Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Drink Offering

So Jacob set up a pillar in the place where He talked with him, a pillar of stone; and he poured a drink offering on it, and he poured oil on it.
Genesis 35:14*

After Jacob had a vision of a ladder to heaven, he set up a rock as a pillar and then poured oil on it as an act of worship (Genesis 28:18). More than 20 years later, Jacob returned to the same spot and again poured out oil. This was long before Moses gave instructions for drink offerings, but in every case, three aspects of sacrifice are always present.

1. Poured out - When a liquid is poured out on the ground it never can be retrieved again for anything useful. The world would look on this as a waste, but the drink offering was a free-will offering given in gratitude to God. The Apostle Paul poured out his life in service for the gospel of Christ and considered it a sacrifice that he was joyfully willing to give (Philippians 2:17).

2. Precious - Oil and wine are not cheap. A quart and a half of wine was poured out every morning and every evening in the daily sacrifices and then much more was given on top of that for feast days and public worship. David once poured out water as a drink offering, because his three mighty men risked their lives to break into a Philistine garrison to get him a jug of water. David said that it represented the life's blood of his men and it was too precious to drink. Instead he poured it out in worship to God. 

3. Praise - as a part of the grain offering, the drink offering was included in the sweet smelling sacrifices that the LORD delighted in. It had nothing to do with sin and transgression and everything to do with worship and appreciation. The liquid of this sacrifice was usually wine, which was sipped and then the rest poured out to God, as if both the creature and the Creator were making a toast together. 

The Lord Jesus Christ freely gave His life as a Drink Offering to the Father. On the cross of Calvary the Savior poured out His precious blood to save the human race of their sins, for the praise of the glory of God. 

*used 66 times in various ways in scripture. 


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