the nails--coming out to bless His people.¡¨ (Arch.
Brown.)
Redeemed by blood
Some Africans are terribly bloodthirsty and cruel. A chief, one
day, ordered a slave to be killed for a very small offence. An Englishman who
overheard the order at once went to the chief and offered him many costly
things if he would spare the poor man¡¦s life. But the chief turned to him and
said: ¡§I don¡¦t want ivory, or slaves, or gold; I can go to yonder tribe and
capture their stores and villages. I want no favours from the white man. All I
want is blood.¡¨ Then he ordered one of his men to pull the bowstring and
discharge an arrow at the heart of the poor slave. The Englishman instinctively
threw himself in front and held up his arm, and the next moment the arrow was
quivering in the white man¡¦s flesh. The black men were astonished. Then, as the
Englishman pulled the arrow from his arm, he said to the chief: ¡§Here is blood;
I give my blood for this poor slave, and I claim his life.¡¨ The chief had never
seen such love before, and he was completely overcome by it. He gave the slave
to the white man, saying: ¡§Yes, white man, you have bought him with your blood,
and he shall be yours.¡¨ In a moment the poor slave threw himself at the feet of
his deliverer, and with tears flowing down his face, exclaimed: ¡§Oh, white man,
you have bought me with your blood; I will be your slave for ever.¡¨ The
Englishman could never make him take his freedom. Wherever he went the rescued
man was beside him, and no drudgery was too hard, no task too hopeless for the
grateful slave to do for his deliverer. If the heart of a poor heathen can thus
be won by the wound on a stranger¡¦s arm shall not we, who are ¡§redeemed by the
precious blood of Christ,¡¨ give our whole lives also to His service? (S. S.
Chronicle.)
Remission by blood
I would earnestly commend this remission by the shedding of
blood to those who have not yet believed. Mr. Innis, a great Scotch minister,
once visited an infidel who was dying. When he came to him the first time, he
said, ¡§Mr. Innis, I am relying on the mercy of God; God is merciful, and He will never damn a
man for ever.¡¨ When he got worse and was nearer death, Mr. Innis went to him
again, and he said, ¡§Oh, Mr. Innis, my hope is gone; for I have been thinking
if God be merciful, God is just too; and what if, instead of being merciful to
me, He should be just to me? What would then become of me? I must give up my
hope in the mere mercy of God; tell me how to be saved!¡¨ Mr. Innis told him
that Christ had died in the stead of all believers--that God could be just, and
yet the justifier through the death of Christ. ¡§Ah!¡¨ said he, ¡§Mr. Innis, there
is something solid in that; I can rest on that; I cannot rest on anything
else.¡¨ (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Sprinkled with the blood of Christ
Martin Luther went one day to see a lad who lay dying.
Among the questions asked him was this: ¡§What will you take with you to God?¡¨
¡§Everything that is good,¡¨ was the reply. ¡§How can you, a poor sinner, take
anything to God?¡¨ asked the great man. ¡§I will take to God in heaven an humble
and a contrite heart, sprinkled with the blood of Christ,¡¨ was the reply of the
dying boy. ¡§Go then, dear son, you will be a welcome guest with God,¡¨ responded
Luther.
He shall kill the bullock
Slaying the sacrifice
I.
Concerning
the killing and
slaying of the offering, our first point is that it was absolutely essential.
1. The pouring out of the blood of the victim was of the very essence
of the type. The death of Christ by blood-shedding was absolutely necessary to
make Him an acceptable sacrifice for sin. ¡§It behoved Christ to suffer.¡¨ He
could only enter into the presence of God with His own blood. He could not be
the grain of wheat which bringeth forth much fruit unless He should die. ¡§The
blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all sin.¡¨ Observe, not the
life, not the incarnation, not the resurrection, not the second coming of the
Lord Jesus, but His blood, His death, the giving up of His life, is that which
cleanseth us from all sin. This is that purging with hyssop whereof David
speaks when he laments his sin, and yet looks to be made whiter than snow by
the free pardon of his God. This truth is the subject of all true gospel
preaching. Do you not know how Paul puts it--¡§The preaching of the Cross is to
them that perish foolishness; but unto us which are saved it is the power of God¡¨; ¡§for,¡¨ he
says, ¡§the Jews require a sign, and the Greeks seek after wisdom: but we preach
Christ crucified.¡¨ It is not Christ in any other position, but Christ as
crucified, Christ as made a curse for us up n the tree, that is the first and
most prominent fact that we are called to preach among the sons of men.
2. Here let us further consider that death is the result and penalty
of sin--¡§The soul that sinneth it shall die.¡¨ ¡§Sin, when it is finished,
bringeth forth death.¡¨ ¡§The wages of sin is death.¡¨ It was meet that the
Substitute should bear a similar chastisement to that which should have fullen
upon the sinner.
3. This death of Christ was absolutely necessary also for the
clearing of the troubled conscience. An awakened conscience will never be
quieted with anything less than the blood of the Lamb: it rests at the sight of
the great Sacrifice, but nowhere else.
II. Secondly, we
will with great delight meditate upon the fact that the death of Christ is
effectually prevalent. Other offerings, though duly slain, did nothing
thoroughly, did nothing lastingly, did nothing really, by way of expiation; for
the Scripture saith, ¡§It is not possible that the blood of bulls and of goats
should take away sins¡¨ the true purification is alone found in the death of the
Son of God. Why was there such cleansing power in the Redeemer¡¦s blood? I
answer, for several reasons.
1. First, because of the glory of His person. Only think who He was I
He was none other than the ¡§Light of light, very God of very God.¡¨
2. Next, consider the perfection of our Lord¡¦s character. In Him was
no sin, nor tendency to sin. He was ¡§holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate
from sinners.¡¨ In His character we see every virtue at its best; He is
incomparable. If lie therefore died, ¡§the just for the unjust,¡¨ what must be
the merit of such a death?
3. Think next of the nature of the death of Christ, and you will be
helped to see how effectual it must be. It was not a death by disease or old
age, but a death of violence, well symbolised by the killing of the victim at
the altar.
4. And then think of the Spirit in which our Lord and Saviour bore
all this. Martyrs who have died for the faith have only paid the debt of nature
a little before its time, for they must have died sooner or later; but our Lord
needed not to have died at all he said of His life, ¡§No man taketh it from Me,
but I lay it down of Myself.¡¨ O glorious Christ, there must be infinite merit
in such a death as Thine, endured in such a style!
5. And then I bid you to remember once more the covenant character
which Christ sustained: for when He was crucified we thus judge that one died
for all, and in Him all died. He was not slain as a private individual, but He
was put to death as a representative man.
III. That the fact
of the necessity for the death of the Lord Jesus is intensely instructive.
1. Must the victims die? must Jesus bleed? then let us see what is
claimed by our righteous God. He claims our life: He claimed of the offering
its blood, which is the life thereof: He justly requires of each of us our
whole life. Nor is the demand unjust. Did He not make us, and does He not
preserve us? Should He not receive homage from the creatures of His hand?
2. Next, must the sacrifice die? then see the evil of sin. It is not
such a trifle as certain men imagine. It is a deadly evil, a killing poison. It
is a horrible and a grievous thing, and God saith to you, ¡§Oh, do not this
abominable thing which I hate.¡¨ God help you to flee from all iniquity.
3. Next learn the love of God. Behold how He loved you and me I He
must punish sin, but He must save us, and so He gives His Son to die in our
stead. I shall not go too far if I say that in giving His Son the Lord God gave
Himself, for Jesus is one with the Father. Next learn how Christ has made an
end of sin. His one offering has perfected for ever the set-apart ones. These
are but a few of the great lessons which we may learn from the necessity that
the Sacrifice should be slain.
IV. And so I shall
close by saying that this blessed subject is not only full of instruction, but
it is energetically inspiring.
1. First, this inspires us with the spirit of consecration. When I
think that I could not be saved except by the death of Jesus, then I feel that
I am not my own, but bought with a price.
2. Next, this truth should create in us a longing after the greatest
holiness, for we should say, ¡§Did sin kill my Saviour? Then I will kill sin!¡¨
3. Does not this inspire you with great love for the Lord Jesus? Can
you look at His dear wounds, and not be wounded with love for Him? Are not His
wounds as mouths which plead with you to yield Him all your hearts?
4. Lastly, do you not think that this solemn truth should inspire us
with great zeal for the salvation of others? (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The priest shall burn all on the altar.
The sacrificial burning
What was the significance of the burning? It has been often
answered that the consumption of the victim by fire symbolised the consuming
wrath of Jehovah, utterly destroying the victim which represented the sinful
person of the offerer. And, observing that the burning followed the killing and
shedding of blood, some have even gone so far as to say that the burning
typified the eternal fire of hell! But when we remember that, without doubt,
the sacrificial victim in all the Levitical offerings was a type of Christ, we
may well agree with one who justly calls this interpretation ¡§hideous.¡¨. . .
