"That My covenant might be with Levi. My covenant was with him of life and peace; and I gave them to him for the fear wherewith he feared Me, and was afraid before My name. The law of truth was in his mouth, and iniquity was not found in his lips; he walked with Me in peace and equity, and did turn many away from iniquity."--MAL. ii. 4-6.
ISRAEL was meant by God to be a nation of priests. In the first making of the Covenant this was distinctly stipulated. "If ye will obey My voice, and keep My covenant, ye shall be unto Me a kingdom of priests." They were to be the stewards of the oracles of God; the channels through whom God's knowledge and blessing were to be communicated to the world; in them all nations were to be blessed.
Within the people of Israel one tribe was specially
set apart to embody and emphasise the priestly
idea. The first-born sons of the whole people were
to have been the priests. But to secure a more
complete separation from the rest of the people,
and the entire giving up of any share in their
possessions and pursuits, God chose one tribe to be
exclusively devoted to the work of proving what
constitutes the spirit and the power of priesthood.
Just as the priesthood of the whole people was
part of God's Covenant with them, so the special
calling of Levi is spoken of as God's Covenant of Life
and Peace being with Him, as the Covenant of an
everlasting priesthood. All this was to be a
picture to help them and us, in some measure, to
apprehend the priesthood of His own Blessed Son,
the Mediator of the New Covenant.
Like Israel, all God's people, under the New
Covenant, are a royal priesthood. The right of free
and full access to God, the duty and power of
mediating for our fellowmen and being God's
channel of blessing to them, is the inalienable
birthright of every believer. Owing to the feebleness
and incapacity of many of God's children,
their ignorance of the mighty grace of the New
Covenant, they are utterly impotent to take up
and exercise their priestly functions. To make up
for this lack of service, to show forth the exceeding
riches of His grace in the New Covenant, and the
power He gives men of becoming, just as the priests
of old were the forerunners of the Great High
Priest, His followers and representatives, God still
allows and invites those of His redeemed ones who
are willing, to offer their lives to this blessed
ministry. To him who accepts the call, the New
Covenant brings in special measure what God has
said: "My Covenant of Life and Peace shall be
with him"; it becomes to him in very deed "the
Covenant of an everlasting priesthood." As the
Covenant of Levi's priesthood issued and culminated
in Christ's, ours issues from that again, and receives
from it its blessing to dispense to the world.
To those who desire to know the conditions on
which, as part of the New Covenant, the Covenant
of an everlasting priesthood can be received and
carried out, a study of the conditions on which
Levi received the priesthood will be most instructive.
We are not only told that God chose that
tribe, but what there specially was in that tribe
that fitted it for the work. Malachi says: "I gave
him My covenant for the fear wherewith he feared
Me, and was afraid before My name." The reference
is to what took place at Sinai when Israel
had made the molten calf. Moses called all who
were on the Lord's side, who were ready to avenge
the dishonour done to God, to come to him. The
tribe of Levi did so, and at his bidding took their
swords, and slew three thousand of the idolatrous
people (Ex. xxxii. 26-29). In the blessing with
which Moses blessed the tribes before his death,
their absolute devotion to God, without considering
relative or friend, is mentioned as the proof of their
fitness for God's service (Deut. xxxiii. 5-11): "Let
Thy Thummim and Thy Urim be with Thy holy one,
who said unto his father and to his mother, I have
not known thee; neither did he acknowledge his
own brethren, nor know his own children: for
they have observed Thy word and kept Thy
covenant."
