Key Scripture
“ ‘The man who commits adultery with another man’s wife, even he who commits adultery with his neighbor’s wife, the adulterer and the adulteress shall surely be put to death.” — Leviticus 20:10 (WEB)
Opening
Some people talk about purity as if it is a small preference, like a rule for religious people who are uncomfortable with desire. Leviticus 20 will not let you think that way. This chapter includes severe penalties under Israel’s old covenant law, and it shows that God treats sexual rebellion seriously. Christians are not ancient Israel carrying out civil penalties, but we must still receive the warning: holiness matters. Sin is not harmless because a culture laughs at it. God is holy, and covenant betrayal is not a game.
Leviticus 20 addresses serious sexual sins and their consequences within Israel. The punishments are severe because Israel was a covenant nation under God’s direct law, called to reflect His holiness among the nations. We must read these penalties in their covenant setting. The church today does not enforce Israel’s civil law. Yet the moral seriousness revealed here remains.
The key verse speaks of adultery with another man’s wife. The penalty in Israel was death for both the adulterer and the adulteress. This shows that God does not treat covenant betrayal as a private mistake. Adultery violates marriage, damages families, corrupts community trust, and rebels against God’s design.
The passage continues by naming other forbidden sexual practices. Some involve family violations. Some involve actions God calls shameful or detestable. The repeated weight of the chapter teaches that sexual boundaries are not optional suggestions. God’s people must not treat holy things casually.
Leviticus 20 must not be used to create cruelty, self-righteousness, or hopelessness. It should produce the fear of the Lord. The fear of the Lord means reverent awe, sober obedience, and taking God seriously. Hebrews 12:14 says to pursue peace with all and holiness, without which no one will see the Lord. Holiness is not a decorative extra. It belongs to seeing God.
This passage confronts a common lie: “As long as people consent or no one finds out, it does not matter.” God says it matters. The body matters. Marriage matters. Family boundaries matter. Community holiness matters. God’s judgment matters.
When the fear of the Lord fades, sin begins to look light. You may start thinking, “It is just a thought,” “just a message,” “just entertainment,” “just what guys do,” or “not as bad as what others do.” That casual attitude is dangerous.
Sexual rebellion hardens the conscience. It can make you less sensitive to Scripture, less honest in prayer, less respectful of others, and more defensive when corrected. The longer you treat God’s warnings as extreme, the more your heart will drift. Do not wait until consequences become painful before you believe that holiness matters.
The seriousness of sin helps you understand the greatness of the cross. Jesus did not die because sin was small. He died because sin is deadly and God is holy. At the cross, the judgment sinners deserved fell on Christ, the sinless Son, so that all who repent and believe can be forgiven.
If this passage makes you feel exposed, do not run from God. Run to Jesus. He is not a soft excuse for sin; He is a mighty Savior from sin. Confess what is real. Turn from what dishonors Him. Receive cleansing through His blood.
The Holy Spirit teaches the fear of the Lord without driving God’s children into despair. He gives conviction, not condemnation for those in Christ. He strengthens obedience, renews desires, and helps you pursue holiness because you have been loved and rescued.
You need a bigger view of purity than “How far is too far?” or “Will I get caught?” Those questions are too small. Ask instead: “Does this honor the holy God? Does this protect covenant? Does this train me for faithfulness? Does this treat people with dignity? Does this help me see the Lord?”
Do not let friends make you casual about what God calls serious. Do not let entertainment turn adultery, betrayal, family violation, or sexual sin into comedy. Do not let your own desires become your teacher. God’s Word must weigh more than your strongest feeling.
The fear of the Lord will help you when temptation tries to shrink your world to one moment. It will remind you that God sees, that consequences are real, and that obedience is worth it. This fear is not panic. It is reverence. It is the settled conviction that God is holy and that your life belongs to Him.
1. Do I treat purity with the seriousness God gives it in His Word?
2. Where have I become casual about sin because my culture is casual?
3. Does the fear of the Lord shape my private decisions?
4. What warning from God do I need to stop ignoring today?
Today, read Hebrews 12:14 slowly and pray over it. Then choose one area where you have been casual about purity and make one serious change: remove access, end a pattern, confess to God, or set a boundary that reflects the fear of the Lord.
Ask a trusted godly adult or mature believer to help you take purity seriously. Share one area where you have been too casual, and ask them to help you build a stronger boundary and pray for reverence in your heart.
Prayer
Father, You are holy, and Your warnings are good. Forgive me for treating purity lightly or making excuses for sin. Jesus, thank You for bearing judgment at the cross so sinners like me can be forgiven and made new. Holy Spirit, teach me the fear of the Lord. Make me serious without despair, humble without hiding, and obedient without pride. Help me pursue holiness because I belong to You. Amen.
