Christian
Churches of God
No.
CB43
The Ordination of Aaron and His Sons
(Edition
1.0 20050108-20061125)
Moses took some of the anointing oil and some
of the blood from the altar and sprinkled them on Aaron and his sons and their
garments and so he consecrated them. This paper has
been adapted from Chapters 32-34 of The Bible Story Volume II by Basil
Wolverton, published by Ambassador College Press, and covers from Leviticus chapter 8
to chapter 25 in the Bible.
Christian Churches of God
E-mail: secretary@ccg.org
(Copyright ã
2005, 2006 Christian Churches of God, explained
and edited by Wade Cox)
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The Ordination of Aaron and His Sons
We
continue here from the study paper Rebellion Against God’s Laws (No. CB41).
After
Moses had set up the tabernacle in the wilderness, the Lord said to Moses,
“Bring Aaron and his sons, their garments, anointing oil, the bull for the sin
offering, the two rams and the basket containing bread made without yeast, and
gather the entire assembly to the Tent of Meeting (Lev. 8:1-3 NIV).
Moses did
as he was asked. He brought Aaron and his sons forward and washed them with
water. He put the tunic on Aaron, tied the sash around him, clothed him with the
robe and put the ephod on him. He then placed the breastpiece on him and put
the Urim and Thummim in the breastpiece. Then he placed the turban on Aaron’s
head and set the gold plate, the sacred diadem, on the front of it as the Lord
commanded Moses (vv. 4-9 NIV).
Then
Moses took the anointing oil and anointed the tabernacle and everything in it,
and so consecrated them. He sprinkled some oil on the altar seven times,
anointing the altar and all its utensils to consecrate them. He poured some of
the oil on Aaron’s head to consecrate him. Then he brought Aaron’s sons
forward, put tunics on them, tied sashes around them and put headbands on them,
as the Lord commanded Moses (vv. 10-13 NIV).
The
consecration service included a sin offering for atonement, a burnt offering
for worship (v.18) and a “ram for ordination” (v. 22) whose blood was applied
to the high priest (Aaron) on his right ear, thumb and toe (v. 23). After this
was done Aaron offered sacrifices for the people (Lev. 9:15-21). Then he
blessed the people in his capacity as priest, and the Lord accepted his
ministry with the sign of miraculous fire (vv. 23-24). See the notes on
Leviticus 8:14 NIV Study Bible.
“God will
allow you to enter completely into His tabernacle service only after you have spent
seven days and nights in your duties at the door,” Moses told Aaron and his
sons. “Do exactly as you have been told, or you may have to pay with your
lives” (Lev. 8:31-36).
On the
eighth day (after the seven days of ordination) Moses told Aaron, his sons and
the elders of Israel to bring offerings for the first services in use of the
altar. All the people were also told to be present. After the first carcasses
were placed on the altar, Moses, Aaron and his sons went out to stand before
the people while Moses informed the crowd that God was pleased with the
offerings.
The first fire that lit the altar was
supplied supernaturally from fire from heaven (Lev. 9:24; 1Kgs. 18:38,39;
2Chro. 7:1-3). The
offering there was quickly consumed by an energy more like lightning than
ordinary flames. This close display of God’s power so startled the people that
they fell forward in awe (Lev. 9:22-24).
“This is God’s holy fire,” Moses told Aaron. “Your sons should never allow it to die” (Lev. 6:12-13). “Twice a day live coals should be taken from the altar and carried in a censer to the holy place to be sprinkled with incense at the golden altar” (Ex. 30:1-9). Therefore, it was the priest’s job to make sure the fire did not go out.
The fire is a representation of the Holy Spirit that we need to keep burning, or growing in us. Just as fire can be put out, the Holy Spirit can be quenched (1Thes. 5:19), or grieved (Eph. 4:30), which can result in the Holy Spirit being removed from an individual. It is the priest’s job to teach the people how to obey God’s Laws, and by doing so they keep God’s Holy Spirit.
From then
on the tabernacle was in constant use. Early each morning Aaron’s sons came to
carry out their preparation duties. Then animals were slaughtered, dressed and
offered for all Israel. This was done again in the afternoon, so that an
offering was always on the altar (Lev. 6:9,12-13). The unblemished animals used
for burnt offerings typified the Messiah who would later come to die for the sins
of the people.
Aaron and
his sons had to carry out their duties properly. There were several kinds of
offerings planned by God to distinctly remind the Israelites of their sins, and
to give them an opportunity to worship Him with a feeling of close contact. These offerings were to teach Israel the
habit of obeying their God (Gal.
3:24). They also taught the need for a
Saviour to come to pay for the sins of the world. The offerings were not to pay for sin.
