“But the goat, on which the lot fell to be the scapegoat, shall be presented alive before the LORD, to make an atonement with him, and to let him go for a scapegoat into the wilderness.” Leviticus 16:10
As someone who has spent a fair amount of time in the wilderness, I wondered what would ever become of that scapegoat. Where did it travel? Did it survive? Did it find other wild goats? Was the scapegoat eaten by wild animals? The instruction was to take the scapegoat to a remote area where no person lived. He was not merely let loose close to the camp. The priest would deliberately take this animal to a place where it would be highly unlikely to be found by anyone but God. Then my mind went to the natural reaction of some. I imagine some adventurous young men might head out to find the scapegoat. Not that they could do anything with it once found. It would be the adventure of finding it that would satisfy. Any sane person would say that such an adventure was a waste of time. First, they wouldn’t know where to start looking. Second, they didn’t know if the goat existed. Perhaps it was destroyed. Third, if the goat was still alive, it was not stationary. As they moved to find it, it would move to evade. The likelihood of finding the animal was remote at best. This reminds me of those who cannot let go of the past. Their past sins, that is.
Have you ever lost something and concluded that it will never be found? What is fascinating to me is that as I sit here and type, I cannot think of a single valuable thing I have lost and never found. I can think of several that were lost for a while and then later found. I lost a pair of glasses in the snow, and when it melted a month later, I found them. There was my wife’s engagement ring that we found in the cuff of my pants. Then she lost her wedding ring and engagement ring, and it was found six weeks later. The latter was replaced before the original was found. The LORD allowed me to make good on a promise of almost forty years ago and get her a bigger diamond. The original was very inexpensive and was all we could afford. It is amazing that bigger and better makes what was lost seem smaller. What I fail to do is remember anything that was permanently lost, which made my life worse and not better. I have lost plenty of fishing lures. I know I have. But I cannot remember any specific one. I know I have lost articles of clothing. Dryers have a way of eating them. Once lost, it would be futile to try to find them.
So, why would we want to dig up our past when the LORD has covered it in His blood? We are like those silly and adventurous boys looking for a goat where it should not be found simply for the exercise of looking. Our motive might be different. Perhaps we want to experience the sins of the past all over again. Or, we cannot seem to forgive ourselves. Therefore, we thrive on arrogant self-abasement. Maybe fear has us looking where we ought not to look. Whatever the cause, the foolishness of looking for something that is supposed to be forgotten is harmful at best. If the goat is gone, let it remain gone. If the goat was left to wander in the wilderness, we have to trust the LORD that He will keep it away. It is where no one but God would know. And He won’t take us there. If we are digging up the past, we are not confident in the mercy of God.