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Text -- Leviticus 1:1-15 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Stood without, Exo 40:35, waiting for God's call.
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From the mercy - seat in the tabernacle.
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Wesley: Lev 1:2 - -- There are divers kinds of sacrifices here prescribed, some by way of acknowledgment to God for mercies either desired or received; others by was of sa...
There are divers kinds of sacrifices here prescribed, some by way of acknowledgment to God for mercies either desired or received; others by was of satisfaction to God for men's sins; others were mere exercises of devotion. And the reason why there were so many kinds of them was, partly a respect to the childish state of the Jews, who by the custom of nations, and their own natural inclinations were much addicted to outward rites and ceremonies, that they might have full employment of that kind in Gods's service, and thereby be kept from temptations to idolatry; and partly to represent as well the several perfections of Christ, the true sacrifice, and the various benefits of his death, as the several duties which men owe to their Creator and Redeemer, all which could not be so well expressed by one sort of sacrifice.
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Wesley: Lev 1:2 - -- Or, Of the sheep; though the Hebrew word contains both the sheep and goats. Now God chose these creatures for his sacrifices, either, In opposition to...
Or, Of the sheep; though the Hebrew word contains both the sheep and goats. Now God chose these creatures for his sacrifices, either, In opposition to the Egyptian idolatry, to which divers of the Israelites had been used, and were still in danger of revolting to again, that the frequent destruction of these creatures might bring such silly deities into contempt. Or, Because these are the fittest representations both of Christ and of true Christians, as being gentle, and harmless, and patient, and useful to men. Or, As the best and most profitable creatures, with which it is fit God should be served, and which we should be ready to part with, when God requires us to do so. Or, As things most common, that men might never want a sacrifice when they needed, or God required it.
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Wesley: Lev 1:3 - -- Strictly so called, such as was to be all burnt, the skin excepted. For every sacrifice was burnt, more or less. The sacrifices signified that the who...
Strictly so called, such as was to be all burnt, the skin excepted. For every sacrifice was burnt, more or less. The sacrifices signified that the whole man, in whose stead the sacrifice was offered, was to be entirely offered or devoted to God's service; and that the whole man did deserve to be utterly consumed, if God should deal severely with him; and directed us to serve the Lord with all singleness of heart, and to be ready to offer to God even such sacrifices or services wherein we ourselves should have no part or benefit.
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Wesley: Lev 1:3 - -- As being more perfect than the female, Mal 1:14, and more truly representing Christ.
As being more perfect than the female, Mal 1:14, and more truly representing Christ.
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Wesley: Lev 1:3 - -- To signify, That God should he served with the best of every kind. That man, represented by these sacrifices, should aim at all perfection of heart an...
To signify, That God should he served with the best of every kind. That man, represented by these sacrifices, should aim at all perfection of heart and life, and that Christians should one day attain to it, Eph 5:27. The spotless and compleat holiness of Christ.
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Wesley: Lev 1:3 - -- According to this translation, the place speaks only of free - will offerings, or such as were not prescribed by God to be offered in course, but were...
According to this translation, the place speaks only of free - will offerings, or such as were not prescribed by God to be offered in course, but were offered by the voluntary devotion of any person, either by way of supplication for any mercy, or by way of thanksgiving for any blessing received.
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will offerings, which were to be observed in other offerings also.
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Wesley: Lev 1:3 - -- In the court near the door, where the altar stood, Lev 1:5. For here it was to be sacrificed, and here the people might behold the oblation of it. And...
In the court near the door, where the altar stood, Lev 1:5. For here it was to be sacrificed, and here the people might behold the oblation of it. And this farther signified, that men could have no entrance, neither into the earthly tabernacle, the church, nor into the heavenly tabernacle of glory, but by Christ, who is the door, Joh 10:7, Joh 10:9, by whom alone we have access to God.
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Wesley: Lev 1:4 - -- Both his hands, Lev 8:14, Lev 8:18, and Lev 16:21. Whereby he signified, that he willingly gave it to the Lord. That he judged himself worthy of that ...
Both his hands, Lev 8:14, Lev 8:18, and Lev 16:21. Whereby he signified, that he willingly gave it to the Lord. That he judged himself worthy of that death which it suffered in his stead; and that he laid his sins upon it with an eye to him upon whom God would lay the iniquity of us all, Isa 53:6, and that together with it he did freely offer up himself to God.
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Wesley: Lev 1:4 - -- Sacramentally; as directing his faith and thoughts to that true propitiatory sacrifice which in time was to be offered up for him. And although burnt-...
Sacramentally; as directing his faith and thoughts to that true propitiatory sacrifice which in time was to be offered up for him. And although burnt-offerings were commonly offered by way of thanksgiving; yet they were sometimes offered by way of atonement for sin, that is, for sins in general, as appears from Job 1:5, but for particular sins there were special sacrifices.
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Wesley: Lev 1:5 - -- Either, the offerer, who is said to do it, namely, by the priest; for men are commonly said to do what they cause others to do, as Joh 4:1-2. the prie...
Either, the offerer, who is said to do it, namely, by the priest; for men are commonly said to do what they cause others to do, as Joh 4:1-2. the priest, as it follows, or the Levite, whose office this was.
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Wesley: Lev 1:5 - -- Which was done in a considerable quantity, and whereby was signified, That the offerer deserved to have his blood spilt in that manner. That the blood...
Which was done in a considerable quantity, and whereby was signified, That the offerer deserved to have his blood spilt in that manner. That the blood of Christ should be poured forth for sinners, and that this was the only mean of their reconciliation to God, and acceptance with him.
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Wesley: Lev 1:7 - -- Or, dispose the fire, that is, blow it up, and put it together, so as it might be fit for the present work. For the fire there used and allowed came d...
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Wesley: Lev 1:8 - -- All the fat was to be separated from the flesh, and to be put together, to increase the flame, and to consume the other parts of the sacrifice more sp...
All the fat was to be separated from the flesh, and to be put together, to increase the flame, and to consume the other parts of the sacrifice more speedily.
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Wesley: Lev 1:9 - -- To signify the universal and perfect purity both of the inwards, or the heart, and of the legs, or ways or actions, which was in Christ, and which sho...
To signify the universal and perfect purity both of the inwards, or the heart, and of the legs, or ways or actions, which was in Christ, and which should be in all Christians. And he washed not only the parts now mentioned, but all the rest, the trunk of the body, and the shoulders.
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Wesley: Lev 1:9 - -- Not in itself, for so it rather caused a stink, but as it represented Christ's offering up himself to God as a sweet smelling savour.
Not in itself, for so it rather caused a stink, but as it represented Christ's offering up himself to God as a sweet smelling savour.
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Wesley: Lev 1:11 - -- ward - Here this and other kinds of sacrifices were killed, Lev 6:25, and Lev 7:2, because here seems to have been the largest and most convenient pla...
ward - Here this and other kinds of sacrifices were killed, Lev 6:25, and Lev 7:2, because here seems to have been the largest and most convenient place for that work, the altar being probably near the middle of the east - end of the building, and the entrance being on the south - side. Besides this might design the place of Christ's death both more generally, in Jerusalem, which was in the sides of the north, Psa 48:2, and more specially, on mount Calvary, which was on the north - west side of Jerusalem.
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Wesley: Lev 1:14 - -- doves - These birds were appointed for the poor who could not bring better. And these birds are preferred before others, partly because they were easi...
doves - These birds were appointed for the poor who could not bring better. And these birds are preferred before others, partly because they were easily gotten, and partly because they are fit representations of Christ's chastity, and meekness, and gentleness, for which these birds are remarkable. The pigeons must be young, because then they are best; but the turtle - doves are better when they are grown up, and therefore they are not confined to that age.
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Wesley: Lev 1:15 - -- From the rest of the body; as sufficiently appears, because this was to be burnt by itself, and the body afterwards, Lev 1:17. And whereas it is said ...
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Wesley: Lev 1:15 - -- wring his head from his neck, but shall not divide it asunder, that is spoken not of the burnt-offering as here, but of the sin-offering.
wring his head from his neck, but shall not divide it asunder, that is spoken not of the burnt-offering as here, but of the sin-offering.
JFB: Lev 1:1 - -- The laws that are contained in the previous record were delivered either to the people publicly from Sinai, or to Moses privately, on the summit of th...
The laws that are contained in the previous record were delivered either to the people publicly from Sinai, or to Moses privately, on the summit of that mountain; but on the completion of the tabernacle, the remainder of the law was announced to the Hebrew leader by an audible voice from the divine glory, which surmounted the mercy seat.
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JFB: Lev 1:2 - -- If the subject of communication were of a temporal nature, the Levites were excluded; but if it were a spiritual matter, all the tribes were comprehen...
If the subject of communication were of a temporal nature, the Levites were excluded; but if it were a spiritual matter, all the tribes were comprehended under this name (Deu 27:12).
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JFB: Lev 1:2 - -- The directions given here relate solely to voluntary or freewill offerings--those rendered over and above such, as being of standing and universal obl...
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JFB: Lev 1:2 - -- That is, those animals that were not only tame, innocent and gentle, but useful and adapted for food. This rule excluded horses, dogs, swine, camels, ...
That is, those animals that were not only tame, innocent and gentle, but useful and adapted for food. This rule excluded horses, dogs, swine, camels, and asses, which were used in sacrifice by some heathen nations, beasts and birds of prey, as also hares and deers.
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JFB: Lev 1:3 - -- So called from its being wholly consumed on the altar; no part of it was eaten either by the priests or the offerer. It was designed to propitiate the...
So called from its being wholly consumed on the altar; no part of it was eaten either by the priests or the offerer. It was designed to propitiate the anger of God incurred by original sin, or by particular transgressions; and its entire combustion indicated the self-dedication of the offerer--his whole nature--his body and soul--as necessary to form a sacrifice acceptable to God (Rom 12:1; Phi 1:20). This was the most ancient as well as the most conspicuous mode of sacrifice.
