Introduction
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapters 4 to 7
Chapters 8 and 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapters 13 and 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapters 19 and 20
Chapters 21 and 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
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God speaking out of the tabernacle, accessible by a provided mediation, sacrifice and priesthood
God speaks not from Sinai, but out of the tabernacle, where He
is sought; where, according to the pattern of His glory, but
according also to the need of those who seek His presence, He is in
relationship with the people by mediation and sacrifice. In Sinai,
in terrible glory, He demanded, and proposed terms of, obedience,
and thereupon promised His favour. In this the communication was
direct, but the people could not bear it. Here He is accessible to
the sinner and to the saint, but by a provided mediation and
priesthood. But then the centre and ground of our access to God
thus is Christ's obedience and offering. This therefore is first
presented to us when God speaks in the tabernacle.
The order of the sacrifices
The order of these sacrifices is first to be remarked. The order
of their application is uniformly opposed to the order of their
institution. There are four great classes of offerings: 1, The
burnt-offering; 2, The meat-offering; 3, The peace-offering; and 4,
The sin-offering. I name them in the order of their institution,
but, in their application, when offered together, the sin-offerings
always come first, for there it is restoration to God;* and, in
approaching God by sacrifice, man must approach by the efficacy of
that which takes away his sins, in that they have been borne by
another. But in presenting the Lord Jesus Himself as the great
sacrifice, His being made sin is a consequence of His offering
Himself in perfectness to God, and though as made sin for us, still
in His own perfectness, and for the divine glory, we say, His
Father's glory; this is a great but blessed mystery. He gives
Himself up, coming to do His Father's will, and is made for us sin,
Him who knew no sin, and undergoes death.
{* As to acceptance, the Christian has no more conscience of
sins; but the Israelite had never learnt this; and hence, as we
have seen, his way of approaching served, as to the means, to
portray the sinner's first coming to God. The import of Christ's
sacrifice is often too little seen. Man must come as a sinner, and
about and owning his sins. He cannot come truly otherwise, but
when entered in peace into God's presence, feeble as we may be, we
view it from God's side, and daily see more of the reality and
value of this great fact which stands alone in the history of
eternity, and on which all and eternal blessing is immutably
founded. Every point and power of good and evil was there brought
to an issue; the absolute enmity of man's heart against God
revealed in grace; Satan's complete power over men; man (Christ)
perfect in obedience and love to His Father in the very place
needed when He was made sin; God perfect in justice against sin
(it became Him), and perfect in love to the sinner. And this being
accomplished, the perfect ground was laid in justice, and in what
was accomplished and immutable, for the display of God's love and
God's counsels, in what morally could not change.}
Christ the one all-perfect Sacrifice
Furthermore, our sins being put away, the source of
communion is thus in the excellency of Christ Himself, and in His
offering, who offers Himself to God, without spot; glorifying God
by death inasmuch as sin was there before Him and death by sin;
and He gives Himself wholly up to God's glory in respect of this
state,* and then our presentation according to the
preciousness of this on high, though the actual bearing of our
sins be of absolute necessity to introduce us into this
communion. In this is the difference of the great day of
atonement. Then the blood was put on the mercy-seat in the
holiest; but this, while giving access there on the ground of
perfect cleansing through an offering of infinite value, was in
respect of actual sins and defilement, not the pure sweet savour
of the offering in itself to God. Yet it supposed sin. The
offering would not have had its own character nor value if it had
not. Hence, as presenting Christ, and our approach to God when
sin has been fully dealt with and holiness tested, the
burnt-offering, meat-offering, and peace-offering (in which
latter our communion with God is presented to us), come first,
and then the sin-offerings apart; needful, primarily needful to
us, but not the expression of the personal perfectness of Christ,
but of His sin-bearing, though perfectness were needed for
that.
{* It is to be remarked that we read of no positive
sin-offerings before the law. The clothing of Adam may suppose it,
and Genesis 4:7 may be taken to speak of it, but they are not
professedly offered; burnt-offerings frequently. These suppose sin
and death, and no coming to God but by sacrifice and death, and
reconciliation through it. But the sacrifice is viewed in the
perfect self-offering of Christ, so that God should be perfectly
glorified in that which was infinitely precious in His sight, and
all He was, righteousness, love, majesty, truth, purpose, all
glorified in Christ's death so that He could freely act in His
grace. Sin is supposed in it, and perfectness of self-sacrifice to
God there where it was; but God glorified rather than individuals'
sins borne. Hence worship according to the sweet savour of it is
involved in it. A man far departed from God, as such I cannot come
to God at all but on this ground, and it will remain valid for
eternity and secure all things: the new heaven and earth are
secured as the dwelling-place of righteousness by it. But my
actual sins being put away is another thing. In one, the whole
relationship of man, indeed of all things with God, is in
question; in the other, my personal sins. Hence all acceptable
sacrifice was of the former kind: sacrifices for sins when the
relationship of a people with God was established, where every act
referred to His actual presence.}
It is evident, from what I have said, that it is Christ we are
to consider in the sacrifices which are about to engage our
attention: the various forms of value and efficacy which attach
to that one all-perfect sacrifice. It is true, we may consider
the Christian in a subordinate point of view as presented to us
here, for he should present his body a living sacrifice. He, by
the fruits of charity, should present sacrifices of sweet savour,
acceptable to our God by Jesus Christ; but our object now is to
consider Christ in them.
The distinction between the sin-offerings and all the
others
I have said that there are four great classes presented to us
— burnt-offerings, meat-offerings, peace-offerings, and
offerings for sin. These may be seen thus classed in chapter 10
of the Epistle to the Hebrews. But then there is a very essential
distinction which divides these four into two separate classes — the sin-offerings, and all the others. The sin-offerings, as
such, were not characterised as offerings made by fire, of a
sweet savour unto Jehovah (although the fat was in most of them
burnt on the altar, and in this respect the sweet savour was
there, and so it is once said, chapter 4:31; for indeed the
perfection of Christ was there though bearing our sins), the
others were distinctly so characterised. Positive sins were seen
in the sin-offerings: they were charged with sins. He that
touched those of them which fully bore this character, as being
for the whole people* (Lev. 16, Num. 19), was defiled. But in
the case of the burnt-offering, though not brought for positive
sins, sin is supposed; there blood was shed, and it was for
propitiation, but burnt on the altar, and all was a sweet savour
to God. It was Christ's whole sacrifice of Himself to God, and
perfect as an offering in every respect, though sin, as such, was
the occasion of it. By this sacrifice, in result, sin will be put
away out of God's sight for ever — what joy! see John 1:29 and
Hebrews 9:26. But then we brought to the consciousness of our
state of sin say, He was made sin for us, that we might be made
the righteousness of God in Him. This is a consequence, but the
basis is that, besides bearing our sins, He glorified God
perfectly there where He was made sin. It was as in the place of
sin that His obedience was perfect and God perfectly glorified in
all He is (John 13 and 17). Indeed there is but one word for sin
and sin-offering in the original. They were burnt, but not on
the altar; the fat, save in one case, of which we may speak
hereafter, was (chap. 4). The other offerings were offerings
made by fire of a sweet savour unto Jehovah — they present
Christ's perfect offering of Himself to God, not the imposition
of sins on the substitute by the Holy One, the Judge.
{* In these cases the burning was outside the camp. It was
the same as to the scape-goat, which immediately connected itself
with the rest of the work.}
These two points in the sacrifice of Christ are very distinct
and very precious. God has made Him to be sin for us, Him who
knew no sin: but also is it true, that through the eternal Spirit
He offered Himself without spot to God. Let us consider this
latter, as first in the order presented in Leviticus, and
naturally so.
The burnt-offering
The first sort of sacrifice, the most complete and
characteristic of those characterised by being offerings made by
fire of a sweet savour, was the burnt-offering. The offerer was
to bring his offering,* in order to his acceptance with God,
to the door of the tabernacle of the congregation, and to kill it
before Jehovah.
