Repentance is essential-but Scripture shows it was never the full price of atonement.
From the first pages of the Torah, God reveals a pattern that cannot be ignored: sin brings death, and reconciliation requires more than regret. Blood, covenant, and sacrifice are not later religious inventions-they are woven into the biblical foundations of redemption from the beginning.
Blood, Covenant, and Atonement offers a careful, Scripture-centered exploration of the Torah and Leviticus, uncovering why sacrifice was established by God as a necessary part of His covenantal system. Without polemics, pressure, or institutional arguments, this book lets the text speak for itself-patiently, respectfully, and clearly.
Inside, you will explore:
- Why sin immediately required death-and why covering always carried a cost
- Why the Torah treats blood as sacred and forbids its casual use
- How covenant and substitution work within the Levitical system
- The meaning of Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement) and what it truly resolves
- Why the biblical logic of atonement points beyond rituals to a final redemption
Written with reverence for Scripture and respect for Jewish tradition, this volume invites honest readers to follow the internal consistency of God's Word to its unavoidable question:
If blood was always required, where is the final atonement found?
Book 3 in The Promised Redeemer: A Journey from Scripture to the Messiah.