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16:1–34 Leviticus 16 describes the rituals for the Day of Atonement, known in Jewish tradition as Yom Kippur. This day—the 10th day of the 7th month—was the one time per year when the high priest was permitted to enter the holy of holies (or most holy place) and stand before the ark of the covenant to atone for the sins of the nation (v. 34). Two goats are used in the ceremony; one is sacrificed, the other is sent away, bearing the nation’s sins. The ritual has two basic components: purifying the sanctuary and eliminating the sins that caused the impurity and offended Yahweh. God seeks to be present among His people, but impurity must be removed for that to happen. God’s forgiveness and restoration of the presence can only occur after the sanctuary is purged.

Atonement LTW

Atonement

16:1 had come near before Yahweh and they died The main legal sections in chs. 1–16 are broken up by a few narrative segments that move along the story begun in Exodus and continued in Numbers. The laws about the sacrificial system in chs. 1–7 set the framework for the inauguration of the priesthood in chs. 8–10. Similarly, the purity laws in chs. 11–15 set the framework for this account of the Day of Atonement ceremony. This verse explicitly connects the instructions of ch. 16 with the events of ch. 10, where Aaron’s sons Nadab and Abihu died in the tabernacle for violating procedure (see note on 10:1–20). The detailed procedure for the Day of Atonement was needed to prevent a similar tragedy from happening again.

16:2 at any time The priest was only allowed into the holy of holies—where the ark of the covenant was kept—on this day.

he might not die Yahweh’s presence made the inner chamber of the tabernacle a dangerous place. In biblical passages where Yahweh has appeared to people, they often fear that they will die from having been in the presence of God (e.g., Gen 32:30; Exod 33:20; Judg 13:21–22).

16:3 a sin offering The Hebrew word used here—chatta’th—refers to the purification offering, which was the primary blood atonement sacrifice in the Levitical system. See Lev 4:1–5:13 and note.

The chatta’th restored ritual purity to the offender (and the sanctuary). Publicly, the sin was intended to ritually cleanse the sanctuary of impurity. Privately, the offering was brought when a person unknowingly sinned, but it was also used for purification of ritual uncleanness.

a burnt offering An offering where the entire animal was burned on the altar. See 1:3–17 and note.

16:4 a holy linen tunic The high priest would cover himself with white linen. The garments Aaron was to wear are detailed in Exod 28:40–43.

16:6 he shall make atonement See note on Lev 4:20. The basic idea of atonement is to purge impurity.

16:8 shall cast lots A divination method for determining the will of a deity, widely used in the ancient Near East. References to casting lots are found in both the ot and nt (Josh 18:8; Prov 16:33; Acts 1:26).

In this context, the casting of lots likely involved the use of the sacred stones known as Urim and Thummim (Exod 28:30; Lev 8:8), kept in the breastplate worn by the high priest. They were used in some way to designate which goat would be for Yahweh and which would be for Azazel.

Lots ISBE

Old Testament Theology and Divination

for Yahweh The goat designated for Yahweh was the one used to purge the sanctuary (v. 9). Aaron’s own purging would be accomplished by a bull (v. 6).

for Azazel The second goat was not sacrificed; it was driven out of the camp after the high priest symbolically transferred the sins of the nation to it.

Interpretation of the Hebrew term aza’zel used here is debated. The word is usually either translated as “scapegoat” or treated as the proper name Azazel for a deity or place (such as a cliff). These two possibilities stem from different ways of dividing the Hebrew letters into words. The interpretation of scapegoat derives from dividing the letters into two words: az plus azal, meaning “the goat that goes away.” However, the traditional Hebrew text (the Masoretic Text) preserves these letters as one word, and the sentence is structured in a way that supports reading a proper name here. In v. 8, one goat is designated “for Yahweh,” and the other is designated “for azazel.” Since Yahweh is a proper name and the goats are described in the same way, Hebrew parallelism suggests Azazel is also a proper name. The name Azazel is known from later Jewish texts, such as 1 Enoch, as the name of a demon associated with the desert (1 Enoch 8:1; 9:6; 10:4–8; 13:1–3). If Azazel, the deity, is in view, this is not meant to indicate that the people were offering a sacrifice to this Azazel (17:7 would prohibit this), but instead that they were sending the goat that carried their sin outside the land deemed holy for Yahweh—into a territory understood to be under Azazel’s jurisdiction (see note on v. 22; note on 17:7). In some of these texts, Azazel is the leader of the angels that sinned in Gen 6:1–4. Azazel’s realm was the uninhabited wilderness. This area outside the boundaries of Israel was considered unholy ground—ground that was under the control of supernatural forces at odds with Yahweh. This connection with the wilderness is reflected in other Jewish texts from the same period, which depict the goat as a desert demon. Since the desert was considered the place outside holy ground (outside the camp, and later outside Zion), it was associated with demonic forces (compare Matt 4:1).