{* The burnt-offerings as such were brought voluntarily;
still, it seems clear that this is not the sense of the Hebrew
word "ratzon" here, but for his acceptance, to be in divine
favour. It remains, just the same doctrinally true that Christ,
through the eternal Spirit, offered Himself without spot to
God.}
The place of the tabernacle ritual:
(1) The Holy of holies
First, of the place, the whole scene of the tabernacle ritual
consisted of three parts: first, the holiest of all, the innermost
part of the boarded space covered with tents, separated from the
rest by a veil which hung before it, and within which was the ark
of the covenant and the cherubim overshadowing the mercy-seat, and
NOTHING ELSE. This was the throne of God, the type also of Christ,
in whom God is revealed, the true ark of the covenant with the
mercy-seat over it.
(2) The Holy place
The veil, the apostle tells us, signified that the way into the
holiest was not yet made manifest while the old economy subsisted.* Immediately outside the veil — its efficacy, however
entering within, and whence, indeed, on certain occasions, incense
was taken in a censer and offered within — stood the golden altar
of incense. In the same, or outer chamber of the tabernacle, called
the holy, as distinguished from the most holy place, or holy of
holies, stood, on either side, the shewbread and the candlestick — types, the former of Christ incarnate, the true bread in union with
and head of the twelve tribes, on the one hand; and the latter, of
the perfection* (still, I have no doubt, in connection with
Israel in the latter day) of the Spirit, as giving light, on the
other. The church owns Christ thus, and the Holy Ghost dwells in
it, but what characterises it, as such, is the knowledge of a
heavenly and glorified Christ, and the Holy Ghost, as in divine
communications, present in unity in it. These figures, on the other
hand, give us Christ in His earthly relation, and the Holy Ghost in
His various displays of power, when God's earthly system is
established. Compare Zechariah 4, and Revelation 11 where there is
the testimony to, but not the actual perfection of, the
candlestick; God's testimony on the earth. The Epistle to the
Hebrews affords us all needed light as to how far and with what
changes, these figures can be applied now. But that epistle never
speaks of the proper relationships and privileges of the church and
Christians. These are viewed as pilgrims on earth, an earthly
people. There is no union with Christ. He is in heaven and we in
need on earth; no mention of the Father's name, but only so much
the more precious as to our access to God, and needed supplies of
grace for our path down here. It is properly Christian; we are
partakers of the heavenly calling; but it may reach out and give
what is available for the remnant, slain after the church is
gone. Into the holy place the body of the priests, and not merely
the high priest, entered continually, but they only. We know who,
and who alone, can now thus enter, even those who are made kings
and priests, the true saints of God: only, we can add, that the
veil that hid the holiest and barred the entrance is rent from top
to bottom, not to be renewed again between us and God. We have
boldness to enter into the holiest. The veil has been rent in His
flesh. He is not merely bread from heaven or incarnate, but put to
death, denoted by flesh and blood, and the door fully opened for us
to enter in spirit where Christ is. Our ordinary privilege and
title is in the holy place — type of the created heaven, as the
most holy is of the heaven of heavens, as it is called. In a
certain sense, as to spiritual approach and intercourse, the veil
being rent, there is no separation between the two, though in the
light which no man can approach unto God dwells inaccessible. In
the heavenly places we now are as priests, though only in
spirit.
{* This is a signal instance that the order set up in the
wilderness was not the image, but only a shadow of good things to
come; for the veil unrent forbad entrance, the rent veil gives us,
through the cross, full boldness to go in. So that in relationship
to God there was contrast.
** The number seven is the number of perfection, and twelve
also, as may be seen in many passages of Scripture: the former, of
absolute completeness in good or evil; the latter, of completeness
in human administration.}
Christ's approach to God in the perfect offering of Himself
In approaching to this was the outside court, the court of the
tabernacle of the congregation.* In entering this part, the
first thing met with was the altar of burnt-offering, and between
that and the tabernacle the laver, where the priests washed**
when they entered into the tabernacle, or were occupied at the
altar, to perform their service. It is evident that we approach
solely by the sacrifice of Christ, and that we must be washed with
water by the word before we can serve in the sanctuary. We have
need also, as priests, of having our feet, at least, washed by our
Advocate on high for our continual service there. (See John 13.)***
{* The door of the tabernacle of the congregation is not
simply the veil of the holy place, but the court where they
entered from without. The altar of burnt-offering was at the door
of the tabernacle of the congregation.
