Draw near to God — the law of holiness and the way of atonement
You shall be holy, for I the LORD your God am holy.
Leviticus 19:2Leviticus is the heart of the Torah — and the book most often skipped by modern readers. That is a mistake. Leviticus is the answer to the question Exodus raises: God has come to dwell among his people in the Tabernacle, but how can a holy God live with a sinful people? The entire book is the answer. Through a detailed system of sacrifice, priesthood, purity laws, and sacred calendar, God provides the infrastructure of relationship between himself and Israel.
The book divides into two major sections: the laws of sacrifice and priesthood (chapters 1–16), culminating in the Day of Atonement — the holiest day in the Jewish calendar; and the Holiness Code (chapters 17–27), governing every area of Israelite life under the repeated refrain: "Be holy, for I am holy." The recurring pattern throughout is: sin creates distance from God; atonement bridges the gap; holiness maintains the relationship.
The New Testament writer of Hebrews devotes ten chapters to demonstrating that every element of Leviticus — the priesthood, the sacrifices, the Day of Atonement, the blood — is fulfilled in Christ. He is the great High Priest, the unblemished sacrifice, and the one who has passed through the veil once for all. Leviticus is not outdated legislation; it is the theological scaffolding of the cross.
2 chapters per day · with Hebrews alongside
Yom Kippur is the theological climax of the entire Mosaic system. Once a year, the High Priest enters the Holy of Holies — the only person, one day a year — and sprinkles blood on the mercy seat to atone for the sins of all Israel. Two goats are used: one is sacrificed for sin; the other has the sins of the people symbolically laid on it before being driven into the wilderness — the scapegoat. Hebrews 9:11–12 declares that Christ entered the greater and more perfect tabernacle, and with his own blood obtained eternal redemption. The annual atonement was a shadow; the cross is the substance.
The phrase "be holy, for I am holy" appears six times in Leviticus and is quoted directly by the Apostle Peter in 1 Peter 1:16. Holiness in Leviticus is not primarily about moral perfection — it is about distinctiveness and consecration, being set apart for God. The purity laws, the dietary restrictions, the calendar of feasts — all of these create a rhythm of life that constantly orients Israel toward God and separates them from the surrounding cultures. The New Testament does not abandon this call to holiness; it relocates it. The Holy Spirit indwells believers, making the body itself a temple (1 Cor. 6:19) and the community a holy priesthood (1 Peter 2:9).
Leviticus 25 describes the Jubilee year — every fiftieth year, all debts are cancelled, all slaves freed, all land returned to its original families. It is an economic reset built into the Law. But its significance is primarily theological and prophetic. In Luke 4:18–19, Jesus reads from Isaiah 61 and declares "Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing" — using Jubilee language: freedom for captives, release for prisoners, the year of the Lord's favour. Jesus himself is the ultimate Jubilee — the one in whom all debts are cancelled, all bondage broken, and all that was lost in the Fall is restored.
Chapters 1–5 describe five distinct types of offering, each addressing a different dimension of Israel's relationship with God. The burnt offering (total consecration) represents complete surrender to God. The grain offering expresses thanksgiving. The peace offering celebrates fellowship. The sin offering covers unintentional sins. The guilt offering provides restitution for wrongs against God or neighbour. Together they map the full terrain of human failure and divine provision — and together they are fulfilled in the single sacrifice of Christ, who is simultaneously the offering that covers every category of human sin.