The Day of Atonement
By Pastor Boffey on Sunday, December 11, 2011.The Day of Atonement
Leviticus 16
I. Though a daily sacrifice was made for sin under the Law (HEB 7:27; 10:11), God ordained an
annual day of atonement for Israel. LEV 16:29-34.
A. Unlike the other sacrifices, this was to be done only by the high priest once each year in the
holiest place of the tabernacle (where the ark and God's presence dwelt). HEB 9:6-7.
B. As the high priest alone made an atonement in the holy place, Christ BY HIMSELF
purged our sins. HEB 1:3; 1PE 2:24.
C. The Levitical high priest had to make this atonement once each year whereas our High
Priest was offered ONCE. HEB 7:27; 9:25-28.
II. On the day of atonement, Aaron was to be attired very specifically. LEV 16:4.
A. The high priest had a special, distinguishing apparel that he was otherwise to wear before
the Lord. EXO 28:1-39.
B. But on this day, Aaron was to don the common linen garment of the subordinate priests.
c/w EXO 28:40-43.
1. Thus the high priest condescended to identify with his fellows.
2. Christ our High Priest condescended to identify with His fellows for the purpose of
atonement. PHIL 2:6-8; HEB 2:17.
C. Some observations about the linen attire:
1. Linen was an integral fabric of the vail that then separated man from the presence
of God (EXO 26:31-33). Thus, for this atonement Aaron must don the very
material of separation.
a. Our sinful flesh separated us from God. ROM 7:18; 8:8.
b. But the Word was made flesh (JOH 1:14; 1TI 3:16), the very material
which could not enter into His presence. ROM 8:3.
c. Through the disturbing of the material of separation, we have access to
God's presence. HEB 10:19-20.
2. Christ had an infinitely superior linen apparel which made His High Priestly
work acceptable: Vengeance, Salvation and Righteousness (with which He then
graciously clothed His saints). ISA 59:17 c/w ISA 61:10; REV 19:8.
D. In preparation for identifying with his fellow priests, Aaron had to wash his flesh in water
(LEV 16:4) so that his approach unto God this day would be by blood and water.
c/w 1JO 5:6.
1. So Christ was washed in water to fulfil all righteousness. MAT 3:13-15.
2. Christ's baptism in water to identify with us spoke of His eventual baptism in
sufferings and in the heart of the earth to atone for our sins. MAT 20:22; 12:40.
III. The ram of burnt offering and the sin offerings for the people were taken FROM the people.
LEV 16:5-10.
A. So Christ was taken from Israel. ROM 9:5.
B. But, whereas the O.T. high priest took the sin offering FROM the church, our High Priest
offered up Himself FOR the church. HEB 9:14, 25-26.
C. A bullock for Aaron's sin offering was appointed and two goats for the people, one of
which was a chosen sin offering and the other a chosen scapegoat.
1. The roles of each goat were determined by lot, for which results God takes credit.
PRO 16:33.
2. Christ was/is God's chosen, His elect. ISA 42:1-4 c/w MAT 12:17-21.
The Day of Atonement Page 1 of 33. He went to His death “...as it was determined...” (LUK 22:22), “...being delivered
by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God...” (ACT 2:23).
IV. Aaron provided his own bullock for the sin offering for himself and his house. v. 11 c/w LEV 4:3.
A. The cost therefore was to Aaron a personal one.
B. Christ did not need to offer for His own sins like Aaron but the cost of His offering was
certainly a personal one!
C. Aaron was to burn incense when he entered within the vail to prevent judgment (LEV
16:12-13). But Christ's sacrifice was itself the perfect incense. EPH 5:2.
1. Note that there were burning coals before the Lord. LEV 16:12.
2. There are “burning coals” before the Lord in the Heavenly place. EZE 28:14.
3. The mighty angelic cabinet on high are described as having this appearance.
EZE 1:13-14; PSA 104:4.
