B'rit Hadasha
Messianic Jewish Synagogue
6320 Quail Hollow Rd.
Memphis, TN 38120
(901) 685-9267 ph
(901) 763-0028 fx
Weekly Torah Study
Saturdays, 9am
Shabbat Worship
Services
Saturdays, 10:30am
Nursery & Children's
classes available
Office hours:
Mon. 1-5pm
Tues.- Fri. 9am-5pm
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YOM KIPPUR
by Sharon Lindsay
The prophet
Daniel (Daniel 12:1-3), the psalmist David (Psalms 69:28), and John,
the writer of several books in the Brit Hadasha (Revelation 20:11-14)
tell us that there are books in heaven. At the end of earthly time,
one of those books, The Book of Life, will be opened and there Adonai
will find the names of every person who will be allowed to live
a joyful life in the world to come. According to Daniel, those whose
names are not inscribed within The Book of Life will experience
shame and everlasting contempt.
The primary focus of Yom Kippur, The Day of Atonement, is to be
certain that your name is inscribed in that all important Book of
Life. Yom Kippur is a serious day, a day of fasting and soul searching.
It is a day to petition God, to request mercy and to look for some
assurance that your name has been inscribed in the Book of Life
for at least one more year. It is a day to ask, “When the
Creator of heaven and earth returns to open the books of heaven
and judge each person, who will be able to face God’s Torah-perfect
standard?”
Historically, beginning with the tabernacle of Moses, excluding
the years between temples and times of oppression or captivity,
and ending with the destruction of Herod’s Temple in 70 CE,
a special once-a-year blood sacrifice was made on Yom Kippur to
atone for the sins of the people. The blood of a goat was carried
by the High Priest into The Most Holy Place and sprinkled on the
Seat of God’s Mercy which was the gold-plated lid over the
Ark of the Covenant. The presence of God Most Holy rested above
that spot. In later years, after the Ark of the Covenant had been
removed from the Temple, the blood was sprinkled where the Ark should
have been.
This ritual sacrifice which is detailed in Leviticus 16 was believed
to leave the people, at that point, in a state of purity that was
acceptable to God. But, Paul, one of the best known first century
Jewish rabbis, emphatically taught that the blood of animals was
totally insufficient for the cleansing of sin. (Hebrews 9) Centuries
before Rabbi Paul lived, King David wrote that only a work of God
could blot out the many times that he had not lived up to the standards
of Torah.(Psalms 51) A more perfect atoning sacrifice was required.
Now, for nearly 2000 years, there has been no Temple and, therefore,
no Yom Kippur sacrifices. Instead, the rabbis have offered these
six substitutions: Torah study, Torah observance, good deeds, living
in Israel, a person dying for someone, or attending Yom Kippur synagogue
services—all things that rest on man’s ability to perform
rather than the promise of a merciful God to save.
Only God can provide the perfect atoning sacrifice. He did this
through Yeshua the Messiah, Jesus of Nazareth. Both divine and human,
Yeshua (Jesus) lived on this Earth a Torah-perfect life. Then, He
gave up His life: our atoning sacrifice. Returning, to God the Father
in heaven after His resurrection, He carried His own atoning blood
into the heavenly throne room and sprinkled it on God’s Heavenly
Seat of Mercy—a Yom Kippur sacrifice for all mankind.
So when a person admits that it is impossible to live up to God’s
perfect standards and cries out to a merciful God to be covered
by the atoning blood of Messiah, then, he/she will be inscribed
in The Book of Life, not just for one year, but for eternity! So
how about yourself? Is your name written in the Lamb's Book of Life?
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