Exodus 24:1-18 · The Covenant Confirmed
Poured Out for Many
Exodus 24:1-18, Mark 14:12-26
Sermon
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And Moses took the blood and threw it upon the people, and said, "Behold the blood of the covenant which the LORD has made with you in accordance with these words." (Exodus 24:8)

The symbol of blood is both an attraction and a revulsion to Christian piety. For some, it is a rich expression of religious feeling. The hymnwriter says: "There is a fountain filled with blood, drawn from Immanuel’s veins; And sinners plunged beneath that flood Lose all their guilty stains." (W. Cowper, 1779)

However, others feel that the Christian religion should rise above such primal imagery. Christianity, they say, is a mature, spiritual religion. It is regressive to mix in such materialistic imagery as blood. This may even translate into feelings of ambivalence about taking Holy Communion, because of its reference to Christ’s blood poured out for many.

The ancient Hebrews who gathered under Moses at Mount Sinai to seal their covenant in blood, may not have understood the Rh factor or the mysteries of hemoglobin. But they did understand that blood stood for life. Quite naturally, their religious instincts guided them to the conclusion that blood was sacred, for it was life. Everything that touches life is in close contact with God, who is the origin of all life.

For the Hebrews, this understanding of blood brought three immediate consequences:

a. The first was ethical. Murder is a violation of God’s Law. To spill another person’s blood is to deprive God of God’s own power over life and death. Therefore, it is wrong.

b. The second consequence was a ritual one. Blood is not to be consumed. Blood, like life, belongs only to God and is not to be eaten. Kosher food laws, in which a rabbi verifies that food has been properly bled before it is blessed and consumed, have their origin here.

c. The third consequence was liturgical. Because blood is linked to life and therefore to God, it may appropriately be used in acts of worship, such as the covenant-making at Mount Sinai.

To the Hebrew people gathered there, Moses reads God’s Word, detailing God’s expectations of them. They solemnly swear to do as God wants. Then Moses seals the covenant between the Hebrews and God in blood, the blood of an innocent victim. Half of the blood he throws upon the altar (symbol for God’s presence): half of the blood he throws on the people.

With blood, the Lord and the Hebrews are bound together in an indissoluble covenant. Yahweh will always be her God. Israel will always belong to THE LORD.

The Covenant with Israel, which Moses seals in blood, is a pre-figuration of the New Covenant in Christ. One of the great themes of Covenant Theology is the way in which the Old Covenant is understood to foreshadow the New:

  • Pre-Figuration Fulfillment
  • Noah’s Flood Baptism
  • The faith of Abraham The faith of the church and Sarah and the individual Christian
  • Circumcision Baptism
  • The Law, given on The New Law, given in a Mount Sinai sermon atop a mount
  • The exile in Babylon The sinner’s exile and and restoration restoration into the new Jerusalem, the church
  • The Passover
  • The Eucharist

The New Covenant reveals what was only dimly perceived in the Old. The New Covenant perfects and fulfills that which was begun in the Old. The New Israel takes the religious ideas of the Old Israel and re-wires them completely, transforming their meaning.

The New Testament story of the suffering and death of Christ does exactly that with the symbol of blood. This was not a quantum leap forward in religious development. For centuries, people had begun to question the use of blood in religious rituals. The Greeks, of course, had long thought that such things were quite beneath them. Too materialistic! Even some Jewish prophets agreed. They began to make provocative statements such as "I desire steadfast love and not sacrifice, the knowledge of God, rather than burnt offerings." (Hosea 6:6) Many Jews were content simply to pour out drops of wine on the table at Passover time, in remembrance of the blood shed in the Exodus.

By the time of Jesus, sacrifices and blood rituals were clearly on the wane. There were still plenty of people around who believed in them. But by Jesus’ time, the synagogue, not the Temple, was the backbone of Jewish religious life. Enough Jews had "outgrown" the concept of sacrifice, making it only a matter of time. The refinement of religious ideas is a difficult trend to reverse.

If blood was on the way out in liturgy by the time of Jesus, why do we hear so much about it in the New Testament? The answer is a simple one: God moves when humankind is ready! Covenant Theology affirms a God who is actively involved in the human race and its religious development. God grows with us, so to speak.

If you’re looking for a religion that never changes, you’ve picked the wrong one. The Christian faith is constantly evolving, constantly growing in its perception of God’s Kingdom. Each generation adds some new insight, some new perception.

The early church was on the cutting edge in its re-working of the concept of blood in religion. The New Testament boldly proclaims that the blood sacrifices of the Temple are now obsolete. The sacrifices of Jesus’ blood upon the cross is the final, perfect sacrifice. Any further sacrifices are unnecessary, for Jesus’ blood is sufficient to cover the sins of all, forever.

When early Christians use the word "sacrifice," they aren’t talking anymore about animals in the Temple at Jerusalem. Instead, they refer to Christ’s sacrifice on Calvary. When they describe their early Eucharists as a sacrifice, what they mean is that in the Eucharist the church offers a sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving. Most significantly, Christians begin to talk of themselves as sacrifices, about witnessing to their faith by being "living sacrifices, holy and acceptable to God." (Romans 12:1)20

The early Christians took the Hebrew ideas about blood and sacrifice and totally revolutionized them. Jesus is proclaimed as the innocent victim whose blood is shed for many. His is the sacrifice that ends all sacrifices. The blood that seals this New Covenant is his own blood. And those who drink from this cup, at the Lord’s Table, share in this Covenant.

That’s what blood means in Christian worship today. And if you still don’t feel all that comfortable with it, let me ask you this question: What makes you think that you are supposed to feel comfortable with it? Just because you live in a generation that knows much about platelets and antigens, is blood any less sacred? Is it any less mysterious as a sign for life itself? I don’t think so.

Maybe the problem is not how you feel about blood. Maybe the problem is how you feel about ritual and encountering God through it.

The great temptation with ritual is to try to domesticate it; to bring it under control; to understand everything that is going on. But this attitude toward worship violates the most basic terms of the Covenant. The Covenant is a relationship between unequals, one of whom just happens to be Yahweh, the Lord God Almighty, the Holy One, who is shrouded in mystery, who will not let us set foot on Mount Sinai, lest we see him and die.

We have mentioned how the Old Covenant pre-figures the New Covenant. This view of the Covenant tends to exaggerate the differences between Old and New. It portrays the Israelites as "groping in the darkness," in contrast to the Christians who walk as "children of the light."

There is some legitimacy to that. When the Hebrews were being sprinkled with blood, they had no idea that twelve centuries later, Christ would shed his blood on a cross as a fulfillment of what they had started. They hadn’t a clue about that!

Possibly, our participation in the Lord’s Supper prefigures something that we can only now dimly perceive - like the wedding feast of the Lamb perhaps? Maybe when we drink Christ’s blood of the New Covenant, we are looking through a glass darkly, drawn into a great Mystery that far exceeds our perceptual abilities.

I would go even further and suggest that the communion language about blood is intended to throw you off a bit. An elder once complained to a pastor about the use of a common loaf and cup in communion. "It’s so messy," she said, "it looks so untidy." The minister thought for a moment and replied: "Perchance, does that remind you of anything?"

Christ’s blood of the New Covenant which is poured out for many is the reason why all of us are here tonight. What God had to do to gather us into the Covenant was not at all tidy, not at all un-messy, and we don’t need to go into the reasons behind that!

But God did it! God did what needed to be done, praised be he! And next year, may be bring us to Jerusalem!

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio,