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Leviticus 21-25
Shall we turn now in our bibles to Leviticus chapter 21. We trust
tonight to complete the book of Leviticus. My wife said, “If
you make it through Leviticus, the rest is down hill”.
There’s a lot of ordinances and laws, and all, that really
don’t relate to us, in our time, but it is interesting to
observe how God related to man in other times. So, we’ll just
sort of summarize for you, chapters twenty one through twenty seven,
this evening.
Now, in verse one of chapter twenty one, we find that God is speaking
to the priest. The function of the priest was two-fold. He was to go
before God in behalf of the people, representing the people, before
God. Then he was to come out to the people, representing God to the
people. He was a mediator. He was one who stood between God and the
people. So, these are the instructions for these men, who were to stand
before God for the people, and before the people for God. Those men who
stood between.
First of all they were not to defile themselves, for the dead, among
their own people, except for their relatives, who are nearest to him.
Mother, father, son, daughter, brother, virgin sister, if she has no
husband, and for them, he may defile himself. That is make himself
ceremonially unclean. See according to the law, you were not to touch a
dead body. If you touched a dead body, then you were unclean, and you
could not offer the sacrifices unto God until you had gone through the
purification rites.
They’re not to make any bald place on their heads, [that is
shaving their heads] nor are they to shave the edges of their beards,
nor make any cuttings in their flesh, [they’re to be holy]
and not profane the name of their God, for they offer the offerings of
the Lord, made by fire and bread, Now, when they took a wife, they were
not to take a prostitute or a defiled woman. They were not to take a
woman who had been divorced, for he offers the bread unto God. If a
daughter of a priest became a prostitute, she was to be put to death,
burned with fire. And the high priest who has the anointing oil upon
his life, is not to uncover his head or tear his clothes (21:5-10).
Now, you remember reading of people in the bible times, often times it
says, “And they rent their clothes.” It means that
they tore their clothes. It was again, a cultural thing. You get real
hurt or sorrowful, if you wanted to really show the greatest kind of
sorrow, you’d rip your clothes. We don’t have such
customs anymore but, they did, they would rend their clothes. You
remember that God said, “Hey, rend your hearts, not your
garments, before the Lord.” It became a thing, you know, you
just want to show how grief stricken you were or how moved you were by
a situation, you’d tear your clothes. God said,
“I’d rather your hearts be torn, rather than your
clothes. I’d rather be an inward thing, rather than an
outward display”. So much of our displays are outward. God is
looking at the heart. God is interested in what’s in your
heart.
Nor shall he go near any dead body, or defile himself, even for his
father or mother. Nor shall he go out of the sanctuary, nor profane the
sanctuary of God, and he is to take, as his wife, only a virgin. He is
not to marry a widow, [which a ordinary priest could do] nor is he to
marry a divorced woman, defiled woman, or harlot: but he shall have a
virgin, among his own people, [that is not a stranger, or not from
another land or nation] nor shall he profane his posterity among his
people: for I the Lord set him apart (21:11-15).
Now, verse seventeen is addressed to Aaron, who was the high priest.
No man of your descendants in succeeding generations who has any
defect, may approach to offer the bread of his God. [So, the priest,
the high priest who was to go before the Lord, was not to have any kind
of physical defect.] He wasn’t to be blind, or lame, or have
a marred face, or a limb too long, he was not to have a broken foot or
broken hand, he wasn’t to be a hunch back, or dwarf, or a man
with defects in his eyes, eczema, or scabs, or a eunuch (21:17-20).
If they have a defect, they can serve in other areas of the priesthood,
but they are not to come before God to offer the bread.
He may eat the bread of his God, but he is not to come near the veil,
to the very place of offering in the sanctuary (21:22-23).
Chapter 22
Now, chapter twenty two is addressed, in verse two, to Aaron and his
sons.
That they separate themselves from the holy things of the children of
Israel, and that they do not profane my holy name, in those holy
things, which they sanctified to me: for I am the Lord. And whoever, of
all your descendants through your generation who goes near the holy
things, which the Lord, which the children of Israel sanctified to the
Lord, while he has uncleanness upon him, that person shall be cut off
from my presence (22:2-3).
So, there were things that defiled a person, and they weren’t
to come into the sanctuary in that condition. If a person has
sanctified something to God, has brought a sacrifice to God, then they
are not to touch it, unless they have gone through the cleansing and
the purification rites.
And whatever man of the descendants of Aaron, who is a leper,
discharge of his body, [and so forth] he is not to touch these things
that have been consecrated to God. Unless he washes his body with
water. [verse six] Therefore keep my ordinances, lest they bear sin for
it and die thereby, if they profane it: For I the Lord have sanctified
them, and no outsider shall eat the holy offering. One who sojourns
with a priest or a hired servant, shall not eat the holy thing.
Now, the sacrifices that were given, a portion was for the priest. It
was considered holy. Only the priest or his immediate family could eat
it. The meal offerings, the little loaves of bread that they baked,
were again for the priest but, only the priest and his family could eat
of it. If he had guests come for dinner, he could not give them the
food that was used as a sacrifice, or that food that was sanctified
unto the Lord. It was to be exclusively for the priest and his family.
But we do remember, that when David was fleeing from Saul, he came to
the priest in the tabernacle, and he and his men, fleeing from Saul.
David had really run out without anything. He didn’t even
have a sword, and so he asked the priest if he had a sword, and the
priest said, “Well, the sword you took from
Goliath” and David said, “That’s good
enough”, and he said, “What have you got to
eat” and he said, “All I have here is this show
bread”. It was that holy bread that had been placed on the
table, before the Lord, and so David took the show bread for himself
and his men, and he took off.
