Showing posts with label priests. Show all posts
Showing posts with label priests. Show all posts

Saturday, October 23, 2021

The Cup

 


“And He (Jesus) was saying, ‘Abba! Father! All things are possible for You; remove this cup from Me, yet not what I will, but what You will.’” (Mark 14:36 [NASB])

 Jesus approached His final Passover. He and His disciples walked to Jerusalem to take part in the festivities and remembrances that week. The Jews recalled the times when I AM (Yahweh God) provided food for them in the wilderness. They remembered when the Spirit of God went from home to home and from one animal stall to another, killing the first-born of each species. Moses told the Jews to put the blood of a sacrificial lamb on their door frame to protect them from God’s judgment. The Spirit bypassed obedient Hebrews when exacting God’s vengeance against Egypt. During that night the Jews prepared for the journey they would begin the next day. They packed their belongings and asked their Egyptian neighbors for their gold, silver, and other assets. During this night, they made unleavened bread for the journey. Jesus traveled to Jerusalem like obedient Jews did to celebrate the Passover and the exodus from Egypt.

 Jesus and His disciples obediently journeyed to Jerusalem to thank God. They prepared and ate a meal together. Jesus knew, though His disciples did not understand fully, that His time had come. Soon He would be arrested and handed over to the Jewish religious leaders and Roman leaders. The purpose for His life on earth had arrived. The purpose for Jesus’ birth as a man was to provide a once-for-all perfect sacrifice for humanity’s sins. For this reason, He purposefully walked to Jerusalem.

 After Jesus celebrated the Passover and began giving its new meaning of the “Lord’s Supper,” He and His disciples walked to the Mount of Olives, where they often prayed and He taught them. During this time, Judas Iscariot prepared to betray Jesus. He took thirty pieces of silver from the Jewish religious leaders and sought a time to betray Jesus. Jesus knew who would betray Him. He realized, because He is 100% divine, He would be given into the hands of men who would crucify Him. The Son, like the Father, knows all things. That He knew His disciple would betray Him weighed heavily on His heart. As the Son of Man (100% God and 100% man), Jesus understood He would experience the pain of being nailed to a cross, having His side pierced by a spear, and gasping for breath. As a man, Jesus probably felt trepidation and needed strength to finish His purpose on earth. His human mind and heart possibly dreaded what He understood must be done. This gives new depth of meaning to John 3:16. God (Father, Son, and Spirit) loves us so much that He willingly sent His Son to earth in the form of a man to die the death of judgment for our each of our sins. Jesus, God with us, came to us and for us, willingly and knowingly living on earth as a man to die a slow death of asphyxiation for each person. He did this so whoever believes in Him as the Son of God, the Messiah, will have eternal life and forgiveness of sins.

 Jesus said in Mark 14, “Abba! Father! All things are possible for You; remove this cup from Me, yet not what I will, but what You will.” Jesus called out, “Daddy!” That speaks of a close relationship with the Father. He then states fact; God is Sovereign and can do anything. Anything, like keeping one from death and from the hands of angry, evil, and scared men. Anything, like making a way for His created and rebellious humans to have an eternal relationship with Him. God is the source of all power. Jesus knows the Godhead is all-powerful. He also knows no other way was available to provide redemption from sins. A sin sacrifice was required, and it could not be just anything. This sin sacrifice had to be perfect, without blemish or stain from sin. The only sinless being is the Godhead-Father, Son, and Spirit. God provided the perfect sacrifice through the death of the Son of Man and Son of God, Jesus the Messiah. With this understanding, Jesus made His final statement in this verse. He said, “Not what I will, but what You will.” The humanity of Jesus submitted to the perfect, divine will of the Godhead. He willingly walked to the cross to be crucified, pierced, and to suffocate so humanity could be saved from their sins and death.

 The Father did not leave Jesus to walk to His mortal death alone. In Luke 22:43, Luke tells us, “An angel from heaven appeared to Him (Jesus) and strengthened Him.” The Father realized the mortal flesh was weary and frightened but determined to do His will because of His overabundant love for each person. Luke continued in verse forty-four by saying, “And being in anguish, He (Jesus) prayed more earnestly, and His sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground.” [NIV] Jesus prayed for the strength to walk to His death. He prayed for each person to believe in Him. Jesus prayed so fervently that sweat became profuse, like a river of blood flowing from an arterial vein. The angel encouraged, strengthened, and upheld Him for the purpose for which He humbly gave up His place on the throne in heaven. Jesus’ decision was deliberate before He left heaven, while He walked and taught on earth, and as He prepared for Judas’ betrayal, the Jewish religious leaders’ antagonism and unbelief, and Pontius Pilate’s handwashing. This One who died for the sins of each person was betrayed, mocked, tormented, and found unworthy for a governor to be held accountable.

