Reference

Leviticus 9:10

But the fat, and the kidneys, and the caul above the liver of the sin offering, he burnt upon the altar; as the Lord commanded Moses.
8

Aaron therefore went unto the altar, and slew the calf of the sin offering, which was for himself.

9

And the sons of Aaron brought the blood unto him: and he dipped his finger in the blood, and put it upon the horns of the altar, and poured out the blood at the bottom of the altar:

10

But the fat, and the kidneys, and the caul above the liver of the sin offering, he burnt upon the altar; as the Lord commanded Moses.

11

And the flesh and the hide he burnt with fire without the camp.

12

And he slew the burnt offering; and Aaron’s sons presented unto him the blood, which he sprinkled round about upon the altar.

Why This Verse Was Tagged

Atonement Process
Multi-Signal Classification
70% relevance

This verse was identified by multiple independent signals: structural patterns, prophetic context, and vocabulary — then validated by a probability model (Snorkel).

Earthly Sanctuary System
Semantic Discovery
90% relevance

This verse was identified through meaning similarity — its content is mathematically close to known verses in this theme, even without sharing the same vocabulary.

Counter-Arguments

The strongest case that this verse does not belong in this theme.

Atonement Process

The verse describes a specific action (burning parts of an offering) without explicitly stating the purpose of that action as atonement, forgiveness, or reconciliation. It merely states that it was done "as the Lord commanded Moses."

Heavenly Sanctuary

This verse describes a physical act of burning animal parts on an earthly altar as part of a sin offering, with no mention or implication of a heavenly sanctuary, a divine throne room, or Christ's ministry. The text solely focuses on the earthly ritual commanded to Moses.

Earthly Sanctuary System

While the verse describes a ritual act, it does not explicitly detail the physical structure of the sanctuary, tabernacle, or temple, nor does it directly mention the Levitical priesthood as a foundational structure.