We all wanted to read through the entire Bible in a year, but when we got into Leviticus, we are become stuck, slowed down.
Why did God include Leviticus in the Bible?
How exciting it was to start that
Bible reading commitment; January 1st was smooth, Genesis was fine
for you, and Exodus seemed pretty good, at least more than half of it did, but
then you came to Leviticus. Now you want to quit reading because your progress
has come to a grinding halt.
One reason is that the Old
Testament book is about sacrifices and rituals that no longer seem to matter to
us. We no longer have a tabernacle or a temple.
And, since there are no more sacrifices
today, why should modern-day Christians bother reading Leviticus at all?
UNDERSTANDING THE HOLINESS OF GOD
The key to reading Leviticus is to
remember that Leviticus is the Word of God. The book is not just filled with
rules for ancient Israel, but it has transferable principles for our lives today.
Leviticus contains truth that transcends time and culture.
For example, one great aspect of
Leviticus is that it reminds us of the holiness of God. Even though God desired
a close fellowship with Israel, they couldn't enter His presence as if the Lord
were their buddy or pal. God is the Creator of the universe, the king of the
world, and His essence is glorious purity and total holiness. When we read the
expansive list
of rules about approaching God in
Leviticus, we are reminded of just how holy He is. Most of us know that Peter’s
first New Testament letter reminds believers to be holy because God is holy.
But do we realize that 1 Peter 1:16 is actually quoting from four
separate verses from (you guessed it!) Leviticus (11:45; 19:2: 20:7; 26)?
UNDERSTANDING THE SIN OFFERING
Another example of a transferable
truth from Leviticus is found in the entire sacrificial system. There are
principles involved in all the different kinds of sacrifices, but the most foundational
teaching is in the sin offering. Leviticus 4-5 shows how a sinner is to present
an animal sacrifice (Lev. 4:28), by placing his or her hand on the sacrificial
animal as a symbolic identification with the animal (v. 29). By this action, the
sin was transferred from the person to the animal. The animal's death would
follow (v. 29) and the sinning person would be forgiven and live (v. 31). This
is a divine transaction— an exchange of life. The reason it is so important for
us to understand the sacrifice is that without it we cannot fully understand
the meaning of the Messiah Jesus’ death for us.
Jesus presented Himself to God as our sacrifice. Jesus identified with our sin while remaining sinless Himself (2 Cor. 5:21).
Then the Lord Jesus died for us,
paying the penalty for our sin (and rose again, proving He’s God). If we have
faith in His death and resurrection, then a great transaction takes place, His
exchange of life. He died so that we might live.
The book of
Hebrews reminds us that the Old Testament sacrifices never really took away sin
but merely foreshadowed the coming sacrifice of the Messiah Jesus. Hebrews 10:4
declares:
“For it is
impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sins.”
Those sacrifices pointed forward to
the death of Messiah Jesus on our behalf. This whole idea of the Messiah Jesus’
substitution is derived from the sin offering, as Paul states: “For what the
law was powerless to do because it was weakened by the flesh, God did by
sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh to be a sin offering. And
so he condemned sin in the flesh” (Rom. 8:3 NIV).
This concept of Jesus’
substitutionary sacrifice, that “God made Christ, who never sinned, to be the
offering for our sin, so that we could be made right with God through Christ”
(2 Cor. 5:21 NLT), wouldn't even be comprehensible without understanding the sin
offering found in (surprise, surprise) the book of Leviticus.
WE ARE CONSECRATED PRIESTS
Here’s one more example of the
value of Leviticus for today: when the High Priest was consecrated to serve
God, Moses took the ram of ordination, slaughtered it, and put some of its
blood on Aaron's right earlobe, right hand, and the big toe of his right foot
(Lev. 8:22-23). While this might seem weird, there was a purpose. The ear
represents hearing; the thumb, doing; and the toe, walking. Basically, it was
saying that the High Priest was to be consecrated to serve God every day in every
way. He was separated for God's service, not just when
he went into the tabernacle, but
every minute of every day.
That’s a great reminder to us
because in Revelation 1:6, followers of Jesus are called “priests to [our] God
and Father.”
We are mediating God's love to this
world not just when we are at our congregations or serving in some ministry,
but like Aaron, our whole lives—whether at work, school, or play— are to be
consecrated to serving God (Col. 3:17). And this great principle is found in. .
. wait for it, Leviticus.
FINAL THOUGHTS
There's so much more to Leviticus
than can be addressed in this short space. But let’s say this: Leviticus is
God’s Word and it can transform our lives. My own personal paraphrase of
Proverbs 16:20, says, “He who gives attention to the Word, even the more
challenging parts of it, will find good, and blessed is he who trusts in the
Lord.” So, I would encourage you to keep these key values in mind as you go
back and read Leviticus.


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