Salvation never came through animal sacrifices. They were given to Israel until
the coming of the Saviour (Gal. 3:19), and were to remind the people that one
would come to shed his blood for their sins (Heb. 10:3, 4, 18).
There
were burnt offerings, food offerings, peace offerings, trespass offerings,
offerings for sins of ignorance and others. For each type there was a special
ceremony outlined by God (Lev. 1-5). For example, if a man wished to make a
personal burnt offering as a gift to God, he was to bring one of three things.
It had to be a healthy, unblemished male from his cattle, sheep, goats, turtledoves
or pigeons. There was a ceremony for each kind of creature. Some ceremonies
were more involved than others, but each ended with the animal’s flesh being
burned.
Most of the
people didn’t realise their sacrifices pointed to a time when the Being in the
cloud (the Angel of Yahovah) would later come in human form as Jesus the
Christ, and he would be sacrificed for the sins of all the world’s inhabitants.
Sacrificial
ceremonies included more than animals. Olive oil, flour from grains, wine and
incense were also used. Some were used in combinations, such as unleavened
breads not sweetened by honey. Whatever the ritual or its necessities, all had
to be done exactly according to how God had instructed Moses. Nothing was to be
changed, added or omitted.
The
sacrificing of animals was no longer necessary after Jesus Christ was
sacrificed many centuries later, as the
Lamb of God to die for the sins of this world (Heb. 10:4, 10-12,18). When Jesus
Christ sacrificed Himself there ceased to be any need to sacrifice animals as a
reminder of sin (Heb. 10:3).
Two of
Aaron’s sons, Nadab and Abihu, took their censers, put fire in them and added incense;
and they offered unauthorised fire before the Lord, contrary to His command. So
fire came out from the Presence of the Lord and consumed them, and they died
before the Lord (Lev. 10:1-2).
Moses
then said to Aaron, “This is what the Lord spoke of when he said:
‘By those who come near me
I must be regarded as holy:
And before all the people
I must be glorified.’” (v. 3)
Aaron’s sons died because they disobeyed God by
bringing strange fire before Him when they were told not to.
Aaron
stood in silent misery, gazing at the flame-blackened bodies of his sons.
Finally he turned away, realising that disobedience had brought punishment. In
spite of the shock of his nephews’ deaths, Moses lost no time in arranging for
burials, and for replacements in Eleazar and Ithamar, Aaron’s two other sons.
“Don’t
mourn because of Nadab and Abihu,” Moses warned Aaron and the two other sons.
“If you do, it would show that you feel God has dealt unjustly with them” (vv.
6-7). However, their relatives could mourn for the two men that the Lord had
destroyed by fire.
People
were sobered when they heard Nadab and Abihu had died by the hand of God. Even
a funeral wasn’t to interfere with tabernacle ceremonies. Aaron had to carry on
with his duties, and Eleazar and Ithamar had to start with theirs.
Priests
are to be holy in the exercise of their duties. To that end, it is also a
ruling that priests on duty abstain from wine and strong drink until after they
have ceased the sacrificial duties in hand that day. The only wine used in the
ceremonies was the drink offering where wine was poured out as an offering to
God.
Serious
events didn’t necessarily steer matters smoothly. In one case a goat was to be
used as a sin offering for the people. When Moses inquired about the goat
offering and found it had been burned up he was angry with Eleazar and Ithamar,
Aaron’s remaining sons.
“Why was
the offering left to burn?” he angrily asked. “Why wasn’t it eaten in the holy
place, as holy meat to bear the sins of the people?” (vv. 16-18). “Since its
blood was not taken into the holy place, you should have eaten the goat in the
sanctuary area, as I commanded”, Moses said.
Aaron
replied to Moses, “Today they sacrificed their sin offering and their burnt
offering before the Lord, but such things as this have happened to me. Would
the Lord have been pleased if I had eaten the sin offering today?” (Lev.
10:19).
When
Moses heard this he was satisfied.
God gave
us Laws and a priesthood to protect the understanding of those Laws and to
conduct the day-to-day worship of the nation of Israel.
This
priesthood were the sons of Levi, a tribe of Israel. This tribe itself was
subordinate to the older order of Melchisedek. Levi was deemed to have tithed
to Melchisedek when he was in the loins of his great-grandfather Abraham. This
order of Melchisedek represented the new priesthood of the Church, which was
open to all nations, or the Gentiles (meaning people of the nations),
through the death of its High Priest Jesus Christ.
Levi was
to give way to and become a part of this order and many would be added to Levi
and the tribes, who would all provide priests in the new system.