** It does not appear that the washing of the priests for
their consecration was at the laver; that was according to what was
within when they had got there. But it is always the word, which is
figured by the water.
*** In the first edition, I had added here the "renewing of
the Holy Ghost," referring to Titus 3. But though the Holy Ghost
surely renews the heart continually, yet I doubt the justice of the
application of this passage here. The renewing seems more absolute
there, anakainoseos. I might have simply left it out,
perhaps, but that I would call the attention of the reader to the
fact that "regeneration" is not the same word as being "born
again." It is paliggenesia, not anagenneesis.
It is only found again, to denote the millennium, in Matthew 19. It
is in its import, the "washing of water," or being "born of water,"
not the reception of life by the Spirit. Water is a change of
condition of what exists, not in itself receiving of life, which is
being "born of the Spirit." it is the anakainosis.}
Christ also thus approached, but it was in the perfect offering
of Himself, not by the offering of another. Nothing can be more
touching, or more worthy of profound attention, than the manner in
which Jesus thus voluntarily presents Himself, that God may be
fully, completely, glorified in Him. Silent in His sufferings, we
see that His silence was the result of a profound and perfect
determination to give Himself up, in obedience, to this glory — a
service, blessed be His name, perfectly accomplished, so that the
Father rests in His love towards us.
Christ's absolute devotedness to the Father's glory shown in two ways
This devotedness to the Father's glory could, and indeed did,
shew itself in two ways: it might be in service, and of every
faculty of a living man here, in absolute devotedness to God,
tested by fire even unto death; or in the giving up of life itself,
giving up Himself — His life unto death, for the divine glory, sin
being there. Of this latter the burnt-offering speaks; of the
former, I judge, the meat-offering: while both are the same in
principle as entire devotedness of human existence to God — one of
the living acting man, the other the giving up of life unto
death.
Christ both Victim and Offerer
So in the burnt-offering; he who offered, offered the victim up
wholly to God at the door of the tabernacle of the
congregation. Thus Christ presented Himself for the accomplishment
of the purpose and glory of God where sin was. In the type the
victim and the offerer were necessarily distinct, but Christ was
both, and the hands of the offerer were laud on the head of the
victim in sign of identity.
Let us cite some of the passages which thus present Christ to
us. First, in general, whether for life or for death, thus to
glorify God; but exactly as taking the place of these sacrifices,
the Spirit thus speaks of the Lord, in Hebrews 10, citing Psalm 40:
"Then said I, Lo I come, in the volume of the book it is written of
me, I delight to do thy will, O God; yea, thy law is within my
heart." Christ, then, giving Himself up entirely to the will of God
is what replaces these sacrifices, the antitype of the shadows of
good things to come. But of His life itself He thus speaks (John
10:18): "I lay it down of myself, no one takes it from me. I have
power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again: this
commandment have I received of my Father." It was obedience, but
obedience in the sacrifice of Himself; and so, speaking of His
death, He says, "The prince of this world [Satan] comes, and has
nothing in me; but that the world may know that I love the Father,
and as the Father has given me commandment, so I do." So we read
in Luke 9: "And it came to pass when the time was come that he
should be received up, he stedfastly set his face to go to
Jerusalem." "Through the eternal Spirit he offered himself without
spot to God" (Heb. 9:14).
