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Appointments With God Atonement

Yom Kippur: Afflict the former way of life to be reborn

Every mistake, goof up in our Torah walk can fall into one of three categories: sin, transgression or iniquity. Sin is missing the mark on accident. Transgression is doing something wrong when you know better. Iniquity is when you do something wrong as an act of rebellion.

Discover in this study why God blots out our sins, transgressions and iniquities, and why we want the Messiah to present us to God free of our long list of shortcomings.

Every mistake, goof up in our Torah walk can fall into one of three categories: sin, transgression or iniquity. Sin is missing the mark on accident. Transgression is doing something wrong when you know better. Iniquity is when you do something wrong as an act of rebellion.

יוֹם הַכִּפֻּרִים Yom haKippurim (Day of Coverings, aka Day of Atonement) is more like an appointment than a festival. It’s a time God expects us to show up and meet with Him. 

God uses affliction to mark who belongs to Him and who doesn’t. That affliction is an important part of this day. Bringing closure to the old and starting anew is a crucial part of this day as well. But there’s more. 

Yom Kippur is discussed in Leviticus 16. People wear white on Yom Kippur in honor of the priest who was commanded to wear white on Yom Kippur. This is tradition and not a requirement. 

The High Priest slaughters a bull, a goat and a ram. He places the sins, transgressions and iniquities of the people on the living goat. How does the priest do this? Does he know every single sin of every person in the congregation? No. What does Aaron say then? What does he say to transmit the sin of the congregation to the scapegoat? 

In Jewish tradition, we are told that Aaron would make a general declaration under different categories of sin that God would take away. It is to draw to mind how many sins we have committed in secret or in public. Hearing Aaron’s words would bring to mind examples in your own life how you have fallen short. 

We need to remember our sins otherwise our repentance for those sins can’t be sincere. We need to discard both the outside influences that whisper to us to do wrong and our own internal hearts desire that entice us to the wrong way. 

It isn’t Yom Kippur that determines our path of the coming year. It’s what happens the day after. Do we merely “borrow” the prayers of repentance of Yom Kippur, or do we own those prayers and internalize them? 

“and make atonement for the holy sanctuary, and he shall make atonement for the tent of meeting and for the altar. He shall also make atonement for the priests and for all the people of the assembly. Now you shall have this as a permanent statute, to make atonement for the sons of Israel for all their sins once every year.” And just as the LORD had commanded Moses, so he did.” (Leviticus 16:33–34 NASB)

All the sin offerings that one can do through the year are mainly for “oops.” Only Yom Kippur pays for iniquitous sins. You have to worry about your iniquity and rebellion because that sin hangs over you until Yom Kippur. You have time to show God before Yom Kippur that you have repented and know how bad and stupid that iniquity is.

All parents want their children to avoid iniquity and rebellion and God wants us to avoid that, too. 

Yom Kippur doesn’t take away our ability to sin. If one part of me is contaminated by sin, all of me is contaminated by sin. If one part of you is clean, all of you is clean. 

Hebrews 10:1–10 discusses this in great detail. 

We understand that sacrifices don’t repair the relationship, but doing God’s will is what repairs our relationship with God. 

Yom Kippur doesn’t take our ability to sin away from us so how can God forget our sins? God makes a willful decision not to remember our sins. He erases the sins from our record. 

The Day of Atonement is not about me. The High Priest does all the work. The Day of Atonement is for the High Priest. 

The tool that blots out our sin from God’s record book is not the scapegoat or the sacrificial goat. We can’t erase it ourselves either. 

All the prophets and authors of our Torah understood is that the sacrifices don’t really solve the problem and wrote about it at length. 

No matter how many times you say “I’m sorry” it doesn’t change anything if you aren’t really sorry (Isaiah 1:2–9). 

There was nothing good in them. They were utterly corrupt. The offerings themselves were empty because the person making the offering was truly corrupt (Isaiah 1:12–20). 

The offerings do not fix the corruption in the heart. You have to repent and walk a different way than you walked before. 

Leviticus 16 doesn’t mention learning to do good, seeking justice, reproving the ruthless, defending the orphan, or pleading for the widow in how repentance and forgiveness work. See Isaiah 58:1–14.

This is what God intended for our fasts and “The Fast.” The goal of the fast is not blood and slaughter. 

Messiah will fix the sins I can’t fix, but there are sins that I can clean up. 

Why does God blot out our sins, transgressions and iniquities? Because He loves us and when He sees us wanting to live like Him. I don’t want to stand before God face to face. I want the Messiah to stand before me, and I will hide behind Him. Otherwise, the entire list of shortcomings will remain. 

What we do now is training for the next life. Those things that will keep is out of the life to come, we need God to fix those. I can’t fix the past, only God can do that. But the sins that aren’t death penalty type offenses, I can work up and improve my track record. 

Banner Photo: La Résurrection des Morts (1870) by Victor Mottez. 

Summary: Tammy

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