|
Volume 19 Number 1
September/October 2002
Gods Sign On Yom Kippur
By Rabbi Barney Kasdan
As we move into the changes of the Fall season, the Jewish community
is gearing up for the most important holy days in the biblical calendar.
After the long, dry summer we move into several festivals packed into
a 3-week period. The High Holy Days start with a focus on repentance at
Rosh Hashanah (New Year). Yet the 10 days following are even more intense
as we search our souls and evaluate our relationship with our Creator.
On the 10th day of the Jewish month, we enter into the most holy day of
them all known as Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement). This solemn time includes
a strict fast and numerous prayers as we seek to have our lives in order
as we appear before the King. This year Jews worldwide, including some
75,000 here in San Diego, will gather on September 15-16 for this annual
observance. Yet, it should be noted that the modern Yom Kippur service
has greatly evolved for the observance of biblical times. When the Temple
was standing in Jerusalem, the Holy Day was not only a time of prayer
and fasting but also of some vital animal sacrifices. After all, that
is the theme of Yom Kippur. Atonement and restoration must be bought by
an outside sacrifice. It is not something we can muster up ourselves,
even with our most sincere intentions. In the Torah itself (Leviticus
16), we are told that we must have the priest present a peculiar offering;
namely, the 2 goats. One animal, called the Chatat/Sin Offering, was to
be brought before the priest who in turn would lay his hands on the goat
as he confessed the sins of Israel. After the confession, the goat was
then slain as a symbolic atonement for the sins of the nation. The second
goat has quite a different task. As the priest prayed over this animal,
it was then set aside and not to be killed. In contrast to the sin offering
goat, this second goat was then to be set free in the wilderness. It was
fittingly called the Azazel or"scapegoat" in that it escaped
while carrying away the sins of the people. In the Talmud we are told
another fascinating detail about the scapegoat. It became a tradition
in the days of the Temple to tie a crimson red thread to the horns of
the goat to illustrate the darkness of sin. Yet we are told that every
year the thread of the scapegoat turned from crimson to white to clearly
show that the sins of the people had been forgiven. This was interpreted
as a fulfillment of the verse in Isaiah 1:18 "though your sins be
a scarlet they shall be white as snow."
For hundreds of years, generation after generation, the ceremony of the
crimson thread was fulfilled. That is, until one somber Yom Kippur day
in the first century AD. In the Talmud it states "During the last
forty years before the destruction of the Temple, the lot for the Lord
did not come up in the right hand; nor did the crimson-colored strap become
white" (Tractate Yoma 39b). This is an astounding statement when
one realizes that the Second Temple was destroyed in 70 AD. The thread
stopped turning white some 40 years previous, meaning around 30 AD. Up
until that time God had consistently given a sign of forgiveness to our
people. But something happened around 30 AD that changed things. Call
it a coincidence that at that very time a man came to Israel named Yeshua
claiming to be our long-awaited Messiah. He lived a perfect life and yet
died at that time as an atonement for the sins of Israel and indeed the
whole world. If it is true that He paid the full price for us, it makes
perfect sense why the crimson thread never changed again. There was no
longer a need for the scapegoat of Yom Kippur because Yeshua of Nazareth
completed the work. This incident with the goat was such a dramatic sign
that it is recorded in Jewish tradition. As believers in Yeshua (both
Jews and Gentiles), may we have a fresh vision of what God has done for
us this High Holy Day season. It is my prayer that as we enter the Days
of Awe, many of our people will consider Gods sign on Yom Kippur.
LShana Tova Tikateyvu!
©2002 Kehilat Ariel Messianic Synagogue. All rights reserved.
URL:http://www.kehilatariel.org/9_10_2002.html
Last Modified Setptember 20, 2002
|