Volume 1
Genesis - 2 Chronicles
By John Nelson Darby
The Book of Leviticus is the way
of drawing near to God, viewed
as dwelling in the sanctuary,
whether in respect of the means
of doing so, or of the state in
which men could; and therewith,
consequently, especially the
subject of the priesthood; that
is, the means established of God
for those outside the sanctuary
drawing near unto Him; and the
discernment of the defilements
unbecoming those who were thus
brought into relationship with
God; the function of discerning
these being, in any case that
rendered it necessary, a part of
the service of the priesthood.
There are also in Leviticus the
several convocations of the
people in the feasts of Jehovah,
which presented the special
circumstances under which they
drew near unto Him; and, lastly,
the fatal consequences of
infringing the principles
established by God as the
condition of these relationships
with Him.
Here the communications of God
are consequent upon His presence
in His tabernacle, which is the
basis of all the relationships
we are speaking of. It is no
longer the lawgiver giving
regulations from above, to
constitute a state of things,
but one in the midst1 of the
people, prescribing the
conditions of their relationship
with Him.
But whatever be the nearness and
the privileges of the priestly
position, the sacrifice of
Christ is ever that which
establishes the possibility and
forms the basis of it. Hence the
book begins with the sacrifices
which represented His one
perfect sacrifice. As presenting
the work of Christ in its
various characters and diverse
application to us, these typical
sacrifices have an interest that
nothing can surpass. We will
consider them with some little
detail.
The types which are presented to
us in the scriptures are of
different characters; partly, of
some great principle of God's
dealings, as Sarah and Hagar of
the two covenants; partly, they
are of the Lord Jesus Himself,
in different characters, as
sacrifice, priest, etc.; partly,
of certain dealings of God, or
conduct of men, in other
dispensations; partly, of some
great future acts of God's
government.
Though no strict rule can be
given, we can say in general
that Genesis furnishes us with
the chief examples of the first
class; Leviticus, of the second,
though some remarkable ones are
found in Exodus; Numbers, of the
third: those of the fourth class
are more dispersed.
The employment of types in the
word of God is a feature in this
blessed revelation not to be
passed by. There is peculiar
grace in it. That which is most
highly elevated in our
relationship with God almost
surpasses, in the reality of it,
our capacities and our ken,
though we learn to know God
Himself in it and enjoy this by
the Holy Ghost. In itself,
indeed, it is needful that it
should surpass infinitely our
capacities, because, if I may so
speak, it is adapted to those of
God, in respect of whom the
reality takes place, and before
whom it must be effectual, if
profitable for us. All these
profound and infinite objects of
our faith, infinite in their
value before God or in the
demonstration of the principles
on which He deals with us,
become, by means of types,
palpable and near to us. The
detail of all the mercies and
excellencies which are found in
the reality or antitype are, in
the type, presented close to the
eye, with the accuracy of Him
who judges of them as they are
presented to His, but in a
manner suited to ours, which
meets our capacity; but for the
purpose of elevating us to the
thoughts which occupy Him
Christ, according to the mind of
God, in all His glory, is the
picture presented. But we have
all the lines and explanations
of what is contained in it, in
that which we hold in our hand —
of Him who composed the great
reality. Blessed be His name!
To apply this to the sacrifices
in the beginning of Leviticus,
the establishment of the
tabernacle embraces two points
quite distinct, — the display of
the plans of God in grace,2 and
the place of access to Him, and
also the means of meeting the
necessity and sin which gave
occasion for its present
exercise. All its structure was
according to a pattern given in
the mount — a pattern of
heavenly things including the
intercourse between heaven and
earth, and shews forth the order
which finds its accomplishment
in the better tabernacle not
made with hands. But the economy
of the tabernacle was only
actually set up after the sin of
the golden calf, when the
jealousy of God against sin had
already broken forth; and His
grace was ministered from the
throne in the sanctuary by
offerings which met
transgression, and transgression
which in result barred the
entrance of the priests at all
times into the sanctuary, but
supplied in grace all that met
the need of a sinful people.
Hence also it is that the first
mention we have of the
tabernacle is upon the occasion
of the sin of the golden calf,
when Moses's anger waxed hot
against the mad impiety which
had rejected God, before they
had received the details and
ordinances of the law of Moses,
or even the ten words from the
mountain. Moses took the tent,
and pitched it without the camp,
far off from the camp, and
called it the tabernacle of the
congregation, though that really
was not yet erected; and all
that sought Jehovah went forth
to the tabernacle of the
congregation without the camp.
It was a place of meeting for
God and those among the people
who sought Him. In the law there
was no question of seeking God.
It was the communication of
God's will to a people already
assembled, in the midst of whom
God manifested Himself,
according to certain demands of
His holiness. But when evil had
come in, and the people as a
body had apostatised and broken
the covenant, then the place of
assembly, where God was to be
sought, was set up. This was
before the tabernacle, as
regulated according to the
pattern shewn in the mount, was
set up; but it established the
principle on which it was
founded in the most striking
manner.
The order of the tabernacle as
originally instituted was never
carried out, as the law in its
original character never was
brought in. Nadab and Abihu
offered strange fire the first
day, and Aaron was forbidden the
holiest save on the great day of
atonement in another way. The
tabernacle itself was set up
according to the pattern, but
the entrance to the inner
sanctuary was closed. What was
done referred to the state of
sin, and was provisional, but a
provision for sin, only not a
finished work as we have it.
This meeting of Jehovah with the
people, or the mediator, was
twofold: apostolic, or
sacrificial; that is, for the
purpose of communicating His
will; or of receiving the people
in their worship, their
failures, or their need, even as
Christ Himself is the Apostle
and High Priest of our
profession — expressions which
allude to the circumstances of
which we treat. Jehovah's
presence in the tabernacle, for
the communication of His will
(with which we have to do only
inasmuch as what occupies us is
an example of it3), is thus
spoken of in Exodus 25, 29. In
chapter 25, after describing the
structure of the ark and its
appendages in the most holy
place, it is said, "And thou
shalt put the mercy-seat above
upon the ark; and in the ark
thou shalt put the testimony
which I will give thee. And
there I will meet with thee
[Moses], and I will commune with
thee from above the mercy-seat,
from between the two cherubim
which are upon the ark of the
testimony, of all things which I
will give thee in commandment
with the children of Israel."
This was for the mediator with
Jehovah alone in secret. In
chapter 29 we read, "A continual
burnt offering throughout your
generations at the door of the
tabernacle of the congregation
before Jehovah: where I will
meet you, to speak there unto
thee. And there will I meet with
the children of Israel." That is
where, though through a
mediator, as all was now since
the law was broken, Jehovah met
the people, not Moses alone,
with whom He communicated from
between the cherubim in the most
holy place.
On this ground Leviticus
commences.
God speaks not from Sinai, but
out of the tabernacle, where He
is sought; where, according to
the pattern of His glory, but
according also to the need of
those who seek His presence, He
is in relationship with the
people by mediation and
sacrifice. In Sinai, in terrible
glory, He demanded, and proposed
terms of, obedience, and
thereupon promised His favour.
In this the communication was
direct, but the people could not
bear it. Here He is accessible
to the sinner and to the saint,
but by a provided mediation and
priesthood. But then the centre
and ground of our access to God
thus is Christ's obedience and
offering. This therefore is
first presented to us when God
speaks in the tabernacle.
The order of these sacrifices is
first to be remarked. The order
of their application is
uniformly opposed to the order
of their institution. There are
four great classes of offerings:
1, The burnt-offering; 2, The
meat-offering; 3, The
peace-offering; and 4, The
sin-offering. I name them in the
order of their institution, but,
in their application, when
offered together, the
sin-offerings always come first,
for there it is restoration to
God;4 and, in approaching God by
sacrifice, man must approach by
the efficacy of that which takes
away his sins, in that they have
been borne by another. But in
presenting the Lord Jesus
Himself as the great sacrifice,
His being made sin is a
consequence of His offering
Himself in perfectness to God,
and though as made sin for us,
still in His own perfectness,
and for the divine glory, we
say, His Father's glory; this is
a great but blessed mystery. He
gives Himself up, coming to do
His Father's will, and is made
for us sin, Him who knew no sin,
and undergoes death.
Furthermore, our sins being put
away, the source of communion is
thus in the excellency of Christ
Himself, and in His offering,
who offers Himself to God,
without spot; glorifying God by
death inasmuch as sin was there
before Him and death by sin; and
He gives Himself wholly up to
God's glory in respect of this
state,5 and then our
presentation according to the
preciousness of this on high,
though the actual bearing of our
sins be of absolute necessity to
introduce us into this
communion. In this is the
difference of the great day of
atonement. Then the blood was
put on the mercy-seat in the
holiest; but this, while giving
access there on the ground of
perfect cleansing through an
offering of infinite value, was
in respect of actual sins and
defilement, not the pure sweet
savour of the offering in itself
to God. Yet it supposed sin. The
offering would not have had its
own character nor value if it
had not. Hence, as presenting
Christ, and our approach to God
when sin has been fully dealt
with and holiness tested, the
burnt-offering, meat-offering,
and peace-offering (in which
latter our communion with God is
presented to us), come first,
and then the sin-offerings
apart; needful, primarily
needful to us, but not the
expression of the personal
perfectness of Christ, but of
His sin-bearing, though
perfectness were needed for
that.
It is evident, from what I have
said, that it is Christ we are
to consider in the sacrifices
which are about to engage our
attention: the various forms of
value and efficacy which attach
to that one all-perfect
sacrifice. It is true, we may
consider the Christian in a
subordinate point of view as
presented to us here, for he
should present his body a living
sacrifice. He, by the fruits of
charity, should present
sacrifices of sweet savour,
acceptable to our God by Jesus
Christ; but our object now is to
consider Christ in them.
I have said that there are four
great classes presented to us —
burnt-offerings, meat-offerings,
peace-offerings, and offerings
for sin. These may be seen thus
classed in chapter 10 of the
Epistle to the Hebrews. But then
there is a very essential
distinction which divides these
four into two separate classes —
the sin-offerings, and all the
others. The sin-offerings, as
such, were not characterised as
offerings made by fire, of a
sweet savour unto Jehovah
(although the fat was in most of
them burnt on the altar, and in
this respect the sweet savour
was there, and so it is once
said, chapter 4:31; for indeed
the perfection of Christ was
there though bearing our sins),
the others were distinctly so
characterised. Positive sins
were seen in the sin-offerings:
they were charged with sins. He
that touched those of them which
fully bore this character, as
being for the whole people6
(Lev. 16, Num. 19), was defiled.
But in the case of the
burnt-offering, though not
brought for positive sins, sin
is supposed; there blood was
shed, and it was for
propitiation, but burnt on the
altar, and all was a sweet
savour to God. It was Christ's
whole sacrifice of Himself to
God, and perfect as an offering
in every respect, though sin, as
such, was the occasion of it. By
this sacrifice, in result, sin
will be put away out of God's
sight for ever — what joy! see
John 1:29 and Hebrews 9:26. But
then we brought to the
consciousness of our state of
sin say, He was made sin for us,
that we might be made the
righteousness of God in Him.
This is a consequence, but the
basis is that, besides bearing
our sins, He glorified God
perfectly there where He was
made sin. It was as in the place
of sin that His obedience was
perfect and God perfectly
glorified in all He is (John 13
and 17). Indeed there is but one
word for sin and sin-offering in
the original. They were burnt,
but not on the altar; the fat,
save in one case, of which we
may speak hereafter, was (chap.
4). The other offerings were
offerings made by fire of a
sweet savour unto Jehovah — they
present Christ's perfect
offering of Himself to God, not
the imposition of sins on the
substitute by the Holy One, the
Judge.
These two points in the
sacrifice of Christ are very
distinct and very precious. God
has made Him to be sin for us,
Him who knew no sin: but also is
it true, that through the
eternal Spirit He offered
Himself without spot to God. Let
us consider this latter, as
first in the order presented in
Leviticus, and naturally so.
The first sort of sacrifice, the
most complete and characteristic
of those characterised by being
offerings made by fire of a
sweet savour, was the
burnt-offering. The offerer was
to bring his offering,7 in order
to his acceptance with God, to
the door of the tabernacle of
the congregation, and to kill it
before Jehovah.
First, of the place, the whole
scene of the tabernacle ritual
consisted of three parts: first,
the holiest of all, the
innermost part of the boarded
space covered with tents,
separated from the rest by a
veil which hung before it, and
within which was the ark of the
covenant and the cherubim
overshadowing the mercy-seat,
and NOTHING ELSE. This was the
throne of God, the type also of
Christ, in whom God is revealed,
the true ark of the covenant
with the mercy-seat over it.
The veil, the apostle tells us,
signified that the way into the
holiest was not yet made
manifest while the old economy
subsisted.8 Immediately outside
the veil — its efficacy, however
entering within, and whence,
indeed, on certain occasions,
incense was taken in a censer
and offered within — stood the
golden altar of incense. In the
same, or outer chamber of the
tabernacle, called the holy, as
distinguished from the most holy
place, or holy of holies, stood,
on either side, the shewbread
and the candlestick — types, the
former of Christ incarnate, the
true bread in union with and
head of the twelve tribes, on
the one hand; and the latter, of
the perfection9 (still, I have
no doubt, in connection with
Israel in the latter day) of the
Spirit, as giving light, on the
other. The church owns Christ
thus, and the Holy Ghost dwells
in it, but what characterises
it, as such, is the knowledge of
a heavenly and glorified Christ,
and the Holy Ghost, as in divine
communications, present in unity
in it. These figures, on the
other hand, give us Christ in
His earthly relation, and the
Holy Ghost in His various
displays of power, when God's
earthly system is established.
Compare Zechariah 4, and
Revelation 11 where there is the
testimony to, but not the actual
perfection of, the candlestick;
God's testimony on the earth.
The Epistle to the Hebrews
affords us all needed light as
to how far and with what
changes, these figures can be
applied now. But that epistle
never speaks of the proper
relationships and privileges of
the church and Christians. These
are viewed as pilgrims on earth,
an earthly people. There is no
union with Christ. He is in
heaven and we in need on earth;
no mention of the Father's name,
but only so much the more
precious as to our access to
God, and needed supplies of
grace for our path down here. It
is properly Christian; we are
partakers of the heavenly
calling; but it may reach out
and give what is available for
the remnant, slain after the
church is gone. Into the holy
place the body of the priests,
and not merely the high priest,
entered continually, but they
only. We know who, and who
alone, can now thus enter, even
those who are made kings and
priests, the true saints of God:
only, we can add, that the veil
that hid the holiest and barred
the entrance is rent from top to
bottom, not to be renewed again
between us and God. We have
boldness to enter into the
holiest. The veil has been rent
in His flesh. He is not merely
bread from heaven or incarnate,
but put to death, denoted by
flesh and blood, and the door
fully opened for us to enter in
spirit where Christ is. Our
ordinary privilege and title is
in the holy place — type of the
created heaven, as the most holy
is of the heaven of heavens, as
it is called. In a certain
sense, as to spiritual approach
and intercourse, the veil being
rent, there is no separation
between the two, though in the
light which no man can approach
unto God dwells inaccessible. In
the heavenly places we now are
as priests, though only in
spirit.
In approaching to this was the
outside court, the court of the
tabernacle of the congregation.10
In entering this part, the first
thing met with was the altar of
burnt-offering, and between that
and the tabernacle the laver,
where the priests washed11
when they entered into the
tabernacle, or were occupied at
the altar, to perform their
service. It is evident that we
approach solely by the sacrifice
of Christ, and that we must be
washed with water by the word
before we can serve in the
sanctuary. We have need also, as
priests, of having our feet, at
least, washed by our Advocate on
high for our continual service
there. (See John 13.)12
Christ also thus approached, but
it was in the perfect offering
of Himself, not by the offering
of another. Nothing can be more
touching, or more worthy of
profound attention, than the
manner in which Jesus thus
voluntarily presents Himself,
that God may be fully,
completely, glorified in Him.
Silent in His sufferings, we see
that His silence was the result
of a profound and perfect
determination to give Himself
up, in obedience, to this glory
— a service, blessed be His
name, perfectly accomplished, so
that the Father rests in His
love towards us.
This devotedness to the Father's
glory could, and indeed did,
shew itself in two ways: it
might be in service, and of
every faculty of a living man
here, in absolute devotedness to
God, tested by fire even unto
death; or in the giving up of
life itself, giving up Himself —
His life unto death, for the
divine glory, sin being there.
Of this latter the
burnt-offering speaks; of the
former, I judge, the
meat-offering: while both are
the same in principle as entire
devotedness of human existence
to God — one of the living
acting man, the other the giving
up of life unto death.
So in the burnt-offering; he who
offered, offered the victim up
wholly to God at the door of the
tabernacle of the congregation.
Thus Christ presented Himself
for the accomplishment of the
purpose and glory of God where
sin was. In the type the victim
and the offerer were necessarily
distinct, but Christ was both,
and the hands of the offerer
were laud on the head of the
victim in sign of identity.
Let us cite some of the passages
which thus present Christ to us.
First, in general, whether for
life or for death, thus to
glorify God; but exactly as
taking the place of these
sacrifices, the Spirit thus
speaks of the Lord, in Hebrews
10, citing Psalm 40: "Then said
I, Lo I come, in the volume of
the book it is written of me, I
delight to do thy will, O God;
yea, thy law is within my
heart." Christ, then, giving
Himself up entirely to the will
of God is what replaces these
sacrifices, the antitype of the
shadows of good things to come.
But of His life itself He thus
speaks (John 10:18): "I lay it
down of myself, no one takes it
from me. I have power to lay it
down, and I have power to take
it again: this commandment have
I received of my Father." It was
obedience, but obedience in the
sacrifice of Himself; and so,
speaking of His death, He says,
"The prince of this world
[Satan] comes, and has nothing
in me; but that the world may
know that I love the Father, and
as the Father has given me
commandment, so I do." So we
read in Luke 9: "And it came to
pass when the time was come that
he should be received up, he
stedfastly set his face to go to
Jerusalem." "Through the eternal
Spirit he offered himself
without spot to God" (Heb.
9:14).
How perfect and full of grace is
this way of the Lord! as
constant and devoted to draw
near when God should be thus
glorified, and submit to the
consequences of His devotedness
— consequences imposed by the
circumstances in which we are
placed — as man was to depart
from God for his pleasure. He
humbles Himself to death that
the majesty and the love of God,
His truth and righteousness, may
have their full accomplishment
through the exercise of His
self-devoting love. Thus man, in
His person, and through His
work, is reconciled to God;
takes the true and due
relationship to Him; God being
perfectly glorified in Him as
to, and (wondrous to say) in the
place of, sin, and that
according to all the value of
what Christ has done to glorify
God. It was in the place of sin,
as made it for us, for there it
was God had to be glorified, and
there all He is came out as
nowhere else, and there
perfectly, in love, light,
righteousness, truth, majesty,
as by man's sin He had been dishonoured; only that now it
was infinite in value, God
Himself, not merely human
defacing of God's glory. I do
not here say men, but man. And
the blessed result was, not
merely forgiveness, but
introduction into the glory of
God.
The sacrifice was to be without
blemish; the application of this
to Christ is too obvious to need
comment. He was the Lamb
"without blemish and without
spot." The offerer13 was to kill
the bullock before Jehovah. This
completed the likeness to
Christ, for, though evidently He
could not kill Himself, He laid
down His life: no one took it
from Him. He did it before
Jehovah. This, in the ritual of
the offering, was the offerer's
part, the individual's, and so
Christ's as man. Man saw, in
Christ's death, man's judgment —
the power of Caiaphas, or the
power of the world. But as
offered, He offered Himself
before Jehovah.
And now comes Jehovah's and the
priest's part. The offering was
to be made the subject of the
fire of the altar of God; it was
cut in pieces and washed, given
up, according to the
purification of the sanctuary,
to the trial of the judgment of
God; for fire, as a symbol,
signifies always the trial of
the judgment of God. As to the
washing with water, it made the
sacrifice typically what Christ
was essentially — pure. But it
has this importance, that the
sanctification of it and ours is
on the same principle and on the
same standard. He is in this
sense our sanctification. We are
sanctified unto obedience. He
came to do the will of His
Father, and so, perfect from the
beginning, learns obedience by
the things which He suffered;
perfectly obedient always, but
His obedience put ever more
thoroughly to the test, so that
His obedience was continually
deeper and more complete, though
always perfect. He learned
obedience, what it was to obey,
and that by growing sufferings
and the sense of what was around
Him, and finally by the cross.14
It was new to Him as a divine
Person — to us as rebels to God
— and He learned it in all its
extent.
Furthermore, this washing of
water, in our case, is by the
word, and Christ testifies of
Himself that man should live by
every word that proceedeth out
of the mouth of God. This
difference evidently and
necessarily exists, that as
Christ had life in Himself, and
was the life (see John 1:4; 1
John 1:1-2,) we, on the other
hand, receive this life from
Him; and while ever obedient to
the written word Himself, the
words which flowed from His lips
were the expression of His life
— the direction of ours.
