Never Only Animals
A sheet comes down out of heaven, and it is full of the wrong animals. Every kind of uncleanIn Leviticus, unclean (Hebrew tame') names a state of ritual impurity, not a moral fault — its usual causes are the body's own processes (birth, illness, discharge, contact with death), and it is never listed among the sins (Lev 16:16). Its remedy is washing and waiting — purification, not forgiveness (Lev 15:31). See also: What He Was Willing to Touch. More creature — four-footed animals, creeping things, the birds of the air — let down in front of a hungry man, with a voiceWhen Jesus says his sheep know his voice (John 10), it isn't the words they recognize — it's the tone, the intent, the spirit behind them. Scripture carries that kind of voice too: you can sense something is there, often before the mind can say what it is. Synonyms: tone, intent, quality, spirit. See: Do You Know the Voice? More: “Rise, Peter; kill and eat.” He won’t. He has never in his life eaten anything common or unclean, and he says so. The voice comes back: “What God has made clean, do not call common.” Three times over, and then the sheet is taken up again (Acts 10).
Here is the part to sit with. Peter doesn’t walk away with a new rule about food. He walks away baffled — and when the meaning finally lands, he tells us himself what the sheet was, and it has nothing to do with what’s for dinner: “God has shown me that I should not call any person common or unclean” (Acts 10:28). The sheet full of unclean animals was a way of talking about people. Which is very close to where we land if we hold that same clean-and-unclean test up to ourselves — the human creature coming up unclean on every line, and the question left hanging: what was the whole pattern demonstrating about us? Peter’s sheet is the New Testament saying it out loud — these animals were never only animals. (Set beside what we have said about man himself being unclean, this can read like a contradiction — are we unclean, or may we not say so? It is a fair question, and it gets its own answer.)
The moment anyone reads the food laws this way, the charge comes down: you’re spiritualizing away the truth. But look at what that word — spiritualize — quietly assumes: that to read a thing as a symbol you have to throw the thing away. That’s backwards. Tossing the physical aside for a floating idea isn’t reading the sign(Greek sēmeion) — a miracle told less for its power than for what it signifies; the word points at meaning, not spectacle. John builds his gospel on them — numbering them and saying he wrote them down so we might see and believe (John 20:30-31). Synonyms: sēmeion, signs. See An Entire Message More; it’s discarding it. Reading the PassoverThe LORD's Passover, kept on Nisan 14 (Lev 23:5): the lamb slain and its blood marking the houses spared in Egypt (Ex 12). The New Testament presents Christ as the Passover lamb (1 Cor 5:7), making it the opening act of the feast year. Synonyms: Pesach. See Was the Passover a Sin Offering? — at the Cross More lamb as pointing to ChristNot a surname but a title: the Greek Christos, rendering the Hebrew Mashiach (Messiah) — "the Anointed." The anointing that set apart Israel's kings, priests, and prophets all converges on the one person it was pointing to. Synonyms: Messiah, Anointed, the Anointed One, Mashiach, Christos. See also: Logos More doesn’t spiritualize the lamb away — it stands, heavier, not lighter. The symbol was never the enemy of the thing; the thing is what carries the meaning. So the choice was never “literal or symbolic, pick one.” Peter’s sheet held real animals and meant real people — both at once, which is how the whole framework has run from the start.
And if the sheet were the only case, you could set it aside as a one-time vision and move on. But watchIn plain English, to observe means to see attentively — to give careful, focused attention to something. This is precisely what the Hebrew shamar points at: watchful, protective attention toward something valued. In religious usage, particularly in the Church of God tradition, "observe" has been reduced to performing an external requirement. The original sense — attentive seeing that allows something to reveal itself — is what the feasts and sabbath are actually asking for. Synonyms: shamar, keep, watch, guard. More Christ — no trance, no sheet, just teachingFrom the Hebrew Torah — instruction, direction — rooted in yarah, to aim as an archer toward a target. Never primarily legislative. The stone tablets were hidden inside the ark, inside the most holy place, mediated by a priest. The promise was always to move that instruction from stone to flesh — from concealment behind a veil to working from within the person. Synonyms: Torah, nomos, instruction, teaching, commandment, mitzvah. More a crowd: “You blind guides, straining out a gnat and swallowing a camel!” (Matt 23:24). The smallest unclean creature and one of the largest — you strain the speck out of your cup and swallow the giant whole. No one has ever swallowed a camel; it’s a plain figure, and he expects the crowd to catch it on the spot. The symbolic reading wasn’t a special revelation dropped on Peter. It was simply how Christ spoke — as if the unclean had always been a kind of language, and everyone in earshot already half-knew it. Which leaves a question worth carrying: if that’s how he used them, how far back does the language go — and how far does he take it?

