The Bible Recap - Day 051 (Leviticus 22-23) - Year 4
Episode Date: February 20, 2022SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! - Join our PATREON family for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Article: Jewish Feasts a...nd Holidays - Exodus 34 - Leviticus 16 - Romans 5:20-21 SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today!
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
This is another day that unexpectedly brought me to tears, and I can't wait to tell you
why.
Today we continue with God's laws for the people delivered to Moses, but remember that the
point of what we're reading isn't the laws.
It's what's underneath the laws.
What do they point to?
I always want to be encouraging us to look for God when we read.
Some days it'll be harder than others, maybe today was one of those days.
That's okay.
The way you feel about the text doesn't decrease its value in your life.
It's adding value to your life to fix your eyes on these pages, whether you feel it right
now or not.
So what do we see about God in the laws he's setting out?
One of the things underneath much of what we read today
was that God wants his people to be clean
and he keeps reminding him that he is the one
who makes him clean.
I, in the Lord, who sanctifies you.
We get repeated reminders of both God's holiness
and his rescue in these passages.
In chapter 23, we see a lot about feasts.
Since I don't have time to go into this in-depth,
we'll include a short article in the show notes
that explains these seven feasts and their significance.
As always, when we include a resource,
we can't vouch for everything on that site.
We're just including that one particular resource,
though in general, we do try to be careful about what we're sending you.
So back to the feasts.
First, God reminds them again about a weekly feast
called the Sabbath.
Then there are six annual feasts covered here,
and you should recognize a few of them
from our reading so far.
It can get really confusing though,
since a lot of these feasts have multiple names.
You probably recognize Passover,
which is also called the Feast of Unleavened Bread.
You may also recognize the Feast of First Frutes, although when we read about it in Exodus
34, it was called the Feast of Harvest.
And on that same day, we read about the Feast of In-Gathering, which is called the Feast
of Booths here.
And then there's the one we read about most recently in Leviticus 16, the Day of Atonement.
Aren't you glad there isn't a quiz on this?
Me too.
I'm just telling you all of this because I used to be under the impression that there
were like 30 feasts based on the names I'd read.
Turns out they're just the same six feasts with nicknames.
One weird thing about the day of atonement, it's called a feast, but they're fasting
on this day.
That's part of what it means when you see the phrase they afflicted themselves, that refers
to fasting.
This is the only feast day where they're fasting because this is the holiest and most
solemn day of the year.
Instead of eating, they offer their food to God.
On all the other feast days, they're not allowed to do any regular work, but they're
allowed to do the work of offering sacrifices and preparing meals.
The day of atonement, however, calls for no work. They eat no food and the priest does all the sacrificing. This is still a celebration
of provision, but it's a very different kind of celebration and a very different kind
of provision. There are only two feasts in this section that we haven't talked about
before, so let me touch on those briefly. First, there's the feast of weeks, which you
probably know of as Pentecost, although it didn't take on that name until much later. Here's some Bible trivia
for you. The word Pentecost means 50th, and this feast occurs on the 50th day after Passover,
so that's seven weeks and a day. The fact that it's a week of weeks, seven weeks after Passover,
it's why it's called the feast ofs. At this feast, something unique happens.
This is the only feast where leavened bread makes an appearance.
God tells them to have two types of bread, unleavened and leavened.
There's some rich symbolism here.
The unleavened loaf represents the Israelites,
and the leavened loaf is foreshadowing of the day when the Gentiles, non-Jews,
will be brought into his family.
We'll touch on this more when we get to the book of Acts
in the New Testament, but just know that if you're not
of Jewish heritage, you still show up on these pages,
foreshadowing Christ's provision.
The Feast of Trumpets is what's now known as Rosh Hashana,
the Jewish New Year, but at this time,
it's signaled ten days notice for the day of atonement.
The Israelites called that period of time ten days of repentance or the days of awe.
This points us back to what we learned not long ago.
The fear of God, which is comprised primarily of delight and awe, draws us nearer to him
and serves to produce righteousness in us.
Their days of repentance and awe led up to the day of atonement where they were purified.
Speaking of which, can I tell you something about today's reading, specifically chapter
22, that used to really bother me?
It bothered me that God only accepted the best sacrifice.
It felt unloving.
Maybe because I've seen this idea used in God's name to treat people poorly.
I've heard pastors tell people who aren't dressed nicely that they should be ashamed of
what they wore to church because they needed to bring God their best.
I've seen church members shamed for not volunteering more of their time when they're already
overextended and serving because they should give God their best.
I have to remind myself that first of all, that's not on God.
That's on fallen humanity misappropriating his words.
But if I dig a little deeper into my own heart, I think the real reason these passages bothered me
is because I knew deep down that I'm not a good sacrifice.
I'm blemished and blind and scabbed and crushed, and it felt like God would reject me.
God is establishing something here in his requirements for sacrifices.
It's true, he does only accept a perfect sacrifice.
And that's where my God shot comes in.
Since even the best version of Me is still unacceptable to God,
there's a temptation to fix my eyes on myself.
If I do that, I'm too buried in my own failings
to notice that He has provided the perfect sacrifice in my place, because
he still wants to be near me even though I'm imperfect.
All these requirements of perfection are supposed to be weighty.
The law is supposed to remind us how impossible all this is.
That's the point of the law, to show us God's perfection and how far we are from it.
Romans 5.20 says, the law came in to increase the trespass, but where sin increased,
grace abounded all the more. For every one of my sins, grace abounds, for every one of my imperfections,
grace abounds. Romans 5.21, the very next verse continues, saying, so that, as sin-rained in death, grace also might rain through righteousness, leading to eternal life
through Jesus Christ our Lord. Praise God for providing the perfect sacrifice. Jesus Christ our Lord.
He's where the joy is.
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