Hebrews Lesson 125 May
8, 2008
NKJ Isaiah 40:31 But those who wait on the LORD Shall
renew their strength; They shall mount up with wings like eagles, They
shall run and not be weary, They shall walk and not faint.
We have been studying Hebrews
9 and as you get into Hebrews 9 the backdrop for the whole chapter is the Tabernacle
service in the Old Testament.
Unfortunately many people today just don’t teach the tabernacle. It was always one of my favorite subjects. When
I was a kid I always remember going to Good News Clubs (Child Evangelism
Fellowship) with a flannel graph.
Everybody remembers CEF because they’re the flannel graph people having
the backdrops and putting the Tabernacle up and teaching about all the
different elements of the Tabernacle.
It’s a tremendous way to teach kids about all the different facets of salvation
and the need for salvation because everything is a picture image of the either
the person or work of the Lord Jesus Christ.
When I was first a pastor
some 26 years, 27 years ago down in La Marquee in Galveston County, one of the
families that joined the church right after I went down there just moved to the area was the guy who was the
Area Director for Child Evangelism Fellowship.
There is a Child Evangelism Fellowship Good News camp down there in
Now last time we looked at
the reasons to study the tabernacle and we began to get an overview of the tabernacle
and to begin to come into the tabernacle as we would if we were going to come
to worship. In the Scripture it starts at the center with a description of what
is inside the Holy of Holies and then works it way out. So we’re coming at things a little
backward. But if you try to teach the
Tabernacle verse-by-verse, you run into a lot of problems because you have God’s
initial overview. In Exodus 25:29-30 you
get into the priesthood. Then after that you get a description of them building
all the different pieces. Then it comes
back at the end and you get a third description. So there’s a lot of repetition as you move
through the book of Exodus. It gets a
little bit redundant in terms of teaching.
So I try to synthesize it down so that we can come to understand it.
What I want to do tonight is
begin to wrap up the outer curtains that surrounded the fence that surrounded
the courtyard around the Tabernacle and then move inside the entry into the courtyard
and up to the first major piece of furniture which is the brazen altar. You can see the model down here on the table in
front of me. We’ll be spending some time
talking about that.
As you can tell from this
diagram as we approach the tabernacle, approach the outer perimeter and you
can’t see what is going on inside. It is
completely blocked from view because it is surrounded by the outer walls. The dimensions of the outer walls are
approximately 150 feet by 75 feet. It’s
100 cubits according to the text, 100 cubits by 50 cubits. Exodus 27:18 summarizes it.
So if you want to open your
Bibles we’ll spend most of our time in the 27th chapter of
Exodus. You have a section from verse 9 (Exodus
27:9) down through 19 which describes the outer courtyard. Verse 18 gives us a summary.
NKJ Exodus 27:18 "The length of the court shall
be one hundred cubits, the width fifty throughout, and the height five
cubits, made of fine woven linen, and its sockets of bronze.
So the curtain (the wall
around it) was 7 ½ feet high. The average height of an Israelite at that time
was about 5½ feet tall. You were considered
tall (exceptionally tall) if you were 6 feet tall so with a height of 7 ½ feet nobody
was looking inside. That kept the people
from seeing what was going on inside which is where the presence of God is. So you have a rectangle that is half as wide as
it is long, approximately 150’ on the north and south sides. The way it’s laid out is the entry which is
down in this area. This is on the east
side so this is the west side behind the Holy of Holies. Then you have the north to the right and the
south to the left. The north and south
sides were each 150 feet approximately.
That’s using an 18” cubit. We’ll
just round it off there. It could have
been a little longer; it could have been a little shorter. We’re not exactly sure. There’s a lot of debate as to the length of a
standard cubit in
On each of these long sides,
there were 20 pillars. Each pillar had bronze sockets that the pillars sat in. Then at the top there were silver hooks and bands
that the curtains would hang on. So the
curtains as we saw last time, the curtains were woven linen, a high grade of
linen. It was very expensive linen that
came out of
It sort of reminds me of what
it was like back in the earth 90’s when I first went over to Moscow not long
after things opened up and went to Belarus.
