The One Year Bible- February 11th
This week we will start the book of Mark
and right at the beginning of this Gospel there is a verse that jumps out at
me, “News about him [Jesus] spread quickly over the whole region of
Galilee” (Mark 1:28 NIV). Just think of the power of Jesus. Mark tells us “At once” everyone around knew about
him. It reminds me of living in the Internet age. We can get information “at
once” as soon as events happen. It is amazing how fast news travels. But what
has happened to the good news about Jesus? Why is his fame not being spread
everywhere? Well one reason is because the Devil doesn’t want it to. Satan is
waging war against the good news of Jesus Christ and at times he seems to be
winning. Satan is not happy that you are reading the Bible this year and he
will work on your soft spots to get you behind and tempt you to give up. Don’t
let his tricks get you down. You have the most powerful weapon in the fight,
the Word of God. Remember that the battle belongs to the Lord and even though
we may loose a few skirmishes here and there the ultimate victory is the
Lord’s. Keep up the good work and fight the hard fight as you pick up the sword
of the Spirit daily. On to the study...
Seth’s
Thoughts
The Old
Testament
The end of Exodus is just a foretaste of
what is to come in the book of Leviticus. We will be taking a break from the
narrative story for a while and read about many of the nuts and bolts of
religious life of the people of Israel. We usually do not read these sections
of scripture in Church so they may be brand new for you. Exodus ends with the
building of the tabernacle and all the furnishings. This place (and later the
temple) is the physical representation of Yahweh on earth. It is quite
literally, God’s house. The building of this structure is important for many
reasons. First of all, it gave the people something tangible in their
relationship with God. Secondly, it was a place where God could interact with
his people bringing mercy and forgiveness. Third, it sets up the life and
ministry of Jesus. Jesus referred to himself as a temple that would be
destroyed and build again in three days. Jesus himself came down to be a
physical representation of Yahweh on earth. In John 1:14 we read, “The Word
became flesh and made his dwelling among us.” The word we translate at
“made his dwelling” literally means that Jesus “tabernacled” among us. When
Jesus came to earth he becomes another tabernacle, this one wrapped in flesh
and poised to be the ultimate sacrifice for the forgiveness of the sins of the
world. Now the tabernacle had its own purpose in the days of the Israelites,
and the temple as well for that matter, but they both point to a greater
tabernacle and temple in the person of Jesus Christ.
One other thing I want to do this week is
give you an introduction on the many different offerings that are mentioned in
Exodus and especially in Leviticus.
Burnt
Offering: Leviticus 1; 6: 8-13; 8: 18-21; 16: 24 The
burnt offering was for unintentional sin. This was a blanket sacrifice for
wrongdoing in general. The price was a male bull, lamb or goat. It had to be a
perfect animal, without defect. The poor could offer a pigeon or dove. The
penitent would present the animal at the entrance to the tent, which housed the
altar and the tabernacle. After presenting the animal, the sinner would place
his two hands on the animal and thus, it was accepted as an offering for sin.
Probably this act transferred the sin from the human to the animal, which paid
the penalty and was sacrificed. They would kill their own offering and then the
priests took over.
The priests bled the animal and cut it up ceremonially. The priests
sprinkled the blood on the altar. Some of the internal organs and legs were
washed. They then burned it whole on the altar. The aroma was said to be
pleasing to God. The fire had to be continually burning and was never
extinguished.
Grain
Offering: Leviticus 2; 6: 14-23 Voluntary worship
and thanks: A grain offering is just what it says. The grain had to ground into
flour and could be put into loaves or cakes. Olive oil and incense were added
to make a pleasing aroma when it burned. Yeast was forbidden for this offering.
The cakes had to be salted. The offering was presented to the priests who
burned a small portion of it on the altar. The rest was food for them and the
Levites.
Fellowship
Offering: Leviticus 3: 7: 11-34
A voluntary act of worship, thanks and
fellowship: This is called a fellowship offering because the sacrifice is eaten
communally instead of burned. Any clean animal, male or female could be
offered. Bread, both with and without yeast, was also part of the offering.