 Considering what Jesus did and said in Mark 14:36 and Luke 22:43, are any of us ever willing to make these statements to God? Have any of us lived out God’s purpose this determinedly? Have we made a genuine sacrifice of ourselves to God’s plans and purposes? With Jesus as our model, I realize few people make this ultimate stand for God. This purpose in life requires a total surrender of heart and will to God’s plans. Jesus understood this profound surrender. To give oneself in total surrender to God means giving the right to oneself-one’s whole heart, mind, body, and spirit-to obey God in His purposes to save every person before he or she mortally dies.

 Just as Abba gave strength to Jesus to walk the road to Calvary, He gives us the strength to walk according to His plans. Those plans may be to help someone with food, offer shelter for someone without a home, or donate to a charitable organization. It may also mean leaving home and country to live where most people have not heard about Jesus and walk with them telling them about Him. Walking with unbelievers often means being willing to sacrifice our lives. The key to each of these tasks and others God asks of believers is God, not us. God created. He sacrificed and redeems. God cleanses. He calls and strengthens. Then, God walks with those who willingly offer to Him what He asks of them. God gives each person what she or he needs to live abundantly in a loving, growing, and eternal relationship with Him.

Jesus didn’t ask for a kiss, but Judas gave it.

He asks us to believe in Him; He paid the price.

 Are you willing to give your all-heart, soul, body, and spirit-to God? He will give you the strength and everything you need to follow Him. All things are possible with God.


Friday, November 28, 2014

Following the Leader (part 2) Deuteronomy 18


Deuteronomy 18

INTRODUCTION

            God created the nation of Israel from the smallest of people groups and took them from out of one of the largest people groups in the world around 1440BC. He established this nation and set up its codes of moral, spiritual, and civil law. God taught through Moses about the leaders the people would need to appoint and follow, too. Last week, we read about the judges, officers, and kings. This week our reading tells us about priests and prophets. In our present day and age, a distinct difference between civil and religious judges and kings exists. In the time of Israel’s foundation, judges and kings presided over the people using God’s laws to guide the moral, civil, and spiritual aspects of society. Today, we rarely find out about a country that does not separate church and state issues. From the current separation of church and state, judges and kings only rule on issues of civil law. In this study, the position of prophet will be considered again, as in Deuteronomy 13, but it will be juxtaposed with the secular form of prophets at the time – witches, sorcerers, et.al. Let us now look at Deuteronomy 18.

LEADERS

Priests

            Eight verses in Deuteronomy 18 speak of priests, but we know more about them from 245 other references in the Pentateuch (first five books of the Bible). Verse 1 begins, “The Levitical priests, the whole tribe of Levi, shall have no portion or inheritance with Israel.” The word for priest is kohen. It means priest, principal officer, or chief ruler. The word kohen came to mean, over time, the line of priests descended from Aaron, the grandson of Levi. Yet, when  Moses taught the Israelites before crossing the Jordan River, kohen meant every Levitical priest. Moses denoted it with the dependant clause in verse one. No distinction is obvious between kohanim and levi’im (the other tribes of Levi not from Aaron’s line) during the early days of the nation of Israel. The people of Israel recognized, in time, Aaron’s line as the high priests in the house of God.

            God did not give the Levitical priests an inheritance of land as He did the other eleven tribes of Israel. He said, in the latter half of verse one, “They shall eat the LORD’s offering by fire and His portion.” The Levitical priests received the burnt offering the Israelites offered at the sanctuaries and later at the temple. The “portion” of which Moses spoke was their inheritance or share of the bounty for the year that the Israelites took to the temple or sanctuaries. Deuteronomy 10:9 says, “Levi does not have a portion or inheritance with his brothers; the LORD is his inheritance.” 1 Corinthians 9:13 says, “Do you not know that those who perform sacred services eat the food of the temple, and those who attend regularly to the altar have their share from the altar?” Moses reiterated Deuteronomy 10:9 in 18:2. God promised the Levitical priests an inheritance from His portion. He said this to Aaron in Numbers 18:20, too. God was specific in verse three about what part of the burnt offering and sacrifices the priests received. In the first part of the sentence of verse three, Moses spoke of the priests’ due. “Due” comes from the Hebrew word mishpat and means proper, fitting, measure, and plan. He said they received the shoulder, two cheeks (jaws), and the stomach (see Leviticus 7:32-34). Other passages in the Pentateuch speak of what is due to the priests. Leviticus 7:32-34 says food was to come from the peace offering (the thigh) and from the wave offering (bread). In Numbers 18:11-12, the priests received from the wave offering the best of the fresh wine, grain, and first fruits. Deuteronomy 18:4 speaks of first fruits, new wine, oil, and the first shearing of their sheep, too. (The first shearing was most often the softest.) God ensured the Levitical priests had enough to eat, a place to live, and wool from which to make cloth.