Azazel AYBD

Azazel DDD

16:10 to make atonement for himself Atonement is typically associated with blood sacrifice—the guilt (trespass) offering (asham in Hebrew) and the purification (sin) offering (chatta’th in Hebrew). Here, atonement is connected with the goat to be sent away—alive. No blood is applied to the goat or associated with this part of the ritual (Lev 16:20–22). In this special case, making atonement may either refer to the confession in v. 21 or to the overall purpose of the day’s rituals. See 4:20 and note.

16:11 the sin offering’s bull, which is for himself Aaron first offered a bull as a chatta’th (or purification offering) to purify himself and his household (v. 6). This allowed him to enter the sanctuary.

16:12 from behind the curtain The Day of Atonement was the only time the priest could go beyond the veil (curtain) that separated the front room of the tent (or later the temple) from the inner room (the most holy place or holy of holies).

16:13 he shall put the incense on the fire The high priest must put the incense on the small altar stationed in front of the veil leading to the most holy place, where the ark of the covenant was kept (see Exod 30:1).

Incense AYBD

might cover the atonement cover The site where God’s presence was directly manifested needed to be obscured by a cloud of incense. The lid of the ark of the covenant was called in Hebrew the kapporeth, which is commonly translated as “atonement cover” or “mercy seat” (see note on Exod 25:17).

16:14 he shall take some of the bull’s blood The high priest went behind the veil (curtain) twice—first to sprinkle the blood from the bull used for his own purification (sin) offering and then to sprinkle the blood from the goat that was the people’s purification (sin) offering (Lev 16:15). The blood of this goat made the people ritually clean before Yahweh—but their sins had not yet been removed. Blood was the agent of purification in sacrifice (4:6, 17; Num 19:4).

16:16 for the sanctuary Atonement is made for the sanctuary—an inanimate object—as well as for people. The high priest also makes atonement for the altar and the tabernacle in general (Lev 16:20). Compare v. 33.

16:18 altar that is before Yahweh The large sacrificial altar in the courtyard of the tabernacle (see Exod 27:1–8).

16:20 he shall present the living goat After the blood of the goat for Yahweh was sprinkled inside the tabernacle, the ritual shifts focus to the second goat. This goat was not sacrificed.

16:21 on the living goat’s head After the purging of the sanctuary by the sacrificial blood, the second act of the Day of Atonement ritual came into focus: ridding the camp of its sins via the goat for Azazel (see note on Lev 16:8). On the symbolic gesture of laying on hands, see note on 1:4.

he shall confess The Hebrew verb yadah (“confess”) has the sense of “revealing”—the opposite of concealing. The Israelites were to name their sins.

all their sins The collective guilt of the community for all of their sins is symbolically transferred to the goat who will carry the sin away.

16:22 the goat shall bear on it to a barren region all their guilt The live goat carried away the sins of the congregation. This goat—not the goat that was sacrificed—was the one connected with the sins of the people.

This distinction between the two goats reflects the logic behind a goat being designated for the demonic realm, represented by Azazel. This goat bore the sins of the nation and was subsequently driven out of the camp of Israel—out of holy ground and away from a purified people. This goat was driven into the wilderness to Azazel, where sin belonged. The goat was a means to ritually transport sin to the demonic realm since sin could not be tolerated on holy ground. Rabbinic literature records stories of how the Jews in the first century ad were so frightened that the goat for Azazel would return that they would drive it over a cliff. Compare Isa 53:10–12.

he shall send the goat away The goat was not free to wander; it was driven far enough from the camp that it could not return.

16:26 the person who sends out the goat The person who leads the goat into the wilderness becomes ritually impure. This impurity is similar to that caused by contact with a carcass in Lev 11:24–25. Although alive, the goat is treated as though it were dead.

16:29 on the tenth of the month The date designated for the Day of Atonement is specified here in the Hebrew text as the tenth day of the month Tishri (the seventh month). Tishri was an autumn month.

Calendars AYBD

Israelite Calendar Table

Israelite Festivals Table

16:33 he shall make atonement for the sanctuary’s holy place See v. 16 and note.

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