While it is quite true that fire often typifies the wrath of God punishing sin,
it is certain that it cannot always symbolise this, not even in the sacrificial
ritual. For in the meal-offering (chap. 2.) it is impossible that the thought
of expiation should enter, since no life is offered and no blood shed; yet this
also is presented to God in fire. We must hold, therefore, that the burning can
only mean in the burnt-offering that which alone it can signify in the
meal-offering, namely, the ascending of the offering in consecration to God, on
the one hand,
and, on the ocher, God¡¦s gracious acceptance and appropriation of the offering. This was
impressively set forth in the case of the burnt-offering presented when the
Tabernacle service was inaugurated; when, we are told (Leviticus 9:24), the fire which consumed
it came forth from before Jehovah, lighted by no human hand, and was thus a
visible representation of God accepting and appropriating the offering to
Himself. The symbolism of the burning thus understood, we can now perceive what
must have been the special meaning of this sacrifice. As regarded by the
believing Israelite of those days, not yet discerning clearly the deeper truth
it shadowed forth as to the great Burnt Sacrifice of the future, it must have
symbolically taught him that complete consecration unto God is essential to
right worship. There were sacrifices having a different special import, in
which, while a part was burnt, the offerer might even himself join in eating
the remaining part, taking that for his own use. But in the burnt-offering
nothing was for himself: all was for God; and in the fire of the altar God took
the whole in such a way that the offering for ever passed beyond the offerer¡¦s
recall. In so far as the offerer entered into this conception, and his inward
experience corresponded to this out, ward rite, it was for him an act of
worship. But to the thoughtful worshipper, one would think, it must sometimes
have occurred that, after all, it was not himself or his gift that thus
ascended in full consecration to God, but a victim appointed by God to
represent him in death on the altar. And thus it was that, whether understood
or not, the offering in its very nature pointed to a Victim of the future, in
whoso person and
work, as the one only fully consecrated Man, the burnt-offering should receive its
full explication. And this brings us to the question, What aspect of the person
and work of our Lord was herein specially typified? It cannot be the resultant
fellowship with God, as in the peace-offering; for the sacrificial feast which
set this forth was in this case wanting. Neither can it be expiation for sin;
for although this is expressly represented here, yet it is not the chief thing.
The principal thing in the burnt-offering was the burning, the complete
consumption of the victim in the sacrificial fire. Hence what is represented
chiefly here, is not so much Christ representing His people in atoning death as
Christ representing His people in perfect consecration and entire
self-surrender unto God; in a word, in perfect obedience. How much is made of
this aspect of our Lord¡¦s work in the Gospels! The first words we hear from His
lips are to this effect (Luke 2:49); and after His official work
began in the first cleansing of the Temple, this manifestation of His character
was such as to remind His disciples that it was written, ¡§The zeal of Thy house
shall eat me up¡¨--phraseology which brings the burnt-offering at once to mind.
And His constant testimony concerning Himself, to which His whole life bare
witness, was in such words as these: ¡§I came down from heaven, not to do My own
will, but the will of Him that sent Me . . . ¡¨ And so the burnt-offering
teaches us to remember that Christ has not only died for our sins, but also consecrated
Himself for us to God in full self-surrender in our behalf. We are therefore to
plead not only His atoning death, but also the transcendent merit of His life
of full consecration to the Father¡¦s will. To this the words three times
repeated concerning the burnt-offering (Leviticus 1:9; Leviticus 1:13; Leviticus 1:17) blessedly apply: it is
¡§an offering made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the Lord.¡¨ That is, this full
self-surrender of the holy Son of God unto the Father is exceedingly delightful
and acceptable unto God. And for this reason it is for us an ever-prevailing
argument for our own acceptance, and for the gracious bestowment for Christ¡¦s
sake of all that there is
in Him for us. Only let us ever remember that we cannot argue, as in the case
of the atoning death, that as Christ died that we might not die, so He offered
Himself in full consecration unto God, that we might thus be released from this
obligation. Here the exact opposite is the truth; for Christ Himself said in
His memorable
prayer, just before His offering of Himself to death, ¡§For their sakes I
sanctify (consecrate) Myself, that they also might be sanctified in truth.¡¨ And
thus is brought before us the thought, that if the sin-offering emphasised the
substitutionary death of Christ, whereby He became our righteousness, the
burnt-offering as distinctively brings before us Christ as our sanctification,
offering Himself without spot, a whole burnt-offering to God. And as by that
one life of sinless obedience to the will of the Father He procured our
salvation by His merit, so in this respect He has also become our one perfect
example of what consecration to God really is. (S. H. Kellogg, D. D.)
