Sermon # 14 Leviticus Sermons
Title: “It
is most holy.”
Text: Leviticus 6:8-7:15
Subject: The Priests and the Sacrifices
Date: Sunday Morning -- 2001
Tape # W-53a
Reading: Leviticus 6:8-7:15
Introduction:
We read our text (Lev.
6:8-7:15) earlier. I want us to read just five verses from this passage to
refresh our minds with the thing most prominent in it. There is one phrase
repeated five times in these two chapters to which I want to direct your
attention today.
[Leviticus 6:17] "It shall not be baken with leaven. I
have given it unto them for their portion of my offerings made by fire;
it is most holy, as is the sin offering, and as the
trespass offering."
[Leviticus
6:25] "Speak unto Aaron and to his
sons, saying, This is the law of the sin offering: In the place where
the burnt offering is killed shall the sin offering be killed before the LORD:
it is most holy."
[Leviticus
6:29] "All the males among the
priests shall eat thereof: it is most holy."
[Leviticus
7:1] "Likewise this is the
law of the trespass offering: it is most holy."
[Leviticus 7:6] "Every male among the priests shall eat
thereof: it shall be eaten in the holy place: it is most holy."
Did you catch the phrase? –
“It is most holy.” That will be our subject. “It is most holy.” May God the
Holy Spirit be our Instructor.
These first seven chapters of Leviticus give us the inspired
record of the law God gave to Moses on Mt. Sinai regarding the sacrifices of
divine worship and how they were to be offered.
·
The
Burnt Offering portrayed a celebration of acceptance with God by Christ.
·
The
Meat Offering was a sacrifice declaring the worshipper’s consecration to God in
Christ.
·
The
Peace Offering was a celebration of peace and fellowship with God in Christ.
·
The
Sin Offering portrayed the Lord Jesus Christ as our Substitute, our Sin
Offering.
·
The
Trespass Offering typified Christ’s effectual, sin-atoning sacrifice to God and
the forgiveness of sin and restitution made by his blood.
Voluntary
Sacrifices
The burnt offering, the meat
offering, and the peace offering were freewill offerings. They were not
required by the law; but were voluntarily made. They were offerings arising
from the grateful hearts of forgiven sinners for the praise of God. The Lord
God never required anyone to bring them. He only required that if men and women
worshipped him, they must do so in the manner he prescribed. – No one
worships God who does not do so with a willing heart. Yes, we are made
willing by the power of his grace (Ps. 65:4; 110:3); but we are willing
worshippers. In all acts of worship, “if there be first a willing heart, it
is accepted” (2 Cor. 8:12).
Required
Sacrifices
However, the sin offering
and trespass offering were offerings God required. He required them because
they portray redemption, the absolute necessity of redemption by Christ our
Substitute. In these two offerings, the Lord Jesus stands before us and says, “I
am the way, the truth, and the life. No man cometh unto the Father, but by me.”
In the first chapters of Leviticus (1:1-6:7) the Lord God gave
specific instructions to the people of Israel (the rulers, the common people
and the priests) were given specific instructions about how they must come
before God in worship, bringing their sacrifices to him. However, beginning at
Leviticus 6:8 and continuing through the end of chapter seven, all the
instructions given relate to the priests, to Aaron and his sons, who offered
the sacrifices, ministering before the Lord in the tabernacle.
Proposition: In these two chapters, the
priests stand before us pre-eminently as types and pictures of our Lord Jesus
Christ, our great High Priest before God; and the entire work they performed
under the law of God in offering these daily sacrifices is declared to be “most
holy.” “It is most holy.”
Those words apply not to the
sacrifice alone, but to the offering of the sacrifice, the burning of the
sacrifice, the eating of the sacrifice, the place of the sacrifice, and the
priest who offered the sacrifice. They are specifically applied to the
ceremonies relating to the meat offering, the sin offering and the trespass
offering.
Divisions: I want to show you three
things in this message. I have found these seven chapters to be rich beyond
measure to my own soul. I realize, as I prepare and preach theses messages,
that I am barely scratching the surface of an inexhaustible mine. It is my
prayer that, as I scratch the surface, you will see the Savior of whom the Book
speaks, fall at his feet, worship him, and find in him the boundless treasures
of God’s free grace flowing freely to needy sinners because of his great,
sin-atoning sacrifice. In these words of instruction given to Aaron and his
sons about the sacrifices, three things stand before us like the star that led
the wise men to Bethlehem, saying “Behold, here is the Christ of God.”