Later on, Jesus, when He was being challenged by the Pharisees
concerning his violation of the oral interpretation of the law, which
is known as the Mishna. It didn’t violate the torah itself.
But they had what they called the oral traditions by which they
amplified the torah, and explained the torah. And Jesus was constantly
violating these articles of the Mishna, the oral traditions. That is
why I put very little regard on the oral traditions. Jesus was
constantly violating them and of course, getting in trouble for it.
Then later on they wrote the Talmud, some sixty volumes, to amplify and
explain the Mishna.
We were in Israel last weekend there was this one gal who was seeking
to be a Rabbi, though it is kosher yet in Israel, they don’t
have any women Rabbis. So, anyhow, she’s sort of a feminist
and hoping to be one, and so she was explaining to us the ceremony at
the end of the Sabbath. Now, to begin the Sabbath, you have the candle
lighting ceremony, and you have to go through all of this ritual and so
forth, also now for the end of the Sabbath, there’s a ritual
again, a lighting of another candle, and then you take cinnamon and
spices, and you smell them, and you go through this ritual, but they
have everything, and they just, you have to light the candle this way,
you know, and you don’t strike the match on something, you
know, I mean, weird. You know, everything was all laid out, how you
were supposed to do everything, and everything, or if you do it this
way, it doesn’t count. They were going through and explaining
all of the facets, and this one guide that we had, when they were
explaining the whole thing to me, he turned and said, “Never
become a Jew, Chuck.”
But, these are the things that the, it gets so complicated. God gave
His word. It’s sort of like, we have our constitution. You
know, it’s pretty straight forward. Basic, but man, look at
the volumes that have now been written to interpret our constitution.
And we are still all the time, talking about constitutional issues, and
now we have all kinds of laws, and regulations and rules, by which we
have interpreted the constitution of the United States. It fills walls
of volumes! Well, the Jews were much the same way. God gave them laws,
straight forward, it’s pretty basic, the Torah. But then,
“What did God mean by this?” So, they had their
oral traditions, which was the Mishna. But then, what was meant by the
oral traditions, so they have the Talmud, to explain the oral
tradition. So, you have to go through the whole thing, to find out
where you are.
Well, Jesus was accused of violating the oral laws, the Mishna, and so
He allowed His disciples, on the Sabbath day, to pick some wheat, and
He allowed them to rub it in their hands, thrush it, and were eating
the wheat. And they said, “Hey! That’s not lawful
to do.” And He said, “Do you remember what the
bible says that David did when he was hungry? How he went to the
tabernacle and he took the bread, which was not lawful for him to eat,
and he ate and gave it to his men. For man was not made for the
Sabbath, but the Sabbath was made for the man.” And so, Jesus
makes reference to David’s particular violation of this law,
that no outsider, that is outside of the priesthood, was to eat of this
bread.
If the priest has a slave, or those born in his house, they may eat it.
If his daughter marries an outsider, she can’t eat it
anymore. As long as she’s unmarried, she can eat it. If
she’s widowed, or divorced, and moves back home, then she can
eat it again. And if a man eats it unintentionally, he has to restore
it to the priest, adding twenty percent. Then the Lord spoke to Moses
to speak to Aaron and his sons, [verse eighteen], and to all the
children of Israel. [So this is spread out now, we’ve been
addressing the priest, and then we’re addressing Aaron and
his sons, now to Aaron of his sons and all of the children of Israel.]
Whatever man of the house of Israel, or the strangers in Israel, who
offers his sacrifice for any of his vows, or for any of the freewill
offerings, which they offered to the Lord for a burnt offering, you
shall offer of your own free will, A male without blemish from the
cattle, from the sheep, or from the goats. But whatever has a defect,
you shall not offer, for it shall not be acceptable on your behalf
(22:10-23).
So, the offering that you made to God, of consecration, had to first of
all, be of your own free will. God never forces any man to give to Him.
You should never give unto God under any kind of constraint or
pressure. Anything that you give to God, you should always give of your
free will. That’s a requirement of God. Any offering that you
make to the Lord, has to be a free will offering, something from your
heart to the Lord. If it isn’t it, it isn’t
acceptable, so you might as well keep it. Then also, you
weren’t to offer anything to God that had a defect, a
blemish. For if it did, it was not acceptable.
Then, whoever offers a sacrifice of a peace offering. Now the burnt
offering was consecration. Peace offering, was fellowship. The offering
by which a man came into fellowship or communion with God. If you want
to offer the peace offering to fulfill your vow, or a free will
offering from the cattle or the sheep, it must be perfect to be
accepted. There shall be no defect in it. So God requires the offerings
that are made to Him to be perfect.
Now, gives me a problem if I want to offer my life to God. How can I
offer my life to God? It’s not perfect! It is far from
perfect! So, there comes the problem. I want to commune with God, I
want to fellowship with God. What can I offer Him? Now, even in those
days they brought an animal to offer, but the animal that they brought
had to be perfect. No defect in it. That immediately eliminates my
coming to God on my own merits or my own goodness, or my own works.
Because I’m not perfect and my works are not perfect. God
will not accept me. The offering will not be accepted. God
won’t accept me, if I just say, “Hey God, here I
am!” You know, “I’m Chuck, Lord, I came
in to talk to you”, and, “who are you?”
He won’t accept me. They’re defects.
