The central failure of the Old Covenant was not merely that it was "weak," but that its offerings and sacrifices had become repulsive to God. When rituals are performed without a transformed heart, they are not just empty; they are offensive. God would rather us be cold or hot rather than lukewarm (to be clean on the outside and not inwardly). The Levitical system functioned as an external restraint—a system of "fleshly ordinances"—that could never remedy the internal corruption of man.
Consequently, God rejected these external attempts at appeasement. In Malachi 2:3, God speaks regarding the priests who offered sacrifices, declaring He would "spread refuse on your faces, the refuse of your solemn feasts." The Hebrew word for "refuse" here is peresh (dung), signifying that the religious acts themselves had become waste in His sight. The propitiation (appealing his wrath and anger) offerings became an offense, instead of a sweet smelling aroma going up to God they were like the smell of dung to God.
Into this context of rejection enters the solution: not a better animal sacrifice, but a willing Person.
Hebrews 10:5-7
"Therefore, when He came into the world, He said: 'Sacrifice and offering You did not desire, but a body You have prepared for Me. In burnt offerings and sacrifices for sin You had no pleasure. Then I said, 'Behold, I have come—in the volume of the book it is written of Me—to do Your will, O God.'"
The "body prepared" is the answer to the "dung" of dead works. God no longer desired the external code; He desired a vessel that would internally and perfectly execute His will.
The movement from the Old Covenant to the New is not a renovation of rituals but a complete relocation of the Law—from stone tablets to the human heart. True perfection is not achieved by the "standing" anxiety of external compliance, but by "sitting" in the finished work of Christ. It is here, in the rest of faith, that the Spirit empowers the believer to fulfill the righteous requirement of the Law from the inside out.
I. The Standing Priest vs. The Seated King: Entering His Rest
The distinction between the Old and New Covenants is captured in the posture of the priest. The Levitical priest "stands ministering daily" (Hebrews 10:11) because his repetitive sacrifices are powerless to remove sin—an unfinished cycle of dead works. In contrast, Christ offered one effective sacrifice and "sat down" (Hebrews 10:12). This posture of "sitting" signals that the work of cleansing is complete and the believer is "perfected forever" (Hebrews 10:14).
This transition is the theological foundation for the "Rest" of Hebrews 4:10: "For he who has entered His rest has himself also ceased from his works as God did from His." To refuse this rest—to continue "standing" in an attempt to appease God through religious performance—is an act of "unbelief" (apistia) (Hebrews 3:191). It is the insistence on offering the "dung" of self-effort rather than accepting the finished work of the King.
II. The Prophetic Fulfillment: Writing the Law on the Heart (Hebrews 10:15-18)
God abolished the "first" system of external performance to establish the "second" system of internal transformation.
Hebrews 10:16 (quoting Jeremiah 31:33)
"This is the covenant that I will make with them after those days, says the Lord: I will put My laws into their hearts, and in their minds I will write them."
The Old Covenant failed because it was written on stone, leaving the heart stony. The "perfection" (teleioō) of the New Covenant is that the spiritual aspect of God's laws are internalized. God imparts a new nature—a "new heart" and "new spirit" (Ezekiel 36:26-27)—that naturally desires the things of God. The worshiper is no longer a whitewashed tomb (clean outside, dirty inside) but is through the building up of faith and love, structurally changed from the core.
III. Released from the Letter to Serve in the Spirit (Romans 7)
Paul explains that this shift requires a death to the old way of relating to God. We cannot mix the "dung" of self-effort with the perfection of Christ.
Romans 7:6
"But now we have been delivered from the law, having died to what we were held by, so that we should serve in the newness of the Spirit and not in the oldness of the letter."
The "oldness of the letter" (gramma) is the written code that demands righteousness from flesh that cannot provide it. This system only exposes the corruption of our nature but cannot clean it. To be "delivered" is to stop trying to please God through external checklist compliance and to enter the "rest" of a life empowered by the Spirit.
IV. Fulfilling the Righteous Requirement (Romans 8)
The goal of this transition is not lawlessness, but true holiness.
Romans 8:3-4
"...that the righteous requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us who do not walk according to the flesh but according to the Spirit."
This is the definition of perfection. It is not the external "cleansing of the cup" while the inside is full of extortion (Matthew 23:25). It is the "body prepared" to do God's will, empowered by the Spirit. It is the shift from offering God the "dead works" of religious striving to offering Him the "living sacrifice" (thysian zōsan) of a transformed life (Romans 12:1).
Summary
The journey from Hebrews 10 to Romans 7 is a journey from the external to the internal. God rejected the "dung" of external religious performance because it could not touch the heart. In its place, He provided a "body prepared"—first in Christ, and then in the believer. By moving from the anxiety of the "standing priest" to the rest of the "seated King," we stop working for salvation and start working from salvation. This is the new way of the Spirit: a law not written on stone to be obeyed by grit, but written on the heart to be fulfilled by grace.