LEVITICUS
CHAPTER 1.
The Burnt offerings.
OF
THE HERD. – V.1. And the Lord called
unto Moses, and spake unto him out of the Tabernacle of the Congregation,
out of the midst of the cloud which enveloped
his glory, Ex.
40, 35, saying, v.2. Speak unto the
children of Israel, and say unto them, if any man
of you bring an offering unto the Lord, ye shall bring
your offering of the cattle, even of the herd and of the flock. The
sacrifices brought by individuals are described first, voluntary offerings,
through which the worshiper intended to draw near to the Lord. The Hebrew word
indicates the fact that sinful man, as such, does not dare to draw near to
Jehovah. The sacrifice, therefore, is a symbol of his desire to enter into
fellowship with Jehovah, and its value consisted in its foreshadowing the
greater Sacrifice, through whom we have peace and access to the Father. The
voluntary offering was regarded as a gift of the worshiper, no matter whether it
was an actual sacrifice or a dedicatory offering. When the individual Israelite
had determined to bring such a gift, the Lord’s instructions as to the
selection of the animal and as to the manner of offering were inclusive and
exact. V.3.
If his offering be a burnt sacrifice of the herd, let him offer a male
without blemish, a strong, healthy animal, with all its limbs and members
intact; he shall offer it of his own
voluntary will at the door of the Tabernacle of the Congregation before the
Lord. The formal dedication of the sacrifice to the Lord took place at the
great entrance of the court, or perhaps inside the court itself, where the altar
of burnt offering stood. At a later period such a perfect system of offering
sacrifices was put into operation that both the slaughtering of the animals and
their dissecting was performed with the greatest possible speed, a row of
pillars holding heavy beams with hooks being used to suspend the animals after
their blood had been caught by the officiating priests. V.4.
And he shall put his hand upon the head of the burnt offering, in token of
the transfer of his sin to the animal as his substitute, as the victim destined
to die in the worshiper’s stead; and it
shall be accepted for him to make atonement for him, that his sins might be
covered over before the face of the Lord. Note that here, as always, the
acceptance of a substitute is in itself an act of grace and mercy on the part of
the Lord. V.5.
And he shall kill the bullock
before the Lord, each worshiper, in a case of this kind, performing
the function of a priest of the Lord, as a member of the kingdom of priests, Ex.
19, 6. And the priests, Aaron’s sons, shall bring the blood, as it was
caught up in basins after the slaughter of the animal, and sprinkle the blood round about upon the altar, against its four
sides, that is by the door of the
Tabernacle of the Congregation. The last was an exclusive priestly function,
and even the catching of the blood was performed by the Levites only in cases of
emergency. V.6. And he shall flay the
burnt offering, this part of the work being done either by the offerer or by
a Levite, and cut it into his pieces,
dissect it according to the rule concerning the disposition of the various
parts. V.7.
And the sons
of Aaron, the priest, shall put fire upon the altar of burnt offering,
and lay the wood in order upon the fire, which was always kept burning; v.8.
and the priests, Aaron’s sons,
shall lay the parts, the head and the fat, chiefly the loose fat of
the abdominal and thoracic cavities, in
order upon the wood that is on the fire which is upon the altar; v.9.
but his inwards and his legs, the intestines, as the lower viscera, and the
lower parts of the legs, especially beneath the knees, shall he wash in water, to remove any outward impurities that might
be clinging to them; and the priests
shall burn all on the altar, to be a burnt sacrifice, an offering made by fire,
of a sweet
savor unto the Lord. The animal, with its flesh and bones, was burned
entire, for the offering signified that the worshiper dedicated himself to the
Lord with all his heart and mind, with all the powers of his body and soul, and
the rising of the smoke, as the animal was consumed, caused its essence to
ascend as a pleasant, acceptable odor to the Lord. In other words, the Lord
graciously accepted the worshiper and his service as a member of His Church on
earth. God was well pleased with such sacrifices, if they were offered in faith.
OF
THE FLOCK. - V.10. And if his offering be of the flocks, namely, of the sheep or of the
goats, for a
burnt sacrifice, the worshiper being too poor to afford a bullock, he shall bring it a
male without blemish, a perfect animal in every respect. V.11. And
he shall kill it on the side of the altar northward, the usual place for
slaughtering sacrifices, before
the Lord. The various parts of the court were soon used for special
purposes, its eastern end being used for the ashes of the altar, and the place
south and southwest of the great altar being devoted to the priests. On the
south side of the altar was also the incline for the officiating priests. And the priests, Aaron’s sons,
shall sprinkle his blood round about upon the altar, in the act
symbolizing the atonement of sins. V.12. And
he shall cut it into his pieces, as the disposition of the parts required, with
his head and his fat, these parts being severed from the carcass; and
the priest shall lay them in order on the wood that is on the fire which is upon
the altar. V.13. But he shall wash
the inwards and the legs with water, as in the case of the bullock. And
the priest shall bring it all and burn it upon the altar; it is a burnt
sacrifice, an offering made by fire, of a sweet savor unto the Lord.
OF
FOWLS. - V.14. And if the burnt sacrifice for his offering to the Lord be of fowls,
in the case of very poor people, then he
shall bring his offering of turtle-doves or of young pigeons, either the
mild or the tame species being acceptable for a gift-offering. V.15. And
the priest shall bring it unto the altar, and wring off
his head, separate his head from his body by pinching, and burn it on the altar, toss the head into the fire; and
the blood thereof shall be wrung out at the side of the altar, since there
was hardly enough to be sprinkled or poured. V.16.
And he shall pluck away his crop
with his feathers, either the crop with the entire intestinal tract and its
filth, or the entire intestinal tract while the dove was unplucked, and
cast it beside the altar on the east part, by
the place of the ashes, where all the refuse was heaped up. V.17. And
he shall cleave it with
the wings
thereof, split it open lengthwise, or make an incision at its wings, but
shall not divide it asunder; and the priest shall burn
it upon
the altar, up on the wood that is upon the fire; it is
a burnt sacrifice, an
offering made by fire, of a sweet savor unto the Lord.
The sacrifice of the poor was just as acceptable to the Lord as the more
costly sacrifice of the rich. The sacrificial worship was a shadow of things to
come, in the person of the Messiah. In anticipation of the perfect sacrifice of
Christ God accepted these figurative offerings as atonements for sin. But Christ
is the only true Sacrifice, who bore the sins of all men in His body on the
tree, burning under the wrath of the just God and dying as the Substitute for
all men. In view of this sacrifice, whose blessings are ours through faith, we
Christians are bound to offer ourselves to the Lord in daily obedience and
service. Such sacrifice is a sweet savor to the Lord, a living sacrifice, holy,
acceptable unto God, Rom. 12, 1.
2.