1. The Revelation of God’s
Holiness
2. The Eating of the
Sacrifice
3. The Fulfillment of the
Type
I. the revelation of God’s Holiness
Everywhere today men talk
about holiness, talk about being holy, and talk about doing holy things. The
word “holy” is thrown around by religious people with less thought than profane
men use profanity. All the light talk (with very serious religious tones) about
holiness reveals one certain fact. This generation knows absolutely nothing
about holiness or the revelation of God’s holiness.
In the Book of God, men and women are described as saints,
sanctified, holy men and women only because they are in Christ who is holy, who
is our Holiness, that Holiness without which no man shall see the Lord. None
are described as being holy because of their own personal character and
conduct.
Focus on these four words for just a few minutes. – “It is
most holy.” Those four words are used only ten times in Holy Scripture (Ex.
30:10; Lev. 6:17,25,29; 7:1,6: 10:12, 17; 14:13; 24:9). Every time they are
used, every time without exception, they refer to those sacrifices of the Lord
Jesus Christ as our sin-atoning Substitute.
Without question, God’s holiness is displayed in part in many
ways and by many things. God revealed his holiness in the garden. He made his
holiness known on Mt. Sinai. His holiness is stamped upon every man’s
conscience by his creative hand. His holiness is displayed in his righteous
judgments. But all these things reveal but a portion of his holy character.
They convince us that God is holy; but do not and cannot show us his holiness. The
holiness of God is revealed and known only in the sacrificial work of the Lord
Jesus Christ at Calvary.
Come, come with me to Mt. Calvary. Behold the crucified Son of
God, and learn something about God’s holiness. Come, turn aside, behold this
burning bush that is not burned. Hear God speak. Take off your shoes here, for
the place whereon you stand is holy ground. “It is most holy!”
Beholding the floods of water over the earth, the smoke of
Sodom, the plagues of Egypt and the righteous judgments of God upon men and
women in daily providence, I know that the Lord God is holy, and tremble before
his holiness. Standing at the foot of Sinai’s dreadful mount, beholding the
fire and smoke, feeling the quaking earth and terrifying thunder, I see that
God is holy and tremble before his holiness. Lying upon his bed, with the cold
sweat of death on his brow, looking into the grave, slipping off into hell, the
dying sinner hears the screams of his guilty conscience, knows that God is
holy, and trembles with terror in his soul. But standing upon Mt. Calvary,
beholding the bleeding, dying Lamb of God as my all-sufficient, sin-atoning Substitute,
I see God in his majestic, splendorous, infinite holiness forgiving sin for
Christ’s sake; and I love his holiness! I rejoice in his holiness!
Concerning the Lord Jesus Christ and his great sacrifice
for sin, the Lord God declares, “It is most holy.”
·
He
who undertakes the work of making an offering for sin must be holy. It is
written in chapter 6, verse 18, “concerning the offerings of the Lord made by fire: every one that
toucheth them shall be holy.”
·
The
sacrifice itself must be holy (ceremonially holy).
·
The
place where the sacrifice is made and accepted is the holy place, upon the holy
altar.
·
The
One to whom the sacrifice is made is the Holy Lord God.
·
The
one for whom the sacrifice is made is, by the sacrifice, made to be holy. –
Everyone who touches the sacrifice shall be holy!
Behold this wondrous mystery. – Here is the Holy Lord God made
to be sin, punishing sin, putting away sin, and forgiving sin, that sinners
might ever live before him without sin in spotless holiness, that we might be
made to be “holy and without blame before him!” This Holy One who is our
Substitute is that Holiness we must have!
[Hebrews
12:14] "Follow peace with all men,
and holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord:"
[1
Corinthians 1:30-31] "But of him
are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness,
and sanctification, and redemption: [31] That, according as it is
written, He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord."
Bold shall I stand in that
great day,
For who aught to my charge
shall lay,
While through Christ’s blood
absolved I am
From sin’s tremendous guilt
and blame.
For with Christ’s spotless
garments on
I’m holy as the Holy One!