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JFB: Lev 1:3 - -- No animal was allowed to be offered that had any deformity or defect. Among the Egyptians, a minute inspection was made by the priest; and the bullock...
No animal was allowed to be offered that had any deformity or defect. Among the Egyptians, a minute inspection was made by the priest; and the bullock having been declared perfect, a certificate to that effect being fastened to its horns with wax, was sealed with his ring, and no other might be substituted. A similar process of examining the condition of the beasts brought as offerings, seems to have been adopted by the priests in Israel (Joh 6:27).
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JFB: Lev 1:3 - -- Where stood the altar of burnt offering (Exo 40:6). Every other place was forbidden, under the highest penalty (Lev 17:4).
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JFB: Lev 1:4 - -- This was a significant act which implied not only that the offerer devoted the animal to God, but that he confessed his consciousness of sin and praye...
This was a significant act which implied not only that the offerer devoted the animal to God, but that he confessed his consciousness of sin and prayed that his guilt and its punishment might be transferred to the victim.
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Rather, "that it may be an acceptable atonement."
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JFB: Lev 1:5 - -- The animal should be killed by the offerer, not by the priest, for it was not his duty in case of voluntary sacrifices; in later times, however, the o...
The animal should be killed by the offerer, not by the priest, for it was not his duty in case of voluntary sacrifices; in later times, however, the office was generally performed by Levites.
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JFB: Lev 1:5 - -- On the spot where the hands had been laid upon the animal's head, on the north side of the altar.
On the spot where the hands had been laid upon the animal's head, on the north side of the altar.
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JFB: Lev 1:5 - -- This was to be done by the priests. The blood being considered the life, the effusion of it was the essential part of the sacrifice; and the sprinklin...
This was to be done by the priests. The blood being considered the life, the effusion of it was the essential part of the sacrifice; and the sprinkling of it--the application of the atonement--made the person and services of the offerer acceptable to God. The skin having been stripped off, and the carcass cut up, the various pieces were disposed on the altar in the manner best calculated to facilitate their being consumed by the fire.
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That about the kidneys especially, which is called "suet."
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JFB: Lev 1:9 - -- This part of the ceremony was symbolical of the inward purity, and the holy walk, that became acceptable worshippers.
This part of the ceremony was symbolical of the inward purity, and the holy walk, that became acceptable worshippers.
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JFB: Lev 1:9 - -- Is an expression of the offerer's piety, but especially as a sacrificial type of Christ.
Is an expression of the offerer's piety, but especially as a sacrificial type of Christ.
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JFB: Lev 1:10-13 - -- Those who could not afford the expense of a bullock might offer a ram or a he-goat, and the same ceremonies were to be observed in the act of offering...
Those who could not afford the expense of a bullock might offer a ram or a he-goat, and the same ceremonies were to be observed in the act of offering.
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JFB: Lev 1:14-17 - -- The gentle nature and cleanly habits of the dove led to its selection, while all other fowls were rejected, either for the fierceness of their disposi...
The gentle nature and cleanly habits of the dove led to its selection, while all other fowls were rejected, either for the fierceness of their disposition or the grossness of their taste; and in this case, there being from the smallness of the animal no blood for waste, the priest was directed to prepare it at the altar and sprinkle the blood. This was the offering appointed for the poor. The fowls were always offered in pairs, and the reason why Moses ordered two turtledoves or two young pigeons, was not merely to suit the convenience of the offerer, but according as the latter was in season; for pigeons are sometimes quite hard and unfit for eating, at which time turtledoves are very good in Egypt and Palestine. The turtledoves are not restricted to any age because they are always good when they appear in those countries, being birds of passage; but the age of the pigeons is particularly marked that they might not be offered to God at times when they are rejected by men [HARMER]. It is obvious, from the varying scale of these voluntary sacrifices, that the disposition of the offerer was the thing looked to--not the costliness of his offering.
Clarke: Lev 1:1 - -- And the Lord called unto Moses - From the manner in which this book commences, it appears plainly to be a continuation or the preceding; and indeed ...
And the Lord called unto Moses - From the manner in which this book commences, it appears plainly to be a continuation or the preceding; and indeed the whole is but one law, though divided into five portions, and why thus divided is not easy to be conjectured. Previously to the erection of the tabernacle God had given no particular directions concerning the manner of offering the different kinds of sacrifices; but as soon as this Divine structure was established and consecrated, Jehovah took it as his dwelling place; described the rites and ceremonies which he would have observed in his worship, that his people might know what was best pleasing in his sight; and that, when thus worshipping him, they might have confidence that they pleased him, every thing being done according to his own directions. A consciousness of acting according to the revealed will of God gives strong confidence to an upright mind.
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Clarke: Lev 1:2 - -- Bring an offering - The word קרבן korban , from קרב karab , to approach or draw near, signifies an offering or gift by which a person had a...
Bring an offering - The word
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Clarke: Lev 1:2 - -- Of the cattle - הבהמה habbehemah , animals of the beeve kind, such as the bull, heifer, bullock, and calf; and restrained to these alone by th...
Of the cattle -
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Clarke: Lev 1:2 - -- Of the flock - צאן tson . Sheep and Goats; for we have already seen that this term implies both kinds; and we know, from its use, that no other...
Of the flock -
1. The bull or ox, the cow or heifer, and the calf
2. The he-goat, she-goat, and the kid
3. The ram, the ewe, and the lamb
Among Fowls, only pigeons and turtle-doves were commanded to be offered, except in the case of cleansing the leper, mentioned Lev 14:4, where two clean birds, generally supposed to be sparrows or other small birds, though of what species is not well known, are specified
Fish were not offered, because they could not be readily brought to the tabernacle alive.
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Clarke: Lev 1:3 - -- Burnt-sacrifice - The most important of all the sacrifices offered to God; called by the Septuagint ὁλοκαυτωμα, because it was wholly c...
Burnt-sacrifice - The most important of all the sacrifices offered to God; called by the Septuagint
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Clarke: Lev 1:3 - -- His own voluntary will - לרצנו lirtsono , to gain himself acceptance before the Lord: in this way all the versions appear to have understood t...
His own voluntary will -
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Clarke: Lev 1:4 - -- He shall put his hand upon the head of the burnt-offering - By the imposition of hands the person bringing the victim acknowledged
1. &nb...
He shall put his hand upon the head of the burnt-offering - By the imposition of hands the person bringing the victim acknowledged
1. The sacrifice as his own
2. That he offered it as an atonement for his sins
3. That he was worthy of death because he had sinned, having forfeited his life by breaking the law
4. That he entreated God to accept the life of the innocent animal in place of his own
5. And all this, to be done profitably, must have respect to Him whose life, in the fullness of time, should be made a sacrifice for sin
6. The blood was to be sprinkled round about upon the altar, Lev 1:5, as by the sprinkling of blood the atonement was made; for the blood was the life of the beast, and it was always supposed that life went to redeem life
See Clarke on Exo 29:10 (note). On the required perfection of the sacrifice see Clarke on Exo 12:5 (note). It has been sufficiently remarked by learned men that almost all the people of the earth had their burnt-offerings, on which also they placed the greatest dependence. It was a general maxim through the heathen world, that there was no other way to appease the incensed gods; and they sometimes even offered human sacrifices, from the supposition, as Caesar expresses it, that life was necessary to redeem life, and that the gods would be satisfied with nothing less. " Quod pro vita hominis nisi vita hominis redditur, non posse aliter deorum immortalium numen placari arbitrantur ."- Com. de Bell. Gal., lib. vi. But this was not the case only with the Gauls, for we see, by Ovid, Fast., lib. vi., that it was a commonly received maxim among more polished people: -
"- Pro parvo victima parva cadit
Cor pro corde, precor, pro fibris sumite fibras
Hanc animam vobis pro meliore damus .
See the whole of this passage in the above work, from ver. 135 to 163.
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Clarke: Lev 1:6 - -- He shall flay - Probably meaning the person who brought the sacrifice, who, according to some of the rabbins, killed, flayed, cut up, and washed the...
He shall flay - Probably meaning the person who brought the sacrifice, who, according to some of the rabbins, killed, flayed, cut up, and washed the sacrifice, and then presented the parts and the blood to the priest, that he might burn the one, and sprinkle the other upon the altar. But it is certain that the priests also, and the Levites, flayed the victims, and the priest had the skin to himself; see Lev 7:8, and 2Ch 29:34. The red heifer alone was not flayed, but the whole body, with the skin, etc., consumed with fire. See Num 19:5.
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Clarke: Lev 1:7 - -- Put fire - The fire that came out of the tabernacle from before the Lord, and which was kept perpetually burning; see Lev 9:24. Nor was it lawful to...
Put fire - The fire that came out of the tabernacle from before the Lord, and which was kept perpetually burning; see Lev 9:24. Nor was it lawful to use any other fire in the service of God. See the case of Nadab and Abihu, Leviticus 10 (note).
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Clarke: Lev 1:8 - -- The priests - shall lay the parts - The sacrifice was divided according to its larger joints
1. After its blood was poured out, an...
The priests - shall lay the parts - The sacrifice was divided according to its larger joints
1. After its blood was poured out, and the skin removed, the head was cut off
2. They then opened it and took out the omentum, or caul, that invests the intestines
3. They took out the intestines with the mesentery, and washed them well, as also the fat
4. They then placed the four quarters upon the altar, covered them with the fat, laid the remains of the intestines upon them, and then laid the head above all
5. The sacred fire was then applied, and the whole mass was consumed. This was the holocaust, or complete burnt-offering.
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Clarke: Lev 1:9 - -- An offering - of a sweet savor - אשה ריח ניחוח ishsheh reiach nichoach , a fire-offering, an odour of rest, or, as the Septuagint expres...
An offering - of a sweet savor -
Calvin -> Lev 1:1
Calvin: Lev 1:1 - -- 1.And the Lord called unto Moses In these seven chapters Moses will treat generally of the sacrifices. But since we read of many things here, the use...
