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Leviticus
Chapter Four
Leviticus 4
Chapter Contents
The sin-offering of ignorance for the priest. (1-12) For
the whole congregation. (13-21) For a ruler. (22-26) For any of the people.
(27-35)
Commentary on Leviticus 4:1-12
Burnt-offerings, meat-offerings, and peace-offerings, had
been offered before the giving of the law upon mount Sinai; and in these the
patriarchs had respect to sin, to make atonement for it. But the Jews were now
put into a way of making atonement for sin, more particularly by sacrifice, as
a shadow of good things to come; yet the substance is Christ, and that one
offering of himself, by which he put away sin. The sins for which the
sin-offerings were appointed are supposed to be open acts. They are supposed to
be sins of commission, things which ought not to have been done. Omissions are
sins, and must come into judgment: yet what had been omitted at one time, might
be done at another; but a sin committed was past recall. They are supposed to
be sins committed through ignorance. The law begins with the case of the
anointed priest. It is evident that God never had any infallible priest in his
church upon earth, when even the high priest was liable to fall into sins of
ignorance. All pretensions to act without error are sure marks of Antichrist.
The beast was to be carried without the camp, and there burned to ashes. This
was a sign of the duty of repentance, which is the putting away sin as a
detestable thing, which our soul hates. The sin-offering is called sin. What
they did to that, we must do to our sins; the body of sin must be destroyed, Romans 6:6. The apostle applies the carrying
this sacrifice without the camp to Christ, Hebrews 13:11-13.
Commentary on Leviticus 4:13-21
If the leaders of the people, through mistake, caused
them to err, an offering must be brought, that wrath might not come upon the
whole congregation. When sacrifices were offered, the persons, on whose behalf
they were devoted, were to lay their hands on the heads of the victims, and to
confess their sins. The elders were to do so, when the sacrifices were offered
for the whole congregation. The load of sin was supposed then to be borne by
the guiltless animal. When the offering is completed, it is said, atonement is
made, and the sin shall be forgiven. The saving of churches and kingdoms from
ruin, is owing to the satisfaction and mediation of Christ.
Commentary on Leviticus 4:22-26
Those who have power to call others to account, are
themselves accountable to the Ruler of rulers. The sin of the ruler, committed
through ignorance, must come to his knowledge, either by the check of his own
conscience, or by the reproof of his friends; both which even the best and
greatest, not only should submit to, but be thankful for. That which I see not,
teach thou me, and, Show me wherein I have erred, are prayers we should put up
to God every day; that if, through ignorance, we fall into sin, we may not
through ignorance abide in it.
Commentary on Leviticus 4:27-35
Here is the law of the sin-offering for a common person.
To be able to plead, when charged with sin, that we did it ignorantly, and
through the surprise of temptation, will not bring us off, if we have no
interest in that great plea, Christ hath died. The sins of ignorance committed
by a common person, needed a sacrifice; the greatest are not above, the meanest
are not below Divine justice. None, if offenders, were overlooked. Here rich
and poor meet together; they are alike sinners, and welcome to Christ. From all
these laws concerning the sin-offerings, we may learn to hate sin, and to watch
against it; and to value Christ, the great and true Sin-offering, whose blood
cleanses from all sin, which it was not possible that the blood of bulls and of
goats should take away. For us to err, with the Bible in our hands, is the effect
of pride, sloth, and carelessness. We need to use frequent self-examination,
with serious study of the Scriptures, and earnest prayer for the convincing
influences of God the Holy Spirit; that we may detect our sins of ignorance,
repent, and obtain forgiveness through the blood of Christ.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Leviticus¡n
Leviticus 4
Verse 1
[1] And
the LORD spake unto Moses, saying,
The Lord spake unto Moses ¡X The laws contained in the three first chapters, seem to have been
delivered to Moses at one time. Here begin the laws of another day, which God
delivered from between the Cherubim.
Verse 2
[2] Speak unto the children of Israel, saying, If a soul shall sin through
ignorance against any of the commandments of the LORD concerning things which
ought not to be done, and shall do against any of them:
If a soul sin ¡X
This must necessarily be understood of more than common daily infirmities; for
if every such sin had required an offering, it had not been possible either for
most sinners to bear such a charge, or for the altar to receive so many
sacrifices, or for the priests to manage so infinite a work. And for ordinary
sins, they were ceremonially expiated by the daily offering, and by that on the
great day of atonement, Leviticus 16:30.
Through ignorance ¡X
Or, error, either not knowing his act to be sinful, as appears by comparing Leviticus 4:13,14, or not considering it, but falling
into sin thro' the power of some sudden passion or temptation, as the Hebrew
word signifies, Psalms 119:67.
Things which ought not to be done ¡X The words may be rendered, in or about every, or any of the commandments
of the Lord which should not be done; or, which concern things that should not
be done, namely, in any negative commands. (And there is great reason why a
sacrifice should be more necessary for these, than for other sins, because
affirmative precepts do not so strictly and constantly bind men as the negative
do.) Then he shall offer according to his quality, which is here to be
understood out of the following verses.
Verse 3
[3] If
the priest that is anointed do sin according to the sin of the people; then let
him bring for his sin, which he hath sinned, a young bullock without blemish
unto the LORD for a sin offering.
If the priest ¡X
That is, the high-priest, who only was anointed after the first time. His
anointing is mentioned, because he was not compleat high-priest 'till he was
anointed.
Do sin ¡X
Either in doctrine or practice, which it is here supposed he may do. And this
is noted as a character of imperfection in the priesthood of the law, whereby
the Israelites were directed to expect another and better high-priest, even one
who is holy, harmless, and separate from sinners, Hebrews 7:26.
According to the sin of the people ¡X In the same manner as any of the people do; which implies that God
expected more circumspection from him, than from the people. But the words may
be rendered, to the sin or guilt of the people, which may be mentioned as an
aggrevation of his sin, that by it he commonly brings sin, and guilt, and
punishment upon the people, who are infected or scandalized by his example.
A young bullock ¡X
The same sacrifice which was offered for all the people, to shew how much his
sin was aggravated by his quality.
Sin-offering ¡X
Heb. sin, which word is oft taken in that sense.
Verse 4
[4] And
he shall bring the bullock unto the door of the tabernacle of the congregation
before the LORD; and shall lay his hand upon the bullock's head, and kill the
bullock before the LORD.
On the head ¡X To
testify both his acknowledgment of his sin, and faith in God's promise for the
expiation of his sins through Christ, whom that sacrifice typified.
Kill the bullock ¡X By
one of the priests, whom he should cause to do it.
Verse 5
[5] And the priest that is anointed shall take of the bullock's blood, and
bring it to the tabernacle of the congregation:
To the tabernacle ¡X
Into the tabernacle; which was not required nor allowed in any other sacrifice,
possibly to shew the greatness of the high-priest's sin, which needed more than
ordinary diligence in him, and favour from God to expiate it.
Verse 6
[6] And
the priest shall dip his finger in the blood, and sprinkle of the blood seven
times before the LORD, before the vail of the sanctuary.
Seven times ¡X A
number much used in scripture, as a number of perfection; and here prescribed,
either to shew that his sins needed more then ordinary purgation, and more
exercise of his faith and repentance, both which graces he was obliged to join
with that ceremonial rite.
Before the veil ¡X
The second veil dividing between the holy of holies, which is generally called
the veil of the sanctuary.
Verse 7
[7] And
the priest shall put some of the blood upon the horns of the altar of sweet
incense before the LORD, which is in the tabernacle of the congregation; and
shall pour all the blood of the bullock at the bottom of the altar of the burnt
offering, which is at the door of the tabernacle of the congregation.
All the blood ¡X
All the rest; for part was disposed elsewhere.
Verse 12
[12] Even
the whole bullock shall he carry forth without the camp unto a clean place,
where the ashes are poured out, and burn him on the wood with fire: where the
ashes are poured out shall he be burnt.
The whole bullock ¡X So
no part of this was to be eaten by the priests, as it was in other
sin-offerings. The reason is plain, because the offerer might not eat of his
own sin-offering, and the priest was the offerer in this case, as also in the
sin-offering for the whole congregation below, of which the priest himself was
a member.
Shall be carried forth ¡X Not himself, which would have defiled him, but by another whom he shall
appoint for that work.
Without the camp ¡X To
signify either, 1. The abominable nature of sin, especially in high and holy
persons, or when it overspreads a whole people. Or, 2. The removing of the
guilt or punishment of that sin from the people. Or, 3. That Christ should
suffer without the camp or gate.
Where the ashes are ¡X
For the ashes, though at first they were thrown down near the altar, Leviticus 1:16, yet afterwards they, together
with the filth of the sacrifices, were carried into a certain place without the
camp.
Verse 13
[13] And
if the whole congregation of Israel sin through ignorance, and the thing be hid
from the eyes of the assembly, and they have done somewhat against any of the
commandments of the LORD concerning things which should not be done, and are
guilty;
The whole congregation ¡X The body of the people, or the greater part of them, their rulers
concurring with them.
Verse 14
[14] When
the sin, which they have sinned against it, is known, then the congregation
shall offer a young bullock for the sin, and bring him before the tabernacle of
the congregation.
A bullock ¡X
But if the sin of the congregation was only the omission of some ceremonial
duty, a kid of the goats was to be offered, Numbers 15:24.
Verse 15
[15] And
the elders of the congregation shall lay their hands upon the head of the
bullock before the LORD: and the bullock shall be killed before the LORD.
The elders ¡X
Who here acted in the name of all the people, who could not possibly perform
this act in their own persons.
Verse 17
[17] And
the priest shall dip his finger in some of the blood, and sprinkle it seven
times before the LORD, even before the vail.
And sprinkle it ¡X It
was not to be poured out there, but sprinkled only; for the cleansing virtue of
the blood of Christ was sufficiently represented by sprinkling. It was
sprinkled seven times: seven is a number of perfection; because God made the
world in six days, and rested the seventh. This signified the perfect
satisfaction Christ made, and the compleat cleansing of our souls thereby.
Verse 18
[18] And
he shall put some of the blood upon the horns of the altar which is before the
LORD, that is in the tabernacle of the congregation, and shall pour out all the
blood at the bottom of the altar of the burnt offering, which is at the door of
the tabernacle of the congregation.
The altar ¡X Of
incense: Which is before the Lord - That is, before the holy of holies, where
the Lord was in a more special manner present.
Verse 20
[20] And
he shall do with the bullock as he did with the bullock for a sin offering, so
shall he do with this: and the priest shall make an atonement for them, and it
shall be forgiven them.
For a sin-offering ¡X
That is, for the priest's sin-offering, called the first bullock, Leviticus 4:21.
Verse 24
[24] And
he shall lay his hand upon the head of the goat, and kill it in the place where
they kill the burnt offering before the LORD: it is a sin offering.
The burnt-offering ¡X So
called by way of eminency, to wit, the daily burnt-offering.
It is a sin-offering ¡X And therefore to be killed where the burnt-offering is killed; whereby
it is distinguished from the peace-offering, which were killed elsewhere.
Verse 26
[26] And
he shall burn all his fat upon the altar, as the fat of the sacrifice of peace
offerings: and the priest shall make an atonement for him as concerning his
sin, and it shall be forgiven him.
It shall be forgiven ¡X Both judicially, as to all ecclesiastical censures or civil punishment;
and really, upon condition of repentance and faith in the Messiah to come.
Verse 28
[28] Or
if his sin, which he hath sinned, come to his knowledge: then he shall bring
his offering, a kid of the goats, a female without blemish, for his sin which
he hath sinned.
A female ¡X
Which here was sufficient, because the sin of one of those was less than the
sin of the ruler, for whom a male was required.
Verse 33
[33] And
he shall lay his hand upon the head of the sin offering, and slay it for a sin
offering in the place where they kill the burnt offering.
He shall slay it ¡X
Not by himself, but by the hands of the priest.
Verse 35
[35] And
he shall take away all the fat thereof, as the fat of the lamb is taken away
from the sacrifice of the peace offerings; and the priest shall burn them upon
the altar, according to the offerings made by fire unto the LORD: and the
priest shall make an atonement for his sin that he hath committed, and it shall
be forgiven him.
Burn them ¡X
The fat; but he useth the plural number, because the fat was of several kinds,
as we saw Leviticus 4:8,9, Heb. upon the offerings,
together with them, or after them; because the burnt-offerings were to have the
first place.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on
Leviticus¡n
04 Chapter 4
Verses 2-35
If a soul shall sin through ignorance.
The sin and trespass-offerings
I. There are,
then, some lingering defilements and trespasses adhering to man, even though he
be justified, consecrated, and in fellowship with God. A man may run from a
gathering storm, and be terribly shocked at the idea of being caught in it, and
exert all his wisdom and his power to escape it, and yet may be made to feel
its force; and though a good man¡¦s whole being is averse to sin, and he can
have no more fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, it can argue
nothing against a remaining weakness subjecting him every day to lacks and
failings which would undo him but for the pleadings of his Saviour¡¦s blood.
