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Texts -- Leviticus 7:1-36 (NET)

Context
The Guilt Offering
7:1 “‘This is the law of the guilt offering . It is most holy . 7:2 In the place where they slaughter the burnt offering they must slaughter the guilt offering , and the officiating priest must splash the blood against the altar’s sides . 7:3 Then the one making the offering must present all its fat : the fatty tail , the fat covering the entrails , 7:4 the two kidneys and the fat on their sinews , and the protruding lobe on the liver (which he must remove along with the kidneys ). 7:5 Then the priest must offer them up in smoke on the altar as a gift to the Lord . It is a guilt offering . 7:6 Any male among the priests may eat it. It must be eaten in a holy place . It is most holy . 7:7 The law is the same for the sin offering and the guilt offering ; it belongs to the priest who makes atonement with it.
Priestly Portions of Burnt and Grain Offerings
7:8 “‘As for the priest who presents someone’s burnt offering , the hide of that burnt offering which he presented belongs to him . 7:9 Every grain offering which is baked in the oven or made in the pan or on the griddle belongs to the priest who presented it. 7:10 Every grain offering , whether mixed with olive oil or dry , belongs to all the sons of Aaron , each one alike.
The Peace Offering
7:11 “‘This is the law of the peace offering sacrifice which he is to present to the Lord . 7:12 If he presents it on account of thanksgiving , along with the thank offering offering sacrifice he must present unleavened loaves mixed with olive oil , unleavened wafers smeared with olive oil , and well soaked ring-shaped loaves made of choice wheat flour mixed with olive oil . 7:13 He must present this grain offering in addition to ring-shaped loaves of leavened bread which regularly accompany the sacrifice of his thanksgiving peace offering . 7:14 He must present one of each kind of grain offering as a contribution offering to the Lord ; it belongs to the priest who splashes the blood of the peace offering . 7:15 The meat of his thanksgiving peace offering must be eaten on the day of his offering ; he must not set any of it aside until morning . 7:16 “‘If his offering is a votive or freewill sacrifice , it may be eaten on the day he presents his sacrifice , and also the leftovers from it may be eaten on the next day , 7:17 but the leftovers from the meat of the sacrifice must be burned up in the fire on the third day . 7:18 If some of the meat of his peace offering sacrifice is ever eaten on the third day it will not be accepted ; it will not be accounted to the one who presented it, since it is spoiled , and the person who eats from it will bear his punishment for iniquity . 7:19 The meat which touches anything ceremonially unclean must not be eaten ; it must be burned up in the fire . As for ceremonially clean meat , everyone who is ceremonially clean may eat the meat . 7:20 The person who eats meat from the peace offering sacrifice which belongs to the Lord while his uncleanness persists will be cut off from his people . 7:21 When a person touches anything unclean (whether human uncleanness , or an unclean animal , or an unclean detestable creature) and eats some of the meat of the peace offering sacrifice which belongs to the Lord , that person will be cut off from his people .’”
Sacrificial Instructions for the Common People: Fat and Blood
7:22 Then the Lord spoke to Moses : 7:23 “Tell the Israelites , ‘You must not eat any fat of an ox , sheep , or goat . 7:24 Moreover, the fat of an animal that has died of natural causes and the fat of an animal torn by beasts may be used for any other purpose , but you must certainly never eat it. 7:25 If anyone eats fat from the animal from which he presents a gift to the Lord , that person will be cut off from his people . 7:26 And you must not eat any blood of the birds or the domesticated land animals in any of the places where you live . 7:27 Any person who eats any blood – that person will be cut off from his people .’”
Priestly Portions of Peace Offerings
7:28 Then the Lord spoke to Moses : 7:29 “Tell the Israelites , ‘The one who presents his peace offering sacrifice to the Lord must bring his offering to the Lord from his peace offering sacrifice . 7:30 With his own hands he must bring the Lord’s gifts . He must bring the fat with the breast to wave the breast as a wave offering before the Lord , 7:31 and the priest must offer the fat up in smoke on the altar , but the breast will belong to Aaron and his sons . 7:32 The right thigh you must give as a contribution offering to the priest from your peace offering sacrifices . 7:33 The one from Aaron’s sons who presents the blood of the peace offering and fat will have the right thigh as his share , 7:34 for the breast of the wave offering and the thigh of the contribution offering I have taken from the Israelites out of their peace offering sacrifices and have given them to Aaron the priest and to his sons from the people of Israel as a perpetual allotted portion .’” 7:35 This is the allotment of Aaron and the allotment of his sons from the Lord’s gifts on the day Moses presented them to serve as priests to the Lord . 7:36 This is what the Lord commanded to give to them from the Israelites on the day Moses anointed them– a perpetual allotted portion throughout their generations .