1.And the Lord called unto Moses In these seven chapters Moses will treat generally of the sacrifices. But since we read of many things here, the use of which has passed away, and others, the grounds of which I do not understand, I intend to content myself with a brief summary, from whence, however, the reader may fully perceive that whatever has been left to us relative to the legal sacrifices is even now profitable, provided we are not too curious. Let those who choose to hunt for allegories receive the praise they covet; my object is only to profit my readers, and it will suffice briefly to sum up what I think useful to be known. Although in this chapter burnt-offerings only are treated of, yet the rule which is laid down respecting them has a more extensive application, since Moses teaches what animals God would have offered to Him, so as that they may be acceptable, and also by whom and with what ceremonies they are to be offered. He enumerates three kinds, of the herd, of the flocks, and of fowls; for the case of the red heifer, from which the ashes of atonement were made, was different and peculiar; and here the question is as to the ordinary sacrifices, by which private individuals used either to atone for their sins or to testify their piety. He commands, therefore, that the cattle as well as the lambs and kids should be males, and also perfect and free from all blemish. We see, then, that only clean animals were chosen for the sacrifices, and again that all clean animals did not please God, but only domestic ones, such as allow themselves to be directed by the hand and will of men. For, though deer and roes are sometimes tamed, yet God did not admit them to His altar. This, then, was the first rule of obedience, that men should not offer promiscuously this or that victim, but bulls or bull-calves of their herds, and male lambs or kids of their flocks. Freedom from blemish is required for two reasons; for, since the sacrifices were types of Christ, it behooved that in all of them should be represented that complete perfection of His whereby His heavenly Father was to be propitiated; and, secondly, the Israelites were reminded that all uncleanness was repudiated by God lest his service should be polluted by their impurity. But whilst God exhorted them to study true sincerity, so he abundantly taught them that unless they directed their faith to Christ, whatsoever came from them would be rejected; for neither would the purity of a brute animal have satisfied Him if it had not represented something better. In the second place, it is prescribed that whosoever presented a burnt-offering should lay his hand on its head, after he had come near the door of the tabernacle. This ceremony was not only a sign of consecration, but also of its being an atonement, 249 since it was substituted for the man, as is expressed in the words of Moses, “And it shall be accepted for him to make atonement for him.” (Lev 1:4.) There is not, then, the least doubt but that they transferred their guilt and whatever penalties they had deserved to the victims, in order that they might be reconciled to God. Now, since this promise could not have been at all delusive, it must be concluded that in the ancient sacrifices there was a price of satisfaction which should release them from guilt and blame in the judgment of God; yet still not as though these brute animals availed in themselves unto expiation, except in so far as they were testimonies of the grace to be manifested by Christ. Thus the ancients were reconciled to God in a sacramental manner by the victims, just as we are now cleansed through baptism. Hence it follows that these symbols were useful only as they were exercises unto faith and repentance, so that the sinner might learn to fear God’s wrath, and to seek pardon in Christ.
Defender: Lev 1:1 - -- All Scripture is verbally inspired, but there were various methods by which this was accomplished. The result, rather than the method, is the key issu...
All Scripture is verbally inspired, but there were various methods by which this was accomplished. The result, rather than the method, is the key issue. God "in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets" (Heb 1:1). The idea of direct divine dictation is often ridiculed or denied with embarrassment, but the fact is that this method was actually claimed by the human writers in many cases. The book of Leviticus is a prime example, with Moses asserting that over 90% of its verses were dictated by God. Similar claims were made by many of the prophets. "Is anything too hard for the Lord?" (Gen 18:14)."
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Defender: Lev 1:3 - -- Burnt offerings were offered first by Abel (Gen 4:4), as well as by the later patriarchs. They are the first of five types of offerings mentioned in L...
Burnt offerings were offered first by Abel (Gen 4:4), as well as by the later patriarchs. They are the first of five types of offerings mentioned in Leviticus as being incorporated into the ceremonial law of Israel. To make a true atonement (or "covering") for sins, the blood of a spotless animal must be shed, thereby anticipating the eventual offering of the sinless blood of the Lamb of God as a once-for-all offering for the sin of the world (Joh 1:29; 1Pe 1:18-20; Heb 10:10)."
TSK: Lev 1:1 - -- called : Exo 19:3, Exo 24:1, Exo 24:2, Exo 24:12, Exo 29:42; Joh 1:17
out of : Exo 25:22, Exo 33:7, Exo 39:32, Exo 40:34, Exo 40:35
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TSK: Lev 1:2 - -- If any : Lev 22:18, Lev 22:19; Gen 4:3, Gen 4:5; 1Ch 16:29; Rom 12:1, Rom 12:6; Eph 5:2
an offering : Korban , from karav to approach, an introdu...
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TSK: Lev 1:3 - -- a burnt : Lev 6:9-13, Lev 8:18, Lev 8:21; Gen 8:20, Gen 22:2, Gen 22:8, Gen 22:13; Exo 24:5, Exo 29:18, Exo 29:42, Exo 32:6, Exo 38:1; Num 23:3, Num 2...
a burnt : Lev 6:9-13, Lev 8:18, Lev 8:21; Gen 8:20, Gen 22:2, Gen 22:8, Gen 22:13; Exo 24:5, Exo 29:18, Exo 29:42, Exo 32:6, Exo 38:1; Num 23:3, Num 23:10, Num 23:11, Num 23:19, Num 23:23, Num 23:24, Num 23:27, Num 23:30, Num 29:8-11, Num 29:13; Isa 1:11; Heb 10:8-10
a male : Lev 3:1, Lev 4:23, Lev 22:19-24; Exo 12:5; Deu 15:21; Zec 13:7; Mal 1:14; Luk 1:35; Joh 1:36; Eph 5:27; Heb 7:26, Heb 9:14; 1Pe 1:18, 1Pe 1:19
his own : Lev 7:16, Lev 22:19, Lev 22:21; Exo 35:5, Exo 35:21, Exo 35:29, Exo 36:3; Psa 40:8, Psa 110:3; 2Co 8:12, 2Co 9:7
at the : Lev 16:7, Lev 17:4; Exo 29:4; Deu 12:5, Deu 12:6, Deu 12:13, Deu 12:14, Deu 12:27; Eze 20:40; Joh 10:7, Joh 10:9; Eph 2:18
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TSK: Lev 1:4 - -- put : Lev 3:2, Lev 3:8, Lev 3:13, Lev 4:4, Lev 4:15, Lev 4:24, Lev 4:29, Lev 8:14, Lev 8:22, Lev 16:21; Exo 29:10, Exo 29:15, Exo 29:19; Num 8:12; Isa...
put : Lev 3:2, Lev 3:8, Lev 3:13, Lev 4:4, Lev 4:15, Lev 4:24, Lev 4:29, Lev 8:14, Lev 8:22, Lev 16:21; Exo 29:10, Exo 29:15, Exo 29:19; Num 8:12; Isa 53:4-6; 2Co 5:20, 2Co 5:21
be accepted : Lev 22:21, Lev 22:27; Isa 56:7; Rom 12:1; Phi 4:18
atonement : Lev 4:20, Lev 4:26, Lev 4:31, Lev 4:35, Lev 5:6, Lev 6:7, Lev 9:7, Lev 16:24; Num 15:25, Num 15:28, Num 25:13; 2Ch 29:23, 2Ch 29:24; Dan 9:24; Rom 3:25, Rom 5:11; Heb 10:4; 1Jo 2:2
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TSK: Lev 1:5 - -- kill : Lev 1:11, Lev 3:2, Lev 3:8, Lev 3:13, Lev 16:15; 2Ch 29:22-24; Mic 6:6
the priests : Lev 1:11, Lev 1:15; 2Ch 35:11; Heb 10:11
sprinkle : Lev 1:...
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TSK: Lev 1:7 - -- fire : Lev 6:12, Lev 6:13, Lev 9:24, Lev 10:1; 1Ch 21:26; 2Ch 7:1; Mal 1:10
lay : Gen 22:9; Neh 13:31
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TSK: Lev 1:9 - -- inwards : Lev 1:13, Lev 8:21, Lev 9:14; Psa 51:6; Jer 4:14; Mat 23:25-28
burn all : Lev 1:13, Lev 1:17, Lev 3:11; Psa 66:15; Zec 13:7
a sweet : Gen 8:...
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TSK: Lev 1:10 - -- of the flocks : Lev 1:2; Gen 4:4, Gen 8:20; Isa 53:6, Isa 53:7; Joh 1:29
a burnt sacrifice : Olah , a burnt offering, from âlah , to ascend, bec...
of the flocks : Lev 1:2; Gen 4:4, Gen 8:20; Isa 53:6, Isa 53:7; Joh 1:29
a burnt sacrifice :
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TSK: Lev 1:11 - -- he shall : Lev 1:5; Exo 40:22; Eze 8:5
northward : Lev 6:25, Lev 7:2
and the : Lev 1:7-9, Lev 9:12-14
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TSK: Lev 1:15 - -- wring off his head : or, pinch off the head with the nail, Lev 5:8; Psa 22:1, Psa 22:21, 69:1-21; Isa 53:4, Isa 53:5, Isa 53:10; Matt. 26:1-27:66; 1Jo...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Lev 1:1 - -- The Lord - In the Hebrew text of Leviticus, Jehovah יהוה ye hovâh is the name by which God is usually called. Where אלהים ...
The Lord - In the Hebrew text of Leviticus, Jehovah
The tabernacle of the congregation - Rather, the tent of meeting. See Exo 22:21 note. When Jehovah (Yahweh) was about to give His people the Law of the Ten Commandments Exo 19:3 He called to Moses from the top of Mount Sinai in thunders and lightnings and a thick cloud. When He was now about to give them the laws by which their formal acts of worship were to be regulated, He called to Moses out of the tabernacle which had just been constructed at the foot of the mountain. Exo 25:22.