Though his face and heart are fully turned away from sin, it proves nothing
against his liability to be ¡§overtaken by a fault.¡¨
II. And these
lingering imperfections and defects are real sins. Men do not scruple to plead
their ignorance, their infirmities, their natural and habitual propensities, in
excuse for their misdeeds. But the law of God acknowledges no such plea. Sin is
sin; and guilt is a part of its essential nature wherever found. True, in their
effects upon the perpetrator, or in their influences upon society, some are
worse than others; but in their relations to God and His holy law, they are
always the same, always evil, abhorrent, and damning. Men may talk of ¡§little
sins,¡¨ but God never does. Let them he never so little, they are big enough to
sink the soul to everlasting death if uncancelled by the Saviour¡¦s blood. All
this is very forcibly portrayed in the rites of the sin and trespass-offerings
now under consideration. As to sins of ignorance, if the guilty party were a
priest, he was to offer ¡§a young bullock¡¨; if a judge or magistrate, he was to
offer ¡§a kid of the goats,¡¨ of the male kind; if one of ¡§the common people,¡¨ he
was to offer ¡§a kid of the goats,¡¨ of the female kind, or a lamb. And so in the
case of trespass, the guilty one was to offer ¡§a lamb or kid¡¨; or, if poor, two
doves or young pigeons; or, if poor, and unable to procure the doves or
pigeons, an offering of fine flour might be substituted as the representative
of the animal or bird which could not be procured, but was to be looked upon,
not as a meat-offering, hut as a ¡§sin-offering,¡¨ the same as if it were a
living animal. These offerings were then to he slain and burned, and their
blood presented as the only adequate expiation. And from the nature of the
expiation we are to learn God¡¦s estimate of the offence. Though committed in
ignorance, or no more than a trespass, or an accidental contamination, it
required blood and sacrifice to cover it.
III. There is also a
noticeable gradation in these sins of ignorance. Though they are all sins, so
that blood only can atone for them, they are yet more serious and offensive in
some persons than in others. When a priest or ruler sinned in this way, a more
valuable sacrifice was required than when one of the common people thus sinned.
The more prominent and exalted the person offending, the more flagrant was the
offence. There is a very serious augmentation of responsibility going along
with high station. A public man is like a town clock, upon which much more
depends than upon private time-pieces. Hence the necessity for greater care and
attention with reference to the one than to the other.
IV. But whilst we are
treating of these defects and failings which are to be found in Christian life,
let us not overlook the principal point of the text, that there is adequate remedy for
them. What! are we to be told that Christ¡¦s infinite atonement is that shallow
thing, that the first draw of the sinner upon it quite exhausts its virtue, and
leaves all subsequent sins to be disposed of by the confessional, and the fires
of purgatory? Are we to be told that Christ ¡§ever liveth to make intercession,¡¨
and for this reason ¡§is able to save unto the uttermost,¡¨ and yet that there is
not virtue enough in His mediation to cover a few sins of ignorance and
infirmity in Christian life? Are we to behold the priest of a typical economy,
with the mere blood of beasts upon his fingers, obtaining a full remission for
the Jew, and yet believe that our great High Priest in heaven, bearing the
scars of deadly wounds endured for us, is unable to secure mercy for those
struggling saints of God, who, in hours of surprise or weakness, become entangled
again in guilt of which they heartily repented the moment it was done? Give us
this, and we want no pontifical absolutions, no penal inflictions, no
purgatorial fires, to make us acceptable to God. From this general subject we
are now led to reflect--
1. First, what a holy thing is God¡¦s law! It finds guilt, not only in
the sins which are deliberate, but even in the mistakes of ignorance, the
contaminations of accident, and the shortcomings of the holiest saints.
2. Second, what reason have we to cultivate the modest virtues of
Christian life--to be moderate in our pretensions, humble in our spirit,
charitable in our censures, forgiving under injuries, lenient towards
offenders, pungent in our self-examinations, hearty in our repentance, watchful
in our walk, constant in our prayers, and deeply anxious to be firmly rooted in
the true faith l I care not how good we may be, we are still great offenders,
and much worse than we think we are.
3. Finally, how precious is the mercy of God in Christ Jesus! (J.
A. Seiss, D. D.)
The sin-offering
I. View our
blessed lord as made sin for us.
1. His personal character is set forth in the victim chosen. It was a
bullock, the most valuable of the sacrifices, an animal laborious in life and
costly in death; it was a young bullock in the fulness of its strength and
vigour; it was without blemish; and the slightest fault disqualified it from
being laid upon the altar of God. Behold, O believer, your Lord Jesus, more
precious far than ten thousands of the fat of fed beasts: a sacrifice not to be
purchased with gold, or estimated in silver. Full of vigour, in the very prime
of manhood, He offered up Himself for us. Even when He died, He died not
through weakness; for that cry of His at His death, ¡§with a loud voice,¡¨ proved
that His life was still firm within Him, and that when He gave up the ghost,
His death was not one of compulsion, but a voluntary expiring of the soul. His
glory is as the firstling of the bullock, full of vigour and of strength. How
distinctly was our Lord proved to be without blemish! Naturally born without
sin, practically He lived without fault.
2. The act of the transference of sin to the victim next calls for
our attention. This laying of the hand does not appear to have been a mere
touch of contact, but in some other places of Scripture has the meaning of
leaning heavily, as in the expression, ¡§Thy wrath lieth hard upon me¡¨ (Psalms 88:7). Surely this is the very
essence of faith, which doth not only bring us into contact with the great
Substitute, but teaches us to lean upon Him with all the burden of our guilt;
so that if our sins be very weighty, yet we see Him as able to bear them all;
and mark, the whole weight of our iniquity taken off from us, and laid on Him
who took the weight and bore it all, and then buried it in His sepulchre for
ever.
3. We must now beg your notice of the sins transferred. In the case
of the type, they were sins of ignorance. Alas! the Jew knew nothing about a
sin-offering for sins of presumption, but there is such a sin-offering for us.
Our presumptuous sins were laid on Christ; our wilful sins, our sins of light
and knowledge, are pardoned by His blood. The mention of sins of ignorance,
suggests a very comfortable reflection, that if there are any sins which I know
not, they were, notwithstanding my ignorance, laid on my Substitute and put
away by His atonement. It is not sin as we see it which was laid on Christ, but
sin as God sees it; not sin as our conscience feebly reveals it to us, but sin
as God beholds it, in all its unmitigated malignity, and unconcealed
loathsomeness. Sin in its exceeding sinfulness Jesus has put away.
4. Passing on, still keeping to the same point, we would remark that
the sin was laid upon the bullock most conspicuously ¡§before the Lord.¡¨ Did you
notice the frequent expressions: ¡§shall bring him to the door of the
congregation before the Lord¡¨; ¡§kill the bullock before the Lord¡¨; ¡§shall
sprinkle the blood seven times before the Lord, and shall put some of it upon
the horns of the altar of sweet incense before the Lord¡¨? Apart from the blood,
we are guilty, condemned: washed in blood, we are accepted and beloved. Without
the atonement we are aliens and strangers, heirs of wrath even as others; but,
as seen in the eternal covenant purpose, through the precious blood of Jesus,
we are accepted in the beloved. The great stress of the transaction lies in its
being done ¡§before the Lord.¡¨
5. Still, further, carefully observe that as soon as ever the sin was
thus ¡§before the Lord,¡¨ laid upon the bullock, the bullock was slain. ¡§He shall
lay his hand upon the bullock¡¦s head, and kill the bullock before the Lord.¡¨
So, in the fifteenth verse, ¡§The elders of the congregation shall lay their hands
upon the head of the bullock before the Lord, and the bullock shall be killed
before the Lord.¡¨ Ah! yes; as soon as the sin is transferred, the penalty is
transferred too. Down fell the pole-axe the minute that the priestly hand had
been laid on the bullock. Unsheathed was the knife of sacrifice the moment that
the elders had begun to lean upon the sacrificial head. So was it with our
Saviour; He must smart, He must die, for only as dying could He become our
Sin-offering.
II. The efficacy of
the precious blood of Jesus.
1. As soon as the bullock was slain, blood of the sin-offering was
sprinkled. This was to show that our communion with God is by blood.
2. The next act of the priest was to retire a little from the veil to
the place where stood the golden altar of incense, adorned with four horns of
gold probably of a pyramidal shape, or fashioned like rams¡¦ horns, and the
priest, dipping his finger in the basin, smeared this horn and the other, until
the four horns glowed with crimson in the light of the golden candlestick. The
horn is always, in the Oriental usage, indicative of strength. What was the
blood put upon the altar for, then? That incense altar was typical of prayer,
and especially of the intercession of Christ; and the blood on the horn showed
that the force and power of all-prevailing intercession lies in the blood. Why
was this the second thing done? It seems to me that the second thing which a
Christian loses is his prevalence in prayer. Whereas first he loses communion
with God when he backslides, the next thing he loses is his power in
supplication. He begins to be feeble upon his knees; he cannot win of the Lord
that which he desireth. How is he to get back his strength? Here the great
Anointed Priest teaches us to look to the blood for renewed power, for see, he
applies the blood to the horns of the altar, and the sweet perfume of
frankincense ascends to heaven, and God accepts it.
3. This being finished, the priest goes backwards still farther and
enters the court of the Israelites. There stood the great altar of brass,
whereon was consumed the burnt-offerings; and now the priest, having the basin
full of the blood of which only a small quantity had been used in sprinkling
the veil and touching the horns of the golden altar, pours the whole of the
remaining blood in a great stream at the foot of the altar of burnt-offering.
What does that typify? Did he not thus teach us that the only ground and basis
(for mark, it is put at the foot of the altar), of the acceptance of our
persons and of our thank-offerings is found in the blood of Jesus? Thus I have
tried to set forth the threefold prevalence of the precious blood, but let it
not be forgotten that the blood also put away sin; for you find at the end of
the chapter, ¡§His sin shall be forgiven.¡¨ First forgiven, then accepted, then
prevalent in prayer, and then admitted into access with boldness to God; what a
change of blessings! All, all through the blood of Jesus!
III. Thirdly, the
most painful part of our sermon remains, while I beg you to view the shame
which our lord endured. While it is all so well for us I want you now to
reflect how bitter, how shameful it was for our Lord! The offerer who brought
the sin-offering has been forgiven: he has been accepted at the brazen altar;
his prayers have been heard at the golden altar; and the veil has been
sprinkled on his behalf: but what of the victim itself? Draw nigh and learn
with holy wonder.
1. In the first place, albeit that our Lord Jesus Christ was made sin
for us, it is noteworthy that, though nearly all the bullock was burned without
the camp, there was one portion left and reserved to be burnt upon the altar of
burnt-offering--that was the fat. Certain descriptions are given as to the fat
which was to be consumed upon the altar, by which we believe it was intended to
ensure that the richest part of the fat should be there consumed. As much as if
God would say, ¡§Though My dear Son must be made sin for this people, and
consequently I must forsake Him, and He must die without the camp, yet still He
is most dear and precious in My sight, and even while He is a sin-offering, yet
He is My beloved Son, with whom in Himself I am still well pleased.¡¨ Whenever
we speak about our Lord as bearing our sins, we must carefully speak concerning
Him--not as though God ever did despise or abhor the prayer of His afflicted
Son, but only seemed to do so while He stood for us, representatively made sin
for us, though He knew no sin. Oh! I delight to think that the Lord smelled a
sweet savour even in the Cross, and that Jesus Christ is this day a sweet
savour unto God, even as a sin-offering; the fat, the excellence of His heart,
the consecration of His soul, were acceptable to God, and sweet in His esteem,
even when He laid upon Him the iniquity of His people. Still, here is the
shameful part of it: the priest then took the bullock, and gathering up all the
inwards, every part of it, the skin, the dung--all mentioned to teach us what a
horrible thing sin is, and what the Surety was looked upon as being when He took
our sin--He took it all up, and either Himself personally, or assisted by
others, took it away out of the camp.
2. After the removal, they gathered the hot ashes, they kindled the
fire, and burnt it all. See here a faint image of the fire which consumed the
Saviour on Calvary! His bodily pains ought never to be forgotten, but still the
sufferings of His soul must have been the very soul of His sufferings; and can
you tell what they were? (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The sin-offering
I. In contrast
with the other offerings.
II. The varieties
in this offering.