They’re blemishes, they are imperfections. You must be
perfect to be accepted. That is why my approach to God is through Jesus
Christ. He is my sacrifice. He is the perfect sacrifice. He is the one
who brings me into fellowship with God. He is the one who establishes
the relationship between God and myself. Jesus Christ. If you want to
come to God, you’ve got to bring a perfect sacrifice. There
cannot be any defects. And Jesus is the perfect one. So, it must be
perfect to be accepted. Remember that. That excludes any of us coming
apart from Jesus.
If the animal is blind, broken, maimed, has an ulcer, eczema, or scabs,
you shall not offer it to the Lord, nor make an offering of fire of
them, on the altar unto the Lord, Either a bull or lamb that has any
limb that’s too long, too short, you may offer as a free will
offering, but for a vow, it shall not be accepted. Ye shall not offer
unto the Lord what is bruised, or crushed, torn, cut (22:22-24).
There is a tendency of people to give their cast offs to the Lord. God
doesn’t want your cast offs. God doesn’t want your
leftovers. God always required the first fruits unto the Lord. God
first. But we don’t often place that kind of a priority.
Often times, it’s God’s last. If I have anything
left, then you know, I’ll give it to God. I’ll take
care of myself first, and all of these things first, and anything left
over, well we’ll think about God then. But God
doesn’t want your leftovers or your cast -offs.
Can’t use it anymore. You know, it’s no good, well,
let’s give it to the church. Well we’ve had a lot
of those kinds of gifts. When we were in Tucson, we went to pastor
there, and there was this big old, ugly rocking chair, in the living
room. And we said, “Oh, that old, ugly thing. Let’s
get rid of that.” But then we found out that it belonged to
Aunt Bertha, and her niece had given it to the church, she
didn’t want it. But oh, it belonged to Aunt Bertha, and
don’t want to throw it away, you know, so we were supposed to
keep it. She didn’t want to keep it at her house, too ugly.
“Give it to the church, you know, but don’t you do
anything to it, you take care of it, cause that was Aunt
Bertha’s.” No, please don’t give God any
of those kind of gifts. He doesn’t need them, and He
doesn’t want them. Not the cast offs.
Again, verse twenty nine, If you offer a sacrifice of thanksgiving unto
the Lord, let it be the free will. Do it from your heart.
Don’t do it because you think, “Oh I ought
to”, or “Oh man, gotta go to church, gotta do this
for God, Oh my”. No way! That’s no way to serve
God. That’s no way to give to God. Only give from your heart.
God loves a cheerful giver!
Ye shall keep my commandments, I am the Lord. Ye shall not profane my
holy name; the holy name of Yahweh, but I will be hallowed among the
children of Israel. I am Yahweh who sanctifies you, who brought you out
of the land of Egypt to be your God. I am Yahweh (22:31-33).
Chapter 23
And so, the Lord spoke to Moses saying, Speak to the children of Israel
(23:1).
So now, leaving the priesthood, we’re talking to the nation,
and he’s talking to them about the feast, these holidays, and
really they are holy days. And that word holidays sort of comes from
holy days, but they’re no longer holy days, they’re
just holidays now. But, originally they were holy days and there were
three separate feasts, that were week long feasts. Celebrations. Time
when the people had their minds turned towards God, and the things of
God. Time when the people gathered together to worship God as a
community, as a nation. These days were dedicated unto the Lord. Oh how
glorious that must have been! How glorious it would be if in the United
States, we had set aside three weeks out of the month, to just worship
the Lord, and to come before the Lord and spend time, and just seeking
Him, where the national consciousness would be centered upon God. Oh
how strong the nation would be!
So these are the feasts, the holy convocations, when every adult male
was required to come and stand before God. Throughout the land,
wherever you are, you’ve gotta go and stand before the Lord
and of course, many a times they brought their families with them.
Now, first of all, he starts out with:
The Sabbath day, the seventh day, is a sabbath of solemn rest, a holy
convocation: you are not to do any work on it, and it shall be the
Sabbath to the Lord, [or the rest unto the Lord] in all your dwellings
(23:3-4).
Now, the law has it’s fulfillment in Jesus Christ. He said,
“I didn’t come to destroy the law, but to fulfill
the law.” As far as the Sabbath day, the day of rest, surely
Jesus is a beautiful fulfillment of that Sabbath day, for the believer.
For we have entered into His rest. “There is a rest for the
people of God, and they that have entered into that rest, have ceased
from their own labors.” And that tremendous labor to try to
be righteous or be accepted by my righteousness before God, is over. I
am now resting in Jesus. He’s my Sabbath. I rest in Him. And
in Him, I am accepted by God.
Next was the feast of the Passover.
On the fourteenth day of the first month, at twilight, is the
Lord’s Passover. And on the fifteenth day of the same month,
is the feast of unleavened bread to the Lord: In seven days you must
eat unleavened bread. And on the first day, you will have a holy
convocation, and you’re not to do any customary work on it,
but you shall offer an offering, made by fire unto the Lord, for seven
days: The seventh day shall be a holy convocation, You shall do no
customary work on it (23: 5-7).
So, this feast of the Passover, beginning on the fourteenth day of the
month, the first month, which on their calendar, was April, at
twilight, is the Lord’s Passover. The Passover was the
reminder of God’s deliverance of their first born sons in
Egypt. When the Lord passed through Egypt, and all of the first born in
the land were slain, with the exception of those houses where the
children of Israel had killed the lamb, and placed the blood on the
lentils and on the doorposts of their homes. Those houses were passed
over by God, and the firstborn of the family was not slain. And so,
this feast was to remind them, of really, God’s deliverance
out of Egypt, by the death of the firstborn, their being saved by the
lamb for the family, being sacrificed, and thus the firstborn saved
from death.