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Barnes: Lev 1:2 - -- Speak unto the children of Israel - It is important to observe that these first instructions Lev. 1:2\endash 3:17 are addressed expressly to th...
Speak unto the children of Israel - It is important to observe that these first instructions Lev. 1:2\endash 3:17 are addressed expressly to the individual who felt the need of sacrifice on his own account. They were not delivered through the priests, nor had the officiating priest any choice as to what he was to do. He was only to examine the victim to see that it was perfect Lev 22:17-24, and to perform other strictly prescribed duties Lev. 6:8\endash 7:21. The act of offering was to be voluntary on the part of the worshipper, but the mode of doing it was in every point defined by the Law. The presenting of the victim at the entrance of the tabernacle was in fact a symbol of the free will submitting itself to the Law of the Lord. Such acts of sacrifice are to be distinguished from the public offerings, and those ordained for individuals on special occasions (see Lev 4:2 note), which belonged to the religious education of the nation.
Offering - Hebrew:
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Barnes: Lev 1:3 - -- burnt - literally, that (offering) which ascends (as a flame). A male without blemish - Males were required in most offerings, since the ...
burnt - literally, that (offering) which ascends (as a flame).
A male without blemish - Males were required in most offerings, since the stronger sex which takes precedence of the other. But females were allowed in peace-offerings Lev 3:1, Lev 3:6, and were expressly prescribed in the sin-offerings of the common people Lev 4:28, Lev 4:32; Lev 5:6.
At the door of the tabernacle of the congregation - Wherever these words occur, they should be rendered: "at the entrance of the tent of meeting."The place denoted is that part of the court which was in front of the tabernacle, in which stood the brass altar and the laver, and where alone sacrifices could be offered. See Cut to Exo. 26.
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Barnes: Lev 1:4 - -- And he shall put his hand upon the head of the burnt offering - The usual ceremony. By it the sacrificer identified himself with his victim Lev...
And he shall put his hand upon the head of the burnt offering - The usual ceremony. By it the sacrificer identified himself with his victim Lev 3:2, Lev 3:8; Lev 4:15; Lev 8:14; Rom 12:1.
To make atonement for him - This phrase belongs more especially to the sin-offerings and the trespass-offerings (compare Lev 4:20, Lev 4:26, Lev 4:31, Lev 4:35; Lev 5:16, Lev 5:18; Lev 6:7, etc.) It is not used in reference to the peace-offerings, and but rarely in reference to the burnt-offerings. It should be noticed that it is here introduced in close connection with the imposition of hands by the worshipper, not, as it is when it refers to the sin-offering, with the special functions of the priest, Lev 4:26, Lev 4:35; 2Ch 29:23.
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Barnes: Lev 1:5 - -- And he shall kill the bullock - Tradition states that before the laying on of the hand, the victim was bound by a cord to a ring on the north s...
And he shall kill the bullock - Tradition states that before the laying on of the hand, the victim was bound by a cord to a ring on the north side of the altar; as the words of the prayer were ended, the throat was cut and the blood received into a bowl held by an assistant.
Sprinkle the blood - Rather, throw the blood, so as to make the liquid cover a considerable surface. (The Christian significance of this typical action is referred to in Heb 12:24; 1Pe 1:2.)
By the door of the tabernacle - At the entrance of the tent.
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Barnes: Lev 1:6 - -- And he shall flay - The sacrificer, or his assistant, had to skin and cut up the victim. The hide was the gratuity of the officiating priest. L...
And he shall flay - The sacrificer, or his assistant, had to skin and cut up the victim. The hide was the gratuity of the officiating priest. Lev 7:8.
His pieces - That is, its proper pieces, the parts into which it was usual for a sacrificed animal to be divided.
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Barnes: Lev 1:7 - -- Put fire upon the altar - This must specifically refer to the first burnt-offering on the newly-constructed altar. The rule was afterward to be...
Put fire upon the altar - This must specifically refer to the first burnt-offering on the newly-constructed altar. The rule was afterward to be, "it shall never go out,"Lev 6:13.
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Barnes: Lev 1:8 - -- The parts of the victim were then salted by the priest in conformity with the rule, Lev 2:13; Eze 43:24; Mar 9:49, and placed IN ORDER upon the wood...
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Barnes: Lev 1:9 - -- The parts which were washed were the stomach, and bowels, and feet, divided from the carcass at the knee-joint. The priest shall burn - The ve...
The parts which were washed were the stomach, and bowels, and feet, divided from the carcass at the knee-joint.
The priest shall burn - The verb here translated burn, is applied exclusively to the burning of the incense, to the lights of the tabernacle, and to the offerings on the altar. The primary meaning of its root seems to be to exhale odor. (See the margin of Lev 24:2; Exo 30:8). The word for burning in a common way is quite different, and is applied to the burning of those parts of victims which were burned without the camp (Lev 4:12, Lev 4:21; Num 19:5, etc.). The importance of the distinction is great in its bearing on the meaning of the burnt-offering. The substance of the victim was regarded not as something to be consumed, but as an offering of a sweet-smelling savor sent up in the flame to Yahweh.
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Barnes: Lev 1:10 - -- Of the flocks - These directions are more brief than those for the bullock. The burnt-offering of the sheep must have been that with which the ...
Of the flocks - These directions are more brief than those for the bullock. The burnt-offering of the sheep must have been that with which the people were most familiar in the daily morning and evening service. Exo 29:38-42. Sheep were preferred for sacrifice when they could be obtained, except in some special sin-offerings in which goats were required Lev 4:23; Lev 9:3; Lev 16:5. The lamb "without blemish"is a well-known type of Christ. Heb 9:14; 1Pe 1:19.
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Barnes: Lev 1:11 - -- Northward before the Lord - That is, on the north side of the altar. See also Lev 4:24, Lev 4:29, Lev 4:33; Lev 7:2. This was probably an arran...
Northward before the Lord - That is, on the north side of the altar. See also Lev 4:24, Lev 4:29, Lev 4:33; Lev 7:2. This was probably an arrangement of some practical convenience. On the west side of the altar stood the laver; on the east side was the place of ashes (see Lev 1:16 note); and the south side, where appears to have been the slope by which the priests went up to the altar, must have been left clear for a path.
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Barnes: Lev 1:14 - -- Of turtledoves, or of young pigeons - The offering of a bird was permitted to one who was too poor to offer a quadruped. (Compare the marginal ...
Of turtledoves, or of young pigeons - The offering of a bird was permitted to one who was too poor to offer a quadruped. (Compare the marginal references.) But in certain rites of purification birds were appointed for all, whatever might be their circumstances. See Lev 15:14, Lev 15:29; Num 6:10. The limitation of the age of the pigeons may be accounted for by the natural habits of the birds. It would seem that the species which are most likely to have been the sacrificial dove and pigeon are the common turtle and the bluerock pigeon, a bird like our stock-dove, and considerably larger than the turtle. The turtles come in the early part of April, but as the season advances they wholly disappear. The pigeons, on the contrary, do not leave the country; and their nests, with young ones in them, may be easily found at any season of the year. Hence, it would appear, that when turtledoves could not be obtained, nestling pigeons were accepted as a substitute.
Poole: Lev 1:1 - -- Moses stood without Exo 40:35 , waiting for God’ s call.
Out of the tabernacle of the congregation from the mercyseat in the tabernacle.
Moses stood without Exo 40:35 , waiting for God’ s call.
Out of the tabernacle of the congregation from the mercyseat in the tabernacle.
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Poole: Lev 1:2 - -- There are divers kinds of sacrifices here prescribed; some by way of acknowledgment to God for mercies either desired or received; others by way of ...
There are divers kinds of sacrifices here prescribed; some by way of acknowledgment to God for mercies either desired or received; others by way of satisfaction to God for men’ s sins; others were mere exercises of piety and devotion. And the reason why there are so many kinds of them was, partly respect to the childish estate of the Jews, who by the custom of nations, and their own natural inclinations, were much addicted to outward rites and ceremonies, that they might have full employment of that kind in God’ s service, and thereby be kept from temptations to idolatry; and partly to represent as well the several perfections of Christ, be true sacrifice, and the various benefits of his death, as the several duties which men owe to their Creator and Redeemer, all which could not be so well expressed by one sort of sacrifices.
Of the flock or, of the sheep ; though the Hebrew word contains both the sheep and goats, as appears both from the use of the word, Gen 12:16 27:9 38:17 and from Lev 1:10 , and other places of Scripture. Now God chose these kinds of creatures for his sacrifices, either,
1. In opposition to the Egyptian idolatry, to which divers of the Israelites had been used, and were still in danger of revolting to again, that the frequent destruction of these creatures might bring such silly deities into contempt. Or,
2. Because these are the fittest representations both of Christ and of true Christians, as being gentle, and harmless, and patient, and most useful to men. Or,
3. As the best and most profitable creatures, with which it is fit God should be served, and which we should be ready to part with, when God requires us to do so. Or,
4. As things most common and obvious, that men might never want a sacrifice when they needed or God required it.
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Poole: Lev 1:3 - -- A burnt sacrifice strictly so called, was such as was to be all burnt, the skin excepted, Lev 7:8 Gen 8:20 1Ki 3:15 . For Otherwise every sacrifice w...
A burnt sacrifice strictly so called, was such as was to be all burnt, the skin excepted, Lev 7:8 Gen 8:20 1Ki 3:15 . For Otherwise every sacrifice was burnt, more or less. The sacrifices did partly signify that the whole man, in whose stead the sacrifice was offered, was to be entirely and unreservedly offered or devoted to God’ s service; and that the whole man did deserve to be utterly consumed, if God should deal severely with him; and directed us to serve the Lord with all singleness of heart, without self-ends, and to be ready to offer to God even such sacrifices or services wherein we ourselves should have no part nor benefit.
