Starting after Sukkot 2024, Hallel Fellowship switched to a three-year cycle of Torah and parallel Bible readings (2024–2027), outlined by TorahResource. While there’s ancient evidence for a triennial cycle, a major benefit is to provide more time to mine more of Scripture for lessons.
Readings
- Leviticus 8
- Ezekiel 43:27–44:8
- Hebrews 7:11–28
Corresponding reading in the 1-year Torah cycle
Insights from this week’s readings
Leviticus 8, Ezekiel 43:27–44:8, and Hebrews 7:11–28 are tied together by the themes of priesthood, consecration, holiness, mediation, covenant access, and the problem of imperfect human priests. Together, the passages move from the establishment of the Aaronic priesthood, to prophetic warnings and restoration of priestly holiness, and finally to the eternal priesthood of Messiah Yeshua. The Torah establishes the earthly pattern, Ezekiel warns about corrupt priestly service and anticipates restored worship, and Hebrews explains how Yeshua fulfills and surpasses the Levitical order as the eternal High Priest.
Consecration and ordination
In Leviticus 8, Moses consecrates Aaron and his sons for service in the Tabernacle. The Hebrew verb is מָשַׁח mashach (“to anoint”), used in Leviticus 8:12 when Aaron is anointed with oil. The Septuagint translates this with χρίω chriō (“to anoint”). This Greek verb becomes foundational for the title Χριστός Christos (“Anointed One,” Messiah). The same Greek root appears in Luke 4:18 (“He has anointed me”), Acts 4:27, and Hebrews 1:9.
The Hebrew noun מָשִׁיחַ mashiach (“anointed one”) is translated in the LXX as χριστός christos. Psalm 2:2 speaks of “the LORD and His Anointed,” rendered τοῦ χριστοῦ αὐτοῦ tou Christou autou in Greek. The New Testament directly applies this language to Yeshua in Acts 4:26–27.
Bottom line: This means the priestly anointing of Aaron was never just about ancient ritual. It pointed forward to the ultimate Anointed Priest-King, Yeshua. Aaron received oil on his head; Yeshua received the Spirit without measure (John 3:34). The earthly ceremony became a prophetic picture of the Messiah.
Holiness
Leviticus 8 repeatedly emphasizes sanctification. The Hebrew root is קָדַשׁ qadash (“to make holy, consecrate”). The LXX often translates it with ἁγιάζω hagiazō (“to sanctify”) or ἅγιος hagios (“holy”). Ezekiel 43:27 continues this theme when God says He will accept the offerings after proper consecration.
In the New Testament, hagiazō appears prominently in Hebrews itself:
- Hebrews 2:11 — “the one who sanctifies”
- Hebrews 10:10 — “we have been sanctified”
- Hebrews 13:12 — Yeshua suffered “to sanctify the people”
In the LXX, hagiazō translates qadash in passages such as:
- Exodus 29:44
- Leviticus 8:30
- Ezekiel 43:26
Hebrews uses the same priestly sanctification language from the Torah to explain Messiah’s work.
Bottom line: Holiness in Scripture is not mainly about being spiritually elite. It means being set apart for God’s purposes. Aaron had to be washed, clothed, anointed, and purified before entering sacred service. Hebrews teaches that Yeshua sanctifies His people internally, accomplishing what the repeated Temple rituals only symbolized externally.
Access to God through mediation
The Hebrew word כֹּהֵן kohen/cohen (“priest”) is translated in the LXX as ἱερεύς hiereus. This term dominates Hebrews 7. Hebrews contrasts the mortal Levitical priests with Yeshua, the eternal High Priest.
Important NT uses of ἱερεύς include:
- Matthew 8:4
- Luke 1:5
- Hebrews 5:1
- Hebrews 7 throughout
- Revelation 1:6
In the LXX, hiereus translates kohen throughout the Torah:
- Exodus 28:1
- Leviticus 8:1
- Ezekiel 44:15
Hebrews also uses ἀρχιερεύς archiereus (“high priest”), corresponding to Hebrew הַכֹּהֵן הַגָּדוֹל ha-kohen ha-gadol. The LXX uses archiereus in Leviticus 21:10 and elsewhere.
Bottom line: Priests in the Bible functioned like covenant mediators. They represented the people before God and handled sacrifices for sin and impurity. Hebrews argues that Yeshua fulfills this role permanently and perfectly because He is sinless and eternal, unlike Aaron’s descendants who died and had to continually offer sacrifices for themselves.
Perfection or completion
Another strong connection is the idea of perfection or completion. Hebrews 7:11 asks: “If perfection were through the Levitical priesthood…” The Greek word is τελείωσις teleiōsis (“completion, perfection”). This term is tied to priestly ordination in the Greek Torah.