The result of Christ's work — introduction into the glory of God
How perfect and full of grace is this way of the Lord! as
constant and devoted to draw near when God should be thus
glorified, and submit to the consequences of His devotedness
— consequences imposed by the circumstances in which we are
placed — as man was to depart from God for his pleasure. He
humbles Himself to death that the majesty and the love of God,
His truth and righteousness, may have their full
accomplishment through the exercise of His self-devoting
love. Thus man, in His person, and through His work, is
reconciled to God; takes the true and due relationship to Him;
God being perfectly glorified in Him as to, and (wondrous to
say) in the place of, sin, and that according to all the value
of what Christ has done to glorify God. It was in the place of
sin, as made it for us, for there it was God had to be
glorified, and there all He is came out as nowhere else, and
there perfectly, in love, light, righteousness, truth,
majesty, as by man's sin He had been dishonoured; only that
now it was infinite in value, God Himself, not merely human
defacing of God's glory. I do not here say men, but man. And
the blessed result was, not merely forgiveness, but
introduction into the glory of God.
The offerer's part in the sacrifice without blemish
The sacrifice was to be without blemish; the application of
this to Christ is too obvious to need comment. He was the Lamb
"without blemish and without spot." The offerer* was to
kill the bullock before Jehovah. This completed the likeness
to Christ, for, though evidently He could not kill Himself, He
laid down His life: no one took it from Him. He did it before
Jehovah. This, in the ritual of the offering, was the
offerer's part, the individual's, and so Christ's as man. Man
saw, in Christ's death, man's judgment — the power of
Caiaphas, or the power of the world. But as offered, He
offered Himself before Jehovah.
{* That is, it was not yet the priest's part. It may be
translated, "one was to kill him." It was completing the offering,
not presenting its blood in a priestly way.}
Jehovah's and the priest's part in the pure offering
And now comes Jehovah's and the priest's part. The offering
was to be made the subject of the fire of the altar of God; it
was cut in pieces and washed, given up, according to the
purification of the sanctuary, to the trial of the judgment of
God; for fire, as a symbol, signifies always the trial of the
judgment of God. As to the washing with water, it made the
sacrifice typically what Christ was essentially — pure. But it
has this importance, that the sanctification of it and ours is on
the same principle and on the same standard. He is in this sense
our sanctification. We are sanctified unto obedience. He came to
do the will of His Father, and so, perfect from the beginning,
learns obedience by the things which He suffered; perfectly
obedient always, but His obedience put ever more thoroughly to
the test, so that His obedience was continually deeper and more
complete, though always perfect. He learned obedience, what it
was to obey, and that by growing sufferings and the sense of what
was around Him, and finally by the cross.* It was new to Him
as a divine Person — to us as rebels to God — and He learned it in all its extent.
{* Much deep instruction is connected with this, but its
development belongs to the New Testament. See Romans 12 and 6, and
1 Peter.}
The water of cleansing and its symbolical use in baptism
Furthermore, this washing of water, in our case, is by the word,
and Christ testifies of Himself that man should live by every word
that proceedeth out of the mouth of God. This difference evidently
and necessarily exists, that as Christ had life in Himself, and was
the life (see John 1:4; 1 John 1:1-2,) we, on the other hand,
receive this life from Him; and while ever obedient to the written
word Himself, the words which flowed from His lips were the
expression of His life — the direction of ours.