We may pursue the use of this
water of cleansing yet farther.
It is the power of the Spirit
also, exercised as by the word
and will of God;15 so even the
commencement of this life in us.
"Of his own will begat he us by
the word of truth, that we might
be a kind of firstfruits of his
creatures" (James 1:18). And so
in 1 Peter 1:23, we are born of
the incorruptible seed of the
word. But then this finds us
walking in sins and living in
them, or, in another aspect,
dead in them. These are really
the same thing, for being alive
in sins is being spiritually
dead towards God; only the
latter sets out with our whole
state discovered; the former
deals with our responsibility.
In Ephesians we are viewed as
dead in sins; in Romans alive in
them; in Colossians chiefly the
latter, but the former is
touched on. The cleansing must
be, therefore, by the death and
resurrection of Christ; death to
sin and life to God in Him.
Hence, on His death, was shed
forth out of His side water and
blood, cleansing as well as
expiating power. Death then is
the only cleanser of sin as well
as its expiation. "He that is
dead is freed16 from sin," and
water thus became the sign of
death, for this alone cleansed.
This truth of real
sanctification was necessarily
hidden under the law, save in
figures: for the law applied
itself to man, alive, and
claimed his obedience. Christ's
death revealed it. In us — that
is, in our flesh — good does not
dwell. Hence, in the symbolical
use of water in baptism, we are
told that as many of us as are baptised unto Christ, are
baptised unto His death. But it
is evident that we cannot stop
at death in itself. In us it
would be the herald and witness
of condemnation, but, having
life in Christ, death in Him is
death to the life of sin and
guilt. It is the communication
of the life of Christ which
enables us thus to treat the old
man as dead, and ourselves as
having been dead in trespasses
and sins. The body is dead
because of sin, and the Spirit
is life because of
righteousness, if Christ be in
you. So we are told as to the
truth of our natural state (it
is not here what faith holds the
old man to be if Christ be in
us): "You, being dead in your
sins, and the uncircumcision of
your flesh, has he quickened
together with him." When we were
dead in sin, He has quickened us
together with Him; and, as
baptised unto His death, it is
added, "that like as Christ was
raised up from the dead by the
glory of the Father, even so we
also should walk in newness of
life." It is only in the power
of a new life that we can hold
ourselves to be dead to sin.
And, indeed, it is only by known
redemption we can say so. It is
when we have apprehended the
power of Christ's death and
resurrection, and know that we
are in Him through the Holy
Ghost, that we can say, I am
crucified with Him; I am not in
the flesh. We know then, that
this cleansing, which was
apprehended as a mere moral
effect in Judaism, is, by the
communication of the life of
Christ to us, that by which we
are sanctified, according to the
power of His death and
resurrection, and sin as a law
in our members is judged. The
first Adam, as a living soul,
corrupted himself; the last, as
a quickening Spirit, imparts to
us a new life.
But, if it is the communication
of the life of Christ which,
through redemption, is the
starting-point of this judgment
of sin, it is evident that that
life in Him was essentially and
actually pure; in us, the flesh
lusts against the Spirit. He,
even according to the flesh, was
born of God. But He was to
undergo a baptism, not merely to
fulfil all righteousness as
living — though perfectly pure —
in a baptism of water, but a
trial of all that was in Him by
the baptism of fire. "I have,"
says He, "a baptism to be
baptised with, and how am I
straitened till it be
accomplished!"
Here, then, Christ, completely
offered up to God for the full
expression of His glory,
undergoes the full trial of
judgment. The fire tries what He
is. He is salted with fire. The
perfect holiness of God, in the
power of His judgment, tries to
the uttermost all that is in
Him. The bloody sweat, and
affecting supplication in the
garden, the deep sorrow of the
cross, in the touching
consciousness of righteousness,
"Why hast thou forsaken me?" —
as to any lightening of the
trial, an unheeded cry — all
mark the full trial of the Son
of God. Deep answered unto deep,
— all Jehovah's waves and
billows passed over Him. But as
He had offered Himself perfectly
to the thorough trial, this
consuming fire and trying of His
inmost thoughts did, could,
produce nought but a sweet
savour to God. It is remarkable
that the word used for burning
the burnt-offering is not the
same as that of the
sin-offering, but the same as
that of burning incense.
In this offering, then, we have
Christ's perfect offering up of
Himself, and then tried in His
inmost parts by fiery trial of
God's judgment. The consuming of
His life was a sacrifice of a
sweet savour, all infinitely
agreeable to God — not a
thought, not a will, but was put
to the test — His life consumed
in it; but all, without apparent
answer to sustain, given up to
God; all was purely a sweet
savour to Him. But there was
more than this. The greater part
of what has been said would
apply to the meat-offering. But
the burnt-offering was to make
atonement, an expression not
used in chapter 2. There the
personal intrinsic perfectness
of Christ was tested, and the
manner of His incarnation, what
He was as man down here
unfolded, but death was the
first element of the
burnt-offering, and death was by
sin. There where man was
(otherwise for him it could not
be); where sin was; where
Satan's power as death was;
where God's irreversible
judgment was, Christ had to
glorify God, and it was a glory
not otherwise to be displayed:
love, righteousness, majesty, in
the place of sin and death.
Christ, who knew no sin, made
sin for us, in perfect obedience
and love to His Father goes down
to death; and God is glorified
there, Satan's power of death
destroyed, God glorified in man
according to all He is, sin
being come in, in obedience and
love. He was in the place of
sin, and God glorified, as no
creation, no sinlessness, could.
All was a sweet savour in that
place, and according to what God
was as to it in righteousness
and love.
When Noah offered his
burnt-offering, it is said, "And
Jehovah smelled a sweet savour,
and Jehovah said in his heart, I
will no more curse the ground
for man's sake, for the
imaginations of man's heart are
only evil continually." It had
repented Him that He had made
man, and grieved Him at His
heart; but now, on this sweet
savour, Jehovah says in His
heart, "I will no more curse."
Such is the perfect and infinite
acceptableness of Christ's
offering up of Himself to God.
It is not in the sacrifice we
are considering that He has the
imposition of sins on Him (that
was the sin-offering), but the
perfectness, purity, and
self-devotedness of the victim,
but in being made sin, and that
ascending in sweet savour to
God. In this acceptability — in
the sweet savour of this
sacrifice — we are presented to
God. All the delight which God
finds in the odour of this
sacrifice — blessed thought! —
we are accepted in. Is God
perfectly glorified in this, in
all that He is? He is glorified
then in receiving us. He
receives us as the fruit and
testimony of that in which He
has been perfectly glorified,
and that as revealed in
redemption, in which all that He
is is wrought out in revelation.
Does He delight in what Christ
is, in this His most perfect
act? He so delights in us. Does
this rise up before Him, a
memorial for ever, in His
presence, of delight? We, also,
in the efficacy of it, are
presented to Him; in one sense
we are that memorial. It is not
merely that the sins have been
effaced by the expiatory act;
but the perfect acceptability of
Him who accomplished it and
glorified God perfectly in it,
the sweet savour of His sinless
sacrifice, is our good odour of
delight before God, and is ours;
its acceptance, even Christ's,
is ours.
And we are to remark that,
though distinct from laying our
sins upon Him, yet death implied
sin, and the sacrifice of
Christ, as burnt-offering, had
the character which resulted
from sin being in question
before God, namely, death. It
made the trial and suffering so
much the more terrible; His
obedience was tested before God
in the place of sin, and He was
obedient unto death, not in the
sense of bearing sins and
putting them away, though in the
same act, but in the perfection
of His offering of Himself to
God, and obedience tested by
God; tested by being dealt with
as sin, and therein, only, and a
perfect sweet savour. Hence it
was atonement; and, in one
sense, of a deeper kind than the
bearing of sins, that is, as the
test of obedience and glorifying
God in it. If we have found
peace in forgiveness we cannot
too much study the
burnt-offering. It is that one
act in the history of eternity
in which the basis of all that
in which God has glorified
Himself morally, that is,
revealed Himself as He is, and
of all that in which our
happiness is founded (and its
sphere) — for blessed be God
they go together — is laid; and
laid in such a way that Christ
could say, Therefore doth My
Father love Me; and that in
total, self-sacrifice made sin
before God (oh, wondrous
thought!) and for us. It became
Him. Where is God's
righteousness against sin known?
where His holiness? where His
infinite love? where His moral
majesty? where what became Him?
where His truth? where man's
sin? where His perfectness? and,
absolutely, where Satan's power,
but its nullity too? All in the
cross, and essentially in the
burnt-offering. It is not as
bearing sins, but as absolutely
offered to God and in atonement
— blood shedding about sin.
There is another point to remark
in this sacrifice distinguishing
it. It was wholly for and to
God; for us no doubt, but still
wholly to God. Of other
sacrifices (not of the two
first, for sin — but of these
hereafter) in some form or other
men partook, of this not; it was
wholly for God and on the altar.
It was thus the grand absolute
essential sacrifice; as to its
effect, connected with us, as
blood-shedding was (Heb. 9:26
and John 1:29, the Lamb of God)
present in it (compare Eph.
5:2). Hence, though having the
stamp of sin being there in
blood-shedding and propitiation,
it was absolutely and wholly
sweet savour, wholly to God.
I now turn to the meat-offering.
This presents to us the humanity
of Christ; His grace and
perfectness as a living man, but
still as offered to God and
fully tested. It was of fine
flour without leaven, mingled
with oil and frankincense. The
oil was used in two ways; it was
mingled with the flour, and the
cake was anointed with it. The
presenting (Christ's presenting
Himself as an offering to God)
even unto death, and His
actually undergoing death, and
shedding blood,17 must have come
first; for, without the
perfectness of this will even
unto death, and that shedding of
blood by which God was perfectly
glorified where sin was, nothing
could have been accepted; yet
Christ's perfectness as a man
down here had to be proved, and
that by the test of death and
the fire of God. But the atoning
work being wrought, and His
obedience perfect from the
beginning (He came to do His
Father's will), all the life was
perfect and acceptable as man, a
sweet savour under the trial of
God — His nature as man.18 Abel
was accepted by blood; Cain, who
came in the way of nature,
offering the fruit of his toil
and labour, was rejected. All
that we can offer of our natural
hearts is "the sacrifice of
fools," and is founded on what
is failure in the spring of any
good, on the sin of hardness of
heart, which does not recognise
our condition — our sin and
estrangement from our God. What
could be a greater evidence of
hardness of heart than, under
the effects and consequences of
sin, driven from Eden, to come
and offer offerings, and these
offerings the fruit of the
judicial toil of the curse
consequent on sin, as if nothing
at all had happened? It was the
perfection of blind hardness of
heart.
But, on the other hand, as
Adam's first act, when in
blessing, was to seek his own
will (and hence by disobedience
he was, with his posterity such
as he, in this world of misery,
alienated from God in state and
will), Christ was in this world
of misery, devoting Himself in
love, devoting Himself to do His
Father's will. He came here
emptying Himself. He came here
by an act of devotedness to His
Father, at all cost to Himself,
that God might be glorified. He
was in the world, the obedient
man, whose will was to do His
Father's will, the first grand
act and source of all human
obedience, and of divine glory
by it. This will of obedience
and devotedness to His Father's
glory, stamped a sweet savour on
all that He did: all He did
partook of this fragrance.
It is impossible to read
John's,19 or indeed any of the
Gospels, where what He was, His
Person, specially shines forth,
without meeting, at every
moment, this blessed fragrance
of loving obedience and
self-renouncement. It is not a
history — it is Himself, whom
one cannot avoid seeing, — and
also the wickedness of man,
which violently forced its way
through the coverture and holy
hiding-place which love had
wrought around Him, and forced
into view Him who was clothed
with humility — the divine
Person that passed in meekness
through the world that rejected
Him: but it was only to give all
its force and blessedness to the
self-abasement, which never
faltered, even when forced to
confess His divinity. It was "I
am," but in the lowliness and
loneliness, of the most perfect
and self-abased obedience; no
secret desire to hold His place
in His humiliation, and by His
humiliation: His Father's glory
was the perfect desire of His
heart. It was, indeed, "I am"
that was there, but in the
perfectness of human obedience.
This reveals itself everywhere.
"It is written," was His reply
to the enemy, "Man shall not
live by bread alone, but by
every word that proceedeth out
of the mouth of God." "It is
written" was His constant reply.
"Suffer it thus far," says He to
John the Baptist, "thus it
becometh us to fulfil all
righteousness." "That give,"
says He to Peter, though the
children be free, "for me and
for thee." This historically. In
John, where, as we have said,
His Person shines more forth, it
is more directly expressed by
His mouth: "This commandment
have I received of my Father,"
"and I know that his commandment
is life eternal." "As the Father
has given me commandment, so I
do." "The Son can do nothing of
himself, but what he sees the
Father do." "I have kept," says
He, "my Father's commandments,
and abide in his love." "If a
man walk in the day, he stumbles
not."
Many of these citations are on
occasions where the careful eye
sees through the blessed
humiliation of the Lord, the
divine nature — God — the Son,
only more bright and blessed,
because thus hidden; as the sun,
on which man's eyes cannot gaze,
proves the power of its rays in
giving full light through the
clouds which hide and soften its
power. If God humbles Himself,
He still is God; it is always He
who does it. "He could not be
hid." This absolute obedience
gave perfect grace and savour to
all He did. He appeared ever as
one sent. He sought the glory of
the Father that sent Him. He
saved whoever came to Him,
because He came not to do His
own will, but the will of Him
that sent Him: and as they would
not come without the Father's
drawing, their coming was His
warrant for saving them, for He
was to do implicitly the
Father's will. But what a spirit
of obedience is here! He saves
whom? whomsoever the Father
gives Him — the servant of His
will. Does He promise glory? "It
is not mine to give, but to
those for whom it is prepared of
my Father." He must reward
according to the Father's will.
He is nothing, but to do all, to
accomplish all, His Father
pleased. But who could have done
this, save He who could, and He
who at the same time would, in
such obedience, undertake to do
whatever the Father would have
done? The infiniteness of the
work, and capacity for it,
identify themselves with the
perfectness of obedience, which
had no will but to do that of
another. Yet was He a simple,
humble, lowly man, but God's
Son, in whom the Father was well
pleased.
Let us now see the fitting of
this humanity in grace for this
work. This meat-offering of God,
taken from the fruit of the
earth, was of the finest wheat;
that which was pure, separate,
and lovely in human nature was
in Jesus under all its sorrows,
but in all its excellence, and
excellent in its sorrows. There
was no unevenness in Jesus, no
predominant quality to produce
the effect of giving Him a
distinctive character. He was,
though despised and rejected of
men, the perfection of human
nature. The sensibilities,
firmness, decision (though this
attached itself also to the
principle of obedience),
elevation, and calm meekness
which belong to human nature,
all found their perfect place in
Him. In a Paul I find energy and
zeal; in a Peter ardent
affection; in a John tender
sensibilities and abstraction of
thought united to a desire to
vindicate what he loved, which
scarce knew limit. But the
quality we have observed in
Peter predominates, and
characterises him. In a Paul,
blessed servant though he was,
he does not repent, though he
had repented. He had no rest in
his spirit when he found not
Titus, his brother. He goes off
to Macedonia, though a door was
opened in Troas. He wist not
that it was the high priest. He
is compelled to glory of
himself. In him, in whom God was
mighty towards the circumcision,
we find the fear of man break
through the faithfulness of his
zeal. John, who would have
vindicated Jesus in his zeal,
knew not what manner of spirit
he was of, and would have
forbidden the glory of God, if a
man walked not with them. Such
were Paul, and Peter, and John.
But in Jesus, even as man, there
was none of this unevenness.
There was nothing salient in His
character, because all was in
perfect subjection to God in His
humanity, and had its place, and
did exactly its service, and
then disappeared. God was
glorified in it, and all was in
harmony. When meekness became
Him, He was meek; when
indignation, who could stand
before His overwhelming and
withering rebuke? Tender to the
chief of sinners in the time of
grace; unmoved by the heartless
superiority of a cold Pharisee
(curious to judge who He was);
when the time of judgment is
come, no tears of those who wept
for Him moved Him to other words
than, "Weep for yourselves and
your children," — words of deep
compassion, but of deep
subjection to the due judgment
of God. The dry tree prepared
itself to be burned. On the
cross, when His service was
finished, tender to His mother,
and entrusting her, in human
care, to one who, so to speak,
had been His friend, and leant
on His bosom; no ear to
recognise her word or claim when
His service occupied Him for
God; putting both blessedly in
their place when He would shew
that before His public mission
He was still the Son of the
Father, and though such, in
human blessedness, subject to
the mother that bare Him, and
Joseph His father as under the
law; a calmness which
disconcerted His adversaries;
and, in the moral power which
dismayed them by times, a
meekness which drew out the
hearts of all not steeled by
wilful opposition. What keenness
of edge to separate between the
evil and the good!
True, the power of the Spirit
did this afterwards in calling
men out together in open
confession, but the character
and Person of Jesus did it
morally. There was a vast work
done (I speak not of expiation)
by Him, who, as to outward
result, laboured in vain.
Wherever there was an ear to
hear, the voice of God spoke, by
what Jesus was as a man, to the
heart and conscience of His
sheep. He came in by the door,
and the porter opened, and the
sheep heard His voice. The
perfect humanity of Jesus,
expressed in all His ways, and
penetrating by the will of God,
judged all that it found in man
and in every heart. But this
blessed subject has carried us
beyond our direct object.
In a word, then, His humanity
was perfect, all subject to God,
all in immediate answer to His
will, and the expression of it,
and so necessarily in harmony.
The hand that struck the chord
found all in tune: all answered
to the mind of Him whose
thoughts of grace and holiness,
of goodness, yet of judgment of
evil, whose fulness of blessing
in goodness were sounds of
sweetness to every weary ear,
and found in Christ their only
expression. Every element, every
faculty in His humanity,
responded to the impulse which
the divine will gave to it, and
then ceased in a tranquillity in
which self had no place. Such
was Christ in human nature.
While firm where need demanded,
meekness was what essentially
characterised Him as to contrast
with others, because He was in
the presence of God, His God,
and all that in the midst of
evil, — His voice was not heard
in the street, — for joy can
break forth in louder strains
when all shall echo, "Praise his
name, his glory."
But this faultlessness of the
human nature of our Lord
attaches itself to deeper and
more important sources, which
are presented to us in this type
negatively and positively. If
every faculty thus obeyed and
were the instrument of the
divine impulse in its place, it
is evident that the will must be
right — that the spirit and
principle of obedience must be
its spring; for it is the action
of an independent will which is
the principle of sin. Christ, as
a divine Person, had the title
of an independent will. "The Son
quickens whom he will;" but He
came to do His Father's will.
His will was obedience, sinless
therefore, and perfect. Leaven,
in the word, is the symbol of
corruption — "the leaven of
malice and wickedness." In the
cake, therefore, which was to be
offered as a sweet savour to
God, there was no leaven: where
leaven was, it could not be
offered as a sweet savour to
God. This is thrown into relief
by the converse: there were
cakes made with leaven, and it
was forbidden to offer them as
sweet savour, an offering made
by fire. This occurred in two
cases, one of which, the most
important and significative, and
sufficing to establish the
principle, is noticed in this
chapter.
When the firstfruits were
offered, two cakes were offered
baked with leaven, but not for
an offering for a sweet savour.
Burnt-offerings and
meat-offerings were also
offered, and for a sweet savour;
but the offering of the
firstfruits — not (see verse 12
of this chapter, and Lev. 23).
And what were these firstfruits?
The church, sanctified by the
Holy Ghost. For this feast and
offering of the firstfruits was
the acknowledged and known type
of the day of Pentecost — in
fact was the day of Pentecost.
We are, says the Apostle James,
a kind of firstfruits of His
creatures. It will be seen (Lev.
23) that, the day of Christ's
resurrection, the first of the
fruits was offered, ears of corn
unbroken, unbruised. Clearly
there was no leaven there. He
rose, too, without seeing
corruption. With this no
sin-offering was offered, but
with the leavened cakes (which
represented the assembly
sanctified by the Holy Ghost to
God, but still living in
corrupted human nature) a
sin-offering was offered; for
the sacrifice of Christ for us,
answered for and puts away in
God's sight the leaven of our
corrupted nature, overcome (but
not ceasing to exist) by the
operation of the Holy Ghost; by
reason of which nature, in
itself corrupt, we could not, in
the trial of God's judgment, be
a sweet savour, an offering made
by fire; but, by means of
Christ's sacrifice, which met
and answered the evil, could be
offered to God, as is said in
Romans, a living sacrifice.
Hence it is said, not merely
that Christ has answered for our
sins, but that "what the law
could not do, in that it was
weak through the flesh, God,
sending his own Son in the
likeness of sinful flesh, and
for sin, condemned sin in the
flesh." God has condemned sin in
the flesh, but it was in Christ
as for, that is as a sacrifice
for, sin, making atonement,
undergoing the judgment due to
it, being made sin for us
because of it, but dying in
doing so, so that we reckon
ourselves dead. The condemnation
of the sin is passed in His
death, but death to it is
therein come to us.