The sin-offering; or, God just and justifier
The most awful and terrible aspect of Jesus¡¦ death is presented in
this type. In the burnt-offering He is seen as the ¡§Delight¡¨ of the Father (Proverbs 8:30), the One in whom He is
¡§well pleased¡¨ (Matthew 17:5), in the peace-offering we
behold Him as the blessed Peacemaker (Matthew 5:9; Colossians 1:20). But in--
I. The
sin-offering we are shown the heinousness, the awful nature of sin, that called
for such a sacrifice. Atonement is its chief feature. The Blessed One ¡§knew no
sin,¡¨ yet He hung upon the Cross as ¡§an offering for sin¡¨ (Isaiah 53:10), the sin-bearer, the
personation of that ¡§abominable thing¡¨ that God hates (Jeremiah 44:4). Studying the details of
sin-offering, we read--
II. ¡§if a soul . .
. sin through ignorance.¡¨ All are sinners by nature (Romans 3:23; Romans 5:12), and ever prone to sin, by
reason of the root of evil that dwells within. This root it is that is
specially met in sin-offering (Romans 8:3; Hebrews 9:26), the sinful nature, more
perhaps than the actions that spring therefrom, though these are included; but
till God opens our eyes to see the exceeding sinfulness of sin, and how the
smallest sin separates from Him, and endangers our eternal safety, we are--so
to speak--sinning ignorantly. Still, no sin--even when done in ignorance--can
be passed over or forgiven by a holy God ¡§without shedding of blood¡¨; hence God, in His grace and
mercy, has provided
a complete, a perfect atonement, in the ¡§precious blood¡¨ shed (Hebrews 9:22; Hebrews 9:28; Hebrews 10:12; 1 Peter 1:19). Even after being
¡§made nigh,¡¨ how prone are we to sin! But see Psalms 37:24; Proverbs 24:16. To sin ¡§through
ignorance¡¨ signifies, not only through actual want of knowledge, but through
weakness--failing to lay hold of the ¡§power¡¨ to keep (1 Peter 1:5)--unintentionally
offending, and not realising at the time the guilt; for, in truth, who can
fully realise what is sin in the sight of a holy God? But He foresaw all, and
provided a perfect Sacrifice sufficient to meet it all, whether the sin be
committed by ¡§anointed priest,¡¨ ¡§whole congregation,¡¨ a ¡§ruler,¡¨ or ¡§one of the
common people.¡¨ The variation in the offerings teaches how sin becomes deeper,
according to the position or privileges of the sinning one. The more prominent
were these, the greater the harm done by evil example.
III. The laying of
hands on the victim¡¦s head teaches much.
1. Sense of sin, and need of pardon (Psalms 51:4; Luke 18:13; 1 Timothy 1:15). ¡§The wages of sin
is death¡¨ (Romans 6:23); hence I need a
substitutionary sacrifice. ¡§Who shall deliver me?¡¨ (Romans 7:24).
2. Transmission of guilt; truth of deepest importance. ¡§The Lord hath
laid . . . ¡¨ (Isaiah 53:6). ¡§Christ . . . suffered for
sins, the Just for the unjust,¡¨ &c. (1 Peter 3:18). The holy Jesus
received ¡§the wages of sin.¡¨ ¡§He put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself¡¨; He
overcame ¡§through death¡¨ (Hebrews 2:14) the one who had introduced
it into the world; and thus the Just One could--without the smallest sacrifice
of His justice--exercise His prerogative of mercy, and be ¡§the Justifier of him
which believeth in Jesus¡¨ (Romans 3:24-26).
3. Faith in God¡¦s acceptance of a substitutionary sacrifice (Romans 4:25; Romans 5:1; Romans 5:9). The offering was slain for
the offerer; it was laden typically with his sins, as was the holy Jesus
actually when He was ¡§made a curse for us¡¨ (Galatians 3:10-13). As we meditate on
these things we cannot wonder at another feature of the sin-offering.
IV. Not voluntary.
There is nothing in this type--as in others--to show willingness on the part of
the Holy One, and our Lord¡¦s words in Gethsemane plainly show how He shrank
from being ¡§made sin¡¨--that hateful thing which would separate Him from His God
and Father. Hence the prayer thrice repeated, with increasing earnestness (Matthew 26:39-44; Luke 22:42-45): which contrast with the
willingness displayed in the words (Psalms 40:7-8, with Hebrews 10:1-39.).
V. The animals
sacrificed as sin-offerings varied (Leviticus 4:3; Leviticus 4:14; Leviticus 4:23; Leviticus 4:28; Leviticus 4:32), according to whether it
was for the ¡§priest,¡¨ ¡§whole congregation,¡¨ ¡§ruler,¡¨ or ¡§one of the common
people.¡¨ Also, as before observed, no one type could ever suffice to depict the
glorious Antitype; therefore no doubt some different characteristic or aspect
of the Blessed One, in His passion, is set forth in each of the animals
sacrificed. (Lady Beaujolois Dent)
.
The sin-offering; or, expiation and forgiveness
I. The sin-offering
shadows forth the fulfilment of Psalms 85:10; mercy can be shown to
sinners in the ¡§free gift of . . . eternal life¡¨ (Romans 6:23, R.V.), because God¡¦s truth
as to sin¡¦s ¡§wages¡¨ was verified on Calvary. Righteousness, i.e., the
righteous judgment of a holy God, was shown in the just punishment of ¡§sin,¡¨
borne by a sinless victim; and Peace becomes the portion of every soul taught
by the Holy Spirit to know that Jesus was punished for him or her; that is,
every one that believes in God¡¦s acceptance of Christ¡¦s substitutionary
Sacrifice (Romans 4:25; Romans 5:1).
II. The blood
strikingly shows the double aspect of this mighty sacrifice. ¡§The life . . . is
in the blood¡¨ (Leviticus 17:11). Life was forfeited by
fall (Genesis 2:17; Genesis 3:19; Romans 5:12); therefore life must be
taken, blood must be shed (Ezekiel 18:4; Ezekiel 18:20; Hebrews 9:22), a substitutionary victim
must be slain, before a holy God could pardon and accept the sinner. Jesus
died, He shed His ¡§precious blood,¡¨ and through it we have ¡§redemption¡¨ (Matthew 27:50; John 19:34; Romans 5:8-9; Ephesians 1:7). Observe what was done
with the blood.
1. For anointed priest, or whole congregation, it was to be sprinkled
¡§seven times before the Lord, before the veil¡¨ (Leviticus 4:6-7; Leviticus 4:17-18), and put on ¡§horns of
altar of sweet incense¡¨; seven betokening completeness, and horns power. We
thus learn the completeness of restoration to worship and
communion--interrupted by sin--through the power of Jesu¡¦s blood, shed on
Calvary¡¦s Cross, and brought symbolically into the very presence of God for us:
the ground, too, of His advocacy for us, as our ¡§Great High Priest¡¨ (1 John 2:1-2; Hebrews 4:14). Tim higher the position,
privilege, light, the greater the sin. The anointed priest was in a very
blessed position, admitted daily to minister in the Tabernacle; and the whole
congregation were marked by Jehovah¡¦s favour. They were His ¡§redeemed¡¨ or ¡§purchased¡¨
people, called by Him, His ¡§son,¡¨ ¡§a peculiar treasure,¡¨ &c. (Exodus 15:13; Exodus 15:16; Exodus 4:22; Exodus 19:5); brought into covenant
relationship with Jehovah, who Himself dwelt in their midst, guarding and
guiding them night and day (Exodus 13:21-22). And they were encamped
around His habitation, as accepted worshippers, through the medium of the
priesthood and offerings. Hence, when sin entered, blood alone could atone and
restore.
2. For a ruler or one of the common people the priest must put blood
on the horns of the altar of burnt-offering (chap. 4:25, 30), telling of the
power of the atoning blood to cleanse from all sin, and restore basis for
worship, peace, &c.
3. All the blood was to be poured out at the bottom of the altar
(verses 7, 18, 25, 30, 34). This was to be done in every case, as there
atonement, or reconciliation, was made; there the Lord met with the children of
Israel (Exodus 29:42-43). The pouring out tells
of the fulness of the atonement made by Jesus. He ¡§poured out His soul unto
death¡¨ (Isaiah 53:12; Psalms 22:14); made ¡§reconciliation for
iniquity¡¨ (Daniel 9:24); gave ¡§His life a ransom,¡¨
&c. (Matthew 20:28; 1 Timothy 2:6); and in Him--our
¡§Altar¡¨ (Hebrews 13:10)--God and the sinner meet.
III. Fine flour It
is thought that in chap. 9., sin, as the root of all evil, the great principle
of evil within, is specially dealt with, and when it shows itself in the committal
of sin--though of ignorance--it must be judged by a holy God. In chap. 5.
certain sinful actions are specified (verses 1-4), and dealt with in the same
spirit (verses 5-13); but while again we see how a just and holy God must
punish sin, we see also how a God of love meets the need of every sinner--even
the poorest--by permitting fine flour to be offered, when the offender was ¡§not
able¡¨ to bring any of the animals named.
IV. The burning,
again, shows the double aspect of the holy Sufferer, by the two words used.
1. The fat, and portions of the inwards (as in
peace-offering)--representing the rich excellences, heart and affections
reserved for God Himself--were to be burnt as incense, or ¡§savour of delight,¡¨
upon the altar of burnt-offerings (Leviticus 4:8-10; Leviticus 4:19; Leviticus 4:26; Leviticus 4:35). Striking testimony to
the intrinsic worth of the holy Jesus, even when presented to our gaze as ¡§made
sin!¡¨
2. The whole bullock was to be burnt--in judgment--¡§without the camp¡¨
(Leviticus 4:11-12). The animal
was--typically--loaded with man¡¦s sin. It represented man in his corrupt state,
outwardly and inwardly evil (Romans 3:12; Romans 7:18): head guiding, legs walking,
in evil ways, engendered within (James 1:15); therefore too loathsome to
remain in sight of holy God, or be consumed with fire on His altar or table.
The sin-offering must be cast forth--so to speak--from His presence. Thus ¡§sin¡¨
was ¡§laid upon¡¨ the sinless Son of God; the holy Jesus was separated from God,
when, ¡§in the likeness of sinful flesh,¡¨ He ¡§suffered without the gate¡¨ (Romans 8:3; Hebrews 13:11-12). The gate of the very
city chosen of God to put His Name there. Yes--outside its walls, the holy Son
of God was crucified in a place set apart for the execution of malefactors (John 19:16-18).
3. ¡§In a clean place¡¨ the bullock was to be burnt, ¡§where the ashes¡¨
of burnt-offering were poured out (Leviticus 4:12). Ashes told of
¡§redemption¡¨ accomplished, and the pouring out of those of burnt-offering, of
acceptance of ¡§finished¡¨ work. The ¡§body¡¨ of Jesus was laid in a ¡§new tomb¡¨ (Matthew 27:60), ¡§with the rich in His
death¡¨ (Isaiah 53:10); token of work ¡§finished,¡¨
complete reconciliation made, ¡§eternal redemption¡¨ obtained (Hebrews 9:12).
V. ¡§outside the
camp¡¨--¡§the gate,¡¨ full of deep teaching, can here but point to subjects for
meditation and study, sufficient for whole lesson.
1. Christ forsaken of God, ¡§made a curse for us¡¨ (Psalms 22:1; Matthew 27:46; Galatians 3:13), showing both desert of
sinner and fate of those who die unrepentant and unpardoned, and must therefore
bear the curse due to--God¡¦s judgment upon--their own sin.
2. Christ rejected by His own--by the world (John 1:11; Luke 23:18; Luke 23:24; Luke 19:14); bearing reproach, scorn (Psalms 42:10; Psalms 69:9; Psalms 69:20; Romans 15:3; Matthew 27:43), buffeted, scourged,
crucified (Matthew 26:67; Matthew 27:26; Matthew 27:30-35).
3. All who are Christ¡¦s are called to be ¡§separate from the world,¡¨
¡§bearing His reproach¡¨ (2 Corinthians 12:10; Hebrews 13:13), for ¡§the servant is not
greater than his Lord¡¨ (John 13:16; John 15:20); hated by, crucified to
world, ¡§with Christ¡¨ (John 17:14; Galatians 6:14; Galatians 2:20).
4. Christ, the ¡§Saviour of the world¡¨ (John 4:42; 1 John 4:14). Place of Gentiles was
outside the camp, so may here see how Christ died--¡§not for that nation only,¡¨
&c. (John 11:51-52). (Lady Beaujolois Dent)
On sins committed in ignorance
I. Man¡¦s own
disposition is to condone inadvertent sins.
1. Ignorance is treated as if synonymous with guiltlessness.
2. The responsibilities which attach to the knowledge become secretly
a reason why knowledge is eschewed.
II. Wherein the
guiltiness of inadvertent sins consists.
1. What such sinfulness has wrought. The death of the Saviour.
2. Sin in ignorance is the embodiment in action of those dark
principles of enmity against God which lie embosomed in the human heart.
III. God¡¦s emphatic
witness against inadvertent sins.
1. Sources of Divine remonstrance against such sins. Nature.
Scripture. Conscience.
2. Man¡¦s resistance of the Divine remonstrance.
3. How is such daring ignorance fostered?
IV. Godly souls are
betrayed into the commission of inadvertent sins. When Christians give
themselves up to the guidance of any individual, or of any system, not strictly
accordant with God¡¦s revealed truth, they will surely act against Christ and
His commandments ignorantly.
V. Sins in the
godly are most heinous in god¡¦s esteem. Sin is to be estimated by a man¡¦s
spiritual elevation.
VI. Expiation
provided for sins of inadvertence.
1. Against whom the sins were committed. Blood sprinkled ¡§before the
Lord.¡¨
2. The process of purging.
3. Its suggestion of death.
4. Its suggestion of wrath.
III. Typical
intimations of Christ¡¦s death for man¡¦s sins.
1. God¡¦s condemnation of our Substitute.
2. God¡¦s acceptance of our Substitute. (The Preacher¡¦s Hom. Com.)
Ignorance in sinning
I. Man¡¦s
perception of right and wrong cannot be an allowed standard. He may ¡§sin
through ignorance.¡¨
1. Neither his judgment nor his conscience is an adequate guide.
2. Hence the inquiry, What is sin? must be determined from without a
man, not from within. God must be heard.
3. The presence of sin in man, even ignorantly contracted, imperils
man¡¦s relationship to God. It interrupts man¡¦s approach to God, prevents his
acceptable worship of God, and alienates his relationship with God.