Maybe one out of every 4 street lights would work. If you were in the hotel maybe one of every
four lights in the hallway would be turned on.
Everything was painted…you know Soviet drab concrete. Everything was in about in three colors –
gray, beige and dirty white. That was
it! So after spending 3 weeks in a
culture where even at night when you are out on the street only one of every 4
street lights is on where everything is dark and dim. When you come back and land in someplace like
The first color that they
used was a bluish purple. In the text
sometimes it’s translated blue; sometimes the translators will translate it
purple. It was a bluish purple and it
was symbolic of heaven as the true dwelling place of God and to remind people
of the heavenly origin of the Tabernacle.
It was designed to draw people’s attention to heaven.
The second color that is used
- oh, one more note on the blue color.
Both the blue-purple and the reddish-purple were produced from different
species of mollusks. They would take
these mollusks and crush them to get the various secretions from the glands. It is from that that they would create the
dyes. It would take enormous numbers of
these mollusks in order to produce these dyes.
That’s why it was rare and it was extremely expensive.
The second color that you
have listed is the color purple which was more of a reddish purple which
signified royalty. This was the color of
royal robes. It was featured in the
clothing of the High Priest as well. It
was in the decorative features of the High Priest’s garments (the pomegranates). It was produced from the secretions of the sea
snail the murex trunkulous (?). It would take a total of 250,000 of these to
make one ounce of the dye. It was extremely
expensive and highly valued in
Then the third color that is prominent
in all of the material is that of scarlet.
You had actually two different words that are translated red. The first is the Hebrew word shanyi which refers to a bright read color
with just a tinge of orange. This is
used to color various threads. It is
used to color ribbons and a lot of decorations.
It was a dye that was extracted from the bodies of insects.
Then there is a second word
that is usually translated scarlet and there is a second word that is usually
translated crimson. That is from the
word towla which refers to a worm as well as
the dye that comes from the worm. They
would crush the worm and then it was the color that came from the worm that was
used to produce the dye. Both of these
words are used as I pointed out last time in Isaiah 1:18:
NKJ Isaiah
Both of these dyes were
considered permanent. They just couldn’t
get it out. So it pictures how
thoroughly sin stains and affects somebody.
So we have the statement:
Though your sins are like scarlet, They shall be as white as
snow; Though they are red like crimson, They shall be as wool.
So as the worshipper (the
Israelite) would come to the temple he would just be overwhelmed with the beauty
and the color that was present there. Then
the fabric itself was a fabric that was made from extremely fine linen, the
linen from
It was interesting today. We
were having a conversation with a couple of pastors about how our culture has
so deteriorated and become so informal.
Everybody has become so informal.
We were just reflecting.
One guy said, “The other day
I was channel surfing and ran across an old episode of Leave It to Beaver
and they were sitting around the dinner table.
The father has got on his coat and tie to eat dinner.”
That was just 50 years ago,
or 40 years ago. And now look at our culture. You look at the common dress of the 19 year
old and he’s probably never even tied a tie or even had a sport coat and dresses
in the most horrid manner. I believe
there is a connection that if you’re informal in the way you present yourself,
you are probably informal in the way you think, especially if you think about
values in anything. That is a sign of
the deterioration of our culture and a lack of recognition of formality and a
lack recognition of protocol. We have
moved away from that so much and it creates a very slovenly attitude about
morals, about any kind of absolutes and about how to conduct things in
life.
So the priesthood had a
uniform. They always wore it. It was exquisite. It emphasized the fact that they were doing
something that had the highest value which is the worship of God. It wasn’t just something else to do. All of this was designed to bring glory to
God who dwelt within the Tabernacle.
As you approached the
Tabernacle you might start wandering around trying to figure out how in the
world you’re ever going to get inside and into the presence of God. You
could go around to the left and you could go around to the right. There is only one way to enter into the
presence of God. There is only one entry
way. This entryway is described in
Exodus 27:17-18.
