THE PRIEST
"Take unto you Aaron your brother, and his sons with him,
from among the children of Israel, that he may minister unto Me, in the
Priest's office." Exodus 28:1
No pencil's art can represent the sun. No image can
portray Christ's riches. He leaves all boundaries behind. But still His
knowledge is the soul's choice food. It is the joy of joys, it is the life
of life. The tabernacle stood to be the witness of His truth. The Altar was
upraised, the victims died, the incense curled, the lamps were lighted, the
Bread of the Presence was presented, to paint in varied ways His varied
worth. These many types taught much. But this full cluster is not a full
picture. A living office, therefore, receives birth. An active order is now
added. The Priest appears, to be an ever-moving type of redeeming work.
Reader! we live in times when erring lips misrepresent
our Lord. But err we cannot, when we behold Him in the Priestly ordinance.
Our Priest is not on earth. The Spirit witnesses, 'We have a great
High-priest, who has passed into the heavens.' Who can this be but Christ?
Thus Christ is the Priest who ministers for us. Ignorance makes many
priests. Faith knows but one.
First, mark the call. It is most clear. No human mind
selects THE PRIEST. No self-called man usurps the work. The
service is ordained by God. The sacred order has a door which none
can pass but by divine command. The heavenly will thus speaks—'Take unto you
Aaron your brother, and his sons with him.' The purporse is distinct: 'No
man takes this honor unto himself, but he that is called of God, as was
Aaron.' In Christ the fulfillment is found. 'That is why Christ did not
exalt himself to become High Priest. No, he was chosen by God.'
There is a volume of instruction here. Christ swiftly
flies on outstretched wings of love. But all the flight, and all the course
are in the path which God marked out. The Father chooses and
the Father sends. The Son obeys and hastens to the work. Hence all
poor sinners may repose, without one fear, on Christ. He comes commissioned
to discharge a settled service. He saves according to decree.
The office is protected by another fence. None can
pass through who have defect. The mandate is stern. All who draw
near must show completeness in complete perfection. Thus says the Lord,
'Whoever he be of your seed in their generations that has any blemish, let
him not approach to offer the bread of his God.' This leads us to explore
the all-surpassing worthiness of Christ. He is beauty in its
full-blown blaze, and grace in its most graceful form. He is as bright as
God is bright. He is as perfect as God is perfect. Righteousness is His
belt. Glory is His robe. The very heavens are unclean beside Him. Reader!
keep Jesus always in your sight. The world in all its tinsel-show will then
no more be seen.
This admiration has transforming power. Faith
looks, and as it looks, an inward likeness to Jesus grows. We 'are changed
into the same image from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord.'
He is the holiest man who sees by faith the most of Christ. Let Christ,
then, take the Priesthood for His people. He has full worthiness. No sin
ever stained Him.
Through this vestibule, we may press on to view THE
PRIESTLY WORK itself. It is a tree of many branches. The main are thus
described—'Every High-priest taken from among men is ordained for men in
things pertaining to God, that he may offer both gifts and sacrifices for
sins.' At the altar the chief functions were discharged. There is an
altar, then, at which Jesus served. Calvary shows it. Let faith, with open
and adoring eye, survey that scene. It gladdens heaven and affrights all
hell. It should be meditation's happiest seat.
The promised Lamb appears. The victim chosen before time
began, the theme of prophet's song, the crown of patriarchal hope, the jewel
in each typifying casket, is now led forth. It is the God-man Jesus,
Jehovah's fellow, creation's author, the Lord of all things, the Prince of
life. He comes to die, that He may save; to bleed, that He may make
atonement; to lay down life, that sin may be destroyed. An altar is
prepared. It is sufficient for the mighty load. Its pillars are the
strength of Deity.
But what Priest leads this Lamb and binds Him to
the Altar? The Priest is Jesus. He teaches this when speaking of His
life. He says, 'No man takes it from Me, but I lay it down of Myself.' The
Spirit bids us mark the Sacrificer's hand, when He adds, He 'through the
eternal Spirit, offered Himself without spot to God.' Jesus well knew that
nothing but His blood could satisfy the holiness of God, and He did not
withhold it. He loved to save, and therefore loved to die. He joyed to do
His Father's will, and therefore joyed to give Himself. The language of the
cross is loud and clear. All that my Father's glory asks—all that
My people's need requires—I willingly present. I gladly die to honor
God and bring redemption to My flock. My soul, turn often to this
self-sacrificing act. Do you seek proof that He desires your pardon? Behold
it in His arm stretched out to give Himself. You must be spared. He will not
spare Himself.
But when the blood was shed, the Priestly work was not
concluded. On the most solemn day of Israel's year, the High-priest passed
within the veil. He stood before the mercy-seat. But not without the proof
of sacrifice enacted. He brought the blood. He sprinkled it before the
ark. Is Jesus here? What is the Spirit's comment. 'By His own blood, He
entered in once into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for
us.' We thus gain vision of the courts above. Our eyes are opened to a
wondrous sight. We see our Jesus transacting still the priestly functions.
