|
Significance of the
Red Heifer: Christ Crucified Outside the Camp
by Gerald L. Finneman
The heifer, unlike the par
"bull," was not usually used in the Old Testament as a
sacrificial animal. The red heifer was the exception. This animal was
slaughtered and burned outside the camp (Num. 19:1-9). The ashes were
preserved for future use. The ashes were to be kept for a "water
separation," or a "purification for sin." (vv 9, 17-22).
That ceremony was to remove defilement incurred through contact with the
dead (vv 11-16). In Hebrews 9:13 is found a referral to this custom when
writing of the effectiveness of Christ's blood for the forgiveness of
sins.
The word in Numbers 19 for
heifer is parah (paw raw'). This is the feminine gender of the
term for "bullock." It means a cow, a kine, or a calf or young
cow. The red heifer was to be "without spot" and without a
yoke typifying Christ's voluntary coming to redeem us and His sinless
character even though He took our sins as His own.
The red heifer was similar
to, yet different from, the other offerings for sin. Nevertheless, the
purpose was the same. It was a sin offering. However, the blood was not
individually applied to the sinner. The blood is mentioned only in
relationship to the sacrifice, when the priest sprinkled it toward the
tabernacle seven times. Neither was the heifer offered within the
confines of the court as were the other sacrifices. The blood of this
slain animal was not carried into the first apartment of the tabernacle.
It was not sprinkled before the veil. Neither was there a fingerprint, a
blood print, placed upon the horns of the altar of incense as a record
of the sin committed, confessed and forgiven.
The sacrifice of the red
heifer was not directly connected with the regular and usual worship
service of the sanctuary. The ceremony was conducted outside the camp.
The offering of the red heifer was not only for the Israelite, but also
for the stranger or gentile among them. (Num. 19:10). This offering was
not a regular offering, only an occasional ceremony. It was universal in
its scope.
The word "red"
used here (vs 2) is adom'. It is related to the words adam
and ground (or earth) [ada'mah]. The words "red"
"Adam" and "ground" all come from the same root word
'dm. (In Lam. 4:7 the word adam is translated
"ruddy"). In the beginning God made adam out of the
ground (ada'mah) (Gen. 2:7). When Adam sinned all of creation was
altered. The created structure of earth (ada'mah) was violated.
Because of adam’s sin, the ada'mah brings forth thorns
and thistles thus making adam's tilling of the ada'mah
much more labor intensive (Gen. 3:17,18,23). Finally after a lifetime of
toil, adam must return to the ada'mah from which he was
made (Gen. 3:19).
However, from adam
God promised to bring forth a lifegiver (Gen. 3:15). The woman ('ishsha)
was the physical counterpart of the man (Gen. 2:23, 24). Woman used in a
collective sense such as "born of a woman" indicates man's
mortality with his inherent frailties. (See Job 14:1; 15:14; 25:4.). The
last Adam was to be "born of a woman" to redeem those who are
under the condemnation of the law (Gal. 4:4, 5). In the first three
chapters of Genesis we have the creation-fall-redemption pattern and
model that guides us through the study of the Patriarchal, the
Levitical, and the Christian ages revealed in both the Old and New
Testaments.
The ceremony of the red
heifer is most significant in the creation-fall-redemption model. Man
was cast out of the paradise garden of Eden. At the end of his life he
was consigned to the ground from which he came. But Christ, the second
Adam, who was above all law, came under the law to redeem man. He went
outside the gate to become the curse of God in order to redeem Adam's
failure. The red heifer was to be one upon which a yoke had never been
placed. This signified the voluntary offer of Himself for us. The only
cord that bound Him was the cord of His own love for us. Christ was
above all law. But He came under the jurisdiction and the condemnation
of His violated moral law.
The red heifer was a
congregational, or corporate, offering (Num. 19:1). It was to be offered
outside the camp as an impure thing, typifying Christ who was made to be
sin and a curse for us. He suffered outside the established order of
things (Heb. 13:12). Outside the camp, Christ as the son of Adam (earthy-red)
came in red apparel—red with His own blood which was the blood of
mankind, red with the blood of His enemies. Although enemies, He
reconciled us to God, through His death (Isa. 63:1-3; Rom. 5:10).
The heifer was to be
totally consumed with nothing remaining but ashes. This typified the
extent to which the last Adam would go. He offered Himself, both soul
and body, as a sacrifice made by fire (2 Cor. 5:21; Isa. 9:18, Psa.
22:14). When Jesus spoke of His death, He never called it a sleep as in
the first death. He spoke of it as it really was—eternal death,
separation from the Father, the equivalent of what the Bible calls the
second death. Hell is where both soul and body are destroyed (Matt.
10:28). This is the depth to which Christ went in order to save the
world. He went to hell for us. He offered His soul for us (Isa. 53:12).
