Leviticus 8:13-32 KJB
These verses teach that the sin offering and the burnt offering were made for different purposes, but they were of equal importance to God. But the one could never be offered without the other. Whenever the priest made a sin offering, he had to follow it with a burnt offering, and whenever he made a burnt offering, he first had to shed the blood of a clean animal which was a sin offering. Leviticus 8:14-21 (KJB).
When the priest made a sin offering which symbolized reconciliation with God, he burnt some of the internal organs of the animal on the altar, but he burned the rest of the animal outside the camp. The priest always had to pour out the blood of the sin offering at the bottom of the brazen altar before the Tabernacle, and he had to rub some of the blood on the horns of the altar. The Tabernacle represented God's presence with His people. The fact that the priest burned some of the animal outside the camp symbolized the fact that Jesus would suffer outside of the camp for the sins and evil of all humans. Hebrews 13:10-13 (KJB). On the cross, Jesus made the blood sacrifice before the Temple of God which could only be the entire universe since the Holy Spirit pervades it all. II Chronicles 6:18 (KJB). The fact that the priest burned some of the internal organs of the animal on the altar symbolized that because Jesus bore the sins and evil of the entire human race on the cross, then Jesus must have felt the fires of Hell inside His body before He dismissed His Spirit to descend into Hell to suffer the burnt offering for all of humanity not saved by grace. Jesus shed His blood on the cross to cleanse the sins and evil and save from eternal death all humans who would become saved by His grace, but Jesus and His Spirit also suffered the burnt offering sacrifice for the lesser form of salvation of the rest of humanity. In the end of the world, Christ will appear to all of His living humans "on the earth, and under the earth," and He will cause them all to repent and return to faith in Him as the Lamb of God their Savior so that He can use His fiery wrath against evil to dissolve all their beings to separate their repentant living souls and spirits from their dead and evil natures so that He can recreate their living souls and spirits with new bodies to live forever on His recreated earth, and He will cast their dead and evil natures into the eternal fires of Hell. Revelation 5:11-14; Philippians 2:9-11; Psalm 75:3; Luke 3:16-17; Matthew 13:36-43; I Corinthians 3:11-15; Revelation 20:5; Revelation 21:1-5 (KJB). Jesus' baptism with fire as John the Baptist said means His burnt sacrifice. Luke 3:16-17 (KJB).
When Moses offered a "ram of consecration," he had to put some of the blood on the right ears, right thumb, and right big toes of Aaron and his sons to symbolize God's gift of Jesus' righteousness to all humans who would ever become saved by His grace. Moses then took some of the internal organs and the right shoulder of the ram on which he put an unleavened cake, oiled bread, and wafers which represented the sinless life of Christ. Moses then put them in the hands of Aaron and his sons, took them out of their hands and waved them before the Lord, and then Moses burnt them with the ram on the altar. This act by Moses symbolized that God would transfer all of the sins and evil of all humans not saved by grace to the perfect body of Jesus who through His Spirit would make a burnt offering sacrifice for the salvation of all of humanity who do not become saved by grace. Leviticus 8:27-28 (KJB).
Moses then took the roasted breast of the ram and waved it before the Lord, and it was his to eat. Exodus 29:26; Leviticus 8:29 (KJB). This act by Moses symbolized that God had definitely already saved Moses by His grace.
Moses then took some of the anointing oil and blood from the altar and sprinkled Aaron and his sons with it. This act symbolized that some humans had been saved and would be saved by God's grace. Leviticus 8:30 (KJB).
Moses then had Aaron and his sons eat some of the flesh of the ram that had been boiled, along with some of the unleavened bread, and then burn all that was not eaten with fire. This act symbolized that all humans saved by grace would partake of the Spirit of Christ, and all of the rest of humanity would be saved by the burnt sacrifice of Christ. Leviticus 8:31-32 (KJB).
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