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Life-Study of Leviticus

An introductory word    msg.1
A general definition of the offerings    msg.2
The burnt offering Christ for God’s satisfaction (1)    msg.3
The burnt offering Christ for God’s satisfaction (2)    msg.4
The burnt offering Christ for God’s satisfaction (3)    msg.5
The burnt offering Christ for God’s satisfaction (4)    msg.6
The burnt offering Christ for God’s satisfaction (5)    msg.7
The burnt offering Christ for God’s satisfaction (6)    msg.8
The burnt offering Christ for God’s satisfaction (7)    msg.9
The burnt offering Christ for God’s satisfaction (8)    msg.10
The meal offering Christ for the satisfaction of God’s people enjoyed together with God (1)    msg.11
The meal offering Christ for the satisfaction of God’s people enjoyed together with God (2)    msg.12
The meal offering Christ for the satisfaction of God’s people enjoyed together with God (3)    msg.13
The practical experience and enjoyment of Christ as the offerings    msg.14
The elements of the meal offering for the Christian life and the church life    msg.15
The meal offering church life    msg.16
The peace offering Christ as the peace between God and God’s people for their co-enjoyment in fellowship    msg.17
The sin offering Christ for the sin of God’s people (1)    msg.18
The sin offering Christ for the sin of God’s people (2)    msg.19
The sin offering Christ for the sin of God’s people (3)    msg.20
The trespass offering Christ for the sins of God’s people (1)    msg.21
The trespass offering Christ for the sins of God’s people (2)    msg.22
The law of the burnt offering    msg.23
The law of the meal offering    msg.24
The law of the sin offering    msg.25
The law of the trespass offering    msg.26
The law of the peace offering    msg.27
I. The peace offering for thanksgiving being offered with the meal offering of unleavened cakes mingled with oil, unleavened wafers anointed with oil, and cakes of fine flour saturated. mingled with oil
II. With the peace offering for thanksgiving, cakes of leavened bread being offered
III. From the meal offering the offerer offering one piece from each offering as a heave offering to Jehovah, and it being for the priest who offers the peace offering
IV. The flesh of the thanksgiving sacrifice of the peace offering being eaten on the offering day and no part of it being laid aside until morning
V. The sacrifice of the offering, as a vow or a freewill offering, being eaten on the offering day and the remainder on the next day
VI. The flesh of this offering eaten on the third day not being accepted but being an abhorrent thing, and the eater being condemned
VII. The flesh of this offering touching anything unclean not being eaten but burned with fire
VIII. The flesh of the peace offering which has not touched anything unclean being eaten by the person who is clean
IX. An unclean person who eats the flesh of the peace offerings that belong to Jehovah being cut off from his people
X. The sons of Israel not eating any fat of an ox, a sheep, or a goat
XI. The fat of cattle which died of themselves or were torn by beasts not eaten by the sons of Israel but put to other uses
XII. Whoever eats the fat of an offering by fire offered to Jehovah being cut off from his people
XIII. The blood, whether of bird or of beast, not eaten by the sons of Israel
XIV. Any person who eats any blood being cut off from his people
XV. The offerer of the peace offering bringing parts of his offering for the offerings of Jehovah by fire, the fat burned to God by fire on the altar with the breast as a wave offering before Jehovah for Aaron and his sons
XVI. The right thigh of the peace offering given to the priest as a heave offering
XVII. Jehovah having taken the breast of the wave offering and the thigh of the heave offering out of the peace offerings and having given them to the priests as their perpetual due
XVIII. This being the portion of the anointing of Aaron and his sons from the offerings of Jehovah by fire in the day when they were brought to serve Jehovah as priests
XIX. This being the law for the burnt offering, the meal offering, the sin offering, the trespass offering, the consecration, and the sacrifice of peace offerings
The consecration of Aaron and his sons (1)    msg.28
The consecration of Aaron and his sons (2)    msg.29
The consecration of Aaron and his sons (3)    msg.30
The initiation of the priestly service of Aaron and his sons    msg.31
The issue of the priestly service    msg.32
