Leviticus 1:1-3:17
We may note the frequent recurrence
of the phrase, "a soothing aroma to the Lord" (Leviticus 1:9,13,17:
Leviticus 2:2,9,12; Leviticus 3:5,16). The presence of the Lord is "like
a fragrance that fills the air." Not all people welcome the presence of
the Lord. To some, it is "the aroma of Christ", " a life-giving
fragrance." To others, it is "a deadly fragrance" (2 Corinthians
2:14-16). We are to pray that our life - in every part - will be
pleasing to the Lord, bringing glory to Him. This will involve our
worship in the holy place. It will also involve our living for the Lord
in the many and varied situations of everyday life.
Leviticus 4:1-35
The
word, "blood, appears often here. We may note, in particular, the
phrase, in Leviticus 4:25, "the blood of the offering for sin." In the
final verse (Leviticus 4:35), we may note why "the blood of the offering
for sin" was shed - "forgiveness" and "peace with the Lord." Reading
about this, our thoughts turn towards Jesus Christ, our Saviour, who
died that we might be forgiven. Out of love for us, He gave Himself for
our sins so that we might have peace with God (Romans 5:8,1).
Leviticus 5:1-7:38
In
the descriptions of different offerings, we catch a glimpse of our need
and Christ's salvation. There is the "offering for sin" (Leviticus
5:6), the "fellowship offering of thanksgiving" (Leviticus 7:15), the
"guilt offering" (Leviticus 7:34), the "ordination offering" (Leviticus
7:37). There is teaching here which we must build on in our
understanding of our Christian experience. Christ died for our sins to
remove our guilt and bring us into fellowship with God. Grateful to Him,
we give ourselves to Him, confident that He has ordained that we should
bear fruit for Him (1 Peter 3:18; John 15:16). All of this arises from
the Old Testament details: - "the burnt offering, the grain offering"
(Leviticus 7:37). We must always look beyond the Old Testament
sacrifices to our Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ.
Leviticus 8:1-9:24
Aaron
was anointed with "the anointing oil", set apart or "dedicated" to the
Lord for "holy duties" (Leviticus 8:12,30). Anointed by the Lord and
dedicated to Him, "Aaron and his sons did everything the Lord commanded,
through Moses" (Leviticus 8:36). Concerning the Lord's commands, "Moses
said, 'The Lord has commanded you to offer these sacrifices so that you
may see the Lord's glory'" (Leviticus 9:6). Together with Moses, Aaron
was obedient to God, bringing the blessing of God to the people - "Then
the Lord's glory appeared to all the people" (Leviticus 9:23). The
principles of God's blessing are still the same. We need the anointing
of the Holy Spirit. He calls us to obedience. This is the way of
receiving God's blessing. This is the way in which the glory of God
comes down upon the people of God. We receive God's blessing when the
Holy Spirit comes down upon us in His mighty power.
Leviticus 10:1-11:47
It
is vital that we know "the difference between what is holy and what is
unholy" (Leviticus 10:10). God calls us to "be holy", to "live holy
lives" (Leviticus 11:44). This is the central point we must see in all
the many unfamiliar details of ancient Jewish worship. This is the
"permanent law" (Leviticus 10:9,15). This is the teaching which must be
passed on to "generations to come."
Leviticus 12:1-13:59
Again
and again, we read the word, "clean." Looking beyond the teaching
"regarding health", we may recall that "the blood of Jesus Christ -
God's Son - cleanses us from all sin" (1 John 1:7). This is the
cleansing which everyone needs. No matter how healthy we may be in our
bodies, we are spiritually diseased because of sin, and we need Christ's
cleansing.
Leviticus 14:1-57
We read here of our
need of cleansing and of the sacrifice of a lamb as a way of removing
our guilt and bringing us into peace with God (Leviticus 14:21).
Spiritually, we are "poor." What we have to bring to God is not "that
much." It is not enough to provide for our cleansing. What we need has
been provided for us - "the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the
world" (John 1:29). Our Lord Jesus Christ has done for us what we could
never do for ourselves - "There was no other good enough to pay the
price of sin. He only could unlock the gate of heaven and let us in."
All glory to God!
Leviticus 15:1-16:34
Each of us
is unclean before God. Each of us needs Christ, who has given Himself as
"a sin offering" to "make atonement" for us (Leviticus 16:16). Christ
is the perfect Saviour, who "bears all our iniquities" (Leviticus
16:22). Concerning His great sacrifice for us, the Word of God says, "On
this day shall atonement be made for you, to cleanse you; from all your
sins you shall be clean before the Lord" (Leviticus 16:30).
Leviticus 17:1-18:30
Through
the shed blood of Christ, we have peace with God and eternal life
(Leviticus 17:11; Romans 5:1-2,8-10). We have received new life in
Christ. Now, we are to leave our sinful past behind us. We are to live a
new life as those who belong to Christ (Leviticus 18:1-5; Romans
6:12-14; Romans 12:1-2).
Leviticus 19:1-37
Again and
again, we read the words, "I am the Lord your God", or, more simply, "I
am the Lord" (Leviticus 19:3-4,10,12,14,16,18,25,28,30-32,34,36-37). The
whole point of this is that our moral practice is grounded in our
spiritual worship (Romans 12:1).
Leviticus 20:1-21:24
The
Lord calls us to be holy - because He is holy (Leviticus 20:26). We are
to be like Him. He has set us apart as holy (Leviticus 21:8). We are
"dedicated with the anointing oil of our God" (Leviticus 21:12).We may
take this "anointing oil" as symbolic of the presence and power of the
Holy Spirit. We are to "eat the food of our God - what is holy and what
is very holy" (Leviticus 21:22). Here, our attention is directed towards
Christ, who is our spiritual food - "the Bread of Life" (John 6).
