… To make an end of sins, To make reconciliation
for iniquity, To bring in everlasting righteousness, To seal up vision and
prophecy, And to anoint the Most Holy.
Daniel
9:24
Sometimes
in the Old Testament it is difficult to determine if a title of God is
referring to God the Father or if it is actually a prophesy of the Christ who
was to come. This time it’s not hard at all, because it is a part of Daniel’s
seventy-weeks prophesy. This section is actually the only place in the Old
Testament where the title “Messiah” is given (David 9:25,26 KJV and NKJV) and in the verse above the One who is
called the Most Holy is anointed.
Conditions
in an operating room must be 100% sterile. To arrive at that condition,
antiseptics or antimicrobial devices are used to kill bacteria on surfaces and in
the air. These things are not only 100% sterile, they also make everything
around them free from germs.
Anything
that is holy is 100% free from sin. Since the term Most Holy is superlative, it must be more than 100% sinless and it
is able to sanctify whatever it touches. In the Old Testament, the phrase
refers to things that were used to atone for sin. The inner part of the
Sanctuary (1 Kings 6:16) and the
bronze altar and its utensils were considered most holy (Exodus 40:10).
The priests who interceded for sinners were set apart for service to God and
the sin offering and other offerings made by fire were most holy before God (Leviticus
6:17).
All
of these Old Testament images are nothing more than types and shadows of God’s
anointed, the Messiah, Jesus Christ. He is the Most Holy of all the most
holy things that were ever used for atonement. With His one and only
sacrifice on the cross, He was able to make an end of sins, make reconciliation
of all mankind, and bring everlasting righteousness to the earth.
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