            Why did the Levitical priests get the first and best of what the other Israelites grew and raised? The main answer is because the LORD chose and set them apart to serve Him alone. Because of Aaron’s faithfulness to God, God chose the tribe of Levi to serve Him. Exodus 29:9 says that God chose them as priests by a perpetual statute. The priests’ service to Him was to be single-minded. For priests, serving God was their sole duty whether they lived in Jerusalem or in an outlying town serving in the tabernacles/sanctuaries (pre-temple). God provided for the priests who journeyed/moved from towns to Jerusalem to serve in the temple, too. He considered no one priest or group of the priests any better than another. He did, though, give priests from Aaron’s line a more sacred duty, that of being chief priests. Whether the priests came from outlying towns or Jerusalem, God told them they each would eat equal portions (18:8). He, too, allowed the priest whose father’s estate had value to receive and keep the money from that estate. Since they did not own land, the estate value came from the animals and personal property his father owned. The important point is that one person was not greater than another was. Service to the LORD was different for just a small few.

            God created each person equal to the others. None of them had more worth than any other. The difference lay just in the service God had them offer. Their service to Him did not make him have more worth. Even today, one person is not more worthy than another based on their humanity. Each person deserves food, shelter, and clothing. For God, this meant life. When the Israelites kept their covenant with God, God kept His covenant to them and gave them prolonged life in the land of Israel. When the people did not keep their covenant with God, His promise of a curse fell upon them. The curse was death - immediate or delayed. By keeping covenant with God, the Israelites kept His laws (the Ten Commandments), statutes, and ordinances.

Spiritism

            Moses began the next section with negative commands reminding the Israelites of earlier commands and teachings he gave them. He began with the command to serve the LORD alone by not doing specific abominable acts (Deuteronomy 18:10). God said doing abominable things was rebellion against Him. The Israelites should remember He rescued them from slavery, brought them to the Promised Land, and promised to be there for them if they kept their covenant with Him. God cared about them so they should love Him and be obedient to His laws.

            Moses did not speak in generalities, but in specifics in verses ten through eleven. He said,

There shall not be found among you anyone who makes his son or daughter pass through the fire, one who uses divination, one who practices witchcraft, or one who interprets omens, or a sorcerer, or one who casts a spell, or a medium, or a spiritist, or one who calls up the dead. [NASB]

When he told them not to pass their child through fire, he alluded to the religious ritual of neighboring nations of appeasing Molech/Baal (see Deuteronomy 12:31). The people of the nations thought offering a living sacrifice to this god ensured a fruitful harvest. Since God cherishes human life, humankind should, too. Besides this, burning a person has no effect on a harvest. God determined the harvest based on the Israelite’s faithfulness to His covenant. Faithlessness led to death – no harvest, starvation, and death – and faithfulness led to life, the opposite of death.

            Since Moses recognized the sanctity of life and the importance of remaining faithful to God’s covenant, he spoke of seven acts/roles involved in spiritism that God called abominable. He spoke against divination, witchcraft, omens, sorcerers, casting spells, mediums, spiritists, and calling up the dead. To understand this better, let us define each of these. Divination is seeking knowledge of the future or the unknown through supernatural means. Divination is interpreting omens - observing signs and taking them as omens. A sorcerer is one who uses magic or witchcraft to do spells or enchant. The attempt to influence nature or people through magic (being a sorcerer or witch) is what Moses called casting spells. A medium is a person who mediates between the dead or a deity to a living person to communicate with them. A spiritist is similar a medium and is a person familiar with the dead. The final act, witchcraft,  is the practicing of magic, divination, spiritism/being a medium, sorcery, conjuring (doing tricks), and casting spells. As you realize with this list, witchcraft encompasses each of the six of the other acts of spiritism on which Moses spoke. Moses spoke earlier in Exodus 22:18 and in Leviticus 19:26, 31 and 20:6 against these practices. He said they would defile the person who did them and the LORD would find them abominable. God would turn His face from them, Moses said. Jeremiah 27:9-10a spoke on point when he said,

Do not listen to your prophets, your diviners, your dreamers, your soothsayers, or your sorcerers who speak to you saying ‘You will not serve the king of Babylon.’ For they prophesy a lie to you in order to remove you far from your land. [NASB]

If God removed a person from the Promised Land, that meant the person or people were unfaithful to their covenant with Him. So if a person did something to be removed, then the one who instigated their unfaithfulness - Satan and his followers - was the antithesis to God. Hence, these seven things of which Moses spoke against and God considers abominable are from Satan.