In the LXX, related forms such as τελειόω teleioō translate Hebrew מָלֵא יָד maley yad (literally “fill the hand”), an idiom for priestly ordination:
- Exodus 29:9
- Leviticus 8:33
Hebrews intentionally draws on this ordination vocabulary:
- Hebrews 2:10 — Yeshua made “perfect”
- Hebrews 5:9 — “having been perfected”
- Hebrews 7:19 — the Law made nothing perfect
- Hebrews 7:28 — the Son perfected forever
The point is profound. In Torah, priests were “filled-handed” or installed into office through rituals. Hebrews says Yeshua was “perfected” not morally — as if He were sinful — but vocationally and covenantally through suffering, resurrection, and exaltation into His eternal priesthood.
Bottom line: Hebrews is saying that the Levitical system was real and God-given, but an incomplete pattern of the actual. It prepared Israel for something greater. The repeated sacrifices and dying priests pointed forward to a final Priest who would never fail, never die, and never need replacement.
Faithfulness of the priesthood
Ezekiel 44 especially emphasizes faithful versus corrupt priesthood. God condemns priests who allowed foreigners and uncleanness into the sanctuary. The Hebrew word for abomination is תּוֹעֵבָה to‘evah, translated in the LXX as βδέλυγμα bdelygma. This same Greek term appears in the New Testament:
- Matthew 24:15
- Mark 13:14
- Revelation 17:4
In the LXX, bdelygma translates to‘evah in:
- Deuteronomy 7:25
- Ezekiel 44:7
- Proverbs 6:16
This shows continuity between Ezekiel’s warnings about Temple corruption and later biblical warnings about spiritual defilement.
Bottom line: The message is that God cares deeply about how worship is conducted. Ezekiel rebukes leaders who treated holy things casually. Hebrews answers this problem by presenting Yeshua as the faithful High Priest who perfectly guards and fulfills God’s holiness.
Covenant
Another key word is covenant. Hebrews 7:22 calls Yeshua the guarantor of a “better covenant.” The Greek is διαθήκη diathēkē, translating Hebrew בְּרִית berit. In the LXX, diathēkē is the standard translation for covenant:
- Genesis 9:9
- Exodus 24:8
- Jeremiah 31:31
NT uses include:
- Luke 22:20
- 2Corinthians 3:6
- Hebrews 8:6–13
- Hebrews 9:15–20
Hebrews does not portray covenant as abolished, but renewed and brought to fullness through Messiah.
Bottom line: Covenant means relational commitment initiated by God. The priesthood existed to maintain covenant fellowship between God and Israel. Hebrews teaches that Yeshua secures this covenant permanently because His life is indestructible.
Melchizedek
Hebrews 7 also centers on the mysterious figure Melchizedek. The Hebrew name מַלְכִּי־צֶדֶק Malki-Tzedek means “King of Righteousness.” Hebrews interprets the name directly. The Greek δικαιοσύνη dikaiosynē (“righteousness”) corresponds to Hebrew צֶדֶק tsedeq.
LXX examples:
- Psalm 11:7
- Isaiah 45:8
NT examples:
- Matthew 5:6
- Romans 3:21–22
- Hebrews 1:9
Melchizedek is also king of Salem, linked to שָׁלוֹם shalom (peace), rendered εἰρήνη eirēnē in Greek.
NT examples:
- John 14:27
- Ephesians 2:14
- Hebrews 12:14
Hebrews portrays Yeshua as both righteous king and priest of peace.
Bottom line: This means Messiah combines offices normally separated in Israel. He is both the righteous ruler and the perfect mediator. The Levitical priests served temporarily; Messiah reigns eternally.
Acceptable worship
Finally, the Leviticus, Ezekiel and Hebrews passages converge on the idea of acceptable worship and divine presence. Ezekiel 43 describes the return of God’s glory to the Temple. The Hebrew כָּבוֹד kavod (“glory”) is translated δόξα doxa.
LXX examples:
- Exodus 40:34
- Ezekiel 43:2
NT examples:
- John 1:14
- John 17:5
- Hebrews 1:3
- Revelation 21:23
Hebrews presents Yeshua as “the radiance of God’s glory” (Hebrews 1:3), connecting Him directly to the divine presence that once filled the Tabernacle and Temple.
Bottom line: Our passages move from a physical sanctuary filled with glory to Messiah Himself embodying God’s presence among His people. The Tabernacle, priesthood, sacrifices, and Temple all become interconnected prophetic patterns fulfilled in the ministry of Yeshua, the eternal High Priest and mediator of the renewed covenant.
Studies
Get real about faith: God doesn’t want — or need — your virtue signals (Leviticus 6–8; Hosea 6)
How to be a ‘nation of priests’ to a world that needs closeness to God (Leviticus 6–8)
Jeremiah 7-9; Malachi 3-4: Heaven’s salve for our hearts to prepare us for Passover
Leviticus 6:8–8:36: God wants a relationship with you that responds and grows
Holy Ground: Approaching God with Reverence (Leviticus 8-10)
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