THE LIVES OF THE PATRIARCHS #33 | THE LIFE OF MOSES #15
Pastor Christopher Choo
Lesson 3715
THE LIVES OF THE PATRIARCHS #33
THE LIFE OF MOSES #15
GOD'S MOST HOLY NAME: YHVH #8
3 REVELATIONS OF YHVH'S NAME GIVEN TO MOSES #3
1. YHVH RAPHA ( PART 3)
Both Moses and Jesus came down a mountain.
Moses came down Mt. Sinai with the Ten Commandments - the Law which condemns man as unclean - full of sin and death.
But when Jesus completed His Sermon On The Mount ( traditionally thought to be the Mount Of Beatitudes ), He healed a leper ( Matthew 8:1-4 ) who is considered unclean.
Let us read Matthew's version of this event.
"When He came down from the mountainside, large crowds followed Him.
2 A man with leprosy came and knelt before Him and said, "Lord, if you are willing, you can make me clean."
3 Jesus reached out his hand and touched the man. "I am willing," he said. "Be clean!" Immediately he was cured of his leprosy.
4 Then Jesus said to him, "See that you don't tell anyone. But go, show yourself to the priest and offer the gift Moses commanded, as a testimony to them."
Jesus comes down from the mountain to cleanse His people after declaring His Father’s will earlier ( Matthew 8:1–4).
Christ is greater than Moses who came down with commands that could only pronounce people as “unclean” (Ex. 34:29; Lev. 13:1–8).
According to the Mosaic law, leprosy renders a person unclean, and the leper who approaches Jesus in today’s passage is used to living apart from the community in isolation or in a leper colony (Lev. 13:45–46).
Since lepers are outcasts in Jesus’ day, the diseased man acts with audacity when he comes for healing, at least in the view of his culture.
Yet the leper displays faith, not arrogance when he kneels before Christ.
Convinced of the Savior’s power, the man knows that Jesus can make him clean if the Lord is willing to exercise His healing touch (Matt. 8:1–2).
Truly, the leper’s recognition that Christ’s will is the determining factor is an example of how all are to come before Him (6:10).
Jesus could heal the man with His word alone (8:5–13), but He chooses to touch the leper (vv. 3–4).
This point helps us interpret this text since Matthew emphasizes the touch with the “unnecessary” detail of Christ stretching out His hand (v. 3).
Contact with a leper should render Jesus ceremonially unclean (Num. 5:1–4), but He is not defiled. Instead, His contact purifies the diseased man (Matt. 8:3–4), showing Him to be the fulfillment of the Law.
Ceremonial regulations, including the leprosy laws, show us our need to be separated from all pollution, but such separation is ultimately possible only if men and women are themselves clean.
Jesus’ touch cleanses His people, lepers or not, and will make it unnecessary to follow the letter of the ritual purity laws any longer.
Though not all diseases will be healed before the Lord returns to consummate His kingdom, we can be sure that He will cleanse the sins of everyone who confesses Him as Savior and follows Him as Lord (1 John 1:8–9).
If you feel unclean this day, know that Jesus has indeed cleansed you if you love Him and have turned from your sin, placing your faith in Him.
Pray for His continued cleansing and look forward to the day when all creation will be made new.