Whoever coined the phrase, “Cleanliness is next to
godliness,” must have been thinking about this priestly ritual. Although it
might be more appropriate to say that cleanliness comes before you can get next to godliness. The priests were heading into
the presence of the most holy God but the Almighty was not concerned about the
spreading of germs, and all that washing couldn’t really make anyone clean
enough to approach God. God was concerned about what their physical hygiene
represented: holiness.
We don’t need priests to stand in for us today. We are our
own priests – each of us must be cleansed personally before we approach God.
How do we meet the requirements for ceremonial cleanliness? In Hebrews 9: 14 we
read that it is the blood of Christ that cleanses us. How do we apply the blood
for cleansing purposes? In Acts 22: 16, Paul says that after his conversion
experience, he was instructed by Ananias to get up, be baptized and wash his
sins away. And Peter writes, in I Peter 3: 21, that the water of baptism saves
us – not by removing dirt from the body but as a pledge of a good conscience
toward God.
Unlike the priests, we don’t have to rewash every time we
approach God. Jesus entered the Most Holy Place “once for all by his own blood”
(Hebrews 9: 12). Instead of offering many sacrifices, year after year, Christ’s
sacrifice is the only one we need for complete forgiveness.
Are you washed in the blood?
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