Showing 10 results for “aaron cleveland”
The story opens with Aaron as a very small lad who rides in his father’s sleigh as the people of that neighborhood busy themselves helping runaway slaves from the South escape to Canada. Aaron’s father, Uriel, is presented as a strict Congregationalism a man who presents himself to his family as b
Vox Populi! The voice of the "people," who fear the Lord, enter into His courts with praise, and who bless His Holy Name, is this Aaron! Forsooth, the people, who fear Jehovah, and know the joyful sound as this comes from the mouth of Moses, revere this Aaron, the appointed one of God to approach in
Is it in His anger that He gives Moses Aaron? The notice of the sacred narrator is too plain to allow any other view. We may expect therefore that at some point in his career this brother will bring great grief upon Moses, that through him, who can speak so well, the Lord will lay his stripes upon h
Everything here indicates that Aaron in his capacity of high priest and the office which he served were but shadows -- everything: his being stripped of his sacred garments, his being unable to continue in his office by reason of death, and his being disqualified from entering into Canaan by his gre
Personally Aaron perfected nothing. He did not bring Israel into the rest. Fact is, he died on mount Hor without entering the promised, typical land. But Christ’s priesthood is better. It does not depend on a birth from a priestly father, from the tribe of Levi, the house of Aaron, but is simply a p
Let this be understood, young people! We had better keep this straight in our mind lest we be caught up in the trivial. We do not often hear this so-called Aaronic blessing” pronounced from our pulpits do we? And we probably have never heard a sermon preached on this very remarkable wording” of this
That ceremony symbolized that as a priest, all of Aaron was consecrated for God’s service. He must be ready to hear and obey Jehovah’s word and willing to fulfill the holy duties of his office. We who live in the New Testament have been anointed to be priests by the Holy Spirit.
Aaron, being holy, was the chosen of the Lord. On this account he was the Lord's. These two characteristics are essentially one. They can be distinguished between but are not to be separated. They stand to each other in the relation of cause and effect. For through the Lord's choosing Aaron, He made
Jason L. Kortering is pastor of the Protestant Reformed Church of Grandville, Michigan. 2. The priestly consecration with its warnings for violations (Lev. 8:1-10:20). Aaron and his family were presented to the Lord in the presence of the congregation. Aaron was dressed in the proper clothes of the