We may pursue the use of this water of cleansing yet farther. It
is the power of the Spirit also, exercised as by the word and will
of God;* so even the commencement of this life in us. "Of his
own will begat he us by the word of truth, that we might be a kind
of firstfruits of his creatures" (James 1:18). And so in 1 Peter
1:23, we are born of the incorruptible seed of the word. But then
this finds us walking in sins and living in them, or, in another
aspect, dead in them. These are really the same thing, for being
alive in sins is being spiritually dead towards God; only the
latter sets out with our whole state discovered; the former deals
with our responsibility. In Ephesians we are viewed as dead in
sins; in Romans alive in them; in Colossians chiefly the latter,
but the former is touched on. The cleansing must be, therefore, by
the death and resurrection of Christ; death to sin and life to God
in Him. Hence, on His death, was shed forth out of His side water
and blood, cleansing as well as expiating power. Death then is the
only cleanser of sin as well as its expiation. "He that is dead is
freed** from sin," and water thus became the sign of death, for
this alone cleansed. This truth of real sanctification was
necessarily hidden under the law, save in figures: for the law
applied itself to man, alive, and claimed his obedience. Christ's
death revealed it. In us — that is, in our flesh — good does not
dwell. Hence, in the symbolical use of water in baptism, we are
told that as many of us as are baptised unto Christ, are baptised
unto His death. But it is evident that we cannot stop at death in
itself. In us it would be the herald and witness of condemnation,
but, having life in Christ, death in Him is death to the life of
sin and guilt. It is the communication of the life of Christ which
enables us thus to treat the old man as dead, and ourselves as
having been dead in trespasses and sins. The body is dead because
of sin, and the Spirit is life because of righteousness, if Christ
be in you. So we are told as to the truth of our natural state (it
is not here what faith holds the old man to be if Christ be in us):
"You, being dead in your sins, and the uncircumcision of your
flesh, has he quickened together with him." When we were dead in
sin, He has quickened us together with Him; and, as baptised unto
His death, it is added, "that like as Christ was raised up from the
dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in
newness of life." It is only in the power of a new life that we can
hold ourselves to be dead to sin. And, indeed, it is only by known
redemption we can say so. It is when we have apprehended the power
of Christ's death and resurrection, and know that we are in Him
through the Holy Ghost, that we can say, I am crucified with Him; I
am not in the flesh. We know then, that this cleansing, which was
apprehended as a mere moral effect in Judaism, is, by the
communication of the life of Christ to us, that by which we are
sanctified, according to the power of His death and resurrection,
and sin as a law in our members is judged. The first Adam, as a
living soul, corrupted himself; the last, as a quickening Spirit,
imparts to us a new life.
{* Water thus used as a figure signifies the word in the
present power of the Holy Ghost.
** Literally, "justified." You cannot accuse a dead man of
sin. And note, it is not "sins" here, but "sin."}
Christ's baptism of fire
But, if it is the communication of the life of Christ which,
through redemption, is the starting-point of this judgment of sin,
it is evident that that life in Him was essentially and actually
pure; in us, the flesh lusts against the Spirit. He, even
according to the flesh, was born of God. But He was to undergo a
baptism, not merely to fulfil all righteousness as living — though
perfectly pure — in a baptism of water, but a trial of all that
was in Him by the baptism of fire. "I have," says He, "a baptism to
be baptised with, and how am I straitened till it be accomplished!"
Here, then, Christ, completely offered up to God for the full
expression of His glory, undergoes the full trial of judgment. The
fire tries what He is. He is salted with fire. The perfect holiness
of God, in the power of His judgment, tries to the uttermost all
that is in Him. The bloody sweat, and affecting supplication in the
garden, the deep sorrow of the cross, in the touching consciousness
of righteousness, "Why hast thou forsaken me?" — as to any
lightening of the trial, an unheeded cry — all mark the full trial
of the Son of God. Deep answered unto deep, — all Jehovah's waves
and billows passed over Him. But as He had offered Himself
perfectly to the thorough trial, this consuming fire and trying of
His inmost thoughts did, could, produce nought but a sweet savour
to God. It is remarkable that the word used for burning the
burnt-offering is not the same as that of the sin-offering, but the
same as that of burning incense.
The sacrifice of a sweet savour
In this offering, then, we have Christ's perfect offering up of
Himself, and then tried in His inmost parts by fiery trial of God's
judgment. The consuming of His life was a sacrifice of a sweet
savour, all infinitely agreeable to God — not a thought, not a
will, but was put to the test — His life consumed in it; but all,
without apparent answer to sustain, given up to God; all was purely
a sweet savour to Him. But there was more than this. The greater
part of what has been said would apply to the meat-offering. But
the burnt-offering was to make atonement, an expression not used in
chapter 2. There the personal intrinsic perfectness of Christ was
tested, and the manner of His incarnation, what He was as man down
here unfolded, but death was the first element of the
burnt-offering, and death was by sin. There where man was
(otherwise for him it could not be); where sin was; where Satan's
power as death was; where God's irreversible judgment was, Christ
had to glorify God, and it was a glory not otherwise to be
displayed: love, righteousness, majesty, in the place of sin and
death. Christ, who knew no sin, made sin for us, in perfect
obedience and love to His Father goes down to death; and God is
glorified there, Satan's power of death destroyed, God glorified in
man according to all He is, sin being come in, in obedience and
love. He was in the place of sin, and God glorified, as no
creation, no sinlessness, could. All was a sweet savour in that
place, and according to what God was as to it in righteousness and
love.
