“‘What to me
Is the multitude of your sacrifices?’
Says Yahweh.
‘I have had enough
Of burnt offerings
Of rams.
I have had enough
Of burnt offerings
Of the fat of fed beasts.
I do not delight
In the blood of bulls.
I do not delight
In the blood of lambs.
I do not delight
In the blood of goats.
When you come
To appear before me,
Who asked this
From your hand?
Trample my courts no more.
Bringing offerings is futile.
Incense is an abomination to me.’”
In a total rejection of the priestly Levitical Israelite line that stressed the importance and necessity of sacrificial offerings, Yahweh, via Isaiah, seems to call all of the Temple sacrifices useless. Why were there multitudes of sacrifices? Yahweh, the Lord, had had enough of priestly burnt offerings of rams, fatten animals, blood, bulls, lambs, and goats. Who asked you to bring all these animals? Why, of course it was God’s law, the Torah, especially the books of Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers. It was a common theme as late as the wisdom literature. Here is an opposite strain of thought. Yahweh did not want his courts trampled, but that was what the law called for. This is a strong condemnation of incense, which was praised throughout all the other biblical writings because of its sweet smell. What a stunning reversal against the Torah!