NKJ Exodus 27:17 "All the pillars around the court
shall have bands of silver; their hooks shall be of silver and their sockets of
bronze.
NKJ Exodus 27:18 "The length of the court shall
be one hundred cubits, the width fifty throughout, and the height five
cubits, made of fine woven linen, and its sockets of bronze.
Then in verse 14:
NKJ Exodus 27:14 "The hangings on one side
of the gate shall be fifteen cubits, with their three pillars and
their three sockets.
NKJ Exodus 27:15 "And on the other side shall
be hangings of fifteen cubits, with their three pillars and their
three sockets.
Then in verse 16:
NKJ Exodus 27:16 " For the gate of the court
there shall be a screen twenty cubits long, woven of blue, purple, and scarlet thread,
and fine woven linen, made by a weaver. It shall have four pillars and four
sockets.
So it was probably set off a
little bit from the main design of the main wall there. This area was probably set back just a little
bit. We’re not sure exactly how it
worked but there was a very wide entrance of 20 cubits. So it’s 30 feet wide which would allow for a
large number of people to be able to come in.
There is not a narrow entrance. But
there is only one entrance. Of course
the fact that there is only entrance reinforces the exclusivity doctrine that
we find in the Scripture that there is only one way to come to God. What we see is that God always has only one
way to come to Him.
A couple of things that we
need to be reminded of… is that first of all - God has the right to tell man
basis how he comes into God’s presence.
God has the right to tell people what the basis is and what the
regulations are for coming into His presence.
What we find is many people who have this very low view of God and think
that they’re so great and wonderful that they can tell God how and under what
conditions they’re going to come into God’s presence as if man is doing God a
favor by worshipping Him.
So man comes along and says,
“Well, there are many different ways to God and even if they’re contradictory
ways, they all work because somehow man is so great and so wonderful that how could
God possibly live without us?”
What this reflects is that
man has developed a very low view of what God is. He’s just a man that has basically been
enlarged a little bit, but He is certainly not the God of the Bible. Yet when we come to the God of the Bible we
realize this presents a God who is totally distinct from anything in our frame
of reference. He is unique; He is one of
a kind. He’s holy. He’s qadosh.
He is completely separate from anything that
we can ever possibly imagine. In order to come into His presence we have to
conform to His character which is a character of perfect righteousness. So God sets the standards, but He provides
the way so that despite our sin and despite our failures we can come into His
presence. We can come in and worship Him
and have fellowship with Him; but He sets the standards. He decides what the protocol is. So the first principle is that God has the
right to tell man the basis for coming into His presence.
The second thing that we note
is that throughout the Bible there is only one way of salvation whatever the
circumstances may be. When Adam and Eve were in the garden there was only one
way to solve the problem of sin - the problem of their nakedness that was
exposed after they fell and that was through the sacrifice that God made when
He made new clothing for them. Then when
we move through the Old Testament we go from the fall, and then we come to the
flood – there is only one way to survive the flood. That is to be on the ark with Noah. There is only one entry to the ark. Again and again there is only one way to come
into God’s presence. We get into the Tabernacle. There is only one way to get into the Tabernacle. Once you’re inside there is only one way to come
into God’s presence. There is only one
way to have fellowship with Him and that is on the basis of a substitutionary
sacrifice, a blood sacrifice. God spells
out exactly what sacrifices are needed for what circumstances.
Then when we get into the New
Testament Jesus of course says:
NKJ John 14:6 Jesus said to him, "I am the
way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me.
He says, “I am the door.”
NKJ John 10:2 "But he who enters by the door
is the shepherd of the sheep.
He uses all of these various
illustrations to indicate that He is the only way to God. Either He is telling the truth or He is
lying. There are no two ways about
it. If He is telling the truth, then He
is the only way to God. As God’s Son He is the way to provide that way
to God. He is the gate; He is the
doorway, the entry to God. The single
entry here is a type or a picture of the fact that Jesus is the only way to
God. So John 14:7 provides us with that
backdrop.
