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Leviticus 4

The Sin Offering: Purification for Unintentional Sin

No one in the covenant community is beyond the reach of sin or beyond the mercy of God's appointed atonement.

Chapter Summary

No one in the covenant community is beyond the reach of sin or beyond the mercy of God's appointed atonement.

Overview

Leviticus 4 teaches that sin is measured by the Lord's commands, not by human awareness alone. Unintentional sin still brings guilt and must be addressed through God's appointed sacrifice. The chapter moves from priest to congregation to leader to ordinary member, showing that all levels of the covenant community require atonement. The blood rites differ according to the offender's representative weight, but the conclusion remains consistent: the priest makes atonement, and the sinner is forgiven.

Context
Author

Moses, mediating Yahweh's covenant instruction to Israel within the Torah.

Audience

Israel's covenant community, the anointed priesthood, leaders, and ordinary members of the people who must learn how sin defiles, guilt is addressed, and forgiveness is granted within the holy presence of the Lord.

Setting

Leviticus 4 follows the opening instructions for the burnt offering, grain offering, and fellowship offering. The Lord now turns to the sin offering, especially for unintentional sins against the Lord's commands.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

The Lord provides sin offering instructions for unintentional sins by the anointed priest, the whole congregation, a leader, or an ordinary member of the community, showing that guilt at every level must be brought before God through sacrifice, blood, priestly mediation, and atonement.

Covenant Significance

Leviticus 4 shows how the Sinai covenant addresses sin within the redeemed community. Covenant membership does not make sin harmless. Priests, leaders, congregation, and individuals must bring guilt to God through sacrifice and priestly mediation. The chapter protects the holiness of the sanctuary and the integrity of Israel's life with God.

Gospel Clarity

Leviticus 4 gives essential gospel grammar. Sin is real even when unintentional. Guilt must be addressed before God. Blood is required for purification. Mediation is necessary. Atonement leads to forgiveness. Christ fulfills this pattern as the sinless substitute, the greater priest, and the final sin offering who sanctifies His people by His own blood.

Formation Aim

Humble repentance, Word-governed conscience, reverent accountability, and confident trust in God's provided atonement.

Focus Points

  • Unintentional sin
  • Command violation
  • Guilt
  • Purification
  • Atonement
  • Forgiveness
  • Priestly mediation
  • Corporate responsibility
  • Leadership accountability
  • Sanctuary holiness
  • Blood and altar
  • Representative sacrifice
  • Sin Is Defined by God's Command
  • Unintentional Sin Still Matters
  • Representative Guilt Has Wider Consequences
  • Every Level of the Community Needs Atonement
  • Blood Purifies What Sin Defiles
  • Forgiveness Is Granted Through Atonement
  • God Provides Mercy Without Diminishing Holiness
  • Sin
  • Holiness
  • Christ as Sin Offering

Cross References

Leviticus 1:1-17
Then the Lord called to Moses and spoke to him from the Tent of Meeting, saying, “Speak to the Israelites and tell them: When any of you brings an offering to the Lord, you may bring as your offering an animal from the herd or the flock. If his offering is a burnt offering from the herd, he is to present an unblemished male. He must bring it to the entrance...
Opening sacrificial context
Leviticus 5:1-19
“If someone sins by failing to testify when he hears a public charge about something he has witnessed, whether he has seen it or learned of it, he shall bear the iniquity. Or if a person touches anything unclean—whether the carcass of any unclean wild animal or livestock or crawling creature—even if he is unaware of it, he is unclean and guilty. Or if he...
Continuation of guilt-related instruction
Leviticus 6:24-30
And the Lord said to Moses, “Tell Aaron and his sons that this is the law of the sin offering: In the place where the burnt offering is slaughtered, the sin offering shall be slaughtered before the Lord; it is most holy. The priest who offers it shall eat it; it must be eaten in a holy place, in the courtyard of the Tent of Meeting.
Priestly instruction
Leviticus 8:14-17
Moses then brought the bull near for the sin offering, and Aaron and his sons laid their hands on its head. Moses slaughtered the bull, took some of the blood, and applied it with his finger to all four horns of the altar, purifying the altar. He poured out the rest of the blood at the base of the altar and consecrated it so that atonement could be made on...
Priestly ordination
Leviticus 9:8-11
So Aaron approached the altar and slaughtered the calf as a sin offering for himself. The sons of Aaron brought the blood to him, and he dipped his finger in the blood and applied it to the horns of the altar. And he poured out the rest of the blood at the base of the altar. On the altar he burned the fat, the kidneys, and the lobe of the liver from the sin...
Priestly ministry begins
Leviticus 16:1-34
Now the Lord spoke to Moses after the death of two of Aaron’s sons when they approached the presence of the Lord. And the Lord said to Moses: “Tell your brother Aaron not to enter freely into the Most Holy Place behind the veil in front of the mercy seat on the ark, or else he will die, because I appear in the cloud above the mercy seat. This is how Aaron...
Atonement culmination
Leviticus 17:11
For the life of the flesh is in the blood, and I have given it to you to make atonement for your souls upon the altar; for it is the blood that makes atonement for the soul.
Blood theology
Numbers 15:22-31
Now if you stray unintentionally and do not obey all these commandments that the Lord has spoken to Moses— all that the Lord has commanded you through Moses from the day the Lord gave them and continuing through the generations to come— and if it was done unintentionally without the knowledge of the congregation, then the whole congregation is to prepare...
Unintentional and defiant sin distinction
Psalm 19:12
Who can discern his own errors? Cleanse me from my hidden faults.
Hidden sin
Isaiah 53:10
Yet it was the Lord’s will to crush Him and to cause Him to suffer; and when His soul is made a guilt offering, He will see His offspring, He will prolong His days, and the good pleasure of the Lord will prosper in His hand.
Guilt offering trajectory
John 1:29
The next day John saw Jesus coming toward him and said, “Look, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!
Sin-bearing fulfillment
Romans 3:23-26
For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus. God presented Him as an atoning sacrifice in His blood through faith, in order to demonstrate His righteousness, because in His forbearance He had passed over the sins committed beforehand.
Atonement and righteousness
2 Corinthians 5:21
God made Him who knew no sin to be sin on our behalf, so that in Him we might become the righteousness of God.
Christ made sin
Hebrews 9:11-14
But when Christ came as high priest of the good things that have come, He went through the greater and more perfect tabernacle that is not made by hands and is not a part of this creation. He did not enter by the blood of goats and calves, but He entered the Most Holy Place once for all by His own blood, thus securing eternal redemption. For if the blood of...
Greater priest and better blood
Hebrews 10:1-14
For the law is only a shadow of the good things to come, not the realities themselves. It can never, by the same sacrifices offered year after year, make perfect those who draw near to worship. If it could, would not the offerings have ceased? For the worshipers would have been cleansed once for all, and would no longer have felt the guilt of their sins....
Final sacrifice
Hebrews 13:11-13
Although the high priest brings the blood of animals into the Holy Place as a sacrifice for sin, the bodies are burned outside the camp. And so Jesus also suffered outside the city gate, to sanctify the people by His own blood. Therefore let us go to Him outside the camp, bearing the disgrace He bore.
Outside the camp fulfillment
1 Peter 2:24
He Himself bore our sins in His body on the tree, so that we might die to sin and live to righteousness. “By His stripes you are healed.”
Sin-bearing

Passages

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