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DAY 47: Leviticus 11-13
Why does God care about what is on your plate, on your skin, and in your walls?
In today’s episode of Five Minute Bible, we step into Leviticus 11–13, where holiness moves out of the tabernacle and into daily life. These chapters address food laws, childbirth, skin disease, and mildew. At first glance, it can feel technical or even strange. But the setting explains everything.
The glory of the Lord now dwells in the center of Israel’s camp. The Holy One lives among them. The question is no longer whether God is near. The question is how a redeemed people live safely and wisely in that nearness.
Leviticus 11 draws careful distinctions between clean and unclean animals. The categories are deliberate. Clean animals fully reflect their created design. Unclean animals blur boundaries, feed on decay, or embody disorder. God is training His people to notice patterns. To value wholeness. To avoid what symbolizes corruption. Holiness even reaches the dinner table.
Leviticus 12 addresses purification after childbirth. Childbirth is a blessing, not a sin. Yet it involves blood and the realities of mortality in a fallen world. In a camp where God’s presence dwells visibly, even ordinary life must be handled with awareness. Life and death stand close together.
Leviticus 13 turns to skin diseases and mildew. The priest examines carefully. If decay spreads, it must be quarantined. If it continues spreading, stones are removed. The lesson is consistent and sobering: impurity spreads. Decay spreads. Disorder spreads. In a community where God dwells, corruption cannot be ignored.
This pattern presses into our own lives. We often think of holiness only in terms of obvious moral failures. Leviticus expands the vision. Holiness involves discernment. It involves attentiveness. It involves recognizing that corruption, if left unchecked, grows quietly.
Under the old covenant, impurity spreads faster than holiness. Touch a corpse and you become unclean. Contact with decay requires cleansing. The direction of spread is outward from corruption.
And this is where Christ transforms the pattern.
Under Leviticus, the unclean must be isolated. Under Jesus, the unclean draw near and are restored. Lepers reach for Him, and instead of their impurity spreading to Him, His purity spreads to them. Where decay once moved outward, life now moves outward. Where uncleanness once dominated, resurrection begins reversing the flow.
As you read Leviticus 11–13 today, ask yourself:
What instincts is God forming in me about holiness, corruption, and discernment?
Tomorrow, we will see how cleansing is declared and restored, and how fellowship with God continues after impurity has been addressed.
CHECK IT OUT ON:
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/6jKPORV75RzsBVOqC8IsvE?si=e1d0801259e14135
Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/five-minute-bible/id1865075283
YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/@KendallLankford
Let’s Church:
https://lets.church/channel/five-minute-bible
By Kendall LankfordDAY 47: Leviticus 11-13
Why does God care about what is on your plate, on your skin, and in your walls?
In today’s episode of Five Minute Bible, we step into Leviticus 11–13, where holiness moves out of the tabernacle and into daily life. These chapters address food laws, childbirth, skin disease, and mildew. At first glance, it can feel technical or even strange. But the setting explains everything.
The glory of the Lord now dwells in the center of Israel’s camp. The Holy One lives among them. The question is no longer whether God is near. The question is how a redeemed people live safely and wisely in that nearness.
Leviticus 11 draws careful distinctions between clean and unclean animals. The categories are deliberate. Clean animals fully reflect their created design. Unclean animals blur boundaries, feed on decay, or embody disorder. God is training His people to notice patterns. To value wholeness. To avoid what symbolizes corruption. Holiness even reaches the dinner table.
Leviticus 12 addresses purification after childbirth. Childbirth is a blessing, not a sin. Yet it involves blood and the realities of mortality in a fallen world. In a camp where God’s presence dwells visibly, even ordinary life must be handled with awareness. Life and death stand close together.
Leviticus 13 turns to skin diseases and mildew. The priest examines carefully. If decay spreads, it must be quarantined. If it continues spreading, stones are removed. The lesson is consistent and sobering: impurity spreads. Decay spreads. Disorder spreads. In a community where God dwells, corruption cannot be ignored.
This pattern presses into our own lives. We often think of holiness only in terms of obvious moral failures. Leviticus expands the vision. Holiness involves discernment. It involves attentiveness. It involves recognizing that corruption, if left unchecked, grows quietly.
Under the old covenant, impurity spreads faster than holiness. Touch a corpse and you become unclean. Contact with decay requires cleansing. The direction of spread is outward from corruption.
And this is where Christ transforms the pattern.
Under Leviticus, the unclean must be isolated. Under Jesus, the unclean draw near and are restored. Lepers reach for Him, and instead of their impurity spreading to Him, His purity spreads to them. Where decay once moved outward, life now moves outward. Where uncleanness once dominated, resurrection begins reversing the flow.
As you read Leviticus 11–13 today, ask yourself:
What instincts is God forming in me about holiness, corruption, and discernment?
Tomorrow, we will see how cleansing is declared and restored, and how fellowship with God continues after impurity has been addressed.
CHECK IT OUT ON:
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/6jKPORV75RzsBVOqC8IsvE?si=e1d0801259e14135
Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/five-minute-bible/id1865075283
YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/@KendallLankford
Let’s Church:
https://lets.church/channel/five-minute-bible