Not One of the
Atonement Day Sacrifices—
Not One of the Subsequent Sacrifices for the
People—
The Class Typified by This
Sacrifice—
The Apostle Paul the
Under-Priest Who Witnesses and Testifies Respecting the Antitype—
The
Sprinkling of the Ashes for the Cleansing of the People Will Be During
the Millennial Age—
How the Cleansing Will Be Effected.
ONE feature of the
ceremonial law of Israel, related in Numbers 19, required the killing
of a red heifer (cow)—one without blemish and which had never been
under the yoke of service. It was not one of the sin-offerings of the
Day of Atonement, nor was it one of the offerings of the people
subsequent to the Day of Atonement —indeed, it was no
"offering" at all, for no part of it was offered on the
Lord's altar or eaten by the priests. It was sacrificed, but not in
the same sense, nor in the same place, as these offerings--in the
Court. It was not even killed by one of the priests, nor was its blood
taken into the Holy and Most Holy. The Red Heifer was taken outside
the camp of Israel, and was there killed and burned to ashes--flesh,
fat, hide, blood, etc.—except a little of the blood taken by the
priest and sprinkled seven times toward the front of the Tabernacle
(Revised Version and Leeser). The ashes of the heifer were not brought
into the Holy place, but were left outside the Camp, gathered together
in a heap, and apparently accessible to any of the people who had use
for them. Under the prescription of the Law, a portion of the ashes
was to be mixed with water in a vessel, and a bunch of hyssop dipped
into this mixture was to be used in sprinkling the person, clothing,
tent, etc., of the legally unclean, for their purification.
In view of what we
have seen respecting the Day of Atonement sacrifices, which
foreshadowed the better sacrifices of this Gospel age (accomplished by
the Royal Priesthood, Christ, Head and Body) this heifer was in no
sense related to these, and evidently did not typify any of the
sacrifices of this present time. So likewise it is different from any
of the sacrifices that were accepted on behalf of the people of Israel
after the Day of Atonement, and which we have just shown signified
their repentance and sorrow for sins during the Millennium, and their
full consecration of themselves to the Lord. The burning of the heifer
was not related to any of these sacrifices, all of which were made by
the priests, and in the Court. We must look elsewhere for an antitype
to this Red Heifer, for had it in any sense of the word represented
the priests, it would of necessity have been killed by one of them as
indicating that fact.
What, then, did this
sacrifice of the red heifer signify?-- What class or persons were
represented by it, as having suffered outside the "Camp,"
and in what sense of the word would their sufferings have to do with
the cleansing or purification of the people of God--including those
who shall yet become his people during the Millennial age?
We answer that a
class of God's people not of the "Royal Priesthood" did
suffer for righteousness' sake outside the "Camp"; a brief
history of these, and of the fiery trials which they endured, is given
us by the Apostle in Heb. 11. Of these he says, after recounting the
faith exploits of a number, "What shall I say more? For the time
would fail me to tell of Gideon, and of Barak, and of Samson, and of
Jephtha; of David also, and of Samuel and of the prophets: who through
faith subdued kingdoms, wrought righteousness, obtained promises,
stopped the mouths of lions, quenched the violence of fire, escaped
the edge of the sword, out of weakness were made strong, waxed valiant
in fight, turned to flight the armies of aliens. Women received their
dead raised to life again: and others were tortured, not accepting
deliverance; that they might obtain a better resurrection: and others
had trials of cruel mockings and scourgings, yea, moreover, of bonds
and imprisonment: they were stoned, they were sawn asunder, were
tempted, were slain by the sword: they wandered about in sheepskins
and goatskins; being destitute, afflicted, tormented, of whom the
world was not worthy." Heb. 11:32-38
Here we have a
class fitting to the account of the Red Heifer--a class which laid
down their lives outside the "Camp"; a class in every way
honorable, and yet not a priestly class. This class being no part of
the Body of the High Priest could have no part or share in the
sin-offerings of the Atonement Day--nor could it be admitted into the
spiritual conditions typified by the Holy and Most Holy. It may seem
to some remarkable that we should, with so much positiveness, declare
that these ancient worthies were not members of the "Royal
Priesthood," while with equal positiveness we declare that the no
more faithful servants of God of this Gospel age are members of this
"Royal Priesthood." Our positiveness on this subject is the
positiveness of the Word of God, which in the very connection with the
narrative of the faithfulness of these patriarchs declares in so many
words, "These all, having obtained a good report through faith,
received not the promise [received not the chief blessing], God having
provided some better thing for us, that they without us should not be
made perfect." Heb. 11:39,40
Nor should it be
difficult for us to realize that although there could be antitypical
Levites (justified by faith in a coming atonement) before our Lord
Jesus came into the world, yet there could be no antitypical priests,
for he was the Head or Chief Priest, and in all things had
pre-eminence, and made atonement for the blemishes of his
"Body" and of "his house" before any could become
his brethren and members of the royal priesthood. Our Lord himself
stated this matter very pointedly, and succinctly pointed out the line
of demarcation between the faithful ones that preceded him and the
faithful ones who would follow after him, walking in his footsteps,
and becoming his joint-heirs. Of John the Baptist he said,
"Verily I say unto you, Among them that are born of women there
hath not risen a greater than John the Baptist; notwithstanding he
that is least in the Kingdom of Heaven is greater than he."