It was pointing ahead to Jesus Christ who, as the lamb of God, would be
slain for us. That death might pass over us, that we might have eternal
life through Him. Thus it was not by accident, but extremely
significant that Jesus was crucified on Passover. You remember He had
celebrated, the evening before the Passover feast with His disciples.
Their day goes from evening to evening. So, the fact that He celebrated
the Passover feast with His disciples in the evening, it was still the
Passover day, the next day when He was crucified. Thus, His death as a
sacrifice for our sins, was the fulfillment of this Passover feast. It
is what it was, actually it looked back, but it also looked forward;
and, so Jesus, when He celebrated the Passover feast with His
disciples, took the bread, and He broke it, and He said,
“Take. Eat. This is my body now which is broken for you. This
do in remembrance of me.” They used to do it in remembrance
of the lamb that was slain in Egypt. Now, you’re to remember
the lamb of God, slain for the sins of the world. He took the cup and
He said, “This cup is a new covenant, the old covenant was
with the blood of the lamb on the door posts, that saved the sons from
death. This is a new covenant. It’s in my blood and
it’s shed for the remission of sins.” So, the
Passover feast, fulfilled, in Jesus Christ.
The next is the feast of the first fruits, when you come into the land
which I give unto you. You reap the harvest. You shall bring a sheep of
the first fruits of your harvest to the priest, and he shall wave the
sheaf before the Lord, to be accepted on your behalf, on the day after
the Sabbath, the priest shall wave it. And you shall offer on that day,
when you wave the sheaf, a male lamb of the first year without blemish,
as a burnt offering. It’s grain offering shall be two tenths
of an ephah (23:10-14).
And so forth. So, this feast of the first fruits, where you offer the
first fruits unto God. And then the feast of weeks, verse fifteen:
You shall count, for yourselves, from the day after the Sabbath, from
the day that you brought the sheaf of the wave offering, seven sabbaths
shall be completed. Count fifty days; to the day after the seventh
Sabbath (23:15).
So, after the Passover the first fruits, they were to count then, seven
Sabbaths, so that you come to the feast of Pentecost, and
“Pente” being fifty days. It’s fifty days
after the Passover feast, you had this feast of Pentecost. Seven
Sabbaths, and then the following day. And again, it was an eight day
feast. They are to bring these loaves to the Lord. They are the first
fruits, and they are to be baked with leaven. In contrast to the
unleavened bread. You are to offer the bread, seven lambs without
blemish, a young bull, and the various offerings.
So, this feast of Pentecost was the first fruits being offered to God.
There is a harvest out here that is yet to be gathered. But God, we
want to dedicate the first fruits of this whole harvest unto You. It
was on this feast day that the church was born. It was on this feast
day that Peter preached the first sermon, and 2,000 souls were saved.
It was the birth of the church when the day of Pentecost had fully
come. The Holy Spirit descended upon the waiting disciples, and the
church was born. The first fruits of the harvest, that the Lord was
going to reap. The church of Jesus Christ. Those that were to be
redeemed by the blood of Jesus. So were part of the harvest. The day of
Pentecost was the first fruits of the glorious harvest, from among men,
the body of Christ, the church of our Lord Jesus Christ. And so, that
particular feast was fulfilled with the birth of the church.
Now verse twenty two, just as long as he’s dealing with the
harvest.
When you reap your harvest, you’re not to wholly reap the
corners of your field. Leave the corners, don’t reap those.
Nor shall you gather any gleaning from the harvest. [That is
you’re not to go back through the second time.] You shall
leave them for the poor and for the stranger. I am the Lord (23:22-23).
Now, the third major feast was in the seventh month, [equivalent to our
month of October], on the first day of the month, you will have a
Sabbath, a memorial of the blowing of trumpets, an a holy convocation.
You’re not to do any work: and ye shall offer an offering
made by fire unto the Lord. And on the tenth day of the seventh month,
will be [Yom Kippur], the day of atonement, [when the high priest goes
in to the holy of holies, as we studied last week, to make atonement
before the Lord (23:24-27).
And then it’s in verse thirty two, the latter portion that
they have their day, from evening to evening, you will celebrate the
Sabbath. Not from morning to morning. Not from midnight to midnight.
From evening to evening. So their Sabbath began with sundown and ended
with sundown.
The feast of the tabernacles, on the fifteenth day of the seventh
month, shall be the feast of tabernacles, for seven days to the Lord,
there’s to be the holy convocation. No customary work. Seven
days, you’re to offer the offering made by fire. On the
eighth day, you shall have a holy convocation, you shall offer an
offering made by fire to the Lord. It’s a sacred assembly,
you’re not to do work on it. There were many, many offerings
that were to be made because you had the special offerings, you had the
Sabbath day offerings, you were having the special offerings of your
vows, the free will offerings, that you give to the Lord.
Now, this feast of tabernacles that we get in verse forty two:
They are to dwell in booths for seven days, all who are native
Israelites will dwell in booths (23:42).
