Christians are a holy priesthood under Jesus
A few years ago Alison and I spent a long weekend in Rome. It's a fabulous place - full of character and history, with ancient artefacts and modern shops, cobbled alleyways and wide piazzas. It's also full of people, with noisy streets and mad drivers. When we visited St Peter's Basilica early in the day, it was so busy that we couldn't get in - the queues snaked back through the square so we gave up and went in search of a coffee.
And as we left, we stumbled across the papal outfitters. It's a small shop just behind the Basilica in a side-street, with a window full of priestly garments in all sorts of brocades and golds with gorgeous embroidery. And a few statues of saints thrown in for good measure. And there, at the bottom of the display, a pair of red velvet slippers that the Pope apparently wears beneath his white cassock, perhaps when he has his feet up in front of the TV.
It all made my black & white Church of England robes look a little dull by comparison. We just don't do that level of decoration, at least at our reformed end of the Anglican spectrum. And I think the priestly robes that we heard about in our Leviticus reading would also make mine look a little dull.
We've just started a new 5-Sunday series from the book of Leviticus, that strange and sometimes confusing OT book that's full of the rules and regulations God set for the Israelites as they wandered in the wilderness. Last Sunday at HAO we heard about the blood sacrifices to purify the people from their sins; this week we have the ordination of the priests who will manage those temple sacrifices.
You'll remember that Aaron was the brother of Moses, who led the people out of Egypt; and he had four sons, who were to serve as priests alongside him. And the reason the people needed priests, as Oliver explained last week, was that a sinful people, tainted with the sin of Adam, cannot exist alongside a holy God, in the same way that darkness cannot co-exist with light; and blood sacrifices were required to remind the people of the gravity of their sin and to enable them to be cleansed. And priests were needed to administer those sacrifices.
These priests were literally playing with fire, hence the detailed instructions from God. This was no religious game - the priests were ministering before a frighteningly holy God - frighteningly holy but also abounding with love and compassion such that he gave the people this complex set of rules for their own preservation. Beginning with the priests.
In this Chapter 8 we see the priests being set aside, and washed and clothed for service in the sanctuary. So let's look a little closer and see what we can learn about what they had to do - and more importantly, what that means for us now some 3500 years later.
1. Dressed for the part
Leviticus 8:6-9 Moses 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 also tied the ephod to him .. He 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.
Special robes marked the priests out as having special significance, being in a special state - analagous to wearing black for mourning or white for a bride. It marked them out as serving God on behalf of the people. Exodus 28 gives us more detail on these robes. There were layers of clothing:
First, having been ceremonially washed, there was a tunic of fine woven linen, decently covering the body. Then a sash to keep it in place, made from woven threads of expensive and colourful yarns - blue, purple and scarlet.
Next a robe - made of expensive blue material, probably a bit like a long poncho in design with a hole for the head. The hem was embroidered with pomegranates and had golden bells stitched to the rim.
Then the Ephod - possibly a bit like a tabard, made of colourful blue, purple and scarlet threads, but this time with gold embroidery also. Attached to the ephod were onyx stones engraved with the names of the tribes of Israel.
And then the breast piece, a pouch of expensive coloured cloth about 18" square, tied to the ephod with gold rings, containing the urim and thummim. We're not sure what these were made from but they were articles used to cast lots at God's command.
And finally a linen turban, with a pure gold coronet tied to its front by a blue cord and engraved with the words 'Holy to the Lord'.
It must have been quite a spectacle for this nomadic tribe whose regular garments were probably in simple black or earth colours. Here were sparkling, dramatic, costly robes that must have looked astonishing - beautiful and majestic, perhaps even a bit frightening. And all of this would have conveyed an impression of royalty - priests in royal robes, in royal colours, with a royal diadem on the head.
But not evoking an earthly sovereign - for the people had no king at this point - their king was God himself. These priests were attendants of the heavenly King, who was dwelling in the midst of his people in a holy place, the tent or tabernacle that served as their temple while they wandered in the desert.
2. Commissioned for service
Leviticus 8:10-12 Then Moses took the anointing oil and anointed the tabernacle and everything in it, and so consecrated them. He sprinkled some of the oil on the altar seven times, anointing the altar and all its utensils and the basin with its stand, to consecrate them. He poured some of the anointing oil on Aaron's head and anointed him to consecrate him.
