Living Leviticus

I

t is entirely possible to be a churchgoing Christian for 40 years and never hear a sermon preached solely from the Old Testament book of Leviticus.

Leviticus is the third book of the Hebrew Scriptures that contains the laws, large and small, that God gave the Israelites. Most people might be familiar with the Ten Commandments or the really odd edicts against, for instance, eating lobster or shaving your sideburns, and laws ordering menstruating women to sit in a tent apart from the rest of the community.

When viewed through the lens of modernity, Leviticus seems to be an arcane, strange, and wholly irrelevant book. Why would God care about the condition of our skin? Or what kind of meat we eat? Or whether we wear a cotton-polyester blend T-shirt? Or ask us to sacrifice pigeons to atone for our sins? Or need to remind us not to have sexual relations with our stepmothers, nephews, or pets?

It’s no wonder, then, that many pastors, preoccupied with attracting—not repelling—people choose to ignore Leviticus altogether. But Daniel Harrell is not your average pastor. Call him an ecclesial Captain Courageous or a foolhardy glutton for punishment.

A few years ago, while he was a minister at Boston’s evangelical Park Street Church, Harrell launched a preaching series on Leviticus. More than a few folks thought he was crazy.

“Leviticus is that graveyard where read-through-the-Bible-in-a-year plans go to die,” Harrell says. “They looked at me as if I were attempting sermon suicide—or worse, homiletical homicide. Leviticus would kill our congregation. Who’d get up on a Sunday to hear a homily on mildew?”

Leviticus not only mentions that God is concerned about mildew, but actual types of mildew: “If he finds bright green or reddish streaks on the walls of the house and the contamination appears to go deeper than the wall’s surface, he will leave the house and lock it up for seven days” (14:37-38 NLT).

Harrell did more than just preach about Leviticus. He convinced 19 of his congregants to join him for a month-long experiment in “living Levitically”—trying to obey all of the laws put forth in Leviticus. Some rules had to be observed in spirit if not in substance; most municipalities, including Boston, frown on animal sacrifice.

Harrell has chronicled the adventures of his would-be Levites in the hilarious and thought-provoking new book, How to Be Perfect: One Church’s Audacious Experiment in Living the Old Testament Book of Leviticus.

While the book is peppered with laugh-out-loud anecdotes, Harrell’s aim was quite serious. Many Christians simply dismiss Leviticus and its odd edicts as the “old law”-fulfilled by Jesus, replaced with grace, and no longer applicable to believers. But if Christians really believe that God gave all of the Bible to humankind to show us how to live, then what does Leviticus mean to faithful living?

Inspired by A. J. Jacobs’ book The Year of Living Biblically, in which the author attempted to adhere to the biblical laws for 12 months, Harrell decided the best way to answer lingering questions about the laws of Leviticus was to attempt to follow them in real life.

Following Leviticus’ laws—keeping kosher, not cutting their beards, keeping their bodies and their homes as meticulously clean as possible, and strict adherence to Sabbath-keeping—was as difficult as Harrell and his flock had anticipated. But it was also even more rewarding than they could have hoped.

Rather than affirm the idea that you can either embrace grace or the law, Harrell found that a faithful life involves both.

No one can be perfect by following Leviticus’ laws. They’re impossible. And realizing that leads, necessarily, to the understanding that no one can be perfect apart from God’s grace.

Still, Leviticus illustrates that there is nothing too small for God to care about and nothing too big. Grace might cover all, but knowing and trying to follow God’s law—the greatest of which, Jesus said, was to love God and love our neighbors as ourselves—can be transformative as well.

“The thing that struck us in doing the Levitical month was the simple power of obedience,” Harrell said in a recent interview. “Because we’re so used to the disconnect between our beliefs and our behavior, integrity has become something of a quaint notion consigned to the past. But I’d like to think that it still matters and that some- how it’s still worth pursuing. Otherwise, why bother believing?”