Leviticus 22:1-23:44
Our
careful obedience to God's Word is not to be a purely legalistic thing.
We must never forget that God is the God of redemption. Our holiness is
grounded in Him: He is holy, and He sets us apart as holy (Leviticus
22:31-33). Holy living involves both worship and service. We are to
worship God (Leviticus 23:1-4), but we must not forget the "poor people"
(Leviticus 23:22).
Leviticus 24:1-23
If our light is
to be keep on burning continually, we need pure oil (Leviticus 24:2).
The emphasis here is on keeping close to God. It is only through
closeness to God that our light will be kept burning. In Leviticus
24:15, we read, "Whoever curses his God shall bear his sin." This is
followed, in Leviticus 24:16, by some words of explanation of what
bearing his sin meant: "He who blasphemes the Name shall be put to
death." As we read these words, our thoughts move to Christ, the sinless
Saviour who bore the sins of many - "He died that we might be forgiven.
He died to make us good, that we might go at last to heaven, saved by
His precious blood." Through Him, we are brought close to God. Through
Him, we are darkness and into light.
Leviticus 25:1-55
This
chapter is full of the Lord's instructions concerning the Jubilee to be
celebrated by Israel. Why was it so important for Israel to hear and
obey the Word of the Lord? - "The Israelites belong to Me as servants.
They are My servants. I brought them out of Egypt. I am the Lord"
(Leviticus 25:55). This is still the foundation of our call to
obedience. The Lord, who calls us to obedience, has first called us to
belong to Him through redemption. He has redeemed us. We belong to Him.
We will serve Him.
Leviticus 26:1-46
There is
blessing for those who learn to obey the Lord (Leviticus 26:3-13). There
is judgment for those who persist in sinning against the Lord
(Leviticus 26:14-33). The opportunity of blessing remains even for those
who are in despair and are wasting away because of sin (Leviticus
26:36,39) - God says, "I will remember My promise" (Leviticus 26:42).
Those who have sinned against the Lord "must accept their guilt." This
is the way of coming to know the blessing of the Lord who says, "I will
not reject them of look at them with disgust" (Leviticus 26:43).
Leviticus 27:1-34
The
underlying theme of this final chapter is giving ourselves to the Lord
to belong to Him, to be dedicated to Him, to be set apart for Him, to be
holy. Such dedication to the Lord is to affect the whole of our life.
We learn this from the variety of details in this chapter. There must be
no turning back from following the Lord. Those who turn back do so at
great cost. They become spiritually dead through their disobedience to
the Lord. Let us keep up our dedication to the Lord.
"a sin offering ... an atonement ... clean" (Leviticus 12:8).
We
read the words of the book of Leviticus. We feel like we're out of our
depth. We don't really know what to make all of this. We read about " a
sin offering", we read about "an atonement", we read about being made
"clean" - We read all of this, and the light begins to shine. It's the
light of Jesus, our Saviour. We think of Him. We think of His death upon
the Cross. We know that He died for us. We know that He loves us - and
we rejoice in His love. Do we need to understand all that there is in
the book of Leviticus? No! We catch a glimpse of Jesus - and His "sin
offering." Our hearts are filled with joy, as we think of His
"atonement." This a new beginning for us - "the blood of Jesus Christ,
God's Son, cleanses us from all sin" (1 John 1:7). It's a new
beginning. We're set free from our past. We're set free for God's
future.
What is God's future? What great plan does He have for us? - This is what He says to us, "I
am the Lord your God, who brought you out of Egypt so that you would no
longer be slaves to the Egyptians; I broke the bars of your yoke and
enabled you to walk with heads held high" (Leviticus 26:13).
What
God has done for us in the past is not all that He will do for us. We
must never forget what He has done for us in the past. the Exodus from
Egypt was a great event. It was an event of salvation. The death of our
Saviour was an even greater event. this is the event of our salvation.
without His death for us, we could never be saved. he took our place. He
died our death. He took our sin upon Himself. He died that we might
have life - the new life of those who have received the forgiveness of
their sins, the eternal life which will be filled with joy forevermore.
Following our entry into this new life and before our entry into God's
everlasting Kingdom, there is a journey that each of us must make. It
will be a different journey for each of us. We must make our own
journey. My journey will not be your journey. Your journey will not be
my journey. In my journey, I am not alone. In your journey, you are not
alone. The Lord is with you. The Lord is with me.
What
kind of journey will it be? It will be a hard road. How hard? In what
way will it be hard? No-one really knows. We know that there will be
"enemies" - but we know that the Lord has given us his promise: "When they are in the land of their enemies, I will not reject them ... I am the Lord their God" (Leviticus 26:44).
What
a great promise this is! We have many enemies - but there is one enemy
who is more determined than all of the rest of them, put together. Our
great enemy is Satan. God's Word teaches us that Satan is a determined
enemy. It also teaches us that he's a defeated enemy. we look at Satan -
and we look at Jesus. We see what Satan is trying to do to us. We look
at what Jesus has done for us. At the Cross, we learn that Jesus has
succeeded - and we learn that Satan has failed. Jesus has triumphed over
Satan. Can we doubt that Jesus' victory over Satan will be a complete
victory? Can we doubt that Satan's defeat will be a total defeat? At the
Cross, we catch a glimpse of the final victory. In our hearts, we know
that God's Word is true: "Thanks be to God who gives us the victory
through our Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Corinthians 15:57).
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