ATONEMENT,
DAY
OF
special
morning
sacrifices
had
been
offered
(Nu
29
'-").
tile
higli
priest
selected
the
appointed
sin-
and
burnt-offerings
for
himself
and
'his
house,'
i.e.
the
priestly
caste,
then
laid
aside
his
usual
ornate
vestments,
bathed,
and
robed
in
a
simple
white
linen
tunic
and
girdle.
He
next
selected
two
he-goats
and
a
ram
for
the
people's
offerings,
and
proceeded
to
'
cast
lots
upon
the
two
goats;
one
lot
for
J",
and
the
other
lot
for
Azazel'
(AV
'scapegoat,'
see
Azazel).
These
prep-arations
completed,
the
proper
expiatory
rites
were
begun,
and
were
accomplished
in
three
successive
stages.
(6)
In
the
first
stage
(vv."-")
the
high
priest
made
atonement
for
himself
and
the
priesthood.
After
slaying
the
bullock
of
the
sin-offering,
he
took
a
censer
filled
with
live
charcoal
from
the
altar
of
burnt-offering
and
a
handful
of
incense,
and
entered
the
Most
Holy
Place.
Here
he
cast
the
incense
on
the
coals,
producing
a
cloud
of
smoke,
by
which
the
dwelUng-place
of
the
Most
High
between
the
Cherubim
was
hidden
from
mortal
gaze
(see
Ex
332»).
This
done,
he
returned
to
the
court,
to
enter
immediately,
for
the
second
time,
the
inner
sanctuary,
carrying
a
basin
with
the
blood
of
the
bullock,
which
he
sprinkled
on
the
front
of
the
mercy-seat
once,
and
seven
times
on
the
ground
before
the
ark.
(c)
In
the
second
stage
(vv.'s-")
atonement
was
made
in
succession
for
the
Most
Holy
Place,
the
Holy
Place,
and
the
outer
court.
The
goat
on
which
the
lot
'for
J"'
had
fallen
was
slain
by
the
high
priest,
who
then
entered
the
Most
Holy
Place
for
the
third
time
with
its
blood,
which
he
manipulated
as
before.
On
his
return
through
the
Holy
Place
a
similar
ceremony
was
performed
(v.^,
cf.
Ex
30'°),
after
which
he
pro-ceeded,
as
directed
in
w.'"-,
to
'cleanse
and
hallow'
the
altar
of
burnt-offering,
which
stood
in
the
outer
court.
(d)
These
all
led
up
to
the
culminating
rite
in
the
third
stage
(vv.*"-^).
Here
the
high
priest,
placing
both
hands
on
the
head
of
the
goat
allotted
to
Azazel,
made
solemn
confession
—
the
tenor
of
which
may
still
be
read
in
the
Mishnic
treatise
YOma
—
of
all
the
nation's
sins.
By
this
ceremony
these
sins
were
conceived
as
not
only
symbolically
but
actually
transferred
to
the
head
of
the
goat
(w.^"-,
see
below),
which
was
solemnly
conducted
to
'a
solitary
land'
(RV),
the
supposed
abode
of
the
mysterious
Azazel.
In
NT
times
the
goat
was
led
to
a
lofty
precipice
in
the
wilder-ness
about
12
miles
east
of
Jerusalem,
over
which
it
was
thrown
backwards,
to
be
dashed
in
pieces
on
the
rocks
below
(YSma,
vi.
6
ff.).
(c)
We
now
reach
the
concluding
stage
of
'the
Day's'
ceremonial
(w.
23-28).
The
fact
that
the
essential
part
was
now
accomplished
was
strikingly
shown
by
the
high
priest's
retiring
into
the
Holy
Place
to
put
off
'the
holy
garments'
(vv.
^-
'^),
bathe,
and
resume
his
ordinary
high-priestly
vestments.
Returning
to
the
court,
he
offered
the
burnt-offerings
for
himself
and
the
people,
together
with
the
fat
of
the
sin-offering.
The
remaining
verses
(a-28)
deal
with
details,
the
characteristic
significance
of
which
will
be
discussed
presently.
Reasoning
from
the
literary
history
of
Lv
16,
from
the
highly
developed
sense
of
sin,
and
from
the
unique
promi-nence
given
to
fasting,
as
well
as
on
other
grounds
which
cannot
be
fully
set
forth
here,
OT
scholars
are
now
practi-cally
unanimous
in
regarding
the
Day
of
Atonement
as
an
institution
of
the
post-exilic
age.
There
ia
good
reason
for
holding
—
although
on
this
point
there
is
not
the
same
una-nimity
—
that
it
originated
even
later
than
the
time
of
Ezra,
by
whom
the
main
body
of
the
Priests'
Code
was
introduced.
The
nucleus
from
which
the
rites
of
Lv
16
were
developed
was
probably
the
simpler
ceremonial
laid
down
by
Ezekiel
forthepurifioationoftnesanctuary
45"*).
Other
elements,
such
as
the
earlier
provisions
for
the
entry
of
the
high
priest
into
the
Most
Holy
Place
still
found
in
the
opening
verses
of
Lv
16,
and
perhaps
the
desire
to
make
an
annual
mstitu-tion
of
the
great
fast
of
Neh
Q^-,
contributed
to
the
final
development
of
the
institution
as
it
now
appears
in
the
ATTALIA
Pentateuch.