II. God¡¦s estimate
and measurement of sin regulated the atonement. A full atonement for all sin
has been made in
Christ.
1. This, if apprehended, lays the ground of a settled peace.
2. This will exalt our conception of the fulness and efficacy of the
Saviour¡¦s sacrifice.
3. This will assure us of acceptable and satisfactory fellowship with
God, since all sin is propitiated.
III. Ignorance
concerning sin argues man¡¦s real helplessness in dealing with it. (W. H.
Jellie)
.
Sins of infirmity
1. Even sins of infirmity contract a guilt upon the soul; yea, such a
guilt as needs atonement and expiation in the blood of Jesus Christ. Do not
slight sins of infirmity, for then they become more than mere infirmities.
2. Here is relief unto faith against those usual complaints of daily
infirmities, which many gracious souls so much complain of and mourn under. The
blood of Jesus Christ cleanses us from all our sins.
3. Here is great encouragement to engage in the service and work of
God, notwithstanding our own infirmities and disabilities. The Lord hath
provided a sin-offering for us; He will accept our sincere, though weak
endeavours, and pardon our failings.
4. Take notice what continual obligations of love are upon us to
Jesus Christ. We have such continual need of Him. (S. Mather.)
The sin-offering
Sin! The sound is brief. But it presents a dark abyss of thought.
No mind can trace its birth. No eye can see its death. It ever rolls an
ever-deepening course. Think much of sin. It is earth¡¦s death-blow. It marred
the beauty of a beautous world. It is man¡¦s ruin. Its most tremendous blight
fell on our inner life. It drove the soul from peaceful fellowship with God.
Its terrible destructions die not in the grave. It works this bitter and
eternal anguish, because God¡¦s curse attends it. As the bright sun behind a
threatening cloud, the sin-offering waits to change the aspect. Though sin is
death, the sinner need not die. There is a fortress of escape. Such are the
tidings of the sin-offering. Say, is not this the truth of truths? Mark, now,
how the sin-offering in every part proves sin to be a vanquished foe. There are
indeed some grades of difference in this type, as rank or as offence might
differ. The first example will illustrate all. The offender is the anointed
priest (Leviticus 4:3). Sin has
allured-ensnared--defiled him. But now he sees his guilt. He cannot rest till
pardon be obtained. God¡¦s voice directs his course. He must bring a young
unblemished bullock to the Tabernacle door. Behold the proof, that God has
found a ransom. This is an idle and an empty rite, except it shows the victim
of God¡¦s choice. This is but mockery, except it witnesses, that help is laid on
the redeeming Jesus. A solemn act is next enjoined. The offender¡¦s hands must
touch the victim¡¦s head. This sign, too, has no meaning, unless it bids the
sin-lost to transmit their guilt. The proxy is then slain (Leviticus 4:4). Sin must have death. The
curse must fall. Believer, your sins slew Christ. They cannot now slay you. His
death is yours. The precious rite continues to unfold the Saviour¡¦s worth. It
shows three uses of the outpoured blood.
1. The veil is sprinkled seven times (Leviticus 4:6). This hung before the
mercy-seat. It was the entrance to the holiest place. The truth is manifest.
They, who would enter heaven, must plead blood shed.
2. Part dyed the golden altar¡¦s horns (Leviticus 4:7). This was the place where
incense rose, as emblem of ascending prayer. Christ¡¦s intercession is
salvation¡¦s crown.
3. The brazen altar drank the rest (Leviticus 4:7). Thus all is used to bring
assurance to the anxious hearth Each drop subserves its part. Atonement needs
the whole. The whole is given. (Dean Law.)
Sins of infirmity
1. To take heed by the fall of others (Leviticus 4:3). If the pillars may bend,
End the chief props of the house shake, what shall the tender rafters do? ¡§Be
not high-minded, but fear.¡¨
2. To bear with them that are weak (Galatians 6:1). He more easily excuses
sin in others, who himself is bitten with the consciousness of his own
infirmity.
3. Of the greatness of the sin of the priests. As by their good life
and doctrine they save themselves and those who hear them, so by the contrary
they destroy both.
4. To bear patiently the momentary afflictions of this life (Leviticus 4:12; cf. Hebrews 13:13). We should in our
meditation and desire go out of the world, as out of the camp, and be content
to bear reproach for Christ¡¦s sake, seeing we shall have no long continuance
here, but look for an everlasting habitation in heaven.
5. The multitude of sinners does not excuse sin (Leviticus 4:13).
6. The prince is to take notice of his error (Leviticus 4:22). (A. Willet, D. D.)
Sins unperceived
These are not sins of omission, but acts committed by a
person when at the time he did not suppose that what he did was sin. Although
he did the thing deliberately, yet he did not perceive the sin of it. So
deceitful is sin, we may be committing that abominable thing which cast angels
into an immediate and an eternal hell, and yet at the moment be totally
unaware! Want of knowledge of the truth and too little tenderness of conscience
hide it from us. Hardness of heart and a corrupt nature cause us to sin
unperceived. But here again the form of the Son of Man appears! Jehovah, God of
Israel, institutes sacrifice for sins of ignorance, and thereby discovers the
same compassionate and considerate heart that appears in our High Priest, ¡§who
can have compassion on the ignorant!¡¨ (Hebrews 5:2). Amidst the types of this
Tabernacle we recognise the presence of Jesus; it is His voice that shakes the
curtains and speaks in the ear of Moses, ¡§If a soul shall sin through
ignorance!¡¨ The same yesterday, to-day, and for ever! (A. A. Bonar.)
The sin-offering
The sin-offering, although first in order of application, came
last in order of institution. It is distinctly a creation of the law. Sin
having become, by the commandment,
¡§exceeding sinful,¡¨ the remedy provided by the law was the sin-offering, with
all its elaborate ritual. The most prominent feature is the sprinkling of the
blood. The blood being that which atones (Leviticus 17:11), it naturally comes most
prominently forward in that which was especially the atoning sacrifice. The
sin-offerings fall into two classes--viz., those whose blood was taken into the
Tabernacle, placed upon the horns of the golden altar, and sprinkled seven
times before the veil; and those whose blood was not taken into the Tabernacle,
but only placed upon the horns of the brazen altar which stood in the outer
court. To the first class belong the sin-offerings of the high priest (Leviticus 4:3-12), and of the whole
congregation (Leviticus 4:13-21); to the second, those
offered by rulers (Leviticus 4:22-26), or by any of the
common people (Leviticus 4:27-35). Certain portions of
the sacrifice were laid upon the altar of burnt-offering (Leviticus 4:8-10); the main part was
dealt with in one of two ways--in sin-offerings of the first class mentioned
above, it was consumed by fire outside the camp (Leviticus 4:12; Leviticus 4:21); in other cases, viz.,
where the blood was not carried into the Tabernacle, it became the food of the
officiating priests (Leviticus 6:26; Leviticus 6:29; Leviticus 10:17-18); the greater part of
the blood was poured away at the bottom of the altar of burnt-offering (Leviticus 4:7; Leviticus 4:18; Leviticus 4:25; Leviticus 4:30; Leviticus 4:34). Tradition adds that it
descended thence into the valley of the Kedron. It is to be observed that a
sin-offering was ordained to consist of one animal only, and that in each case
the precise offering to be made was specified. ¡§Men were not allowed to choose
or multiply their sin-offerings, as if there could really be any proportion
between their gift and the privileges to which it readmitted them, lest they
should dream of compensating for so much sin by so much sacrifice.¡¨ According
to the unanimous tradition of the Jews, a verbal confession of the sin or sins
for which the offering was brought accompanied the imposition of hands in the
case of sin and trespass-offerings. The next point to be noticed is that
remarkable provision of the law by which it was ordained that the majority of
the sin-offerings should be eaten by the priests. The explanation of this is
given in Leviticus 10:17. The people¡¦s sin passed
into the very substance of the priests who thus ¡§in a deep mystery neutralised,
through the holiness vested in them by their consecration, the sin which the
offerer had laid upon the victim and upon them.¡¨ By this solemn act, which
served but to increase the guilt of an unholy priesthood, the priests became in
a remarkable manner types of Him who was ¡§made sin for us.¡¨ It remains to
inquire, For what sins did the sin-offering atone? Clearly not for wilful
breaches of any of God¡¦s commandments (2 Corinthians 3:7; Hebrews 2:2; Hebrews 10:28; also Numbers 15:27-31; Deuteronomy 17:12). The law proclaimed
aloud that ¡§the wages of sin is death.¡¨ For what, then, were the Mosaic
sacrificial atonements available? The cases which admitted the application of a
sin or trespass-offering may be brought under four beads--viz.,
Sins of ignorance
I know nothing that gives a higher view of the holiness of
God than this: that not only sins that we culpably and deliberately commit are
guilt in His sight, but that we commit sins in our ignorance which are sins
though we do not suppose them to be so. God¡¦s law is a fixture, and is not
dependent upon our estimate. There is sin committed in the dark as well as
noonday. Sin committed by those who are not acquainted with it as such, as well
as when committed, though it may be aggravated in the last case by those who
are acquainted with it, is still sin. Now, it has been said that sins committed
in ignorance are no sins at; all; and that the ignorance of a duty is atonement
for omitting that duty, or expiatory of the sin. My answer is--ignorance may
extenuate our guilt, but it does not in the least modify the sin, or make an
atonement for it. (J. Cumming, D. D.)
The sin-offering
There is a prevailing disposition in the hearts of many to think
of sins of ignorance as if they were no sins; or if it be allowed that they
need mercy, such mercy is regarded rather as a right than as the free and
unmerited gift of grace. Ignorance in the minds of such persons becomes
synonymous with guiltlessness; to act conscientiously (however dark or dead the
conscience)is to act blamelessly. The thought of the responsibilities that
attach to knowledge becomes secretly a reason why knowledge is eschewed. In a
word, darkness is loved rather than light, because darkness brings quiet, but
light has awakening and convicting power. A sufficient answer to all such
thoughts is this--that the especial reason for the appointment of the
sin-offering was, that it might meet sins committed in ignorance. The
heinousness of such sins of ignorance depends, not so much on the character of
the deed done as on that condition of heart which is capable of committing sin
without knowing that it is sin, and commits it, perhaps exultingly, triumphing
in it as good. What must angels in heaven think of the state of that soul which
is so thoroughly blinded, so utterly astray from God, as to violate His
commandments and resist His will in total unconsciousness that it is doing
wrong? What can be more terrible than a conscience so hardened? Nothing has a
greater tendency to bring the conscience into this state, and to lead to the
daring commission of sins of ignorance, than religious truth perverted. It
would be happy, indeed, if we could assert, even of real Christians, that they
are free from these fearful sins of ignorance. But whenever they give
themselves up to the guidance of any individual, or of any system whose
influence is not strictly according to the revealed truth of God, they will surely
act against Christ and His commandments ignorantly. There is nothing, perhaps,
at this present moment, that is operating more terribly against the progress of
truth than the misdirected energies of real Christians, ignorantly sustaining
error, ignorantly resisting light. If, then, there may be sins of ignorance,
even where there is most diligence and watchfulness, how much more where there
is negligence or slumber, or acquiescence in the prevailing evil of the age!
There has been only One on earth free from sins of ignorance, even He who said,
¡§I have set the Lord always before me¡¨; and He came to be our Sin-offering--to
bear the wrath due to these very sins of ignorance; otherwise, they alone would
have sunk us into perdition for ever. The chapter before us, as being addressed
to those who were ostensibly the separate people of God, teaches us especially
respecting sins of ignorance committed by believers. The greater our
privileges, the nearer we are brought to God; the more intimately we are
connected with His service, the more terrible must be the consequences of
transgression . . . In atonement, Divine holiness requires in the Surety not
only that He should bear every penalty, but that He should also present a
substitutional perfectness for us. There are few chapters worthy of more solemn
consideration than this. It teaches us the deep responsibility of all positions
of ostensible service, especially such as are influential over the minds and
habits of others. Any influence we may possess, any ability of instructing,
comforting, or in any way helping others, by word or by example, is a talent
which we cannot escape the responsibility of using. The priests of God (and all
believers are priests)must act, and that, too, openly. But how needful that
they should well consider the responsibility of their position; the danger in
which they are of acting ignorantly, and the disastrous effects of such
ignorance, in dishonouring God and injuring others who may be involved in the
consequences of their sin I Honest-hearted reception of the Word of God can
alone preserve us from such ignorance. (B. W. Newton.)
Man¡¦s incompetency to deal with sin
Nothing can more forcibly express man¡¦s incompetency to deal with
sin than the fact of there being such a thing as a ¡§sin of ignorance.¡¨ How
could he deal with that which he knows not? How could he dispose of that which
has never even come within the range of his conscience? Impossible. Man¡¦s
ignorance of sin proves his total inability to put it away. If he does not know
of it, what can he do about it? Nothing. He is as powerless as he is ignorant.