Now once you came up to the
tabernacle and you came to the entry gate and you walked into the entry gate, there
wasn’t a lot of things going on inside the courtyard. There may be other people there who have preceded
you, but the main piece of furniture that you would see around which all of the
activity transpired was the brazen altar.
The brazen altar was located just inside the gate. We’re not sure exactly just how far it is. In this diagram it’s located up fairly close
to the holy place itself. In others it
may be out a little more. You would come
up to the brazen alter and it was there that the sacrifices were taking
place. Every morning and every evening
there would be a burnt offering offered for the sins of the nation. Individuals who were coming into the presence
of God …before they could worship God, before they could serve God in the
tabernacle, before they could have fellowship with God; there had to be a
sacrifice. So the sacrifices (the primary
foundational sacrifices) that took place at the brazen altar were the burnt
offerings. We’ll get into that in just a
minute. Well in Exodus 27:1-8 (so you see we’re backing up a little bit.) we
have the description of the altar for the burnt offering.
There we read that:
NKJ Exodus 27:1 "You shall make an altar of
acacia wood, five cubits long and five cubits wide -- the altar shall be square
-- and its height shall be three cubits.
So that would be approximately
7 ½ feet square with a height of 4 ½ feet.
NKJ Exodus 27:2 "You shall make its horns on
its four corners; its horns shall be of one piece with it. And you shall
overlay it with bronze.
3 "Also you shall make its pans
to receive its ashes, and its shovels and its basins and its forks and its firepans; you shall make all its utensils of bronze.
4 "You shall make a grate for
it, a network of bronze; and on the network you shall make four bronze rings at
its four corners.
5 "You shall put it under the
rim of the altar beneath, that the network may be midway up the altar.
6 "And you shall make poles
for the altar, poles of acacia wood, and overlay them with bronze.
7 "The poles shall be put in
the rings, and the poles shall be on the two sides of the altar to bear it.
8 "You shall make it hollow
with boards;
You can see the brazen altar
down in the front. I’ll go down and pick
it up so that those of you in the back can have a little better look at
it. You can see that this model gives
you a pretty good idea of what it looked like. It was
built with acacia wood which is a wood that was extremely dense and it was not
prone to any kind of corruption or rotting.
The wood in all the construction always represents the humanity of the
Lord Jesus Christ. It was without corruption so that during His life He was
without sin. Even when He is in the
grave His body did not undergo decay or corruption because He was raised from
the dead on the third day.
So the altar itself is
built. It has four horns, one on each corner
representing the four corners of the earth – that ultimately the sacrifice that
would be provided would be a sacrifice that would provide salvation for all of
the earth. The horns also represent
power indicating the power of the sacrifice to atone for sin.
The third use for the horns
would be to tie down the sacrifice to hold it in place in the same way that the
Lord Jesus Christ is nailed to the cross.
Inside there is a grate. On the inside you would have the fire (the coals)
underneath and then you have a grate. It’s
a grate not a grill. (For those of you who
like to barbeque - it’s not a grill.) You
would put the sacrifices on the grate.
Then there was a ring on each
corner for the carrying poles each of which was made of acacia wood and then
overlaid with bronze. Now the reason it’s
overlaid with bronze is so that it can withstand the heat. The heat represents judgment. So we have the picture of the humanity of the
Lord Jesus Christ with the acacia wood. The
word there in the Hebrew is shittim. It is shittim
wood which was an incorruptible, indestructible wood that grew out in the Sinai
desert. They would then cover that with
bronze which pictures the fact that Jesus Christ was able withstand the
judgment that God poured out upon Him for our sin. Therefore He was able to pay the penalty for our
sin as our substitute. He was able to
withstand the fire of God’s punishment.
When the sacrifice was made and
the lamb, they would take the nice little lamb.
