Leviticus 8
Leviticus 8:1-4 The Lord told Moses to bring Aaron and his sons and the required offerings to the entrance of the tent of meeting. Moses, as God’s prophet, was to commission his brother and family as priests. Moses had a unique position, but curiously his children aren’t ever mentioned in connection with the ministry. One suspects interesting family dynamics, although at the age of about eighty, Moses and Aaron must have pretty much settled all that.
Leviticus 8:5-9 Moses baptized Aaron and his sons, and then dressed Aaron in the high priest garments and accoutrements. The symbolism is recounted elsewhere. (Hebrews 4:14, 5:4-5)
Leviticus 8:10-13 Moses anointed everything with oil - the tabernacle, the implements, and Aaron. He also dressed Aaron’s sons.
Leviticus 8:14-21 Moses presented a bull for the sin offering for Aaron and his sons. He then presented the ram for the burnt offering for them.
Leviticus 8:22-25 Moses offered another ram for ordination. This included putting some of the ram’s blood on the right ear, thumb, and big toe of Aaron & sons. Since this was not a sin offering, but for ordination, the symbolism might be something like the Lord ordaining them to actively serve Him with their hearing (possibly hearing His voice while serving), the work of their hands, and where they would go. Blood brings life to our cells (nutrition and oxygen among other things) The blood of Jesus, having atoned for our sin, brings us eternal spiritual life. Beyond life as mere existence, life as purposeful, meaningful, and positive activity.
Leviticus 8:26-29 Moses gave the bread loaves, both unleavened and with yeast, to Aaron & sons, with which they performed a wave offering, worshipping the Lord with upraised hands. Moses also used the breast of the ordination ram as a wave offering himself.
Leviticus 8:30 Moses then sprinkled the blood and anointing oil on Aaron & sons and their garments, to consecrate them. They were set apart for the priesthood.
Leviticus 8:31-35 Moses gave them direction to eat the priests’ portion of the meat and bread offerings, and remain in the tent of meeting for seven days. He closed with a rather stark promise: do this so you won’t die. We often present the gospel, offering people eternal life, but how often do we include a warning? Doesn’t that become brimstone and fire preaching? But whether we yell or say it softly, the message still has to be, right relationship with God is the only alternative to eternity apart from Him.
Leviticus 8:36 Aaron & sons did what Moses passed on to them from the Lord.
Leviticus 9
Leviticus 9:1-6 Moses told Aaron & sons, and the elders of Israel to perform the sin and burnt offerings. Then he gave instructions for the Israelites, presumably to be passed by the elders to the people, or maybe to be done by the elders on their behalf, to bring a goat, a calf, a lamb, an ox, and a ram for sin, burnt, and fellowship offerings. The entire assembly of Israel came and stood before the Lord. Moses promised that the glory of the Lord would appear. I wonder how the people at the back of the crowd of 600,000 could see what was happening. Perhaps the Lord enabled them to see and hear supernaturally. The largest sports venues these days seat only about 100,000, and loudspeakers and Jumbotrons are needed to see what is happening on an individual level.
In the context of this enormous worship service, it is important to remember that the primary purpose of all this was so that God could bless Israel with His presence. He did not need the blood or burnt carcasses of these animals. He wanted to draw His chosen people close to Himself, and this was His method for revealing Himself to them. In preparing to encounter God’s presence as we pray and worship, we need to take seriously the commands He gives in the New Testament. He wants this communion and He seeks us, but we need to respond by taking what He has told us seriously. For example, Paul gives directions regarding preparation for communion in 1 Corinthians 11, and for worship in 1 Timothy 2. This is not a matter of Pharisaical rule-following, but of principles for
entering into close relationship with the living God and loving Savior.
Leviticus 9:7-14 At Moses’ command, Aaron & sons offered the offerings for themselves, in great detail.
Leviticus 9:15-22 Aaron and sons then made the offerings as directed for the people. This included sin, burnt, fellowship, and wave offerings. Then Aaron blessed the people.
Leviticus 9:23-24 Moses and Aaron went into the tent of meeting and came out, Then the glory of the Lord appeared to all the people, and fire came out from the presence of the Lord to consume the offerings. The people shouted for joy. It’s not clear if the glory appeared in the fire or some other manifestation. The people recognized it. And they rejoiced! Would that we all would rejoice in His presence, not cower in guilt and fear for our lives. God provided a remedy - Jesus our sin offering - so that we can fellowship with Him and have joy in doing so.
Moses had previously experienced the Lord’s presence, first in the burning bush, and later on Mount Sinai. Now the presence of the Lord was to reside permanently in the Holy of Holies, although only the high priest could enter it, and that only once a year. But He was there. (Hebrews 9:7, but see 9:8-14.)
Leviticus 10
Leviticus 10:1-3 Aaron’s sons Nadab and Abihu offered unauthorized fire to the Lord. Fire came out from the Lord’s presence and consumed them. Moses spoke God’s word to Aaron that He was to be honored. Since they were the sons of Aaron the high priest, they may have desired to get even closer to God (we can’t know their motives), but they were also held to a higher standard. This included using only the incense recipe that was given earlier (Exodus 30:34-38).
The deaths of Ananias and Sapphira (Acts 5:1-11), and the death of Achan and his entire family (Joshua 7:24-26) are reminiscent of this judgment of God in the early days of the faith community. That using the wrong incense formula doesn’t seem to us like it should be a capital offense probably reflects that we do not adequately appreciate the weight of God’s holiness. The incense symbolizes one of the physical manifestations of His glory, which they had just seen. (9:23-24) To use their own formulation was to try to mix human glory with His. Not going to happen. And we would be the worse off if He allowed it.
Priests seem to be an elevated position, respected and honored, but they carried the weight of a heavy responsibility. Since they represented God to the people, God Himself held them to the highest standards. And since we are to be a kingdom of priests in the New Testament, He holds us to the highest standards as well. The only difference is that the Holy Spirit empowers us to be like Jesus. We need to humbly receive this calling and empowerment.
Leviticus 10:4-7 Moses passed on God’s instructions that Aaron and his surviving sons were not to mourn publicly, and not to leave the tent of meeting, lest they also die.
Leviticus 10:8-11 Aaron & sons were instructed not to drink alcoholic beverages when they went into the tent to meet the Lord. Furthermore, this was a lasting rule for future generations.
Leviticus 10:12-15 Moses said that they and their families should eat the priests’ portions of the offering, per earlier instructions. This is a perpetual sharing.
Leviticus 10:16-20 Moses found out that the goat from the sin offering had been burned up, and was angry that it had not been eaten in the sanctuary as he had instructed. Aaron’s response was that he wasn’t sure if the Lord would have been pleased, given what had happened earlier to Abihu and Nadab. Apparently this answer satisfied Moses. Sometimes we have conflicting guidance and honestly don’t know what the Lord wants. We should not judge others if they are trying to obey God and honestly confused. We shouldn’t always assume we have the whole story or the best course of action for them.