Leviticus 5 - 6
Leviticus 5 discusses several specific sins. The Ten Commandments are mentioned, but other suns are also identified.
- Leviticus 5:1 speaks to failure to speak up to a matter to which they are a witness.
- Leviticus 5:2-13 talks about touching something that is ceremonially unclean. This includes:
- The carcass of an unclean animal or creature.
- Human uncleanness.
This section also includes thoughtlessly taking an oath. The penalty for these things is to offer a female lamb, or two doves or pigeons, kill it or them, splash the blood, and burn the offering. Very poor people must instead bring a tenth of an ephah (about 2.2 liters) of fine flour and burn a handful of it.
Leviticus 5:5 speaks to making a confession, simply telling how we have sinned. In this context it is implicitly the priest that we are to tell, but perhaps more importantly, we must confront honestly what we have done and admit to God how we have sinned. While a formal confession in church can implement this today, it is the individual responsibility ultimately to take it to our great high priest and confess it to Him. A sin offering means more than just admitting we got caught. It means acknowledging that what we did was wrong.
- Leviticus 5:14-16 Unintentionally sinning by touching one of the holy things requires offering a ram or its monetary vale, plus 20%. It is all given to the priest. God places high value on us treating His holy things respectfully, according to His instructions.
- Leviticus 5:17-19 The Ten Commandments are implicitly included here plus the other commands of the Lord given as recorded throughout the Law. Any one who sins in this way must offer a ram from the flock. A guilt offering provides a divinely approved path to clearing one’s conscience, not through psychotherapy but through atonement.
- Leviticus 6:1-7 Absconding with property entrusted by a neighbor (presumably lent) is unfaithful to the Lord. Whether this involves deceit, cheating, stealing, or even extortion, the remedy is to make restitution in full, plus an additional 20%. In addition, they must offer a ram from the flock, so the priest can make atonement.
Leviticus 6:14-18 Instructions for priests eating their portion of the grain offering. They offer part of it to the Lord and then eat the rest in the courtyard of the tent of meeting. Who can eat it? Any of the male descendants of Aaron. And almost as a footnote: whatever touches them (the priests’ portion of the grain offering) will become holy!
Leviticus 6:19-23 A special offering when a priest is anointed. His son, the heir to his position, is to cook a tenth of an ephah of grain on a griddle in oil. It is to be completely burned in the fire. It is never eaten.
Leviticus 6:24-30 The priests’ instructions for their portion of the sin offering. (4:3-12) What is left after the offering can be eaten by the priest who offered it. Whatever touches the flesh becomes holy. If blood is spattered on garments, they are to be washed on the spot, so the residual blood does not leave the area. A clay pot that is used must be broken but a metal pot must be washed. A distinction is made - a sin offering whose blood is taken into the holy place must not be eaten, but completely burned up.
Leviticus 7
Leviticus 7:1-10 Instructions for priests regarding eating their portions of the guilt offering. Essentially the same as the sin offering as described above (6:24-39).
Leviticus 7:11-15 Instructions for priests regarding eating their portions of the fellowship offering. In this case, there are to be both thin loaves and thick loaves of bread. Unique to this case, in addition to unleavened bread they are to bring thick loaves of bread made with yeast. Since this symbolizes restoring or celebrating fellowship with the Lord, perhaps the significance is that He is present with us even in those times of life in which we are not following His ways. He still pursues relationship with those who have chosen self over Him. A Thanksgiving offering would be appropriate when a person recognizes that he received divine protection in a dangerous situation, such as a dangerous journey or serious illness. Testifying to the goodness of God is encouraged. (See for example Psalm 27:13.)
Leviticus 7:16-18 In the case of a free will offering or an offering as a result of a vow, anything left over on the day of the offering may be eaten on the next day, but must not be eaten on the third day. Without refrigeration, some foods will keep overnight, but eventually they go bad. When we have an encounter with the Lord, His presence can sustain us the next day, but on the third day we need a fresh rhema to nourish us.
Leviticus 7:19-21 Rules for uncleanness. Meat that touches anything that is ceremonially unclean is contaminated and must be incinerated. Ceremonially clean people who eat ceremonially clean meat are ok. But contamination works both ways. Unclean people who eat clean meat of the fellowship offering must be cut off from the people (excommunicated). A stiff penalty, something that the priests would likely be responsible for either preventing or enforcing. And this works the opposite of the gospel. Any sinner who receives the gospel is saved. The gospel presented in the various strata of sin is not thereby contaminated, but spreads a message of hope.
Leviticus 7:22-27 repeats the absolute prohibition on eating fat or blood. (3:17) Here, too, the punishment is excommunication
Leviticus 7:28-36 The priests’ share of the fellowship offering is delineated explicitly as being the breast and the thigh. The fat of the offering is to be burned, and the person bringing the offering is to present it to the Lord as a wave offering with their own hands. This dedication to the Lord apparently consisted of simply waving the indicated items back and forth, and then giving them to the priest. The priest was to burn the fat in the fire, but the rest was for his personal use.
The significance of the wave offering in the Mosaic Law is unclear. Perhaps the modern version of this is seen in worship services in which people raise their hands in worship to the Lord. Why? It seems spontaneous, but aligns with Paul’s command. (1 Timothy 2:8) In this verse Paul mentions “… without anger or disputing.” Lifting our hands in surrender to the Lord. Giving up the human tendency to justify our actions or beliefs or criticize others’. We focus on Jesus and surrender to His will for us. This is the portion given to Jesus, our high priest. How much of a portion of our lives do we give Him?
Leviticus 7:37-38 A recap of the first seven chapters of Leviticus. The full scope of the law on offerings includes the means (meat and grain), and the reasons - sin, guilt, ordination, and fellowship. The incredible minutiae of detail in the instructions show that God is very concerned about our attention to detail in following Him, His ways, taking on His nature and character to that degree of specificity, as applied to all of His teachings to us.
Starting with Leviticus 6:8, chapters 6-7 focus on the priests’ roles in being the intermediaries between God and common man. In this, they give a foretaste of the role that Jesus would ultimately play in being the sacrificial lamb who the becomes our great high priest. The ancient Jews got glimpses into the future day when God Himself would walk among them, forgive sin, and restore fellowship with mankind.