Nor is this all. The fact of a ¡§sin of ignorance¡¨ demonstrates, most clearly,
the uncertainty which must attend upon every settlement of the question of sin,
in which no higher claims have been responded to than those put forth by the
most refined human conscience. There can never be settled peace upon this
ground. There will always be the painful apprehension that there is something
wrong underneath. If the heart be not led into settled repose by the Scripture
testimony that the inflexible claims of Divine justice have been answered,
there must of necessity be a sensation of uneasiness, and every such sensation
presents a barrier to our worship, our communion, and our testimony, if I am
uneasy in reference to the settlement of the question of sin, I cannot worship;
I cannot enjoy communion, either with God or His people, nor can I be an
intelligent or effective witness for Christ. The heart must be at rest, before
God, as to the perfect remission of sin, ere we can ¡§worship Him in spirit and
in truth.¡¨ If there be guilt on the conscience there must be terror in the
heart; and assuredly a heart filled with terror cannot be a happy or a
worshipping heart. (C. H. Mackintosh.)
The Bible tells of sin and its cure
The Bible is a book with a single purpose; and that purpose is to
reveal the sinfulness of the human family, and a method of salvation from that
sinfulness. And, of course, a book that has only one end in view must
necessarily be silent with reference to a thousand other subjects. A few years
ago a man was galloping on horseback, as if he had seen a spectre, down the
bank of a New England river in the dead of night. His mission was to inform the
sleeping dwellers in a number of manufacturing towns farther down the stream
that the great dam farther up the river was about to burst its barriers. The
horseman, as he sped along, trampled myriads of flowers underfoot, but he had
nothing to say of botany. He rushed by hundreds of projecting rocks, rich in
stories of prehistoric ages, but he had nothing to say on the subject of
geology. Over his head the starry hosts were marshalled as they had been since
the foundation of the world, but he had nothing to say on the subject of
astronomy. He had just one mission--to inform the sleeping toilers of their
danger, and how they might escape it, and he had no time to devote to the
consideration of any other subject, however important, or however fascinating
to other minds. So it is with God¡¦s Word. Its single object is to tell us of
sin and its cure. On this subject it is full and explicit and infallible.
Involuntary offences
¡§Truth, real inward truth, is the rarest of all things.¡¨ Thus
wrote the late Rev. F. D. Maurice, one of the most saintly men of his day. Let
him who questions this consider this good man¡¦s confession, that ¡§some little
petty subterfuge, some verbal or acted dishonesty, we are continually surprised
into; and against this neither a high code of honour nor an exact profession of
religion is much preservation.¡¨ Does the reader see in this confession, as in a
mirror, his own heart? If so, and if he would know how to become absolutely
truthful, let him learn that ¡§continued intercourse with the Father of
Lights, revealing our own darkness to us, is the one safeguard; and the
Christian who loses that is in more danger of stumbling than an infidel.¡¨
Perhaps not in more, but certainly in as much danger; since when a Christian
runs from the light into darkness he is blind as other men. To be thoroughly
truthful in all things, it is, therefore, needful for a good man to live very
near to the God of truth. Our virtues are never so pure as when we live close
to our Redeemer¡¦s throne.
Errors and oversights in all our lives
It is with the children of men as with the housewife, that having
diligently swept her house and cast the dust out-of-doors, can see nothing
amiss, not so much as a speck of dust in it, whereas, if the sun do but a
little shine in through some cranny in the wall, or some broken quarrel in the
window, she may soon see the whole house swim and swarm with innumerable motes
of dust, floating to and fro in the air, which for dimness of light or sight
before she was not able to discern. Even so it is with many that are careful of
their ways, so that little may be seen amiss that might require either
reformation or amendment, yet, when they shall come to look more
attentively into God¡¦s law, a little beam of light reflecting upon their souls
from it, will discover unto them such an innumerable company, as well of
corruptions in their hearts as of errors and oversights in their lives, that it
shall make them, as men amazed, cry out, Lord, what earthly man doth know the
errors of his life? (T. Gataker.)
The best are not free from imperfection
He who boasts of being perfect is perfect in folly. I have been a
good deal up and down the world, and I neither did see either a perfect horse
or a perfect man, and I never shall until two Sundays come together. You cannot
get white flour out of a coal sack, nor perfection out of human nature; he who
looks for it had better look for sugar in the sea. The old saying is,
¡§Lifeless, faultless.¡¨ Of dead men we should say nothing but good; but as for
the living, they are all tarred, more or less, with the black brush, and half
an eye can see it. Every head has a soft place in it, and every heart has its
black drop. Every rose has its prickles, and every day its night. Even the sun
shows spots, and the skies are darkened with clouds. Nobody is so wise but he
has folly enough to stock a stall at Vanity Fair. Where I could not see the
fool¡¦s cap, I have, nevertheless, heard the bells jingle. As there is no sunshine without
some shadow, so is all human good mixed up with more or less evil; even poor
law guardians have their little failings, and parish beadles are not wholly of heavenly
nature. The best wine has its lees. All men¡¦s faults are not written on their
foreheads, and it is quite as well they are not, or hats would need wide brims;
yet, as sure as eggs are eggs, faults of some sort nestle in every man¡¦s bosom.
There¡¦s no telling when a man¡¦s sins may show themselves, for hares pop out of
a ditch just when you are not looking for them. A horse that is weak in the
legs may not stumble for a mile or two, but it¡¦s in him, and the rider had
better hold him up well. The tabby cat is not lapping milk just now, but leave
the dairy door open, and we will see if she is not as bad a thief as the
kitten. There¡¦s fire in the flint, cool as it looks; wait till the steel gets a
knock at it, and you will see. Everybody can read that riddle, but it is not
everybody that will remember to keep his gunpowder out of the way of the
candle. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
All sin must be abhorred
It is credibly reported that in some parts of Italy there are
spiders of so poisonous a nature as will kill him that treads upon them, and
break a glass if they do but creep over it. This shows clearly that the force
of this poison is not in measure by the quantity, but in the nature by the
quality thereof. And even so the force of sin consists not in the greatness of
She subject or object of it, but in the poisonful nature of it, for that it is
the breach of the law, violation of the justice, and a provocation of the wrath
of God, and is a present poison and damnation to men¡¦s souls; therefore, as the
least poison, as poison, being deadly to the body, is detested, so the least
sin, as sin, being mortal to the soul, is to be abhorred. (J. Spencer.)
Verse 3
If the priest that is anointed do sin.
The eminent sinfulness of error in the priest
I. From the
superior position he occupied.
II. From the
superior privileges he enjoyed. Exempt from many secular anxieties and
temptations. Constantly in contact with sacred influences.
III. From the
superior knowledge he possessed. Intimately acquainted with requirements of
law. Possessing ample means and opportunities for ascertaining purpose of
precepts enjoined.
IV. From the
superior influence he exerted. Looked up to as an example. (F. W. Brown.)
Defiled sanctities
1. Christians occupying exalted positions, enjoying elevated
privileges, rendering distinguished service for God, may fall into sin.
2. They know that the dishonour done to God is commensurate with the
dignity of their position and the holiness of their profession.
3. So acutely is their guilt felt by them when thus brought under
consciousness of sin, that its burden and bitterness would overwhelm them were
there not adequate grace in the sin-offering for even such sin as theirs. Here,
therefore, it is clearly shown--
I. That however
far sin may have penetrated, and whatever solemn and sacred things it may have
defiled, thither the atoning blood follows, carrying full expiation where sin
has carried defilement.
II. That the
dishonour done to God, to the sanctities of a godly life, and to the
solemnities of sanctuary ministries, was compensated for in offering upon the
altar of incense the symbols of the inherent and intrinsic excellency of
christ. (W. H. Jellie.)
Sin in the priesthood
I. A holy office
does not ensure infallibility.
II. Occupants of a
holy office are specially called to sanctity.
III. Eminently
privileged and enlightened, they who minister before God should be most
vigilant lest they sin.
IV. Sin in God¡¦s
priests had to be purged by a great sacrificial expiation. Expressing--
1. The peculiar magnitude of sin in them.
2. The boundless sufficiency of redemption, even for them. (W. H.
Jellie.)
The priest¡¦s sin
This man is a priest; the holy anointing oil of the Lord his God
is upon him, and therefore, of course, he cannot sin! The fact of the matter is
that none of us are beyond the reach of temptation, beyond the possibility of a
fall. Well, what then? I know what the mocking world will say: ¡§If the priest
that is anointed do sin,¡¨ I will have nothing to do with religion at all; it is
all hypocrisy; he is no better than other men. I know quite well what
uncharitable professors will say: Turn him out; he is a hypocrite. ¡§If the
priest that is anointed do sin,¡¨ he has disgraced himself. I know what your own
heart will say: It is no good; I have tried; I have fallen; I may as well give
it all up, there is no hope at all. But what does God say? ¡§If the priest that
is anointed do sin,¡¨ let him bring his sacrifice; ¡§let him bring . . . a young
bullock without blemish . . . for a sin-offering.¡¨ Is it not marvellous! I do
not so much wonder at the 27th verse where God says: ¡§If any one of the common
people sin,¡¨ but ¡§if the priest that is anointed do sin,¡¨ let him bring his
sacrifice. And yet, if you read that verse carefully all through, you will see
that there is no minimising of the priest¡¦s sin. God, in the terms that He
uses, says that it is a very heinous thing for a priest to sin. If one of His
own children goes astray it is a very serious thing. He has been anointed; that
anointing not only implies separation to God, but enduing with power. That
anointing of the Holy Spirit is upon him, he ought not to have sinned. No temptation
came upon him more than he was able to bear. And if you read on you will see,
in the Revised Version, ¡§If the priest that is anointed do sin, so as to cause
the people to sin.¡¨ Yes, if the priest sin, he causes the people to sin, and if
the Christian sin he is a stumblingblock to others, therefore an ungodly man
will go still further into the depths of sin. And yet, ¡§if the priest that is
anointed do sin, let him bring his sacrifice.¡¨ What does he do when he
sacrifices? There are seven points you ought to consider. The first thing he
has to do (Leviticus 4:4), ¡§He shall bring the
bullock unto the door of the Tabernacle of the congregation before the Lord,
and shall lay his hand upon the bullock¡¦s head.¡¨ The bullock is to be without
spot or blemish. The priest comes there conscious of his own sin, and lays his
hand upon the bullock¡¦s head. And that is the first thing you must do. You must
find a spotless victim. The Lord Jesus Christ is that Lamb without sin, without
spot. The first thing to do is to put our hand upon the victim. And the moment
the man laid his hand upon the victim that moment a transference took place.
All the sinner¡¦s sin was placed upon the victim. The victim was slain and east
outside the camp, and the sinner goes into the Temple of God and takes his
place in the Holy Place of Jehovah. And directly you lay the hand of faith upon
Christ, directly you grasp Christ as your great Substitute, the same thing
takes place. And if you arc a child of God, you have felt that the burden of
sin is intolerable, it has weighed you down, and all that sin has been made to
meet upon Him. Another reason why he was to lay his hand hard, was to show that
all his trust was in that victim alone. He was to lean hard with all his weight
upon him. If the victim did not support him the man fell prostrate to the
ground. So we must lean entirely upon Christ, all our confidence must be in Him
and Him alone. The second point is this--He shall kill the bullock before the
Lord. There is no doubt about it, ¡§the wages of sin is death.¡¨ Look at it! look
priest! and see what your sin has brought about--the death of that pure and
spotless victim. Now there were three things to be done with the blood of the
bullock. The blood of the bullock was to be taken and sprinkled in three
different places. First of all you read in Leviticus 4:6, the priest was to take the
blood and sprinkle it seven times before the Lord, before the veil of the
sanctuary. Seven times he was to sprinkle it there at the Holy of Holies. Why?
Because within that Holy of Holies dwell the Shechinah glory of God. Christian,
is this not the first result of your sin? You lose your communion with God. The
first thing to be done is to restore that communion with God. The next thing to
be done is this--he was to take some of the blood (Leviticus 4:7) and put it upon the altar
of sweet incense. What was that? The place where the priest prayed for the
people. When the people were praying outside the priest went into the Holy Place, and his offering went up as
incense before God. Is not this the second result of sin--you lose the power of
prayer; you say your prayers but you no longer pray; you lose all that joy and
spontaneity of service; there is no fragrance about your prayers, it is mere
routine, and there is no reality about them at all. If you want to have communion
with God in prayer, and to be able to pray as you ought to pray, there must be
the sprinkling of the blood there. The third thing to be done was to take the
rest of the blood and pour it out on the altar of burnt-offering. What was
that? The place where the daily burnt-offering was offered up. God will
not accept your burnt-offering if there is sin in the heart. There is a
controversy between me and God, and though I may try and bring Him offerings,
God will not accept them. There was another thing to be done. ¡§And the skin of
the bullock, and all his flesh, with his head, and with his legs, and his
inwards, and his dung, even the whole bullock shall he carry forth without the
camp unto a clean place, where the ashes are poured out, and burn him on the
wood with fire: where the ashes are poured out shall he be burnt.¡¨ Now we have
never had that word for burnt before. That word means to thoroughly consume
with burning. Very different to another word for burning I shall notice
presently. It is no use your saying you cannot get peace and joy as long as you
are keeping your bullock within the camp. You must take it out and burn it.
There will be no peace until you do. Inside the camp a very different scene was
taking place. There, upon the altar, we read in the eighth and following
verses, all the fat of the bullock, all the inwards of the bullock, he is to
offer it up upon the altar of the burnt-offering for a sweet savour to God.