A male as being more perfect than the female, Mal 1:14 , and more truly representing Christ.
Without blemish of which see Exo 29:1 Lev 23:22 , &c.; to signify,
1. That God should be served with the best of every kind.
2. That man, represented by these sacrifices, should aim at all purity and perfection of heart and life, and that Christians should one day attain to it, Eph 5:27 .
3. The spotless and complete holiness of Christ, Heb 9:13,14 1Pe 1:18,19 2:22 . Of his own voluntary will . According to this translation, the place speaks only of free-will offerings, or such as were not prescribed by God to be offered in course, but were offered at the pleasure and by the voluntary devotion of any person, either by way of supplication for any mercy which he needed or desired, or by way of thanksgiving for any favour or blessing received. But it may seem improper to restrain the rules here given to free will offerings, which were to be observed in other offerings also. And the Hebrew word is by the LXX. Chaldee, Syriac, and Arabic, and others, rendered to this purpose, for his acceptation , or that he may be accepted with God , or that God may be atoned, as it is Lev 1:4 . And so this phrase is used Lev 23:11 . At the door of the tabernacle of the congregation ; in the court near to the door, where the altar stood, Lev 1:5 . For here it was to be sacrificed, and here also the people might behold the oblation of it. And this further signified, that men could have no entrance, neither into the earthly tabernacle, the church, nor into the heavenly tabernacle of glory, but by Christ, who is the door , Joh 10:7,9 , by whom alone we have access to God.
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Poole: Lev 1:4 - -- His hand i.e. both his hands, Lev 8:14,18 16:21 ; a common enallage.
Upon the head of the burnt-offering whereby he signified,
1. That he willingl...
His hand i.e. both his hands, Lev 8:14,18 16:21 ; a common enallage.
Upon the head of the burnt-offering whereby he signified,
1. That he willingly gave it to the Lord.
2. That he did legally unite himself with it, and judged himself worthy of that death which it suffered in his stead; and that he laid his sins upon it in a ceremonial way, and had an eye to him upon whom God would lay the iniquity of us all , Isa 53:6 ; and that together with it he did freely offer up himself to God.
To make atonement for him to wit, ceremonially and sacramentally; as directing his faith and thoughts to that true propitiatory sacrifice which in time was to be offered up for him. See Rom 3:25 Heb 9:15,25,26 . And although burnt-offerings were commonly offered by way of thanksgiving, Gen 8:20 Psa 51:16,17 , yet they were sometimes offered by way of atonement for sin, to wit, for sins in general, as appears from Job 1:5 , but for particular sins there were special sacrifices, as we shall see.
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Poole: Lev 1:5 - -- He shall kill either,
1. The offerer, who is said to do it, to wit, by the priest; for men are commonly said to do what they cause others to do, as ...
He shall kill either,
1. The offerer, who is said to do it, to wit, by the priest; for men are commonly said to do what they cause others to do, as Joh 4:1,2 . Or,
2. The priest, as it follows, or the Levite, whose office this was. See Exo 29:11 Lev 8:15 Num 8:19 1Ch 23:28,31 2Ch 20:16 35:11 .
Sprinkle the blood round about upon the altar which was done in a considerable, quantity, as may be gathered from Zec 9:15 ; and whereby was signified,
1. That the offerer deserved to have his blood spilt in that manner.
2. That the blood of Christ should be poured forth for sinners, and that that was the only mean of their reconciliation to God, and acceptance with him.
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Poole: Lev 1:6 - -- He shall flay the burnt-offering partly for decency, because the sacrifices being as it were God’ s food and feast, it was incongruous to offer ...
He shall flay the burnt-offering partly for decency, because the sacrifices being as it were God’ s food and feast, it was incongruous to offer to God that which men refused to eat; and partly to signify that the great thing which God required and regarded in men was, not their outward appearance, but their inside; and that as he doth see all men’ s insides, Heb 4:13 , so he will one day make them visible to others.
Into his pieces to wit, the head, and fat, and inwards, and legs, Lev 1:8,9 .
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Poole: Lev 1:7 - -- Or,
dispose the fire i.e. blow it up, and put it together, so as it might be fit for the present work. For the fire there used and allowed came do...
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Poole: Lev 1:8 - -- The fat all the fat, which was to be separated from the flesh, and to be put together, to increase the flame, and to consume the other parts of the s...
The fat all the fat, which was to be separated from the flesh, and to be put together, to increase the flame, and to consume the other parts of the sacrifice more quickly. Others translate it,
the trunk of the body as distinguished from the head, and joints, and inward parts.
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Poole: Lev 1:9 - -- His inwards and his legs shall he wash to signify the universal and perfect purity both of the inwards, or the heart, and of the legs, or ways, or ac...
His inwards and his legs shall he wash to signify the universal and perfect purity both of the inwards, or the heart, and of the legs, or ways, or actions, which was in Christ, and which should be in all Christians.
The priest shall burn all not only the parts now mentioned, but all the rest, the trunk of the body, and the shoulders, as is apparent from the practice or execution of these precepts.
Of a sweet savour not in itself, for so it rather caused a stink, but as it represented Christ’ s offering up himself to God as a sweet-smelling savour, Eph 5:2 ; and to admonish us of the excellent virtue of Divine institution, without which God values no worship, though never so glorious, and by which even the meanest things, are precious and acceptable to God.
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Poole: Lev 1:11 - -- This and other kinds of sacrifices were killed
on the side of the altar northward Lev 6:25 7:2, because here seems to have been the largest and m...
This and other kinds of sacrifices were killed
on the side of the altar northward Lev 6:25 7:2, because here seems to have been the largest and most convenient place for that work, the altar being probably near the middle of the east end of the building, and the entrance being on the south side; so the north side was the only vacant place. Besides, this might design the place of Christ’ s death, both more generally, to wit, in Jerusalem, which was
in the sides of the north Psa 48:2 ; and more specially, to wit, on Mount Calvary, which was on the north and west side of Jerusalem.
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Poole: Lev 1:14 - -- These birds were appointed for the relief of the poor who could not bring better. And these birds are preferred before others, partly because they w...
These birds were appointed for the relief of the poor who could not bring better. And these birds are preferred before others, partly because they were easily gotten, and partly because they are fit representations of Christ’ s chastity, and meekness, and gentleness, for which these birds are remarkable. The pigeons must be young, because then they are best; but the turtle-doves are better when they are more grown up, and therefore they are not confined to that age.
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Poole: Lev 1:15 - -- Wring off his head to wit, from the rest of the body; as sufficiently appears, because this was to be burnt by itself, as it here follows, and the bo...
Wring off his head to wit, from the rest of the body; as sufficiently appears, because this was to be burnt by itself, as it here follows, and the body afterwards, Lev 1:17 . And whereas it is said, Lev 5:8 , he shall wring off his head from his neck, but shall not divide it asunder , that is spoken not of the burnt-offering, as here, but of the sin-offering, in which there might be a differing rite.
Haydock: Lev 1:2 - -- Offer, voluntarily, without any command. Some sacrifices were of precept, Exodus xxii. 29. (Menochius) ---
These first chapters are addressed to t...
Offer, voluntarily, without any command. Some sacrifices were of precept, Exodus xxii. 29. (Menochius) ---
These first chapters are addressed to the people; the 6th from ver. 9, to the priests. Oxen, goats, and sheep, pigeons, and turtles, were to be offered in sacrifice, and small birds also, in the purification of lepers, (chap. xiv. 4,) as they might easily be procured. (Calmet) ---
By sacrifice, we testify the dominion of God over all. They were offered by the patriarchs, and by all nations. God requireth that the victim should be without blemish, and slain with certain ceremonies wisely ordained, Psalm ciii. 24. (Worthington) ---
A sacrifice. Hebrew korban, a present of any sort, Mark vii. ---
Sheep and goats, ver. 10. The same term, tson, signifies both. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Lev 1:3 - -- A holocaust. That is, a whole burnt-offering; (olocauston) so called, because the whole victim was consumed with fire; and given in such manner to G...
A holocaust. That is, a whole burnt-offering; (olocauston) so called, because the whole victim was consumed with fire; and given in such manner to God as wholly to evaporate, as it were, for his honour and glory; without having any part of it reserved for the use of man. The other sacrifices of the Old Testament were either offerings for sin, or peace-offerings: and these latter again were either offered in thanksgiving for blessing received, or by way of prayer for new favours or graces. So that sacrifices were then offered to God for four different ends or intentions, answerable to the different obligations which man has to God: 1. By way of adoration, homage, praise, and glory, due to his divine Majesty. 2. By way of thanksgiving for all benefits received from him. 3. By way of confessing and craving pardon for sins. 4. By way of prayer and petition for grace an relief in all necessities. In the New Law we have but one sacrifice, viz. that of the body and blood of Christ: but this one sacrifice of the New Testament perfectly answers all these four ends; and both priests and people, as often as it is celebrated, ought to join in offering it up for these four ends. (Challoner) (St. Augustine, City of God viii. 17.; St. Chrysostom in Psalm xcv.) ---
We have an altar, (Hebrews xiii. 10,) on which the unbloody sacrifice is offered, (Matthew xxvi. 25,) as the blood of Christ was on the cross, Hebrews ix. 25. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Lev 1:4 - -- Victim. To transfer all the curses due to him upon it, (Eusebius, Demon. i. 10,) and to testify that he gives it up entirely for the honour of God. ...
Victim. To transfer all the curses due to him upon it, (Eusebius, Demon. i. 10,) and to testify that he gives it up entirely for the honour of God. (Lyranus) ---
The Egyptians cut off the head of the victim, and vented upon it imprecations, begging that the gods would discharge upon it all the evils which they had deserved. Then they sold it to some foreigner, or threw it into the Nile. (Herod. ii. 39.) All nations seem to have acknowledged, that life would be given for life. Hanc animam vobis pro veliore damus: (Ovid, Fast. i.) and they had holocausts, in imitation of the Hebrews. (Bochart) ---
Expiation. Hebrew, "it shall be accepted for him to make atonement for him," provided he be in proper dispositions. (Menochius) ---
The primary intention of the holocaust was to honour God: but this insured his favour also, and pardon. (Du Hamel)
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Haydock: Lev 1:5 - -- He, by the hands of the priests, (chap. x. 1,) as the Septuagint express it, "they shall immolate;" (Menochius) though we might infer from this text,...
