
Text -- Leviticus 6:3 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Lev 6:3
His oath being required, seeing there was no other way of discovery left.
JFB -> Lev 6:2-7
JFB: Lev 6:2-7 - -- This law, the record of which should have been joined with the previous chapter, was given concerning things stolen, fraudulently gotten, or wrongfull...
This law, the record of which should have been joined with the previous chapter, was given concerning things stolen, fraudulently gotten, or wrongfully kept. The offender was enjoined to make restitution of the articles to the rightful owner, along with a fifth part out of his own possessions. But it was not enough thus to repair the injury done to a neighbor and to society; he was required to bring a trespass offering, as a token of sorrow and penitence for having hurt the cause of religion and of God. That trespass offering was a ram without blemish, which was to be made on the altar of burnt offerings, and the flesh belonged to the priests. This penalty was equivalent to a mitigated fine; but being associated with a sacred duty, the form in which the fine was inflicted served the important purpose of rousing attention to the claims and reviving a sense of responsibility to God.
Clarke -> Lev 6:3
Clarke: Lev 6:3 - -- Have found that which was lost - The Roman lawyers laid it down as a sound maxim of jurisprudence, "that he who found any property and applied it to...
Have found that which was lost - The Roman lawyers laid it down as a sound maxim of jurisprudence, "that he who found any property and applied it to his own use, should be considered as a thief whether he knew the owner or not; for in their view the crime was not lessened, supposing the finder was totally ignorant of the right owner." Qui alienum quid jacens lucri faciendi causa sustulit, furti obstringitur, sive scit, cujus sit, sive ignoravit; nihil enim ad furtum minuendum, facit, quod, cujus sit, ignoret - Digestor, lib. xlvii., Tit. ii., de furtis, Leg. xliii., sec. 4. On this subject every honest man must say, that the man who finds any lost property, and does not make all due inquiry to find out the owner, should, in sound policy, be treated as a thief. It is said of the Dyrbaeans, a people who inhabited the tract between Bactria and India, that if they met with any lost property, even on the public road, they never even touched it. This was actually the case in this kingdom in the time of Alfred the Great, about a. d. 888; so that golden bracelets hung up on the public roads were untouched by the finger of rapine. One of Solon’ s laws was, Take not up what you laid not down. How easy to act by this principle in case of finding lost property: "This is not mine, and it would be criminal to convert it to my use unless the owner be dead and his family extinct."When all due inquiry is made, if no owner can be found, the lost property may be legally considered to be the property of the finder.
TSK -> Lev 6:3
TSK: Lev 6:3 - -- have found : Exo 23:4; Deu 22:1-3
sweareth : Lev 19:12; Exo 22:9-11; Pro 30:9; Jer 5:2, Jer 7:9; Zec 5:4; Mal 3:5
have found : Exo 23:4; Deu 22:1-3
sweareth : Lev 19:12; Exo 22:9-11; Pro 30:9; Jer 5:2, Jer 7:9; Zec 5:4; Mal 3:5

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Poole -> Lev 6:3
Poole: Lev 6:3 - -- Sweareth falsely his oath being required, seeing there was no other way of discovery left.
Sweareth falsely his oath being required, seeing there was no other way of discovery left.
Haydock -> Lev 6:3
Haydock: Lev 6:3 - -- Lost. We acquire no title to the thing by finding it. The Roman law, as well as divines, condemn those who appropriate the thing found to their own...
Lost. We acquire no title to the thing by finding it. The Roman law, as well as divines, condemn those who appropriate the thing found to their own use, as guilty of theft, whether they knew to whom it belonged or not; and Plato greatly commends the law of Solon, "Take not what thou didst not put down," a rule which the Dyrbeans and the people of Biblos rigorously observed. We may, however, take up what is lost, (Calmet) and endeavour to find the owner, who must indemnify us for our trouble; and, if we never find him, we are directed to give the price to the poor, for the owner's welfare. (Haydock)
Gill -> Lev 6:3
Gill: Lev 6:3 - -- Or have found that which was lost, and lieth concerning it,.... Who having found anything lost, at once concludes it his own, and converts it to his o...
Or have found that which was lost, and lieth concerning it,.... Who having found anything lost, at once concludes it his own, and converts it to his own use, never inquiring after the proprietor of it, or taking any method to get knowledge of him, and restore it to him; but so far from that, being suspected of finding it, and charged with it denies it: Maimonides k gives a reason why a lost thing should be restored, not only because so to do is a virtue in itself praiseworthy, but because it has a reciprocal utility; for if you do not restore another's lost things, neither will your own be restored to you:
and sweareth falsely; which is to be understood, not of the last case only, but of all the rest, or of anyone of them, as it follows:
in any of all these that a man doeth, sinning therein; by unfaithfulness in a trust, cheating, defrauding, lying, and false swearing.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Lev 6:1-30
TSK Synopsis: Lev 6:1-30 - --1 The trespass offering for sins done wittingly.8 The law of the burnt offering;14 and of the meat offering.19 The offering at the consecration of a p...
MHCC -> Lev 6:1-7
MHCC: Lev 6:1-7 - --Though all the instances relate to our neighbour, yet it is called a trespass against the Lord. Though the person injured be mean, and even despicable...
Matthew Henry -> Lev 6:1-7
Matthew Henry: Lev 6:1-7 - -- This is the latter part of the law of the trespass-offering: the former part, which concerned trespasses about holy things, we had in the close of t...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Lev 6:1-7
Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 6:1-7 - --
(Ch. 5:14-6:7)
(Note: In the original the division of verses in the Hebrew text is followed; but we have thought it better to keep to the arrangeme...
Constable: Lev 1:1--16:34 - --I. The public worship of the Israelites chs. 1--16
Leviticus continues revelation concerning the second of three...

Constable: Lev 1:1--7:38 - --A. The laws of sacrifice chs. 1-7
God designed the offerings to teach the Israelites as well as to enabl...