The best offering
Some children lost their Sunday-school teacher by death. The
scholars gathered round the open grave, and the little hands dropped in their
wreaths of flowers. They talked afterwards about his goodness and his love, and
then considered what they should do to keep his memory bright. One little girl
said: ¡§Let us keep his grave fresh with flowers,¡¨ so every Sunday, after school
hours, one of the little girls was told off to beg the flowers she could not
gather, and lay them on her teacher¡¦s grave. Twelve months passed away, and one
sultry July morning one of the grave-diggers saw, lying on the grave which had
been so tenderly cared for, a little slumbering child of five or six years. He
took her in his arms and gently woke her up. ¡§Where am I?¡¨ exclaimed the
aroused sleeper. Then suddenly recalling why she had come there, she added,
¡§Oh, I know; it was my turn to put the flowers on teacher¡¦s grave last night,
and I couldn¡¦t find anything half good enough. He used to call me his ¡¥little
flower,¡¦ and I thought I would give myself to him, just to show him how I loved
him.¡¨ In that cemetery there are two graves opposite each other, the one the
Sunday-school teacher, and the other that of the little girl, and on her grave
are these words, ¡§Little Flower.¡¨ She gave herself to show how much she loved
him. (G. S. Reaney.)
Genuine consecration
A personal friend asked Wendell Phillips not long before his
death, ¡§Mr. Phillips, did you ever consecrate yourself to God?¡¨ ¡§Yes,¡¨ he
answered, ¡§when I was a boy, fourteen years of age, in the old church at the
north end, I heard Lyman Beecher preach on the theme, ¡¥You belong to God,¡¦ and
I went home after that service, threw myself on the floor in my room, with
locked doors, and prayed, ¡¥O God, I belong to Thee; take what is Thine own. I
ask this, that whenever a thing be wrong it may have no power of temptation
over me; whenever a thing to be right it may take no courage to do it.¡¦ From
that day to this it has been so. Whenever I have known a thing to be wrong it
has held no temptation. Whenever I have known a thing to be right it has taken
no courage to do it.¡¨
A devoted life
David Brainerd was one of those who might be called God¡¦s men.
From the first, it was the vision of God¡¦s splendour which subdued him; it was
for the glory of God that he laboured; his nearness to the blaze of the Divine
presence enabled him to kindle a light which will never be extinguished. Hear
what he says concerning his experience when first he obtained a foothold in the
kingdom, ¡§My soul rejoiced with joy unspeakable to see such a God! such a
glorious, Divine Being; and I was inwardly pleased and satisfied that He should
be God over all for ever and ever. My soul was so captivated and delighted with
the excellency, loveliness, greatness, and other perfections of God, that I was
even swallowed up in Him; at least, to that degree that I had no thought, that
I remember at first, about my own salvation, and scarcely reflected that there
was such a creature as myself.¡¨ And, again, on his twenty-fourth birthday, ¡§I
hardly ever so longed to live to God, and to be altogether devoted to Him, I
wanted to wear out my life in His service and for His glory.¡¨ He wrote a
journal, detailing the exercises of his soul, and recounting his experiences
amongst the Redskins. Two early volumes of it he destroyed, lest he might be
led to glory in anything he had felt or done; the remaining volumes he also
desired to demolish when he came to die; but through the influence of Jonathan
Edwards, who had caught a glimpse of their contents, and estimated their worth,
he was induced to spare them, and even permit them to be published, though they
had not been written with such an intention, but in the weary solitudes had
been like a friend, to whom he could pour out the secrets of his heart. William
Carey, the pioneer of modern missions, read these journals of Brainerd as he
sat on the shoemaker¡¦s bench, and said to himself, ¡§If God can do such things
among the Indians of America, why not among the pagans of India?¡¨ He was thus
led to offer himself for missionary work just one hundred years ago. Henry
Martyn read the book, and received an impulse which sent him to live and die
for Christ in Persia. John Wesley, in answering the question, ¡§What can be done
to revive the work of God where it is decayed?¡¨ said, ¡§Let every preacher read
carefully over the life of David Brainerd.¡¨ McCheyne records, in his journal,
that after reading it, he was ¡§more set on missionary enterprise than ever.¡¨ (W.