Pericope

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Expository Notes on the Bible (Constable)

  • Moses revealed God's purpose for giving the Mosaic Covenant in this chapter.19:1-6 The Israelites arrived at the base of the mountain where God gave them the law about three months after they had left Egypt, in May-June (v. 1...
  • "At first sight the book of Leviticus might appear to be a haphazard, even repetitious arrangement of enactments involving the future life in Canaan of the Israelite people. Closer examination will reveal, however, that quite...
  • Leviticus continues revelation concerning the second of three elements necessary for any nation to exist, namely, a people (Gen. 12:10--Exod. 19), their law (Exod. 20--Num. 10:10), and their land (Num. 10:11--Josh. 24).Leviti...
  • God designed the offerings to teach the Israelites as well as to enable them to worship Him. They taught the people what was necessary to maintain and restore the believer's communion with God."The servant, therefore, had to ...
  • The burnt offering (in Greek, holokautoma, from which we get the word "holocaust") expressed the offerer's complete consecration to Yahweh (cf. Matt. 22:37; Rom. 12:1-2). However it also made atonement for the offerer. Some r...
  • The peace (fellowship, NIV) offering was the third sacrifice of worship. It represented the fellowship between God and man that resulted from the relationship that God had established with the redeemed individual. Peace and f...
  • The structure of 4:1-6:7 indicates that this offering has a close relationship to the sin offering. This offering removed the guilt of certain sins that involved trespassing against God. Trespassing means going beyond the lim...
  • "The five basic sacrifices are . . . introduced twice, each sacrifice being treated both in the main section addressed to the people [1:1-6:7] and in the supplementary section addressed to the priests [6:8-7:38]."62The main t...
  • God considered the meal, sin, and trespass offerings "most holy"(6:17, 25; 7:1, 6). This means that they were sacrifices that only the priests could eat.The "layman who touched these most holy things became holy through the c...
  • This is the only offering that ordinary Israelites could eat, but the priests also ate a part. This pericope clarifies who could eat what and when. For many Israelites eating the peace offering was probably the main, and perh...
  • This section closes with a summary. This is a common feature of Leviticus (cf. 11:46-47; 13:59; 14:54-57; 15:32-33)."The sacrificial law, therefore, with the five species of sacrifices which it enjoins, embraces every aspect ...
  • The account of the consecration of the priests and the priesthood (chs. 8-10) follows the regulations concerning offerings. We have a change in literary genre here from legal to narrative material. The legal material in chapt...
  • The sacrifices and offerings that Moses described thus far in the law were not sufficient to cleanse all the defilement that the sins of the people created. Much sinfulness still needed covering. Therefore God appointed a yea...
  • We move from public regulations in chapter 16 to intimate regulations in chapter 18 with chapter 17 providing the transition. In contrast to the first sixteen chapters, chapter 17 says very little about the role of the priest...
  • Genesis reveals how people can have a relationship with God. This comes through trust in God and obedience to Him. Faith is the key word in Genesis. God proves Himself faithful in this book.Exodus reveals that God is also sov...
  • Aharoni, Yohanan, and Michael Avi-Yonah. The Macmillan Bible Atlas. Revised ed. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1977.Albright, William Foxwell, The Archaeology of Palestine. 1949. Revised ed. Pelican Archaeology series. H...
  • The "wife oath"that the Israelites had taken at Mizpah (20:8-11) may have had some connection with God's commands concerning Israel's treatment of the Canaanites (Lev. 7:1-3). Israel was to destroy these enemies utterly and n...
  • Eli's sons were not only evil in their personal lives, but they flagrantly disregarded the will of God even as they served as leaders of Israel's worship of Yahweh. They neither knew the Lord (in the sense of paying attention...
  • Saul concluded at first that David had not come to the new moon sacrificial meal because he was unclean (cf. Lev. 7:20-21; 15:16). His continued absence required an explanation, which Saul looked to David's friend to provide....
  • 54:4-5 David was confident that God would help and sustain him. He also believed God would punish those who opposed him, and he asked God to do so. He could pray this way because what his adversaries were doing was contrary t...
  • 116:12-14 It is difficult to tell if the writer used "cup"in a literal or in a figurative sense. Perhaps it was a literal part of his thank offering to God. On the other hand the cup may represent his lot in life that was phy...
  • This seems to be a new message from the Lord. It is a good example of prophetic indictments of Israel's sacrificial institutions (cf. 6:20; 1 Sam. 15:22; Ps. 51:16-17; Isa. 1:4-15; Hos. 6:6; Amos 5:21-24; Mic. 6:6-8).7:21 Yah...
  • Jeremiah first viewed Jerusalem's destruction as an outsider looking in. Verses 1-7 describe the extent of the desolation and verses 8-11 its cause.1:1 Jeremiah bewailed the abandoned city of Jerusalem that had once been so g...
  • 4:4 Ironically the Lord told these sinful Israelites to go to Bethel but to transgress, not to worship. Such a call parodied the summons of Israel's priests to come to the sanctuary to worship (cf. Ps. 95:6; 96:8-9; 100:2-4)....
  • This parable stresses the extensive ultimate consequences of the kingdom that would be out of all proportion to its insignificant beginnings."Whereas the parable of the mustard seed answers the question of whether the phase o...
  • Matthew and Mark's accounts of this event are similar, but Paul's is more like Luke's.14:22 The bread Jesus ate would have been the unleavened bread that the Jews used in the Passover meal. The blessing Jesus pronounced was a...
  • "Within the structure of 13:7-19, vv 7-9 and vv 17-19 constitute the literary frame for the central unit of explanatory parenesis in vv 10-16."43713:7 The example of our spiritual leaders is one we should follow (cf. 12:1; 13...
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