These were presented at the gate of the tent. The priests would sprinkle the
blood on the four corners of the altar. The internal organs, the fat on them
and the best part of the liver were burned as a food offering. The rest had to
be eaten within two days or else it was burned also.
Sin
Offering: Leviticus 4: 1-5: 13; 6: 24-30; 8: 14-17;
16: 3-22 Mandatory for specific sins: All of these offerings for sins are for
unintentional transgressions. If you were guilty of premeditated infraction,
these offerings didn’t help you. Your stature in the community determined the
kind of sacrifice that you were required to offer. A young bull was required
for the sin of a high priest or for a community sin. Leaders had to present a
male goat. The common people could bring a female goat or a lamb. The poor were
permitted to offer a dove or pigeon and the very poor could get away with a tenth
of an ephah of fine flour. The bull’s fat was burned inside the camp but the
rest was burned outside. Leviticus 5 records the sins for which a sin offering
was required. These include unintentionally touching an animal that is ritually
unclean, touching something unclean of human origin or making a careless
promise.
Guilt
Offering: (Repayment Offering) Leviticus
5:14 – 6:7; 7: 1-6 Mandatory for unintentional sin requiring restitution: This
is a repayment offering for a sin committed against God, like holding back your
tithe. A ram or lamb was brought to the tent to be sacrificed. The debt would
have to be paid plus an additional twenty percent. These were the offerings
outlined in the first seven chapters of Leviticus. God could forgive mistakes
but intentional sins were another matter.
The New
Testament
At the beginning of last week we saw the
familiar words of institution as Jesus gives his disciples communion for the
first time. Remember that meals were very important for the Jews and the
connection that this new meal of remembrance first occurred during Passover is
by no means a coincidence. Remember that Matthew is writing to a Jewish
audience and this new covenant made in blood would ring a bell with all his
readers. This would cut to the heart of any Jew, hearing about this because
blood equals life. It is not in our culture to think of that. In fact when
people outside of the Christian faith hear about being washed in the blood of
the lamb, they get turned off from Christianity. I guess my point here is we
need to watch how we word some things. To a Jewish audience, Matthew does the
culturally relevant thing; when we share the message of Jesus we need to be
careful not to offend or even gross out someone when talking about blood.
I want to say a few words about the Great
commission this week and I hope not to loose you when I start talking about
Greek grammar. First of all every time we translate the Bible from its original
languages we loose something. The phrase “Lost in translation” is really true.
At times when we translate into English we then, without thinking place certain
rules and meaning based on sentence structure and word order. Unfortunately
many people, myself included, have misinterpreted portions of scripture because
of our cultural bias toward English. In reading the Great Commission in English
it seems to be that Jesus is giving us a command (called an imperative) in the
word “go”, but in the Greek this word is an adverbial participle, not an
imperative. What is an adverbial participle? The action described by an
adverbial participle is primarily directed toward the verb. This kind of
participle is usually translated with an adverbial phrase. “While studying for
his Greek final...” or “While going through the world...”. So we see in Matthew
28 an interesting grammatical sentence that if translated properly is very poor
English. A very literal interpretation would be, “As you are going, disciple
all the nations, by baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and
of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things...” The only imperative
in the Great Commission is to disciple others—literally to make them learners.
How do we do it? Well, Jesus tells us, we are to baptize and teach. Again these
words are not imperatives but the natural flow of what will occur by “discipleing”
others. Don’t even get me started on the NIVs use of the word “obey”. What a
poor translation that is! We are to observe the things of Jesus through his
word and actions and they serve as a guide. They are descriptive on how we are
to live not prescriptive. I could go on about this one but we don’t have time
here.
One quick thing about the book of Mark. As
you read look for the extensive use of the word “immediately” (or similar
phrases such as “at once”, they are usually the same word in the Greek). This
is a book of action. It hits the ground running and never stops. It is a good
book to read as we slug through Leviticus. It will give us some balance to our
readings for the next couple of weeks.
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