What is it in the posts and scriptures shared with you in the yearly day of atonement and the differences between "the Lords goat" that provides "blood sacrifice" and the Great High Priest that both represent Jesus and His final atonement and the cleansing of the Sanctuary for all the sins of Gods' people that you do not understand?
I don't understand why you want to make the connection between the scapegoat in the two goats story and Satan in Revelation 20 and 22. It looks to me like there are so many issues with that.
One thing I raised in a post you may not have gotten to when you wrote this is:
If Satan carries our sins into the abyss, what happens to our sins after that? Do they cease to exist while they are in the abyss? Or does Satan come back out of the abyss with our sins still on him?
Do you understand where the sins of Gods' people are once atonement has been made through blood sacrifice? They are with the blood sacrifice and the Great High Priest being removed from the sinner and the Sanctuary right?
Well, I thought I did. But just going back and reading Leviticus 16 to be sure, I don't know that it says where are the same is.
For one thing, Aaron ends up sprinkling the blood of the bull and the Lord's goat on the horns of the altar. Why would he put sin-bearing blood back on the altar?
I also noticed that it is the blood of both the bull and the Lord's goat. So this would possibly make the bull representing Jesus as well. So now Jesus is three characters in the story.
Also, an interesting verse, at least in the World English Bible:
Leviticus 16:10 The other goat, the scapegoat chosen by lot to be sent away, will be kept alive, standing before the Lord. When it is sent away to Azazel in the wilderness, the people will be purified and made right with the Lord.
If that translation is correct, it sounds like the purification and justification of the people was not complete until the scapegoat was sent away.
If we try to apply that to Satan in the end times, it means that our purification and justification is currently not complete.
Then looking on further
Leviticus 16:21 He will lay both of his hands on the goat’s head and confess over it all the wickedness, rebellion, and sins of the people of Israel. In this way, he will transfer the people’s sins to the head of the goat.
So at this point the priest transfers the people's sins to the goat by confessing. So are the sins of the people now in both the blood and on the goat? Or they've been taken out of the blood and put on the goat?
These kinds of issues lead me to believe that the story in Leviticus 16 is meant to be a kind of drama that the Israelites would see and understand what kinds of things needed to be done regarding sin. I think they only loosely translate over to Jesus and what he did.
A final note since I have Leviticus 16 open again:
Leviticus 16:21 Then a man specially chosen for the task will drive the goat into the wilderness.
The man drives the goat. The goat is not bound.
So is it blood sacrifice that makes the final atonement for us in receiving God's forgiveness does it not?
Well, based on what I just read, it sounds like the final atonement, if that means purification and justification, are not made until the goat is sent away.
Now once again, according to the scriptures once our final atonement through blood sacrifice has been completed by the Great High Priest (Jesus), the scapegoat (Azazel; "remove" "fallen angel") come before the Lord to remove all sin from the presence of God and the Sanctuary. Do you agree?
Well, I don't think so, unless the sin that is in God's presence and the sanctuary is different from our sin.
Our sin is in the blood, isn't it? Or, if it isn't in the blood at that point and has been transferred to the goat, then the role of the blood was just to transfer the sin, kind of like a carrier wave.
What then happens with "the scapegoat" (Azazel; "remove" "fallen angel")?
It goes off into the wilderness.