It is important for a troubled
but tender and faithful
conscience to remember that
Christ has died, not merely for
our sins,20 but for our sin; for
surely this troubles a faithful
conscience much more than many
sins past.
As the cakes then, which
represent the church, were baked
with leaven, and could not be
offered for a sweet savour, so
the cake, which represented
Christ, was without leaven, a
sweet savour, and offering made
by fire unto Jehovah. The trial
of the Lord's judgment found a
perfect will, and the absence of
all evil, or spirit of
independence. It was "thy will
be done" which characterised the
human nature of the Lord, filled
with and animated by the fulness
of the Godhead, but the man
Jesus, the offering of God.
There is another example of the
converse of this which I may
notice in passing — the
peace-offerings. There Christ
had His part, man also. Hence in
this were found cakes made with
leaven along with the others
which were without it. That
offering, which represented the
communion of the assembly
connected with the sacrifice of
Christ, necessarily brought in
man, and the leaven was there —
ordained symbol of that leaven
which is ever found in us. The
assembly is called to holiness;
the life of Christ in us is
holiness to the Lord; but it
remains ever true that in us,
that is, in our flesh, dwells no
good thing.
This leads us to another great
principle presented to us in
this type: namely, the cake was
to be mingled with oil. That
which is born of the flesh is
flesh; and in ourselves, born
simply of the flesh, we are
naturally nothing but corrupted
and fallen flesh — "of the will
of the flesh." Though we are
born of the Spirit of God, this
does not uncreate the old
nature. It may attenuate to any
conceivable degree its active
force, and control altogether
its operations;21 but the nature
remains unchanged. The nature of
Paul was as disposed to be
puffed up when he had been in
the third heaven, as when he had
the letter of the chief priest
in his robe to destroy the name
of Christ if he could. I do not
say the disposition had the same
power, but the disposition was
as bad or worse, for it was in
the presence of greater good.
But the will of the flesh had no
part whatever in the birth of
Christ. His human nature flowed
as simply from the divine will
as the presence of the divine
upon earth. Mary, bowing in
single-eyed and exquisite
obedience, displays with
touching beauty the submission
and bowing of her heart and
understanding to the revelation
of God. "Behold the handmaid of
the Lord [Jehovah], be it unto
me according to thy word." He
knew no sin; His human nature
itself was conceived of the Holy
Ghost. That holy thing which was
born of the virgin was to be
called the Son of God. He was
truly and thoroughly man, born
of Mary, but He was man born of
God. So I see this title, Son of
God, applied to the three
several estates of Christ: Son
of God, Creator, in Colossians,
in Hebrews, and in other
passages which allude to it; Son
of God, as born in the world;
and declared Son of God with
power as risen again from the
dead.
The cake22 was made mingled with
oil, just as the human nature of
Christ had its being and
character, its taste, from the
Holy Ghost, of which oil is ever
and the known symbol. But purity
is not power, and it is in
another form that spiritual
power, acting in the human
nature of Jesus, is expressed.
The cakes were to be anointed
with oil; and it is written how
God anointed Jesus of Nazareth
with the Holy Ghost and with
power, who went about doing good
and healing all that were
oppressed of the devil. It was
not that anything was wanting in
Jesus. In the first place, as
God, He could have done all
things, but He had humbled
Himself, and was come to obey.
Hence, only when called and
anointed, He presents Himself in
public, although His interview
with the doctors in the temple
shewed His relation with the
Father from the beginning.
There is a certain analogy in
our case. It is a different
thing to be born of God, and
sealed and anointed with the
Holy Ghost. The day of
Pentecost, Cornelius, the
believers of Samaria on whom the
apostle laid their hands — all
prove this, as also many
passages on the subject. We are
all "the sons of God by faith in
Christ Jesus." But "because ye
are sons, God has sent forth the
Spirit of his Son into your
hearts." "In whom also, after
that ye believed, ye were sealed
with that Holy Spirit of
promise, which is the earnest of
our inheritance, until the
redemption of the purchased
possession." "This spake he,"
says John, "of the Spirit, which
they that believe on him should
receive." The Holy Ghost may
have produced, by a new nature,
holy desires, and the love of
Jesus, without the consciousness
of deliverance and power — the
joy of His presence in the
knowledge of the finished work
of Christ. As to the Lord Jesus,
we know that this second act, of
anointing, was accomplished in
connection with the perfectness
of His Person, as it could,
because He was righteous in
Himself, when, after His baptism
by John (in which He who knew no
sin placed Himself with His
people, then the remnant of
Israel, in the first movement of
grace in their hearts, shewn in
going to John, to be with them
in all the path of that grace
from beginning to end, its
trials and its sorrows), He,
sinless, was anointed by the
Holy Ghost, descending in a
bodily shape like a dove, and
was led of the Spirit into the
conflict for us, and returned
conqueror in its power, in the
power of the Spirit, into
Galilee. I say conqueror in its
power; for if Jesus had repulsed
Satan simply by divine power as
such, firstly, there evidently
could have been no conflict; and
secondly, no example or
encouragement for us. But the
Lord repulsed him by a principle
which is our duty every day —
obedience, intelligent
obedience; employing the word of
God, and repulsing Satan with
indignation the moment he openly
shews himself such.23 If Christ
entered into His course with the
testimony and joy of a Son, He
entered into a course of
conflict and obedience (He might
bind the strong man, but He had
the strong man to bind).
So we. Joy, deliverance, love,
abounding peace, the Spirit of
sonship, the Father known as
accepting us: such is the
entrance to the christian
course, but the course we enter
on is conflict and obedience:
leave the latter, and we fail in
the former. Satan's effort was
to separate these in Jesus. If
Thou be the Son, use Thy power —
make stones into bread — act by
Thine own will. The answer of
Jesus is, in sense, I am in the
place of obedience — of
servitude; I have no command. It
is written, Man shall live by
every word that proceeds out of
the mouth of God. I rest in My
state of dependence.
It was power, then, but power
used in the state and in the
accomplishment of obedience. The
only act of disobedience which
Adam could commit he did commit;
but He, who could have done all
things as to power, only used
His power to display more
perfect service, more perfect
subjection. How blessed is the
picture of the Lord's ways! and
that, in the midst of the
sorrows, and enduring the
consequences of the
disobedience, of man, of the
nature He had taken in
everything save sin. "For it
became him, for whom are all
things, and by whom are all
things, [seeing the state we are
in,] in bringing many sons unto
glory, to make the captain of
their salvation perfect through
sufferings."
Jesus, then, was in the power of
the Spirit in conflict. Jesus
was in the power of the Spirit
in obedience. Jesus was in the
power of the Spirit in casting
out devils, and bearing all our
infirmities. Jesus was also in
the power of the Spirit in
offering Himself without spot to
God; but this belonged rather to
the burnt-offering. In what He
did do, and in what He did not
do, He acted by the energy of
the Spirit of God. Hence it is
that He presents an example to
us, followed with mingled
energies, but by a power by
which we may do greater things,
if it be His will, than He — not
be more perfect, but do greater
things; and morally, as the
apostle tells us, all things. On
earth He was absolutely perfect
in obedience, but by that itself
He did not, and, in the moral
sense, could not, do many
things, which He can do, and
manifest now, by His apostles
and servants. For, exalted at
the right hand of God, He was to
manifest, even as man, power,
not obedience; "Greater things
than these shall ye do, because
I go to my Father."
This puts us in the place of
obedience, for by the power of
the Spirit we are servants to
Christ — diversities of
ministrations, but the same
Lord. Hence greater works were
done by the apostles, but
mingled in their personal walk
with all sorts of imperfections.
With whom did Jesus contend,
even if He was in the right?
before whom manifest the fear of
man? when did He repent of an
act which He had done, even if
afterwards there was no reason
for repentance? No! there was a
greater exercise of power in
apostolic service, as Jesus had
promised; but in vessels whose
weakness shewed all the praise
to be of Another, and whose
obedience was carried on in
conflict with another will in
themselves. This was the great
distinction. Jesus had never
need of a thorn in the flesh,
lest He should be exalted above
measure. Blessed Master! Thou
didst speak that Thou knewest,
and testifiedst that Thou hadst
seen; but to do so Thou hadst
emptied, humbled Thyself, made
Thyself of no reputation, and
taken the form of a servant, in
order to our being exalted by
it.
The height, the consciousness of
the height, from which He came
down, the perfectness of the
will in which He obeyed where He
was, made no exaltation needed
to Him. Yet He looked on the joy
that was set before Him, and was
not ashamed, for He was humbled
even to this, to rejoice in
having respect to the recompense
of reward. And He has been
highly exalted. "Because of the
savour of thy good ointments,
thy name is as ointment poured
forth." For there was yet
besides, in the meat-offering,
the frankincense — the savour of
all Christ's graces.
How much of our graces is
presented to the acceptance of
man, and consequently the flesh
often mistaken for grace, or
mixed with it, being judged of
according to the judgment of
man! But in Jesus all His graces
were presented to God. True, man
could, or ought to have
discerned them as the odour of
the frankincense, diffusing
itself around, where all was
burnt to God; but it was all
burnt as a sweet savour to God.
And this is perfection.
How few so present their charity
to God, and bring God into their
charity, exercising it for and
towards Him, though in behalf of
man, so that they persevere
nothing the less in its
exercise, though the more they
love, the less they be loved! it
is for God's sake. So far as
this is the case, it is indeed a
sweet odour to God; but this is
difficult: we must be much
before God. This was perfectly
the case with Christ; the more
faithful He was, the more
despised and opposed; the more
meek, the less esteemed. But all
this altered nothing, because He
did all to God alone: with the
multitude, with His disciples,
or before His unjust judges,
nothing altered the perfectness
of His ways, because in all the
circumstances all was done to
God. The incense of His service
and His heart, of His
affections, went ever and always
up, and referred themselves to
God; and surely abundant
frankincense, and sweet its
odour, in the life of Jesus. The
Lord smelled a sweet savour, and
blessing flowed forth, and not
the curse, for us. This was
added to the meat-offering, for
in truth it was in effect
produced in His life by the
Spirit, but always this
frankincense ascended; so of His
intercession, for it was the
expression of His gracious love.
His prayers, as the holy
expression of dependence,
infinitely precious and
attractive to God, were all
sweet odour, as frankincense,
before Him. "The house was
filled with the odour of the
ointment." And just as sin is
taking self instead of God, this
was taking God instead of self,
and this is perfection. And it
is power too, because then
circumstances have no power over
self And this is perfection in
going through the world. Jesus
was always Himself in all
circumstances; yet for that very
reason we feel them all
according to God — not self. We
may add, too, as Satan led to
one and so slavery to him, so
the other is in the power and
leading of the Holy Ghost.
There was yet another thing
forbidden, as well as leaven, in
the sacrifice — namely, honey,
that which was most sweet to the
natural taste, as the affections
of those we love after the
flesh, happy associations, and
the like. It is not that these
were evil. "Hast thou found
honey?" says the wise man, "eat
so much as is sufficient, lest
thou be filled therewith, and
vomit it." When Jonathan took a
little he had found in the wood,
in the day of service and the
energy of faith for Israel, his
eyes were lightened. But it
cannot enter into a sacrifice.
He who could say, "Mother,
behold thy son," and "Son,
behold thy mother," even in the
terrible moment of the cross,
when His service was finished,
could also say, "Woman, what
have I to do with thee?"24 when
He was in the simplest
accomplishment of His service.
He was a stranger to His own
mother's sons, as Levi, in the
blessing of Moses, the man of
God — Levi, who was offered as
an offering to God of the people
(Num. 8:11), "who said unto his
father and his mother, I have
not seen him; neither did he
acknowledge his brethren, nor
knew his own children: for they
have observed thy word, and kept
thy covenant."
Yet another thing remains to be
observed. In the burnt-offering
all was burnt to God, for Christ
offered Himself wholly up to
God. But the human nature of
Christ is the food of the
priests of God; Aaron and his
sons were to eat what was not
burned in the fire, of the
meat-offering. Christ was the
true bread, come down from
heaven, to give life unto the
world, that we (through faith,
priests and kings) may eat
thereof and not die. It was
holy, for Aaron and his sons
alone to eat; for who indeed
ever fed on Christ but those
who, sanctified by the Holy
Ghost, live the life of faith,
and feed on the food of faith?
And is not Christ the food of
our souls, as sanctified to God,
yea, sanctifying us also ever to
God? Do not our souls recognise
in the meek and humble holy One
— in Him who shines as the light
of human perfectness and divine
grace amongst sinful men — what
feeds, nourishes, and
sanctifies? Cannot our souls
feel what it is to be offered to
God, in tracing, by the sympathy
of the Spirit of Jesus in us,
the life of Jesus toward God,
and before men in the world? An
example to us, He presents the
impress of a man living to God,
and draws us after Him, and that
by the attraction of what He was
— Himself the force which
carries on in the way He trod,
while our delight and joy are in
it. Are not our affections
occupied and assimilated in
dwelling with delight on what
Jesus was here below? We admire,
are humbled, and become
conformed to Him through grace.
Head and source of this life in
us, the display of its
perfection in Him draws forth
and develops its energies and
lowliness in us. For who could
be proud in fellowship with the
humble Jesus? Humble, He would
teach us to take the lowest
place, but that He had taken it
Himself, the privilege of His
perfect grace. Blessed Master,
may we at least be near to and
hidden in Thee!
This is true, but there is a
difference to be made here. In
the peace-offerings there was
also an eating of the Hesh of
the sacrifice besides what the
priests had. Those who ate were
Israelites and clean, and they
ate together as a convivial
feast. There was a common
enjoyment, fellowship, founded
on the offering of the blood and
of the fat to God, that is of
Christ as offered to God in
death for us — the sin-offerings
are assimilated in this last
(Lev. 4:10, 26, 31, 35), and the
partaking of those who partook
of the feast was carefully
connected with this. This was
common and just joy,
thanksgiving for blessings, or
voluntarily as rejoicing in the
Lord's blessing, it was
"Shalom," and was fellowship in
it, the fruit of redemption and
grace. The case of the
meat-offering was that of one,
himself consecrated to God,
entering into and feeding on the
perfectness of Christ Himself as
offering Himself to God. The
priests alone ate of it as such.
How vast too the grace which has
introduced us into this
intimateness of communion, has
made us priests in the power of
quickening grace, to partake of
that in which God our Father
delights; that which is offered
to Him as a sweet savour, an
offering made by fire to
Jehovah; that with which the
table of God is supplied! This
is sealed by covenant as a
perpetual, an eternal, portion.
Hence the salt of the covenant
of our God was not wanting in
the sacrifice, in any sacrifice;
the stability, the durability,
the preservative energy of that
which was divine, not always
perhaps to us sweet and
agreeable, was there — the seal,
on the part of God, that it was
no passing savour, no momentary
delight, but eternal. For all
that is of man passes; all that
is of God is eternal; the life,
the charity, the nature, and the
grace continues. This holy
separating power, which keeps us
apart from corruption, is of
God, partaking of the stability
of the divine nature, and
binding unto Him, not by what we
are in will, but by the security
of divine grace. It is active,
pure, sanctifying to us, but it
is of grace, and the energy of
the divine will, and the
obligation of the divine promise
binds us indeed to Him, but
binds by His energy and
fidelity, not ours — energy
which is mingled with and
founded on the sacrifice of
Christ, in which the covenant of
God is sealed and assured
infallibly, or Christ is not
honoured. It is the covenant of
God. Leaven and honey, our sin
and natural affections, cannot
find a place in the sacrifice of
God, but the energy of His grace
(not sparing the evil, but
securing the good) is there to
seal our infallible enjoyment of
its effects and fruits. Salt did
not form the offering, but it
was never to be wanting in any —
could not be in what was of God;
it was indeed in every offering.
We must remember in this
offering, as in the former, that
the essential characteristic,
common indeed to all, was its
being offered to God. This could
not be said of Adam: in his
innocence he enjoyed much from
God; he returned, or should have
returned, thankfulness for it;
but it was enjoyment and
thankfulness. He was not himself
an offering to God. But this was
the essence of Christ's life —
it was offered to God; and hence
separated from all around it,
essentially separated.25 He was
holy, therefore, and not merely
innocent: for innocence is the
absence of — ignorance of —
evil, not separation from it.
God (who knows good and evil,
but is infinitely above and
separated from the evil, as it
is opposite to Him) is holy.
Christ was holy, and not merely
innocent, being consecrated in
all His will to God, and
separate from the evil, and
living in the energy of the
Spirit of God. Also, as offered,
the essence of the offering was
the fine flour, oil, and
frankincense, representing human
nature, the Holy Ghost, and the
perfume of grace. Negatively
there was to be no leaven or
honey: so, as to the manner,
there was the mingling with oil
and the anointing with oil;
also, for every sacrifice, the
salt of the covenant of God:
here noticed, because in what
concerned the grace of His human
nature, what concerned man (a
man offering Himself to God —
not as dying, but as living,
though tested even to death), it
might have been supposed to be
wanting, that it was as man's
act just as good. But its being
offered on the altar to God,
burned as a sweet savour, and
the three things first named,
formed the substance and essence
of the meat-offering.
The peace-offering now presents
itself to our notice. It is the
offering which typifies to us
the communion of saints,
according to the efficacy of the
sacrifice, with God, with the
priest who has offered it in our
behalf, with one another, and
with the whole body of the
saints as priests to God. It
comes after those which
presented to us the Lord Jesus
Himself in His devoting Himself
to death, and His devotedness
and grace in His life, but even
unto death, and the testing of
fire, that we may understand
that all communion is based on
the acceptability and sweet
odour of this sacrifice; not
only because the sacrifice was
needed, but because therein God
had all His delight.
I have already remarked that,
when a sinner, that is a guilty
person, approached, the
sin-offering came first; for the
sin must be borne and put away
that he might approach as
qualified to do so. But, being
cleansed and clean, he
approaches; and so here,
according to the sweet savour of
the offering of God, the perfect
acceptability of Christ, who
knew no sin, but consecrated
Himself in a world of sin to
God, that God might be perfectly
glorified — and His life also,
that all that God was in
judgment might be also glorified
— glorified by man in His
Person; and hence infinite
favour flow forth on them that
were received and that came by
Him. "Therefore doth my Father
love me, because I lay down my
life that I might take it
again." He does not say here,
because I have laid it down for
the sheep; that was rather the
sin-offering. He speaks of the
positive excellence and value of
His act; for in this Man wrought
all perfectness. In this all the
majesty and truth, the
righteousness against sin, and
love of God were infinitely
glorified in man, though much
more than a man, and, where poor
estranged man had got by sin, in
Him who was made sin for us.
"Now is the Son of man
glorified, and God is glorified
in him." "By man came death, by
man came also the resurrection
from the dead." The evil which
Satan had wrought was infinitely
more than remedied, in the scene
where the ruin was brought in;
yea, by the means through which
the ruin was effected. If God
was dishonoured in and by man,
He is a debtor in a certain
sense to man in Jesus for the
full display of His best and
most blessed glory: though even
this be all His gift to us, yet
Christ making Himself man has
wrought it out. But all that
Christ was and did was
infinitely acceptable to God;
and in this we have our
communion — not in the
sin-offering.26 Hence the
peace-offerings follow here at
once, though, as I have
remarked, the sin-offering came
first of all where the case of
application arose.
The first act in the case of the
peace-offering was the
presenting and killing it at the
door of the tabernacle of the
congregation and sprinkling the
blood, which formed the basis of
every animal offering, the
offerer being identified with
the victim by laying his hands
on his head.27
Next, all the fat, especially of
the inwards, was taken and burnt
on the altar of burnt-offering
to the Lord. Fat and blood were
alike forbidden to be eaten. The
blood was the life, and
necessarily belonged essentially
to God; life was from Him in an
especial manner; but fat also
was never to be eaten but burnt,
and so offered to God. The use
of this symbol, fat, is
sufficiently familiar in the
word. "Their heart is fat as
grease." "Jeshurun waxed fat and
kicked." "They are enclosed in
their own fat, with their mouth
they speak proudly." It is the
energy and force of the inward
will, the inwards of a man's
heart. Hence, where Christ
expresses His entire
mortification, He declares "They
could tell all His bones"; and,
in Psalm 102, "By reason of the
voice of my groaning my bones
cleave to my skin."
But here, in Jesus, all that in
nature was of energy and force,
all His inward parts, were a
burnt-offering to God, entirely
sacrificed and offered to Him
for such a sweet savour. This
was God's food of the offering,
"the food of the offering made
by fire unto Jehovah." In this
Jehovah Himself found His
delight; His soul reposed in it,
for surely it was very good —
good in the midst of evil — good
in the energy of offering to Him
— good in perfect obedience.