(Matt. 11:11) John the Baptist belonged to this Red Heifer class which
suffered outside the "Camp," even unto death, but he had
nothing whatever to do with the still better sacrifices of the royal
priesthood during the Atonement Day, whose fat and life producing
organs were offered upon God's altar in the "Court," and
whose blood was taken into the "Most Holy," typical of those
who become new creatures in Christ Jesus, even members of his
"Body," the Church, joint-heirs with him in all things.
But while these
ancient worthies are not in any sense part of the sin-offering, they
are nevertheless connected with the cleansing from sin: their ashes
(the knowledge and remembrance of their faithfulness unto death),
mingled with the water of truth, and applied with the purgative,
cleansing hyssop, is valuable, purifying, sanctifying all who desire
to come into full harmony with God--and "sprinkling the unclean,
sanctifieth to the purification of the flesh." Not, however, of
themselves would these lessons of faithfulness in the past be valuable
to us, but only by, through and associated with the sin-offerings of
the Day of Atonement, to which the Apostle refers in the same
connection--"the blood of bulls and goats." And not only are
the remembrance and lessons of the faithfulness of the ancient
worthies (typified by the ashes of the red heifer) of sanctifying
power to us now, but in a much larger sense they will be applicable
and a blessing to the world of mankind in general during the
Millennial age. For, as we have elsewhere seen, the divine arrangement
is that these ancient worthies, the greatest of whom is less in honor
than the least one in the Kingdom, will nevertheless occupy a place of
high honor and distinction under that Kingdom of God--as its agents
and representatives. For they shall be the "princes in all the
earth," the agents of the Kingdom's judgments, and the channels
of its blessings, to "all the families of the earth." Thus
the faithfulness of these ancient worthies was represented in the
gathered ashes of the heifer, as laid up in store for future use,
valuable lessons of experience, faith, obedience, trust, etc., which,
applied to the world of mankind, seeking cleansing in the coming age,
will sanctify them and purify them--not without the Day of Atonement
sacrifices, but in connection with and based upon those. Psa. 45:16
The burning of
the heifer was witnessed by a priest, who took cedar wood and a sprig
of hyssop and a scarlet string and cast them into the midst of the
burning cow. The hyssop would represent purging or cleansing, the
cedar wood or evergreen would represent everlasting life, and the
scarlet string would represent the blood of Christ. The casting of
these three into the midst of the burning would imply that the
ignominy heaped upon the ancient worthies who were stoned, sawn
asunder, etc., and of whom the world was not worthy, permitted the
merit of the precious blood, the cleansing of the truth, and the gift
of everlasting life to be accounted to them through faith; and that
subsequent to their death they would be recognized as cleansed,
justified, accepted. The under-priest (not Aaron, who typified the
Lord Jesus) who saw, recognized and approved the burning of the heifer
and who took of its blood and sprinkled it in the direction of the
Tabernacle door, would seem well antityped in that great under-priest,
the Apostle Paul, who, by the help of God (the name Eleazar signifies
"Helped by God") has not only identified for us the
sin-offerings of the Atonement Day, but also in his writings points
out to us (Heb. 11) that which enables us to identify the Red Heifer
sacrifice as typifying the ancient worthies. And thus he sprinkles
their blood toward the Tabernacle, showing that their lives were in
full, complete harmony with the Tabernacle conditions--although, not
living in the time of this high calling, it was not their privilege to
become members of the Body of the great High Priest, the royal
priesthood.