My soul, be much in spirit, and by faith, in heaven. It
is a sin, a shame, a folly, and a loss, to live apart from Him who ever
lives for you. Abide by Jesus. He is never absent from the Father's side. He
ever shows His soul-redeeming blood. It has an eloquence which must prevail.
It has a plea which no accusing rage can answer. It is full price for all
the ransomed race. It fills the scales which justice brings. It gives to
truth its every demand. It silences the Law's stern curse. It claims all
pardon, and all sins are pardoned. What now can Satan say? The High-priest
shows the blood. All charge is answered, all guilt removed, the blood-bought
are absolved.
The High-priest bears a censer, also. From it a
cloud of rising incense covers all the mercy-seat. Thus Jesus fills the
heavens with fragrance. His precious intercession sheds precious aromas
round. He pleads that all His work on earth is done. He spreads His wounded
hands. He shows His wounded side. He proves that every term of the vast
covenant of grace is kept, that sin is punished, and His people free. Oh!
the rich savor of such rich pleas! All attributes take up the shout, 'Who
shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect?'
The High-priest exercised another function. It was his
happy province to strew blessings round. 'Instruct Aaron and his sons to
bless the people of Israel with this special blessing.' Jesus is called
to be a blessing Lord. Mark His departing act—'He led them out as far as to
Bethany, and He lifted up His hands and blessed them.' And now He lives in
heaven a blessing-life, and opens there His blessing-hands, and utters there
His blessing-voice, and displays there His blessing-smile.
Poor sinners feel their sin. They see the Savior. They
flee to wash in His all-cleansing blood. They hide beneath His glorious
righteousness. This is a blessing. They burst the bonds of sin and Satan;
they love the sacred feasts of Bible-truth and holy ordinances. This is a
blessing. They rejoice with joy unspeakable; they trample on the world, and
all its snares, and all its baits. They see hell vanquished, heaven their
home, saints their brethren, angels their ministering guardians, Jesus their
all. This is a blessing! Life is theirs; Death is theirs; Christ is theirs;
Heaven is theirs; Glory is theirs; Eternity is theirs. This is a blessing!
All these streams flow down from Jesus our High-priest, who ever lives to
execute this blessing work.
It is the Spirit's solemn will that we should know and
use this Great High-priest. Hence, by repeated contrasts, He magnifies His
worth. This teaching bids us give ear. Let us advance, then, and pluck some
fruit from these luxuriant boughs.
"There were many priests under the old system. When one
priest died, another had to take his place. But Jesus remains a priest
forever; his priesthood will never end." Hebrews 7:23-24. The priests who
ministered to Israel's sons were only men. Dust was their substance and to
dust they soon returned. Death soon removed them from their post. Our Great
High-priest is very God. His life is immortality. Eternity is His day. No
time can bring decay to Him. No age makes His seat void. So long as
mediating work remains, His mediating office lives.
"He does not need to offer sacrifices every day like the
other high priests. They did this for their own sins first and then for the
sins of the people. But Jesus did this once for all when he sacrificed
himself on the cross." Hebrews 7:27. The high priests were of corruption's
seed. Sin cleaved to their most holy service. Their very best was vile and
black. They must make offerings for themselves. They needed blood to wash
away their guilt. Jesus is pure as God is pure. He breathed no atmosphere
but perfect holiness. Poor sinners have a sinless Priest in Him.
"But only the high priest goes into the Most Holy Place,
and only once a year, and always with blood, which he offers to God to cover
his own sins and the sins the people have committed in ignorance." Hebrews
9:7. The high priests passed the veil but once in every year. He entered
heaven as His own abode. There, day and night He pleads, and will present
incessant pleas, until the last saint be safely gathered home.
"Once for all time he took blood into that Most Holy
Place, but not the blood of goats and calves. He took his own blood, and
with it he secured our salvation forever." Hebrews 9:12. The high priests'
victims were but creatures of this lower world. The blood was only blood of
beasts. It had no saving power. It could not touch transgression's infinite
pollution. Jesus presents Himself to God. He brings the very blood of God.
All worlds are worthless when compared to this. Believer, this is your full
salvation.
"Under the old covenant, the priest stands before the
altar day after day, offering sacrifices that can never take away sins. But
our High Priest offered himself to God as one sacrifice for sins, good for
all time. Then he sat down at the place of highest honor at God's right
hand." Hebrews 10:11-12. The high priests offered often. The victims died,
the altars blazed, the incense burned from year to year, from day to day.
Jesus presents one victim once. His death once died, His life once given,
His blood once shed, fully and forever washed out His people's sins,
redeemed His people's lives, and saved His people's souls. His one surrender
of Himself as the atoning Lamb, forever quenched all wrath, forever took
away all curse, forever satisfied all claims, forever saved the family of
faith, forever opened heaven, forever vanquished hell. To add to infinite
perfection is impossible. Woe be to them who think such offering incomplete!
The Spirit cries, 'fix your thoughts on Jesus, the
apostle and high priest whom we confess.' Hebrews 3:1. Reader! obey. Make
Him the center of your every thought, the home of your adoring mind, the
first, the last of meditation's joys. Christ's Priesthood is a theme which
time cannot exhaust. It is a theme for which eternity is short!