This is called the feast of tabernacles, or the feast of Succoth, the
booths, because they were required to move out of their houses. They
were to build little thatched houses out of palm branches, or out of
other branches, but just mainly they use palm branches today. It is
relevant that in the month of October, during the time of the feast of
tabernacles, you will see, beside these high rise apartment buildings,
these little lean to thatched huts, and the families living in these
little thatched huts. The feast of tabernacles was in a memorial,
remembering how that God had preserved their fathers in the wilderness
experience. For forty years their fathers wandered in the wilderness,
they slept under the stars and yet God miraculously sustained them and
preserved them. So this feast was in memorial for God’s
preservation of the people and for His bringing them into the land He
had promised. So the eighth day of this feast, the great day, the
Sabbath day, the celebration changed from a memorial, of the
preservation to a rejoicing over the fulfillment of the promise,
“He has brought us into the promised land and now we are
dwelling in the land of promise”.
Now, this feast God’s fulfillment of His promise, after forty
years of wandering in the wilderness, was possibly fulfilled in the
birth of Jesus. For Jesus was born probably in the month of October,
and if we knew the date, it probably coincided with the feast of
tabernacles. December twenty fifth was an arbitrary date that was
chosen because it was a pagan holiday, and so they wanted a holiday to
celebrate the birth of Jesus, and so they just picked up the pagan
holiday of Saturnalia, and they used that date, but most likely He was
born in October, but I feel the real fulfillment of this feast is yet
future. I believe that when Jesus comes again and establishes His
eternal kingdom, that this whole picture of the children of Israel,
forty years wandering in the barren wilderness, yet being nourished and
sustained by God, and now coming in to the land, this glorious land of
promise. I believe it will be fulfilled when Jesus comes and
establishes God’s kingdom upon the earth and we will finish
this wilderness wandering, and we’ll enter in to that
glorious age, that God has promised, the age of God’s kingdom
upon the earth. So the real fulfillment of this is yet future, and so I
am convinced that when Jesus comes again, not the rapture of the
church, I don’t know when that will be. It could be tonight,
hopefully. Won’t have to go up tomorrow and get my wife out
of the snow. We’ll just meet each other in the air. I hate
snow. But, I love my wife. But I believe that when Jesus comes again,
and His foot sets in that day, on the Mount of Olives, and that thing
splits in the middle, I believe that you’ll find that will
take place during the month of October, the seventh month, and probably
the day of the blowing of the trumpets. Because it’s a day of
jubilee. So, that particular feast has yet it’s fulfillment
in the future.
Chapter 24
Now in chapter 24:
The children of Israel were commanded to bring pure olive oil to be
used in this lamp stand that was in the tabernacle. And
Aaron’s responsibility was to make sure that these lights in
this lampstand were burning every night. There were seven cups filled
with oil with the little wicks, they were to trim the wicks, and fill
the cups so that all night long, the light would be burning there in
the tabernacle. This was the duty of Aaron, he was to be in charge of
it from evening until morning and they were to burn before the Lord
continually (24:1-4).
Now, with this particular menorah burning, and so forth, there did
develop another feast. That is Hanukkah. It was probably developed
because the Jews needed something also, to counteract the Christmas.
You know, all the little Christian kids getting all kinds of toys and
gifts, so we gotta do something about this because our little kids are
wanting to become Christians, cause look at all the gifts, you know, so
we’ll have Hanukkah. We’ll celebrate a part of
their history in the lighting of the candles, the Hanukkah candles.
Now, according to the story, when Judas Maccabees and those brave
zealots who were with him, against insurmountable odds, drove off the
armies of Antioch Epiphanes, who had profaned the temple of God,
blasphemed, offered a pig upon the altar, and this so incensed the Jews
that Judas Maccabees got together with a bunch of fellows and they
drove off the forces of Antioch Epiphanes, they recaptured the temple
and they reconsecrated the temple to God. According to the story. It
takes seven days to compound the oil so it is just right for the
candles, and they relit the menorah, but according to the story, they
had only enough oil to fill the cups, and it took them seven days to
compound the new oil, and so according to the story, the candles stayed
lit, with a one day supply of oil, they stayed lit for the whole seven
days until they had the opportunity to compound the oil and fill it
again. So the lighting of the candles, the Hanukkah and so forth, in
celebration of this event of their history. It is not one of the
biblical holidays, but yet one that Jesus did observe. So it was
really, I said Christmas and the light thing, it was a ceremony they
already had. It really preceded our Christmas. Actually the Christians
probably need something to counteract the Jews kids presents, and
that’s why we went for Christmas.
So, here is the lighting of the candles, Aaron’s
responsibility. Then the twelve loaves of bread were to be placed upon
this little table of show bread, two rows of six. Frankincense also on
the table, and then on the Sabbath day, these loaves of bread were to
be changed. A loaf of bread, one for each nation, changed on the
Sabbath day, and then bread taken from the table was to be eaten by
Aaron and his sons in the holy place.
Now we come to a event that happened, and at this point it happened
that there was a Israelitish woman, whose father is an Egyptian, the
son of an Israelitish woman, his father was an Egyptian. He went out
among the children of Israel, and he had a fight with an Israelite. And
in the fight this woman’s son, blasphemed the name of Yahweh.
Now this is something that is strictly forbidden, in fact the Jews hold
the name Yahweh in such reverence, that they won’t even
pronounce it. They won’t even write the vowels in their
manuscripts. They just write the consonants, “Y H V
H”, so you can’t pronounce it. They don’t
even try to pronounce it. They just call it the name and here in our
text, “Of the Lord” you notice, is inserted. He
just blasphemed the name. And it has become customary for the Jew when
he gets to the name of Yahweh in his text, he just bows his head and he
says the name. They just call it the name. They don’t even
try to pronounce it in their minds. It is too holy and pure a name they
feel, to be pronounced. Well here’s a kid blaspheming the
name and he was cursing. So they brought him to Moses. So they put him
in custody that they might discover the mind of the Lord,
“Lord what shall we do with this kid?”
