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Leviticus Storyline

Leviticus establishes that a holy God dwells with His redeemed people through a carefully ordered sacrificial system that exposes sin, provides atonement through substitution, trains the nation to distinguish clean from unclean in every dimension of life, and protects His holy name by requiring that all who draw near to Him, especially His priests, honor Him with precision, wholehearted devotion, and unblemished offerings.

Book Storylines

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Return to the storyline index when you want to compare the wider canonical movement of Scripture by book.

Major Movements
Opening

Leviticus 1-5

Leviticus 1 - Leviticus 5

The holy God provides an ordered way for His redeemed people to draw near through an acceptable sacrifice wholly offered before Him. By Leviticus 5, the holy God exposes hidden guilt, requires honest confession, provides merciful access to atonement, and insists that wrongs against Him be repaired.

Sets the book's opening burden from the available chapter or passage coverage.

Rising Tension

Leviticus 6-10

Leviticus 6 - Leviticus 10

The holy Lord requires His people to repair wrongs honestly and His priests to steward the altar and offerings faithfully. By Leviticus 10, those who draw near to the holy Lord must honor Him according to His command, with sober discernment, obedient service, and reverent handling of holy things.

Develops the book's central pressure points and theological movement.

Pivot

Leviticus 11-16

Leviticus 11 - Leviticus 16

The holy Lord trains His redeemed people to distinguish clean from unclean in daily life so that their ordinary existence reflects His holy claim upon them. By Leviticus 16, the holy Lord provides annual atonement through His appointed high priest, blood, substitution, confession, cleansing, and removal so that He may continue dwelling among His sinful and unclean people.

Marks the book's major turn in the available coverage.

Climax

Leviticus 17-21

Leviticus 17 - Leviticus 21

Because life belongs to the Lord and blood has been given by Him for atonement, Israel must bring sacrifice to His appointed altar, reject false worship, and never treat blood as common food. By Leviticus 21, those who draw near to offer the Lord's food must bear heightened holiness, because priestly nearness to God requires purity in death contact, mourning, marriage, household order, bodily wholeness, and sanctuary approach.

Carries the book toward its climactic emphasis.

Resolution

Leviticus 22-27

Leviticus 22 - Leviticus 27

The Lord's holy name must not be profaned by careless priests, unauthorized eating, or defective offerings, because He sanctifies Israel and redeemed them from Egypt to be their God. By Leviticus 27, voluntary devotion to the Lord must not be impulsive, manipulative, or casual, because persons, animals, houses, fields, firstborn, devoted things, and tithes are holy when given to the Lord and must be handled according to His command.

Closes the book's movement and final emphasis.

Storyline Themes

Atonement

Atonement is God's provision through which the guilt of sin is dealt with, reconciliation with Him is made possible, and His justice and mercy are upheld, ultimately accomplished through the sacrificial death of Jesus Christ.

Holiness

Holiness in Scripture describes God's absolute moral purity, uniqueness, and separation from sin, as well as the calling of His people to reflect His character through lives set apart for Him.

Priesthood

Priesthood is God's appointed means by which sinful humanity is brought into mediated relationship with Him through representation, sacrifice, intercession, and instruction, ultimately fulfilled in the perfect priesthood of Jesus Christ.

Redemption

Redemption is God's act of delivering people from bondage, guilt, and judgment by paying the necessary cost to restore them to Himself and to His purposes, ultimately accomplished through the saving work of Jesus Christ.

Sacrifice

Sacrifice is God's appointed means by which sin is addressed, worship is expressed, and reconciliation with God is symbolically and covenantally maintained, ultimately fulfilled in the once-for-all sacrificial death of Jesus Christ.

Presence of God

The presence of God is the biblical theme describing God's nearness to His creation and His people, expressed through His dwelling among them, guiding them, revealing Himself, and ultimately restoring full fellowship with humanity through Jesus Christ.

Temple

The temple is the appointed place where God's presence dwells among His people, where worship and sacrifice occur, and where the relationship between God and His covenant people is visibly expressed, ultimately fulfilled in Jesus Christ and consummated in the new creation.

How To Read This Book
  1. Read Leviticus as the answer to a single question: how does a holy God dwell with an unholy people?
  2. Do not read the sacrificial system as primitive ritual; read each offering type as a precise statement about sin, atonement, substitution, and access to God.
  3. Keep the Day of Atonement (chapter 16) at the structural center; everything before it prepares and everything after it extends from it.
  4. Read the holiness code (chapters 17-27) as the pattern of life for a people who live in the presence of the holy God , ethics flowing from worship, not apart from it.
  5. Let the repeated phrase 'I am the LORD' govern your reading; Leviticus is relentlessly about the character of God as the ground of every command.