He, by the hands of the priests, (chap. x. 1,) as the Septuagint express it, "they shall immolate;" (Menochius) though we might infer from this text, that the person who offered the victim, had to slay it; (Calmet) while the priests alone could pour the blood upon and around the altar. Without the effusion of blood remission is not made, Hebrews ix. 22. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Lev 1:6 - -- They. Regularly the Levites performed this office. The skin belonged to the priest, chap. vii. 8. (Calmet)
They. Regularly the Levites performed this office. The skin belonged to the priest, chap. vii. 8. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Lev 1:7 - -- Fire. Hebrew and Septuagint place the fire first, then the wood. It was the sacred fire which was never extinguished, but removed from the altar in...
Fire. Hebrew and Septuagint place the fire first, then the wood. It was the sacred fire which was never extinguished, but removed from the altar in marches, (chap. iv. 13,) perhaps in a censer or pan. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Lev 1:8 - -- All things, &c. Hebrew pador, may signify the fat, or the trunk of the animal. (Calmet)
All things, &c. Hebrew pador, may signify the fat, or the trunk of the animal. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Lev 1:9 - -- Sweet. Not that the Deity can take delight in sweet odours; but he is pleased with the devotion of men. For their advancement in piety, he required...
Sweet. Not that the Deity can take delight in sweet odours; but he is pleased with the devotion of men. For their advancement in piety, he required these sacrifices; 1. to keep the people from idolatry; 2. to teach them to consecrate their body and effects to him, as well as their souls, to serve justice unto sanctification; (Romans vi. 19; John iv. 24) as without the help of exterior observances, the mind will hardly rise to the contemplation of truth; 3. to prefigure the greater mysteries of the Christian religion, of which the law was only a shadow, incapable of conferring justifying grace. (John i. 17; Galatians iii. 11.) (Worthington) ---
The law was our pedagogue, in Christ, that we might be justified by faith, ver. 24.
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Haydock: Lev 1:10 - -- Male. Lyranus seems to have read "a year old," in the Vulgate. But it is not found in the Hebrew or in any version. It may have been taken from Ex...
Male. Lyranus seems to have read "a year old," in the Vulgate. But it is not found in the Hebrew or in any version. It may have been taken from Exodus xii. 5, where the paschal lamb must be a male of one year. ---
Blemish. The Septuagint add, "and he shall put his hand upon its head." (Haydock)
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Haydock: Lev 1:14 - -- Pigeons. Hebrew and Septuagint say nothing about the age; though the Rabbins assure us, that old turtles and young pigeons were to be immolated, as ...
Pigeons. Hebrew and Septuagint say nothing about the age; though the Rabbins assure us, that old turtles and young pigeons were to be immolated, as being more excellent. God requires only what each person may easily procure. This third species of holocaust was chiefly intended for the poor, chap. xii. 8. But if they could not afford even this, they might offer flour, chap. ii.
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Haydock: Lev 1:15 - -- The neck. Some say, without pulling the head off (Grotius); which the Rabbins deny. (Calmet)
The neck. Some say, without pulling the head off (Grotius); which the Rabbins deny. (Calmet)
Gill: Lev 1:1 - -- And the Lord called unto Moses,.... Or "met him", as the phrase is rendered in Num 23:4. The word ויקרא, translated "called", the last letter of ...
And the Lord called unto Moses,.... Or "met him", as the phrase is rendered in Num 23:4. The word
and spoke unto him out of the tabernacle of the congregation; from off the mercy seat, between the cherubim over the ark, where the glory of the Lord, or the divine Shechinah and Majesty took up its residence, and from whence the Lord promised to commune with Moses, Exo 25:22,
saying; what follows concerning sacrifices; which shows, that these were not human inventions, but of divine institution, and by the appointment of God.
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Gill: Lev 1:2 - -- Speak unto the children of Israel, and say unto them,.... For unto no other was the law of sacrifices given; not to the Gentiles, but to the children ...
Speak unto the children of Israel, and say unto them,.... For unto no other was the law of sacrifices given; not to the Gentiles, but to the children of Israel:
if any man; or woman, for the word "man", as Ben Gersom observes, includes the whole species:
of you; of you Israelites; the Targum of Jonathan adds,"and not of the apostates who worship idols.''Jarchi interprets it of yours, of your mammon or substance, what was their own property, and not what was stolen from another d, see Isa 61:8,
bring an offering unto the Lord; called "Korban" of "Karab", to draw nigh, because it was not only brought nigh to God, to the door of the tabernacle where he dwelt, but because by it they drew nigh to God, and presented themselves to him, and that for them; typical of believers under the Gospel dispensation drawing nigh to God through Christ, by whom their spiritual sacrifices are presented and accepted in virtue of his:
ye shall bring your offering of the cattle, even of the herd, and of the flock; that is, of oxen, and of sheep or goats. The Targum of Jonathan is,"of a clean beast, of oxen, and of sheep, but not of wild beasts shall ye bring your offerings.''These were appointed, Ben Gersom says, for these two reasons, partly because the most excellent, and partly because most easy to be found and come at, as wild creatures are not: but the true reason is, because they were very fit to represent the great sacrifice Christ, which all sacrifices were typical of; the ox or bullock was a proper emblem of him for his strength and laboriousness, and the sheep for his harmlessness, innocence, and patience, and the goat, as he was not in himself, but as he was thought to be, a sinner, being sent in the likeness of sinful flesh, and being traduced as such, and having the sins of his people imputed to him.
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Gill: Lev 1:3 - -- If his offering be a burnt sacrifice of the herd,.... So called, because consumed by fire, see Lev 6:9 even all of it except the skin, and therefore ...
If his offering be a burnt sacrifice of the herd,.... So called, because consumed by fire, see Lev 6:9 even all of it except the skin, and therefore its name with the Greeks is "a whole burnt offering", as in Mar 12:33 its name in Hebrew is
let him offer a male; and not a female, pointing at the Messiah's sex, and his strength and excellency, the child that was to be born, and the Son to be given, whose name should be Immanuel:
without blemish; or perfect, having no part wanting, nor any part superfluous, nor any spot upon it, see Lev 22:19 denoting the perfection of Christ as man, being in all things made like unto his brethren, and his having not the least stain or blemish of sin upon him, either original or actual, and so could, as he did, offer up himself without spot to God, Heb 2:17,
and he shall offer it of his own voluntary will; not forced or compelled to it, or with any reluctancy, but as a pure freewill offering; so our Lord Jesus Christ laid down his life of himself, and freely gave himself an offering and a sacrifice, and became cheerfully and readily obedient unto death:
at the door of the tabernacle of the congregation, before the Lord; it was to be done openly and publicly, and in the presence of the Lord, to whom it was offered up; showing, that Christ's sacrifice would be offered up to God, against whom we have sinned, by which his law would be fulfilled, his justice satisfied, and wrath appeased, and that his death would be public and notorious; see Luk 24:18.
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Gill: Lev 1:4 - -- And he shall put his hand on the head of the burnt offering,.... According to the Targum of Jonathan, it was his right hand; but it is generally thoug...
And he shall put his hand on the head of the burnt offering,.... According to the Targum of Jonathan, it was his right hand; but it is generally thought by the Jewish writers that both hands were laid on; so Ben Gersom and Aben Ezra, with whom Maimonides e agrees, who says, he that lays on hands ought to lay on with all his strength, with both his hands upon the head of the beast, as it is said, "upon the head of the burnt offering": not upon the neck, nor upon the sides; and there should be nothing between his hands and the beast: and as the same writer says f, it must be his own hand, and not the hand of his wife, nor the hand of his servant, nor his messenger; and who also observes g, that at the same time he made confession over the burnt offering both of his sins committed against affirmative and negative precepts: and indeed by this action he owned that he had sinned, and deserved to die as that creature he brought was about to do, and that he expected pardon of his sin through the death of the great sacrifice that was a type of. Moreover, this action signified the transferring of his sins from himself to this sacrifice, which was to be offered up to make atonement for them; so Gersom observes; see Lev 16:21. This denotes the translation of our sins from us, and the imputation of them to Christ, who was offered up in our room and stead, to make atonement for them, as follows:
and it shall be accepted for him to make atonement for him: that is, the burnt offering should be accepted in his room and stead, and hereby an atonement of his sins should be made for him, typical of that true, real, and full atonement made by the sacrifice of Christ, which this led his faith unto.
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Gill: Lev 1:5 - -- And he shall kill the bullock before the Lord,.... That is, the man that brings the burnt offering, for no other is yet spoken of; and according to th...
