Leviticus 1 The Burnt Offering
Leviticus 1:1-9 The law for burnt offerings from the herd.
- Leviticus 1:1-4 First, it must be perfect, without blemish or defect. Identify with the animal by laying hands on it.
- Leviticus 1:5- 9 Slaughter the bull, sprinkle its blood, skin the carcass, put pieces of the head and fat on the fire, wash the entrails and legs with water and burn them. It is a food offering and a pleasing aroma to the Lord.
Leviticus 1:10-13 Do the same for an offering from the flock (sheep or goat), except there is no command to skin it.
Leviticus 1:14-17 To offer a bird, wring off its head, burn it; Drain the blood on the side of the altar; Remove the crop and feathers and throw them in the ashes; tear it open (but not apart) by the wings and burn it. A less expensive offering to enable poor people to do so.
To people at the time this was given, the killing, dismembering, washing, and burning must have portrayed the serious consequences of sin in God’s eyes. The cost of the sacrificial animal was the residual payment that they had to make for the gracious provision that He gave in allowing it to pay the price for their sin. It also introduced the concepts of propitiation and atonement.
- Propitiation - the act of appeasing God.
- Atonement - reparation for a wrong or injury.
The purpose of this was to ask for forgiveness from, make a total commitment to, and restore a right relationship with God. (John 17:3)
The New Testament view is that this is a ceremony that prefigures and points us to Christ. (Hebrews 10) Some of the specifics in these commands relate to Christ. Jesus was crucified, His blood was poured out of His side on the cross after He died. He was baptized years earlier by John the Baptist, but His whole body, not just entrails and legs. His body was not burned nor skinned. His head was not separated from His body. What can this mean?
- Jesus gave His life as atonement for our sin. That much is clear.
- Jesus was sinless, the only truly perfect sacrifice.
- Washing of the innards perhaps signifies that our uncleanness has roots deep within us, it is not just the actions of our outer man. Baptism brings spiritual washing to the Christian, symbolic of the death of the old man and rising to new life.
- Burning the body might have two interpretations. The fires of hell are the destination of those who refuse the offer of salvation in Christ, and live for the body of sin. Our body of sin must necessarily no longer control us. The skin, representing bodily desires, must be burned. But…
- The head, representing our ability to choose, must be engulfed by Ruach Hakodesh. On the day of Pentecost, the Holy Spirit came with tongues of fire to overcome the body of sin with the Spirit of God. When we choose God, we are responding affirmatively to His choosing us.
Ultimately, we can only receive forgiveness from God through receiving Christ as our Lord and savior and having faith in His sacrifice. This involves a true commitment of life, not just a formulaic prayer or ritual. And it results in a personal relationship with Jesus who is continuously with us throughout our life, and with whom we converse and interact. The Levitical sacrifice was for a specific sin, but our redemption is for a lifelong lifestyle leading to an eternal relationship and fellowship with God.
Leviticus 2 The Grain Offering
Leviticus 2:1-7 The grain offering may be made in different ways.
- Leviticus 2:1-3 The offering of finest flour
- Leviticus 2:4 The offering baked in an oven
- Leviticus 2:5-6 The offering prepared on a griddle
- Leviticus 2:7 The offering cooked in a pan
Leviticus 2:8-10 The memorial portion is offered to the Lord, and the rest belongs to the priest who acts as a representative or intermediary between God and man.
Leviticus 2:11-16 Specific instructions for the offerings
- Olive oil was mentioned throughout the earlier verses. It was also used as oil for the lamp stand in the tabernacle, most likely symbolizing the Holy Spirit bringing light, as on the day of Pentecost.
- Salt was used as a preservative, as representing an enduring relationship, more than as a spice.
- Yeast was prohibited, as for example also in the bread of the Passover Seder bread. In the New Testament, yeast was likened to the teaching of the Pharisees (Matthew 16:11-12); hypocrisy (Luke 12:1); and boasting (1 Corinthians 5:6).
- If it is brought as grain rather than as bread or flatcakes or muffins, then crushed heads of new grain are to be put in the fire along with oil and incense.
- There was an altar of incense in the tabernacle, but only the sons of Aaron were to offer incense to the Lord (Numbers 16). Its sweet aroma pleased the Lord and reminded worshippers of His sweetness when He is respected.
Leviticus 3 The Fellowship Offering
Leviticus 3:1-5 A fellowship offering from the herd. Essentially a burnt offering for fellowship. (Leviticus 1:1-9) Here we are given a few details about the innards. The food offering to the Lord of the innards must include specifically the kidney and the liver, and the fat that is on the kidney near the loins. The aroma of this burnt offering pleases the Lord.
Leviticus 3:6-11 A fellowship fearing from the flock. (1:10-13) The same details are repeated.
Leviticus 3:12-16 A fellowship offering of a goat. Same instructions. A bird is not given as an option for a fellowship offering, and a goat was not mentioned as an option in chapter 1.
Leviticus 3:17 A repetition for emphasis. They must not eat any fat or blood. In the case of these offerings, the blood was to be sprinkled or poured out on or near the altar. The fat was to be burned. In the natural realm, blood and fat are very unhealthy to eat. The spiritual significance of this might be that the life is in the blood (Leviticus 17:11) and they are not to think they can live off the life-force of another like a vampire. The spirit of life comes from Jesus. (Job 33:4, John 6:33) Fat cushions and insulates the vital organs. We must not try to protect our vital essence, our own spirit, at the expense of others. We must depend on God for that protection.
Leviticus 4 The unintentional sin offering
Leviticus 4:1-2 This section deals with offerings if various people sin unintentionally, and then find out that they have sinned. Presumably, offerings for intentional sin are not covered here, such as repentance, restitution, penance, etc.
Leviticus 4:3-12 Instructions for offerings when an anointed priest unintentionally sins. He is to bring a young bull without defect. After following the instructions for a fellowship offering, he must take what remains of the bull outside the camp to a ceremonially clean place and burn it.
Leviticus 4:13-21 Instructions for offerings when the whole Israelite community unintentionally sins. Essentially, the same procedure as for the priest, repeated with a second bull.
Leviticus 4:22-26 Instructions for offerings when a leader unintentionally sins. He must bring a male goat. Same procedure, but without disposal instructions.
Leviticus 4:27-31 Instructions for offerings when any member of the community unintentionally sins. He must bring a female goat, same instructions.
Leviticus 4:32-35 Instructions if someone brings a lamb as a sin offering. Same procedure. A lamb may be slightly less expensive than a goat, but probably the significance is the difference in temperament. The phrase “goat-rope” conveys the idea that goats are hard to control and don’t come when called. By contrast, lambs are usually thought of as loving and gentle. These last few verses are clearly pointing to Jesus’ atonement for us on the cross. While Jesus is the good shepherd (Psalm 23:1, John 10:11), He is the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world. (Isaiah 53:7, Revelation 13:8) When we seek forgiveness and restoration from sin, our only efficacious offering is Jesus.