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Old Testament Sacrifices and New Testament Fulfillment: A Bible Study Outline
The Premise
When we compare the Old Testament to the New Testament (particularly from a Protestant perspective), we might initially think many things have been done away with:- We don't have priests anymore
- We don't sacrifice animals anymore
- We don't get circumcised anymore
- We don't obey the commandments anymore
Upon closer examination, we discover that all these elements still exist in transformed form:
- There IS a High Priest in the NT (Christ)
- We ARE called a royal race of priests (1 Peter 2:9)
- There WAS a Lamb sacrificed (Christ, the Lamb of God)
- Our hearts ARE circumcised (Romans 2:29, Colossians 2:11)
Part 1: Understanding Old Testament Sacrifices
The Basics: Who, What, When, Where, Why
Who performed sacrifices?Early in biblical history, patriarchs served as priests for their families:
- Cain and Abel (Genesis 4)
- Noah (Genesis 8:20)
- Abraham (Genesis 15, 22)
- Job (Job 1:5)
- Aaron and his sons were consecrated as priests (Exodus 28-29)
- The tribe of Levi was set apart for priestly service (Numbers 3)
- This formal priesthood served Israel as they became a nation needing organized worship structure
Offerings vs. Sacrifices
Not all offerings were sacrifices, and not all sacrifices were specifically for sin:Types of sacrifices/offerings included:
- Sin offerings - for atonement of specific sins (Leviticus 4)
- Guilt offerings - for restitution and atonement (Leviticus 5-6)
- Burnt offerings - complete consecration to God (Leviticus 1)
- Peace/Fellowship offerings - thanksgiving and communion with God (Leviticus 3)
- Grain offerings - tribute and thanksgiving (Leviticus 2)
- Covenant ratification sacrifices - establishing covenant relationship (Genesis 15, Exodus 24)
Corporate vs. Individual
Sacrifices could be offered:- Individually - when a person sinned (Leviticus 4:27-35)
- Corporately - for the whole nation, especially on the Day of Atonement (Leviticus 16)
- On behalf of others - the high priest for the people, Job for his children
The Process: Confession and Determination
A crucial but often overlooked element: When you sinned, you had to go to the priest and confess (Leviticus 5:5). The confession determined what sacrifice was required:- Small sins = doves or pigeons (especially for the poor)
- Medium sins = lambs or goats
- Serious sins = bulls or heifers
The Requirement: Perfect Animals
This is critical to understanding the system. The animals had to be without blemish (Hebrew: tamim - complete, whole, perfect):Key passages on unblemished animals:
- Leviticus 22:19-21 - "you shall offer of your own free will a male without blemish from the cattle, from the sheep, or from the goats... whatever has a defect, you shall not offer, for it shall not be acceptable"
- Deuteronomy 17:1 - "You shall not sacrifice to the LORD your God a bull or sheep which has any blemish or defect, for that is an abomination to the LORD your God"
- Leviticus 22:22-24 - Specific defects excluded: blind, broken, maimed, having sores, bruised or crushed
- Exodus 12:5 (Passover lamb) - "without blemish, a male of the first year"
- Leviticus 22:27 - Animal must be at least 7 days old
- Exodus 12:46 / Numbers 9:12 - "nor shall you break one of its bones" (Passover lamb)
- Free from any disease or sickness
- Free from broken bones
- Free from spots or blemishes
- In its prime (first year, not aged)
- The best of the flock or herd
The Problem: God Grows Weary of Sacrifices
Despite instituting the sacrificial system Himself, God declares through the prophets that He is tired of their sacrifices:- Isaiah 1:11-14 - "I have had enough of burnt offerings... I take no pleasure in the blood of bulls and lambs and goats... Stop bringing meaningless offerings!"
- Amos 5:21-24 - "I hate, I despise your religious festivals... Away with the noise of your songs!"
- 1 Samuel 15:22 - "Does the LORD delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices as much as in obeying the LORD? To obey is better than sacrifice"
- Hosea 6:6 - "For I desire mercy and not sacrifice, and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings"
- Micah 6:6-8 - "With what shall I come before the LORD?... He has shown you, O man, what is good: to act justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God"
Because ritual without repentance is worthless. They were:
- Going through the motions mechanically
- Treating sacrifice as a transaction: sin → sacrifice → back to sinning
- Living unjustly while maintaining religious ritual
- Missing the heart change that sacrifice was meant to represent
OT version: "I've got my sin offering lined up, so I can do whatever I want. I'll just bring a lamb next week."
NT version: "Grace covers all my sins, so it doesn't matter what I do. Might as well keep sinning so grace can abound!" (Romans 6:1-2 - Paul explicitly rejects this)
Early Examples: Before the Law
Cain and Abel (Genesis 4:3-5)The first recorded offerings in Scripture:
- Abel brought firstborn of his flock with their fat portions (specific, best quality, involving blood)
- Cain brought "some" fruit of the ground (generic, unspecified, no blood)
- God accepted Abel's, rejected Cain's
- Hebrews 11:4 says Abel's sacrifice was "by faith"
Job's Sacrifices (Job 1:5)
Job would rise early and offer burnt offerings for each of his children, thinking "It may be that my sons have sinned and cursed God in their hearts."