And he shall kill the bullock before the Lord,.... That is, the man that brings the burnt offering, for no other is yet spoken of; and according to the traditions of the elders h, killing of the sacrifice was right when done by strangers, by women, and by servants, and by unclean persons, even in the most holy things so be it that the unclean did not touch the flesh; and it is observed i, that the service of the priest begins in the next clause, killing being lawful by him that was not a priest, according to the Targum of Jonathan, the butcher; but Aben Ezra interprets it of the priests, and certain it is, that the burnt offerings of the fowls were killed by the priests, Lev 1:15 and the Septuagint version renders it, "and they shall kill": but be this as it will, the burnt offering was to be killed in the court before the Lord; and this was typical of the death of Christ, who, according to these types, as well as to other prophecies, was to die for the sins of men, and accordingly did; and if this was the proprietor and not the priest that killed the sacrifice, it may denote that the sins of God's people, for whom Christ's sacrifice was offered up, were the cause of his death:
and the priests, Aaron's sons, shall bring the blood: in vessels or basins, as the Targum of Jonathan adds, into which they received it when slain:
and sprinkle the blood round about upon the altar that is by the door of the tabernacle of the congregation; which was the altar of burnt offering, and not the altar of incense, as appears by the situation of it, see Exo 40:5 and the blood was sprinkled all around the altar with two sprinklings: the rule in the Misnah is k; the slaying of the burnt offering is in the north, and the reception of its blood into the ministering vessels is in the north, and its blood ought to have two sprinklings, which answer to four; which Maimonides l explains thus; because it is said "round about", it must needs be that the sprinklings should comprehend the four sides of the altar; and this is done when the two sprinklings are upon the two horns, which are diametrically opposite; and this is what is meant, "which are four"; the sense is, that those two should include the four sides, and the two opposite horns were the northeast and the southwest, as he and other Jewish writers observe m, and which he expresses more clearly elsewhere n: when the priest took the blood in the basin, he sprinkled out of it in the basin, two sprinklings upon the two corners of the altar opposite from it; and he ordered it so to sprinkle the blood upon the horn, that the blood might surround the corners in the form of the Greek letter "gamma" o; so that the blood of the two sprinklings might be found upon the four sides of the altar; because it is said of the burnt offerings, and of the peace offerings "round about"; and this is the law for the trespass offering, and the rest of the blood was poured out at the bottom southward: now this was always done by a priest, for though the bullock might be killed by a stranger, as Gersom on the place observes, yet its blood must be sprinkled by a priest; and it is the note of Aben Ezra, that this might be done by many, and therefore it is said, the "priests, Aaron's sons", when the slaying of it was only by one. The "altar" on which the blood was sprinkled typified the divinity of Christ, which gave virtue to his blood, whereby it made atonement for sin; and in allusion to this rite Christ's blood is called "the blood of sprinkling", 1Pe 1:2 Heb 12:24 which being sprinkled on the heart by the Spirit of God clears it from an evil conscience, and purges the conscience from dead works, and speaks peace and pardon there, Heb 10:22.
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Gill: Lev 1:6 - -- And he shall flay the burnt offering,.... Take off its skin; this was the only part of it that was not burnt, and was the property of the priest, Lev ...
And he shall flay the burnt offering,.... Take off its skin; this was the only part of it that was not burnt, and was the property of the priest, Lev 7:8 but who this was done by is not so manifest, since it is in the singular number "he", and seems to be the bringer of the offering; for Aaron's sons, the priests that sprinkled the blood, are spoken of plurally; and agreeably, Gersom observes, that the flaying of the burnt offering and cutting it in pieces were lawful to be done by a stranger; but Aben Ezra interprets "he" of the priest; and the Septuagint and Samaritan versions read in the plural number, "they shall flay", &c. and this was the work of the priests, and who were sometimes helped in it by their brethren, the Levites, 2Ch 29:34 and as this follows upon the sprinkling of the blood, it was never done till that was; the rule is, they do not flay them (the sacrifices) until the blood is sprinkled, except the sin offerings, which are burnt, for they do not flay them at all p. The flaying of the burnt offering may denote the very great sufferings of Christ, when he was stripped of his clothes, and his back was given to the smiters, and his cheeks to them that plucked off the hair; and the skin of the sacrifice, which belonged to the priest, may be an emblem of the righteousness of Christ, and which also was signified by the coats of skins the Lord God made for Adam and Eve, Gen 3:21 that robe of righteousness, and garments of salvation, which all that are made kings and priests to God are clothed with:
and cut it into his pieces; which was done while he was flaying it, and after this manner, as Maimonides relates q, he flays until he comes to the breast, and then he cuts off the head, then its legs, and finishes the flaying; then he rends the heart, and brings out its blood; then he cuts off the hands, and goes to the right foot, and cuts off that, and after that he cuts down the beast until its bowels are discovered; he takes the knife and separates the lights from the liver, and the caul of the liver from the liver, and does not remove the liver out of its place; and he goes up to the right side, and cuts and descends to the backbone, and he does not go to the backbone until he comes to the two tender ribs; he comes to the neck, and leaves in it two ribs here and two ribs there; he cuts it and comes to the left side, and leaves in it two tender ribs above and two tender ribs below; then he comes to the point of the backbone, he cuts it, and gives it and the tail, and the caul of the liver, and the two kidneys with it; he takes the left foot and gives it to another; and according to this order they flay and cut in pieces the burnt offering of the cattle; and these are the pieces spoken of in the law, Lev 1:6 some apply this to the ministers of the Gospel, rightly dividing the word of God, and to the effect the word has in dividing asunder soul and spirit; but it is best to apply it to Christ, either to the evidence given of him in the Gospel, in which he is clearly set forth in his person, natures, and offices, and in all the parts and branches thereof; where every thing is naked and open to view, as the creature was when thus cut up; or rather to his sufferings, which he endured in every part of his body, from head to foot.
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Gill: Lev 1:7 - -- And the sons of Aaron the priest shall put fire upon the altar,.... The fire of the altar originally came down from heaven, and consumed the sacrifice...
And the sons of Aaron the priest shall put fire upon the altar,.... The fire of the altar originally came down from heaven, and consumed the sacrifice, and which was a token of God's acceptance of it, see Lev 9:24 and this fire was kept burning continually upon the altar, Lev 6:12 and yet the Jewish writers say, it was the command of God, according to this passage, that fire should be brought from another place and put here; Jarchi's note on the text is,"though fire came down from heaven, it was commanded to bring it from a common or private place:''and Maimonides r says the same thing, and so it is often said in the Talmud s; and this, as Gersom observes, was not done by any but a priest in the time of his priesthood, or when clothed with his priestly garments; and so in the Talmud it is said, that the putting fire upon the altar belonged to the priesthood, but not flaying or cutting in pieces t: this fire denoted the wrath of God, revealed from heaven against all unrighteousness and ungodliness of men, and which is the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels, and all the workers of iniquity; and which Christ endured for his people in human nature, when he bore their sins, and became a whole burnt offering for them:
and lay the wood in order upon the fire; the wood for the sacrifice was an offering of the people, brought to the temple at the times appointed, Neh 10:34 where was a place called
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Gill: Lev 1:8 - -- And the priests, Aaron's sons, shall lay the parts,.... That were cut in pieces, Lev 1:6 some of which are particularly mentioned:
the head and the...
And the priests, Aaron's sons, shall lay the parts,.... That were cut in pieces, Lev 1:6 some of which are particularly mentioned:
the head and the fat; the head which was cut off, and the body, the trunk of it; so, Aben Ezra says, the wise men interpret the word
in order upon the wood that is on the fire which is upon the altar; this disposition of the several parts of the burnt offering upon the altar signifies the laying of Christ upon the cross, and the disposition of his head, his hands, and feet there; according to the usual order of crucifixion: the skin, as before observed, was not burnt, but was the property of the priest, and the sinew that shrunk was taken away, and cast upon the ashes in the middle of the altar z.
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Gill: Lev 1:9 - -- But the inwards and his legs shall he wash in water,.... This was first done in a room in the court of the temple, called לשכת המדחין, "the ...
But the inwards and his legs shall he wash in water,.... This was first done in a room in the court of the temple, called
and the priest shall burn all on the altar; all the other pieces, as well as the inwards and legs, excepting the skin, which denoted the painful sufferings of Christ, and the extent of them to all parts of his body; and indeed his soul felt the fire of divine wrath, and became an offering for sin:
to be a burnt sacrifice, an offering made by fire; that is, all the parts of the bullock were burnt on the altar, that it might appear to be a whole burnt offering consumed by fire:
of a sweet savour unto the Lord: he accepting of it, and smelling a sweet savour of rest in it, as an atonement for sin, typical of the sacrifice of Christ, which is to God for a sweet smelling savour, Eph 5:2 the Jewish doctors e gather from hence, that whether a man offers much or little, it matters not, if his heart is but directed to God; which Maimonides explains thus f, he that studies in the law, it is all one as if he offered a burnt offering, or a meat offering, or a sin offering, concerning which this phrase is used.
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Gill: Lev 1:10 - -- And if his offering be of the flocks,.... As it might be:
namely, of the sheep, or of the goats for a burnt sacrifice; which were both typical of ...
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Gill: Lev 1:11 - -- And he shall kill it on the side of the altar northward before the Lord,.... This is a circumstance not mentioned in the killing of the bullock: Maimo...
And he shall kill it on the side of the altar northward before the Lord,.... This is a circumstance not mentioned in the killing of the bullock: Maimonides g says, there was a square place from the wall of the altar northward, to the wall of the court, and it was sixty cubits, and all that was over against the breadth of this, from the wall of the porch to the eastern wall, and it is seventy six cubits; and this foursquare place is called the "north", for the slaying of the most holy things; so that it seems this being a large place, was fittest for this purpose. Aben Ezra intimates, as if some respect was had to the situation of Mount Zion; his note is, "on the side of the altar northward", i.e. without, and so "the sides of the north", Psa 48:2 for so many mistake who say that the tower of Zion was in the midst of Jerusalem; and with this agrees Mr. Ainsworth's note on Lev 6:25 hereby was figured, that Christ our sin offering should be killed by the priests in Jerusalem, and Mount Sion, which was on "the sides of the north", Psa 48:2 crucified on Mount Calvary, which was on the northwest side of Jerusalem; as by the Jews' tradition, the morning sacrifice was killed at the northwest horn of the altar h:
and the priests, Aaron's sons, shall sprinkle the blood round about upon the altar; See Gill on Lev 1:5.
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Gill: Lev 1:12 - -- And he shall cut it into his pieces, with his head and his fat,.... Or "his body", as the Targum of Jonathan; this was to be cut in pieces in the same...