            What is the punishment for doing these detestable things? Separation from God - death. Moses stated it for the Israelites in verse twelve. He said God would drive out from the Promised Land those who did these detestable things. Moses gave this as the reason God removed the Canaanites’ from Canaan when the Israelites moved into the land in Leviticus 18:24. On the positive side, Moses said in verse thirteen, “You shall be blameless before the LORD your God.” God encouraged them to stay faithful to their covenant with Him, which would make them blameless. The word “blameless” is the Hebrew word tamiym. It means to be complete, perfect, and innocent. As we know, though, the Israelites and the rest of humanity through the ages were never blameless. The writer of Genesis used the word “blameless” to describe Noah in Genesis 6:9 and Abraham in Genesis 17:1. They rebelled against God, as humankind does, but they repented and returned to God. In Matthew 5:48, Jesus said in the Sermon on the Mount that people are to be perfect (blameless) just as the heavenly Father is perfect.
            As we comprehend from the reading of our Bibles and as Jews and Christians realized, nothing a person does can make him or her perfect. Only the perfect sacrifice can make that happen. God offered the perfect sacrifice through the life, death, and resurrection of His only Son, Jesus Christ. For the Israelites 1400 years before Christ’s birth, the means God gave them to be blameless was to follow His commandments and be faithful to their covenant with Him. God said the Israelites would dispossess the nations who practice these detestable things. He did not allow the Israelites to follow them (18:14-15). God had something better planned for them.

Prophets

As the alternative for following the practices of the surrounding nations, God promised to “raise up” a prophet for them, similar to Moses, from within their nation. God had this same requirement for the leaders He allowed the people to have in Deuteronomy 16:18-17:20. Moses commanded in Deuteronomy 18:15 that they listen to the future prophet. “Listen” comes from the Hebrew word shama, which comes from the same root word as shamar. It means to hear, listen, and follow. The Canaanites attempted to get advice by speaking with their gods, dead leaders, and dead loved ones by using witchcraft and sorcery. The people of Canaan did what these prophets of Satan required instead of what God required. God promised to give the Israelites a prophet who would be like Moses. Moses was their leader, mediator, intercessor, judge, and prophet. In Matthew 21:11, Luke 2:25-34, 4:19, 7:16, and John 1:21, 25, and 4:19, people speak of the prophet of which Moses spoke. The Israelites feared God when they heard His voice and saw the fire on Mount Sinai/Mount Horeb. Because of that, they requested Moses as the mediator between them and God (Exodus 20:18-19, Deuteronomy 5:23-27). God said they spoke well when they asked Moses to be their mediator with Him (Deuteronomy 18:17, 5:28). The Israelites awe and fear of God continued through history and they still required a mediator to go between them and God. God fulfilled Moses’ prophecy in verse fifteen about the future prophet many times through Old Testament prophets and through Jesus Christ. Moses was a foretaste of Jesus Christ. He was a visible representation of what Jesus Christ would be for humankind.

In verse 15, Moses spoke to Israel while in verse 18, Moses reminded the Israelites of what God said in Deuteronomy 13. He proved the appointment of prophets in chapter 18 came from God by referring to what He said in chapter 13. In verse 18, Moses recalled God said, “I will raise up a prophet from among their countrymen like you, and I will put My words in his mouth and he shall speak to them all I command him.” Many prophets came before Jesus speaking for God. They reminded the Israelites what God required of them, what His condemnation would be, and their need to return to their covenant with Him. Verse 18 ultimately alluded to Jesus Christ.

Moses said in verses 19-20 God had one requirement for the people of Israel and two for His prophet. The first of the two rules for the prophet was he had to speak what God required of him (vs. 19). The second requirement God gave was he speak just what God commanded and not speak for himself or other so-called gods (vs. 20). The one requirement God gave the Israelites about prophets was they listen (shama – hear, listen, and obey) to what the prophets told them. God demanded their obedience and promised life if they obeyed and death if they did not. This harkens back to the law of the ban earlier in Deuteronomy when God told the Israelites to remove every trace of the Canaanites and their worship.

            With this warning in the Israelites’ minds, Moses realized the people might question how they could tell if a prophet spoke for the LORD. He reminded them that if a prophet prophesied something in the name of the LORD and it did not occur, then the LORD did not speak it (vs. 22). From Deuteronomy 13, we learned other ways to decide if a prophet is from God. If a prophet, friend, or family member says to serve other gods, that person is not from God (Deut. 13:6-8). In Deuteronomy 13:12-15, Moses said if a person in another town or city says to the town’s residents, “Let us go and serve other gods,” you shall not believe him or her, but shall put them under the law of the ban. So if a person says to follow and serve other gods or if what the prophet says does not come true, the person is not a prophet from God. To the Israelites’ fear of being punished by God if they do not listen to and obey a prophet, Moses told them, they need not be afraid (vs. 19, 22) of not following a false prophet.