Levi was
to become a priesthood that was holy and dedicated to God, as Israel was a
nation holy and dedicated to God. In order to be holy and clean as servants of
God there were rules given to them to maintain clean and healthy bodies and
minds.
These
apply to the servants of God both as ancient Israel, the priests of Levi and the
nations brought into and serving under the priests of the Order of Melchisedek,
of whom Jesus Christ is High Priest. These aspects are covered in the Book of
Hebrews. See also the paper Melchisedek (No. 128).
Everybody should
be healthy. God intended that His own people should not only know the truth
about food but also live radiant, healthy lives.
Food that
is clean doesn’t always mean that it is free of every kind of dirt. It can be pure in that
respect, but at the same time it can be unfit to eat. God made animals, birds
and fish in a class good for human food, and in another class unfit for humans
to eat. The Bible calls one kind “clean” and the other kind “unclean.”
This was known
before the Flood. Noah knew what to do when he was told to take seven pairs of
each kind of clean animals and birds into the Ark along with one pair of each
unclean kind (Gen. 7:2-3). The detailed knowledge of such things had been
compromised over the centuries as the Israelites had mingled with the heathen
Egyptians, who had no interest in obeying God. The laws needed to be restated.
The same
was true of the Ten Commandments. Adam knew what they were. So did Noah,
Abraham and many others. At Mt. Sinai they were brought to the Israelites so
they could know again, or have confirmed, what was God’s will. (See the paper The Ten Commandments (No.
CB17).) To Israel went
the responsibility of preserving the Laws in writing and keeping pagan beliefs
and rules from becoming mixed with them.
God gave
simple rules by which clean animals could be known from the unclean. See the
paper The Biblical Food
Laws (No. CB19).
The Creator
never does anything without a good reason. His mind is far superior to human
minds, which are rarely able to understand divine decisions and actions.
Nevertheless, man tries to figure out why God tells him to do certain things.
And when he can’t discover God’s reasons, he generally decides obedience is
unnecessary.
Man should
obey for his own good, regardless of how little he understands. Only then is
he blessed. Unhappily, millions have decided that unclean animals are proper to
eat, especially if God is thanked for them.
The main
reason any animal is unclean is that God did not intend that man should eat it.
God made some animals for human food. Others were for work, for pets, for
consuming waste products and for controlling the numbers of other
creatures. If man could have discerned
which animals were unclean, there would have been no need for the Bible to
inform him.
The human
body has degenerated since Adam. Man should not be surprised to find that much
of that degeneration has been due to centuries of consuming unclean
foods.
“Do not
defile yourself with these unclean creatures,” God warned.
“Keep
yourselves clean and sacred, so that you will be more acceptable to your holy
God” (Lev. 11:44-47).
Regardless
of what God said, millions who claim to be faithful, obedient Christians feel
that anything with high vitamin content must be good for them. They argue mistakenly that the laws of clean
and unclean food, inspired by God for all people for all time, were merely “old
Jewish laws” that had been “nailed to the cross” at Christ’s death.
To justify
their eating unclean foods many people turn to 1Timothy 4:4-5, and point with
triumph to what Paul said:
“For
everything created by God is good, and nothing is to be rejected if it is
received with thanksgiving; for then it is consecrated by the word of God and
prayer” (RSV).
Taken out
of its context, this statement would probably cause the reader to conclude that
either Paul didn’t agree with God or that God has changed His mind and humans
could eat anything as long as God’s blessing is asked on it. But Paul didn’t
disagree with God, who never changes (Mal. 3:6; Heb. 13:8). Neither do His Laws
change (Mat. 5:17-18).
In 1Timothy
4:4-5, the Holy Spirit was telling Paul that in the
Last Days two doctrines of demons would be popular on planet Earth. The demons introduced these doctrines to deceive people.
Some people have wrong ideas about not marrying and not eating certain foods.
The first doctrine of demons is the teaching that people should not get married. The demons want to destroy the family unit that God is using to teach His system and Plan of Salvation. The family unit is the foundation of our society on which the nations are built. Many people today live together without getting married and this is not the correct thing to do. This is sinning against God’s Laws and can only lead to punishment of the nations.
The next doctrine is not eating meats that God specifically created for us to eat. This
doctrine is called “vegetarianism”. If we do not eat meat we will lack
essential nutrients that we need for a healthy brain. That is not the system
God set up from the beginning when he created Adam. Cain was a tiller of the
soil and Abel was a pastoralist. Abel's offering was more acceptable to God
than Cain's offering. That is the reason for Cain's anger and the reason why he
killed his brother Abel (Gen. 4:1-16). See the papers Cain and Abel: Sons of Adam
(No. CB7) and The
Doctrines of Demons of the Last Days (No. 48).
