If he brings a lamb as his sin offering, […] Then he shall lay his hand on the head of the sin offering, and kill it as a sin offering at the place where they
kill the burnt offering.
Leviticus
4:32-33
My
memories of the special children’s gospel meeting in the 1950’s was that all
the evangelists wore suits and ties and did “chalk talks” where they drew
pictures at the same time that they preached. One vivid image that I still
carry in my mind is of a picture of little lamb lying dead on an altar of
stones. A small river of blood flowed down on the rocks and onto the ground
below. The preacher used special chalk, so when the chapel lights were turned
off and the black light came on, the drawing changed. In the background we
could see a cross and at the bottom of the paper, the words “Sin Offering” was written in red, as if
they were formed from the blood of the lamb.
As
a child I thought that only lambs could be used for a sin offering, but later found out that bulls, goats, and even
pigeons could be used depending on who sinned (priests and leaders had to give
more costly sacrifices for their sins). Another thing I learned was that this
ceremony only covered unintentional sin (Leviticus
4:27). If a person sinned willfully and knew that he was breaking God’s
command, no atonement or forgiveness was given.
Perhaps
the most surprising thing I learned from studying Leviticus 4 was that the
sinner had to kill his own lamb; the priest didn’t do it for him. The person
would put his hands on the head of the animal and confess his sins before
killing his sacrifice. This would make “the wages of sin is death” ( Romans 6:23 ) real and show the sinner
clearly that a substitute was needed so he could live.
Jesus
Christ is our wonderful Sin Offering
who took away our sins, past, present, and future. He took away the sins we did
without thinking, as well as those done in purposeful rebellion. The Savior
died so that we might live. Jesus not only deserves a thank you, He deserves
our willing obedience.
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