
Text -- Leviticus 27:30 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Lev 27:30
Wesley: Lev 27:30 - -- There are divers sorts of tithes, but this seems to be understood only of the ordinary and yearly tithes belonging to the Levites, as the very express...
There are divers sorts of tithes, but this seems to be understood only of the ordinary and yearly tithes belonging to the Levites, as the very expression intimates, and the addition of the fifth part in case of redemption thereof implies.
JFB -> Lev 27:30-33
JFB: Lev 27:30-33 - -- This law gave the sanction of divine authority to an ancient usage (Gen 14:20; Gen 28:22). The whole produce of the land was subjected to the tithe tr...
This law gave the sanction of divine authority to an ancient usage (Gen 14:20; Gen 28:22). The whole produce of the land was subjected to the tithe tribute--it was a yearly rent which the Israelites, as tenants, paid to God, the owner of the land, and a thank offering they rendered to Him for the bounties of His providence. (See Pro 3:9; 1Co 9:11; Gal 6:6).
Clarke -> Lev 27:30
Clarke: Lev 27:30 - -- All the tithe of the land - This God claims as his own; and it is spoken of here as being a point perfectly settled, and concerning which there was ...
All the tithe of the land - This God claims as his own; and it is spoken of here as being a point perfectly settled, and concerning which there was neither doubt nor difficulty. See my view of this subject Gen 28:22 (note), to which I do not see the necessity of adding any thing.
Calvin -> Lev 27:30
Calvin: Lev 27:30 - -- 30.And all the tithe of the land In these words God shews that in assigning the tithes to the Levites, He ceded His own rights, inasmuch as they were...
30.And all the tithe of the land In these words God shews that in assigning the tithes to the Levites, He ceded His own rights, inasmuch as they were a kind of royal revenue; and thus He bars all complaint, since otherwise the other tribes might have murmured on being unduly burdened. He therefore appoints the priests as His receivers, to collect in His name what could not be refused without impious and sacrilegious fraudulency. In the provision that, where the tithes are redeemed by a money payment, a fifth part should be added to their value, the object is not that the Levites should make a gain of the loss of others; but, because the owners of property craftily aimed at some advantage in this commutation of corn for money, frauds are thus prevented whereby something would be lost to the Levites by this deceptive exchange. On the same grounds He commands that the animals, whatever they might be, should be given as tithe, and does not permit them to be redeemed by money, since, if the choice had been free, no fat or healthy animal would have ever come to the Levites. Therefore, in this law a remedy was applied to avarice and meanness, and not without good cause; for if the proverb be true, that “good laws spring from evil habits,” 216 it was necessary that so covetous and ill-disposed a people should be restrained in the path of duty by the utmost severity. And although such careful provision was made for the Levites, yet there was scarcely any period in which they did not suffer from want, and sometimes they wandered about half-starved; nay, after the return from the Babylonish captivity, the memory of so great a blessing did not prevent a part of the tithes from being surreptitiously withheld from them; as God complains in Mal 3:8. Whence it appears that it was not without purpose that the people were so imperiously enjoined to pay them.
Defender -> Lev 27:30
Defender: Lev 27:30 - -- Although tithing was not made a part of the ten commandments, it had been practiced as an implicit responsibility toward God since the time of Abraham...
Although tithing was not made a part of the ten commandments, it had been practiced as an implicit responsibility toward God since the time of Abraham (Gen 14:20; Num 18:21-32; Deu 12:5-18; Deu 14:22-29; Deu 26:12-15). More than one tithe was evidently expected of the ancient Israelites at certain times. At that time the theocratic government was also the civil government so the tithes probably also included taxes. The practice of tithing is never commanded in the New Testament church although the principle of proportionate giving is strongly suggested (1Co 16:1, 1Co 16:2) and generosity is strongly commended (2Co 9:5-15). In general, most Christians can and should give substantially more than a tithe for the Lord's work, but circumstances vary. God is probably less concerned with how much we give as a measure of our love for Him and His work than with what we keep and spend on ourselves."
TSK -> Lev 27:30
TSK: Lev 27:30 - -- Gen 14:20, Gen 28:22; Num 18:21-24; Deu 12:5, Deu 12:6, Deu 14:22, Deu 14:23; 2Ch 31:5, 2Ch 31:6, 2Ch 31:12; Neh 10:37, Neh 10:38, Neh 12:44, Neh 13:5...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Poole -> Lev 27:30
Poole: Lev 27:30 - -- There are divers sorts of tithes, but this seems to be understood only of the ordinary and yearly tithes belonging to the Levites, &c., as the very ...