The burning to ashes represents the total consumption and destruction of
sin and sinners (Mal. 4:1, 3). This is the full extent covered in the
infinite sacrifice to which Christ gave himself! He took our place as
the Sin-bearer. Yea, more than this. He became sin itself in order that
He might destroy him who had the power of sin and death (Heb. 2: 14,15).
The ashes were sufficient
for all the people. When a person or a family needed purification, a
fresh heifer was not required to be sacrificed. One was sufficient for
all, including the sojourning stranger (Num. 19:10). So the sacrifice of
Christ is sufficient for everyone. It is everlastingly efficacious.
There is enough virtue in His sacrifice for the sins of the world. (1
John 2:2). The ashes were stored for all future needs. So the sacrifice
of Christ is laid up for us as an inexhaustible fountain of merit to
which we have daily access for the purging of our consciences (Heb.
9:13,14; Zech. 13:1).
Further, the red heifer
was offered alone. Christ was all alone. There is but one sin-bearer and
He trod the winepress alone. He endured the contradiction (hostility) of
sinners (those he came to save) against himself, alone (Heb. 12:3).
And it is of interest here
to note that the person who offered the red heifer himself became
unclean. The only way he could be purified was by the ashes of that
offering. So it is with those who crucified Christ. Man became guilty
and defiled by sacrificing Christ. And it is by that very same sacrifice
that the sin and guilt which crucified Him cleanses us. It is by virtue
of the same blood which we shed, on Calvary, that we are cleansed from
our guilt through faith. The sacrifice of Christ pollutes the clean
(those who suppose they are so) by their guilt in crucifying Him; and
that same sacrifice cleanses those who are unclean. Christ went outside
the camp of heaven and became the accursed of God for the fallen human
race. In His being cursed, He redeemed us from the curse (Gal. 3:13). He
was "made to be sin for us, that we might be made the righteousness
of God in Him."(2 Cor. 5:21).
The sacrifice of the red
heifer was the cross in type. It was designed to create an influence in
favor of the cross, even where there was no interest. It was the means
to move the world. That sacrifice, accomplished outside the camp of
Israel, was witnessed by heathen passers-by. The offering was itself a
call to all who were unclean, and helpless and perishing. It was an
invitation to come for purification. It drew the attention of those
outside the confines of the camp of Israel as well as Israel. It was the
gospel declaration to "Look unto Me and be ye saved, all the ends
of the earth!" (Isa. 45:22).
The crucified Christ draws
everyone to Himself (John 12:32). A person must exert himself from being
drawn to Christ or he will be pulled to Him. One must willingly take and
keep himself away or he will be led to the foot of the cross. More than
this, he will have to tear himself away from the mighty drawing
influence of the Holy Spirit. God has made it hard for the willful
sinner to be lost.
The red heifer, sacrificed
outside the camp, was the gospel of Jesus Christ hanging upon the cross
for the lost race. In the Levitical age it was the message, the
doctrine, the argument and the warning to the impenitent. It was
encouragement for the defiled and the sorrowing. It was the hope of
every believer. It was designed to awaken an interest in the minds of
men to cause them to fix their eyes on Christ. Christ and Him crucified
was typified in the sacrifice of the red heifer. And in this type there
was no other like it that was so characterized by clear, precise and
terse expression of the far-reaching gospel of Christ crucified.
Spirit of Prophecy
Statements Regarding
Corporate Sacrifice for Corporate Sin
As Adam and Eve were
banished from Eden for transgressing the law of God, so Christ was to
suffer without the boundaries of the holy place. He died outside the
camp, where felons and murderers were executed. There He trod the
winepress alone, bearing the penalty that should have fallen on the
sinner. How deep and full of significance are the
words, "Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being
made a curse for us." He went forth without the camp, thus
showing that He gave His life not only for the Jewish nation, but for
the whole world. …
Christ was indeed enduring
the contradiction of sinners against himself. But every pang of
suffering that he bore helped tear away the foundation of the enemy's
kingdom. Satan bruised Christ's heel, but Christ bruised Satan's head.
Through death the Saviour destroyed him that had the power of death. In
the very act of grasping his prey, death was vanquished; for by dying,
Christ brought to light life and immortality through the gospel. Never
was the Son of God more beloved by his Father, by the heavenly family,
and by the inhabitants of the unfallen worlds, than when he humbled
himself to bear disgrace, humiliation, shame, and abuse. By becoming
the sin-bearer, he lifted from the human race the curse of sin. In
his own body he paid the penalty of that on which the power of Satan
over humanity is founded—sin.
Not that sin might become
righteousness, and transgression of the law a virtue, did Christ die. He
died that sin might be made to appear exceeding sinful, the hateful
thing that it is. By his death he became the possessor of the keys of
hell and of death. Satan could no longer reign without a rival, and be
reverenced as a god. Temples had been erected to him, and human
sacrifices offered on his altars. But the emancipation papers of the
race have been signed by the blood of the Son of God. A way has been
opened for the message of hope and mercy to be carried to the ends of
the earth. Now, whosoever will may take hold of God's strength, and make
peace with him. The heathen are no longer to be wrapped in the
darkness of superstition. The gloom is to disappear before the
bright beams of the Sun of righteousness. (YI June 28, 1900).