Where I got this idea was – the first time we went to Israel a few years
ago there is a place outside the Temple Mount as you’re approaching (Those of
you who went will remember this) and we went downstairs. It’s sort of a museum type setting - a
display with a lot of timelines and chronology.
You go down inside and there’s a little room where you watch about a 10
minute film. The function of this film
is show what it was like for someone who was a Jewish male living away from Jerusalem
who would make his annual pilgrimage to come down to Jerusalem and what it
would have looked like for him to come into Jerusalem to see the magnificence
of the Herodian Temple and then go to the money changers and get the kind of
money he needed to buy the sacrifice and then to buy the lamb. So you see this guy dressed up of course in
first century costume. He comes up and
he buys this lamb. And it is the cutest
lamb. Picture the expression on your
favorite pet looking into those eyes.
That’s what it was like. This
lamb just looks – these big brown eyes.
You just want to take it home and cuddle with it. He takes this lamb and it really hit me how
this lamb is completely innocent. He has
never done anything to hurt anybody. He
has never done anything wrong. It’s just
this sweet gentle lamb. He’s taking that
lamb into the
So after they would slit the
throat of the lamb, they would then take the blood and they would splash the
blood up against the side of the altar so the altar would show all of this
blood that had dried on the sides of the altar from all of the sacrifices. This is a picture of course of the fact that
Jesus Christ - it was a certain kind of death that He had to undergo. He just couldn’t have a heart attack and die
for our sins. They couldn’t strangle
Him. They couldn’t take him out and
lynch Him. They couldn’t shoot Him or
decapitate Him. It had to be a certain
kind of death to fulfill prophecy and it had to be a penal death, a punishment because
it’s depicting His punishment in our place for our sins. As you look at the brazen altar itself, you
see this picture of the substitution of Christ.
Now in the third verse it talks
about the things that went along with the altar. You had these various other instruments. You had pans and shovels. You had pails for removing its ashes and
shovels. You had basins and forks and
fire pans. So you had four different
things there and all these utensils were to be made of bronze because the
bronze would withstand the fire and the judgment. Each of these indicates something. Every element as far as we can tell seems to
have some sort of typological meaning.
Now what is typology? Let me make sure you understand that. Typology simply means that there are
elements of something designed to picture or foreshadow some elements about the
person of Christ or some event. It’s
prophecy through symbol. A lot of times
you don’t know – can’t see exactly how the symbolism works until you see the
fulfillment. Then once you see the fulfillment,
then it becomes clear what these different elements prophecy. You understand certain things, but there
might be some other details that would get by you.
The pans and shovels were
used to remove the ashes of the sacrifices and carry them outside of the camp to
be disposed of in a clean place. So there
was a sense of honor and respect for those ashes. They weren’t just taken anywhere and
dumped. There was a special place, a clean
place that conformed to ritual where they would dispose of those ashes. It was a depiction of the fact that Jesus
would be buried in a special place. The
ashes themselves especially with a burnt offering where everything was consumed,
the ashes spoke of the finished work of Christ that it was a complete payment
for sin as we see in John 19:30 when Jesus said, “Tetalestai.”
(It is finished.)
NKJ John
The blood from the sacrifices
was drained into the basins and then it’s poured out at the base of the altar
which is a picture of the fact that Jesus poured out His life in judgment. The blood represents life. Life depicts the fact that Jesus as He is
hanging on the cross bears the penalty of our sin spiritually. He is judged for our sins. So the pouring out of the blood is a picture
of that. We’ll see the significance of
that as developed in Hebrews 9:12-15.
The flesh hooks that were inside
of the altar represented the cruelty and the pain of the death that the Lord
Jesus Christ suffered as He went through all the whippings and scourging and
beatings. In everything leading up to
the cross He did not utter a word.
NKJ Isaiah 53:7 He was oppressed and He was
afflicted, Yet He opened not His mouth; He was led as a lamb to the slaughter,
And as a sheep before its shearers is silent, So He opened not His mouth.
