|
The UK Bible Students Website Christian Biblical Studies |
SHADOW AND
SUBSTANCE
The
Consecration of the Priests
Second in an occasional
series
The
Anointing
At the establishment of the Tabernacle the High
Priest chosen was Aaron, the brother of Moses. His sons were appointed as
under-priests. But before they were allowed to serve they had to be anointed. It
is this anointing which comprises the focus of this short study. We will comment
on the symbols associated with the service. The text is that of the New
International Version (UK edition).
Leviticus 8:
14-30
14 [Aaron] then presented the bull for the sin offering, and Aaron and his
sons laid their hands on its head.
Laying their hands on the head of the bull
seems to signify, ‘this represents us’ – the ‘us’ in the antitype being the
humanity of Jesus and the Church. The animal was to be the best of the herd.
This seems to denote the actual perfection of Jesus, the man, and the
reckoned perfection of His Church, who derive their justification by
faith in Him, their sins being covered.
15 Moses slaughtered the bull and took some of the blood, and with
his finger he put it on all the horns of the altar to purify the altar. He
poured out the rest of the blood at the base of the altar. So he consecrated it
to make atonement for it. 16
Moses also took all the fat around the
inner parts, the covering of the liver, and both kidneys and their fat, and
burned it on the altar.
Moses was the embodiment of the Law, being its
mediator and representative (Galatians
3: 19). Over the generations the name ‘Moses’ became synonymous with
‘the Law’ (Acts
15: 21). By and through the Law Covenant sacrifices, especially those
offered on the Day of Atonement, Jehovah made
provision for the temporary, annual, justification of the nation,
predictive of the ‘once for all’ sacrifice of Christ which would come later. The
blood sprinkled around the base of the altar may suggest that the sacrifice of
Christ is so comprehensive as to cover the cursed earth itself (Genesis
3: 17-19).
17
But the bull with its hide and its flesh and its offal he
burned up outside the camp, as the LORD commanded
Moses.
From the standpoint of an unregenerate world
the ministry and sacrifice of Jesus and His Church is as vile refuse, dung,
something to be despised. They are, figuratively, hounded out of secular
civilisation, persecuted to death.
18
He then presented the ram for the burnt offering, and Aaron and his sons laid
their hands on its head. 19 Then Moses
slaughtered the ram and sprinkled the blood against the altar on all
sides.
There is a shift in viewpoint here. Now
we see the Church herself as a sin-offering, again signified by the pantomime of
the laying on of the hands. (For an elementary explanation of the Church’s
sin-offering, see the article ‘Dying for the
Dead’ on this site.) Needless to say, the
sin-offering of the Church does not equal or compete with the ransom-offering of
Jesus, which is unique and all-inclusive. For only Jesus could tender the
purchase price for the whole race (which includes the Church). However, the
Church has the honour of suffering with Him, thereby contributing to the
effectiveness of the Christian ministry and amplifying the efficacy of Christ’s
sacrifice. The Church’s ministry is beneficial for all, shown by the blood being
sprinkled around the altar.
20
He cut the ram into pieces and burned the head, the pieces and the fat.
21 He washed the inner parts and the legs with
water and burned the whole ram on the altar as a burnt offering, a pleasing
aroma, an offering made to the LORD by fire, as the LORD commanded
Moses.
This description portrays the consuming of the
sacrifice offered by Jesus (the Head) and the Church (the Body). Though despised
by the world, the conjoined sacrifice was very pleasing to
God.
To
be continued
Copyright July 2009
ukbiblestudents.co.uk
You may reproduce this article in part or whole, but please let us know if you do.