Thursday, April 20, 2017

Year 7, Day 110: Leviticus 21

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Leviticus 21 is a very interesting chapter.  In this chapter we have all kinds of rules and regulations for the priests of Israel.  At first glance, it seems like only those who embody perfection and who surround themselves with perfection can be near the Lord.  Just in case you are curious, if you are taking this message away from these verses, it is certainly understandable.  However, I think it is the wrong message to take.

Remember what God has been telling us about Himself in this whole book.  God is holy.  That means God is different.  He is separate.  He is not like the world.

In this light, God doesn’t want His priests to have a worldly mentality, either.  He wants His priests to go through life making choices for the right reason – even for righteous reasons – and not because it’s easy or the expected thing to do.  God wants us to put thought and consideration into our actions and their consequences.  He wants us to be concerned about our purity and our spirituality.

As I read through the commentary that I wrote six years back, I found a challenging thought along these lines.  The thought was this: the greatest evil is the corruption of the greatest good.  Now, I might argue with that and say that all evil is evil and there is no greatest evil.  But that is really an argument of semantics and it misses the real point of what I’m talking about here.

As high priests to God, we need to be careful about what we do and the choices that we make.  As God’s priests, our corruption carries weight and consequence.  As God’s priests, our actions and the consequences that they bring speak to the people around us.  We should take these things into account as we look to make our life available to God to use as He sees fit to use.

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