In that the red
heifer never wore a yoke, it represented a class of justified
persons--made free from the Law Covenant. Although most of the ancient
worthies were born under the Law Covenant, and therefore legally
subject to its conditions and to its condemnation through imperfection
of the flesh, nevertheless, we see that God justified them through
faith, as the children of faithful Abraham. This is fully attested and
corroborated by the Apostle, when he says that "all these
obtained a good report of God through faith"--a verdict of, Well
done, a testimony that they pleased God, and that he had provided for
them blessings in harmony with his promise--although these blessings
could not be given to them at the time, but must be waited for and be
received through the spiritual Seed of Abraham-- the Christ. The fact
that this sacrifice must be a cow and not a bullock served to
differentiate it from the great sacrifice of the Day of Atonement
which could be a bullock only. That it must be a red cow would seem to
teach that those ancient worthies were not sinless and therefore
accepted of God before the great Atonement Day sacrifice, but that
they were "sinners even as others." The fact of their
cleansing or justification by faith, was otherwise indicated as above
suggested.
The cleansings
for which these red cow ashes were prescribed, were of a peculiar
kind; namely, specially for those who came in contact with death. This
would seem to indicate that these ashes of the heifer were not
designed to remove the individual's guilt--no, his moral guilt could
be cleansed away only through the merit of the Atonement Day
sacrifices. The cleansing of defilement through contact with the dead
would seem to teach that this cleansing, affected by and through the
experiences of the ancient worthies, will specially apply to the world
of mankind during the Millennial age, while they are seeking to get
rid of all the defilements of Adamic death--seeking to attain human
perfection. All the blemishes of the fallen condition are so much of
contact with death; all constitutional weaknesses and blemishes
through heredity are contacts with death: and from all of these the
ashes of the Red Heifer are to be used for the cleansing of all who
will become the people of God. Like the ashes of the red heifer, laid
up in a clean place, so the results of the painful experiences of the
ancient worthies will be a store of blessings, instruction and help,
by which they, when made subordinate "princes" in the
Kingdom, will assist in the restitution work. Each pardoned sinner,
desiring to be cleansed perfectly, must not only wash himself with
water (truth), but must also have applied to him the instructions of
these "princes"--said instructions being typified by the
sprinkled ashes of the heifer, representing the valuable lessons of
faith and obedience learned through experience by this class. Exod.
12:22; Lev. 14:4,49; Psa. 51:7; Heb. 9:19
"So Great
Salvation"
"Nothing
to pay? No, not a whit.
Nothing to give? No, not a bit.
All that was needed to give or to pay,
Jesus hath done in God's own blessed way.
"Nothing
to settle? All has been paid.
Nothing to anger? Peace has been made.
Jesus alone is the sinner's resource;
Peace he has made by the blood of his cross.
"What
about terror? It hasn't a place
In a heart that is filled with a sense of his grace.
My peace is most sweet and it never can cloy,
And that makes my heart bubble over with joy.
"Nothing
of guilt? No, not a stain;
How could the blood even one let remain?
My conscience is purged and my spirit is free;
Precious that blood is to God and to me.
"What
of my future? 'Tis glorious and fair.
Since justified, sanctified, glory I'll share.
By his blood first redeemed, by his grace then enthroned,
Side by side with my Lord, as his Bride I'll be owned.
"What
then, dost thou ask? O, glory shall follow;
Earth shall rejoice in the
dawn of the morrow.
To rule and to bless comes that kingdom and reign;
Flee then, shall sorrow, death, crying and pain."
Table
of Contents
- Preface
- Chapter
1 - Chapter
2 - Chapter
3 - Chapter
4 - Chapter
5 - Chapter
6 - Chapter
7 - Chapter
8 - Index