Pulpit & Podium
What’s with all the blood? It’s a question many of us feel when we come to Leviticus. The rituals seem foreign, the imagery unsettling, and the cost overwhelming. But beneath the strangeness is a single, urgent question: How can sinners live in the presence of a holy God? From Eden onward, humanity has been pushed out of God’s presence because of sin, yet God’s desire has always been to dwell with his people. Leviticus is not a random collection of rules—it is God’s gracious instruction for how that broken relationship can be restored. The Day of Atonement stands at the center of that answer. Once a year, a sacrifice is made to cleanse both the people and the place where God dwells. One goat is offered, its blood symbolizing life given to cleanse what sin has defiled. The other carries the sins of the people away into the wilderness, removing guilt and shame from the camp. Together, they reveal a profound truth: sin must be dealt with, and a substitute is required. Yet even this is not the final solution. The repetition of the ritual points forward to something greater—a better priest, a better sacrifice, and a once-for-all atonement fulfilled in Jesus. I unpack: * Why God’s presence is both beautiful and dangerous, and why sin makes direct access impossible * How the two goats of Leviticus 16 reveal both cleansing and removal, pointing to our need for a substitute * How the Day of Atonement ultimately anticipates Jesus, who fulfills both roles and opens full access to God 📖 Key Passage: Leviticus 16 🎧 Listen and reflect: If Jesus has fully made a way for you to be in God’s presence, what keeps you from drawing near to him with confidence?
45 episoder
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