Thats not what the bible says:
Isaiah 1:1
“Of what benefit to me are your many sacrifices?” says Jehovah.
“I have had enough of your burnt offerings of rams and the fat of well-fed animals,
And I have no delight in the blood+ of young bulls and lambs and goats.
1 Samuel 15:
22 Samuel then said: “Does Jehovah take as much pleasure in burnt offerings and sacrifices+ as in obeying the voice of Jehovah? Look! To obey is better than a sacrifice,+ and to pay attention than the fat+ of rams;
Proverbs 21:3 To do what is right and just Is more pleasing to Jehovah than a sacrifice
It was man who introduced sacrifices, not God. Read it in the book of Genesis 4:4
Did God say He had no desire for burnt offerings?
Another reason why Christians and many Jews do not believe there is a place for burnt offerings any longer is because they believe God Himself said through the prophets He has no desire for them. Here are a couple popular passages that at first appear to support this.
"To what purpose is the multitude of
your sacrifices to Me?" Says the Lord. "I have had enough of burnt offerings of rams and the fat of fed cattle. I do not delight in the blood of bulls or of lambs or goats." Isaiah 1:11
We need to understand the state of things in Israel at the time Isaiah wrote this. The mind set of the people was that they figured they could do whatever they pleased against the Law of God as long as they offered God the appropriate sacrifice afterwards. In essence, they were trying to appease God... a form of patronage that was repulsive to Him because it totally lacked love for Him, His ways, and true repentance. God had had enough of their patronizing sacrifices. We should understand God to be saying, "I do not delight in the blood of
your bulls or of
your lambs or goats." He did not imply that all burnt offerings were repulsive to Him. Just theirs.
The second popular passage is;
"For I desire mercy and not sacrifice." Hosea 6:6
This passage left out of its context appears quite compelling at face value. Yahshua even quoted it in Matthew 9:13. There he exhorted the Pharisees to go and find out what it meant. This would imply studying the passage in its full context. The very next phrase in Hosea reads: "and the knowledge of God
more than burnt offerings." This is typical Hebrew poetry where the essence of one phrase is repeated in another with different words. God did not say He had absolutely no interest in sacrifice. The obvious point that Yahshua wanted to make was that mercy is preferred, and far better than sacrifice, the same way that true repentance is preferred and better than sacrifice in God's eyes.