II. The Eating of the Sacrifice
[Leviticus
6:16] "And the remainder thereof
shall Aaron and his sons eat: with unleavened bread shall it be eaten in
the holy place; in the court of the tabernacle of the congregation they shall eat
it."
[Leviticus
6:18] "All the males among the
children of Aaron shall eat of it. It shall be a statute for ever
in your generations concerning the offerings of the LORD made by fire: every
one that toucheth them shall be holy."
[Leviticus
6:26] "The priest that offereth it
for sin shall eat it: in the holy place shall it be eaten, in the court
of the tabernacle of the congregation."
[Leviticus
6:29] "All the males among the
priests shall eat thereof: it is most holy."
[Leviticus
7:6] "Every male among the priests
shall eat thereof: it shall be eaten in the holy place: it is most
holy."
A. The sacrifice was
to be eaten.
That sacrifice made by fire
unto the Lord was to be completely eaten. Remember, the sacrifice had sin
imputed to it. It was to be eaten by the priest who offered it. What does that
represent?
It speaks of our Savior’s complete identification with sin. He
was made to be sin. As the priest ate the sin offering and made it his, so the
Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, our great High Priest, took our sins to be
his own.
B. The sacrifice had
to be completely eaten in one day.
So in one day the Lord Jesus
consumed and took away forever all the sins of all his people.
[Zechariah 3:9] "For behold the stone that I have laid
before Joshua; upon one stone shall be seven eyes: behold, I will
engrave the graving thereof, saith the LORD of hosts, and I will remove the
iniquity of that land in one day."
C. The sacrifice must
be eaten by Aaron and his sons. “All the males among the children of
Aaron shall eat it… The priest that offereth it for sin shall eat it…All the
males among the priests shall eat it: it is most holy.”
Why were the males and only
the males to eat the sacrifice of the sin offering? The females, the daughters
of Aaron, were allowed to eat the wave offering as well as his sons (Num.
18:8-11), but not the sin offering. Why?
Throughout the Scriptures, the female is presented as the weaker
vessel. As such, the daughters of Aaron could never serve as priests, because
the weaker vessel could never portray him who is God in human flesh. The weaker
vessel portrayed weakness and need.
The male here portrays a man, but a man with strength to consume
and put away sin. You see, that Man who is our great High Priest is the
God-man, our omnipotent Savior. He and he alone has the ability to make our sin
his own and put it away!
The Lord Jesus Christ made his people’s sins his own. He bore
the wrath and judgment of God against us for our sins in his own body on the
cursed tree. Thus, he fully identified himself with us and with our sin, so
that we might know, with full and blessed certainty, that the matter is forever
settled (Rom. 8:1-4, 33-34; Heb. 1:1-3; 9:26).
Our salvation, our peace, our happiness, our eternal blessedness
does not in any way depend upon us, our works, our feelings, our goodness, or
even the strength of our faith, but upon the perfection of Christ’s atonement
alone.
‘Tis done! The great
transaction’s done!
I am my Lord’s and He is
mine!
III. The Fulfillment of the Type
Turn with me to 2
Corinthians 5:21. Here is that thing about which it is written, “It is most
holy.”
[2
Corinthians 5:21] "For he hath
made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the
righteousness of God in him."
Never was the Lord Jesus Christ more fully seen as the Holy One
of God, never was the holiness of God so fully revealed, as when God’s own dear
Son was made to be sin for us upon the cursed tree. The vileness and blackness
of our sin, with which the Son of God stood identified on the cross, showed him
to be “most holy.” Though he was the Sin-bearer, he was sinless. Though
he endured all the horror of the wrath of God, he was his Father’s delight.
Though he was forsaken of God when he was made to be sin for us, he yet dwelt
in the bosom of the Father. Precious mystery! Who can sound the mighty depths
of Calvary? This is the great mystery of godliness. “It is most holy!”
[1
Timothy 3:16] "And without
controversy great is the mystery of godliness: God was manifest in the flesh,
justified in the Spirit, seen of angels, preached unto the Gentiles, believed
on in the world, received up into glory."
Come, poor, needy sinners, come touch the Sacrifice with the
hand of faith, and you shall be holy. It is written, “Whosoever shall touch
the flesh thereof shall be holy.”
Amen.