Their ordination began with anointing with oil, just like a king; but continued, if we read on, with sacrifices being offered for Aaron and his sons to purify them of their sin, before they could minister on behalf of the people before the Lord with the daily sacrifices.
And that's the point here - these men, these priests, were representing the people before God, and representing God before the people. They were his intermediaries - they stood between the people and their God. There was no way the people could approach God without being consumed because of their sinful hearts; they needed priests to go for them. And the people knew this. Back in Exodus 20 we read this:
When the people saw the thunder and lightning and heard the trumpet and saw Mount Sinai in smoke, they trembled with fear. They stayed at a distance and said to Moses, "Speak to us yourself and we will listen. But do not have God speak to us or we will die."
It was only through the priests and the sacrifices that the people could relate to God; and the role was handed down through their descendants into the promised land and the stone temple of Solomon that would replace the temporary tabernacle. But this scheme was only ever intended to be temporary, albeit it was to last 1500 years. For. like much of what we read in the OT, it was foreshadowing something better that was to come. Because eventually those daily sacrifices ceased to be required - and those priests also ceased to be required. How was that to be?
3. A greater Priest
Listen to this passage from Hebrews. It refers to the Lord Jesus Christ:
Hebrews 10:11-14 Day after day every priest stands and performs his religious duties; again and again he offers the same sacrifices, which can never take away sins. But when this priest (Jesus) had offered for all time one sacrifice for sins, he sat down at the right hand of God. ... by one sacrifice he has made perfect forever those who are being made holy.
Jesus came to fulfill all that the OT regulations and rules had pre-figured. Rather than needing to offer animal sacrifices for sin, he offered himself in his body on the cross - the perfect sacrifice that takes away the sin of the world. Thus he became our great high priest, who removed forever the barrier separating mankind from God. Jesus takes away the need for any intermediaries. For it is Jesus himself - God himself - who now represents us to the Father, and represents God the Father to us. Through him and his completed work we have direct access to the throne room of God. We don't need priests.
So what am I doing here in my robes? Yes, I am called a priest - but that word does not appear in our New Testaments. The early church in the Acts of the Apostles was led by elders, not priests.
I am an elder in the church, not a priest. You don't need me to intervene between you and God. I am here simply as an elder to help lead and encourage you in your faith. That's why I wear simple robes, not brocades and golds and fancy stoles - because these things are no longer needed.
Because it's through the blood of Jesus, not animals that we stand before our Heavenly Father - that we may boldly approach his eternal throne. But there is more.
4. Sharing the Priesthood
Listen to these words from the Apostle Peter, written to ordinary Christians in his first epistle:
1 Peter 2:9 you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light.
A chosen people, a royal priesthood. I've just said we no longer need priests since Jesus became the one perfect mediator between mankind and God.
And yet there is a sense in which you and I are all priests - not in the role of intervening between man and God, and offering sacrifices for sin - but in the role of proclamation - in Peter's words,
that we may declare the praises of him who called us out of darkness into his wonderful light.
You and I are called to represent God to the world — as a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation. That's quite a calling.
Are you up for that, Christian? Being his representatives to the world around us, making him known through our lives and our words? For that is our calling. It's the calling of every Christian. To be, in our own way, a Priest of God Most High.
And you know we even get to wear robes - but not the glittery robes of Aaron and his sons. For our robes are metaphorical - they are the robes of salvation, the robes of righteousness. The prophet Isaiah expressed it like this:
my soul rejoices in my God. For he has clothed me with garments of salvation and arrayed me in a robe of righteousness, as a bridegroom adorns his head like a priest, and as a bride adorns herself with her jewels. Isaiah 61:10
These robes, the robes that every Christian is given, cover our sin and present us to God as if we were spotless, washed clean in the blood of Jesus. These robes may not be highly coloured, embroidered, brocade garments - they do not sparkle with jewels and gold. And yet they do sparkle - with the joy that Christ brings to our hearts, bubbling over as a witness to the world of the power and love of God. Will you join in that priestly ministry to the lost world around us? For that is our challenge. Even here, even today. To be:
a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God, that we may declare the praises of him who called us out of darkness into his wonderful light.