Day of Atonement
The Day of Atonement is the annual sanctuary-cleansing and people-cleansing rite in which the high priest enters the Most Holy Place with sacrificial blood, makes atonement for priest, sanctuary, altar, and congregation, and sends the live goat away bearing Israel's sins.
What is a cultic practice?
Definition: The Torah's cultic system — sacrifices, feasts, priestly rites, and sanctuary structure — is Israel's divinely ordered worship life. Each element carries theological meaning and a trajectory that points forward.
NT Connections: The New Testament explicitly applies many Torah worship patterns to Christ. This page shows those connections, ranked by how directly the NT makes the link.
How to read this page: Start with the Torah function, then trace the key passages, and see how the NT writers receive and apply the pattern.
In Leviticus 16, the Day of Atonement regulates the high priest's restricted entrance into the Most Holy Place after Nadab and Abihu's death. Through prescribed sacrifices, incense, blood application, confession over the live goat, and the people's self-denial, the rite cleanses the sanctuary from Israel's impurities and makes atonement for the priesthood and people.
Once each year, Israel was taught that sin defiles, access to God is holy, and atonement must be provided God's way. The high priest could not enter casually. Blood was brought before the Lord, and the sins of the people were symbolically carried away.
Hebrews 9 explicitly treats the Day of Atonement ritual — the high priest entering the Most Holy Place once per year with blood — as a type whose fulfillment is Christ entering the true heavenly sanctuary with His own blood, once for all. The author contrasts the earthly tabernacle's restricted annual access with Christ's definitive entry, arguing that the Levitical rite could not perfect the conscience of worshipers but served as a type pointing to Christ's redemptive work.
Hebrews 10 argues that the repeated Yom Kippur sacrifices — offered year after year — demonstrated their own inadequacy, functioning as annual reminders of sin rather than its removal. Christ's single offering accomplishes the definitive cleansing and sanctuary access that the Day of Atonement only anticipated, rendering the repeated rite obsolete.
Paul's use of hilastērion in Romans 3:25 draws directly on Day of Atonement vocabulary — the mercy seat was the locus of blood application on Yom Kippur. Paul applies this language to Christ, whom God publicly set forth as the place of propitiation through His blood, transferring the Day of Atonement's atonement function to Christ's death.
Hebrews presents Christ as the great high priest who has passed through the heavens, directly contrasting with the Levitical high priest's restricted annual entry through the veil. Because Christ has entered the true Most Holy Place, believers are now invited to draw near with confidence to the throne of grace — access that Yom Kippur explicitly denied to all but the high priest.
Hebrews describes Jesus as a forerunner who has entered on our behalf behind the veil — direct Day of Atonement imagery — as a high priest after the order of Melchizedek. The inner sanctuary behind the veil, entered only once yearly on Yom Kippur, is now permanently opened by Christ's entry.
Hebrews draws on the Day of Atonement's practice of burning the bodies of sacrificial animals outside the camp (Leviticus 16:27) to interpret Christ's suffering outside Jerusalem's gate. The author applies this typological logic to Christian discipleship, calling readers to go outside the camp bearing His reproach.
The heavenly altar scene in Revelation 8 — incense offered before God's throne, followed by fire cast upon the earth — echoes the incense rite central to the Day of Atonement, in which the high priest filled the Most Holy Place with incense smoke before applying blood. The heavenly sanctuary imagery carries the Yom Kippur pattern into eschatological fulfillment.
John's Passion narrative frames the crucifixion against Passover timing, but the atonement dimension of the death — the blood and water from Christ's side, the completed sacrificial work — carries the logic of Yom Kippur's blood application. John's high-priestly framing of Jesus throughout the Gospel makes the Day of Atonement a background for reading Christ's sacrificial death.
The Torah presents a repeated annual rite with restricted access and priestly mediation. The NT, especially Hebrews, develops the contrast between repeated Levitical entry and Christ's once-for-all priestly work. The trajectory is strong, but the OT profile must preserve the rite's covenantal and sanctuary-cleansing function before moving to fulfillment.
The Day of Atonement should not be treated as a vague ritual of self-reflection, a generic moral reset, or an isolated scapegoat metaphor. It is an integrated Torah rite involving sanctuary access, high priestly mediation, blood manipulation, confession, cleansing, and removal of sin. Christological use must respect the whole priestly and sanctuary frame.
Names the day as the climactic annual atonement event.
Key verb describing the priestly action by which impurity and guilt are dealt with before the LORD.
Marks the live goat ritual where sins are confessed and sent away into the wilderness.
Signals the restricted sanctuary space entered only under divine prescription.