REFLECTIONS ON TODAY’S BIBLE VERSE(S):
“Then put the Ark’s cover—the place of atonement—on top of the Ark of the Covenant inside the Most Holy Place.” (Exodus 26:34)
“In that room were a gold incense altar and a wooden chest called the Ark of the Covenant, which was covered with gold on all sides. Inside the Ark were a gold jar containing manna, Aaron’s staff that sprouted leaves, and the stone tablets of the covenant.” (Hebrews 9:4)
Friends, while God’s Law is good because it calls for nothing short of holiness and perfection, it also shows every one of us how utterly sinful we are. So, while it is good, it is intended to make us feel bad, to realize our guilt before a holy Judge.
The problem is compounded when we realize that a holy God cannot be indifferent to lawbreakers. A good judge cannot let guilty criminals go free. He must demand that the one who does the crime does the time (see Exodus 34:7; Numbers 14:18; Nahum 1:3; etc.).
So, condemned by the Law as a lawbreaker, we stand before God, our Judge, awaiting our punishment.
“I will meet with you there and talk to you from above the atonement cover between the gold cherubim that hover over the Ark of the Covenant. From there I will give you my commands for the people of Israel.” (Exodus 25:22)
This presents a powerful picture! God hovered over the Law that stood against us. As He looked into the Ark, it testified loud and clear that we were lawbreakers deserving of whatever punishment He deemed fitting.
Let’s not forget that God is a holy God who cannot tolerate sin and must punish sinners anywhere he sees them.
“Then put the Ark’s cover—the place of atonement—on top of the Ark of the Covenant inside the Most Holy Place.” (Exodus 26:34)
The definition of “atonement” can be easily determined by simply dividing the word by it’s syllables – “at-one-ment”. Atonement was the way in which God could be made “at one” with us in spite of our unquestioned guilt.
Leviticus 16 is a chapter that is dedicated solely to the Day of Atonement. It describes in detail what happened on that special day on the Jewish calendar.
The greatest act that occurred on that day was when the High Priest took innocent animals, killed them, and entered the Holy of Holies with their blood. Leviticus 16:14-16 tells us that he sprinkled their blood around and on the Mercy Seat.
Yes, this was gory! Yes, this was vile. Yes, it was messy. A bloody sacrifice was never meant to be a thing that warmed the heart.
It was intended to show how offensive our sin was to a holy God. It was intended to show us that in order for our sin to be forgiven, something must die. To be acquitted, capital punishment must be administered. But, the animal in the Old Testament could serve as a substitute for the lawbreaking worshiper.
So, (get this!), when God (who was hovering over the Mercy Seat) looked into the Ark of the Covenant and saw the law that convicted us, He had to look through the Mercy Seat and the blood to see it. The blood changed the way He saw the Law. Instead of the Law condemning us, the blood showed that the demands of the Law were met, something died for the sin, and God’s justice was satisfied.
In Hebrews 9, it tells us that the Old Testament sacrifices could not permanently remedy the worshipers’ legal guilt. It only pushed their sins forward. It was like a snowball that is rolled on the ground. It gets pushed forward but that only causes it to get bigger and bigger.
The Old Testament sacrifices only temporarily remedied the sin problem but pushing it forward. But in reality, the worshiper’s sin debt only got bigger and bigger. It was an inferior, temporary fix.
In Hebrews 9, we realize that those massive “snowballs” of sin were rolled to the cross. At that place, they were once and forever dealt with!
When Jesus died on the cross, we are told that he took his blood into the heavenly Holy of Holies and offered His own blood on the Mercy Seat.
“So Christ has now become the High Priest over all the good things that have come. He has entered that greater, more perfect Tabernacle in heaven, which was not made by human hands and is not part of this created world. With his own blood—not the blood of goats and calves—he entered the Most Holy Place once for all time and secured our redemption forever.” (Hebrews 9:11-12)
Did you get that? Jesus offered His own blood on our behalf. He sprinkled His own blood on the heavenly Mercy Seat. So, when God looks into the Ark and sees the Law that condemns us, He has to look through Jesus’ blood before He sees the Law.
If you have reached a point in your life when you have turned from your sin and trusted wholly in Jesus and His work on the cross on your behalf, then He has forgiven you and saved you. His death on the cross became the payment for your sin. His death is the capital punishment that you deserved. And when God looks at the Law that once condemned you, it is Jesus’ blood that makes it clear that we have been permanently cleaned and cleared of all guilt. Our fine was paid on the cross. The Law no longer hangs over our heads. Jesus paid it all!
“Then put the Ark’s cover—the place of atonement—on top of the Ark of the Covenant inside the Most Holy Place.” (Exodus 26:34)
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