When Sin Costs Blood and Grace Costs Everything

DID YOU KNOW

Did You Know the Day of Atonement Was a Graphic Reminder That Sin Is a Life-and-Death Matter?

When we read Leviticus 16, we are confronted with imagery that feels foreign and even unsettling. On the Day of Atonement, three innocent animals were involved in addressing the sin of the nation. One purified the high priest and his household. Another was offered to cleanse the holy place where God symbolically dwelt. A third—the scapegoat—was sent into the wilderness bearing the confessed sins of the people. This was not ritual theater. It was divine instruction. Sin costs life.

Leviticus 16:15–16 explains that blood was sprinkled in the Most Holy Place to cleanse it from the impurities of Israel. The Hebrew word for atonement, kippur, carries the idea of covering or wiping clean. But that covering required blood. Hebrews 9:22 later clarifies the principle: “Without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness.” God was teaching Israel that sin is not minor. It fractures relationship. It contaminates what is holy. And it demands a cost that humanity cannot ignore. The Day of Atonement confronted the people with the gravity of their rebellion, forcing them to reckon with the emotional and spiritual weight of their actions.

Did You Know the Scapegoat Revealed God’s Desire Not Just to Forgive Sin but to Remove It?

One of the most moving moments in Leviticus 16 occurs when Aaron lays both hands on the living goat and confesses over it “all the Israelites’ iniquities and all their transgressions for all their sins” (Lev 16:21). The symbolism is powerful. The sins of the nation were transferred, in representation, to a substitute. The goat was then sent into the wilderness, carrying away what had burdened the people. The image is not only about forgiveness; it is about separation.

Psalm 103:12 echoes this truth: “As far as the east is from the west, so far has He removed our transgressions from us.” God’s heart was not merely to suspend judgment temporarily but to restore fellowship fully. The wilderness signified distance. Sin no longer stood between God and His covenant people. The ritual anticipated something greater. Isaiah 53:12 declares of the coming Servant, “He bore the sin of many.” The scapegoat was a shadow; Christ would be the substance. The removal was temporary under the law, but permanent in the Messiah.

Did You Know Jesus Fulfilled the Day of Atonement Once and for All?

The writer of Hebrews draws a direct line between Leviticus and Calvary. Hebrews 10:11–12 states, “And every priest stands every day serving and offering the same sacrifices many times, which are never able to take away sins. But this one, after He had offered one sacrifice for sins for all time, sat down at the right hand of God.” Notice the contrast. The priest stands repeatedly. Christ sits once. The work is finished.

Hebrews 7:28 emphasizes that the law appointed priests with weakness, but God appointed a Son “made perfect forever.” The Day of Atonement had to be observed annually because the sacrifice was insufficient to cleanse permanently. It pointed forward. Jesus, however, became both High Priest and offering. He entered not an earthly Holy of Holies but the heavenly one (Hebrews 9:24). In Him, the horror of Leviticus meets the hope of the Gospel. The cost of sin remains real—but the payment has been made in full. No additional sacrifice is required. No further blood must be shed. Christ has fulfilled what the ritual foreshadowed.

Did You Know the Day of Atonement Ultimately Reveals the Depth of God’s Love?

It is easy to read Leviticus as legal instruction, but beneath the ceremony lies the heart of God. The Day of Atonement symbolized His longing for restored fellowship. Sin disrupted communion. Atonement restored it. Even in the severity of judgment, grace was present. God provided the means by which His people could draw near without being consumed.

When we read John 9:1–12, we see Jesus healing a man born blind. That miracle, too, points to restoration. Sin may bring brokenness into the world, but Christ brings light. Song of Solomon 7:5–9 poetically celebrates delight and intimacy. These passages, when held together with Leviticus 16, remind us that God’s ultimate aim is not distance but relationship. The cross makes possible what the ritual anticipated—a people purified and welcomed. The price of sin is heavy, but the love that pays it is greater still.

As we reflect during seasons of spiritual examination—especially if this reading falls near Lent or times of repentance—we are reminded that atonement is not abstract theology. It is personal grace. The Day of Atonement invites us to ask not, “What can I get away with?” but “What has my sin cost?” And then to rejoice that Christ has borne that cost on our behalf.

In your own walk with God, pause and consider the weight of forgiveness. Do not treat grace lightly. Let the imagery of Leviticus deepen your gratitude for Calvary. When you feel shame over past failures, remember the scapegoat carried sin away. When guilt whispers that you must earn acceptance, remember Christ sat down because the work was complete. The Day of Atonement was a shadow. The cross is the reality. And because of Jesus, sin no longer stands between you and the Father.

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Take time on this holiest day for faithful Jews
to contemplate how a caring humanity can join
in bestowing love and peace on our broken world
#DayOfAtonement

The Westside Highway bridge over Pier One Cafe along the Henry Hudson in Riverside Park, Manhattan

Mercy Seat

This is known in Hebrew as the kapporet.

This was the solid gold lid put on the Ark of the Covenant. It had 2 cherubim at the ends to cover & make the space in which Yahweh/God appeared & lived. It holds major significance in Judaism & minor significance in Christianity. The Ark of the Covenant is mentioned only once in the Quran.