And he shall cut it into his pieces, with his head and his fat,.... Or "his body", as the Targum of Jonathan; this was to be cut in pieces in the same manner as the bullock; see Gill on Lev 1:6,
and the priest shall lay them in order on the wood that is on the fire, which is on the altar; See Gill on Lev 1:8.
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Gill: Lev 1:13 - -- But he shall wash the inwards and the legs with water,.... As he did the bullock, Lev 1:9,
and the priest shall bring it all: all the parts to the...
But he shall wash the inwards and the legs with water,.... As he did the bullock, Lev 1:9,
and the priest shall bring it all: all the parts to the ascent of the altar, as the Jews i interpret it; all the parts and pieces of it, even the very wool on the sheep's head, and the hair on the goat's beard, their bones, sinews, and horns, and hoofs k, all were burnt, as it follows:
and burn it on the altar, it is a burnt offering, an offering made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the Lord; See Gill on Lev 1:9.
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Gill: Lev 1:14 - -- And if the burnt sacrifice for his offering to the Lord be of fowls,.... As it might be for the poorer sort, who could not offer a bullock, nor a shee...
And if the burnt sacrifice for his offering to the Lord be of fowls,.... As it might be for the poorer sort, who could not offer a bullock, nor a sheep, or a lamb, Lev 5:7,
then he shall bring his offering of turtledoves, or of young pigeons; the Jewish writers all agree, that the turtles should be old, and not young, as the pigeons young, and not old; so the Targum of Jonathan, Jarchi, Aben Ezra and Gersom l; the latter gives two reasons for it, because then they are the choicest and easiest to be found and taken: no mention is made of their being male or female, either would do, or of their being perfect and unblemished, as in the other burnt offerings; but if any part was wanting, it was not fit for sacrifice, as Maimonides m observes. These creatures were proper emblems of Christ, and therefore used in sacrifice, whose voice is compared to the turtle's, and his eyes to the eyes of doves, Son 2:12 and who is fitly represented by them for his meekness and humility, for his chaste and strong affection to his church, as the turtledove to its mate, and for those dove like graces of the Spirit which are in him.
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Gill: Lev 1:15 - -- And the priest shall bring it unto the altar,.... The southeast horn of it; near which was the place of the ashes, into which the crop and its feather...
And the priest shall bring it unto the altar,.... The southeast horn of it; near which was the place of the ashes, into which the crop and its feathers were cast n:
and wring off his head; by twisting it back as it should seem; the word used is only to be found here, and in Lev 5:8 the Jews say, it signifies to cut with the nail, and that the priest did this, not with a knife or any other instrument, but with his nail; so Jarchi and Gersom on the place observe: some think he only let out the blood this way, but did not separate the head from the body, which seems to be favoured by Lev 5:8 though Maimonides and Bartenora o conclude the reverse from the same place; and that the meaning is, that he should cut off the head and divide it asunder at the time he cuts with the nail: the manner of cutting with the nail was this p, the priest held both the feet of the bird with his two fingers of his left hand, and the wings between two other fingers, and the bird upon the back of his hand, that it might not be within the palm of it; then he stretches out its neck upon the thumb about two fingers' breadth, and cuts it over against the neck with his nail, and this is one of the hardest services in the sanctuary:
and burn it on the altar; that is, the head, after squeezing out the blood, and rubbing it with salt:
and the blood thereof shall be wrung out at the side of the altar: or "the wall" of it: this, though mentioned last, must be done before, and immediately upon the wringing of the head, and between that and the burning it on the altar: this wringing off the head, and wringing out the blood, denote violence, and show that Christ's death, which this was a type of, was a violent one; the Jews laid violent hands upon him, and pursued his life in a violent manner, were very pressing to have it taken away, and his life was taken away in such a manner by men, though not without his Father's secret will, and his own consent.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Lev 1:1; Lev 1:1; Lev 1:1; Lev 1:2; Lev 1:2; Lev 1:2; Lev 1:2; Lev 1:2; Lev 1:2; Lev 1:2; Lev 1:2; Lev 1:3; Lev 1:3; Lev 1:3; Lev 1:4; Lev 1:5; Lev 1:5; Lev 1:5; Lev 1:6; Lev 1:7; Lev 1:8; Lev 1:8; Lev 1:8; Lev 1:9; Lev 1:9; Lev 1:9; Lev 1:9; Lev 1:10; Lev 1:12; Lev 1:14; Lev 1:14; Lev 1:15; Lev 1:15
NET Notes: Lev 1:1 The second clause of v. 1, “and the Lord spoke to him from the tent of meeting, saying,” introduces the following discourse. This is a sta...
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NET Notes: Lev 1:2 The bird category (Lev 1:14-17) is not included in this introduction because bird offerings were, by and large, concessions to the poor (cf., e.g., Le...
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NET Notes: Lev 1:3 The NIV correctly has “it” in the text, referring to the acceptance of the animal (cf., e.g., RSV, NEB, NLT), but “he” in the ...
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NET Notes: Lev 1:4 “To make atonement” is the standard translation of the Hebrew term כִּפֶּר, (kipper); cf. howeve...
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NET Notes: Lev 1:5 “Splash” (cf. NAB) or “dash” (cf. NRSV) is better than “sprinkle,” which is the common English translation of this...
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NET Notes: Lev 1:6 Heb “Then he”; the referent (the offerer) has been specified in the translation for clarity. The LXX and Smr have “they” rathe...
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NET Notes: Lev 1:7 A few medieval Hebrew mss, Smr, LXX, Syriac, and Tg. Onq. have plural “priests” here (cf. 1:5, 8) rather than the MT singular “pries...
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NET Notes: Lev 1:8 Heb “on the wood, which is on the fire, which is on the altar.” Cf. NIV “on the burning wood”; NLT “on the wood fire....
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NET Notes: Lev 1:9 The standard English translation of “gift” (אִשֶּׁה, ’isheh) is “an offering [made] ...
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NET Notes: Lev 1:10 Heb “And if from the flock is his offering, from the sheep or from the goats, for a burnt offering.” Here “flock” specifies th...
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NET Notes: Lev 1:12 Heb “Then he”; the referent (the offerer) has been specified in the translation for clarity (so also in v. 13).
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NET Notes: Lev 1:14 Heb “from the sons of the pigeon,” referring either to “young pigeons” (cf. KJV, NASB, NIV, NLT) or “various species of ...
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NET Notes: Lev 1:15 Many English versions have “it” here, referring to the head of the bird, which the priest immediately tossed on the altar fire. However, &...
Geneva Bible: Lev 1:1 And the ( a ) LORD called unto Moses, and spake unto him out of the tabernacle of the congregation, saying,
The Argument - As God daily by most singu...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 1:2 Speak unto the children of Israel, and say unto them, If any man of you bring an offering unto the LORD, ye shall bring your offering of the ( b ) cat...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 1:3 If his offering [be] a burnt sacrifice of the herd, let him offer a male without blemish: he shall offer it of his own voluntary will at the door of t...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 1:5 And ( d ) he shall kill the bullock before the LORD: and the priests, Aaron's sons, shall bring the blood, and sprinkle the blood round about upon the...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 1:9 But his inwards and his legs shall he wash in water: and the priest shall burn all on the altar, [to be] a burnt sacrifice, an offering made by fire, ...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 1:11 ( g ) And he shall kill it on the side of the altar northward ( h ) before the LORD: and the priests, Aaron's sons, shall sprinkle his blood round abo...
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Geneva Bible: Lev 1:15 And the priest shall bring it unto the altar, and ( i ) wring off his head, and burn [it] on the altar; and the blood thereof shall be wrung out at th...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Lev 1:1-17
TSK Synopsis: Lev 1:1-17 - --1 The law of burnt offerings;3 of the herd;10 of the flocks;14 of the fowls.
Maclaren -> Lev 1:1-9
Maclaren: Lev 1:1-9 - --Lev. 1:1-9
And the Lord called unto Moses, and spake unto him out of the tabernacle of the congregation, saying, 2. Speak unto the children of Israel,...
MHCC: Lev 1:1-2 - --The offering of sacrifices was an ordinance of true religion, from the fall of man unto the coming of Christ. But till the Israelites were in the wild...
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MHCC: Lev 1:3-9 - --In the due performance of the Levitical ordinances, the mysteries of the spiritual world are represented by corresponding natural objects; and future ...
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MHCC: Lev 1:10-17 - --Those who could not offer a bullock, were to bring a sheep or a goat; and those who were not able to do that, were accepted of God, if they brought a ...
Matthew Henry: Lev 1:1-2 - -- Observe here, 1. It is taken for granted that people would be inclined to bring offerings to the Lord. The very light of nature directs man, some wa...
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Matthew Henry: Lev 1:3-9 - -- If a man were rich and could afford it, it is supposed that he would bring his burnt-sacrifice, with which he designed to honour God, out of his her...
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Matthew Henry: Lev 1:10-17 - -- Here we have the laws concerning the burnt-offerings, which were of the flock or of the fowls. Those of the middle rank, that could not well afford ...
Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 1:1-2 - --
The Burnt-Offering. - Lev 1:2. "If any one of you present an offering to Jehovah of cattle, ye shall present your offering from the herd and from th...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 1:3-9 - --
Ceremonial connected with the offering of an ox as a burnt-offering . עלה (vid., Gen 8:20) is generally rendered by the lxx ὁλοκαύτ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 1:10-13 - --
With regard to the mode of sacrificing, the instructions already given for the oxen applied to the flock (i.e., to the sheep and goats) as well, so ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 1:14-15 - --
The burnt-offering of fowls was to consist of turtle-doves or young pigeons. The Israelites have reared pigeons and kept dovecots from time immemor...
Constable: Exo 15:22--Lev 1:1 - --II. THE ADOPTION OF ISRAEL 15:22--40:38
The second major section of Exodus records the events associated with Go...
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Constable: Lev 1:1--16:34 - --I. The public worship of the Israelites chs. 1--16
Leviticus continues revelation concerning the second of three...
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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...
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