If the eye of God passed, as the
dove of Noah, over this earth,
swept by the deluge of sin,
nowhere, till Jesus was seen in
it, could His eye have rested in
complacency and peace; there on
Him it could. Heaven, as to the
expression of its satisfaction,
whatever its counsels, was
closed till Jesus (the second
and perfect Man, the Holy One,
He who offered Himself to God,
coming to do His will) was on
earth. The moment He presented
Himself in public service,
heaven opened, the Holy Ghost
descended to dwell in this His
one resting-place here, and the
Father's voice, impossible now
to be withheld, declares from
heaven, "This is my beloved Son,
in whom I am well pleased." Was
this object (too great, too
excellent, for the silence of
heaven and the Father's love) to
lose its excellence and its
savour in the midst of a world
of sin? Far otherwise. It was
there its excellency was proved.
If He learned obedience by the
things which He suffered, the
movement of every spring of His
heart was consecrated to God. He
walked in communion, honouring
His Father in all — in His life
and in His death. Jehovah found
continual delight in Him; and
above all, in Him in His death:
the food of the offering was
there. Such was the great
principle, but the communion of
our souls with this is further
given to us. The fat being burnt
as a burnt-offering, the
consecration to God is pursued
to its full point of acceptance
and grace.
If we turn to the law of the
offerings, we shall find that
the rest was eaten. The breast
was for Aaron and his sons, type
of the whole church; the right
shoulder for the priest that
sprinkled the blood, more
especially type of Christ, as
the offering priest; the rest of
the animal was eaten by him who
presented it, and those invited
by him. Thus there was identity
and communion with the glory and
good pleasure — with the delight
— of Him to whom it was offered,
with the priesthood and the
altar, which were the
instruments and means of the
offering, with all God's
priests, and among those
immediately taking part.
The same practice existed among
the heathen; hence the reasoning
of the apostle as to eating
things offered to idols. So,
alluding to the sacrament of the
Lord's supper, the purport of
which is strongly associated
with this type, "Behold Israel
after the flesh: are not they
which eat of the sacrifices
partakers of the altar?" And
this was so much the case, that
in the desert, when it was
practicable (and the analogous
order needful to maintain the
principle was established in the
land), no one could eat of the
flesh of any animal unless he
first brought it to the
tabernacle as an offering.28 We
indeed should eat in the name of
the Lord Jesus, offering our
sacrifices of thanksgivings, the
calves of our lips, and so
consecrate all we partake of,
and ourselves in it, in
communion with the Giver, and
Him who secures us in it; but
here it was a proper sacrifice.
Thus then the offering of
Christ, as a burnt-offering, is
God's delight: His soul delights
and takes pleasure in it; it is
of sweet savour with Him. Before
the Lord, at His table so to
speak, the worshippers, also
coming by this perfect
sacrifice, feed on it also, have
perfect communion with God in
the same delight in the perfect
sacrifice of Jesus, in Jesus
Himself thus offered, thus
offering29 Himself — have the
same subject of delight as God,
a common blessed joy in the excellency of the work of
redemption of Jesus. As parents
have a common joy in their
offspring, enhanced by their
communion in it, so, as filled
with the Spirit, and themselves
redeemed by Him, the worshippers
have one mind with the Father in
their delight in the excellency
of an offered Christ. And is the
Priest, who has ministered all
this, the only one excluded from
the joy of it? No; He has His
share also. He who has offered
it has part in the joy of
redemption. Further, the whole
church of God must be embraced
in it.
Jesus then, as priest, finds a
delight in the joy of communion
between God and the people, the
worshippers, wrought and brought
about by His means — yea, of
which He is the object. For what
is the joy of a Redeemer but the
joy and communion, the
happiness, of His redeemed? Such
then is all true worship of the
saints. It is joying in God
through the means of the
redemption and offering of
Jesus; yea, one mind with God;
joying with Him in the perfect
excellency of this pure and
selfdevoted victim,30 who has
redeemed and reconciled them,
and given them this communion,
with the assurance that this
their joy is the joy of Jesus
Himself, who has wrought it and
given it to them. In heaven He
shall gird Himself, and make
them sit down to meat, and come
forth and serve them.
This joy of worship necessarily
associates itself also with the
whole body of the redeemed,
viewed as in the heavenly
places. Aaron and his sons were
to have their part also. Aaron
and his sons were ever the type
of the church, not as Christ's
body (that was wholly hidden in
the Old Testament) but viewed as
the whole body of its members,
having title to enter into the
heavenly places, and offer
incense — made priests to God.
For these were the patterns of
things in the heavens, and those
who compose the church are the
body of heavenly priests to God.
Hence worship to God, true
worship, cannot separate itself
from the whole body of true
believers. I cannot really come
with my sacrifice unto the
tabernacle of God, without
finding necessarily there the
priests of the tabernacle.
Without the one Priest all is
vain; for what without Jesus?
But I cannot find Him without
His whole body of manifested
people. The interest of His
heart takes them all in. God
withal has His priests, and I
cannot approach Him but in the
way which He has ordained, and
in association with, and in
recognition of, those whom He
has placed around His house, the
whole body of those that are
sanctified in Christ. He who
walks not in this spirit is in
conflict with the ordinance of
God, and has no true
peace-offering according to
God's institution.
But there were other
circumstances we must remark.
First, none but those that were
clean could partake among the
guests. We know that moral
cleansing has taken the place of
the ceremonial. "Ye are clean
through the word which I have
spoken unto you." God has put no
difference between us and them,
having purified their hearts by
faith. Israelites then partook
of the peace-offerings; and if
an Israelite was unclean,
through anything that defiled
according to the law of God, he
could not eat while his
defilement continued.
Christians then, whose hearts
are purified by faith, having
received the word with joy,
alone can worship really before
God, having part in the
communion of saints; and if the
heart is defiled, that communion
is interrupted. No person
apparently defiled has title to
share in the worship and
communion of the church of God.
It was a different thing,
remark, to be not an Israelite,
and not clean. He who was not an
Israelite had never any part in
the peace-offerings; he could
not come nigh the tabernacle.
Uncleanness did not prove he was
no Israelite (on the contrary,
this discipline was exercised on
Israelites only); but the
uncleanness incapacitated him
from partaking, with those that
were clean, in the privileges of
this communion; for these
peace-offerings, though enjoyed
by the worshippers, belonged to
the Lord (Lev. 7:20-21). The
unclean had no title there. True
worshippers must worship the
Father in spirit and in truth,
for the Father seeketh such to
worship Him. If worship and
communion be by the Spirit, it
is evident that those only who
have the Spirit of Christ, and
also have not grieved the Spirit
(and thus rendered the
communion, which is by the
Spirit, impossible by the
defilements of sin) can
participate.
Yet there was another part of
this type which seemed to
contradict this, but which
indeed throws additional light
on it. With the offerings which
accompanied this sacrifice, it
was ordered (chap. 7:13) that
leavened cakes should be
offered. For though that which
is unclean is to be excluded
(that which can be recognised as
unclean), there is always a
mixture of evil in us, and so
far in our worship itself. The
leaven is there (man cannot be
without it); it may be a very
small part of the matter, not
come in to the mind, as it will
be when the Spirit is not
grieved, but it is there where
man is. Unleavened bread was
there also, for Christ is there,
and the Spirit of Christ in us
who are leavened, for man is
there.
There was another very important
direction in this worship.31 In
the case of a vow, it might be
eaten the second day after the
burning of the fat — Jehovah's
food of the offering; in the
case of thanksgiving-offering,
it was to be eaten the same day
This identified the purity of
the service of the worshippers
with the offering of the fat to
God. So is it impossible to
separate true spiritual worship
and communion from the perfect
offering of Christ to God. The
moment our worship separates
itself from this, from its
efficacy and the consciousness
of that infinite acceptability
of the offering of Christ to God
— not the putting away of sins,
without that we could not
approach at all, but its
intrinsic excellency as a
burnt-offering, all burnt to God
as a sweet savour32 — it becomes
carnal, and either a form, or
the delight of the flesh. If the
peace-offering was eaten
separately from this offering of
the fat, it was a mere carnal
festivity, or a form of worship,
which had no real communion with
the delight and good pleasure of
God, and was worse than
unacceptable — it was really
iniquity.
When the Holy Spirit leads us
into real spiritual worship, it
leads us into communion with
God, into the presence of God;
and then, necessarily, all the
infinite acceptability to Him of
the offering of Christ is
present to our spirit. We are
associated with it: it forms an
integral and necessary part of
our communion and worship. We
cannot be in the presence of God
in communion without finding it
there. It is indeed the ground
of our acceptance, as of our
communion.
Apart from this then our worship
falls back into the flesh; our
prayers (or praying well) form
what is sometimes called a gift
of prayer, than which nothing
often is more sorrowful (a
fluent rehearsal of known truths
and principles, instead of
communion and the expression of
praise and thanksgiving in the
joy of communion, and even of
our wants and desires in the
unction of the Spirit); our
singing, pleasure of the ear,
taste in music, and expressions
in which we sympathise — all a
form in the flesh, and not
communion in the Spirit. All
this is evil; the Spirit of God
owns it not; it is not in spirit
and in truth; it is really
iniquity.
There was a difference in the
value of the various kinds of
this offering: in the case of a
vow it might be eaten the second
day; in the case of thanksgiving
only the first. This typified a
different degree of spiritual
energy. When our worship is the
fruit of unfeigned and
single-eyed devotedness, it can
sustain itself longer, through
our being filled with the
Spirit, in the reality of
communion, and our worship be
acceptable — the savour of that
sacrifice being thus longer
maintained before God, who has
fellowship with the joy of His
people. For the energy of the
Spirit maintains His joy in His
people in communion acceptable
to God. When, on the other hand,
it is the natural consequence of
blessing already conferred, it
is surely acceptable as due to
God, but there is not the same
energy of communion. — The
thanks are rendered thus in
communion with the Lord, but the
communion passes away with the
thanksgiving really offered.
Note we also, that we may begin
in the Spirit and pass into the
flesh in worship. Thus, for
example, if I continue to sing
beyond the real operation of the
Spirit, which happens too often,
my singing, which at the
beginning was real melody in the
heart to the Lord, will
terminate in pleasant ideas and
music, and so end in the flesh.
The spiritual mind, the
spiritual worshipper, will
discover this at once when it
happens. When it does happen, it
always weakens the soul, and
soon accustoms to formal worship
and spiritual weakness; and then
evil, through the power of the
adversary, soon makes its
appearance among the
worshippers. The Lord keep us
nigh to Himself to judge all
things in His presence, for out
of it we can judge nothing!
It is good to bear strongly in
mind this expression, "which
pertain to Jehovah" (Lev. 7:20);
the worship, what passes in our
hearts in it, is not ours — it
is God's. God has put it there
for our joy, that we may
participate in the offering of
Christ, His joy in Christ; but
the moment we make it ours, we
desecrate it. Hence what
remained was burnt in the fire;
hence what was unclean must have
nothing to do with it; hence the
necessity of associating it with
the fat burnt to Jehovah, that
it may be really Christ in us,
and so true communion, the
giving forth of Christ, on whom
our souls feed, towards God.
Let us remember that all our
worship pertains to God, that it
is the expression of the
excellency of Christ in us, and
so our joy, as by one Spirit,
with God. He in the Father, we
in Him, and He in us, is the
marvellous chain of union which
exists in grace as well as in
glory: our worship is the
outgoings and joy of heart
founded on this, towards God, by
Christ. So, as Himself
ministering in this, the Lord
says, "I will declare thy name
unto my brethren, in the midst
of the church will I sing praise
unto thee." He surely is in joy
and knows redemption is
accomplished. May we be in tune
with our heavenly Guide! He
shall well conduct our praises,
and agreeably to the Father. His
ear shall be attentive when He
hears this voice lead us. What
perfect and deep experience of
what is acceptable before God
must He have, who, in
redemption, has presented all
according to God's mind! His
mind is the expression of all
that is agreeable to the Father,
and He leads us, taught by
Himself, though imperfect and
feeble in it, in the same
acceptableness. We have the mind
of Christ.
The "calves of our lips" is the
expression of the same Spirit in
which we offer our bodies a
living sacrifice, holy and
acceptable unto God, proving
what is His good and perfect and
acceptable will: such our
worship, such our service, for
our service should be in a
certain sense our worship.
There is added to the directions
of this sacrifice a commandment
to eat neither fat nor blood.
This evidently finds its place
here, inasmuch as the
peace-offerings were the
sacrifices where the worshippers
ate a great part. But from what
we have said, the signification
is evident; the life and inward
energies of the heart belonged
wholly to God. Life belonged to
God and was to be consecrated to
God; to Him alone it belonged or
could belong. Life spent or
taken by another was high
treason against the title of
God. So as to fat — that which
characterised no ordinary
functions, as the movements of a
limb, or the like, but the
energy of the nature itself
expressing itself — belonged
exclusively to God. Christ alone
rendered it to God, because He
alone offered to God what was
due; and hence the burning of
the fat in these and other
offerings represented His
offering Himself a sweet savour
to God. But it was not less true
that all belonged to God and
belongs to God: man could not
appropriate it to his use. Use
might be made of it in the case
of a beast dying or torn; but
whenever man of his will took
the life of a beast, he must
recognise the title of God, and
submit his will, and own the
will of God as alone having
claim.
We come now to the sacrifices
which were not sacrifices of
sweet savour — the sin and
trespass-offerings, alike in the
great principle, though
differing in character and
detail: this difference we will
notice. But first a very
important principle must be
noticed. The sacrifices of which
we have spoken, the sacrifices
of sweet savour, presented the
identity of the offerer and the
victim: this identity was
signified by the laying on of
the hands of the worshippers.
But in those sacrifices the
worshipper came as an offerer,
whether Christ or one led by the
Spirit of Christ, and so
identified with Him in
presenting himself to God — came
of his own voluntary will, and
was identified as a worshipper
with the acceptability and
acceptance of his victim.
In the case of the sin-offering,
there was the same principle of
identity with the victim by
laying on of hands; but he who
came, came not as a worshipper,
but as a sinner; not as clean
for communion with the Lord, but
as having guilt upon him; and
instead of his being identified
with the acceptability of the
victim, though that became
subsequently true, the victim
became identified with his guilt
and unacceptableness, bore his
sins and was treated
accordingly. This was completely
the case where the sin-offering
was purely such. I have added,
"though that became subsequently
true," because in many of the
sin-offerings a certain part
identified them with the
acceptableness of Christ, which,
in Him who united in His Person
the virtue of all the
sacrifices, could never be lost
sight of. The distinction
between the identity of the
victim with the sin of the
guilty, and the identity of the
worshipper with the acceptance
of the victim, marks the
difference of these sacrifices
and of the double aspect of the
work of Christ very clearly.
I now come to the details. There
were four ordinary classes of
sin and trespass-offerings,
besides two very important
special offerings, of which we
may speak hereafter: sins where
natural conscience was violated;
that which became evil by the
ordinance of the Lord, as
uncleannesses which made the
worshipper inadmissible, and
other things (this had a mixed
character of sin and trespass,
and is called by both names);
wrongs done to the Lord in His
holy things; and wrongs done to
the neighbour by breaches of
confidence and the like. The
first class is in Leviticus 4;
the second, attached to it, down
to verse 13 of chapter 5; the
third, from verse 14 to the end;
the fourth, in the first seven
verses of chapter 6.
The two other remarkable
examples of sin-offering were
the day of expiation, and the
red heifer, which demand an
examination apart. The
circumstances of the offering
were simple. In the case of the
high priest and the body of the
people sinning, it is evident
that all communion was
interrupted. It was not merely
the restoration of the
individual to communion which
was needed, but the restoration
of communion between God and the
whole people; not the forming a
relation (the day of atonement
effected that), but the
re-establishment of interrupted
communion. Hence the blood was
sprinkled before the veil seven
times for the perfect
restoration of this communion,
and the blood also put on the
horns of the altar of incense.
When the sin was individual, the
communion of the people in
general was not interrupted, but
the individual had lost his
enjoyment of the blessing. The
blood was sprinkled therefore,
not where the priest approached
— at the altar of incense; but
where the individual did — at
the altar of burnt-offering. The
efficacy of the sin-offering of
Christ is needed, but has been
once for all accomplished, for
every fault; but the communion
of the worshipping body of the
church, though lamed and
hindered, is not cut off by the
individual sin; but when this is
known, restoration is needed and
the offering demanded.33 That the
Lord may punish the whole
congregation, if the sin lie
undetected, we know; for He did
so in Achan. That is, the power
belonging to a state in which
God is ungrieved, is enfeebled
and lost, and where conscience
is awake and the heart
interested in the blessing of
God's people, this leads to
search out the cause. But this
is connected with the government
of God; the imputation of sin as
guilt is another matter, but sin
in itself has always its own
character with God. "Israel,"
said He, "has sinned;" but Achan
only suffers when the evil is
known and purged, and blessing
returns, though with much
greater difficulty. The truth
is, that He who knows how to
unite general government with
particular judgment, even where
there is general faithfulness,
puts in evidence individual
evil, or permits it not (a yet
higher and happier case); and,
on the other hand, can employ
the sin of the individual as a
means of chastening the whole.
Indeed it appears to me very
clear, in the case alluded to,
that, though the occasion of the
chastening is evident in the sin
of Achan, Israel had shewn a
confidence in human strength
which was chastised and shewn
vain in the result, as divine
strength was shewn
all-sufficient in Jericho.
However that is, it is evident
from the detail of these
sin-offerings that God can let
nothing pass; He can forgive all
and cleanse from all, but let
nothing pass. The sin hidden to
a man's self is not hidden to
God; and why is it hidden to
himself, but that negligence,
the fruit of sin, has stupified
his spiritual intelligence and
attention?
God judges sins according to the
responsibility of those who are
judged. But in the sovereign
work of grace God judges of sin
in those who approach Him, not
according to what becomes man,
but what becomes Himself. He
dwelt in the midst of Israel,
and Israel must be judged
according to what becomes God's
presence: our privileges are the
measure of our responsibility.
Men admit to their society what
becomes themselves, and do not
admit the base and corrupt,
allowing their evil, because it
is suited to their estate so to
act. And is God alone to profane
His presence by acting
otherwise? Is all the evil which
man's corruption leads him into
to find its sanction only in the
presence of God? No; God must
(in order to make us happy by
His presence) judge evil, all
evil, according to His presence,
so as to exclude it from it. Has
the moral stupidity, which is
the effect of sin, made us
ignorant of it in ourselves? Is
God to become blind because sin
has made us so — to dishonour
Himself and make others
miserable, and all holy joy
impossible everywhere, even in
His presence; to let pass the
evil? Impossible. No; all is
judged, and judged in the
believer according to the place
grace has brought him into.
God is ignorant of nothing, and
evil, however hidden to us, is
evil to Him. "All things are
naked and open before the eyes
of him with whom we have to do."
He may have compassion,
enlighten by His Spirit, provide
a way of approach so that the
greatest sinner may come,
restore the soul that has
wandered, take account of the
degree of spiritual light, where
light is honestly sought; but
that does not change His
judgment of evil. "The priest
shall make an atonement for him
concerning his sin wherein he
erred and wist it not, and it
shall be forgiven him. It is a
trespass-offering; he has
certainly trespassed against
Jehovah."
I have now to remark certain
differences in these
sin-offerings full of interest
to us in the detail.
The bodies of those in which the
whole people, or the high priest
(which came to the same thing,
for the communion of the whole
body was interrupted), were
concerned, were burnt without
the camp; not those for
individuals, nor those which
were for a sweet savour, a
sacrifice made by fire, though
the whole were burnt. But those
for the high priest, or the
whole people were: they had been
made sin, and were carried out
of the camp as such. The
sacrifice itself was without
blemish, and the fat was burnt
on the altar; but, the offender
having confessed his sins on its
head, it was viewed as bearing
these sins, and made sin of God,
was taken without the camp; as
Jesus (as the epistle to the
Hebrews applies it) suffered
without the gate, that He might
sanctify the people with His own
blood. This was always the case
when the blood was brought into
the sanctuary for sin.
One of the sacrifices, of which
I do not enter into the details
here, was abstractedly and
altogether viewed in this light
of sin, and was slain and burnt,
fat and blood (part of the blood
having been first sprinkled at
the door of the tabernacle), and
every part of it, without the
camp. This was the red heifer.
In the three other sacrifices,
which concerned the whole
people, the bodies were burnt
indeed without the camp, but the
connection with the perfect
acceptance of Christ in His
work, as offering Himself, was
preserved, in the burning of the
fat on the altar of
burnt-offering, and thus gave us
the full sense of how He had
been made sin indeed, but that
it was He who knew no sin, and
whose offering in His most
inmost thoughts and nature was
in the trial of God's judgment
perfectly agreeable. But though
the fat was burnt on the altar
to maintain this association and
the unity of the sacrifice of
Christ, yet, maintaining the
general character and purpose of
the diversity, it is not
habitually called34 a sweet
savour to Jehovah.
