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Leviticus

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Hebrew title, 'vayikrah' And he called' Leviticus based on LXX ... 13-14 skin afflictions, fabrics and walls of houses! must be deep and have white hair ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Leviticus


1
Leviticus!!
  • Yippee! Priestly law of Ancient Israel!

2
Whats in a name?
  • Hebrew title, vayikrah And he called
  • Leviticus based on LXX
  • deals with priestly matters and priests are from
    the tribe of Levi

3
New Tabernacle, New People
  • After giving of law, Exod is focused on the
    construction of the tabernacle
  • chs. 25-31 instructions for tabernacle
  • chs. 35-40 completion of the tabernacle

4
Tabernacle Layout
5
Tabernacle at the Center
  • Exod set on development of a free nation, law and
    cult
  • In Leviticus, the tabernacle becomes operational
  • four main sections
  • laws of sacrifice (1-7)
  • priestly consecration (8-16)
  • Holiness Code or Collection (17-26)
  • appendix vows and dedications (27)

6
Leviticus at the Center
  • Center of Pentateuch conveys the centrality of
    worship and atonement
  • God has been active in history
  • now God will be active in worship
  • God has delivered from slavery outwardly
  • now God will remove the slavery of sin inwardly
  • Lev 923-25

7
Priestly Manual
  • How do we worship this Yahweh?
  • not a secret manual for private rituals but a
    very public document
  • Some texts are for priests (68-721)
  • most are directed to all Israel (12 2646)
  • Provisions for the poor (1421, 32 199f)
  • democratizing laity given ownership with
    respect to priestly matters (Exod 196)

8
Mt. Sinai
  • all Leviticus given on Mt. Sinai (2734)
  • Exod 191 Num 1011 at the mountain
  • Sacrifices of 1-7 continue Gods response to the
    apostasy of the Golden Calf
  • in form law but in spirit grace to prevent such
    apostasy from reoccurring.
  • tell how a gracious God provides a visible means
    whereby people can be forgiven.

9
Exodus and Leviticus
  • Exod tells of deliverance from the sins of others
  • Leviticus - deliverance for ones own sins
  • how we function as a kingdom of priests?
  • 2342-43 dramatized festivals like sukkot tell
    how Exodus-type salvation is still available to
    all Israel
  • Lev. enables relation to Yahweh as a witness to
    the world.

10
Types of Sacrifices
  • 11-17 The burnt offering of three types
  • a bull (v 3-9)
  • male sheep or goat (10-13)
  • birds (14-17)
  • brought for vows and freewill offerings
    (2218-20)
  • entrance of the tent of meeting? (v. 3)
  • Exod 337 tent of meeting used as an oracle
    tent before tabernacle was built

11
Types of Sacrifices
  • burned offerings completely burned turned into
    smoke (19)
  • LXX translates it holocaust which became
    associated with WWII
  • Hebrew word is Hashoah or
  • full name is ??? ??????? ????? ???????
  • Day of Remembrance for the Holocaust and for
    Heroism

12
Grain Offerings
  • 21-6 The grain offering
  • another free-will offering of lesser value?
  • oil and frankincense poured on it
  • portion turned into smoke as a pleasing odor to
    the Lord (v. 2)
  • a portion given to the priests
  • v. 11 no leaven or honey allowed!

13
Offering of Well-Being
  • 31-17 Shelamim based on word Shalom
  • translations possible peace covenant or
    communion
  • expressions of gratitude for covenant blessing
  • Israelites not to eat a domesticated animal
    unless it was first sacrificed (173-4)
  • mostly it goes to the owner, some went to priests
  • God receives visceral fat and organs (39-10)
    which are turned to smoke

14
Sin Offering (41-35)
  • inadvertent transgressions brings pollution
  • blood of this sacrifice brings solution (v 6f)
  • it is a purification offering
  • for priests a bull (v 3f),
  • for congregation a bull (v 13f),
  • a ruler (clan leader) a male goat (v 22)
  • for ordinary people a female goat or lamb (v 27)
  • suet and entrails burned but the rest burned
    outside of camp (vv 8-12)

15
Food laws (111-47)
  • rules against eating certain land, water, and air
    animals
  • permitted diet is limited to land animals with
    split hooves and chew the cud
  • fish must have fins and scales (9f)
  • flying insects must have jumping legs (20f)
  • all birds other than those expressly forbidden
    (13f)
  • why are some animals clean and others unclean?

16
Holy and Common (111-1533)
  • this section interrupts the narrative flow
    between chs 10 and 16 (similar to Num 19)
  • provide legislation about impurity
  • deals with natural, tolerated impurities
  • basic sources are human and certain animal dead
    bodies (ch. 11)
  • normal/abnormal genital discharges (chs 12 and
    15)
  • skin disorders (mistranslated leprosy - chs
    13-14)

17
Clean and Unclean?
  • Read Lev. 1010
  • Three Categories
  • Holy,
  • Common Clean
  • Common Unclean

18
Uncleanness
  • ch. 11 unclean foods
  • ch 12 childbirth (a week for a male, two weeks
    for a female!)
  • ch. 13-14 skin afflictions, fabrics and walls
    of houses!
  • must be deep and have white hair
  • not leprosy (Hansens disease)
  • psoriasis, eczema and fungal infections

19
Appropriate Boundaries
  • holy that which is related to God
  • Common (ordinary) related to everyday life
  • unclean (anomalous) that which is icky or
    out-of-place
  • appropriate boundaries between these three
    factors (holy, clean, unclean)
  • to protect purity of body, homes, clothes, times,
    places, persons, acts

20
The Point??
  • Common Suggestions
  • purity of separation from others (182, 24)
  • hygiene issues of life and death (1711)
  • correlation of social order to cosmic order
  • Anthropological Approach
  • factors of community identity
  • whole animals make a whole people
  • protection of life-giving ways
  • Did God really want this stuff?