The sweet savour of Christ's sinless sacrifice and its
acceptance made ours
When Noah offered his burnt-offering, it is said, "And Jehovah
smelled a sweet savour, and Jehovah said in his heart, I will no
more curse the ground for man's sake, for the imaginations of man's
heart are only evil continually." It had repented Him that He had
made man, and grieved Him at His heart; but now, on this sweet
savour, Jehovah says in His heart, "I will no more curse." Such is
the perfect and infinite acceptableness of Christ's offering up of
Himself to God. It is not in the sacrifice we are considering that
He has the imposition of sins on Him (that was the sin-offering),
but the perfectness, purity, and self-devotedness of the victim,
but in being made sin, and that ascending in sweet savour to
God. In this acceptability — in the sweet savour of this sacrifice
— we are presented to God. All the delight which God finds in the
odour of this sacrifice — blessed thought! — we are accepted
in. Is God perfectly glorified in this, in all that He is? He is
glorified then in receiving us. He receives us as the fruit and
testimony of that in which He has been perfectly glorified, and
that as revealed in redemption, in which all that He is is wrought
out in revelation. Does He delight in what Christ is, in this His
most perfect act? He so delights in us. Does this rise up before
Him, a memorial for ever, in His presence, of delight? We, also, in
the efficacy of it, are presented to Him; in one sense we are that
memorial. It is not merely that the sins have been effaced by the
expiatory act; but the perfect acceptability of Him who
accomplished it and glorified God perfectly in it, the sweet savour
of His sinless sacrifice, is our good odour of delight before God,
and is ours; its acceptance, even Christ's, is ours.
Atonement made in obedience unto death
And we are to remark that, though distinct from laying our sins
upon Him, yet death implied sin, and the sacrifice of Christ, as
burnt-offering, had the character which resulted from sin being in
question before God, namely, death. It made the trial and suffering
so much the more terrible; His obedience was tested before God in
the place of sin, and He was obedient unto death, not in the sense
of bearing sins and putting them away, though in the same act, but
in the perfection of His offering of Himself to God, and obedience
tested by God; tested by being dealt with as sin, and therein, only,
and a perfect sweet savour. Hence it was atonement; and, in one
sense, of a deeper kind than the bearing of sins, that is, as the
test of obedience and glorifying God in it. If we have found peace
in forgiveness we cannot too much study the burnt-offering. It is
that one act in the history of eternity in which the basis of all
that in which God has glorified Himself morally, that is, revealed
Himself as He is, and of all that in which our happiness is founded
(and its sphere) — for blessed be God they go together — is laid;
and laid in such a way that Christ could say, Therefore doth My
Father love Me; and that in total, self-sacrifice made sin before
God (oh, wondrous thought!) and for us. It became Him. Where is
God's righteousness against sin known? where His holiness? where His
infinite love? where His moral majesty? where what became Him? where
His truth? where man's sin? where His perfectness? and, absolutely,
where Satan's power, but its nullity too? All in the cross, and
essentially in the burnt-offering. It is not as bearing sins, but as
absolutely offered to God and in atonement — blood shedding about
sin.
The burnt-offering wholly for and to God
There is another point to remark in this sacrifice
distinguishing it. It was wholly for and to God; for us no doubt,
but still wholly to God. Of other sacrifices (not of the two
first, for sin — but of these hereafter) in some form or other men
partook, of this not; it was wholly for God and on the altar. It
was thus the grand absolute essential sacrifice; as to its effect,
connected with us, as blood-shedding was (Heb. 9:26 and John 1:29, the Lamb of God) present in it (compare Eph. 5:2). Hence,
though having the stamp of sin being there in blood-shedding and
propitiation, it was absolutely and wholly sweet savour, wholly to
God.
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