And the Lord spoke to Moses saying, Take him outside of the camp, him
who has cursed, and let all of those who heard him, lay their hands on
his head and let all the congregation stone him. And then you shall
speak to the children of Israel saying, Whoever curses his God shall
bear his sin, and whoever blasphemes the name of Yahweh, shall surely
be put to death (24:13-16).
So severe penalties for the blaspheming of the name of the Lord. There
is something to be said for severe penalties. There’s
something to be said against them too, no doubt. But where penalties
are severe, you find that crime is extremely curbed. They have no drug
problem in Singapore. Why? If you are found in possession of drugs,
you’re shot immediately. Well, if you’re carrying
drugs, you make sure that your plane doesn’t stop in
Singapore. It’s severe but, they have no drug problem. Now
look at the drug problem we have! Why? Because of the leniency. Our
drug problem is out of hand. We cannot control it. It’s
totally out of hand. Those who are in drug enforcement, are just
frustrated, totally frustrated, because of the leniency of the laws.
Where there are severe penalties, you find that there is a strict
observance of the law. Now, the Iatolla has cut down crime tremendously
in Iran, but it’s again by severe penalties. If
you’re caught taking something, they just put your hands up
there, and they just whack off your hands. And so you don’t
find many pick pockets in Iran. I mean, it’s a way of solving
crime. The leniency of the law has a way of exuberating crime or
encouraging almost, because you think that you can get away with it,
even if you’re caught.
So, God had very severe penalties, but they were effective. Whoever
blasphemes the name of the Lord, will be put to death. Well, you can be
sure that that was a lesson that they had embedded in their minds, and
no one blasphemed the Lord after that.
Capital punishment, in verse seventeen, for anyone who kills a man.
If you killed an animal, you’ve got to make the animal good,
if you cause a disfigurement of a neighbor, as it is done, so shall it
be done to him. [If you broke his leg, your leg is to be broken, if you
blacked his eye, your eye is to be blacked, eye for an eye. If you
knocked out a tooth, then they knock out one of your teeth.] As you
have done, so shall it be done (24:18-20).
Whoever kills an animal, has to restore it. If you kill a man, you are
to be put to death. And the same law goes for everybody. No partiality
as far as the law is concerned, stranger, or one of your own
countryman, it’s all the same.
Chapter 25
Now in chapter 25, he speaks of the Sabbath of the seventh year. That
is, every Sabbath year, you’re to give the land a Sabbath,
the land is to rest. You’re not to plow it, you’re
not to plant it, you’re not to cultivate it, nor are you to
gather it’s fruit. You just let it grow wild in the seventh
year. Of course this is a tremendous soil conservation program that God
had inaugurated, letting the land replenish itself, so that it has its
nutrients again restored to the land. Goodness where we are growing
three or four crops a year on the land, all were doing is feeding the
land with the chemicals and the fertilizer and all, to get the thing to
produce, but the land has been leeched out of any value.
We’ve learned how to grow a beautiful, large, luscious
looking, tasteless tomatoes. Everything’s for the eye, you
know, eye appeal, but as far as real nutrient value and all,
it’s just not there anymore. But God ordered them to just let
the land rest.
Now, the poor of the land, could just come in with the intention, that
it was just there, leave it for the poor people to come in and they
could pick it, and they could have it. But, you weren’t to
take it. Actually God said, “If you do this, in the sixth
year he’ll give you a bumper crop that will carry you over
into the ninth year.” So the seventh year you let the land
rest, and then the eighth year you plant again and it’ll go
for you. It’ll give you enough, at the end of the eighth
year, which would be the ninth year, your sixth year supply will have
last clear over to the harvest of the eighth year. This was the law of
the land.
Then you’re to count seven Sabbaths for the land, and on the
fiftieth year of the year of jubilee, you were to have two years in a
row, where you just kick back and do nothing. Let the land grow of
itself wild, don’t cultivate it, don’t work. Just
take off a year. Just enjoy a year vacation, every seventh year.
That’s not a bad idea! It’s a pretty good life that
God ordered for man.
Now, the children of Israel did not obey this command. When they came
into the land and they began to plant their crops, they just planted
every year, they cultivated every year and they did not keep this law
of God. They did not give the land its rest. They did not observe the
Sabbaths for the land. As a result, after they had been in the land for
490 years without giving it a year off. God said, “Alright!
You did not give the land it’s Sabbaths, as I commanded you
to do, therefore I will give the land it’s Sabbaths, and you
will be carried away captives to Babylon and you will be in Babylon
seventy years until the land has had the seventy sabbaths that it has
coming to it, given to it, and then you will be able to come back to
the land.” So, God took them out of the land for seventy
years. For the 490 years that they were in the land without giving it a
Sabbath.
God will exact His toll, some way or the other. Try and hold back from
God, you think, “Ah, I can get away with it man!”,
you know, planting every year for 490 years, getting by with it. But
God’s gonna get His toll, sooner or later His balance sheet
is gonna come out. You can’t really withhold from God and get
away with it. You can, you know, there’s an old Greek saying,
“The dice of the gods are loaded.” That is, you
just don’t gamble with God. You just don’t go
against God’s word. You’re going find that your
going to be the loser. God’s gonna win every time.