Then only when our sin was
put on Him did He scream out in agony.
The reason for that is to draw the contrast between the fact that no
matter how horrible the torture was (and most of us would have passed out long
before He ever did), - no matter how horrible the physical torment was, He
never even moaned or whimpered. It
wasn’t until sin hit Him that He screamed out.
It’s to depict the fact how horrible sin is and the judgment for sin
that not even the flagellation from the Roman soldiers could make Him whimper
but our sin made Him scream. So the
flesh hooks depict the cruelty of the death that He suffered on the cross and
the pain of bearing our sin. The fire
pans, these were used to carry the fire (the coals) from the brazen altar into
the holy place, to the altar of incense and that represents the intercessory
ministry of Christ – His prayers going up before us as the result of His being a
qualified sacrifice. That’s the argument
that we’ve seen in Hebrews chapters 7 and 8 because He went to the cross and He
died for us. He’s then elevated to the
position of being our High Priest where He is our intercessor today. So this gives you an idea of all the
different elements going into the brazen altar.
Then the second thing we
should note when we look at the brazen altar is the meaning of these words –
altar and sacrifice. The word for altar
is the Hebrew word mizbeah. Mizbeah is
formed on the root verb zabah. The zbh – it’s a soft
b so it’s pronounced like a v. Zabah is the word for slaughter or sacrifice. So the place of the slaughter or the
sacrifice is the mizbeah. The word altar is used over 400 times in the
Old Testament and it has to do with a place where an offering or a sacrifice is
made to a deity. The very first use that
we have of the word altar is in Genesis 8:20 when Noah and his family get off
of the ark and they construct an altar.
There they offer sacrifices to God.
But, that’s not the first place that we actually have an altar. Even though it’s not mentioned, there is clearly
the implication that there is an altar built by Cain and Abel. There is an altar probably built before that.
So if we’re going to trace…before
we can understand the significance of a sacrifice and what’s going on with the
events in Exodus we have to understand the context of sacrifice. It didn’t begin with the tabernacle. It fits within the flow and the progress of
revelation. So the first place that we
see the idea of a sacrifice is in Genesis 3 after Adam and Eve have eaten from
the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil and God has come and smoked them out of hiding where they’ve tried
to cover up their nakedness with fig leaves.
They come out and He outlines the consequences of their sin in terms of
what is normally referred to as the curse in Genesis 3:13-19.
Then after that in verse 21
we read:
NKJ Genesis
What’s interesting is the
word for clothing here is just a general non- technical word to put on
clothes. It’s used in many, many
contexts throughout Scripture as simply meaning to put on clothes. But it’s used here I think in a rather
significant manner because they have tried to cover up their nakedness which is
a sign of the vulnerability, the death, the penalty from sin that they’ve
experienced. They’ve tried to cover it
themselves with the fig leaves and it doesn’t work. So now God is going to cover them with animal
skins. It pictures God’s provision for
us. This same word is used labash is used in the context of Zechariah 3 where
you have the picture of – it’s a heavenly scene where you have Joshua the High
Priest in dirty clothes picturing his sin.
Satan is accusing him and then God provides a white robe and white tunic
and white turban for Joshua which is a picture of putting on imputed
righteousness. It’s a picture of justification. So as he clothes himself with those white
robes, it’s that picture of justification.
That’s what I think we have in Genesis 3.
And I was looking at a
commentary by Al Ross who was one of my Hebrew professors at Dallas
Seminary. Al was always tremendous
insights not only his ThD from Dallas but his PhD from
However,
with such a startling resolution to the problem of sin because that’s the
conflict that you have in Genesis 3 one must conclude that it was designed to
reveal the price of disobedience. Only when
the price was paid could anyone have the prospect of continuing life.