CONCLUSION

            God established the new nation of Israel. They were a religio-political state. Their judges gave verdicts based on God’s laws, statutes, and ordinances. The kings read and lived by God’s laws. The officers ruled under the leadership of the judges. The priests were the intermediaries between the people and God. They were the role models and enforcers of what God required of the people in their spiritual lives. The prophets were the voice of God calling people to obedience, to return to God, and telling of His punishments on the people. Because God established this nation from a people He called His own, His laws for governing society were moral and spiritual. When people transgressed a moral/civil law, they disobeyed God. Disobedience is rebellion against God and the breaking of covenant with Him. The people knew in advance what the blessing and curse of faithfulness and unfaithfulness to the covenant would be. They acknowledged it when they pledged themselves to God.

God provided these five different leaders to remind the people of their covenant and call them back to Him. He wanted everyone to be in relationship with Him. He did not and does not want anyone cursed with death. Death is eternal separation from God. When Moses said, “The LORD will raise up for you a prophet like me from among you,” he meant ultimately the LORD would send His perfect prophet, mediator, leader, priest, and sacrifice – Jesus Christ (Deut 18:15). Isaiah spoke of this prophet, Jesus, in Isaiah 40:3-5.

God’s hand is visible to everyone. People do not have an excuse to say they did not know about God. At Jesus’ birth, wise men and shepherds noticed He was God’s Son. At his death, some soldiers, Jews, and one of the thieves noticed He was the Son of God. At Jesus’ resurrection, the disciples, women, and a multitude of people saw Him and noticed He is the Son of God. Since then, millions across the ages and the world recognized and called Him the Son of God. Moses was the precursor of the future High Priest, Prophet, Savior, and Son of God. He was the precursor of Jesus Christ. God gave the Israelites a glimpse of the perfect Savior, Priest, and Salvation through Moses’ life. We in the 21st century have more than a glimpse. We have the testimony of eyewitnesses, Christians for twenty centuries, and our own experiences of God. We know Him firsthand. Can we turn our backs on this evidence? Can we say no to the perfect sacrifice who came to make us blameless similar Noah and Abraham (Deuteronomy 18:13)? Jesus can and wants to make us perfect, complete, and whole again. What keeps you from seeing and giving Him your imperfect life? What keeps you from abundant life?

           