The lesson and the regulations for the priests (1)    msg.33
The lesson and the regulations for the priests (2)    msg.34
A concluding word on the offerings and the priesthood    msg.35
Discernment in diet    msg.36
Abstaining from death    msg.37
Uncleanness in human birth    msg.38
Uncleanness issuing from within man (1)    msg.39
Uncleanness issuing from within man (2)    msg.40
Uncleanness issuing from within man (3)    msg.41
The cleansing of the leper (1)    msg.42
The cleansing of the leper (2)    msg.43
IV. The leper who was to be cleansed needing to solve the problem of his sin and sins before God
A. Presenting the offerings before God on the eighth day
1. Offering one of the male lambs for a trespass offering, with the log of oil, both of which were waved for a wave offering before Jehovah
2. The male lamb as the trespass offering to be slaughtered in the holy place where the sin offering and the burnt offering were slaughtered
3. The trespass offering belonging to the priest and being most holy
4. The blood of the trespass offering to be put on the tip of the right ear of him who is to be cleansed, on the thumb of his right hand, and on the great toe of his right foot
5. Some of the oil to be poured into the palm of the priest’s left hand and to be sprinkled with his right finger seven times before Jehovah
6. Some of the rest of the oil to be put on the tip of the right ear of the one who was to be cleansed, on the thumb of his right hand, and on the great toe of the right foot, upon the blood of the trespass offering
7. The remainder of the oil in the priest’s palm to be put on the head of him who was to be cleansed
8. The sin offering to be offered to make propitiation for him who was to be cleansed from his uncleanness
9. The burnt offering to be offered with the meal offering
10. The poor who were not able to afford so much were to offer one male lamb for a trespass offering to be waved and one-tenth of an ephah of fine flour mingled with oil for a meal offering, and a log of oil
B. Christ as our food and as our sin offering, trespass offering, burnt offering, and meal offering
The leprosy in a house    msg.44
I. The leprosy in a house signifying sins and evils in a church
A. God putting a leprous disease in a house of the land of Israel’s possession
B. The owner of the house coming and telling the priest that something like a leprous disease has appeared in his house
C. To empty the house so that all that is in the house should not become unclean
D. The priest going in to examine the house
E. If the disease is in the walls of the house with greenish or reddish depressions and appears to be beneath the surface of the wall, the priest shall shut up the house for seven days
F. After the examination of seven days, if the disease has spread in the walls of the house, the stones in which the disease is shall be removed and thrown into an unclean place outside the city
G. Scraping the house all around inside and pouring out the mortar which was scraped off into an unclean place outside the city
H. Taking other stones and putting them in the place of the removed stones
I. Taking other mortar and plastering the house
J. If the disease breaks out again in the house after the removal of the stones, the scraping of the house, and the new plastering, it is a malignant leprosy in the house and it is unclean; the house should be broken down
K. During the shutting up of the house, he who goes into the house shall be unclean until the evening
L. He who lies down in the diseased house and he who eats in it shall wash their clothes
M. If the disease has not spread in the house after the new plastering, the house is clean, and the disease has been healed
II. The cleansing of the leprosy in a house
A. In the same way as the cleansing of leprosy in a man
B. The purging of the house with the blood of the bird and the living water
C. Letting the live bird go free over the open field
D. The house being clean
The cleansing of the discharges from man’s and woman’s body    msg.45
The propitiation (1)    msg.46
I. Aaron being forbidden to enter at all times into the holy of holies within the veil, in front of the propitiatory cover on the ark, lest he die
II. For Aaron to enter into the holy of holies, he should bring a young bull for a sin offering and a ram for a burnt offering
III. Aaron putting on a holy linen tunic, wearing linen breeches over his flesh, girding himself with a linen sash, and being attired with a linen turban in order to enter into the holy of holies
IV. Aaron bathing his flesh in water and putting the holy garments on