There was a difference, however,
between one of the three
last-mentioned sacrifices, the
sacrifice of the great day of
atonement, and the two others
mentioned in the beginning of
Leviticus 4. In the sacrifice of
the great day of expiation the
blood was carried within the
veil; for this was the
foundation of all other
sacrifices, of all relationship
between God and Israel, and
enabled God to dwell among them
so as to receive the others. Its
efficacy lasted throughout the
year — for us, for ever — as the
apostle reasons in the Hebrews;
and on it was based all the
intercourse between God and the
people. Hence the blood of it
was sprinkled on the mercy-seat,
to be for ever before the eyes
of Him, whose throne of grace,
as of righteousness, that
mercy-seat was thus to be. And
God, by virtue of it, dwelt
among the people, careless and
rebellious as they were.
Such also is the efficacy of the
blood of Jesus. It is for ever
on the mercy-seat, efficacious
as the ground of the
relationship between us and God.
The other sin-offerings referred
to were to restore the communion
of those who were in this
relationship. Hence, in
Leviticus 4:1-21, the blood was
sprinkled on the altar of
incense, which was the symbol of
the exercise of this communion;
the residue poured out, as
habitually in the sacrifices, at
the altar of burnt-offering —
the place of accepted sacrifice;
the body, as we have seen, was
burnt. In the case of the
offerings for the sin and
trespass of an individual the
communion of the body was not
directly in question or
interrupted, but the individual
was deprived of the enjoyment of
it. Hence the altar of incense
was not defiled or
incapacitated, as it were, in
its use; on the contrary it was
continually used. The blood of
these sacrifices, therefore, was
put on the horns of the altar of
burnt-offering, which was always
the place of individual
approach. Here, by Christ and
the efficacy of the sacrifice of
Christ once offered, every
individual soul approaches; and,
being thus accepted, enjoys all
the blessing and the privileges
of which the church at large is
continually in possession. But
for us the veil is rent, and as
to conscience of guilt we are
perfected for ever. If our walk
be defiled, water by the word
restores the communion of our
souls, and that with the Father
and with His Son.
To speak of resprinkling of
blood consequently upsets the
real position of the Christian,
and throws him back on his own
imperfect state as to acceptance
and righteousness. There may be
a repeated remedy, but one who
is on that ground drops the
question of holiness, and makes
continuous righteousness in
Christ uncertain. "Blessed is
the man to whom the Lord imputes
not iniquity," is unknown in
such cases; as is also that the
worshipper once purged should
have no more conscience of sins.
Were it so, as the apostle
urges, Christ must have suffered
often. Without shedding of blood
is no remission.
But there was another
circumstance in these
sin-offerings for the
individual. The priest who
offered the blood ate the
victim. Thus there was the most
perfect identity between the
priest, and the victim which
represented the sin of the
offerer. As Christ is both, the
eating by the priest shews how
He did thus make it His own.
Only, in Christ, what was thus
typified was first effected when
victim, and the priesthood, as
exercised for us now in heaven,
comes after. Still this eating
shews the heart of Christ taking
it up as He does for us when we
fail, not merely its being laid
vicariously on Him, though then
His heart took up our cause. But
He cared for the sheep.
The priest had not committed the
sin; on the contrary, he had
made atonement for it by the
blood which he had sprinkled,
but he identified himself
completely with it. Thus Christ,
giving us the most complete
consolation — Himself spotless,
and who has made the atonement,
yet identified Himself with all
our faults and sins, as the
worshipper in the peace-offering
was identified with the
acceptance of the sacrifice.
Only that now, the one offering
having been made once for all,
if sin is in question, it is in
advocacy on high that He now
takes it up, and in connection
with communion, not with
imputation. There is nothing
more to do with sacrifice or
blood sprinkling. His service is
founded on it.
The fat was burnt on the altar,
where the priest was identified
with the sin which was on the
offerer of the victim, but
transferred to it. It was lost,
so to speak, and gone in the
sacrifice. He who drew nigh came
with confession and humiliation,
but, as regarded guilt and
judgment, it was taken up by the
priest through the victim; and,
atonement having been made,
reached not the judgment-seat of
God, so as further to affect the
relation between God and the
offender. Yet here it was
perpetual repetition. Communion
was restored in the acceptance
of the sacrifice, as the sin
which hindered the communion was
entirely taken away, or served
only to renew (in a heart
humbled into the dust, and
annihilated before the goodness
of God) the communion founded on
goodness become infinitely more
precious, and established on the
renewed sense of the riches and
security of that mediation there
typically exhibited, but which
Christ has accomplished once for
all, eternally for us, as
sacrifice, and makes good as to
the blessings flowing from it
continually on high; not to
change the mind of God to us,
but to secure our present
communion and enjoyment, in
spite of our miseries and
faults, in the presence, the
glory, and the love of Him who
changes not.35
Some interesting circumstances
remain to be observed. It is
remarkable that nothing was so
stamped with the character of
holiness, of entire, real
separation to God, as the
sin-offering. In the other
cases, perfect acceptance, a
sweet savour, and in some cases
our leavened cakes, are found
therewith in the use of them;
but all passed in the natural
delight, so to speak, which God
took in what was perfect and
infinitely excellent, though it
supposed sin and judgment to be
there; but here the most
remarkable and exact sanctions
of its holiness were enjoined
(Lev. 6:26-28). There was
nothing in the whole work of
Jesus which so marked His entire
and perfect separation to God
His positive holiness, as His
bearing sin. He who knew no sin
alone could be made sin, and the
act itself was the most utter
separation to God conceivable,
yea, an act which no thought of
ours can fathom, to bear all,
and to His glory. It was a total
consecration of Himself, at all
cost, to God's glory; as God,
indeed, could accept nothing
else. And the victim must have
been as perfect as the
self-offering was.
As a sacrifice then for sins,
and as made sin, Christ is
specially holy; as indeed, now
in the power of this sacrifice,
a Priest present before God,
making intercession, He is
"holy, harmless, separate from
sinners, made higher than the
heavens." Yet, so truly was it a
bearing of sins, and viewed as
made sin, that he who carried
the goat before his letting
loose, and he that gathered the
ashes of the red heifer, and
sprinkled the water of
separation, were unclean until
even, and must wash to come into
the camp. Thus are these two
great truths in the sin-offering
of Christ distinctly presented
to us in these sacrifices. For,
indeed, how can we conceive a
greater separation to God, in
Christ, than His offering
Himself as a victim for sin?
And, on the other hand, had He
not really borne our sins in all
their evil, He could not have
put them away really in the
judgment.
Blessed for ever be His name who
has done it, and may we ever
learn more His perfectness in
doing it!
We have, then, in these
sacrifices, Christ in His
devotedness unto death; Christ
in the perfection of His life of
consecration to God; Christ, the
basis of the communion of the
people with God, who feeds, as
it were, at the same table with
them; and finally, Christ made
sin for those who stood in need
of it, and bearing their sins in
His own body on the tree. We
shall find that in the law of
the offerings the question is
chiefly as to what was to be
eaten in these sacrifices, and
by whom, and under what
conditions.
The law of the offerings: what
was to be eaten, by whom, and
under what conditions
The burnt-offering and the
meat-offering for a priest were
to be entirely burnt. It is
Christ Himself, offered wholly
to God, who offers Himself. As
to the burnt-offering, the fire
burnt all night upon the altar
and consumed the victim, the
sweet-smelling savour of which
ascended thus to God, even
during the darkness, where man
was far from Him, buried in
sleep. This too is true, I doubt
not, as to Israel now. God has
the sweet savour of the
sacrifice of Christ towards Him,
while the nation forgets Him.
However this may be, the only
effect for us of the judgment of
the holy majesty of God — the
fire of the Lord, now that
Christ has offered Himself, is
to cause the sweet smell of this
precious sacrifice to ascend
towards God.
Of the other sacrifices, the
meat-offering and the
sin-offering, the priest ate.
The first pictures the saint in
his priestly character feeding
on the perfectness of Christ;
the last, Christ, and even those
who are His, as priests, in
devoted love and in sympathy
with others, identifying
themselves with their sin and
with the work of Christ for that
sin. To Him alone it was, of
course, to bear that sin; but
founded on His work our hearts
can take it up in a priestly way
before God. They are connected
in grace with it according to
the efficacy of the sacrifice of
Christ; they enjoy the grace of
Christ therein. Christ entered
into it directly for us, we in
grace into what He did. This is,
however, a solemn thing. It is
only as priests that we can
participate in it, and in the
consciousness of what it means.
The people ate of the
peace-offerings, which, though
they were holy, did not require
that nearness to God. It was the
joy of the communion of
believers, based on the
redemption and the acceptance of
Christ. Therefore the directions
for these of offerings follow
those given for the sacrifices
for sin and trespass, although
the peace-offering comes before
the sin-offering in the order of
the sacrifices, because, in the
former, it required to be a
priest to partake of them. There
are things which we do as
priests; there are others which
we do as simple believers.
The sacrifices and the rules for
partaking of them being thus
appointed, priesthood is
established (Lev. 8) according
to the ordinance. Aaron and his
sons are washed; Aaron is then
clothed, and the tabernacle, and
all that was therein, was
anointed, and Aaron also, and
this without blood.
In this we have, I apprehend, a
bright inlet into the way in
which the universe is filled
with glory. When Aaron alone is
anointed without blood, the
tabernacle is also. The fulness
of the divine power and
spiritual grace and glory which
is in Christ, fills the whole
scene of created witness of the
glory of God; that is, the
energy of the Holy Ghost fills
it with the claim and witnesses
of the excellency of Christ.
When the creature has had to do
with it, then, indeed, as on the
great day of atonement, it has
all to be purified and
reconciled with blood. But this
does not undo the direct title
in grace and divine excellency
in Jesus. It is His on this
ground too. It is His as Creator
of it all. It may have
contracted impurity. Redemption
is the ground of the restitution
of all things, and the creature
is delivered from the bondage of
corruption. But as His creation
it all belonged to God. As the
normal order it was, as created
— consecrated to God (see also
Col. 1:16 and 21).
When Aaron's sons are brought
in, the altar is purified with
blood, because we have got out
of the mere personal excellency
and title of Christ. When the
sons of Aaron are clothed with
the priestly garments,
sacrifices are offered,
beginning with the bullock for a
sin-offering, and Aaron and his
sons have its blood put upon ear
and thumb and toe; and then
Aaron and his garments, his sons
and their garments with him, are
sprinkled with oil and blood
according to the directions
given in Exodus. The blood of
Christ and the Spirit are the
ground on which we, associated
with Him, have our place with
God.
On the eighth day Jehovah was to
appear and manifest the
acceptance of the sacrifices
offered on that day, and His
presence in the glory in the
midst of the people. This
manifestation took place
accordingly: first Aaron,
standing by the sacrifice,
blesses the people; and then
Moses and Aaron go into the
tabernacle, and come out and
bless the people. That is, there
is first Christ, as Priest,
blessing them, in virtue of the
offered sacrifice; and then
Christ, as King and Priest,
going in and hiding Himself for
a little in the tabernacle, and
then coming out and blessing the
people in this twofold
character. When this takes
place, as it will at the coming
of Jesus, the acceptance of the
sacrifice will be publicly
manifested, and the glory of
Jehovah will appear to the
people, then become true
worshippers through that means.
This is a scene of the deepest
interest; but there is a remark
to be made here. The church is
not found in this place (though
there are general principles
which apply to any case of
connection with God), unless it
be in the persons of Moses and
Aaron. The blessing comes and is
made manifest; that is, the
acceptance of the victim is made
manifest when Moses and Aaron
appear at their coming out of
the tabernacle. It will be thus
with Israel. When the Lord Jesus
appears, and they recognise Him
whom they pierced, the efficacy
of this sacrifice will be
manifested in favour of that
nation. It will be public by the
manifestation of Christ. Our
knowledge of that efficacy is
during the stay of Christ within
the veil, or rather in heaven
itself, for the veil is now
rent. Israel will not know the
acceptance of the sacrifice
until Christ comes forth as
King; for us the Holy Ghost is
come forth while He is yet
within, so that we have the
anticipatory certitude of that
reception, and are connected
with Him there. And it is this
which gives to the Christian his
proper character.
Here the manifestation takes
place in the court where the
sacrifice was offered, and when
Moses and Aaron have come to the
place where God talked with the
people (not where He Communed
with the mediator only, that is,
the ark of the testimony, where
the veil was no longer on the
face of him who also communed
with the Lord), and answering to
this figure the manifestation
will be here. There is a very
peculiar circumstance connected
with that. There had been no
sacrifice whose blood was
carried into the holy place,
though the body of the bullock
was burnt without the camp.36 A
sin-offering was indeed offered,
but it was such as ought to have
been eaten by the priest (see
Lev. 10:17-18). The
relationships which had been
established were comparatively
external. The sin and defilement
were carried clean out of the
camp and done away; but there
was no entering in within the
veil, or meeting God there.
Lastly, we have what, alas! is
always the case with man. The
first day the priesthood is
established, it comes short of
the glory of God. Nadab and
Abihu offer strange fire, acting
as men in nature in their
relationship with God, not
founding their service on the
altar of sacrifice, and they
die.
The priests must on no account
whatever depart from their
consecration (vers. 6, 7);
therefore they must be Nazarites
(ver. 9), apart from that which
is only the excitement of the
flesh, separated unto God from
all that which would let nature
loose in His presence; from that
which would prevent them from
feeling its power — a state of
abstraction in which the flesh
has no place. The presence of
God must have its full power,
and the flesh must be silent
before Him. It is only thus that
they would be able to discern
between that which is unclean
and that which is pure — that
which is profane and that which
is holy. There are lawful
things, real joys, which,
however, do not belong to
priesthood — joys which flow
from God's blessings, and which
do not keep the flesh in check
as does His presence; for there
is always a certain restraint on
the heart, on nature and its
activity, produced by the
presence of God. But priesthood
is exercised before Him.
Priesthood being established,
there comes the discernment
between holy things and profane,
and the judgment of defilements
(Lev. 11-15), and what was to be
done for the purification of
defiled persons. We see that it
is this nearness of separation
unto God which alone can discern
thus, and such is the service
and ever the duty of priests.
First, as to food, that which is
allowed to be eaten. In general
the principle seems to be, that
anything is allowed that is
clean, in this sense, first,
that it is thoroughly according
to its element, that is, in
principle, divine order (of
course here presented in a
figure), as fishes having
scales; secondly, that was
allowed which united mature
digestion to the absence of that
wilful energy which goes boldly
through everything. These two
qualities must be united. The
grossness which swallows down
things as they are, or the lack
of quiet firmness, rendered
unclean. To be clean, it must be
that which at the same time
chews the cud and divides the
hoof. Of birds, the carnivorous
night birds and those which
cannot be tamed are forbidden;
creeping things also, whatever
grovelled and trailed itself on
the earth. In general, there was
to be in their eating the
discernment of what was clean.
Then we have the judgment of God
fallen on that which would have
been, for unfallen man, joy and
blessing. The birth of a man,
connected now with sin, renders
unclean; that of a woman, in
whom was the transgression,
being deceived, still more so.37
Leprosy requires a little more
detail. It was found in persons,
in garments, in houses. Leprosy
was sin acting in the flesh. The
spiritual man — the priest —
discerns as to it. If the raw
flesh appears, he is unclean;
the strength of the flesh is at
work. If the man was white all
over, it was only the effect, as
sin entirely confessed but no
longer active; he was clean. The
thing spreads in man, if it be
evil in the flesh. The first
step is for him to confess; and
to confess under full spiritual
discernment, and the judgment of
God who has brought to light
what was acting in his nature.
He makes up his mind as one
judged and detected. He has no
part in the assembly of God,
though making part of it in one
sense. He is put out, without
the camp.
Leprosy (sin) manifested itself
in circumstances, in that which
surrounds us, as well as in
personal conduct. If it was only
a spot, the garment was washed,
and it was clean; if the plague
spot, on the contrary, spread,
the whole was burned; if the
plague, though it did not
spread, remained, after washing,
unchanged, the whole was burned.
If changed and it spread no
more, the spot was torn out.
If we get thus defiled by our
circumstances, and it is not in
the things themselves, we need
only wash and remain where we
are; if a part of them be
essentially bad, that it spread
defilingly in our whole
condition, all that part of our
outward life must be given up;
if, in spite of washing, sin be
still found the same there, if
we cannot walk therein with God,
such a position must be wholly
given up at any cost; if it be
affected by the washing and
cease to spread, the general
state being unaffected, the
particular thing which has
defiled is to be given up.
As to purification, the leper
was first considered as being
outside the camp, not belonging
to it; but if the activity of
the disease was stopped in him,
he was healed, but not yet
purified. Thus this type
supposes that the flesh, instead
of being active and
characteristic of the state of
man, is judged and arrested in
its activity. It is the
enjoyment of a recognised
relationship with God which is
to be established.38
The first part of the
purification relates to this
position. Christ being dead and
risen, man sprinkled with His
blood is fit, as regards the
controversy with God, and His
requirements, to enter the camp
of God's people; and then he can
share in the efficacy of the
means which they can use there,
of that which is found within,
in order to present himself as
acceptable before the tabernacle
of God. Two birds were to be
taken, and one killed by some
one, at the command of the
priest; for the priest's office
never properly began till there
was blood to offer or sprinkle,
though the high priest
represented Israel on the great
day of atonement.39 The two
birds, however, are identified,
so that we hear no more of that
which was killed, though the
efficacy of the blood be
everything in the work of
cleansing; the second is dipped
in the blood of the first.
Thus Christ dead is no more
found; but, being raised, He
sprinkles His blood, as priest,
on the unclean sinner. The
earthen vessel, over running
water, presents to us the
efficacy of the Holy Spirit,
according to the all-powerful
efficacy of which, in Christ as
man, this work of the death of
Jesus has been accomplished:
through the eternal Spirit He
offered Himself without spot to
God — God having brought again
from the dead the great Shepherd
of the sheep, through the blood
of the everlasting covenant. He,
the sinner, was under the
efficacy of Christ's work.
But now there is, before he can
offer, the work done on himself,
the actual cleansing applied to
him. He who cleansed himself
washed himself — a purification
of water as well as of blood,
which is always found; the moral
judgment of sin viewed as that
which excludes from God's
presence, so that the sinner is,
in principle and faith, morally
as well as judicially cleansed.
Of the last blood is the emblem;
but the water is the estimation
of sin as shewn in Christ's
death, and the forsaking of God.
It is in virtue of the death of
Christ, seen as His work for us,
for the water comes out of His
pierced side. He came by water
and blood. The leper rids
himself of anything to which
impurity might have attached, or
had a share in, and now he
enters the camp; and the work of
bringing him into communion with
God in his conscience begins.40
This is through realising all
the efficacy of the work of
Christ, with reference to
conscience itself — not only as
to the acceptance of the person,
according to God's knowledge of
that acceptance, but as to the
purification of the conscience,
and as to a knowledge of God,
based on a moral appreciation of
the work of Christ in every
aspect, and the excellent work
of the power of the Spirit of
God. This is the second part of
the cleansing of the leper, that
which took place after he had
re-entered the camp.
It is important to recognise the
work of Christ under these two
aspects; its intrinsic efficacy
for the acceptance of the person
on the one hand; and, on the
other, the purification of the
conscience itself, in order that
there may be communion with God,
according to the price and the
perfection of that work, known
in the conscience as a means of
drawing near to God, and as the
moral condition of that
nearness.
Let us now examine what took
place. The first thing was the
trespass-offering. The
conscience must be purified, by
the blood of Christ, of all that
with which, as a matter of fact,
it is charged, or would be
chargeable in the day of
judgment; and man must be
consecrated to God with an
intelligence which applies the
value of that blood to his whole
walk, his whole conduct, his
whole thoughts, and upon the
principle of perfect obedience.
It is the judicial purification
of the whole man, upon the
principle of intelligent
obedience — a purification
acting upon his conscience, not
merely an outward rule for a man
freed from the present power of
sin, but a purification of his
conscience felt in the knowledge
of good and evil, of which the
blood of Christ is the measure
before God. Man being a sinner,
having failed, the work must
take place in the conscience,
which takes an humbling
knowledge of it; and in becoming
cleansed through the precious
efficacy of the blood of Christ,
does so through the sorrow for
all that is contrary to the
perfection of that blood, and
which has required the shedding
of it.
It is thus man is consecrated.
The heart is first purified in
the conscience. The things to
which he had given way are, as
it were, brought to the
conscience, which takes a
painful knowledge of them,
according to the value of the
blood of the precious Lamb of
God, who, without spot, and
perfect in obedience, had to
suffer the agony caused by the
sin from which we have to be
cleansed — wretched creatures
that we are.
Afterwards the heart makes
progress in the power of its
communion, through the knowledge
of the most precious objects of
its faith. As to communion —
though never as to the
conscience of imputation (see
Heb. 10), and as to communion it
is by water (see John 13 and 1
John 2). This work must go on
again from time to time in the
conscience, whenever there is
something in our nature which is
not in subjection to Christ,
which is not brought captive to
the obedience of Christ.
