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The high priest's garments
The garments were composed of everything that is connected with the
Person of Christ in this character of priesthood; the breastplate, the
ephod, the robe, the broidered coat, the curious girdle, and the
mitre. The ephod was, par excellence, the priestly garment;
made of the same things as the veil, only that there was no gold in
the latter, and there were cherubims (but all enclosed inside the veil
was gold, for God's government and judgment were in Christ as Son of
man): in the ephod, gold but no cherubim,* because the priest must have divine righteousness, but was not
in the place of rule and government (compare Num. 4). It signified
also the essential purity and the graces of Christ. The girdle was the
sign of service. The girdle was of the same materials as the ephod to
which it belonged. Arrayed in these robes of glory and beauty, the
high priest bore the names of the people of God in the fulness of
their order before God; upon his shoulders, the weight of their
government, and upon the breastplate on his heart — breastplate
which was inseparable from the ephod, that is, from his priesthood and
appearing before God. He also bare, according to the perfections of
God's presence, their judgment before Him. He maintained them in
judgment before God according to these things. They therefore looked
for answers through the Urim and Thummim that were in the breastplate;
for the wisdom of our conduct is to be according to this position
before God. Upon the hem of the robe of the ephod** there was the
desirable fruit, and the testimony of the Holy Ghost, which depended
on the priesthood. I think that Christ, in entering heaven, made
Himself heard through the Holy Ghost in His people — hem of His
garment (compare Psalm 133); and He will make Himself heard through
His gifts when He comes out also. Meanwhile He bears within also the
iniquity of the holy things in holiness before the eternal God. (This
holiness is upon His very forehead.) Not only His people, but their
imperfect services are presented according to the divine holiness in
Him. The priests' clothingThe sons of Aaron were also clothed. Their natural nakedness was not to appear, but the glory and the honour with which God clothed them. The girdle of service also distinguished them. The ephod, its girdle and the robe of blue
The dress of the high priest demands a little further
explanation. That which characterised him in service was the ephod, to
which was inseparably attached the breastplate in which the Urim and
Thummim were placed. With the ephod, therefore, the description
begins. It was that in which, as thus clothed, he was to appear before
God. It was made as the veil, with the addition of gold, for the veil
was Christ's flesh, the actings of which could not be separated from
what was divine; but in the exercise of priesthood He appeared before
God within the veil, that is, figuratively, in heaven itself; and
there what met, and had the nature and integral essence of (along with
the heavenly grace and purity) divine righteousness, had its place and
its part as found in Him: as it is written, looking at Him in a
somewhat different aspect, but alike as to this,* "an
advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous." The
groundwork of the priesthood, then, was absolute personal purity in
man, in its highest sense as a nature flowing intelligently from God,
and in the priesthood glorified,** every form of grace interwoven
with it, and divine righteousness. It was service, and the priest was
girded for it, but service before God. The loins were girt, but the
garments otherwise down to the feet. This was especially the case with
the robe all of blue. The shoulder-piecesBut to pursue the ephod itself. The high priest represented all the people before God, and presented them to Him, and this in a double way. First, he bore them on his shoulders — carried the whole weight and burden of them on himself. Their names were all graven upon the two onyx stones which united the parts of the ephod; there was no wearing the ephod — that is, exercising the priesthood — without carrying the names of the tribes of Israel on his shoulders. So Christ carries ever His people. The breastplateNext, the breastplate was attached inseparably to the ephod, never to be detached. There also he carried the names of his people before the Lord, and could not, as thus dressed in the high priestly robes, be there without them. As it is expressed, he bore them on his heart before Jehovah continually. They shall be upon Aaron's heart when he goeth in before Jehovah. Thus are we borne ever before God by Christ. He presents us, as that which He has on His heart, to God He cannot be before Him without doing so; and whatever claim the desire and wish of Christ's heart has to draw out the favour of God, it operates in drawing out that favour on us. The light and favour of the sanctuary — God as dwelling there — cannot shine out on Him without shining on us, and that as an object presented by Him for it. The Urim and Thummim
This was not, however, all. The Urim and Thummim were there — light
and perfection. The high priest bore the judgment of the children of
Israel in their present ways and as to their present relationship*
upon his heart before Jehovah, and this according to the light and
