Ron Thomas Via Bulletin Gold
In our Bible class discussion on Wednesday night, I gave
attention to forgiveness and the Law of Moses. Let me elaborate
on that a little more. Forgiveness is always a matter of God’s
declaration; it is His gift to those who obey Him. Since it has
always been the case that one is justified by faith, then those
justified by the Lord receive the forgiveness of sins.
But, in the context of the Levitical setting, there is something
much different. The Lord brought a nation (Israel) from out of
another nation (Egypt). The new nation formed by the Lord was
to be to all people God’s kingdom of priests (Ex. 19:6). The Lord
brought them from Egypt and placed them in Canaan (Palestine)
to be His shining light in a dark world. Before He led them to the
land of promise, He gave Israel His covenant law, the foundation
being the Ten Words (Commandments). As a nation they lived
according to that, and all other laws were built upon that
foundation.
From Hebrews 10:4, we learn the blood of animals can’t
remove sins, but in Leviticus we learn the men (males) offered
blood sacrifices, a sweet aroma to the Lord. Women did not do
this. In fact, regarding women, when they offered sacrifices, this
was in relation to childbirth and their menstrual cycles. Were the
men only ones forgiven? Not hardly! If that were so, then in what
way was there atonement (Lev. 1:5), or forgiveness (the word
“forgive” is only used 10 times in the book of Leviticus (ASV),
and it is always in relation to sacrifices)?
Since the blood of animals could not remove sin, but one was
forgiven with the blood of animals in specific sacrifices, what
gives? The forgiveness granted was not a personal application,
but one that was “corporate”, or, in other words, forgiveness was
granted to the individual family through the head of the house.
With this being the case, sacrifices in the national context
perpetuated the nation of God’s people, meeting the principle of
Exodus 19:6.
When the nation was loyal to the Lord, they were effective
in their mission work. When they were not loyal to the
Lord, the Lord warned them His protective barrier was
going to come doWn. They refused to listen, and they paid
the price for their disobedience. Finally, the Lord brought
Israel to an end (Mt. 23:37-39; Rom. 15:8) and established
a new Israel, the church of Christ (Rom, 9:6).