The blood, then, was put upon
the tip of his right ear, his
right hand, his right foot — his
thoughts, his conduct, and his
walk purified on the principle
of obedience according to the
measure of Christ's death, and
the claim of the love displayed
in it. Over that they sprinkled
oil — the presence and
sanctifying influence of the
Holy Spirit as given to us, by
which we are anointed and sealed
— not washing (that was typified
by water, the application of the
word by the Spirit), but given
to consecrate in knowledge and
power of purpose and affection
to God (with whatever gifts
might be added thereto); the
whole man being thus
consecrated, according to the
intelligence and the devotedness
wrought by the Holy Spirit, to
God. After that the oil was put
upon his head, his whole person
being thus consecrated to Him.
The work was complete upon him
who was to be cleansed.41 After
that the sin-offering was
offered; that is, Christ (not
only for the purification of the
conscience in a practical sense,
for its actual faults, but that
sin might be judged in its full
extent before God; for Christ
was made sin for us, as well as
bore our sins) thus acts on our
consciences with regard to those
sins — makes us estimate sin,
such as it is in itself, seen in
the sacrifice of Christ.
Then the burnt-offering with the
meat-offering was offered; the
former, the appreciation of the
perfection of the death of
Christ, seen as the devoting of
Himself to God unto death, to
vindicate all the rights of His
majesty, and put away sin by the
sacrifice of Himself — in view
of the existence of sin; the
latter, the absolute sinlessness
of Christ, His perfection, and
the acting power of the Spirit
in Him even to death, and full
testing by it. This death was of
infinite perfection in itself,
as a work, for it can be said,
"Therefore doth my Father love
me, because I lay down my life,
that I might take it again." It
was not as bearing our sins, but
absolute devotedness to God and
His glory, in the circumstances
that sin had brought us into,
and into which Christ also came
by grace, that God might be
fully glorified in Him.
In the meat-offering was found,
besides, all the perfectness of
the grace of Christ in His life
— humanity, pure without doubt,
but kneaded with oil; humanity
having in it all the strength,
the taste, and savour of the
Holy Spirit in its nature; for
it is in that aspect that it is
presented here, not as anointed
with oil42 — as power — but
kneaded with oil in its
substance. Now the man is clean.
And how great is the importance
and the reality of the
reconciliation of a soul to God,
if it values all that is thus
unfolded of the work of Christ,
and of its application to the
soul; and certainly its
reconciliation does not take
place without. Alas! our
trifling hearts pass, perhaps
lightly, over this, and the
dealings of that hand of God
which does marvellous things
with the quiet ease which
perfect grace and power give.
However, we do see, sometimes,
in some souls (according to the
wisdom of God), the anguish and
the suffering which accompany
this work, when the conscience,
in view of the reality of things
before God, and through Christ,
takes knowledge of the state of
the heart, sinful and distant
from God in its nature.
This is the restoration of the
soul on the part of God. It is
all the working of divine power,
not merely as to the work and
resurrection of Christ, but even
as to the soul itself; for the
case here under supposition is
that of a man already vitally
cleansed. The priest judged him
already clean, but the leper was
not himself restored to God in
his conscience;43 and the Spirit
of God, for this purpose, goes
over the work of Christ, and its
application to the soul itself,
and its relationship with the
work and presence of the Holy
Spirit in its work, whether in
purifying the sinner, or in
consecrating the man. May our
gracious God render us attentive
to this! happy that the work
should be His, though it takes
place in us as well as for us.
There remains to be considered
leprosy in a house. In the case
of the leprous person, the whole
referred to the tabernacle. They
were still in the wilderness:
the walk in the world was what
was in question. But here the
being in the land of promise is
supposed. It does not refer to
the cleansing of the person; it
is more typical of an assembly.
When defilement appears there,
they take out the stones and the
plaster: the external walk is
quite changed, and the
individuals who have corrupted
this walk are taken out, and
thrown amongst the unclean. If
the whole be thereupon healed,
the house remains; if not, it is
wholly destroyed; the evil is in
the assembly itself, and it was
manifest, as in the case of the
leper. If its source was in the
stones taken away, if it was
only there, the end was
accomplished by taking out the
stones and removing the plaster,
reforming the whole external
walk. Purification consisted in
taking away the wicked who
corrupted the public testimony —
that which was manifested
outside. It was not a question
of restoring the conscience; the
whole rests anew on the
primitive efficacy of the work
of Christ, which renders the
assembly acceptable with God.
We shall find that the apostle
Paul, in his epistles addressed
to assemblies, says, "grace and
peace"; and, when writing to
individuals, adds "mercy."
Philemon seems an exception; but
the church is addressed with
him.
In the case of garments it is no
question about cleansing one's
person, but of getting rid of
defiled circumstances. We see
that the case of the house is
presented separate, being in the
land of promise, and not in the
walk of the wilderness. The same
truth is found in the
application, I doubt not. The
assembly is in the land of
promise; the individual walks in
the wilderness. However, stones
which corrupt the house may be
found there.
Other cases connected with the
weakness of nature are
mentioned, but which point out
that, sin having come in, all
that is of nature, of the flesh,
defiles (whatever may be the
excuse as to the weakness and
the unavoidable character of the
thing). If it cannot be avoided,
it is the manifestation, or at
least the inevitable existence,
of that which is shameful,
because it is a nature fallen
and sinful.
We shall find, however, that,
though being shameful, the case
is supposed less morally serious
than leprosy. In leprosy there
was the manifestation of
positive corruption, existing
beforehand in the nature, which
was admitted in the heart, so
that a long process was
necessary to purify the
conscience. Here they only
washed once, and they offered
merely a sin-offering, and they
were thereby able, in offering
their burnt-offering, to enter
into communion through the sweet
savour of Christ.
Having made provision for such
defilements of the people as
allowed of it, we have the
revelation, first, of the
general provision for the
purification of the sanctuary
which was in the midst of a
people who defiled it, and
secondly, for the atonement of
the sins of the people
themselves.
In general, there are two great
ideas; first, that the atonement
was made, so that the
relationship of the people with
God was maintained
notwithstanding their sins; and
then, in the second place, in
the difficulties which
surrounded the entrance of Aaron
into the holy place, there was
the testimony (according to the
Epistle to the Hebrews itself)
that the way into the holiest of
all was not yet made manifest
during that dispensation.
It is important to examine this
chapter under these two points
of view. It stands alone. No
mention is made anywhere else of
what took place on that solemn
day. The sacrifice of Christ, as
meeting God's righteousness
against sin as the ground of
redemption, was typified by the
passover. It was a question of
drawing near unto God who
revealed Himself on His throne —
of cleansing defilements — of
taking away the sins of those
who would draw near, and of
purifying their conscience. Now,
while presenting to us in figure
God's means of doing this, it
signified indeed that the thing
was not done. As to the general
idea of its efficacy, the high
priest drew near personally, and
filled the most holy place with
incense. So Christ goes in
personally in the perfect savour
of what He is for God. The place
of God's presence was full of
it.
The expression "that he die not"
expresses the absolutely
obligatory nature of anything
which was fulfilled in Christ.
Personally he appears before
God, being as ointment poured
forth, a sweet savour, connected
with fire from the altar, that
is, based on judgment and death,
but only bringing out a perfect
sweet odour to God: not blood
for others, but fire for the
testing of his perfectness; not
in this case to cleanse, but to
bring out the odour of this good
ointment. Then he took some
blood, which he put on the
mercy-seat and before the
mercy-seat. Atonement or
propitiation was made according
to the requirement of the nature
and majesty of the throne of God
Himself, so that the full
satisfaction made to His majesty
rendered the throne of justice
favourable, a place of
acceptance; grace had free
course, and the worshipper found
the blood there before him when
he drew near, and even as a
testimony before the throne.
Then, secondly, the high priest
cleansed the tabernacle, the
altar of incense, and all that
was found there. But it was only
that which was within.
There were thus two things; the
blood presented to God, the
throne was a throne of grace
according to righteousness — the
conscience being purified, so
that we enter with boldness now;
and then the place was cleansed,
with all that belonged to it,
according to the nature and
presence of God, who dwelt
there. In virtue of the
sprinkling of His blood, Christ
will reconcile all things in
heaven and earth — but here this
is only shewn as to the heavenly
part — having made peace through
the blood of His cross. There
could be no guiltiness in the
tabernacle, but it was the place
of God's dwelling, and God would
cleanse away the defilements,
that they might not appear
before Him.
In the third place (but this as
a distinct service) there was no
cleansing of that which was
outside, but the high priest
confessed the sins of the people
over the scape-goat, which, sent
away unto a land not inhabited,
bore all the sins away from God,
never to be found again. It is
here that the idea of
substitution is presented most
clearly. There are three things:
the blood on the mercy-seat, the
reconciliation of the sanctuary,
and the sins confessed and borne
by another.
It is evident that, though the
scape-goat was sent away alive,
he was identified as to the
efficacy of the work with the
death of the other. The idea of
the eternal sending away of sins
out of remembrance is only added
to the thought of death. The
glory of God was established, on
one side, in the putting of the
blood on the mercy-seat; and, on
the other, there was the
substitution of the scape-goat,
of the Lord Jesus, in His
precious grace, for the guilty
persons whose cause He had
undertaken; and, the sins of
these having been borne, their
deliverance was full, entire,
and final. The first goat was
Jehovah's lot — it was a
question of His character and
His majesty. The other was the
lot of the people, which
definitively represented the
people in their sins.
These two aspects of the death
of Jesus must be carefully
distinguished in the atoning
sacrifice He has accomplished.
He has glorified God, and God
acts according to the value of
that blood towards all.44 He has
borne the sins of His people;
and the salvation of His people
is complete. And, in a certain
sense, the first part is the
most important. Sin having come
in, the justice of God might, it
is true, have got rid of the
sinner; but where would then
have been His love and His
counsels of grace, pardon, and
even the maintenance of His
glory according to His true
nature as love, while righteous
and holy too?
I am not speaking here of the
persons who were to be saved,
but of the glory of God Himself.
But the perfect death of Jesus —
His blood put on the throne of
God — has established and
brought into evidence all that
God is, all His glory, as no
creation could have done it; His
truth (for He had passed
sentence of death) is made good
in the highest way in Jesus; His
majesty, for His Son submits to
all for His glory; His justice
against sin; His infinite love.
God found means therein to
accomplish His counsels of
grace, in maintaining all the
majesty of His justice and of
His divine dignity; for what,
like the death of Jesus, could
have glorified them?
Therefore this devotedness of
Jesus, God's Son, to His glory —
His submission, even unto death,
that God might be maintained in
the full glory of His rights,
has given its outlet to the love
of God, freedom to its action;
wherefore Jesus says, "I have a
baptism to be baptised with, and
how am I straitened till it be
accomplished!" His heart, full
of love, was driven back, in its
personal manifestation, by the
sin of man, who would not have
it; but through the atonement it
could flow forth to the sinner,
in the accomplishment of God's
grace and of His counsels,
unhindered; and Jesus Himself
had, so to speak, rights upon
that love — a position we are
brought into through grace, and
which has none like it.
"Therefore doth my Father love
me, because I lay down my life,
that I might take it again."
We speak with reverence of such
things, but it is good to speak
of them; for the glory of our
God, and of Him whom He has
sent, is found therein
established and manifested.
There is not one attribute, one
trait of the divine character,
which has not been manifested in
all its perfection, and fully
glorified in that which took
place between God and Jesus
Himself. That we have been saved
and redeemed, and that our sins
have been atoned for in that
same sacrifice, according to the
counsels of the grace of God, is
(I presume to say it, precious
and important as it is for us)
the inferior part of that work,
if anything whatever may be
called inferior where everything
is perfect: its object at least
— we sinners — is inferior, if
the work is equally perfect in
every point of view. Nor can
they indeed be separated; for if
sin had not been there, where
would that in God have been
displayed, which has been in
putting it away? Nor is it here
only, though we know it here; we
shall be eternally in glory, the
proof and living witness as to
the efficacy of Christ's work.
Having considered a little the
grand principles, we may now
examine the particular
circumstances.
It will have been observed that
there were two sacrifices; one
for Aaron and his family, the
other for the people. Aaron and
his sons always represent the
church, not in the sense of one
body, but as a company of
priests.
Thus we have, even in the day of
atonement, the distinction
between those who form the
church, and the earthly people
who form the camp of God on the
earth. Believers have their
place outside the camp, where
their Head has suffered as
sacrifice for sin; but, in
consequence, they have their
place in the presence of God in
the heavens, where their Head
has entered. Outside the camp,45
here below, answers to a
heavenly portion above: they are
the two positions of the ever
blessed Christ.
If the professing church takes
the position of the camp here
below, the place of the believer
is always outside. It is,
indeed, what she has done; she
boasts of it — but it is Jewish.
Israel must indeed recognise
themselves outside at last, in
order to be saved and to be
brought in again, through grace;
because the Saviour, whom they
despised in a day of blindness,
has in grace borne all their
sins as a nation, owned in the
remnant, for He died for that
nation. We anticipate that
position whilst Christ is in
heaven. The heart of the remnant
of Israel will indeed be brought
back to Jehovah before that
time; they will only enter into
the power of the sacrifice when
they shall look upon Him whom
they pierced, and mourn for Him.
Therefore was it prescribed that
it should be a day to afflict
their souls, and that he who did
not should be cut off.
The day of atonement supposes,
moreover, according to the state
of things found in the
wilderness, that the people were
in a state of incapacity for the
enjoyment of the relations with
God fully manifested. God had
redeemed them, had spoken to
them; but the heart of Israel,
of man however favoured, was
incapable of it in its natural
state. Israel had made the
golden calf, and Moses put a
veil over his face; Nadab and
Abihu had offered strange fire
upon the altar of God — fire
which had not been taken from
the altar of burnt-offering. The
way into the holiest is closed;
Aaron is forbidden to enter
there at all times. He never
went in in his garments of glory
and beauty. When he went in, it
was not for communion, but for
the cleansing of the sanctuary
defiled by the iniquities of a
people among whom God dwelt; and
the day of atonement is only
introduced with a prohibition of
entering at all times into the
holy place, and is conspicuous
as taking place after the death
of the sons of Aaron. He does it
with a cloud of incense, lest he
die. It was truly a gracious
provision, in order that the
people should not perish on
account of their defilements;
but the Holy Ghost was
signifying that the way into the
holiest of all was not yet made
manifest.
In what, then, is our position
changed? The veil is rent; and
we enter, as priests, with
boldness into the holiest, by a
new and living way through the
veil, that is to say, the flesh
of Christ. We enter in without
conscience of sins, because the
blow which rent the veil, to
shew all the glory and the
majesty of the throne, and the
holiness of Him who sits
thereon, has taken away the sins
which would have incapacitated
us from entering in, or from
looking within. We are even
seated there in Christ our Head
— the Head of His body the
church.
In the meantime, Israel is
outside. The church is seen in
the Person of Christ, the High
Priest, and the whole of this
dispensation is the day of
atonement, during which Israel's
High Priest is hid within the
veil. The veil which hid the
import of all these figures is
indeed done away in Christ, so
that we have full liberty by the
Spirit, but it is upon their
hearts. He maintains there
within, it is true, their cause
through the blood which He
presents; but the testimony to
it is not yet presented to them
outside, nor their consciences
freed by the knowledge that
their sins are lost for ever in
a land not inhabited, where they
will never be found again.
Now our position is, properly
speaking, inside, in the person
of Aaron, the blood being on the
mercy-seat. We are not only
justified by the scape-goat, as
being without; that is done, it
is clear, and once for all, for
the veil is only on the heart of
Israel, it is no longer between
us and God. But we have gone in
with the High Priest, as united
to Him; we are not waiting for
reconciliation till He comes
out. Israel, though the
forgiveness be the same, will
receive these things, when the
true Aaron comes out of the
tabernacle. This is why that
which characterised the
sacrifice of Aaron and his sons
was the blood put inside on the
mercy-seat, and the going in of
Aaron in person.
But the church is composed of
persons who are here below, who
have committed sins. Thus seen
in the world, they are, as to
their conscience, in the rank of
the outside people, as well as
Aaron himself, not viewed as a
typical individual; and the
conscience is purified by the
certainty that Christ has borne
all our sins in His body on the
tree. Our position is within
according to the value of the
blood of Christ, and the perfect
acceptance of His Person.
It is the same with regard to
the expectation of Christ. If I
consider myself as a man
responsible upon earth, I expect
Him for the deliverance of all
things, and to put an end to all
suffering, and to all the power
of evil; and so individually
myself, as a servant, I look to
receive, at His appearing here,
the testimony of His approval,
as a Master, before the whole
world, though if we had done all
that was commanded us we have
only to say we are unprofitable
servants, we have done that
which it is our duty to do — I
speak merely of the principle.
But if I think of my privileges,
as a member of His body, I think
of my union with Him above, and
that I shall come back with Him
when He shall come to appear in
His glory.
It is well we should know how to
make this distinction; without
it there will be confusion in
our thoughts, and in our use of
many passages. The same thing is
true in the personal religion of
every day. I can consider myself
as in Christ, and united to Him,
seated in Him in heavenly
places, enjoying all the
privileges which He enjoys
before God, His Father, and also
as united to Him as Head of the
body. I may also look upon
myself as a poor weak being,
walking individually upon the
earth, having wants, faults, and
temptations to overcome; and I
see Christ above, whilst I am
here below, Christ appearing
alone for me before the throne —
for me, happy in having, in the
presence of God, Him who is
perfect, but who has gone
through the experiences of my
sorrows; who is no longer in the
circumstances in which I find
myself — but with God for me who
am in them. This is the doctrine
of the Epistle to the Hebrews;46
whilst the union of the church
with Christ is more particularly
taught in that to the Ephesians;
in John's writings we are taught
that the individual is in Him.
After this quite special
instruction of the day of
atonement come some directions,
not to purify from defilements,
but to preserve from them either
the people or the service of the
priests (Lev. 17). It is to
maintain them as a people holy
to God, and keep them from all
that would dishonour Him in
their relations with Him, and
themselves in their relations
with others. Life belongs to
God. And where it is taken, it
must be offered in sacrifice and
in sacrifice of course to God.
The blood must be sprinkled, and
the fat burned on the altar.
Thus the danger of secret
departure of the heart to demons
was guarded against, and God's
title to life, and the truth of
sacrifice were maintained — all
vital truths. Thus God was owned
and honoured, and man's
relationship with Him.
Leviticus 18 keeps them from
dishonouring themselves in the
things which belong to nature
itself — to what man ought to be
in his natural relations, that
he might not dishonour himself.
Man ought not to do it; but, not
having honoured God, he has been
left to dishonour himself
(compare Rom. 1). The people of
God, being brought into nearness
to Him, are taught on this
subject. They were separated
from the evil of the world they
were called out of, and the
reckless profligacy into which
Satan had driven degraded man as
his sport. Verse 6 is the great
principle which is insisted on
in the chapter — not to confound
the intimacies of marriage with
the confidence of natural
relationship. Those things are
forbidden into which, in the
satanic and unnatural indulgence
of flesh, Satan plunged man, and
to which God had given them up
to work all uncleanness with
greediness. The comeliness of
nature is maintained; what is
defiling forbidden. Jehovah's
statutes and judgments were to
guide them: man in probation
walking in them would live.
Leviticus 19, 20, carry us
somewhat farther. They were to
be holy, for Jehovah was holy.
Chapter 19 takes up rather the
side of good, though keeping
themselves from all that was
profane, or profaning what was
holy; but we find what is good
and kind and comely, what ought
to be their conduct, in various
details, in the relationship
they sustain one with the other,
either with regard to various
dangers to which they were
exposed in their walk, in their
every-day circumstances: for
they had to do with God, and
Jehovah was their God. The
people of God were, in all their
ways, to walk in a manner worthy
of this relationship, and even
to understand what was suitable
to man, to every relationship in
which they were found, according
to God. Thus, though it was not
here priesthood, it was the
practical maintenance of this
relationship with Him who dwelt
among them, and to whom they
drew nigh, by guarding against
defilements unsuited to those
who were in it. It is here we
find the precept to love our
neighbour as ourselves.
Leviticus 20 guards more against
the evil and corruption which
was found amongst the nations.
In both they are called to be
holy, in chapter 19 more in
conformity to the character of
God, in chapter 20 to keep apart
from idols and evil because
Jehovah had sanctified them to
Himself. It insists upon purity
in every respect.
Leviticus 21 specially presents
what becomes the priests as set
apart for Jehovah: this more
intimate nearness supposed a
conduct corresponding with it.
All in their state must be fit
for God's presence. So it is
with us.
Leviticus 22. If there was,
through weakness or neglect,
anything unbecoming this
nearness, they were to keep at a
distance. Consequently there
were things of which the
priests, and those of their
families in priestly separation,
alone could eat. It is the same
with us: there are things of the
spiritual food of Christ,
offered to God, upon which we
can only feed, inasmuch as the
heart is really separated unto
Him, by the power of the Spirit.