That is a very different word from burnt--the word in Leviticus 4:10, is k¡¦tour; it
means to burn as fragrance--not with consuming burning, but as sweet incense to
God. And there is a sweet incense ascending from that altar. The priest may
almost hear that whisper from the open heavens, and it is forgiven him. It is
all forgiven; the sacrifice is accepted, and the sin is blotted out. (E. A.
Stuart, M. A.)
Sin in ministers
The high priest, although a single individual, if he sin, must
bring as large and valuable an offering as is required from the whole
congregation. For this law there are two evident reasons. The first is found in
the fact that in Israel the high priest represented before God the entire
nation. When he sinned it was as if the whole nation sinned in him. So it is
said that by his sin he ¡§brings guilt on the people¡¨--a very weighty matter.
And this suggests a second reason for the costly offering that was required
from him. The consequences of the sin of one in such a high position of
religious authority must, in the nature of the case, be much more serious and
far-reaching than in the case of any other person. And here we have a lesson as
pertinent to our time as to those days. ,As the high priest, so, in modern
time, the bishop, minister, or elder, is ordained as an officer in matters of
religion, to act for and with men in the things of God. For the proper
administration of this high trust, how indispensable that such a one shall take
heed to maintain unbroken fellowship with God! Any shortcoming here is sure to
impair by so much the spiritual value of his own ministrations for the people
to whom he ministers. And this evil consequence of any unfaithfulness of his is
the more certain to follow, because, of all the members of the community, his example
has the widest and most effective influence; in whatever that example be bad or
defective, it is sure to do mischief in exact proportion to his exalted
station. If, then, such a one sin, the case is very grave, and his guilt
proportionately heavy. (S. H. Kellogg, D. D.)
Sin not excused by ignorance
One would wonder whether it is possible that sin can be committed
in ignorance--that is to say, whether the ignorance does not do away with the
sinful character of the deed. Is not sin a wilful action? Is not its wilfulness
the very essence of its guilt? So we would think; yet again and again in the
ritual we find that ignorance is never made into a sufficient excuse for sin.
The sense of mystery which we may feel in regard to this matter can only be
relieved by looking for analogous instances in the field of nature. There is no
law written on all the dominion of nature with a broader and clearer hated than
that all sin is followed by penalty. Exclude the air, and you exclude vitality;
shut out the light, and you impoverish the life; doom yourself to solitude, and
you doom yourself by the same fiat to extinction. It is in vain to plead that
we did not know the nature of air, or the utility of light, or the influence of
high things upon things that are low; we must be taught the depth of our
ignorance and its guilt by the intensity and continuance of our personal
suffering. Leaving the region of nature and coming into the region of
civilisation, we find that even in legal affairs violations of law are not
excused on the ground of ignorance. The judge upon the bench does not hesitate
to inform the trespasser that he ought to have known the law of which he
pleaded ignorance. Turning from purely legal criticism of this kind, we find
the same law in operation in social affairs. A man is not excused from the
consequences of ill-behaviour on the ground that he did not know the customs of
society or the technicalities of etiquette. He may be pitied, he may be held in
a kind of mild contempt, his name may be used to point a moral; but at the root
of all this criticism lies the law that the man is a trespasser, and that
ignorance cannot be pleaded as a complete excuse. This canon of judgment has a
very wide bearing upon human affairs. Were it to be justly and completely applied,
it would alter many arrangements and relations of life. There are many things
which we ought to know, and which we ought to be; and instead of excusing
ourselves by our ignorance, we should be stimulated by its effects to keener
inquiry and more diligent culture. That sense of ignorance will possibly show
us in what critical conditions our life is being spent. What watchfulness is
imposed upon us by the fact that it is possible to sin through ignorance! If
sin were a mere act of violence, we could easily become aware of it, and with
comparatively little difficulty we might avoid its repetition. But it is more
and other than this. It is committed when we little think of its commission; we
inflict wounds when we think our hands are free of all weapons and instruments;
we dishonour God when we suppose we are merely silent about Him. Neglect may be
sin as well as violence. There is a negative criminality as well as a positive
blasphemy. All this makes life most critical and most profoundly solemn. The
commandment of God is exceeding broad. Being a Divine commandment it comes of
continual and minute exactions covering all life with the spirit and obligation
of discipline. The mercy is shown that a special offering was provided for the
sin of ignorance Let every soul, then, boldly say, as if in solemn monologue,
Whatever my sin may be, it is provided for in the great Offering established as
the way of access to the Father; I will invent no excuses; I wilt seek for no
new methods of payment or compensation; I will bring no price in my hand, no
excuse on my tongue, nor will I hide even in the depths of my consciousness any
hope that I can vindicate my position before God; I will simply fall into the
hands of the Living One, and look upon the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world. In
that spirit I will go forward to judgment, and in that spirit I will encounter the mysteries of
destiny. (J. Parker, D. D.)
Verse 6-7
Sprinkle of the blood.
The sprinkling of the blood of the sacrifice
There is not that intensity of evil in a sin of ignorance which is
to be seen in wilful transgression; but still there is sin in it: for no law
can allow ignorance to be an excuse for trespass, since it is the duty of the
subject to know the law. No amount of sincerity can turn injustice to
righteousness, or transform falsehood into truth. If a man partakes of a deadly
poison believing it to be a health-giving medicine, his sincerity will not
hinder the natural course of nature: he will die in his error. It is precisely
so in the moral and spiritual world. Sins committed in ignorance must be still
sins in the sight of the Lord, or else no expiation would have been provided
for them. I am greatly rejoiced to think there should be such a sacrifice
provided, since it may yet turn out that the larger number of our sins are sins
of which we have not been aware, because the hardness of our heart has
prevented our discovering our error. Many good men have lived in an evil habit,
and remained in it unto death, and yet have not known it to be evil. Now, if
the precious blood of Jesus only put away the sin which we perceived in detail,
its efficacy would be limited by the enlightenment of our conscience, and
therefore some grievous sin might be overlooked and prove our ruin. ¡§Cleanse
Thou me from secret faults¡¨ is a prayer to which the expiation of Christ is a
full answer. The atonement acts according to God¡¦s sight of sin and not
according to our sight of it, for we only see it in part, but God sees it all
and blots it all out.
I. We begin with
the sacrifice of Christ in its relation to the lord God of Israel.
1. In the type before us the prominent thing before God is the blood
of atonement. It was God¡¦s intent to awaken in man a great disgust of sin, by
making him see that it could only be put away by suffering and death. In the
Tabernacle in the wilderness almost everything was sanctified by blood. The
purple drops fell even on the book, and all the people. The blood was to be
seen everywhere.
2. The blood of the sacrifice was sprinkled before the veil seven
times, signifying this: first, that the atonement made by the blood of Jesus is
perfect in its reference to God. All through the Scriptures, as you well know,
seven is the number of perfection, and in this place it is doubtless used with
that intent. The seven times is the same as once for all: it conveys the same
meaning as when
we read, ¡§For Christ also hath once suffered for sins,¡¨ and again, ¡§We are
sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once.¡¨ It is a
complete act. No man need bring anything more, or anything of his own,
wherewith to turn away the anger of God; but he may come just as he is, guilty
and defiled, and plead this precious blood which has made effectual atonement
for him.
3. Note next, that not only is the atonement itself perfect, but that
the presentation of that atonement is perfect, too. The sevenfold sprinkling
was typical of Christ as a Priest presenting unto the Father Himself as a
sacrifice for sin. This has been rally done. Jesus has in due order carried the
propitiation into the sanctuary, and appeared in the presence of God on our
behalf. We now pass on to a few thoughts about ourselves in relation to the
type.
4. This sevenfold sprinkling of the blood upon the veil meant that
the way of our access to God is only by virtue of the precious blood of Christ.
Do you ever feel a veil hanging between you and God? In very truth, there is
none; for Jesus has taken it away through His flesh.
5. I further think that the blood was sprinkled on the veil seven
times to show that a deliberate contemplation of the death of Christ is greatly
for our benefit. Whatever else you treat slightly, let the sacrifice of Calvary
be seriously considered again and again.
6. Remember, too, that this sets out how great our guilt has been,
since the blood must be sprinkled seven times ere the work of atonement is
fully seen by you. Our guilt has a sevenfold blackness about it, and there must
be a sevenfold cleansing. If you plead the blood of Jesus once and you do not
obtain peace thereby, plead it again; and if still the burden lies upon your
heart, still go on pleading with the Lord the one prevailing argument that
Jesus bled. God, who bids us forgive unto seventy times seven, sets no bound to
His own forgiveness.
7. Do reflect that if your case seems to yourself to be very
difficult, it is provided for by this sevenfold sprinkling of the blood. The
devil¡¦s desire will be to keep you from thinking upon Christ; but do remember
that thoughts about anything else will do you very little good. Your hope lies
in thinking upon Jesus, not upon yourself ¡§He is able to save them to the
uttermost that come unto God by Him.¡¨ Mr. Moody Stuart somewhere tells
us that he once talked with a woman who was in great trouble about her sins.
She was a well-instructed person, and knew the Bible thoroughly, so that he was
in a little difficulty what to say to her, as she was so accustomed to
all-saving truth. At last he urged upon her very strongly that passage, ¡§This
is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Jesus Christ came
into the world to save sinners,¡¨ and he noticed that she seemed to find a quiet
relief in a gentle flow of tears. He prayed with her, and when she rose from
her knees she seemed much comforted. Meeting her the next day, and seeing her
smiling face, and finding her full of rest in the Lord, he asked? ¡§What was it
wrought your deliverance?¡¨ ¡§Oh,¡¨ she said, ¡§it was that text, ¡¥ Jesus came to
save sinners.¡¦¡§ ¡§Did you not know that before?¡¨ said Mr. Stuart. Yes, she knew
the words before, but she found that in her heart of hearts she had believed
that Jesus came to save saints, and not sinners. Do not many awakened persons
abide in the same error?
II. The blood in
its influence upon prayer. ¡§The priest shall put some of the blood upon the
horns of the altar of sweet incense before the Lord.¡¨ Horns signify power, and
the explanation of the symbol is that there is no power in intercessory prayer
apart from the blood of expiation.
1. Remember, first, that the intercession of Christ Himself is based
upon His atonement. He is daily pleading before the throne of God, and His
great argument is that He offered Himself without spot unto God. ¡§It pleased
the Father to bruise Him,¡¨ and now it pleases the Father to hear Him. The
bruised spices of His passion are an incense of sweet smell, and derive a
double acceptance from the blood-smeared altar upon which they are presented.
And now take the type to yourselves.
2. You and I are to offer incense upon this golden altar by our daily
intercession for others, but our plea must always be the atoning blood of
Jesus.
3. And, as this must be the plea of our intercession, so it must be
our impulse in making intercession. When we pray we come, as it were, to this
golden altar, and we look thereon: what is that we see? Stains of blood! We
look again, and again see crimson spots, while all the four horns are red with
blood. Did my Lord pour out His soul unto death for men, and shall not I pour
out my soul in living earnest when I pray? Can you now bow your knee to plead
with God and not feel your heart set upon the good of men, when you see that
your Lord has laid down His life that they may be saved? Where He poured out
His blood, will not you pour out your tears? He has given His bleeding heart
for men, will not you give your pleading lips?
4. I think, too, I must say that this smearing of the horns of the
altar with blood is meant to give us very great encouragement and assurance
whenever we come to God in prayer. Never give anybody up, however bad he may
be. Why, there is the blood of Christ. What sin is there which it cannot
remove? When we pray, let us with vehement desire plead the blood of Jesus Christ.
Perhaps fewer petitions, and more urging of the merit of Christ, would make
better prayers.
III. The last point
is, the blood in its influence upon all our service. You see we have been
coming outwards from the veil to the golden altar, and now we pass outside the
Holy Place into the outer court, and there in the open air stands the great
brazen altar--the first object that the Israelite saw when he entered the
sacred precincts.
1. That altar represents a great many things, and among the rest our
Lord Jesus presenting Himself to God as an acceptable sacrifice. Whenever you
think of our Lord as being an offering of a sweet smell unto God, never
dissociate that fact in your mind from His being slain for sin, for all our
Lord¡¦s service is tinged by His atoning death.
2. Viewing the type in reference to ourselves, let us learn that
whenever we come to offer any sacrifice unto the Lord we must take care that we
present it by virtue of the precious
blood of Christ. We must view the atonement as connected with every holy thing.
I believe that our testimonies for God will be blessed of God in proportion as
we keep the sacrifice of Christ to the forefront. Somebody asked our brother,
Mr. Moody, how it was that he was so successful, and he is said to have
replied, ¡§Well, if I must tell you, it is I believe because we come out fair
anal square upon the doctrine of substitution.¡¨ In that remark he hit the nail
on the head. That is the saving doctrine; keep that before your own mind, keep
it before the minds of those whom you would benefit.
3. And, beloved, do you not think that this pouring of the blood at
the foot of this brazen altar indicates to us how much we ought to bring there?
If Jesus has brought His life there, and laid Himself thereon, ought we not to
bring all that we are and all that we have, and consecrate all to God?