It
is
doubtless
much
older
than
the
earliest
reference
in
Sir
60^
(c.
B.C.
180).
In
NT
it
is
referred
to
as
'the
Fast'
(Ac
27^),
and
so
occasionally
by
Josephus.
To
this
day
it
remains
the
most
solemn
and
moat
largely
attended
religious
celebration
of
the
Jewish
year.
The
dominating
thought
of
Lv
16
is
the
awful
reality
and
contagion
of
sin,
which
affects
not
only
priest
and
people,
but
the
sanctuary
itself.
Its
correlate
is
the
intense
realization
of
the
need
of
cleansing
and
pro-pitiation,
as
the
indispensable
condition
of
right
relations
with
a
holy
God.
The
details
of
the
ritual
by
which
these
relations
were
periodically
renewed
are
of
sur-passing
interest,
as
showing
how
the
loftiest
religious
thought
may
be
associated
with
ritual
elements
belong-ing
to
the
most
primitive
stages
of
religion.
Thus,
in
the
case
before
us,
the
efficacy
of
the
blood,
the
universal
medium
of
purification
and
atonement,
is
enhanced
by
cessation
from
labour
and
complete
abstinence
from
food
—
the
latter
the
outward
accompaniment
of
inward
penitence
—
and
by
the
high
priest's
puWic
and
representative
confession
of
the
nation's
sins.
Yet
alongside
of
these
we
find
the
antique
conception
of
holiness
and
uncleanness
as
something
material,
and
of
the
fatal
consequences
of
unguarded
contact
with
the
one
or
the
other.
It
is
only
on
this
plane
of
thought
that
one
understands
the
need
of
the
cleansing
of
the
sanctuary,
infected
by
the
'uncleannesses'
of
the
people
among
whom
it
dwelt
(16'«
RV,
cf.
Ezk
45"*).
The
same
primitive
idea
of
the
contagion
of
holiness
underlies
the
prescribed
change
of
garments
on
the
part
of
the
high
priest.
The
'holy
garments'
in
which
the
essential
parts
of
the
rite
were
performed
had
to
be
deposited
in
the
Holy
Place;
those
who
had
been
brought
into
contact
with
the
sacrosanct
animals
(vv.28*)
must
bathe
and
wash
their
clothes,
lest,
as
Ezekiel
says
in
another
connexion,
'they
sanctify
the
people
with
their
garments
'
(44")
,
i.e.
lest
the
mysterious
contagion
pass
to
the
people
with
disastrous
results.
The
most
striking
illustration
of
this
transmissibility,
however,
is
seen
in
the
central
rite
by
which
the
nation's
sins
are
transferred
to
the
head
of
'the
goat
for
Azazel,'
the
demonic
spirit
of
the
wilderness
(cf.
the
similar
rite,
Lv
148').
These
survivals
from
the
earlier
stages
of
the
common
Semitic
religion
should
not
blind
the
modern
student
to
the
profound
conviction
of
sin
to
which
the
institu-tion
bears
witness,
nor
to
the
equally
profound
sense
of
the
need
of
pardon
and
reconciliation,
and
of
uninter-rupted
approach
to
God.
By
its
emphasis
on
these
perennial
needs
of
the
soul
the
Day
of
Atonement
played
no
unimportant
part
in
the
preparation
of
Judaism
for
the
perfect
atonement
through
Jesus
Christ.
The
author
of
the
Epistle
to
the
Hebrews
in
a
familiar
passage
contrasts
the
propitiatory
work
of
the
Jewish
high
priest
on
this
day
with
the
great
propitiation
of
Him
who,
by
virtue
of
His
own
atoning
blood,
'
entered
in
once
for
all
into
the
holy
place'
(He
9'2
RV),
even
'into
heaven
itself,'
where
He
remains,
our
great
High
Priest
and
Intercessor
O^'-).
A.
R.
S.
Kennedy.
ATROTH-BETH-JOAB.—
See
Ataboth,
No.
4.
ATROTH-SHOPHAN.—
A
town
E.
of
Jordan,
near
Aroer
and
Jazer,
fortified
by
Gad
(Nu
32^).
Some
place
it
with
Atareth
1.
at
'AttSrUs.
This
is
hardly
possible.
The
site
is
unknown.
W.
Ewing.
ATTAI.—
1.
A
Jerahmeelite
(1
Ch
2»').
2.
A
Gadite
who
Joined
David
at
Ziklag
(1
Ch
12").
3.
A
son
of
Rehoboam
(2
Ch
IV).
ATTAIN.
—
In
Ac
27>2
'attain'
has
the
literal
meaning
of
reach
a,
place
(so
RV).
Elsewhere
it
has
the
figurative
sense
still
in
use.
ATTALIA
(modern
Adalia).
—
A
town
on
the
coast
of
Pamphylia,
not
far
from
the
mouth
of
the
river
Catarrhactes,
founded
and
named
by
Attalus
11.
It
was
besieged
in
b.c.
79
by
P.
Seruilius
Isauricus,
when
in
possession
of
the
pirates.
In
the
Byzantine
period