Y. Fullerton, ¡§Sword and Trowel.¡¨)
Results of total self surrender
What are the results of total self-surrender to God, as known to
universal ethical experience? Peace, spiritual illumination, hatred of sin,
admiration of holiness, a strange new sense of the Divine presence, a feeling
of union with God, a love of prayer. Even in the sphere which historic
Christianity has not reached, there will be, after total self-surrender, as I
hold, at least a dim sense of forgiveness, the feeling that one can say ¡§Abba
Father¡¨; a new delight in God¡¦s works and in His Word; love of man; loss of
fear of death: a growing and finally supreme love of the Father, Redeemer,
Ruler, Saviour, which has become the soul¡¦s all. An evangelist of great
experience and wisdom, one of whose anniversaries was lately honoured in this
city, has distributed many thousands of cards on which were printed the
following evidences of conversion. He speaks from the point of view of
exegetical knowledge. I have spoken thus far from the point of view of ethical
science, strictly so-called. Let me contrast now with my results, these results
of a practical evangelist. These are the signs of conversion which Dr. Earle gives--
1. A full surrender of the will to God.
2. The removal of a burden of sin gradually or suddenly.
3. A new love to Christians and to Jesus.
4. Anew relish for the Word of God.
5. Pleasure in secret prayer, at least at times.
6. Sin or sinful thoughts will cause pain.
7. Desire and efforts for the salvation of others.
8. A desire to obey Christ in His commands and ordinances.
9. Deep humility and self-abasement.
10. A growing desire to be holy and like Christ. (Joseph Cook.)
Bring his offering of turtledoves.
The burnt sacrifice of birds
I. We observe, in
the first place, that worship and dedication to god are the general ideas
connected with sacrifices in the sacred scriptures, and this is most important
to a right understanding of them. His own Divine love induced the Saviour to
glorify His humanity through sufferings, that He might be a Saviour for ever to bring His
children to Himself; and thus He suffered, as the apostle says, the just for
the unjust, to bring us to God. He suffered to satisfy His love, not as a
punishment to appease the anger of another Divine person. In the sacrifice before us, ¡§it is a
burnt sacrifice, an offering made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the Lord. A
symbol this of the offering of interior worship from love, the fire of the
soul, on the altar of the heart.
II. But secondly,
the objects offered up were correspondences of good principles or powers in the
mind. The animals used in the sacrifices were lambs, sheep, oxen, goats,
turtledoves, and pigeons, and a consideration of the typical character of each
will assist us to confirm the truth of our first proposition. The lamb is used
in Scripture as the symbol of innocence, and is so expressive of this grace
that it is almost a household word for those who are in possession of it. ¡§I
send you forth,¡¨ said our Lord, ¡§as lambs in the midst of wolves.¡¨ Sheep are
the types of the gentle principles of charity, or sympathising brotherly love.
The sheep described by the Lord Jesus in Matthew 25:1-46. were those who had fed
the hungry, clothed the naked, visited the sick and the prisoners, and succoured the strangers.
Oxen are the types of the dispositions to duty and obedience. It was the animal chiefly devoted
to the plough, and ploughing, in the spiritual sense, means the preparation of
the soul to receive the knowledge of heavenly things. The goat, whose delight
is in leaping from rock to rock,
is the symbol of the disposition to regard the truths of faith with great
pleasure, which sometimes degenerates into a love of faith only, and then is
strongly condemned by the Lord (Ezekiel 34:1-31.; Matthew 25:1-46.). Birds, from their
soaring power, are the symbols of thoughts. Turtledoves and pigeons are correspondences
of those tender thoughts and yearnings after the heavenly life which the soul
has in the early part of its regeneration. The cooing of the turtledove was
first heard in the groves of Palestine, on the return of spring. Its sweet
sound was the sign of the approach of a brighter and warmer season. When the
soul, therefore, is coming to a more genial condition, the sweet thoughts of
hope and trust that encourage its advance towards the heavenly state and
kingdom are like the soft notes of a God-sent turtledove. All these types,
then, of good affections and thoughts, as well as the mode of offering up by
fire, abundantly confirm the view we have drawn from tile Holy Word, that the
sacrifices were representative of good things and principles dedicated to the
Lord in worship, not of punishment for human sin. May I not ask you if you have
no spiritual sacrifice to make? Have not the turtledove, or the young pigeon of
heavenward thought, begun to make themselves heard within you? Have you no
yearnings after a better land? Have you not felt the aspirations after a fuller
conformity to the Lord, after greater purity of heart, and greater usefulness
on earth? If you have, follow their leadings, and offer them up to the Lord in
love. Let the fire glow on the altar of your heart. Acknowledge that these
first yearnings for good are from Him. He will not despise the gift, but bless
it, as an offering made by fire, a sweet savour unto the Lord.