21
Day of Atonement (ch 16)
  • focused on cleansing of people as a whole (vs.
    16)
  • sin is not simply an individual reality
  • sin has a corporate dimension
  • communal ritual to deal with sins potential
    communal destructiveness
  • Goat sent into wilderness for the sins of all the
    people
  • Christian understanding Atonement of Christ

22
Understanding Sacrifice
  • Today sacrifice means to give up something of
    value for a greater good.
  • In ANE, sacrifice was a religious rite something
    offered to ones god/gods/God
  • ANE sacrifice involved
  • food for deity
  • union with deity
  • persuasion of deity to reciprocate
  • assimilation of the life force of the animal

23
Sacrifice
  • technical distinction Israelite sacrifice is
    unique in that parts of the animal are burned on
    the altar
  • How similar was Israelite sacrifice to ANE
    sacrifice?
  • emphasized intentionality
  • to be effective, it must be matched by proper
    interior feeling and lifestyle
  • Pro 158 The sacrifice of the wicked is
    destestable.

24
Sacrifice is . . .
  • Sacrifice is a gift to God
  • recognition that everything comes from God
  • it is a means of achieving unity with God
  • sharing of a meal together with God
  • a means of expiating sin
  • life of the animal and its blood dies expiates
    sin of the worshipper
  • a response of a conscience motivated by a desire
    to obey and fear God

25
Those Pesky Prophets
  • Some prophetic passages seem to condemn the
    practice of sacrifice outright
  • Isa 111-17, Amos 52, Jer 721-23
  • Didnt Moses command sacrifice?
  • The prophetic critique
  • What use is sacrifice without a proper heart
    relationship as the basis for offering it?
  • The opposed the formalism and mere external
    religious practice without corresponding
    repentance.

26
Righteous Behavior in OT?
  • What counts for righteous behavior in OT?
  • the act or the disposition of the heart?
  • Intentionality of the heart is a unique Israelite
    idea a major factor in OT.
  • Sacrifice ended when Romans destroyed the temple
    in 70 AD
  • synagogue and talmud Torah
  • Christ and the atonement

27
Holiness Code (chs 17-26)
  • Section of code that may have had an independent
    status
  • centers on behavior and rituals that promote
    holiness
  • lay-oriented and hortatory (as opposed to
    priestly and technical)
  • 192 You shall be holy for I the Lord your God
    am holy.

28
Holiness
  • Holiness is more than a static state of
    God-relatedness
  • Holiness is relational
  • faithful to God in worship and life
  • a holistic faithfulness to righteous love of God
    and others
  • You shall love your neighbor as yourself
    (1918, 34)
  • Israel Knohl Sanctuary of Silence

29
Leviticus and the Christian
  • traditional designation of OT laws
  • moral laws 10 Commandments
  • civil laws applicable to ancient Israel (BOC)
  • sacrificial laws
  • Only Moral laws apply to us
  • civil laws designed for ancient Israel
  • civil laws are obviated by the cross

30
Problems and Solutions
  • NT doesnt make this distinction
  • differences between them are not always clear
    civil laws have moral implications
  • A better approach?

31
Levitical Law today
  • basic themes have common ground
  • Love the Lord Your God with all your heart . . .
    (Deut 65 and Mark 123ff)
  • Be ye holy for I am holy (Lev 1918 I Peter)
  • You are a kingdom of priests, a holy nation
  • Jesus gives his seal of approval to the spirit of
    the OT Laws (Mark 1230)
  • NT quotes the 10 Commandments (I Pet 116)

32
Two Parallels
  • OT Covenants are based on grace
  • God called and initiated relationship with
    Abraham/Moses
  • Law expresses what God has already done
  • Not how do I achieve Gods favor but How do I
    express my gratitude for Gods grace.
  • NT Covenant also involves Law
  • ethical requirements in Pauls letters
  • proper responses to Christs sacrifice

33
Covenantal Theology
  • NT accepts not only the moral law of the OT but
    builds on understanding of covenant
  • underlying principles of OT law apply in NT also
    in spirit
  • Lev. 199ff (Peah) allowing poor to harvest
    grain from corners of the field
  • what spiritual principle underlies this law?
  • this question can be asked for all OT laws.

34
Christ and Sacrifice
  • Christ is the ultimate sacrifice (according to
    Hebrews) who fulfills all others
  • his sacrifice is superior because it need not be
    repeated
  • it is the substance for which the others were the
    shadow
  • Sacrifice of OT forms the background by which we
    understand the cross
  • Easter and Passover connection
  • Day of Atonement (blowing of shofar)
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