Atonement Day

Published: Nov. 12, 2019, midnight

b'Did you know in Arizona it\\u2019s illegal to spit on the sidewalk? Or that, in Waterbury, Connecticut, barbers can\\u2019t hum while doing your hair? Obviously, these funny laws aren\\u2019t strictly enforced\\u2014otherwise the jails would be filled.\\nThe book of Leviticus in the Bible is filled with laws God gave His people after He rescued them from Egypt. The laws included what they could eat, wear, celebrate, touch, etc.\\nThese laws were so hard to follow that everyone broke them at some point in their lives. But that was the purpose of the laws: God is holy\\u2014totally good, set apart, and without sin\\u2014and He was dwelling with His people, who were just as sinful as we are today. The strictness of the laws shows us we can\\u2019t earn God\\u2019s love or forgiveness, which are gifts from Him that we can only receive by faith (Galatians 3:10, 13-14, 24).\\nAnd why do we need the gift of forgiveness? Sinning, which is breaking God\\u2019s good laws, has always had a serious consequence: death (Romans 6:23). Yet, even back then, God made a way for His people to be rescued from sin and death. When they sinned, they went to their priest to make sacrifices to God by killing animals, such as goats and lambs. Today\\u2019s Scripture reading talks about Atonement Day, a yearly event when the people had to make special sacrifices in order to make up for their sins.\\nSo, today, why don\\u2019t Christians need to follow all of the levitical laws or have an Atonement Day? Because Jesus came to be our atonement\\u2014the payment for our sin. In Matthew 5:17, Jesus says He didn\\u2019t come to get rid of the law but to meet the law\\u2019s requirements. That\\u2019s why He\\u2019s referred to as the Lamb of God (John 1:29). When He died on the cross for our sins, He was the ultimate sacrifice (Hebrews 10:1-4, 11-14). When we put our trust in Jesus as our Savior from sin, He covers all our sins\\u2014past, present, and future (Psalm 103:11-12; 2 Corinthians 5:21).\\n\\u2022 Thousands of animals had to be sacrificed to cover the sins of Israel. (Leviticus 5 gives some examples of sins that would require a sacrifice.) Why, then, did the sacrifice of just one Person (Jesus) cover all of our sins forever (Romans 5:15-19; Hebrews 4:14-16; 7:23-28)? \\u2022 How does our freedom from the levitical law empower us to serve Christ (Galatians 3:23\\xe2\\u20ac\\u201c4:7)? \\u2022 Why is it important to remember that Jesus\\u2019 life and sacrifice cover all of your sins\\u2014even the ones you commit today? \\u2022 What questions do you have about the law in Leviticus? Who is a trusted Christian friend you can bring those questions to? \\nHe himself [Jesus] is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not only for ours, but also for those of the whole world. 1 John 2:2 (CSB)\\n\\xa0\\nRead Verses:\\nLeviticus 16:2, 11-19, 30-34; Romans 8:1-4'