4. Lastly, you notice the blood was poured out at the bottom of the
altar. What could that mean but this--that the altar of thank-offering stood
upon and grew out of a basis of blood. So all our deeds for God, our sacrifices
for His cause, must spring out of the love which He has manifested in the death
of His dear Son. We love Him because He first loved us. And how do we know that
He loves us? Behold the death of Jesus as the surest proof. I long to put my
whole being upon that altar, and I should feel as I did so that I was not
giving my God anything, but only rendering to Him what His dear Son has bought
a million times over by once shedding His life-blood. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Burn all sin
The blood was put upon
the horns of the altar of sweet incense to signify that no prayer can pierce up
to God but in and by the blood of Christ. All the rest of the blood was poured
at the foot of the altar of burnt-offering, to note still the true shedding of
Christ¡¦s blood for mankind, and because also it was holy, it might not be cast
out as profane. The burning of the holy without the host plainly showed that
Christ should not suffer in Jerusalem, but should be led out of the city to a
place appointed, and there suffer; which you know was fulfilled accordingly (Hebrews 13:11-12). And the whole bullock
was to be burned, being a sin-offering, to teach men to burn all their sins,
and not to divide them, as we do, when we say, I will amend my drunkenness, but
I cannot leave my swearing, or if I leave that also, yet my licentious life a
little more must have a swing, &c. But burn all, thou wert best, and
willingly keep none, burn them, I say, by true sorrow and detestation of them,
even all, all, lest but one--being wilfully still delighted in--burn thee all,
and wholly in hell for ever. When Moses, with the Israelites, was to depart out
of Egypt, and Pharaoh would have had them leave their cattle behind them,
saving what they intended to sacrifice, answer was made, they would not leave
one hoof of a beast behind; and so deal you with your sins--leave not one hoof
of sin behind. No one sin, no part of sin, that is, still I say, by wittingly, willingly,
and boldly continuing in it and delighting in it. Otherwise, free from sin in
this life we cannot be. But, through the grace of God, we may be free from
presumptuous pleasure in sin, and sigh and groan no more, for that anyway we
should offend so good a God, as we find infinite ways of Him that we do offend,
desiring and longing to be free even from all sin. (Bp. Babington.)
Sprinkling the blood
Ewald thus explains the various ceremonies of sprinkling: ¡§It was
in the sprinkling of the blood, the proper sacrament of sacrifice, that the
distinction between the guilt-offering and the expiatory offering in the narrow
sense came most clearly to the front: and it is easy to understand why it would
reveal itself most plainly here. As it was right that the blood of an expiatory offering for public
transgressions should be made far more conspicuous to eyes and sense, so it was
sprinkled on an elevated place, or even on one which was extraordinarily
sacred. The way, too, in which this was done was marked by three stages. If the
atonement was made for an ordinary man or for a prince the priest sprinkled the
blood against the high towering horns of the outer altar, and poured the
remainder, as usual, out at its base; if it was made for the community or for
the high priest, some of the blood was seven times sprinkled against the veil
of the Holy of Holies, then some more against the horns of the inner altar, and
only what was then left was poured out as usual at the base of the outer altar.
The third and highest expiation was adopted on the yearly Day of Atonement. On
the other hand, in the case of the guilt-offering no reason existed for
adopting any unusual mode of sprinkling the blood. It was sprinkled, just as in
other cases, round the sides and foot of the outer altar. As soon as this most
sacred ceremony of the sprinkling was completed, then, according to the ancient
belief, the impurity and guilt were already shaken off from the object to which
they had clung.¡¨
Substitution satisfying the conscience
In Passion week as I was reading ¡§Bishop Wilson on the Lord¡¦s
Supper,¡¨ I met with an expression to this effect, that--The Jews knew what they
did when they transferred their sin to the head of their offering. The thought
rushed into my mind, What I may I transfer all my guilt to another? Has God
provided an offering for me that I may lay all my sins on His head? Then, God
willing, I will not bear them on my own soul one moment longer. Accordingly I
sought to lay my sins upon the sacred head of Jesus; and on the Wednesday began
to have a hope of mercy; on the Thursday that hope increased, on the Friday and
Saturday it became more strong, and on Easter Sunday I awoke early, with these
words upon my heart and lips, ¡§Jesus Christ is risen to-day! Hallelujah!
Hallelujah!¡¨ From that hour peace flowed in rich abundance unto my soul. (C.
Simeon.)
.
Repentance insufficient without atonement
1. Some tell us that repentance is sufficient without atonement.
¡§Contrition,¡¨ say they, ¡§is all that God wants. Why insist on the need of
sacrifice? Let a man mourn over his iniquities and he will be forgiven.¡¨ This
is a mode of speech not more unscriptural than unphilosophical. To maintain
that ¡§repentance is sufficient without atonement¡¨ is uncommonly like declaring
that life is enough without bread or that heat is sufficient without the sun.
The fact is, that as existence is sustained by food, and as warmth proceeds
from the orb of day, so repentance is with most men the result of belief in
redemption. John the Baptist was pre-eminently a preacher of repentance: we
invariably associate the two. ¡§Repent ye, for the kingdom of heaven is at
hand¡¨; such was the keynote of his teaching. He bids the Pharisees and
Sadducees ¡§bring forth fruit meet for repentance.¡¨ Yet he who thus spoke took
care to cry, ¡§Behold the Lamb of God.¡¨
2. ¡§Repentance toward God, and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ,¡¨
stand in the relation of effect and cause. The executioner of Socrates, handing
him the cup of hemlock, burst into tears, deeply grieved that he should, in any
way, be an accessory to the death of one so illustrious. In like manner, when
we hear a well-known voice exclaiming, ¡§If it be possible, let this cup pass
from Me,¡¨ we are conscious that our transgressions necessitated the fatal
draught, and, feeling their enormity, we mourn over them. Some years ago
patriotic regard for their country introduced the following fashion among
Polish ladies. Each wore a small iron cross bearing upon it the name ¡§Warsaw.¡¨
Thereby they were reminded of the wrong done to the nation which they loved so
well, and thereby, also, they sought to stir up brothers, husbands, and sons to
hatred of tyrannic Russia. Let us have the Cross near our hearts, for nothing
will so effectually inflame animosity against sin. Aptly has it been remarked
that ¡§contrition is the tear in the eye of faith.¡¨ (T. R. Stevenson.)
Verse 11-12
The whole bullock shall he carry forth.
Why the skin, flesh, and other parts of the bullock was carried
out of the host
1. The legal reason was because it was a sacrifice for sin, and
therefore unmeet to be burnt as other sacrifices upon the altar.
2. The historical reason, because the Lord suffered without the gate
of the city.
3. The moral reason, to show that the skin with the flesh was carried
forth so the priest should be far off, not only from sin, but the occasion
thereof.
4. The mystical reason, that Christ doth cast out-of-doors, and
remove far away from us our sins.
5. Now further, the sin-offering for the priest, and for the whole
congregation were burnt without, to show the horror and greatness of their sin;
and though it were unclean, being a sacrifice for sin, yet because some part
thereof, namely the fat, was burnt upon the altar, the remaining part was with reverence to be
burned, and in a clean place, and therefore without the camp, because it was
separated from the common pollutions which might happen within the camp.
6. The Hebrews further observe that the high priest¡¦s sin-offering
was commanded to be burnt openly without the camp, to the end that no man might
be ashamed to confess his sin. (A. Willet, D. D.)
To bear patiently the momentary afflictions of this life
Whereas Leviticus 4:12, the bullock was to be
carried out of the host, the apostle applieth it to Christ suffering without
the gate, making this further use of it--¡§Let us go forth therefore out of the
camp, bearing His reproach, for we have no continuing city¡¨ (Hebrews 13:13). We should in our
meditation and desire go out of the world as out of the camp, and be content to
bear reproach for Christ¡¦s sake, seeing we shall have no long continuance here,
but look for an everlasting habitation in heaven; by this reason taken from the
shortness of our afflictions the apostle exhorteth thus (2 Corinthians 4:17). The imitation
of the saints, shortness of time, fragility of the body do persuade to
perseverance, nature hath well provided that grief if it be great cannot be
long, for a short danger thou shalt receive an everlasting reward. (A. Willet,
D. D.)
If the whole congregation.
., sin.
Responsibility of communities and nations
Israel was taught by this law, as we are, that responsibility
attaches not only to each individual person, but also to associations of
individuals in their corporate character, as nations, communities, and--we may
add--all societies and corporations, whether secular or religious. Never has a
generation needed this reminder more than our own. The political and social
principles which, since the French Revolution in the end of last century, have
been, year by year, more and more generally accepted among the nations of
Christendom, are everywhere tending to the avowed or practical denial of this
most important truth. It is a maxim ever more and more extensively accepted as
almost axiomatic in our modern democratic communities, that religion is wholly
a concern of the individual; and that a nation or community, as such, should
make no distinction between various religions as false or true, but maintain an
absolute neutrality, even between Christianity and idolatry, or theism and
atheism. It should take little thought to see that this modern maxim stands in
direct opposition to the principle assumed in this law of the sin-offering;
namely, that a community or nation is as truly and directly responsible to God
as the individual in the nation. But this corporate responsibility the spirit
of the age squarely denies. Not that all indeed, in our modern so-called
Christian nations have come to this. But no one will deny that this is the mind
of the vanguard of nineteenth-century liberalism in religion and politics. Many
of our political leaders in all lands make no secret of their views on the
subject. A purely secular state is everywhere held up, and that with great
plausibility and persuasiveness, as the ideal of political government; the goal
to the attainment of which all good citizens should unite their efforts. It is
not strange, indeed, to see atheists, agnostics, and others who deny the
Christian faith, maintaining this position; but when we hear men who call
themselves Christians--in many cases, even Christian ministers--advocating, in
one form or another, governmental neutrality in religion, as the only right
basis of government, one may well be amazed. Will any one venture to say that
this teaching of the law of the sin-offering was only intended, like the
offering itself, for the old Hebrews? Is it not rather the constant and most
emphatic teaching of the whole Scriptures, that God dealt with all the ancient
Gentile nations on the same principle? The history which records the overthrow
of those old nations and empires does so, even professedly, for the express
purpose of calling the attention of men in all ages to this principle, that God
deals with all nations as under obligation to recognise Himself as King of
nations, and submit in all things to His authority. So it was in the case of
Moab, of Ammon, of Nineveh, and Babylon; in regard to each of which we are
told, in so many words, that it was because they refused to recognise this
principle of national responsibility to the one true God, which was brought
before Israel in this part of the law of the sin-offering, that the Divine
judgment came upon them in their utter national overthrow. How awfully plain,
again, is the language of the second Psalm on this subject, where it is
precisely this national repudiation of the supreme authority of God and of His
Christ, so increasingly common in our day, which is named as the ground of the
derisive judgment of God, and is
made the occasion of exhorting all nations, not merely to belief in God, but
also to the
obedient recognition of His only-begotten Son, the Messiah, as the only
possible means of escaping the future kindling of His wrath. (S. H. Kellogg,
D. D.)
Multitude no excuse for offence
Note how a multitude of offenders excuseth no, offence: but if
even the whole congregation should sin through ignorance, yet a sin-offering
must be offered by them all, and their number yieldeth no excuse. Great was the
number of sinners when God sent the flood, but their number defended them not.
So in Sodom and Gomorrah the offenders were many. Ten tribes of twelve fell
away from God and became idolaters. Broad is the way that leadeth to hell, and
many find it, going to hell, though they be many, &c. Secondly, observe
with yourself the praise (hid from your eyes) and see the state of many a man
and woman do evil. The matter is hid from their eyes in God¡¦s anger, and albeit
they lie at the pit¡¦s brink of destruction, yet they see it not, feel it not,
are not troubled with it. Because, indeed, they never sit and take an account
of themselves and their works, laying them to the rule of the word: which if
they did, conscience would quickly bite and spy, and speak of a misdoing. The
godly do this at last, and therefore you see it here in your chapter, a time of
knowing to them, as there was a time of hiding. Pray we ever for this grace,
that we sleep not in death: I mean in sin, that leadeth to death, but that we
may awake and stand up from the dead, and Jesus Christ vouchsafe us light, to
amendment of life, and eternal comfort and safety. (Bp. Babington.)
Some difference between the sacrifice of the priest and that of
the people
1. It is said when the sin which they have committed is known this
was not rehearsed before in the sacrifice of the priest to show that the
priests for the most part do sin wittingly, but the people through ignorance.
2. In the other sacrifice the priest alone was to put his hand upon
the head of the sacrifice; but here the elders are to lay on their hands both
in their own name and of all the people.
3. Here is added Leviticus 4:20, and the priest shall make
atonement for them, which was not expressed before, because the priest before
offered sacrifice for his own sin, and so could not be a mediator for himself.
Herein the priest interceding for the people was a type of Christ who is the
only effectual Intercessor both for sin of priest and people.
4. This congregation here offending may represent the synagogue of
the Jews who put Christ to death, crying, ¡§Crucify Him¡¨; but they did it of
ignorance as St. Peter saith: ¡§and now I know, brethren, that through ignorance
ye did it,¡¨ and as here a sacrifice is appointed after the people came to the
knowledge of their sin, so there St. Peter exhorteth the people to acknowledge
and confess their sin, ¡§repent and turn, that your sins may be put away¡¨; and
as here the elders put their hands upon the sacrifice, so the elders, rulers,
and governors, had their hand in Christ¡¦s death. (A. Willet, D. D.)