The children of Israel
were anciently commanded to make an offering for the entire
congregation to purify, them from ceremonial defilement. This
sacrifice was a red heifer and represented the more perfect offering
that should redeem from the pollution of sin. This was an
occasional sacrifice for the purification of all those who had
necessarily or accidentally touched the dead. All who came in contact
with death in any way were considered ceremonially unclean. This was
to forcibly impress the minds of the Hebrews with the fact that death
came in consequence of sin and therefore is a representative of sin.
The one heifer, the one ark, the one brazen
serpent, impressively point to the one great offering, the
sacrifice of Christ.
This heifer was to be
red, which was a symbol of blood. It must be without spot or blemish,
and one that had never borne a yoke. Here, again, Christ was
typified. The Son of God came voluntarily to accomplish the work of
atonement. There was no obligatory yoke upon Him, for He was
independent and above all law. The angels, as God's intelligent
messengers, were under the yoke of obligation; no personal sacrifice
of theirs could atone for the guilt of fallen man. Christ alone was
free from the claims of the law to undertake the redemption of the
sinful race. He had power to lay down His life and to take it up
again. "Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to
be equal with God." (4T 120, 121).
The sacrificial heifer was
conducted without the camp and slain in the most imposing manner. Thus
Christ suffered without the gates of Jerusalem, for Calvary was outside
the city walls. This was to show that Christ did not die for the
Hebrews alone, but for all mankind. He proclaims to a fallen world
that He has come to be their Redeemer and urges them to accept the
salvation He offers them. The heifer having been slain in a most solemn
manner, the priest, clothed in pure white garments, took the blood in
his hands as it issued from the body of the victim and cast it toward
the temple seven times. "And having an high priest over the house
of God; let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith,
having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies
washed with pure water." (4T 121).
The body of the heifer
was burned to ashes, which signified a whole and ample sacrifice. The
ashes were then gathered up by a person uncontaminated by contact with
the dead and placed in a vessel containing water from a running
stream. This clean and pure person then took a cedar stick with
scarlet cloth and a bunch of hyssop, and sprinkled the contents of the
vessel upon the tent and the people assembled. This ceremony was
repeated several times in order to be thorough and was done as a
purification from sin. (4T 121, 122).
Thus Christ, in His own
spotless righteousness, after shedding His precious blood, enters into
the holy place to cleanse the sanctuary. And there the crimson current
is brought into the service of reconciling God to man. Some may look
upon this slaying of the heifer as a meaningless ceremony, but it was
done by the command of God and bears a deep significance that has not
lost its application to the present time.
The priest used cedar and
hyssop, dipping them into the cleansing water and sprinkling the
unclean. This symbolized the blood of Christ spilled to cleanse us from
moral impurities. The repeated sprinklings illustrate the
thoroughness of the work that must be accomplished for the repenting
sinner. All that he has must be consecrated. Not only should his own
soul be washed clean and pure, but he should strive to have his family,
his domestic arrangements, his property, and his entire belongings
consecrated to God.
After the tent had been
sprinkled with hyssop, over the door of those cleansed was written: I am
not my own; Lord, I am Thine. Thus should it be with those who profess
to be cleansed by the blood of Christ. God is no less exacting now than
He was in olden times. The psalmist, in his prayer, refers to this
symbolic ceremony when he says: "Purge me with hyssop, and I
shall be clean: wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow."
"Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within
me." "Restore unto me the joy of Thy salvation; and uphold me
with Thy free spirit." (4T 122).
The blood of Christ
is efficacious, but it needs to be applied continually. God not
only wants His servants to use the means He has entrusted to them for
His glory, but He desires them to make a consecration of themselves to
His cause. If you, my brethren, have become selfish and are
withholding from the Lord that which you should cheerfully give to His
service, then you need the blood of sprinkling thoroughly applied,
consecrating you and all your possessions to God. (4T 122, 323).
My much-respected
brethren, you have not that earnest and unselfish devotion to the work
of God that He requires of you. You have given your attention to
temporal matters. You have trained your minds for business in order to
thereby benefit yourselves. But God calls for you to come into closer
union with Him, that He may mold and train you for His work. A solemn
statement was made to ancient Israel that the man who should remain
unclean and refuse to purify himself should be cut off from among
the congregation. This has a special meaning for us. If it was
necessary in ancient times for the unclean to be purified by the blood
of sprinkling, how essential for those living in the perils of
the last days, and exposed to the temptations of Satan, to have the
blood of Christ applied to their hearts daily. "For if the
blood of bulls and of goats, and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the
unclean, sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh: how much more shall
the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered Himself
without spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve the
living God?" (4T 123).
|