III. We observe that
so far from the idea of sacrifices being regarded as symbolical of punishment
by the Divine Being, the truth is, that outward sacrifices never were in
accordance with the divine command at all, but were mere permissions to serve
as types during human darkness and degeneracy. A common idea has been entertained
that outward sacrifices are frequently commanded by God, and He originated the
Divine arrangement with the Israelites;
but this is altogether an error. Sacrifices were prevalent among the nations of the East
before God spoke from Sinai at all. Pharaoh told the Hebrews they could
sacrifice in his land, before a single law respecting sacrifice was given them
(Exodus 8:25). In the Book of Leviticus,
where the laws respecting sacrifices are all expressly given, they do not
command sacrifices, they only regulate them. The language is, ¡§If any man of
you bring an offering unto the Lord,¡¨ as in Leviticus 1:2; ¡§If his offering be of the
flocks¡¨ (Leviticus 1:10); ¡§If the burnt sacrifice
for the offering of the Lord be of fowls¡¨ (Leviticus 1:14); and so on through the
book, evidently implying no command, but regulation. The Israelitish people,
like all their neighbours, had sunk from worshipping God in the heart and mind,
with those affections and thoughts to which animals are the figures and
correspondences, and were only too ready to offer up animals instead of
offering up themselves. God only regulated this disposition to be a shadow of a
better worship to come. The graces of the heart are what God requires, not the
slaughter of animals (see Jeremiah 7:22-23; 1 Samuel 15:22; Micah 6:7-8). Let us never suppose, then,
that any sacrifice will be acceptable to Him, instead of that devotion of all
the principles of the soul to do His holy will, which is the inward meaning of
all the sacrifices.
IV. Lastly, To
enable us to do this, and thus to return to the order of heaven, and to offer
spiritual sacrifices again, the lord himself took human nature upon himself,
and purified, perfected, and glorified this, so that all the sacrifices have
their highest fulfilment in the lord Jesus Christ, the great high priest and the supreme
sacrifice. Now we have seen that in relation to man the sacrifices represent
the dedication of the several principles of his nature to the Divine will, by
the destruction of selfishness in him, and his consequent regeneration. In our
blessed Lord this sanctification of His humanity was far higher; it was the
making of it Divine, and thus tile supreme sacrifice. He had the same
principles in His humanity which we have in ours, thus He had the innocence represented
by the lamb, the charity of which the sheep is the symbol, the obedience
typified by the ox, the desire for faith of which the goat is the emblem, the
thought and yearnings for the salvation of the human race represented by the
turtledoves and young pigeons. As His humanity was from Jehovah interiorly,
being the Son of God, but clothed with infirm coverings from His mother, He
needed to sanctify and perfect it by a process precisely similar to that by
means of which His children are prepared for heaven. (J. Bayley, Ph. D.)
Our Lord¡¦s tenderness in dealing with the offerings of the poor
¡§Then he shall bring his offering of turtledoves, or of young
pigeons.¡¨ There is a great deal of tenderness in the Lord¡¦s way of dealing with
the offerings of the poor among men; but there is a great deal of meanness in
man¡¦s way of giving poor offerings to the Lord. The Lord says, If the offering
is of the herd, let it be of the best; if the offerer is too poor to bring a
bullock, let him take a choice offering from his sheep or his goats; if indeed
he has neither herd nor flock, let him bring the best he can find from among
his fowls or his pigeons, and the willing spirit shall enlarge the small
offering in the sight of the Lord. But man says, My cows are all Alderney or
Durham stock; I must hold on to them. My sheep are South Down and Cotesworth;
they are needed for wool and mutton. Some of my fowls and pigeons are of fancy
breed: I don¡¦t see how I can let them go. But there is a sickly pigeon, and a
chicken with the ¡§pip.¡¨ They¡¦ll do for an offering. And the close-fisted
believer goes up smilingly to the sanctuary, and passes in his shabby offering,
with a self-gratulatory likening of his gift to the ¡§widow¡¦s mites.¡¨ There is a
world of beauty in the Lord¡¦s regard for the circumstances and necessities of
His children. There is a shameful perversion, by ungrateful men, of God¡¦s
goodness in His call for offerings according to the means--not according to the
meanness--of those who profess to love and serve Him. (H. C. Trumbull.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n