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Kleinig comments on the grammatical construction in the passage above and states that the verse “presupposes that the life of the animal substitutes for the life of those who present the animal for sacrifice.”135 The meaning of the Hebrew word for “atone” (kap·pêr) here has frequently been disputed, since it is used differently in a number of other contexts in the Old Testament.136 Nevertheless, it appears to have the very definite meaning of an atoning payment of sacrificial blood in the context of Leviticus.137 Working from the varieties of meaning that the term has in other Old Testament books, liberal scholar Jacob Milgrom considers the best translations to be to “cover,” “wipe away,” or “smear” all of which have connotations of the removal of sin through cleansing blood.138 Therefore, even if one were to accept this wider variety of meaning as applicable to the Leviticus usage (which as Kleinig points out, is very difficult to do), these usages still bear the connotation of propiatory sacrifice when read within the context of Leviticus and the larger Pentateuch’s notion of lex talionis. In other words, for Leviticus it is through blood and propiatory sacrifice that God “covers” and “wipes away” human sin. This is in fact really the only appropriate interpretation in that the text of Leviticus explicitly states that this is the function of the sacrifices and hence there can be little ambiguity that the term is meant to be understood this way. Therefore Kleinig concludes: “The legislation for the sin offering quite explicitly states its theological function. The Lord instituted this sacrifice for the performance of atonement and the reception of forgiveness from it.”139 Beyond this, there is also extra-biblical evidence that the sacrifices were understood this way. Josephus, who served as a priest in the Second Temple at the time of Jesus, quite explicitly understands the sacrifices as working atonement in this manner.140 His remarks shed light not only on how sacrifice was understood in the priestly tradition passed down to him, but also how Jews in general and the New Testament authors in particular understood atoning sacrifice.

      Other features of Israelite atonement theology should be recognized. Within Israelite cultic life, a wide variety of sacrifices (particularly sacrifices atoning for sin) also symbolically united in themselves both righteousness and sin. The Passover sacrifice (a substitutionary sacrifice for the life of the firstborn) was enacted by the sacrifice of a lamb without blemish, suggesting cultic and moral holiness. At the same time, the lamb was killed as a substitute of the firstborn male livestock and children of Israel, whom God insists must be ransomed: “you shall set apart to the Lord all that first opens the womb. All the firstborn of your animals that are males shall be the Lord’s. Every firstborn of a donkey you shall redeem with a lamb, or if you will not redeem it you shall break its neck. Every firstborn of man among your sons you shall redeem” (Exod 13:12–13). Therefore, the lamb who united both purity and condemnation in itself served as the sacrifice to redeem the firstborn of Israel.

      That the high priest moves into the holy of holies through the blood of this goat on the Day of Atonement appears to lend further evidence to Fletcher-Louis’s thesis that the high priest represents a new Adam. Though Fletcher-Louis does not make this direct connection, it could be suggested that just as Adam withdrew and “hid from the Lord God” (Gen 3:8) as a result of breaking the law, the high priest moves back into the representation of Eden (the holy of holies) and into the divine presence, through the fulfillment of the law. Interpreted in this manner, the ritual itself appears to be a representation of the end of universal exile. In enacting this ritual then, the high priest represents both Israel’s sin and the actualization of its righteousness.

      As God within the cosmic microcosm, the high priest’s actions repeat the work of Genesis 1. Just as sin destroyed God’s original order, so the sacrifice

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