The offerings themselves must be
pure, and such as become the
eyes of God to whom they are
presented, and a right
appreciation of His majesty, and
of our relationship with Him.
All this indeed is found in
Christ. No hardness of nature is
allowed, but holiness. In what
is connected with our own joy
before God, holiness must be
maintained in what is offered.
In Leviticus 20, where they are
forbidden to follow the brutal
and superstitious customs of
idolatry (to which Satan had
degraded man) and are warned
against all impurity, which
indeed was always inseparable
from it, and for which the
influence of the devil gave
license, we have this simple and
beautiful exposition of the
principle which was to govern
them: "Sanctify yourselves,
therefore, and be ye holy: for I
am Jehovah your God. And ye
shall keep my statutes, and do
them: I am Jehovah which
sanctify you." They are bound to
holiness and to sanctify
themselves practically, because
they are in the house, and the
Master of it is holy.
Sanctification supposed that
they were in an acknowledged
relationship with God, who will
have the inmates of His house
clean according to His own
cleanness.
But then His word was to be the
rule. They were to obey Him in
His directions, for it was He
who was separating them to
Himself. This is a very
instructive word as to the
standard of all our thoughts
with regard to that. If any are
in my house, I will have them
clean, because they are there;
those outside are no concern of
mine47. Then it was Jehovah who
was separating them for that.
There are interesting
instructions with regard to what
the priests ate, which we shall
find again in the following
book, and consider when we come
to it.
We have now come to the feasts
(Lev. 23). It is the full48 year
of the counsels of God towards
His people, and the rest which
was the end of those counsels.
There were consequently seven —
a number expressive of
perfection well known in the
word: the sabbath, the passover
and the feast of unleavened
bread, the firstfruits of
harvest, Pentecost, the feast of
trumpets in the seventh month,
the day of atonement, and the
feast of tabernacles.
If the sabbath be separated and
reckoned by itself, the passover
would be distinguished from the
feast of unleavened bread, which
would make the seven. I do not
say this to preserve the number,
but because the chapter itself
speaks thus: having counted the
sabbath amongst the others, it
resumes and calls the others
(without the sabbath) the solemn
feasts. For, in one sense, it
was indeed a feast; in another,
it was the rest, when the whole
was ended.49 In general these
feasts present us, then, with
all the bases on which God has
entered into relationship with
His people; the principles on
which He has gathered them
around Him, in His ways with
this people, upon the earth.
Their bearing was wider than
that, in other respects; but it
is in this point of view that
these circumstances, that is,
these facts, are here
considered. They are seen in
their accomplishment upon the
earth.
There is another way of dividing
them, by taking the words, "And
Jehovah spake unto Moses"50 as
the title of each part: the sabbath, the passover, and the
unleavened bread (vers. 1-8);
the firstfruits and the
Pentecost (vers. 9-22); the
feast of trumpets (vers. 23-25);
the day of atonement (vers.
26-32); the feast of tabernacles
(ver. 33 to the end). This
latter division gives us the
moral distinction of the feasts;
that is, the ways of God
therein. Let us examine them a
little more in detail.
The very first thing presented
is the sabbath, as being the end
and the result of all the ways
of God. The promise is left us
of entering into God's rest. It
is a feast to Jehovah; but the
feasts, which present rather the
ways of God to lead us there,
begin again at the fourth verse,
as we have already said (compare
vers. 37, 38). This distinction
being noticed, we can take the
sabbath,51 the passover, and the
feast of unleavened bread as
making a whole (vers. 1-8). Of
the two latter, the unleavened
bread was the feast, properly
speaking; the passover was the
sacrifice on which the feast was
grounded. As the apostle says,
"Christ our passover is
sacrificed for us: therefore let
us keep the feast, not with
leaven," etc.
What was indeed necessary for
the sabbath, for the rest of
God, was the sacrifice of
Christ, and purity; and though
all these feasts lead on to the
rest of God, yet these two, the
passover and unleavened bread,
are the basis of all, and of the
rest itself for us. Christ's
sacrifice and the absence of all
principle of sin, form the basis
of the part we have in the rest
of God. God is glorified in
respect of sin; sin is put away
for us, out of His sight, and
out of our hearts. The perfect
absence of leaven marked
Christ's path and nature down
here, and is accomplished in us,
so far as we realise Christ as
our life, and recognise
ourselves, though the flesh be
still in us, as dead and risen
with Him.52 It is thus that we
have seen the manna connected
with the sabbath in Exodus 16.
To be without leaven was the
perfection of the Person of
Christ living upon earth, and
becomes in principle the walk
upon earth of him who is
partaker of His life. In the
true and final sabbath, of
course, all leaven will be
absent from us. The sacrifice of
Christ and purity of life render
one capable of participating in
God's rest.
After that comes power, the
firstfruits; that is, the
resurrection of Christ on the
morrow after the sabbath — the
first day of the week. It was
the beginning of the true
harvest — harvest gathered, by
power, outside and beyond the
natural life of the world.
According to the Jewish law
nothing of the harvest could be
touched before: Christ was the
beginning, the firstborn from
the dead. With this first of the
firstfruits were offered
sacrifices for a sweet savour,
but not for sin. It is clear
there was no need for it. It is
Christ who has been offered to
God, quite pure, and waved
before God — placed fully before
His eyes for us, as raised from
the dead, the beginning of a new
crop before God — man in a
condition which not even
innocent Adam was in, the Man of
God's counsels, the second Man,
the last Adam: not, all hanging
on obedience which might fail,
and did, but after God had been
perfectly glorified in the place
of sin, past death, past sin
(for He died unto sin?, past
Satan's power, past judgment,
and consequently by thus wholly
out of the scene where
responsible man had stood, on a
totally new footing with God
after His finished work, and God
perfectly glorified; such a work
too as gave Him title to say,
therefore doth my Father love me
because I lay down my life that
I might take it again, and made
it God's righteousness to set
Him at His right hand in glory.
Connected with that comes the
meat-offering at the end of the
seven weeks. It is no longer
Christ here, but those who are
His, the firstfruits of His
creatures; they are considered
as being upon earth, and leaven
is found in them. Therefore,
though offered to God, they were
not burned as a sweet savour
(Lev. 2:12); but with the loaves
was offered a sin-offering,
which answered by its efficacy
to the leaven found in them.
They are the saints of which
Pentecost commenced the
ingathering.
This feast was followed by a
long space of time, in which
there was nothing new in the
ways of God. Only they were
commanded, when they reaped the
harvest, not to make clean
riddance of the comers of the
field. A part of the good grain
was to be left in the field,
after the harvest was gathered
into the garner, but not to be
lost; it was for those who were
not enjoying the riches of God's
people, but who would
participate exceptionally by
grace in the provision which God
had made for them — in the
abundance which God had granted
them. This will take place at
the end of this age.
Pentecostal work being ended,
another series of events begins
(ver. 23) with the words
referred to, "And Jehovah spake
unto Moses." They blow up the
trumpet in the new moon (compare
Ps. 81; Num. 10:3, 10). It was
the renewal of the blessing and
the splendour of the people —
Israel gathered as an assembly
before Jehovah. It is not yet
the restoration of joy and
gladness, but at least the
renewal of the light and
reflected glory which had
disappeared takes place, and
enlightens their expectant eyes;
and they gather the assembly to
re-establish the glory.
But Israel must at least feel
their sin; and in the solemn
feast which follows, the
affliction of the people is
connected with the sacrifice of
the day of atonement: Israel
shall look on Him whom they have
pierced, and mourn. The nation
(at least the spared remnant who
become the nation) will
participate in the efficacy of
the sacrifice of Christ, and
that in their state here below,
repenting, and recognised of
God, so that the times of
refreshing will be come. This is
then the repentance of the
people, but in connection with
the atoning sacrifice. The
efficacy is in the sacrifice;
their participation in it is
connected with the affliction of
their souls (compare Zech. 12).
But Israel did nothing — it was
a sabbath — they were assembled
in humiliation in the presence
of God. They accept the pierced
One under the sense of the sin
of which they have been guilty
in rejecting Him.
Then follows the feast of
tabernacles. They offered,
during seven days, offerings
made by fire unto Jehovah; and
on the eighth day there was
again a holy convocation — an
extraordinary day of a new week
which went beyond the full time
— including, I doubt not, the
resurrection; that is, the
participation of those who are
raised in that joy.
It was a solemn assembly — that
eighth day, the great day of the
feast, on which the Lord (having
declared of the then time that
His hour was not yet come to
shew Himself to the world — His
brethren [the Jews] not
believing in Him either)
announced that for him who
believed in Him there would be,
in the meanwhile, rivers of
living water which would flow
from his belly; that is, the
Holy Spirit, who would be a
living power working in, and
flowing forth from the heart,
and in the expression of its
intimate affections. Israel had
indeed drunk of the living water
out of the rock in the
wilderness, the sojourn in
which, now past when the feast
of tabernacles is celebrated,
was celebrated with joy in the
memorial of that which was over,
to enhance the joy of the rest
into which they were ushered.
But believers now meanwhile were
not only to drink, for blessed
are those who have not seen and
yet have believed; the river
itself would flow from the
heart; that is, the Holy Spirit
in power, which they would have
received through Christ before
He should be manifested to the
world, or they have their place
in the heavenly Canaan.
Thus, the feast of tabernacles
is the joy of the millennium,
when Israel have come out of the
wilderness where their sins have
placed them; but to which will
be added this first day of
another week — the resurrection
joy of those who are raised with
the Lord Jesus, to which the
presence of the Holy Ghost
answers meanwhile.
Consequently, we find that the
feast of tabernacles took place
after the increase of the earth
had been gathered in, and, as we
learn elsewhere, not only after
the harvest but after the
vintage also; that is, after
separation by judgment, and the
final execution of judgment on
the earth, when heavenly and
earthly saints should be all
gathered in. Israel was to
rejoice seven days before
Jehovah.
The passover has had its
antitype, Pentecost its also;
but this day of joy is yet
awaiting Him who is to be the
centre and spring of it all, the
Lord Jesus, who will rejoice in
the great congregation, and
whose praise will begin with
Jehovah in the great assembly
(Ps. 22). He had already done it
in the midst of the assembly of
His brethren; but now the whole
race of Jacob is called to
glorify Him, and all the ends of
the world shall remember
themselves.
The expression, solemn assembly,
is not found applied to any of
the feasts but this, except to
the seventh day of the passover
(Deut. 16), as it seems to me
somewhat in the same sense. The
feast of tabernacles could not
be kept in the wilderness. In
order to observe it, the people
were to be in possession of the
land, as is plain. It is also to
be observed, that it never was
kept according to the
prescriptions of the law from
Joshua till Nehemiah (Neh.
8:17). Israel had forgotten that
they had been strangers in the
wilderness. Joy, without the
remembrance of this, tends to
ruin; the very enjoyment of the
blessing leads to it.
It will be remarked that,
properly speaking, all the
feasts are types of what is done
on earth and in connection with
Israel, unless we except the
eighth day of tabernacles. The
church period, as such, is the
lapse of time from Pentecost to
the seventh month. We may, and
of course do, get the benefit
of, at any rate, the two first;
but historically the type refers
to Israel.
The remaining chapters of this
book appear to me to have a
special bearing. The Spirit of
God has presented, in chapter
23, the history of the ways of
God towards His people upon
earth from beginning to end,
from Christ to the millennial
rest.
Chapter 24 presents first the
internal work, so to speak,
which related to priesthood
alone on the one hand, and the
public sin of an apostate on the
other — the fruit of the
alliance with an Egyptian who
blasphemed Jehovah. Through the
care of priesthood (whatever
might be God's public ways, and
the state of Israel) the
gracious light of the Spirit
would be maintained, and that
particularly from the evening
until the morning — the time
during which darkness brooded
over Israel.
Moreover, the incense which was
on the memorial of the bread,
representing the twelve tribes
of Israel, was burned as a sweet
smell to Jehovah, and the
priests identified themselves
with the tribes by eating this
bread — the action of eating
having the significance of
continued identification.
Thus priesthood maintained the
light with respect to Israel,
when all was darkness in the
midst of them, and the memorial
of Israel was in sweet savour
before God, the priesthood
identifying itself with them;
although the people were in the
eyes of man as lost, they exist
through the priesthood of Jesus
on high, as a memorial before
God. There is a certain sense in
which the church participates in
this, as is explained
doctrinally in Romans 11. This
is only as far as promise goes,
and the being children of
Abraham, not the mystery in
which we are taken up as lost
sinners, without promise, and
placed by sovereign grace in the
same glory as the Lord Jesus. In
Isaiah 54 we see that believers
are reckoned to Jerusalem, in
grace, though she were a widow.
Externally the judgment of
cutting off and death without
mercy is executed against him
that had cursed.
Chapter 25. The land itself is
held for Jehovah, as being His;
it must enjoy God's rest; and
moreover he who had lost his
inheritance therein should find
it again, according to the
counsels of God, at the
appointed time. The trumpet of
the jubilee would sound and God
would re-establish each one in
his possession, according to His
(God's) rights, for the land was
His. Their persons also were to
be free then, for the children
of Israel were God's servants.
It was not so with those not
belonging to God's people. And
although Israel have sold
themselves to the stranger, He
who made Himself nigh of kin has
redeemed them from his hands.
The day of jubilee will free the
people, whatever may be the
power of those who hold them
captives.
We have a touching picture of
the ways of God in patience and
in chastisement, if Israel
walked contrary to Him. When
they acknowledged their fault,
then He would remember the
covenant made with their
fathers, with Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob. This was a covenant
made without condition, and with
the land. Then He would remember
the covenant made with their
ancestors, under His name of
Jehovah, when they came out of
Egypt.53 God will take these two
titles on their restoration:
Almighty, the name of His
relationship with the fathers;
and Jehovah, the name of His
relationship with the people,
viewed as taken to Himself at
their coming out of Egypt.
The last chapter (27) treats of
the rights and the appointments
of God in all that relates to
things which are devoted to Him
through the medium of
priesthood. This necessarily
finds its place in that which
treats of priesthood; but it
has, I doubt not, a much wider
meaning. The subject treated is
that of him who devotes himself
to God, and that of the lands
belonging to Him — of the rights
of Israel, whose possession it
was not, and of their selling it
to others.
As to Christ, He offered Himself
without spot to God; He was
valued at a low price. Israel by
right belonged to Jehovah. As
Emmanuel's land, the Israelites
only enjoyed the land without
being proprietors, and they
could only pledge it till
jubilee; it would then return to
its possessor as Emmanuel's
land. Israel (looked at as the
possessor of the gift of God)
not having redeemed it when sold
to the stranger, when the
jubilee comes the land will be
absolutely the Lord's; the
priest will possess it. In
Zechariah 11 Christ is thus
valued, "whom they of the
children of Israel did value."
I only point out the principle
presented in the chapter,
without pretending to enter into
all the details of application
which may suggest themselves.
The principle is the important
thing to enable one to
understand the purpose of God;
in the case of any vow, whether
it be redeemed or not; or of
land, whether it shall return in
the day of jubilee, when God
shall take possession again of
His rights in the land of
Israel, and cause to enter those
whose right it is.
Thus the government of God,
resulting in His return in grace
to His unconditional promise and
[earthly] purpose are given to
us in chapter 26, and the
absolute title of Jehovah in
chapter 27. Chapter 26 is in
fact a parenthesis shewing God's
ways, with return to His promise
in grace; chapter 25 man's
redeeming, if he could, or his
kinsman; chapter 27 God's
absolute title.
It is to be observed also, that
the judgment is according to the
judgment of the priest. But
although this be attributed to
the priest, it is to the king in
Jeshurun (the upright) that the
appreciation is entrusted. This
shews plainly who is to do it,
and under what character, though
being according to the
discernment, the grace, and the
rights of priesthood. It is
Christ as Priest, but Christ as
King in Israel, who will order
all that.
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1) This is the character in
which God puts Himself thus into
relationship. Consequently most
of the directions given suppose
those to whom they apply to
stand already in the relation of
a people recognised of Him as
His people. But the people being
really without, and the
tabernacle presenting the
position in which God was
putting Himself in order to be
approached, the instructions
which are given in cases
supposing the people or the
individuals to be thus placed,
furnish those who are without
with the means of drawing near
to God, when they are in that
position, though no previous
relationship have existed. It is
very important to observe this:
it is the basis of the reasoning
of the apostle, in Romans 3, for
the admission of the Gentiles
and so of any sinner whomsoever.
It is true, nevertheless, that
most of the directions apply to
those who are already in
proximity with the throne.
Besides, all, in spite of
themselves, have to do with it,
although they do not approach
it, and especially now that, as
a testimony of grace, the blood
is on the mercy-seat, and the
revelation and testimony of
glory without a veil, the result
of grace and redemption, gone
out. The conditions of
relationship with the throne
that God establishes, where He
condescends to be approached by
His creatures, are presented,
which includes the details of
those He sustains with His
people.
The reader will remember, as
regards our drawing nigh to God,
the position of the Christian is
entirely changed from that of
the Jew. Then (Heb. 9) the way
into the holiest was not made
manifest, and no one, not even
the priests, could go into the
presence of God within the veil;
and the services were a
remembrance of sins. Now, the
work of Christ being
accomplished, the veil is rent.
It is not a people in a certain
relationship with God yet always
remaining without, drawing near
to the altar, or, at best, some
to the altar of incense. It is
full grace going out to the
world; and then, redemption
being accomplished, and
believers righteous before God,
their having all perfect
boldness to enter the holiest.
Hence, our subject is not the
character of approach, but the
figures of the means by which we
approach, in order to have
communion with God. I need
hardly add, the Father's love
does not come in question. It
was a throne of judgment which
was in the sanctuary, and who
could approach that? 2) My impression is that the tabernacle is the expression of the millennial state of things, save as to royalty, with which the temple is connected — the throne of God, in the holiest. I do not see that the veil will then be rent for those on earth, though all be founded on the sacrifice of Christ; but the high priest will go at all tunes into the holy place, and then in his robes of glory and beauty. The shew-bread and the seven-branched candlestick represent thus Israel in connection with Christ, as manifesting government, and light in the world, but in the place of priesthood with God. For us the veil is rent, and we enter with boldness into the holiest.
3)
For prophecy is a thing apart.
4) As
to acceptance, the Christian has
no more conscience of sins; but
the Israelite had never learnt
this; and hence, as we have
seen, his way of approaching
served, as to the means, to
portray the sinner's first
coming to God. The import of
Christ's sacrifice is often too
little seen. Man must come as a
sinner, and about and owning his
sins. He cannot come truly
otherwise, but when entered in
peace into God's presence,
feeble as we may be, we view it
from God's side, and daily see
more of the reality and value of
this great fact which stands
alone in the history of
eternity, and on which all and
eternal blessing is immutably
founded. Every point and power
of good and evil was there
brought to an issue; the
absolute enmity of man's heart
against God revealed in grace;
Satan's complete power over men;
man (Christ) perfect in
obedience and love to His Father
in the very place needed when He
was made sin; God perfect in
justice against sin (it became
Him), and perfect in love to the
sinner. And this being
accomplished, the perfect ground
was laid in justice, and in what
was accomplished and immutable,
for the display of God's love
and God's counsels, in what
morally could not change.
5) It
is to be remarked that we read
of no positive sin-offerings
before the law. The clothing of
Adam may suppose it, and Genesis
4:7 may be taken to speak of it,
but they are not professedly
offered; burnt-offerings
frequently. These suppose sin
and death, and no coming to God
but by sacrifice and death, and
reconciliation through it. But
the sacrifice is viewed in the
perfect self-offering of Christ,
so that God should be perfectly
glorified in that which was
infinitely precious in His
sight, and all He was,
righteousness, love, majesty,
truth, purpose, all glorified in
Christ's death so that He could
freely act in His grace. Sin is
supposed in it, and perfectness
of self-sacrifice to God there
where it was; but God glorified
rather than individuals' sins
borne. Hence worship according
to the sweet savour of it is
involved in it. A man far
departed from God, as such I
cannot come to God at all but on
this ground, and it will remain
valid for eternity and secure
all things: the new heaven and
earth are secured as the
dwelling-place of righteousness
by it. But my actual sins being
put away is another thing. In
one, the whole relationship of
man, indeed of all things with
God, is in question; in the
other, my personal sins. Hence
all acceptable sacrifice was of
the former kind: sacrifices for
sins when the relationship of a
people with God was established,
where every act referred to His
actual presence.
6) In these cases the burning
was outside the camp. It was the
same as to the scape-goat, which
immediately connected itself
with the rest of the work.
7) The burnt-offerings as such
were brought voluntarily; still,
it seems clear that this is not
the sense of the Hebrew word "ratzon"
here, but for his acceptance, to
be in divine favour. It remains,
just the same doctrinally true
that Christ, through the eternal
Spirit, offered Himself without
spot to God.
8) This is a signal instance
that the order set up in the
wilderness was not the image,
but only a shadow of good things
to come; for the veil unrent
forbad entrance, the rent veil
gives us, through the cross,
full boldness to go in. So that
in relationship to God there was
contrast.
