The Remedy for Death
						
						
						
						Introduction:
						
						
						Life and death are the two extremes of 
						human existence.  Holiness, God, and life are associated 
						together as are uncleanness, sin, and death.  During the 
						time of the Law of Moses, a very unique ordinance was 
						given as a remedy for contamination with the dead.  This 
						cleansing revolved around the ashes of a red heifer and 
						was different from other sacrifices in the Mosaical 
						system.  Apparently God gave this rite toward the start 
						of the period of wilderness wanderings.  Death, except 
						for limited cases, had been suspended prior to this 
						time.  But now death returned.  With its return, came 
						the possibility of contamination with the dead.  
						
						
						
						Text:  
						Numbers 19:1-22
						
						
						Body:
						
						
						I. 
						
						
						The Choice of Victim  
						(Verses 1-2)
						
						
						· 
						
						
						“Red” was most likely signifying blood.  
						(Isaiah 1-18)
						
						
						· 
						
						
						Note what John says about Christ in 
						Revelation 19:13.  “He was clothed with a robe dipped in 
						blood, and His name is called The Word of God.”  
						
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						· 
						
						
						“Heifer” was possibly because the female 
						is the bearer of life.  (Romans 5:21)
						
						
						· 
						
						
						“No defect or blemish” would be a very 
						valuable and rare sacrifice.  (II Corinthians 
						5:21)  (I Peter 2:21-22)  (Hebrews 7:26)
						
						
						· 
						
						
						“No yoke” – Jesus’ sacrifice was a 
						voluntary one.  (John 10:18) “No one takes it from 
						Me, but I lay it down of Myself.  I have power to lay it 
						down, and I have power to take it again.  This command I 
						have received from My Father.” 
						
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						II. 
						
						
						The Manner of Sacrifice  
						(Verses 3-10)
						
						
						· 
						
						
						“Killed outside the camp”  This was 
						the only animal killed outside the camp.  It was without 
						spot and yet without the camp.  It seems strange.  Holy, 
						yet treated as unclean, just as Christ was treated.  
						(Hebrews 13:11-13)  He was despised and rejected of 
						men.  (Isaiah 53:3)
						
						
						· 
						
						
						The priest dipped his finger in its blood 
						and sprinkled it seven times towards the front of the 
						tabernacle.  The entire heifer was burned, even its 
						blood.  In all other offerings, the blood was not 
						burned.  The priest added cedar wood, hyssop, and 
						scarlet yarn to the fire.  Cedar was resistant to 
						disease and rot so it represented incorruption.  Hyssop 
						was used for cleansing or purging.  (Psalm 51:1-2, 7)  
						Scarlet yarn was used in the veil and curtains of the 
						tabernacle as well as in the robes of the high priest.  
						It signified both blood and royalty.
						
						
						· 
						
						
						The ash produced from the burning of the 
						heifer, the cedar, the hyssop, and scarlet yarn were 
						gathered up and placed in water to be used for the water 
						of purification or separation. 
						
						
						III. 
						
						
						The Cleansing Procedure  
						(Verses 11-22)
						
						
						· 
						
						
						Any person touching a dead body was 
						unclean for seven days.  This meant they were barred 
						from the regular fellowship and worship of God until 
						they were made clean.  A lesson to be learned here is 
						that uncleanness makes one unfit for the company of God 
						and His people.  (I Corinthians 5:11-13)  Sin defiles!  
						The wages of sin is death.  (Romans 6:23)
						
						
						· 
						
						
						The procedure for cleansing involved a 
						clean person taking hyssop, dipping it in the mixture of 
						ashes and fresh water, and sprinkling it on the unclean 
						on the third day and seventh day.  Note:  (Hebrews 
						9:12-14) “Not with the blood of goats and calves, but 
						with His own blood He entered the Most Holy Place once 
						for all, having obtained eternal redemption.  For if the 
						blood of bulls and goats and the ashes of a heifer, 
						sprinkling the unclean, sanctifies for the purifying of 
						the flesh, how much more shall the blood of Christ, who 
						through the eternal Spirit offered Himself without spot 
						to God, cleanse your conscience form dead works to serve 
						the living God?” (Hebrews 10:22) “let us draw near with 
						a true heart in full assurance of faith, having our 
						hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and our bodies 
						washed with pure water.”  
						
						NKJV  
						Jesus’ blood purifies the sinner.
						
						
						· 
						
						
						The uncleanness of the person could not 
						correct itself.  He had to submit to this ordinance – 
						water of purification.  If he did not, he was “cut off” 
						from the assembly.  It is God who sets the requirements 
						for approaching Him.  If a man is rendered unfit for 
						approach to God, only God himself is able to provide the 
						cleansing he needs.
						
						
						Conclusion:  
						
						Sin is contagious.  It pollutes and 
						defiles.  One must come continually to God in repentance 
						to have the blood of Christ purify him.  (I John 
						1:7-10) “But if we walk in the light as He is in the 
						light, we have fellowship with one another, and the 
						blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanses us from all sin.  
						If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and 
						the truth is not in us.  If we confess our sins, He is 
						faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse 
						us from all unrighteousness.  If we say that we have not 
						sinned, we make Him a liar, and His word is not in us.” 
						
						
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						Bobby Stafford  
						
						
						July 19, 2015
						
						
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