This raises questions:
- Can we sacrifice for others? (Yes - high priest did for the nation)
- For unknown sins? (Yes - Leviticus 4:13-14, 5:17-19 addresses this)
- Should we sacrifice "just in case"? (Not required, but not forbidden - Job's conscientiousness)
Some of Abraham's sacrifices were not primarily about sin atonement but about covenant ratification - God passing between the pieces as a smoking furnace and torch, establishing His promise.
Part 2: The New Testament Fulfillment
Jesus Said: I Did Not Come to Abolish, But to Fulfill
Matthew 5:17 - "Do not think that I came to destroy the Law or the Prophets. I did not come to destroy but to fulfill."The entire sacrificial system in the Law was pointing forward to Christ. Every lamb slain, every bull offered, every Day of Atonement - all of it was the shadow, and Christ's death was the substance (Colossians 2:17, Hebrews 10:1).
He didn't abolish the requirement for sacrifice - He fulfilled it by BEING the sacrifice.
There Was a Sacrifice in the New Testament
The sacrificial system didn't disappear - it was completed:- John 1:29 - "Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world"
- 1 Corinthians 5:7 - "Christ our Passover lamb has been sacrificed"
- 1 Peter 1:19 - "the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot"
- Revelation 5:6, 12 - Christ as "the Lamb who was slain"
Christ: The Perfect Sacrifice
Jesus met every requirement that had been established for centuries:He was without blemish:
- Sinless - 2 Corinthians 5:21, Hebrews 4:15, 1 Peter 2:22
- Even His enemies couldn't bring valid charges - Pilate: "I find no fault in Him" (John 19:4)
- John 19:33-36 - When the soldiers came to break the legs of those crucified, Jesus was already dead, so they didn't break His bones
- John explicitly says: "For these things were done that the Scripture should be fulfilled, 'Not one of His bones shall be broken'" (Exodus 12:46, Psalm 34:20)
Once for All
The critical difference from the OT system:Hebrews 10:11-14 - "And every priest stands ministering daily and offering repeatedly the same sacrifices, which can never take away sins. But this Man, after He had offered one sacrifice for sins forever, sat down at the right hand of God... For by one offering He has perfected forever those who are being sanctified."
The OT sacrifices were:
- Repeated - daily, yearly, constantly
- Incomplete - "can never take away sins" (Hebrews 10:4)
- Ongoing - priests never sat down because the work was never done
- Once for all - "one sacrifice for sins forever"
- Complete - "It is finished" (John 19:30)
- Final - He sat down (the work of atonement is done)
So What About Us?
The pattern continues, transformed:OLD TESTAMENT:
- Priests (Levitical priesthood)
- Sacrifices (repeated, animals)
- Perfect lamb (examined for blemishes)
- Blood covering (temporary)
- Circumcision (physical sign of covenant)
- High Priest (Christ) + Royal Priesthood (believers - 1 Peter 2:9)
- One Sacrifice (Christ, once for all)
- Perfect Lamb (Christ, no broken bones, without spot)
- Blood atonement (complete and final)
- Circumcision of the heart (Romans 2:29)
Part 3: Important Implications
Grace is Not a License to Sin
Just as "obedience is better than sacrifice" in the OT, this principle still applies in the NT.The danger of "cheap grace":
- Treating Christ's sacrifice as permission to sin freely
- Romans 6:1-2 - "What shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound? Certainly not!"
- Jude 1:4 - Warning against those who "turn the grace of our God into lewdness"
This doesn't mean stumbling or struggling with sin (1 John 1:8-10 acknowledges believers sin and provides for confession and forgiveness). It means:
- Deliberate, ongoing, unrepentant lifestyle sin
- Knowing what's right and choosing wrong anyway
- Treating grace as a license rather than power to change
- No intention of repentance or change
- Stumbling - a believer who falls, confesses, repents, and fights against sin (covered by grace)
- Willful sin - deliberately continuing in sin with no intention of changing (trampling grace)
We Have Even Less Excuse Than They Did
In the OT, the saints had:- External law written on stone tablets
- Priests as intermediaries
- Repeated sacrifices
- The Holy Spirit writing the law on our hearts (Jeremiah 31:33, Hebrews 10:16)
- The Spirit dwelling IN us (1 Corinthians 6:19)
- Power to overcome sin (Romans 8:13, Galatians 5:16)
If Abraham, Moses, David, and Daniel could pursue righteousness without the indwelling Spirit - what excuse do we have WITH the Helper living inside us?
Are We Re-Crucifying Christ by Continuing to Sin?
Hebrews 6:6 speaks of those who fall away and "crucify again for themselves the Son of God, and put Him to an open shame."While Christ's sacrifice was complete and doesn't need to be repeated, there is something about treating His grace cheaply that dishonors the sacrifice. When we presume on grace to continue in sin, we're essentially saying His death wasn't sufficient to change us - just to cover us.
God preferred obedience over sacrifice in the OT. He still prefers obedience in the NT - not as a means of earning salvation, but as the proper response to the completed sacrifice of Christ.
Conclusion (To Be Continued)
This study establishes the foundation: the Old Testament sacrificial system, with all its requirements and patterns, was pointing forward to Christ. He fulfilled it perfectly - the spotless Lamb, the final sacrifice, the once-for-all atonement.But fulfillment doesn't mean elimination. The structure didn't vanish - it was completed in Christ. We still have priests (a royal priesthood), we still have a sacrifice (Christ), we still have circumcision (of the heart), and as we'll explore further - we still have commandments to keep.
The question isn't whether these things continue, but how they've been transformed through Christ's fulfillment of the Law and the Prophets.