9)
The number seven is the number
of perfection, and twelve also,
as may be seen in many passages
of Scripture: the former, of
absolute completeness in good or
evil; the latter, of
completeness in human
administration.
10) The door of the tabernacle of
the congregation is not simply
the veil of the holy place, but
the court where they entered
from without. The altar of
burnt-offering was at the door
of the tabernacle of the
congregation.
11) It does not appear that the
washing of the priests for their
consecration was at the laver;
that was according to what was
within when they had got there.
But it is always the word, which
is figured by the water.
12) In the first edition, I had
added here the "renewing of the
Holy Ghost," referring to Titus
3. But though the Holy Ghost
surely renews the heart
continually, yet I doubt the
justice of the application of
this passage here. The renewing
seems more absolute there, anakainoseos. I might have
simply left it out, perhaps, but
that I would call the attention
of the reader to the fact that
"regeneration" is not the same
word as being "born again." It
is paliggenesia, not
anagenneesis. It is only found
again, to denote the millennium,
in Matthew 19. It is in its
import, the "washing of water,"
or being "born of water," not
the reception of life by the
Spirit. Water is a change of
condition of what exists, not in
itself receiving of life, which
is being "born of the Spirit."
it is the anakainosis.
13)
That is, it was not yet the
priest's part. It may be
translated, "one was to kill
him." It was completing the
offering, not presenting its
blood in a priestly way.
14)
Much deep instruction is
connected with this, but its
development belongs to the New
Testament. See Romans 12 and 6,
and 1 Peter.
15) Water thus used as a figure
signifies the word in the
present power of the Holy Ghost.
16)
Literally, "justified." You
cannot accuse a dead man of sin.
And note, it is not "sins" here,
but "sin."
17) And this for a double reason:
He came to meet our case, and we
were in sin, and the basis of
all must be blood-shedding in
virtue of what God is, and His
obedience all through must have
this perfect character — unto
death. Hence, too, there was no
eating it. Sin being there, it
was according to what God is,
and wholly to God. Sin was
before Him and He glorified as
to it.
18)
Thus the holocaust gives what
the sinful man's state according
to God's glory needed; the
meat-offering, the sinless
perfect man in the power of the
Spirit of God in obedience; for
His life was obedience in love.
19)
In John, the divine displayed in
man, specially comes out. Hence
Gospel attracts the heart, while
it offends infidelity.
20)
Judgment in the last day is
according to works, but by the
state of sin we were wholly
alienated from God and lost.
21)
We never have any excuse for any
sin of act or thought, because
Christ's grace is sufficient for
us, and God is faithful not to
suffer us to be tempted above
that which we are able to bear.
It may be that at a given moment
we may not have power, but then
there has been neglect. 22) This was in various forms, but all bringing out the two principles noticed. First, the great general truth: fine flour, oil poured on it, and frankincense; baken in the oven, cakes mingled, or wafers anointed, with oil — of course unleavened; if in a pan, flour unleavened mingled with oil; if in the frying-pan, fine flour with oil. Thus in all forms in which Christ could be looked at as Man, there was absence of sin; His human nature formed in the power and character of, and anointed also with, the Holy Ghost. For we may consider His human nature, as such in itself: oil is poured on it. I may see it tried to the uttermost: it is still purity, and the grace and expression of the Holy Ghost, in its inward nature, in it. I may see it displayed before men, and it is in Holy Ghost power. We may see both together in essential, in inward, reality of character, in public walk, in every part (as presented to God) of that nature which was perfect and formed by Holy Ghost power: absence of all evil, and the Holy Ghost's power is manifested in it. So, when broken into pieces, every part of it was anointed with oil, to shew that if Christ's life were, so to speak, taken to pieces, every detail and element of it was in the perfectness of, and characterised by, the Holy Ghost. 23) The two first temptations (Matt. 4) were the wiles of the enemy. In the last he is openly Satan. 24) In the first case in which this happens, after saying it, He goes down immediately with His disciples, and His mother John 2:12), and brethren. He could be in the midst of all that influences man naturally, yet separate from it because He was inwardly perfect. All the gospels, and personally John 19:26, shew these natural relations formed of God fully owned.
25)
This was what was properly
signified by salt. So every
sacrifice is seasoned with salt.
Let your speech be always with
grace, seasoned with salt. It is
what gives a divine taste, a
witness of God to everything.
26)
Though the perfect offering for
sin is the basis of all; we
should not without it have the
thing to have communion in, and
this point was carefully guarded
in the type of the
peace-offering — it could not be
acceptably eaten but in
connection with what was offered
to God (see Lev. 7). Only it is
communion in the joy of the
common salvation, not special
priestly delight in what Christ
was for God.
27)
The exceptions to this rule are
sin-offerings of the day of
atonement, and the red heifer,
which confirm the great
principle, or fortify a peculiar
portion of it. The sprinkling of
the blood was always the
priest's work.
28)
Life belonged to God. He only
could give it. Hence, when
allowed to be taken in Noah's
time, the blood was reserved.
There was, of course, no eating
connected with death before the
fall (unless the warning not to
bring it in), nor allowedly
before Noah. Hence, as life
belonged to God, death had come
in by sin, and there could be no
eating of what involved death,
no nourishment by it, unless the
life (the blood) was offered to
God. This being done, man could
have his living nourishment
through it. It was indeed his
salvation through faith.
29) Offering has a double
character distinguished in Greek
by prosphero and anaphero, in
Hebrew by Hikrib and Hiktir.
Christ offered Himself without
spot through the eternal Spirit
to God; but, having done so, God
laid the iniquity on Him, made
Him to be sin for us, and He was
offered up on the cross as an
actual sacrifice.
30)
This expression, in a measure,
brings in the meat-offering.
31) It may be well to remark that
the peace-offering supposes
fellowship in worship, though
many principles are individually
applicable.
32)
We may add of Jesus with the
Father, and that in connection
even with His laying down His
life, but this is not our direct
subject here (see John 10:17).
But there, note, it is not done
as for sinners, but for God. 33) Only we must always remember that in Christ it has been done once for all. We have only a shadow of good things to come, and in certain points, as in this, contrast — a contrast fully developed in Hebrews 10. In Hebrews, however, it is not restoration after failure, but perfecting for ever, in the conscience, which takes the place of repeated sacrifice. The restoration of communion on failure is found in 1 John 2:1-2, founded on the righteous One being before God for us, and the propitiation made. 34) There is one case only where it is, Lev. 4:31. 35) There are points in the New Testament it may be well to notice here. The Hebrews views the Christian as walking down here in weakness and trial, but as perfected for ever by the work of Christ, no more conscience of sins, and the priesthood is exercised not to restore communion, but to find mercy and grace to help. 1 John speaks of communion with the Father and Son. This is interrupted by any sin, and Christ is our Advocate with the Father to restore it. The Hebrews is occupied with access to God within the veil, the conscience being perfect, and we enter with boldness, hence failure and restoration are not in question. The Father is not spoken of. In John, as I have said, it is communion and the actual state of the soul is in question. And it is so true that it is the standing in Hebrews, that if one falls away, restoration is impossible. In the tabernacle there was no going within the veil. No such standing was revealed, and priesthood and communion as far as enjoyed were mingled together, the Father unknown. 36) It does not exactly appear whether the goat for the people (Lev. 9:3) was burnt without the camp. It is said in Leviticus 10:16 that it was burnt, and that its blood was not brought into the holy place for sin, so that they ought to have eaten it. So that if it was burnt outside the camp it was an error; the bullock for Aaron was, though the blood was not carried within the veil. Of the goat it is merely said, "offered it for sin, as the first," (Lev. 9:15). Aaron's sacrifice seems to shew that the character of Christ's priesthood does not bring Israel into fellowship with what is within the veil, though Christ may have suffered on the cross for them. The blood was put on the altar in the court. The sons should have eaten that for the people, as for a particular fault of a people already in relationship with God. They are the offerings after the consecration of Aaron, not those of his consecration. Then there was naturally no offering for the people there. Now his hands were filled. The reader may remark, as regards the remnant of Israel (the one hundred and forty-four thousand who are on Mount Sion with the Lamb, the Sufferer in Israel, now King there), that they are on earth, but they learn the song sung in heaven, though they are not there to sing it.
37)
Connected with this was the
weakness of fallen nature
(compare Gen. 1:28). All that
belonged even to weakness of
nature, being the effect of sin,
rendered unclean under the law.
This is also true spiritually.
All this was the result of some
manifestation or other of the
life that was in the flesh. It
was so with the leper; raw flesh
rendered unclean, as well as any
other case where this life
(which had become unclean, and
had been as set aside and under
judgment through sin),
manifested itself externally,
even though weakness alone were
the cause of its manifestation.
38)
This difference is important; it
is that between the work in us
which makes a sin a judged thing
in us, judged by us, and the
work of Christ which supposing
that, puts us in a condition for
relationship with God.
39)
It was the high priest who did
it, but it was not a properly
priestly act. That is, it was
not one going between
individuals or even the people
and God, but representing them
as such in his own person: as
Christ, His people on the cross.
40) When it was a question of
consecrating those who were recognised
as to their persons (the
priests), they were first
washed, and the sacrifice of
Christ, viewed under every
aspect, was the measure of their
relation with God in every way,
and the basis of their communion
in its inward efficacy upon the
soul. But here, the sinner being
viewed in his sin outside the
camp, it was necessary first to
lay the basis for the
possibility of intercourse with
God. This was done in the death
and resurrection of Jesus. Then,
being washed (the efficacious
operation of the Spirit by the
word), he can be in
relationship.
41) Note here how very distinctly
the ground of introduction into
the new christian place is
stated in its completeness.
Culpability is fully met, guilt
removed, cleansing by blood as
to all committed sins perfect,
and the Holy Ghost given, giving
competency for all that was to
follow. The man stood, to apply
the figure, personally on
christian ground. The
sin-offering and the
burnt-offering go further, hence
only the trespass-offering is
used to introduce the leper and
have him anointed.
42) The fact of anointing the
person comes after the
trespass-offering. But this
circumstance is of moment as shewing
that it is Christ, in what He
was in Person intrinsically —
not the display of power, so as
to say, "If I by the Spirit of
God cast out devils, no doubt
the kingdom of God is come
amongst you," but what He was in
all His blessed life in
perfectness to God and in love.
This is what we feed on. Note
here that what is said in verse
18 does not mean, I apprehend,
that the oil in itself made an
atonement, but the
trespass-offering, for it is the
blood that makes atonement for
the soul. But it is not the less
true that the man was not there
until he had been anointed with
the oil; nor is a man in heart
and conscience before God till
he have received the Holy Ghost,
though the ground and measure of
all be the blood with which he
is sprinkled. It is the same in
verse 29. See what follows.
43) This difference is important,
and shews how the working of sin
may be stopped, and the desires
and will set right, and in a
certain sense the affections,
but the conscience not yet be
restored; communion consequently
not yet re-established, nor the
blessed confidence and
affections founded on it. 44) See John 13:31-32, and 17:1-4. And this entitles man to glory, does not merely justify him. 45) The camp is an earthly religious relationship with God outside the sanctuary, and established on earth with priests between men and God. This the Jews were; they cast Christ out of it; and it is now utterly rejected.
46) The difference of 1 John 2 is
this: there communion is in
question, and Christ is our
Advocate with the Father.
Sin interrupts that communion,
but the advocacy is founded on
righteousness and propitiation.
In Hebrews it is approach to God
which is in question, and for
this we are perfected for ever,
have boldness to enter into the
holiest. Sin is not thus in
question, but mercy and grace to
help in time of need.
47)
I do not speak of responsibility
or mercy here.
48) I add, to give the
intelligence of this expression,
that the word translated "feast"
signifies an appointed or
definite time, and which
returned consequently at the
revolution of the year. The
series of the feasts embraced
the whole year, inasmuch as they
returned regularly each
consecutive year. This shews too
the difference of the sabbath,
God's rest — only here of
creation; and, I may add, of the
new moon — figure I doubt not of
Israel's restoration. The great
new moon was in the seventh
month.
49) The idea of these feasts is
God gathering the people around
Himself as a holy convocation.
The solemn feasts were, then,
the gathering of God's people
around Him, and in detail the
ways of God in gathering them
thus. Hence the distinction made
in this chapter. It is evident
that the sabbath, the rest of
God, will be the great gathering
of the people of God around Him,
as the centre of peace and
blessing. So that the sabbath is
truly a solemn feast, a holy
convocation; but? also, it is
evidently apart and distinct
from the means and the
operations which gathered the
people. Hence we find it
mentioned at the beginning, and
reckoned amongst the solemn
feasts; then the Spirit of God
begins afresh (ver. 4) and gives
the solemn feasts, as embracing
all the ways of God in the
gathering of His people, leaving
out the sabbath. In reckoning
the feasts, the passover and the
feast of unleavened bread may be
considered as one, for both were
at the same time, and treated
together; or, looking upon the
sabbath as separate, they may be
estimated as two feasts. Both
these things are found in the
word.
50) It is well to observe, in
passing, that this formula
gives, in the whole Pentateuch,
the true division of the
subjects. Sometimes the
directions are addressed to
Aaron, which supposes some
internal relations based on the
existence of priesthood —
sometimes to Moses and Aaron;
and in that case they are not
purely communications and
commandments to establish
relations, but also directions
for the exercise of functions
thus established. Consequently
we have in Leviticus 10, for the
first time I think, "Jehovah spake
unto Aaron"; — Leviticus 11 to
"Moses and Aaron"; because that,
whilst it treats of commandments
and ordinances given for the
first time, it is also a
question of the discernment
consequent upon relations
existing between God and the
people, and in which the
exercise of the priesthood came
in. These general principles
will assist in apprehending the
nature of the communications
made by God to His people (see
Lev. 13). Leviticus 14, as far
as verse 32, consists of
ordinances to settle simply what
priesthood must do; verse 33,
priestly discernment is again in
exercise.
51) I shall here add a few words
on the subject of the sabbath,
submitting them to the spiritual
thoughts of my brethren. It is
well to be subject to the word.
First, the participation in
God's rest is what distinguishes
His people — their distinctive
privilege. The heart of the
believer holds that fast,
whatever may be the sign that
God has given of it (Heb. 4).
God had established it at the
beginning; but there is no
appearance that man ever enjoyed
in fact any share in it. He did
not work in the creation, nor
was he set to labour or toil in
the garden of Eden; he was to
dress and keep it, indeed, but
he had nothing to do but
continually to enjoy However the
day was hallowed from the
beginning. Afterwards the
sabbath was given as a memorial
of the deliverance out of Egypt
(Deut. 5:15), and the prophets
specially insist on that point —
that the sabbath was given as a
sign of God's covenant (Ezek.
20; Ex. 31:13). It was plain
that it was but the earnest of
the word, "My presence shall go,
and I will give thee rest" (Ex.
31:13; 33:14; Lev. 19:30). It is
a sign that the people are
sanctified to God (Ezek.
20:12-13-16, 20; Neh. 9:14:
compare Isa. 56:2-6; 58:13; Jer.
17:22; Lam. 1:7; 2:6; Ezek.
22:8; 23:38; 44:24). Besides
these passages, we see that,
whenever God gives any new
principle or form of relation
with Himself, the sabbath is
added: thus in grace to Israel
(Ex. 16:23); as law (Ex. 20:10).
See also, besides the verse we
are occupied with, Exodus
31:13-14; 34:21; when they are
restored afresh by the patience
of God through mediation (chap.
35:2), and in the new covenant
of Deuteronomy already quoted in
the passage.
These remarks shew us what was
the radical and essential
importance of the sabbath, as
the thought of God and the sign
of the relation between His
people and Himself, though,
being only a sign, a solemnity,
and not in itself a moral
commandment; for the thing
signified the association with
God in His rest, and is of the
highest order of truth in
connecting the heart with God.
But if that be of the utmost
importance, it is of an equal
and even higher importance to
remember that the covenant
between God and the Jewish
people is entirely set aside for
us, and that the sign of this
covenant does not belong to us,
although God's rest be yet quite
as precious to us, and even more
so; that our rest is not in this
creation — a rest of which the
seventh day was the sign; and
moreover (which is more
important still) that the Lord
Jesus is Lord of the sabbath, a
remark of all importance as to
His Person, and null if He was
to do nothing with regard to the
sabbath; and that, as a fact, He
has omitted all mention of it in
the sermon on the mount, where
He has given such a precious
summary of the fundamental
principles suited to the
kingdom, with the addition of
the name of the Father and the
fact of a suffering Messiah, and
the revelation of the heavenly
reward, making a whole of the
principles of His kingdom, and
that He uniformly thwarted the
thoughts of the Jews on this
point; a circumstance which the
evangelists (that is, the Holy
Ghost) have been careful to
record. The sabbath itself Jesus
passed in a state of death, a
terrible sign of the position of
the Jews as to their covenant —
for us, of the birth of much
better things.
It has been tried, with much
trouble, to prove that the
seventh day was in fact the
first. A single remark
demolishes the whole edifice
thus reared; it is, that the
word of God calls this last the
first in contrast with the
seventh. What is, then, the
first day? It is for us the day
of all days — the day of the
resurrection of Jesus, by which
we are begotten again unto a
lively hope, which is the source
of all our joy, our salvation,
and that which characterises our
life. Thus we shall find the
rest of God in the resurrection.
Morally, in this world, we begin
our spiritual life by the rest,
instead of finding it at the end
of our labours. Our rest is in
the new creation; we are the
beginning, after Christ, who is
the Head of it, of that new
dispensation.
It is clear, then, that the rest
of God cannot, in our case, be
connected with the sign of the
rest of creation here below.
Have we any authority in the New
Testament for distinguishing the
first day of the week from the
others? For my part, I do not
doubt it. It is certain we have
not commandments like those of
the old law; they would be quite
contrary to the spirit of the
gospel of grace. But the Spirit
of God has marked out, in divers
manners, the first day of the
week, though that day is not
made binding upon us in a way
contrary to the nature of the
economy. The Lord, being raised
on that day according to His
promise, appears in the midst of
His disciples gathered according
to His word: the week following
He does the same. In the Acts
the first day of the week is
marked as the day on which they
gathered together to break
bread.
In 1 Corinthians 16 Christians
are exhorted to lay by of what
they had earned, each first day
of the week. In Revelation it is
positively called the Lord's
day, that is, designated in a
direct manner by a distinctive
name by the Holy Spirit. I am
well aware that it has been
sought to persuade us that John
speaks of being in spirit in the
millennium. But there are two
fatal objections to that
interpretation. First, the Greek
says quite another thing, and
uses the same word that is used
for the Lord's supper, lordly or
dominical — the dominical
supper, the dominical day. Who
can doubt as to the meaning of
such an expression, or,
consequently, can fail to admit
that the first day of the week
was distinguished from others
(as the Lord's supper was
distinguished from other
suppers), not as an imposed
sabbath, but as a privileged
day? But the reasoning to prove
it refers to the millennium is
founded on a totally false idea,
in that only a minimum portion
of the Revelation speaks of the
millennium. The book is about
the things which precede it, and
in the place where the
expression is found, there is
decidedly no mention whatever of
it, but of the existing
churches, whatever withal might
be their prophetic character; so
that, if we hold to the word of
God, we are forced to say that
the first day of the week is
distinguished in the word of God
as being the Lord's day. We are
also bound to say, if we desire
to maintain the authority of the
Son of man, that He is superior
to the sabbath — "Lord of the
sabbath"; so that in maintaining
for us the authority of the
Jewish sabbath as such, we are
in danger of denying the
authority, the dignity, and the
rights of the Lord Jesus
Himself, and of re-establishing
the old covenant, of which it
was the appointed sign, of
seeking rest as the result of
labour under the law. The more
the true importance of the
sabbath, the seventh day, is
felt, the more we shall feel the
importance of the consideration
that it is no longer the
seventh, but the first day which
has privileges for us. Let us
take care, on the other hand,
because we are no longer under
law but under grace, not to
weaken the thought not only of
man's rest but of God's — a
governing thought in the whole
of the revelation of His
relationships with man. The
final rest for us is rest from
spiritual labours in the midst
of evil, not merely from sin; a
rest which we, as
fellow-labourers, shall enjoy
with Him who has said, "My
Father worketh hitherto, and I
work."} 52) There are three points which we may notice here as to this. First in Colossians 3 God counts us dead with Christ (in Col. also risen); in Romans 6 we reckon ourselves dead to sin, and alive not in Adam, but through Him; in 2 Corinthians 4 it is practically carried out; always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life of Jesus may be manifested in our flesh. Ephesians is on different ground: we are not such as have died to sin, but were dead in sins, and then a wholly new creation. Sovereign grace had put us into Christ with the same power that raised Christ from the grave to the throne of God. 53) I take this to be the covenant of Exodus 6, not the law. It connected itself directly with the covenant made with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, adding the name of Jehovah, and taking up the people under that name.
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