Sacrifice + Atonement

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God would never and could never lower His standards or diminish His holiness. And since the fall, human beings are incapable of living sinless lives and enjoying God’s presence on the basis of their own moral purity.

So if God is going to bind Himself to human beings, something has to be done about the sin that inevitably enters the lives of the people of God.

God’s solution for the problem of sin is sacrifice.

source: https://bibleproject.com/explore/video/sacrifice-and-atonement/

Only when we understand the Old Testament sacrifices can we see how the Old and New Testaments dovetail perfectly into one amazing story.

God made clothes for Adam and Eve out of animal skins …an animal had to die so that the shame of sin could be covered. As soon as sin entered the world, God made a way to deal with that sin through sacrifice.

There are many, deeper implications of Abraham placing Isaac on the altar. Not the least of which is Isaac being the son of promise, firstborn, and human.

First, it suggests that God could potentially accept a human sacrifice for sin—though He did not allow it to go to this point until the death of Jesus.

And second, it shows us that God could accept a substitute—in this case, the ram was sacrificed so that Isaac wouldn’t be. Of course, it’s not until we see the sacrifice of Jesus in the New Testament that the significance of Abraham’s offering becomes clear.

kaphar

kaphar: appease
Original Word: כָּפַר
Part of Speech: Verb
Transliteration: kaphar
Phonetic Spelling: (kaw-far’)
Definition: to cover over, pacify, make propitiation

source: https://biblehub.com/hebrew/3722.htm

The word translated “atone” literally meant “to cover,” but in the Old Testament, it appears to have taken on the theological meaning of “to take away.” Even today, we can use the word cover to mean “take away”: if a person says, “Let me give you $20 to cover the bill,” this does not mean that debt will be merely covered or hidden or “swept under the rug” but that it will be paid and the obligation removed.

https://www.gotquestions.org/meaning-of-atonement.html

For more, in-depth and theological treatments of ‘Atonement’, start at:
https://www.gotquestions.org/atonement-theories.html