perfection of God. This we need, to get blessing. Stood we before God,
such as we are, we must draw down judgment, or lose the effect of this
light and perfection of God, remaining without. But, Christ bearing
our judgment according to these, our presentation to God is according
to the perfection of God Himself — our judgment borne; but then our
position, guidance, light, and spiritual intelligence are according to
this same divine light and perfection. For the high priest inquired
and had answers from God according to the Urim and Thummim. This is a
blessed privilege.* The priestly presentation of the high priest
Introduced into the presence of God according to divine righteousness
in the perfection of Christ, our spiritual light, and privileges, and
walk, are according to this perfection. The presentation in divine
righteousness gives us light, according to the perfection of Him into
whose presence we are brought. Hence we are said (1 John 1) to walk in
the light as He, God, is in the light — a solemn thought for the
conscience, however joyful a one for the heart, telling us what our
conversation ought to be in holiness.* Christ
bearing our judgment takes away all imputative character from sin, and
turns the light which would have condemned it and us, into a purifying
enlightening character, according to that very perfection which looks
on us. This breastplate was fastened to the onyx stones of the
shoulders above, and to the ephod above the girdle below. It was the
perpetual position of the people, inseparable from the exercise of the
high priesthood as thus going before the Lord. What was divine and
heavenly secured it — the chains of gold above, and the rings of
gold with lace of blue to the ephod above the girdle
beneath. Exercised in humanity, the priesthood, and the connection of
the people with it, rests on an immutable, a divine, and heavenly
basis. Such was the priestly presentation of the high priest. Beneath
this official robe he had a personal one all of blue. The bells and pomegranates — the testimony and fruits of the Spirit
The character of Christ too, as such, is perfectly and entirely
heavenly. The sanctuary was the place of its exercise. So the heavenly
Priest must Himself be a heavenly Man; and it is to this character of
Christ, as here in the high priest, that the fruits and testimony of
the Spirit are attached — the bells and the pomegranates. It is
from Christ in His heavenly character that they flow; they are
attached to the hem of His garment here below. His sound was heard
when He went in and when He came out; and so it has been and will
be. When Christ went in, the gifts of the Spirit were manifested in
the sound of the testimony; and they will be when He comes out
again. The fruits of the Spirit, we know, were also in the saints.* Worship and servuce in holiness
But not only were there fruits and gifts. Worship and service — the
presenting of offerings to God — was part of the path of the people
of God. Alas! they also were defiled. It formed thus also part of the
priest's office to bear the iniquity of their holy things. Thus the
worship of God's people was acceptable, in spite of their infirmity,
and holiness was ever before Jehovah in the offerings of His
house — borne on the forehead of the high priest as His people were
on the one hand presented to Him, and on the other directed by Him,
according to His own perfections through the high priest.* The coat of fine linenThe coat of fine linen was that which was more proper to himself and personal, what was within — personal purity, but embroidered, adorned with every grace. Such was, and indeed is, Christ. Where the garments of glory and beauty and those of fine linen were used
The application of this to Christ is evident. Only we must remember
the remark of the apostle; that is, of the Spirit of God, that these
were the shadow of good things to come, not the very image of the
things. Our High Priest, though He ever liveth to make intercession
for us, is set down at the right hand of the Majesty in the
heavens. In spirit all this is ours; He presents us, receives grace
and direction for us through the Spirit, and bears the iniquity of our
holy things. All our service is accepted, as our persons, in Him. In
the literal fact the high priest never used the garments of glory and
beauty to go within the veil. He was to use them for going into the
sanctuary;* but this was forbidden after Nadab and Abihu's
death, save on the great day of atonement, and then he went in in
other garments, namely, the linen ones So death and entrance thereon
were needed for us in Christ's fulfilment of the type. And, as regards
the Jews, He is gone in in this last way, all this time being His
absence in the sanctuary and they must wait, till He come forth, for
the knowledge of the acceptance of the presentation of His work: we
know it by the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven; He came out when
the. Lord went in, so that we anticipate in spirit the glory He is
in. This constitutes essentially the Christian's place. In His
glorious high priest's garments, it would have been the intercourse of
an accepted people through the high priest. Hence we have it in
spirit, though this be not the whole truth as regards our position.** |
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