Do I Need to Read Leviticus?

Journal 2021.

I’ve read through the Bible many times, but this time I’m getting bogged down in parts of Leviticus—a handbook for something that no longer exists. It’s like reading a manual for an outdated computer system or instructions on how to program a VCR. What’s the point or purpose? These rules were for a specific audience—the Levitical priests. Why do I need to study someone else’s handbook just because it’s available? And since there is no temple, there is no opportunity to practice these instructions.

There’s a difference between casual reading for interest, studying for information-gathering, grasping its significance, and attempting to master a subject. Rabbis say studying Torah is the highest and holiest calling, but only 1 percent, the cream of the crop, made it a lifetime achievement. But Jesus is Torah personified. Maybe studying Him is more of what I need. I don’t need to feel guilty if I skip over the priest’s manual today and return to the story.

I do have one take-away, however, from Leviticus: “Ye shall therefore be holy, for I am holy” (11:45 KJV). I’ve always read “be holy” as if it were a command about superior moral qualities. But the text is a statement: “You shall be holy.” Here’s what I found from the Jewish Bible Commentary.

God’s holiness is His essential “otherness,” His being separate from all that is not divine; humans are not called upon to be holy in this sense (the text doesn’t say, ‘as I am holy’). Holiness in humans, as in time, space, objects, and speech, is the state of belonging to the deity, being designated God’s “personal” property . . . Israel is holy simply by virtue of having been chosen.

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