When a ruler hath sinned.
A lesson for politicians
While there are many in our parliaments and like governing bodies
in Christendom who cast their every vote with the fear of God before their
eyes, yet, if there be any truth in the general opinion of men upon this
subject, there are many in such places who, in their voting, have before their
eyes the fear of party more than the fear of God; and who, when a question
comes before them, first of all consider, not what would the law of absolute
righteousness, the law of God, require, but how will a vote, one way or the
other, in this matter, be likely to affect their party? Such certainly need to
be emphatically reminded of this part of the law of the sin-offering, which held
the civil ruler specially responsible to God for the execution of his trust.
For so it is still; God has not abdicated His throne in favour of the people,
nor will He waive His crown-rights out of deference to the political
necessities of a party. Nor is it only those who sin in this particular way who
need the reminder of their personal responsibility to God. All need it who
either are or may be called to places of greater or less governmental
responsibility; and it is those who are the most worthy of such trust who will
be the first to acknowledge their need of this warning. For in all times those
who have been lifted to positions of political power have been under peculiar
temptation to forget God, and become reckless of their obligation to Him as His
ministers. But under the conditions of modern life, in many countries of
Christendom, this is true as perhaps never before. For now it has come to pass
that, in most modern communities, those who make and execute laws hold their
tenure of office at the pleasure of a motley army of voters, Protestants and
Romanists, Jews, atheists, and what not, a large part of whom care not the
least for the will of God in civil government, as revealed in Scripture. Under
such conditions, the place of the civil ruler becomes one of such special trial
and temptation that we do well to remember in our intercessions, with peculiar
sympathy, all who in such positions are seeking to serve supremely, not their party but their God,
and so best serve their country. It is no wonder that the temptation too often
to many becomes overpowering to silence conscience with plausible sophistries,
and to use their office to carry out in legislation, instead of the will of
God, the will of the people, or, rather, of that particular party which put
them in power. Yet the great principle affirmed in this law of the sin-offering
stands, and will stand for ever, and to it all will do well to take heed;
namely, that God will hold the civil ruler responsible, and more heavily
responsible than any private person, for any sin he may commit, and especially
for any violation of law in any matter committed to his trust. And there is
abundant reason for this. For the powers that be are ordained of God, and in His providence are
placed in authority; not as the modern notion is, for the purpose of executing
the will of the constituents, whatever that will may be, but rather the unchangeable will of
the Most Holy God, the Ruler of all nations, so far as revealed, concerning the
civil and social relations of men. Nor must it be forgotten that this eminent
responsibility attaches, to them, not only in their official acts, but in all
their acts as individuals. No distinction is made as to the sin for which the
ruler must bring his sin-offering, whether public and official or private and
personal. Of whatsoever kind the sin may be, if committed by a ruler, God holds
him specially responsible,
as being a ruler, and reckons the guilt of that sin, even if a private offence,
to be heavier than if it had been committed by one of the common people. And
this, for the evident reason that his exalted position gives his example double
influence and effect. (S. H. Kellogg, D. D.)
Sins of the great
Judges and magistrates are the physicians of the state, and sins
are the diseases of it. What skills it, whether a gangrene begin at the head or
the heel, seeing both ways it will kill, if the part that is diseased be not
out off; except this be the difference, that the head being nearer the heart, a
gangrene in the head will kill sooner than that which is in the heel. Even so will the sins of
great ones overthrow a state sooner than those of the meaner sort; therefore
wise was that advice of Sigismund the Emperor, when upon a motion to reform the
Church, one said, ¡§Let us begin at the minorities.¡¨ ¡§Nay rather,¡¨ saith the
Emperor, ¡§let us begin at the majorities; for if the great ones be good, the
meaner cannot be easily ill, but be the mean ones never so good, the great will be nothing
the better.¡¨
The influence of a ruler¡¦s sin on others
Nourshivan the Just, being one day a-hunting, would have eaten of
the game which he had killed, but from the consideration that, after dressing
it, his attendants had no salt to give it relish. He sent at last to buy some
at the next village, but with severe injunctions not to take it without paying
for it. ¡§What would be the harm,¡¨ said one of his courtiers, ¡§if the king did
not pay for a little salt?¡¨ Nourshivan answered, ¡§If a king gathers an apple in
the garden of one of his subjects, on the morrow the courtiers cut down all the
trees.¡¨
If any one of the common people sin through ignorance.
The sin-offering for the common people
I. The person: a common
person.
1. If a common person sin his sins will ruin him; he may not be able
to do so much mischief by his sin as the ruler or a public officer, but his sin
has all the essence of evil in it, and God will reckon with him for it. No
matter how obscurely you may live, however poor and unlettered you may be, your
sin will ruin you if not pardoned and put away. If one of the common people sin
through ignorance, his sin is a damning sin, he must have it put away, or it
will put him away for ever from the face of God.
2. A common person¡¦s sin can only he removed by an atonement of
blood. In this case you see the victim was not a bullock, it was a female of
the goats or of the sheep, but still it had to be an offering of blood, for
without shedding of blood there is no remission. However commonplace your
offences may have been, however insignificant you may be yourself, nothing will
cleanse you but the blood of Jesus Christ.
3. But here is the point of joy, that for the common people there was
an atonement ordained of God. Glory be to God, I may be unknown to men, but I
am not unthought of by Him.
4. Observe with thankfulness that the sacrifice appointed for the
common people was as much accepted as that appointed for the ruler. Of the
ruler it is said, ¡§the priest shall make an atonement for him as concerning his
sin, and it shall be forgiven him.¡¨ The same thing is said of the common
person. Christ is as much accepted for the poorest of His people as for the
richest of them.
II. The sacrifice:
¡§a kid of the goats, a female without blemish.¡¨
1. Observe that there is a discrepancy between the type and the
reality, for first the sin-offering under the law was only for sins of
ignorance. But we have a far better sacrifice for sin than that, for have we
not read, ¡§The blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, cleanseth us from all sin,¡¨
not from sins of ignorance only, but from all sin.
2. Note another discrepancy, that the sinner of the common people in
this case had to bring his sacrifice--¡§he shall bring his offering.¡¨ But our
sin-offering has been provided for us.
3. Now let us notice that in the type the victim chosen for a
sin-offering was unblemished; whether it was a goat or a sheep, it must be
unblemished. How could Christ make an atonement for sins if He had had sins of
His own?
4. But, the main point about the sacrifice was, it was slain as a
substitute. There is nothing said about its being taken outside the camp--I do
not think it was in this case: all that the offerer knew was, it was slain as a
substitute. And everything that is essential to know in order to be saved is to
know that you are a sinner and that Christ is your Substitute.
III. The after
ceremonies.
1. In the case of one of the common people after the victim was
slain, the blood was taken to the brazen altar, and the four horns of it were
smeared, to show that the power of fellowship with God lies in the blood of
substitution. There is no fellowship with God except through the blood, there
is no acceptance with God for any one of us except through Him who suffered in
our stead.
2. But then the blood was thrown at the feet of this same brazen
altar, as if to show that the atonement is the foundation as well as the power
of fellowship. We get nearest to God when we feel most the power of the blood,
ay, and we could not come to God at all except it were through that encrimsoned
way.
3. After this, a part of the offering was put upon the altar, and it
is said concerning it, what is not said in any other of the cases, ¡§the priest
shall burn it upon the altar for a sweet savour to the Lord.¡¨ This common
person had, in most respects, a dim view of Christ, compared with the others,
but yet there were some points in which he had more light than others, for it
does not say of the priest that what he offered was a sweet savour; but, for
the comfort of this common person, that he might go his way having sweet
consolation in his soul, he is told that the sin-offering he has brought is a
sweet savour unto God. And oh, what a joy it is to think not only has Christ
put away my sin if I believe in Him; but now for me He is a sweet savour to
God, and I am for His sake accepted, for His sake beloved, for His sake
delighted in, for His sake precious unto God.
IV. I have
purposely omitted an essential act in the sacrifice, in order to enlarge upon
it now. Observe that in all four cases there was one thing which was never left
out, ¡§He shall lay his hand upon the head of the sin-offering.¡¨
1. That act signified confession. ¡§Here I stand as a sinner, and
confess that I deserve to die. This goat which is now to be slain represents in
its sufferings what I deserve of God.¡¨ Oh, sinner! confess your sin now unto
your great God, acknowledge that He would be just if He condemned you.
Confession of sin is a part of the meaning of laying on of the hand.
2. The next thing meant by it was acceptance. ¡§I accept this goat as
standing for me. I agree that this victim shall stand instead of me.¡¨ That is
what faith does with Christ, it pats its hand upon the ever blessed Son of God,
and says, ¡§He stands for me, I take Him as my Substitute.¡¨
3. The next meaning of it was transference. ¡§I transfer, according to
God¡¦s ordinance, all my sin which I here confess, from myself to this victim.¡¨
By that act the transference was made. God did lay sin in bulk upon Christ when
He-laid upon Him the iniquity of us all, but by an act of faith every
individual in another sense lays his sins on Jesus, and it is absolutely
needful that each man should do so, if he would participate in the
substitution.
4. This was a personal act. Nobody could lay his hand upon the
bullock, or upon the goat, for another; each one had to put his own hand there.
A godly mother could not say, ¡§My graceless boy will not lay his hand upon the
victim, but I will put my hand there for him.¡¨ It could not be. He who laid his
hand there had the blessing, but no one else, and had the godliest saint with
holy but mistaken zeal said, ¡§Rebellious man, wilt thou not put thy hand there,
I will act as sponsor for thee,¡¨ it had been of no avail; the offender must
personally come. And so must you have a personal faith in Christ for yourself.
The word is sometimes interpreted ¡§to lean,¡¨ and some give it the meaning of
leaning hard. What a blessed view of faith that gives us!
V. The assured
blessing: ¡¥¡¦And it shall be forgiven him¡¨ (Leviticus 4:31). Was not that plain
speaking? There were no ¡§ifs,¡¨ no ¡§buts,¡¨ no ¡§peradventures¡¨; but ¡§it shall be
forgiven aim.¡¨ Now, in those days it was only one sin, the sin confessed, that
was forgiven, but now ¡§all manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto
men.¡¨ In those days the forgiveness did not give the conscience abiding peace,
for the offerer had to come with another sacrifice by and by; but now the blood
of Christ blots out all the sins of believers at once and for ever, so that
there is no need to bring a new sacrifice, or to come a second time with the
blood of atonement in our hands. The sacrifice of the Jew had no intrinsic
value. How could the blood of bulls and goats take away sin? It could only be
useful as a type
of the true sacrifice, the sin-offering of Christ. But in our Lord Jesus there
is real efficacy, there is true atonement, there is real cleansing, and
whosoever believeth in Him shall find actual pardon and complete forgiveness at
this very moment. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Lay his hand upon the head.
Laying the hand on the sacrifice
The text gives us a pictorial answer to the question--How
can Christ¡¦s sacrifice become available for me?
I. The intent of
the symbol.
1. It was a confession of sin: else no need of a sin-offering. To
this was added a confession of the desert of punishment, or why should the
victim be slain? There was also an abandonment of all other methods of removing
sin.
2. It was a consent to the plan of substitution. If God is content
with this method of salvation, surely we may be. Substitution exceedingly
honours the law, and vindicates justice. No other plan meets the case, or even
looks fairly at it
3. It was an acceptance of the victim. Jesus is the most natural
substitute, for He is the Second Adam, the second head of the race; the true
ideal man. He is the only Person able to offer satisfaction, having a perfect
humanity united with His Godhead. He alone is acceptable to God; He may well be
acceptable to us.
4. It was a believing transference of sin. By laying on of hands sin
was typically laid on the victim. It was laid there so as to be no longer on
the offerer.
5. It was a dependence-leaning on the victim. Is there not a most
sure stay in Jesus for the leaning heart? Consider the nature of the suffering
and death by which the atonement was made, and you will rest in it. Consider
the dignity and worth of the sacrifice by whom the death was endured. The glory
of Christ¡¦s person enhances the value of His atonement (Hebrews 10:5-10).
II. The simplicity
of the symbol.
1. There were no antecedent rites. The victim was there, and hands
were laid on it: nothing more. We add neither preface nor appendix to Christ:
He is Alpha and Omega.
2. The offerer came in all his sin. ¡§Just as I am.¡¨ It was to have his sin removed that
the offerer brought the sacrifice: not because he had himself removed it
3. There was nothing in his hand of merit or price.
4. There was nothing on his hand. No gold ring to indicate wealth; no
signet of power; no jewel of rank. The offerer came as a man, and not as
learned, rich, or honourable.
5. He performed no cunning legerdemain with his hand. By leaning upon
it he took the victim to be his representative; but he placed no reliance upon
ceremonial performances.
6. Nothing was done to his hand. His ground of trust was the
sacrifice, not his hands. He desired his hand to be clean, but upon that fact
he did not rest for pardon. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
All can lean on Christ
The Puritans speak of faith as a recumbency, a leaning. It
needs no power to lean; it is a cessation from our own strength, and allowing
our weakness to depend upon another¡¦s power. Let no man say, ¡§I cannot lean¡¨;
it is not a question of what you can do, but a confession of what you cannot
do, and a leaving of the whole matter with Jesus. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n