Being an Old Testament priest was a demanding profession, full of rules and restrictions about what you must do and what you couldn’t do. For the one high priest, it was even more challenging. Within the first 5 books of our Bible (also called the Pentateuch, or the books of Moses) there are long lists of rules for these people to follow that didn’t apply to anyone else. And sometimes with these rules we find interesting pictures of Jesus, our High Priest. Today I’m writing about one example of that.
In Leviticus 21:13-15, God tells Moses, and then to the people through Moses, about who a high priest may marry:
“And he shall take a wife in her virginity. A widow, or a divorced woman, or a woman who has been defiled, or a prostitute, these he shall not marry. But he shall take as his wife a virgin of his own people, that he may not profane his offspring among his people, for I am the LORD who sanctifies him.”
These verses would be good advice for most people, but for high priests these things are required[1]. The point is to keep the high priest, and those closest to him, as holy and dedicated to God as possible. Because the high priesthood was an inherited role, “he may not profane his offspring among his people.” There was to be no question that this man’s children were not defiled in any way.
Today, we no longer have a high priest serving in the temple in Jerusalem for us, but what we do have is Jesus as our High Priest[2]. If He is our High Priest, do regulations about marriage have anything to do with Him? How do these Levitical rules apply to who Jesus chooses to marry, since He didn’t marry while He was on earth? These rules matter because in the New Testament, most notably in Revelation, the Christian church is the bride of Jesus Christ. The church is who He decided to marry.
But, in light of Leviticus 21, how does our High Priest Jesus “marry” his church without being defiled? None of us are spiritual “virgins.” Instead, we are a church full of sinners who wed themselves to dead gods, separating ourselves from the true God, and defiling ourselves in worship of other gods. Spiritually, we are prostitutes committing spiritual adultery with all the things we choose to worship that are not God.
So, how does Jesus follow the Levitical regulation to “take as his wife a virgin of his own people”?
The answer is that He sanctifies His people by His blood. In the Old Testament we are shown pictures of this concept. In David’s famous penitential prayer of Psalm 51, he asks God to “Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.” (verse 7). In Isaiah, God says to His people:
“Come now, let us reason together, says the LORD:
though your sins are like scarlet,
they shall be as white as snow;
though they are red like crimson,
they shall become like wool.” (verse 18)
Back in verse 15 of Leviticus 21, God said: “I am the Lord who sanctifies him.” Through the shedding of His blood, His death, and His resurrection, we are made as clean from our sin and idolatrous, adulterous worship as we could ever be. We are made “white as snow”. We are made to be acceptable in the eyes of a holy and just God. We are made to be a suitable bride for Jesus Christ, we become “a virgin of his own people,” with no trace of the times we rebelled against our one, true God. He is the one who sanctifies us.
In this rule that is seemingly irrelevant to modern Christians, there is a picture of the sacrifice of our Lord, and of the way He views His people. If we were not sanctified, He could not “marry” us. Do you believe that Jesus sees you as “white as snow”? The Bible says that His people are, otherwise, they would not be acceptable to Him. But we are sanctified if we accept Christ’s work on our behalf.
Pray for God to reassure us of this truth today! Pray for Him to wash away all of our guilt and shame. Pray that we would know that we, in spite of ourselves, are accepted because of what He’s done for us.
Amen.
[1] Because the Aaronic priesthood was hereditary, celibacy was not required, or even recommended. Marriage and procreation were encouraged, or the line would not continue.
[2] Hebrews 3:1, 4:14, 6:20