So, the Sabbaths of the land, and then the year of jubilee. On the year
of jubilee, everything returns back, and reverts back to original
ownership. Now when they came into the land, the land was first of all
apportioned out to the twelve tribes, each tribe was given a section of
land, and then each family in that tribe, was given their family
possession and that was to remain. That was your family’s
land. Now you couldn’t really sell it. You could lease it,
but every fifty years, it reverted back to the family. Came back to the
family again so that no family would really lose their land, but if you
sold it or whatever, it was only sold for that period of time. If it
was the first year after the year after the jubilee, then you would
lease it for fifty years, but then it comes back to you again. And so,
it remained in perpetuity for the family. That is the fields, in the
city, your houses were a different matter. So this year of jubilee when
everything reverts back. Each returns to his possession. Verse thirteen.
In verses eighteen to twenty two he makes the promises of the bumper
crops in the sixth year, if they but observe the land Sabbaths. In
verse twenty three, he deals with the redemption of the property. If
you sold the land, then you had the right to redeem the land, or one of
your kinsman redeemers could redeem it for you, what the brother had
sold. Interesting law, we will get into that law more fully when we get
to the book of Ruth. And of course all measure to the time of the year
of jubilee.
In verse thirty five, we have the laws for lending to the poor. You are
to lend to the poor, but not with interest, or usury, that he might be
able to live with you.
Then, the laws concerning slavery. The person who is poor and sells
himself to you, you’re not to make him serve as a slave, but
you’re to keep him as your hired servant, and he shall serve
you until the year of jubilee and then he is to be set free, and
you’re not to rule over him with rigor. You’re to
remember the fact that you were slaves in Egypt, and that God redeemed
you out of your slavery, and so God becomes then the picture of the
ideal master who has redeemed his slaves and has allowed them to serve
Him in joyfulness and blessing. So your servants are to be serving you,
not under a rigor, not under a hard thumb kind of a rule, but easy on
them. You’re not to rule over one another with rigor, that is
those of the children of Israel. If you have foreigners, strangers and
so forth, as a slave, then that was a different story.
The children of Israel are my servants God said. [In verse fifty five]
I have brought them out of the land of Egypt and they are my servants,
and therefore they are not to be slaves. They are my servants (25:55).
Chapter 26
Now, chapter twenty six is a vital chapter. Tremendously important as
God gives them the laws and the blessings if they will obey, but the
curses if they disobey.
So, you will not make any idols, carved images, pillars.
You’re not to set up any grave stones to bow down to them,
for I am the Lord your God. You are to keep my sabbaths, and reverence
my sanctuary: I am the Lord. Now if, [conditional] you walk in my
statutes, keep my commandments, then I will give you rain in its
season, the land will yield its produce, the trees of the field shall
yield their fruit. Your threshing shall last till the time of the
vintage, the vintage shall last till the time of the sowing, you will
eat your bread to the full, you’ll be prosperous,
you’ll be blessed. And you will dwell in the land safely. I
will give you peace in the land, you will lie down, without fear. I
will rid the land of evil beasts, the sword will not go through your
land, you will chase your enemies, and they shall fall by the sword
before you. Five of you shall chase a hundred, a hundred shall put ten
thousand to flight. Your enemies shall fall by the sword before you:
For I will look on you favorably, I will make you fruitful, multiply
you, confirm my covenant with you. You shall eat the old harvest and
clear out the old because of the new. I have set my tabernacle among
you: my soul shall not abhor you, I will walk among you and be your
God, and you shall be my people (26:1-12).
Tremendous blessings promised to them if they would just be
God’s people. “Walk in my statutes, walk according
to my commandments. You’re going to live a full, peaceful,
rich, wonderful life.” God’s promises to those who
will obey Him and walk with Him. Glorious promises of God.
But, if you do not obey me, [verse 14] you do not observe these
commandments, if you despise my statutes, your soul abhors my
judgements, and you do not perform all my commandments, but you break
my covenant: Then this is what I will do to you; I will appoint terror
over you, a wasting disease, fever which will consume the eyes and
cause sorrow of heart. You will sow your seed in vain, because your
enemies shall eat it. I will set my face against you, and you shall be
defeated by your enemies; those who hate you will reign over you; and
you shall flee when no one pursues you, and after all this if you do
not obey me: then I will punish you seven times more for your sins. I
will break the pride of your power, I will make your heavens like iron,
your earth like bronze, and your strength shall be spent in vain, for
your land shall not yield its produce, nor shall the trees of the land
yield their fruit, then if you walk contrary to me and are not willing
to obey me, I will bring on you seven times more plagues, according to
your sins. I will send wild beasts among you which shall rob you of
your children, destroy your live stock, and make you few in numbers.
And your highways will become desolate. And if by these things you are
not reformed by me and you walk contrary to me, then I also will walk
contrary to you and I will punish you seven times for your sins, and I
will bring a sword upon you, execute vengeance, of my covenant. When
they are gathered together within your cities, I will set pestilence
upon you, and you shall be delivered at the hand of your enemy, and I
will cut off the supply of bread. Ten women shall bake your bread in
one oven, and they shall bring back to you your bread by weight and you
will eat and not be satisfied. And after all of this, if you do not
obey me, and you walk contrary to me, then I will also walk contrary to
you in fury, and even I will chastise you seven times for your sins.