V. Aaron taking from the congregation of the sons of Israel two bucks of the goats for a sin offering and one ram for a burnt offering
VI. Aaron offering the bull as a sin offering for himself and for his household
VII. Aaron taking the two goats from the congregation, setting them before Jehovah, casting lots for them, one for Jehovah and the other for Azazel, and offering the goat for Jehovah as a sin offering, but presenting the goat for Azazel alive before Jehovah and sending it away into the wilderness to Azazel
VIII. Aaron taking a censer full of coals of fire from off the altar and both his hands full of finely ground incense of spices, bringing them inside the veil, and putting the incense on the fire that the cloud of incense may cover the propitiatory cover upon the ark, so that he would not die
IX. Aaron taking some of the blood of the bull, sprinkling it with his finger on the front of the propitiatory cover, and sprinkling the blood before the propitiatory cover seven times
X. Aaron slaughtering the goat of the sin offering for the people, bringing its blood inside the veil, and sprinkling its blood on and before the propitiatory cover
XI. Because of the uncleannesses of the sons of Israel and because of their transgressions, even all their sins, the holy of holies and the tent of meeting also needing propitiation
The propitiation (2)    msg.47
XII. When Aaron went in to make propitiation in the holy of holies, no man should have been in the tent of meeting
XIII. After making propitiation for himself, for his whole household, and for the whole household of Israel, Aaron coming out to the altar and making propitiation for it
A. Putting the blood of the bull and the blood of the goat on the horns of the altar all around
B. With his fingers Aaron sprinkling some of the blood on the altar seven times
C. Cleansing the altar and sanctifying it from the uncleannesses of the sons of Israel
XIV. Aaron finishing making propitiation for the holy of holies, the tent of meeting, and the altar
XV. Aaron going back into the tent of meeting, taking off the linen garments, leaving them there, bathing his flesh in water in a holy place, and putting on his garments, then coming out and offering his burnt offering and the burnt offering of the people and making propitiation for himself and for the people
XVI. The fat of the sin offering being offered in smoke on the altar
XVII. The one who let the goat go to Azazel washing his clothes, bathing his flesh in water, and after that coming into the camp
XVIII. The bull and the goat of the sin offering being taken outside the camp, and their hides, flesh, and dung being burned with fire
XIX. The one who burned the bull and the goat of the sin offering washing his clothes, bathing his flesh in water, and after that coming into the camp
XX. Afflicting their souls
XXI. Not doing any work
XXII. A propitiation being made for the people of the assembly for all their sins once a year
Taking care of the sacrifices and of the blood    msg.48
The holy living of the holy people — putting off the old life and putting on the new    msg.49
The holy living for the priesthood and the disqualifications from the priesthood    msg.50
The holiness in enjoying the holy things and the acceptable way for the offering of a vow and a freewill offering    msg.51
I. The holiness in enjoying the holy things
A. The holy things sanctified to Jehovah by the sons of Israel
B. An unclean person being forbidden to eat the holy things, unless he has bathed his flesh in water, that he may not sin and die
C. An outsider, a sojourner of a priest, or a hired servant being forbidden to eat the holy things
D. A purchased slave of a priest and those who were born in a priest’s house being permitted to eat the holy things
E. The priest’s daughter who married an outsider was forbidden to eat the heave offering of the holy things, but if she became a widow or was divorced, and had no child and returned to her father’s house, she was permitted to eat her father’s food
F. A man who ate a holy thing through ignorance adding one-fifth more to it and giving it to the priest
II. The acceptable way for the offering of a vow and a freewill offering
A. An offering for a vow, for a freewill offering, or as a peace offering that was offered to Jehovah for a burnt offering needing to be a male without blemish, of the herd, of the sheep, or of the goats, that it might be accepted
B. Anything blind, or broken, or maimed, or that had sores, or an eczema, or scabs was not to be offered as food to Jehovah by fire
