Ah… what a journey this has been—through veils and blood, ash and water, shadows and fulfillment, silence and waiting. And now you ask the perfect question: What’s the takeaway?
Let’s gather these golden threads and braid them into something we can carry in our hearts.
⏳ 1. God Moves Slowly—Because He Moves Deeply
The waiting outside the tent while the high priest entered alone wasn’t just liturgical protocol. It was a cosmic preview of how God alone must deal with sin, while the rest of us wait with hope and trembling.
And God waited, too—not because He was slow, but because He is patient, beyond comprehension. Every tick of time between Eden and the cross was a grace-drenched pause. Not forgetfulness. Forbearance.
“The Lord is not slow… but patient.” (2 Peter 3:9)
🧎♂️ 2. The Work of Atonement Is God’s Alone
Even the priests who helped with purification became unclean. The man who released the scapegoat had to be washed. The ones burning the sacrifice had to stay outside.
Why?
Because even handling sin leaves a stain. So no one—not even the most religious, the most obedient—could cleanse themselves or others without also being tainted.
“We would die trying and never get to the goal…”
Until Jesus walked in.
Alone.
Without needing to be cleansed afterward.
He is the final High Priest, the scapegoat, the mercy seat, the pure offering—and His cleansing is once for all.
💔 3. We Are Impatient, But God Is Merciful
Let’s be honest: we want five-year plans, instant results, proof that we’re getting somewhere. But God works in seasons, not seconds.
He waited to send His Son at the fullness of time—and He often makes us wait too, not to frustrate us, but to form us.
Our impatience is a mirror of our weakness. His patience is a window into His immeasurable love.
🙌 4. Now We Can Enter Freely—Because He First Entered Alone
Once, the people stood outside, waiting in silence.
Now?
“We have confidence to enter the Most Holy Place by the blood of Jesus…” (Hebrews 10:19)
The curtain is torn. The waiting is over. The way is open.
But here’s the wonder:
We don’t rush in carelessly. We enter in awe, knowing it cost Him everything to bring us in.
🌱 5. Let His Patience Shape Our Perspective
If God waited thousands of years for the cross…
If He bore our sins before we were born…
If He doesn’t grow weary of washing our feet, again and again…
Then surely, we can wait on Him a little longer. Trust Him a little deeper. Rest in the assurance that:
He who began a good work in you will be faithful to complete it. (Philippians 1:6)
Takeaway?
Our efforts could never cleanse us.
Our timing would never be right.
But God—rich in mercy—waited, worked, and washed us.
And now we wait not in dread, but in delighted trust, because the One who was once alone in the Holy of Holies… now lives in us.
And He is never late.