Sunday, December 22, 2013

The New and Greater (est) Covenant


Hebrews 8

We began our book of Hebrews Bible study last week with Hebrews 7. Let us remember the main points of the chapter. Jesus was of a type like Melchizadek, the first priest of Yahweh. Since he had no known birth or death dates, he appeared to be before time and continuing after time. In addition, since he received a tithe from Abraham, which acknowledges Abraham considered Melchizadek a priest of God, we must consider him as such. Further, Melchizadek offered bread and wine, as Jesus did when He distributed the Passover and reckoned it His body and blood. Another thing to consider in their relationship to each other is Melchizadek’s name meant king of righteousness and he was the king of Salem, which means peace. Melchizadek was the king of righteousness and peace. Jesus, too, is the king of righteousness and peace. Existing before time makes Jesus before the Law God gave to Moses. This means Jesus’ personage came before the Law stating the priests were to come from the line of Aaron, the tribe of Levi. In addition, we found out from the writer of Hebrews the Law led us to know our sin, but did not give us cleansing from our sins eternally. The sacrifices offered were offered repeatedly over time, whereas, the sacrifice Jesus offered was once-for-all. His sacrifice was sufficient for all time and all people.
Let us begin our study for this week in Hebrews 8. The first verse of Hebrews 8 states, “Now the main point in what has been said is this: we have such a high priest, who has taken His seat at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens.” The writer immediately stated Jesus’ position. He dealt at length with this thought in chapter 7 and he wanted to make this emphatic statement to clarify so there was no doubt about it. Jesus is our High Priest who sits at the right hand of God in heaven. David, in Psalm 110:1, said, “The LORD says to my Lord, ‘Sit at My right hand until I make Your enemies a footstool for Your feet.” Hebrews 1:3 states, “When He had made purification of sins, He sat down at the right hand of the Majesty/God on high.” In both the Old and New Testaments, Jesus is a part of the Godhead upon the throne. He sits at the right hand of Yahweh God who reigns in majesty. Further, in Hebrews 3:1, we see we are to consider Jesus as the Apostle and High Priest of our confession. He is above the earthly priests and His sacrifice offered was greater than any that earthly priests could offer. The main point in verse one is still that Jesus sits at the right hand of the Father until HE (the Father) makes His (Jesus’) enemies His footstool, until all evil is defeated. A person under Jesus’ feet means he or she is under subjection to Jesus. You can see this in Ephesians 1:22 and 1 Corinthians 15:25, too.
Moving to verse two, we read, “A minister in the sanctuary and in the true tabernacle, which the Lord pitched, not man.” This is a continuation of verse 1. Jesus is a priest in the sense people know priests; He offers sacrifice. Another difference from the earthly priests is they offer service in the earthly sanctuary and tabernacle, whereas, Jesus Christ offers service as a minister in the true tabernacle. This verse appears easy enough to understand. There are sects that interpret this to mean Jesus is still ministering in a heavenly tabernacle like priests on earth minister in an earthly tabernacle. They think this because, in Exodus 25:9 & 40, God told Moses to make the tabernacle “after the pattern for them, which was shown to you on the mountain.” People from these other religious organizations have read that the earthly tabernacle is a pattern or copy of a tabernacle in heaven. They believe God reigns in a heavenly tabernacle. However, we must return to what tabernacle and sanctuary mean and their purposes to understand this verse. The tabernacle was a tent pitched by the Israelites while they were traveling to the Promised Land. There was nothing solid about the tabernacle; it was a portable place of worship. Yet, God required the Israelites to set aside a place for Him to be a holy place where the people could go to Him for worship and to offer sacrifice. When we read further in Hebrews, the writer explains to us what he meant by the “true tabernacle.” In Hebrews 9:24 he said, “For Christ did not enter a holy place made with hands, a mere copy of the true one, but into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for us.” The “true tabernacle” is heaven where the Father sits on His throne and Christ is sitting at His right hand. God provided the diagram for Moses to build the tabernacle. Just as God planned the earth, heavens, and universes,  He planned the tabernacle and Moses built it to God's specification. The earthly tabernacle does not look and function as the “true tabernacle.” The earthly tabernacle was for use while they were traveling, but when the Israelites settled in the Promised Land, they built temples and synagogues.
Solomon built the temple according to God’s specifications. It was the center of Jewish worship from that time. The Jews rebuilt it under the leadership of Ezra after the Babylonian exile. The Wailing Wall is what remains of the temple area. It is the western retaining wall for the hill where the temple stood. Today the Dome of the Rock built by the Muslims resides where the temple of Jerusalem was. A synagogue is a house of prayer. It is where Jews come together for community prayer services. Because of this, Jewish rabbis call the synagogue the “little temple” in rabbinical literature. The synagogues are independent community organizations. They can be run with or without a rabbi whom the board of directors (lay people) of the synagogue hire. Jews hold prayer services in the sanctuary of the synagogue. To summarize, the Israelites built the temple according to the specifications of God and for worship of God in Jerusalem. No other temple exists. Individual Jewish communities build synagogues for their communities. It is a place of prayer for Jews in the community. The sanctuary is where the prayer services in a sanctuary occur. Comprehending this makes it easier to understand the writer of Hebrews when he speaks of being in the “true tabernacle,” a place not pitched by the hands of men. Nothing of earth is exactly like God’s heaven, not His Priest, His sacrifice, or the place from which He reigns and ministers.