C. An ox or a sheep that had a member too long or too short being allowed to be offered for a freewill offering but not being accepted for a vow
D. Anything with its testicles bruised, crushed, broken, or cut not being allowed to be offered to Jehovah
E. Anything obtained from the hand of foreigners that was offered to God as His food, having ruin and a blemish in it, not being accepted by Him
F. A newborn bull, sheep, or goat needing to remain with its mother until the eighth day, and thereafter being accepted for an offering by fire to Jehovah as His food
G. An ox or a sheep not being allowed to be slaughtered with its young on the same day
H. A sacrifice of thanksgiving to Jehovah needing to be sacrificed so that it may be accepted, by eating it on the day it is sacrificed, not leaving any of it until morning
The festivals (1)    msg.52
The festivals (2)    msg.53
The festivals (3)    msg.54
5. The feast of the blowing of trumpets
a. On the first day of the seventh month, the beginning of the second half of the year
b. To have a solemn rest
c. As a memorial proclaimed by the blowing of trumpets
d. To have a holy convocation
e. Not doing any laborious work but bringing an offering by fire to Jehovah
6. The feast of propitiation
a. Having a holy convocation
b. Afflicting their souls and bringing an offering by fire unto Jehovah
c. Not doing any work but having a sabbath of rest
d. On the ninth day of the month in the evening, from evening to evening God’s returned people keeping the sabbath
7. The feast of tabernacles
a. For seven days
b. On the first day having a holy convocation, not doing any laborious work
c. For seven days bringing an offering by fire to Jehovah
d. On the eighth day having a holy convocation, a sacred assembly, to bring an offering by fire to Jehovah, and not doing any laborious work
e. Bringing an offering by fire to Jehovah — a burnt offering, a meal offering, a sacrifice, and a drink offering, each on its own day
f. Having gathered the produce of the land
g. Taking the fruit of beautiful trees, branches of palm trees, boughs of leafy trees, and willows of the brook, and rejoicing before God for seven days
h. God’s redeemed people to dwell in booths for seven days
II. The dispensational fulfillment of the seven festivals as types
A. The feast of the Passover
B. The feast of unleavened bread
C. The feast of the firstfruits
D. The feast of Pentecost
E. The feast of the blowing of trumpets
F. The feast of propitiation
G. The feast of tabernacles
The arrangement of the lampstand and the showbread table and the death-judgment of the blaspheming of the holy name    msg.55
The sabbath year and the jubilee (1)    msg.56
The sabbath year and the jubilee (2)    msg.57
The sabbath year and the jubilee (3)    msg.58
The word of warning (1)    msg.59
The word of warning (2)    msg.60
The word of warning (3)    msg.61
C. On the third level — bringing plagues sevenfold
1. Plagues
2. Beasts bereaving people of their children and destroying their cattle, reducing the number of people and making their roads desolate
D. On the fourth level — striking sevenfold
1. Bringing a sword
2. Sending the pestilence
3. Delivering the people into the hand of the enemy
4. Cutting off the supply of bread so that it will be delivered by weight and people will not be satisfied
E. On the fifth level — being disciplined sevenfold again
1. Eating the flesh of their children
2. Their carcasses being cast upon the carcasses of their idols
3. Their cities being laid waste and their sanctuaries being desolated, with no smell of a satisfying fragrance to God
4. The land being desolated and inhabited by their enemies
5. Being scattered among the nations and chased by the unsheathed sword
6. The land enjoying its sabbath during their captivity
7. In the enemies’ lands faintness being sent into the hearts, the people being driven and fleeing as though fleeing from the sword, stumbling over one another, perishing among the nations being consumed and rotting in the land of their enemies
VI. The repentance of the people in captivity and the remembrance of God
A. Confessing their iniquity, humbling their uncircumcised heart, and accepting the punishment of their iniquity
B. God remembering His covenants and the land
C. In spite of His chastisement God not rejecting the people, neither destroying them utterly nor breaking His covenant with them
Devotions for a vow (1)    msg.62
Devotions for a vow (2)    msg.63
A concluding word    msg.64
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