4. Christ's blood has brought us into the presence of the most High God and the
mighty angels. HEB 12:22.
5. NOTE: It was NOT the “burning coals” that appeased God and worked atonement
in Aaron's offering. It was the blood (EXO 30:10)! Therefore let none be led to
adore angels for salvation. COL 2:18.
6. The blood of the sin offering and a censer full of burning coals were to be taken
into the holiest of all.
a. Once within the vail, the high priest put incense upon the fire, causing a
cloud of incense to cover the mercy seat.
b. Incense speaks of prayer. PSA 141:2; REV 5:8.
c. The incense cloud points to the intercession of Christ Who prayed His way
into God's presence and now pleads on our behalf.
JOH 17; LUK 22:46; ROM 8:34; HEB 7:25; 9:24.
D. Aaron's approach unto God with his own offering was subsequently duplicated in his
offering for the people (v. 15), thus showing that blood brings both our High Priest and us
into God's presence. HEB 9:12.
V. The blood was sprinkled upon the mercy seat EASTWARD. LEV 16:14.
A. The door of the tabernacle faced east. NUM 3:38.
B. Thus, when man approached God's throne he moved westward.
C. When man moved eastward he was moving away from God with his back to God's throne.
GEN 3:24 c/w EZE 8:16.
D. Cain went east away from the presence of God. GEN 4:16.
E. Thus, the blood of atonement covered the eastward path away from God. c/w ISA 53:6.
F. The blood was sprinkled BEFORE the mercy seat SEVEN TIMES.
1. The blood was thus between the throne of God and the worshipper.
2. We approach God ONLY by Jesus' blood. HEB 10:19.
3. That the blood was sprinkled seven times signifies fullness, pointing to the
complete redemption for all our sins by Christ's blood. HEB 10:12-18.
VI. On this day of atonement, Aaron had to make two trips into the holiest.
A. First he slew the sin offering for himself without and took its blood inside. LEV 16:11-14.
B. Then he had to come back out and sacrifice the goat of the sin offering for the people and
take its blood inside. vs. 15-16.
C. This may typify a curious event that happened after Christ arose from the dead.
JOH 20:17 c/w MAT 28:9-10.
The Day of Atonement Page 2 of 3VII. Having completed the atonement, Aaron was to lay his hands on the scapegoat and confess Israel's
sins, transferring them symbolically to it. LEV 16:20-22 c/w ISA 53:6, 12; 1PE 2:24.
A. In the two goats we have tokens of judgment and remission.
B. The one goat was (as it were) made sin, the other (as it were) was made sanctification and
redemption! 2CO 5:21; 1CO 1:30; ROM 4:25.
C. The losing of the scapegoat spoke of sins that were sought for and not found, for they had
been carried away. JER 50:20 c/w 31:34; ISA 53:4, 12.
D. Mind that those animal sacrifices never really took away sins. HEB 10:4, 11.
E. Christ, however, is both the fit (well adapted or suited to the conditions or circumstances of
the case, answering the purpose, proper or appropriate) man and the scapegoat Who took
away our sins.
1. He was ordained to bear our iniquities. ISA 53:6, 11.
2. He was manifested to take away our sins. 1JO 3:5.
3. He is the Lamb of God that took away our sins. JOH 1:29.
4. Christ took away our sins to a place where NO MAN can find them to lay them to
our charge. ROM 8:33-34.
5. That the scapegoat was not released until AFTER the other sin offering had been
slain shows that removal of sin is an EFFECT of Christ's death. HEB 9:26.
6. For God's Israel, the scapegoat was only used once for the task and there was no
chance of it showing back up with its load. Praise God! HEB 9:28.
IX. This ceremony was to performed on the tenth day of the seventh month v. 29.
A. This was the same day in the year of jubilee that the trumpet of liberty was to sound.
LEV 25:9.
B. Of Christ's saving work's complete sufficiency, Paul said to churches that were forgetting
their jubilee of release, “Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us
free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage” (GAL 5:1).
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