Hebrews 8:3 states, “For every high priest is appointed to offer both gifts and sacrifices; so it is necessary that this high priest also have something to offer.” Every high priest, according to the decrees of God, was to offer gifts to God and sacrifices for the people’s sins (to atone for their sins) so they could be in the presence of God in His tabernacle/temple. “Gifts” is doron and are offered in honor of God as thanks. The "gifts" are used for the temple and the poor. “Sacrifices” is thusia and, in the Law, were for the forgiveness of sins. Since the Law required the High Priests to offer gifts and sacrifices, the High Priest for us must have something to offer just as the Old Testament gifts and sacrifices (see Leviticus 16). The earthly priests were to offer gifts of thanks to God. These gifts were for the priests and aided the poor. The priests were to offer sacrifices for atoning/forgiving of sins. Jesus as the High Priest offered these, too. His sacrifice was His death and blood for our once-and-for-all redemption from the penalty of sin, death forever. In the old covenant, priest had to offer gifts, too. Jesus’ gift was a gift from God to humankind as a gift of love, the birth, life, death, and resurrection of the Son of God. Note the difference here from the earthly priests. God gave both sacrifice and the gift in the new covenant. Humankind has to do nothing to make the new covenant valid. This is why the new covenant is more powerful and will be effective. Humankind has to do nothing to be a part of it or receive the benefits of it. Yahweh does it everything. We just accept the gift and believe. The gift of Jesus becomes personal when each person believes Jesus is the Son of God and He died to remove his or her sins. The act of belief/faith is a gift from God, which anyone can have by asking God. We can be like the father in Mark 9:17-24 who recognizes his unbelief and asks for faith. In addition, Paul said in 1 Corinthians 12:9 God gives faith as a gift.
Reading Hebrews 8:4-5 we see,
Now if He were on earth, He would not be a priest at all since there are those who offer the gifts according to the Law who serve a copy and shadow of the heavenly things just as Moses was warned by God when he was about to erect the tabernacle.See,’ He (God) says, ‘that you make all things according to the pattern which was shown you on the mountain’.
 If this High Priest were on earth, we would not need him because earthly priests offer these gifts and sacrifices according to the Law. We need a High Priest who did not come by the Law but by power and might and who shows us our sin and removes all of it for eternity, not just for a time. This High Priest came from the Most High God, who has no beginning and no end and who has the power to provide the sufficient sacrifice so we can be in His presence for now and forever. These earthly high priests are a copy and shadow of heavenly things. “Copy” is hupodeigma in Greek and means a representation or a thing to be imitated. This Greek word is also used in John 13:15, James 5:10, 2 Peter 2:6 (“example”), and Hebrews 4:11 and 9:23. A copy is never as accurate and sufficient as the real and original. “Shadow” is skia in Greek and means an image cast by an object and representing the form of that object. Thus, the earthly tabernacle represents (is an image of) the true tabernacle – heaven - but is not the true tabernacle. In heaven, we will have access and communication with God at any time. The tabernacle was a holy place on earth where priests could intercede/speak to God for their people. So, in all the earth this was the only place people could commune with God, whereas, in heaven, people can commune with God anywhere and at any time. The earthly tabernacle and priests are just an image, not the real and perfect thing. Even Moses knew it was a representation, not the true tabernacle (heaven). He was making the tabernacle according to the “pattern,” which God showed him on the mountain (Exodus 25:40). Since the earthly tabernacle is a representation, the high priests on earth are representations of the true High Priest. Since they are representations, the sacrifices they offer are not complete fulfillment for atonement of human sins. The true High Priest is the only one who can offer the true and absolute fulfillment for sins.
            Jesus Christ, then, has a more excellent ministry than the earthly Levitical priests. Hebrews 8:6 says, “But now He has obtained a more excellent ministry, by as much as He is also the mediator of a better covenant, which has been enacted on better promises.” Jesus’ ministry is greater than the earthly priests’ ministry because His ministry is based on the new covenant, the better covenant. Jesus is the High Priest of the new covenant and the mediator. First Timothy 2:5 speaks of this mediator, “For there is one God, and one mediator also between God and men, the man Christ Jesus.” "Mediator" in Greek is mesites, which means one who intervenes between two people/groups to make or restore peace or for ratifying a covenant. He is the mediator because He brought the new covenant. He is the new covenant, the promise of restoration/redemption fulfilled in His death and resurrection. Jesus is the means by which humans can be in relationship with God. Since Jesus is the mediator, the one who provides the restoration and means for the new covenant, He enacted it on better promises. Remember Jesus is the only priest who became a priest by an oath/promise. God promised a new covenant. (See Hebrews 7 Bible study, “The Greater (est) High Priest and King.”) This promise He spoke of is the new covenant through Jesus’ blood. Jesus spoke of the new covenant through His blood in Luke 22:20, “And in the same way He took the cup after they had eaten, saying, "This cup which is poured out for you is the new covenant in My blood.Hebrews 9:14-15 speaks of Jesus as the mediator because of His blood being poured out as the offering for our sins. Hebrews 12:24 speaks, too, of Jesus as the mediator because of His blood which sealed the new covenant. “Blood” is haima in Greek, which means blood shed for a purpose and refers to the seat of life. The earlier promises/covenants between God and Israel were two-sided; God would provide for them and forgive them if they walked in His ways and offered up sacrifices. The new covenant is one-sided; God offers the perfect sacrifice for forgiveness and the holy High Priest to administer it. People do not have to provide the sacrifice because their sacrifices never removed forever their sins against God. God is faithful to keep His promises. Human beings are not faithful; therefore, God’s sacrifice is perfect. The sacrifices of humans never completely removed their sins, thus, the priests offered sacrifices repeatedly.