Now the reason I bring this
out is because as we get into this second incident of sacrifice in the Old
Testament which is the situation with Cain and Abel. There is a lot of debate and discussion among
biblical commentaries as to what is going on there. Why does God approve Abel’s sacrifice and not
accept Cain’s sacrifice? I think to understand what happens in Genesis 4 you
have to understand what is going on in Genesis 3.
In the process of making
these tunics God would have had to instruct them on a lot of things that aren’t
present in the text – that we’re just not told about. If you’re going to take leather (the skins of
animals) and produce clothing, then you have to treat the leather. You can’t
just skin the animal and put it on. In
about a day that’s going to harden up and become brittle and it’s not going to
be very comfortable to wear. So there
has to be a whole process here where God was teaching about the anatomy of the
sheep – probably a lamb. He had to
explain the anatomy. He had to explain
how to go about the process of sacrifice.
He had to show how to skin the animal.
He had to show how to treat the leather so that it would be soft and
supple, how to cut it and do all those things.
So that would be part of the instructions.
But beyond that there’s a clear
indication from what we see later on in Scripture that this kind of sacrifice (and
the shedding of blood) is important to deal with the penalty of sin. Everywhere else that we go in Genesis where
there is anything like this it’s s related to a sacrifice. So as
we look at that event it would seem very logical deduction from the text that
this is when God instructed Adam and Eve on the proper way to come into His
presence through the shedding of blood in an animal sacrifice because when we
come to Genesis 4 which is the second incident of sacrifice in the Old Testament
and we have the situation with Cain and Abel it is pretty obvious that they
already know (but we are not told how they found out) that they are supposed to
bring an offering to God.
The word that we have here is
not the word that we have for sacrifice.
It’s another word that we find especially in Leviticus. It’s the minkah which is a gift or offering. It’s used for a present or a tribute. You
give Christmas present birthday present; you’d use the word minkah. If you give them a birthday present you would
use the word minkah. So it’s a tribute, an offering, a present,
something like that. So you are bringing
something to offer God. It’s a word used
over 211 times in the Old Testament so it has a very important
significance. There’s a difference
between offerings and sacrifices, but in some passages they’re virtually
synonymous.
Now what happens with Cain
and Abel is that – we read in verse 3:
NKJ Genesis 4:3 And in the process of time it came
to pass that Cain brought an offering of the fruit of the ground to the LORD.
That could be 10, 20 or 30
years before Cain and Abel grew up. We
don’t know how much time went by – whether they are still young or whether they
have matured a little more.
NKJ Genesis 4:4 Abel also brought of the firstborn
of his flock and of their fat. And the LORD respected Abel and his offering,
This is the New King
James.
NKJ Genesis 4:5 but He did not respect Cain and his
offering. And Cain was very angry, and his countenance fell.
Now there’s a lot of discussion
as I said about why God accepts one and doesn’t accept the other. Now we get
some insight from Hebrews 11:4.
NKJ Hebrews 11:4 By faith Abel offered to God a more
excellent sacrifice than Cain,
Well, why is it a better
sacrifice? I think it’s important that
it doesn’t say “By faith Abel had a better attitude in his offering than Cain.” See that’s what some people will say.
“See you have grain offerings
later on in the Mosaic Law where they bring the first fruits and the fruit of
the ground. That is also called the minkah.”
Of course that’s 1500 to 2000
years later. You’re taking later
revelation under the Mosaic Law and you’re reading it back into something much
earlier. When you look at the book of
Genesis you have only animal sacrifices.
You have animal sacrifices with Noah.
You have animal sacrifices with Abraham.
You have animal sacrifices with Isaac.
You have animal sacrifices with Jacob.
All the way through Genesis you have no reference - of course this is
the only place minkah is used by the way. You have no evidence of any kind of grain or
first fruit offering until you get to the Mosaic Law. So the context of Genesis seems to suggest
that the only sacrifice they knew of was that of a blood sacrifice. So Abel offers to God a better sacrifice. The text indicates that it’s the sacrifice
itself that’s better not the attitude of the one bringing it.
through
which he obtained witness that he was righteous, God testifying of his gifts;
That is God would be
declaring Him righteous on the basis of the atoning sacrifice.
and through
it he being dead still speaks.
