Sacrificial Blood Application
The priestly act of applying sacrificial blood by sprinkling, smearing, or placing it on altars, persons, sanctuary objects, or covenant parties.
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.
The Torah uses blood application in covenant ratification at Sinai, purification offerings, ordination rites, and the Day of Atonement. Blood may be thrown against the altar, placed on horns, sprinkled before the veil or mercy seat, or put on priests during ordination. The action visibly mediates purification, consecration, and covenant relation.
In Torah worship, blood was not merely shed; it was applied. Priests used blood in specific ways to purify, consecrate, make atonement, and enact covenant realities according to God's command.
Hebrews recounts Moses' sprinkling of blood in covenant inauguration and states that under the law nearly everything is cleansed with blood, framing blood application as preparatory to Christ's superior sacrifice.
Hebrews contrasts the blood of goats and calves with Christ entering the greater sanctuary by His own blood, securing eternal redemption and cleansing the conscience.
Believers have confidence to enter the Most Holy Place by the blood of Jesus, with hearts sprinkled clean from a guilty conscience.
Peter speaks of believers being chosen for obedience to Jesus Christ and sprinkling by His blood, applying covenant-blood imagery to Christian identity.
The NT, especially Hebrews, treats the blood of Christ as the decisive reality to which repeated blood applications pointed. Christ's blood cleanses conscience, inaugurates covenant, grants access, and accomplishes what animal blood could only signify and regulate.
This entity is the action of applying blood, not the entire sacrificial system and not one particular sacrifice. It should be joined where the text emphasizes blood manipulation: sprinkling, smearing, placing, or applying.