The design of the Mercy Seat was heavily detailed in the Book of Exodus (25:17-22). The space between the 2 cherubim was considered the earthly throne of God, the place where His presence (often described the Shekinah glory), where He would live & commune/communicate with Moses.

The Ark & Mercy Seat were kept in the Holy of Holies. This was the Temple’s innermost sanctuary which was separated from the other parts of the Temple by a thick curtain called a parochet. The Holy of Holies could only be entered by the High Priest on the Day of Atonement, or Yom Kippur. This is the holiest day of the year in Judaism.

The ritual described, in detail, in Leviticus chapter 16. The High Priest would sprinkle the blood of a sacrificial bull onto the Mercy Seat as an atonement for the sins of his own & his family. A sacrificial goat would be for the sins of the people of Israel. This act of sprinkling the blood would be a symbolic covering of the sins of the people. This allowed for a temporary reconciliation between a holy God & His sinful creation. The blood was a substitute representing a life given in place of the lives of the people who transgressed against God’s law.

For Christians the Mercy Seat is seen as a powerful foreshadowing of Jesus. The New Testament, in Hebrews & Romans, draws a direct & profound connection between the Old Testament ritual & Jesus’ work on the cross.

Jesus on the cross was a greater atonement & the formation of a New Covenant (Hebrews 9:3-15). The continual sacrifices for sin under the Mosaic Law/Covenant became obsolete following Jesus’ one-time sacrificial death, as the Lamb of God.

The author(s) of Hebrews explains that Jesus is the ultimate High Priest (Hebrews 9:11). Unlike the Old Testament priests who HAD to offer sacrifices for sins, Jesus was without sin (or original Sin for that matter) & offered Himself as the perfect sacrifice “once for all.”

The blood of the bulls & goats could only give a temporary “covering” of sin(s) (Hebrews 10:4). Jesus’ own blood, that was shed on the cross, is presented as a perfect & final atonement. THis provides a permanent solution to the problem of sin & guilt.

At the moment of Jesus’ death, the veil of the Temple that separated the Holy of Holies from the rest of the building was torn from top to bottom (Matthew 27:51). This is understood as a symbol that the separation between God & humanity had been removed. Thus through Jesus’ sacrifice, believers now have direct access to God’s presence.

The Greek word for Mercy Seat used in the Septuagint (the Greek Old Testament) is hilasterion. This is a term that carries the idea of an atoning sacrifice. In Romans 3:25, the Apostle Paul uses this exact word to describe Jesus: “…whom God puts forward as a propitation (or Mercy Seat) by His blood, to be received by faith.” This verse teaches that God’s righteous wrath against sin satisfied God’s justice in the Old Testament.

In this way, Jesus is seen as a fulfillment of everything the Mercy Seat represented. The place where God’s holiness & justice meet His mercy & love & the means by which humanity can be reconciled with God. The Mercy Seat was a physical representation of a spiritual truth, one that Christians believe was fully realized in the person & work of Jesus.

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Sending best thoughts for a deeply meaningful Day of Atonement for those who observe. May this day bring reflection, peace, and spiritual renewal as we seek to draw closer to God and embrace His mercy. And a meaningful Yom Kippur to my Jewish friends. #DayOfAtonement #YomKippur

Edith was born the eleventh child, the seventh surviving, to Siegfried and Augusta Stein on October 12, 1891 in a small house on Kohlenstrasse. The parents had come from Lublinitz just a half year before her birth to seek a better living.

In that year, this date fell on the Jewish Day of Atonement, “Yom Kippur”, and Edith explains in her autobiography that this correlation of events was so important to her mother that it was the paramount reason why her mother held her so dear.

Freda Mary Oben

St. Edith Stein the Woman

I was born on the Day of Atonement, and my mother always considered it my real birthday, although celebrations and gifts were always forthcoming on October 12. (She herself celebrated her birthday, according to the Jewish calendar, on the Feast of Tabernacles; but she no longer insisted on this custom for her children.) She laid great stress on my being born on the Day of Atonement, and I believe this contributed more than anything else to her youngest’s being especially dear to her.

Saint Edith Stein

Chapter II, The world as the two youngest knew it

Stein, E, Gelber, L, Leuven R, & Koeppel J 1986, Life in a Jewish Family: her unfinished autobiographical account, ICS Publications, Washington DC.

Sullivan, J 1987, Edith Stein Symposium: Teresian Culture, ICS Publications, Washington, DC.

Featured image: Polish artist Jakub Weinles (1870–1938) depicted the synagogue prayers On the Eve of Yom Kippur at the turn of the century, most likely in Warsaw. This oil on canvas painting comes from the Polish Painting Collection in the National Museum in Warsaw. Image credit: Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)

https://carmelitequotes.blog/2024/10/11/edith-birth/

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Yom Kippur - Wikipedia

Via the School of Sacred Miracles on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/CxlQbRTp8Eh/
The School wishes you and yours a blessed Yom Kippur. The Day of Atonement begins at sunset today (Sept 24, 2023) and ends after nightfall tomorrow evening (Sept 25, 2023). If you are unfamiliar with this Jewish holy day, here is Chabad's guide: "What Is Yom Kippur?" https://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/177886/jewish/What-Is-Yom-Kippur.htm

#interfaith #YomKippur #DayOfAtonement #Jewish #Judaism #HolyDay #Holiday