The same principle is strikingly illustrated in
the story of Aaron's grandson, Phineas, where he,
in his zeal for God, executed judgment on
disobedience to God's command. The words are most
suggestive. "And the Lord apake unto Moses,
saying, Phineas, the son of Eleazar, the son of
Aaron, hath turned away My wrath from the
children of Israel, in that he was jealous with My
jealousy among them, so that I consumed them not
in My jealousy. Wherefore say, Behold, I give
unto him My covenant of peace: and it shall be
unto him, and his seed after him, the covenant of
an everlasting priesthood; because he was jealous
for his God, and made an atonement for the
children of Israel" (Num. xxv. 10-13). To be
jealous with God's jealousy, to be jealous for God's
honour, and rise up against sin, is the gate into
the Covenant of an everlasting priesthood, is the
secret of being entrusted by God with the sacred
work of teaching His people, and burning incense
before Him, and turning many from iniquity (Deut.
xxxiii. 10; Mal. ii. 6).
Even the New Covenant is in danger of being
abused by the seeking of our own happiness or
holiness, more than the honour of God or the
deliverance of men. Even where these are not
entirely neglected, they do not always take the
place they are meant to have--that first place that
makes everything, the dearest and best, secondary
and subordinate to the work of helping and blessing
men. A reckless disregard of everything that
would interfere with God's will and commands, a
being jealous with God's jealousy against sin, a
witnessing and a fighting against it at any sacrifice
--this is the school of training for the priestly
office.
It is this the world needs nowadays--men of God in whom the fire of God burns, men who can stand and speak and act in power on behalf of a God who, amid His own people, is dishonoured by the worship of the golden calf. Understand that as you will, of the place given to money and rich men in the church, of the prevalence of worldliness and luxury, or of the more subtle danger of a worship meant for the true God, under forms taken from the Egyptians, and suited to the wisdom and the carnal life of this world. A religion God cannot approve is often found even where the people still profess to be in covenant with God. "Consecrate yourselves to-day unto the Lord, even every man upon his brother." This call of Moses is as much needed to-day as ever. To each one who responds there is the reward of the priesthood.
Let all who would know to the full what the
New Covenant means, remember God's Covenant
of Life and Peace with Levi. Accept of the holy
calling to be an intercessor, and to burn incense
before the Lord continually. Love, work, pray,
believe, as one whom God has sought and found to
stand in the gap before Him. The New Covenant
was dedicated by a sacrifice and a death: reckon it
your most wonderful privilege, your fullest entrance
into its life, as you reflect the glory of the Lord,
and are changed into the same image from glory to
glory, as by the Spirit of the Lord, to let the
Spirit of that sacrifice and death be the moving
power in all your priestly functions. Sacrifice
yourself, live and die for your fellowmen.
One of the great objects with which God has made
a Covenant with us, is, as we have said so often,
to waken strong confidence in Himself and His
faithfulness to His promise. And one of the
objects that He has in wakening and so strengthening
the faith in us, is that He may use us as His
channels of blessing to the world. In the work
of saving men, He wants intercessory prayer to
take the first place. He would have us come to
Him to receive, from Him in heaven, the spiritual
life and power which can pass out from us to
them. He knows how difficult and hopeless it is
in many cases to deal with sinners; He knows
that it is no light thing for us to believe that in
answer to our prayer the mighty power of God
will move to save those around us; He knows that
it needs strong faith to persevere patiently in
prayer in cases in which the answer is long delayed,
and every year appears farther off than ever. And
so He undertakes, in our own experience, to prove
what faith in His Divine power can do, in bringing
down all the blessings of the New Covenant
on ourselves, that we may be able to expect
confidently what we ask for others.
In our priestly life there is still another
aspect. The priests had no inheritance with their
brethren; the Lord God was their inheritance.
They had access to His dwelling and His presence,
that there they might intercede for others, and
thence testify of what God is and wills. Their
personal privilege and experience fitted them for
their work. If we would intercede in power, do
let us live in the full realisation of New Covenant
life. It gives us not only liberty and confidence
with God, and power to persevere; it gives us
power with men, as we can testify to and prove
what God has done to us. Herein is the full
glory of the New Covenant, that, like Christ, its
Mediator, we have the fire of the Divine love
dwelling in us, and consuming us in the service
of men. May to each of us the chief glory of the
New Covenant be that it is the Covenant of an
everlasting priesthood.