✦ The Hyperlinked Bible

Hebrews 9:22 to Leviticus 17:11

NT Text: Hebrews 9:22

OT Source(s):

  • Leviticus 17:11 (The life of the flesh is in the blood; blood makes atonement for the soul)

Source: Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Reference Type: Allusion

Connection Method(s): Typology + Promise-Fulfillment

Anchor Text: Lev 17:11 — Life Is in the Blood

Significance: Hebrews 9:22 distills Leviticus 17:11 into the canon's most explicit theological axiom: "According to the law, in fact, nearly everything must be purified with blood, and without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness." This is not a verbatim quotation but a generalizing extraction — the writer reads the entire Levitical economy through the lens of Lev 17:11's interior reason ("I have given it to you to make atonement... for it is the blood that makes atonement for the soul") and states it as a universal law: no blood, no forgiveness. The argument is at once typological and promise-fulfilling. As type-and-antitype: Levitical blood (offered repeatedly, never finishing its work) and Christ's blood (offered ἐφάπαξ, once-for-all) operate within the same life-in-blood mechanism — the escalation is supplied not by a change in how atonement works but by the dignity of the who whose life is poured out (Heb 9:14, 25-26; 10:10-14), and the antitype is read back into the type retrospectively by the writer of Hebrews. As promise-fulfillment: the Levitical system's very repetition advertised its incompleteness, promising an atonement it could not itself secure (Heb 10:1-4), and Christ's single bloody offering fulfills that promise definitively. The cross had to be bloody not because God delights in violence but because life is in the blood and only a life accepted in place of a life can atone. The telos is the desirability of that blood: where the worshipper under the law returned year after year, never cleansed in conscience, Christ's accepted life cleanses once and for all — the very thing the whole sacrificial system was longing for, now ours to rest in.