
Text -- Leviticus 12:5 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Lev 12:5
Wesley: Lev 12:5 - -- The time in both particulars is double to the former, not so much from natural causes, as to put an honour upon the sacrament of circumcision, which b...
The time in both particulars is double to the former, not so much from natural causes, as to put an honour upon the sacrament of circumcision, which being administered to the males, did put an end to that pollution sooner than otherwise had been.
TSK -> Lev 12:5

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Lev 12:1-8; Lev 12:5
Barnes: Lev 12:1-8 - -- This chapter would more naturally follow the 15th chapter of Leviticus. See the note to Lev 15:1.
This chapter would more naturally follow the 15th chapter of Leviticus. See the note to Lev 15:1.

Barnes: Lev 12:5 - -- Some have thought that this doubling of each of the two periods was intended to remind the people of the fact that woman represents the lower side o...
Some have thought that this doubling of each of the two periods was intended to remind the people of the fact that woman represents the lower side of human nature, and was the first to fall into temptation. 1Ti 2:13-15; 1Pe 3:7. The ancients had a notion that the mother suffers for a longer time after the birth of a girl than after the birth of a boy. The period required for the restoration of her health in the one case was thirty days, and in the other, it was 40 or 42 days. This notion may have been connected with a general custom of observing the distinction as early as the time of Moses.
Poole -> Lev 12:5
Poole: Lev 12:5 - -- The time in both particulars is double to the former, not so much from natural causes, because the purifications in female births are longer and slo...
The time in both particulars is double to the former, not so much from natural causes, because the purifications in female births are longer and slower, which if it were true, yet doth not extend to any such time as here is mentioned, as for moral reasons; either to be as a blot upon that sex for being the first in man’ s transgression, 1Ti 2:14 , or to put an honour upon the sacrament of circumcision, which being administered to the males, did put an end to that pollution sooner than otherwise had been; or to show the privilege of the man above the woman, and that the women were to be purified, sanctified, and saved by one of the other sex, even by the man Christ Jesus, without whom they should have still continued in their impurity.
Haydock -> Lev 12:5
Haydock: Lev 12:5 - -- Days. In all 80, double the time required for a male child, as they infirmities of women continue so much longer when they bear a female. (Vales. s...
Days. In all 80, double the time required for a male child, as they infirmities of women continue so much longer when they bear a female. (Vales. sac. Philos. c. xviii.) Hippocrates allows forty-two days for the one, and thirty for the other. ---
Purification. Some copies of the Septuagint read, in her pure, others, in her impure blood; which Origen attempts to reconcile by observing, that she is deemed less impure during the last thirty-three or sixty-six days, than in the preceding ones. (Calmet) ---
During these, she was treated almost like those who were under the greatest legal uncleanness. (Chap. xv.; Numbers v.) Those who were under the less, might enter the court of the Gentiles, and did not infect others by their touch. (Josephus, contra Apion 2.) (Tirinus)
Gill -> Lev 12:5
Gill: Lev 12:5 - -- But if she bear a maid child,.... A daughter, whether born alive or dead, if she goes with it her full time:
then she shall be unclean two weeks; o...
But if she bear a maid child,.... A daughter, whether born alive or dead, if she goes with it her full time:
then she shall be unclean two weeks; or fourteen days running; and on the fifteenth day be free or loosed, as the Targum of Jonathan, just as long again as for a man child:
as in her separation; on account of her monthly courses; the sense is, that she should be fourteen days, to all intents and purposes, as unclean as when these are upon her:
and she shall continue in the blood of her purifying sixty and six days; which being added to the fourteen make eighty days, just as many more as in the case of a male child; the reason of which, as given by some Jewish writers, is, because of the greater flow of humours, and the corruption of the blood through the birth of a female than of a male: but perhaps the truer reason may be, what a learned man p suggests, that a male infant circumcised on the eighth day, by the profusion of its own blood, bears part of the purgation; wherefore the mother, for the birth of a female, must suffer twice the time of separation; the separation is finished within two weeks, but the purgation continues sixty six days; a male child satisfies the law together, and at once, by circumcision; but an adult female bears both the purgation and separation every month. According to Hippocrates q, the purgation of a new mother, after the birth of a female, is forty two days, and after the birth of a male thirty days; so that it should seem there is something in nature which requires a longer time for purifying after the one than after the other, and which may in part be regarded by this law; but it chiefly depends upon the sovereign will of the lawgiver. The Jews do not now strictly observe this. Buxtorf r says, the custom prevails now with them, that whether a woman bears a male or a female, at the end of forty days she leaves her bed, and returns to her husband; but Leo of Modena relates s, that if she bears a male child, her husband may not touch her for the space of seven weeks; and if a female, the space of three months; though he allows, in some places, they continue separated a less while, according as the custom of the place is.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Lev 12:5 The doubling of the time after the birth of a female child is puzzling (see the remarks in J. Milgrom, Leviticus [AB], 1:750-51; and G. J. Wenham, Lev...
Geneva Bible -> Lev 12:5
Geneva Bible: Lev 12:5 But if she bear a maid child, then she shall be unclean two ( e ) weeks, as in her separation: and she shall continue in the blood of her purifying th...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Lev 12:1-8
TSK Synopsis: Lev 12:1-8 - --1 The purification of a woman after childbirth.6 Her offerings for her purifying.
MHCC -> Lev 12:1-8
MHCC: Lev 12:1-8 - --After the laws concerning clean and unclean food, come the laws concerning clean and unclean persons. Man imparts his depraved nature to his offspring...
Matthew Henry -> Lev 12:1-5
Matthew Henry: Lev 12:1-5 - -- The law here pronounces women lying-in ceremonially unclean. The Jews say, "The law extended even to an abortion, if the child was so formed as that...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Lev 12:5
Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 12:5 - --
But if she had given birth to a girl, she was to be unclean two weeks (14 days), as in her menstruation, and then after that to remain at home 66 da...
Constable: Lev 1:1--16:34 - --I. The public worship of the Israelites chs. 1--16
Leviticus continues revelation concerning the second of three...

Constable: Lev 11:1--15:33 - --C. Laws relating to ritual cleanliness chs. 11-15
A change of subject matter indicates another major div...