Picking
certain words and phrases out of the Bible and adding them together to try to
prove untruths is an ancient trick. Such deceit can generally be uncovered by
comparing Scriptures and by carefully reading whole chapters to find exact
meanings of certain words, phrases and sentences.
God did not cleanse the unclean creatures
Another
example of misunderstanding is based on Acts 10:9-16. If one reads only those
verses, the impression is conveyed that Peter was told that God had cleansed
unclean creatures, and that Peter should not hesitate to eat them. But verse 17
shows that Peter knew God did not mean for him to eat unclean meat. Peter
noticed that no animal’s nature had been changed; they were still unclean! So
he began to wonder what the vision did mean. He did not jump to a hasty
conclusion.
Verses 28
and 29 show that the vision was for pointing out that Peter should not regard
any man, regardless of nationality, as common or unclean if he seeks to live
rightly. It had nothing to do with clean or unclean foods.
No matter
what is believed about clean and unclean creatures, the two kinds still exist.
The nature of unclean animals has not changed. They are the same today as they
were before the Flood, in Moses’ day and in Peter’s time. Those who obey the
Creator in these matters receive definite blessings.
God’s great
plan for man’s future has to do with salvation—being spared from sin and death
and being given the gift of eternal life. Moses wanted to know about this. God
explained it to him so that he could pass on the vital information to the
Israelites. See the paper God’s
Plan of Salvation (No. CB30).
If there
were no sin, man wouldn’t have to be saved from it. People who say they don’t
need salvation don’t know what sin is or what eternal life means. Man should
know he is mortal, subject to death, and needs the Spirit of God as a gift to
make it possible to live forever. God made this plain to Moses about the time
the tabernacle was erected. Most of the Book of Leviticus (written by Moses)
has to do with the rules meant to keep Israel the wisest and cleanest nation on
Earth. God also made known the rituals required to teach the Israelites the
need of a Saviour and the habit of obedience.
The Book of
Leviticus makes it obvious that God’s Laws, which explain right from wrong, are
helpful in making all people much happier. But down through time many religions
have sprung up that ignore those rules by labeling them “Jewish laws,” and
referring to Leviticus as an account of the ancient “laws of Moses.”
Many people
regard the words law, Jew, Moses and Israelite with contempt. Their religious
leaders unknowingly have either failed to teach them the truth, or have
deliberately withheld the truth from them. Those who have brought the truth
(including Jesus Christ) have been slain or ridiculed because the truth they
announced conflicted with the beliefs of many religious sects. Men have always
hated those with God’s truth (Mat. 23:29-35). Those who sneer at the
commandments given to Israel are inviting on themselves the miserable results
of sin.
There is
nothing wrong with the Laws given to the Israelites through Moses, but because
they were broken, Jesus had to die.
When Moses
told the people the civil laws which God gave him, the Israelites recalled with
shame the way so many of them had pranced before the Golden Calf. See the paper
Rebellion Against God’s
Laws (No. CB41).
Seven steps to the Plan of Salvation
Israel’s
God told Moses that the Plan of Salvation for mankind was so important He would
require the people to observe certain annual Holy Days as reminders. In
summary, the seven steps in God’s Plan are pictured by seven special holy
periods of time. These special days are: Passover, the Days of Unleavened
Bread, Pentecost, Festival of Trumpets, the Day of Atonement, the Festival of
Ingathering or Tabernacles, and the Last Great Day. See the paper God’s Holy Days (No. CB22).
All went
well in carrying out these things. In spite of their weaknesses, the
Israelites became aware that they were the only people to whom God was
revealing His Plan (at that time), which was pictured by the Holy Days. In
choosing them to preserve His truth, He was mercifully willing to forgive their
sins even though He did not promise them eternal life at that time.
People who
have forgotten these days have forgotten the true Plan of Salvation, which these days picture. They have come to
believe in a counterfeit plan! See the paper God’s Plan of Salvation (No.
CB30).
Today most
people do not observe God’s Holy Days. But every human being who has ever lived
or ever will live must have the opportunity of learning of God’s great Plan.
(2Pet. 3:9; 1Tim. 2:4). God will deal justly with everyone. Each person (Rom.
2:11) will have a full understanding of the right way and must make his or her
own decision as to whether he or she will obey God (Heb. 8:11).
In this way
the people of the world are called out and prepared to join the body of Christ,
which is the Church of God. They are prepared to become priests, as were the
Levites before them. They become priests after the Order of Melchisedek, and
servants of the Most High God, bringing the elect to understanding and to
baptism in the Holy Spirit so that they too might become priests of the Most
High God.
(The New
International Study Bible was used as a source of reference in various
places in this paper.)
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