            The writer continues, “For if that first covenant had been faultless, there would have been no occasion sought for a second.” Reread the Bible study from last week on Hebrews 7:11. The Levitical priests could not obtain perfection since they were sinners. Hence, there needed to be another priest, a Great High Priest. Since humans did not keep their promises to God, the Mosaic covenant was invalid. It could not remove the sins of the people. So, God created the new covenant, which relies on nothing from humankind. It relies solely upon God’s promises, power, mercy, forgiveness, and majesty.
            The writer of Hebrews takes the readers back to the prophetic voice of Jeremiah chapter 31. The writer recalled,
8 For finding fault with them, He says, “BEHOLD, DAYS ARE COMING,” SAYS THE LORD, WHEN I WILL EFFECT A NEW COVENANT WITH THE HOUSE OF ISRAEL AND WITH THE HOUSE OF JUDAH; 9 NOT LIKE THE COVENANT WHICH I MADE WITH THEIR FATHERS ON THE DAY WHEN I TOOK THEM BY THE HAND TO LEAD THEM OUT OF THE LAND OF EGYPT; FOR THEY DID NOT CONTINUE IN MY COVENANT, AND I DID NOT CARE FOR THEM,” SAYS THE LORD. 10 “FOR THIS IS THE COVENANT THAT I WILL MAKE WITH THE HOUSE OF ISRAEL AFTER THOSE DAYS,” SAYS THE LORD. “I WILL PUT MY LAWS INTO THEIR MINDS, AND I WILL WRITE THEM ON THEIR HEARTS. AND I WILL BE THEIR GOD, AND THEY SHALL BE MY PEOPLE. 11 AND THEY SHALL NOT TEACH EVERYONE HIS FELLOW CITIZEN, AND EVERYONE HIS BROTHER, SAYING, 'KNOW THE LORD,' FOR ALL WILL KNOW ME, FROM THE LEAST TO THE GREATEST OF THEM. 12 FOR I WILL BE MERCIFUL TO THEIR INIQUITIES, AND I WILL REMEMBER THEIR SINS NO MORE." (Hebrews 8:8-12 [NASB])
Jeremiah was a priest who lived 3 miles north of Jerusalem. His name means Yahweh establishes. Jeremiah spoke to the Israelites who were a vassal state of Babylon. Through Jeremiah, God reminded the people He is the same God who brought them out of Egypt to the Promised Land. God offered hope for the Israelites. This hope told them He would not forget or leave them in their sinfulness forever, separated from His love and mercy. He had promised He was their God and they were His people (Exodus 6:7). Through Jeremiah, God gave the people hope. His hope concerned a new covenant with Him. It showed God had not forgotten them and He understood and still loved them. The old covenant is what the people did not keep. God stated with bluntness that He did not care for them because of it. In the new covenant, in contrast to the previous covenant, God would put the new covenant into the minds and hearts of the house of Israel and would be their God and they His people. The Israelites would not have to teach everyone about God because everyone would know Him because of His mercy and forgiveness. Before, in the Mosaic covenant, God commanded the Israelites to teach the law to their children, the people in their cities and lands, and the foreigners. They were to teach about Him and His covenant. With this covenant, God will be the one teaching and reminding people of His power, mercy, love, and forgiveness. God will pardon all their sins, the sins of Israel (Jacob), and pulverize all the altar stones (see Isaiah 27:9). The altar is not needed any longer. The children of Israel are pardoned of their sins forever. “All” in verse 11 means everyone, each individual. This means the new covenant is for everyone, not just select Jews or priests.
For Paul, this new covenant is also for non-Israelites. When a person believes in Yahweh and His Son, Jesus Christ, he or she becomes a new creation, an adopted child of God through Abraham who was a child of God before the Law. Romans 11:27 shows this the covenant will take away sins. Paul said in Galatians 6:15-16, “For neither is circumcision anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new creation. And those who will walk by this rule, peace and mercy be upon them, and upon the Israel of God.” This “new creation” Paul explained in 2 Corinthians 5:17 is anyone who believes in Jesus Christ. These people are new creatures. Hence, the new covenant is as pertinent for all who believe in Jesus as it was and is for the Jews. The new covenant is universal, for all humankind for all time, for the least and the greatest forever.
Verse 12 is very explicit; God will be merciful and will remember peoples’ sins no more. He said He would wipe out their transgressions and forget their sins (Isaiah 43:25). No iniquity/sin will be found because God pardons fully (Jeremiah 50:20). The remnant spoke of in Jeremiah 50:20 is sha’ar, which means those who remain or are left behind. Jeremiah 50 speaks of the captivity of the northern and southern kingdoms and those who the captors left behind. It alludes to those who will return from captivity in Babylon and Assyria. God forgave the sins of the Israelites through the punishment of captivity in or exile by Babylon and Assyria. They are the remnant of those who had been in Israel and Judah. It alludes, too, to the ultimate forgiveness of God at the end of time for the remnant of His inheritance (Micah 7:18-20). God will have compassion on each person and cast all their sins into the depths of the sea/behind their back (Is. 38:17) and not remember their sins (Is. 43:25).
The previous covenant provided for sin sacrifices, but they could not remove sins forever. Only Jesus as High Priest and sacrifice is great, perfect, and powerful enough to remove our sins forever so humans can be in God’s presence forever. Only His sacrifice is sufficient to cover all sins for the past and the future. Bible book writers spoke of this in Jeremiah 31:34 and Hebrews 8:12 &10:17. God’s forgiveness of sin and remembering them no more is the fulfillment of the old Law. He did not destroy the Law, but made it obsolete (vs. 13). Jesus fulfilled the Law and brought in a new covenant, which only He could do because He is holy, righteous, and perfect. He is the king of righteousness and He brings peace.
Each of us must consider this. We must each decide if we will choose to believe Jesus is the Son of God whose blood sacrifice takes away their sins. Each person must choose whether to accept and believe in Jesus and become inheritors of God’s kingdom, live with God forever. What do you choose – Jesus or self? It is your choice.