✦ The Hyperlinked Bible

Leviticus 4:11-12

Hebrew Key Terms:

  • H4264 מַחֲנֶה (machaneh) - camp, encampment
  • H2351 חוּץ (chuts) - outside, abroad
  • H8313 שָׂרַף (saraph) - to burn, consume with fire
  • H2889 טָהוֹר (tahor) - clean, pure

Context: Leviticus 4 prescribes the sin offering for unintentional sins. After the blood is applied to the altar horns and poured at the base, the entire carcass—skin, flesh, head, legs, entrails, and dung—must be taken "outside the camp" to "a clean place where the ashes are poured out" and burned there.

OT-to-OT Development:

Connections:

Christological Connection: The "outside the camp" location establishes a profound typological geography. The blood is accepted WITHIN (sprinkled on altar, before veil), but the body is rejected WITHOUT (burned four miles from the sanctuary). This spatial theology prefigures Christ's dual work: His blood provides access to God's presence (Hebrews 10:19-22), while He Himself bore rejection outside Jerusalem's walls. The "clean place" where guilt becomes harmless ash anticipates Calvary as the place where divine justice is satisfied.

Connection Method(s): Typology (Direct, Forward-Looking) — The sin offering's "outside the camp" location establishes the typological geography of acceptance (blood within) and rejection (body without), directly cited by Hebrews 13.11-12 as fulfilled in Christ's crucifixion outside Jerusalem's gate.

Trajectory Table: 178 - Burning Outside the Camp (Separation and Judgment)