This is His evidence.
Then you have another
interesting passage in the New Testament.
NKJ Jude
It’s talking about these
false teachers. That’s the background
and context of Jude 11.
For they
have gone in the way of Cain, have run greedily in the error of Balaam for
profit, and perished in the rebellion of Korah.
Three things – but these
three different incidences that come out of the Old Testament are being used by
Jude to indicate the same basic sin.
Each one was a little different, but what we are looking at here is what
did each of these have in common? Now
Balaam was the one trying to curse
That’s the same thing with
the rebellion of Korah. This is a
rebellion against the priesthood that God had established through Aaron. So what each of these has in common is men who
try to redefine the basis of having a relationship with God. So that is what Cain is doing.
He’s trying to say, “Okay,
I’m going to come to God on my own terms and I’m going to bring him the kind of
sacrifice that I think is valuable.”
That’s exactly what so many people
today try to do. They try to define what
worship is on their own terms and how to have a relationship with God on their
own terms. God says, “No.” You have to follow His way.
So in Genesis 4:4 we have
this phraseology that the New American Standard translates it:
NAS Genesis 4:4 And Abel, on his part also brought
of the firstlings of his flock and of their fat portions. And the LORD had
regard for Abel and for his offering;
Really it’s an idiom
here. It’s sort of an anthropomorphic
idiom. It says “God looked with favor
upon the sacrifice.” So this is an idiom
for the fact that God accepted Abel and his offering; but he rejected Cain and
his offering because Cain did not come to God on the basis of a blood
sacrifice.
Now this is when we get into
our evening lesson for discernment. The
reason I bring this up is because if you have certain study Bibles – I haven’t
looked at different study Bibles so I don’t know which one has what view; but you’ll
have different study Bibles and you’ll read in the notes on Genesis 4 that it
wasn’t a problem with the different sacrifice.
It was that Cain was just going
through the motions. He was just going
through the outer form of the sacrifice.
He really didn’t have a heart for God.
This is why God rejects his sacrifice.
I have a problem with that because of Hebrews 11. This is what the Nelson’s New Illustrated
Bible Dictionary says. I am quoting
this because this is your application of discernment for the evening because
you’ll read things. You will look
something up in a Bible dictionary or you’ll read something in some commentary
and you’ll see this kind of stuff. This
is what this writer says.
It
is a serious mistake to affirm that Abel’s sacrifice was acceptable to God
because it was an animal sacrifice and that Cain’s sacrifice was unacceptable
because he did not bring an animal.
Genesis 4 makes no mention of offerings for the atonement of sin. Therefore to insist that the blood of an
animal is mandatory here is to read more into the account than is
warranted. Attitude on the part of the offeror
or not the nature of the offering is in the forefront of the author’s concern
in Genesis 4.
I am telling you – there is a
huge amount of discussion over this.
The majority of scholars will
come along and say, “Well you see, there is no other instruction on sacrifice
so you can’t say that Cain brought the wrong sacrifice.”
But if you stop and really
think about the flow of what’s going on in the text there is that indication
that’s there. There is no indication
anywhere in the book of Genesis that there is a value to a bloodless or to a
grain sacrifice.
Now as we continue to work
our way through Genesis and think our way through Genesis, we come then to the
patriarchs. With the patriarchs we have Abraham who sets up an altar at Shechem
in Genesis 12:7. He sets up another
altar between
So three points in conclusion
here:
We’ll come back and begin
that and look at the different sacrifices and offerings that are described in
Leviticus next time. We’ll start with
Leviticus 1 and start looking at this whole thing of the burnt offering. In Leviticus 2, we have the grain offering. Then later we have the peace offering and the
thank offerings. How do those relate to
the work of Christ on the cross? What does
each of these depict and why are they significant? We’ll begin that next Thursday night.
Let’s bow our heads in
closing prayer.