You’ll eat the flesh of your sons, you’ll eat the
flesh of your daughters, I will destroy your high places, cut down the
incense altars, and cast the carcases of the lifeless forms of your
idols, and my soul will abhor you. I will lay your cities waste, and
bring your sanctuaries to desolation, and I will not smell the
fragrance of your sweet aromas, I will bring the land to desolations
and your enemies who dwell in it shall be astonished at it, and I will
scatter you among the nations and draw out a sword after you. And your
land shall be desolate and your cities waste, and then the land shall
enjoy its sabbath as long as it lies desolate and you are in the
enemies land (26:14-35).
As we said, this was fulfilled, Jeremiah prophesied of it, and it was
fulfilled in their Babylonian captivity seventy years, for the 490
years that they did not give the land its rest.
As long as it lies desolate it shall rest; and for the time it did not
rest in your sabbaths when you dwelt in it. And as for those of you
that are left, I will send faintness into their hearts in the lands of
their enemies; and a shaking leaf shall cause them to flee, they shall
flee as though fleeing from the sword; they shall fall when no one
pursues. They will stumble over one another and you will have no power
to stand before your enemies. You will perish among the nations, the
land of your enemies shall eat you up. And those of you who are left
shall waste away in the iniquity of your enemies lands; also and their
fathers iniquities, which are with them and they shall waste away. But,
if they confess their iniquity and the iniquity of their fathers, with
their unfaithfulness in which they were unfaithful to me, and that they
also have walked contrary to me; And that I also which I have walked
contrary to them and have brought them into the land of their enemies,;
if their uncircumcised hearts are humbled, and they accept their guilt:
Then I will remember my covenant with Jacob, and my covenant with
Isaac, my covenant with Abraham will I remember; and I will remember
the land. The land also shall be left empty by them, and will enjoy its
sabbaths while it lies desolate without them: and I will accept the
guilt [and so forth], Yet for all of that, when they are in the land of
their enemies, I shall not cast them away, nor shall I abhor them to
utterly destroy, and to break my covenant with them: for I am the Lord
their God (26:36-44).
So, they’ll be in these lands, but even there when they call
on me and confess their sins, I’ll listen, I’ll
restore. Now, this is an important chapter for what we’ve got
ahead of us. When we get to the book of Judges, we’re gonna
find this chapter cycling over and over again. “And the
children of Israel sought the Lord, and God blessed them, and they were
prosperous, they subdued their enemies. And in their prosperity, they
turned from the Lord, and they began to worship their idols, [and so
forth], and the enemies came in and the enemies put them to flight, and
the enemies destroyed them, [and all, and then you know] they called
the Lord.” And then God raised up Gideon and God raised up
the various deliverers the judges. And then as you get into the rest of
the books. Kings, the Chronicles, the same kind of a history, repeated
over and over again. When they were seeking the Lord, and when they
were keeping the commandments of God, they were prospered and blessed
of the Lord, and when they turned from God, then they had all kinds of
calamities that befell them.
Now, the interesting thing is that when Daniel was in captivity in
Babylon, if you will read the prayer of Daniel, you’ll find
that at the end of the captivity period, towards the end there, as
Daniel sought the Lord, and prayed, confessing his sins and the sins of
the nation. Daniel used this passage of scripture to model his prayer.
And so it’s important that you put this together with Daniel
as God here says, “If they confess their iniquity, begin
verse forty, and tie that in with Daniel’s prayer, in
Babylon, in captivity, and you’ll find how that Daniel was a
student of the scriptures and he modeled his prayer right after what
God had said. You read that and you get excited. Because you realize
that Hey, Daniel was on the ball, he was on his toes, he knew what God
had promised, and how he should pray. You wonder, why would Daniel
confess sins and all, when he was such a model person. But yet, he was
following the commandment of the Lord here.
But this chapter, we’ll be referring back to it, over and
over again, because God is really, in a sense, predicting the future,
because He knows what they’re going to do. And knowing what
they’re going to do and the calamity that’s going
to befall them, He’s warning them in advance!
Now, this particular passage was written in a poetic way, so that it
was to be sung; and one of the best ways to memorize things, is to sing
them. The little children can so often learn their A B C’s by
the song, “A B C D E F G, H I J K L M N O P”, you
know and they can learn it much quicker than just by strict rote, if
they can have a little melody to it. This was to be a song. They were
to learn the song, but it was also, when they’re singing it,
suddenly truth strikes you, “Oh wow! That’s why! We
have sinned against the Lord. We broke the covenant. That’s
why this calamity has, just as God said,”. Boy you go through
their history and here is a picture, a graphic picture, of exactly what
happened in the history of the nation of Israel.
You know, this is so important, that we’re going to come back
to twenty six and twenty seven. I hated to rush through it, but I was
trying to finish, but I can’t. And, you just got to know your
limitations.
So, next week Leviticus twenty six and twenty seven. There’s
too much in here to just pass it over lightly. I mean, this is where
it’s at. This is where it’s at. So, we’ll
come back to this next week. I just hate myself for trying to run
through it so fast, when there’s so much there, I just
can’t do it. I just can’t do it. I just
can’t do it.
God help us to learn. To learn all the lessons that were taught to us
in history. The lessons of this people and their relationship with Him.
The blessing of walking with God and keeping His commandments, and the
disastrous consequences of forsaking God and His commandments. That we
might live a life of fellowship with God, blessed, as we walk with Him.
And thus may you live this week, in fellowship with God, walking
according to His commands, and enjoying the fruit of the blessing, of
just being His child, in fellowship with the Father. In
Jesus’ name.