There are divers sorts of tithes, but this seems to be understood only of the ordinary and yearly tithes belonging to the Levites, &c., as the very expression intimates, and the addition of the fifth part in case of redemption thereof implies.
Haydock -> Lev 27:30
Haydock: Lev 27:30 - -- Tithes. Abraham and Jacob paid tithes, out of devotion, Genesis xiv., and xxviii. 22. Moses first made a law on this subject, which began to be in ...
Tithes. Abraham and Jacob paid tithes, out of devotion, Genesis xiv., and xxviii. 22. Moses first made a law on this subject, which began to be in force when the Hebrews had obtained quiet possession of Chanaan. The people paid them more exactly when they were determined to keep God's law, and had pious princes at their head, 2 Paralipomenon xxxi. 5. At other times they were very negligent, Malachias iii. 10. This forced Esdras to appoint inspectors, Namnim, to collect them. The Pharisees affected a decree of exactitude in this respect, (Luke xi. 42., and Matthew xxiii. 23,) paying what some Jews do not suppose to be necessary, though our Saviour says it was. Since the destruction of the temple the Jews pay none. The first-fruits and tithes of wheat, barley, figs, raisins, olives, pomegranates, and dates, were required, though it be not certain what quantity of the first-fruits was given; some say between the 40th and the 60th part of the produce. Wine and wool were also to be offered. The tithes were taken after the first-fruits and the heaved oblations ( thorume ) were paid. They belonged to the Levites, and these gave a tithe to the priests, Numbers xviii. 28. See chap. xix. 24. The Eastern kings required a tithe of their subjects, for the support of their families, 1 Kings viii. 15. God does the like, Malachias iii. 10. The Persians, Carthaginians, Greeks, Romans, and even the Arabs and Scythians, religiously paid their tithes in honour of their false gods. See Cyrop. iv. and Q. Curtius iv. 2.; Herod. ii. 135.; Pliny, [Natural History?] xii. 14.; Mela. ii. 5, &c. The Romans often consecrate the tithes of their spoils to Hercules, as the Carthaginians did also. The Scythians sent them to Apollo. (Solin 27, &c.) (Calmet) ---
Scaliger and Amama dispose the tithes, and the oblations of the Hebrews, in the following order. Supposing a person's annual produce amount to 6000 bushels, an oblation ( thorume ) of at least 100 was to be made to the priests: out of the remaining 5900, a first tithe of 590 belonged to the Levites, out of which they paid 59 to the priests. The residue, of 5310 bushels, paid a second tithe of 531, to be consumed in feasts in the temple, (a custom which the ancient Christians imitated in their love-feasts, called agape; Calmet) The original produce was thus reduced to 4779 bushels; and both the tithes amounted to 1121 and the oblation to 100. The thorume consisted of flour dressed, and of oil, wine (Amama) and wool, (Calmet) to be given to the priests on the feast of Pentecost, chap. xxiii. 15. It could not be less than the 60th part of the produce, (Ezechiel xlv. 13.) and it was necessary to pay it before any could be used in the family. Hence these oblations are often called first-fruits, and have been confounded with those sheaves which were to be offered at the beginning of harvest. (Amama)
Gill -> Lev 27:30
Gill: Lev 27:30 - -- And all the tithe of the land,.... Of which there were various sorts, the first tithe, the tithe out of the tithe, the second tithe, and the poor's ti...
And all the tithe of the land,.... Of which there were various sorts, the first tithe, the tithe out of the tithe, the second tithe, and the poor's tithe, which are generally reduced to three,"The first tenth part of all increase I gave to the sons of Aaron, who ministered at Jerusalem: another tenth part I sold away, and went, and spent it every year at Jerusalem:'' (Tobit 1:7)so Maimonides p says,"after they had separated the first tithe every year, they separate the second tithe, as it is said Deu 14:22; and in the third year, and in the sixth, they separate the poor's tithe, instead of the second tithe:''so that, properly speaking, there were but two tithes, though commonly reckoned three; the tithes of all eatables were given to the Levites every year, and a tenth part of that given by the Levites to the priests, and the second tithe was eaten by the owners; instead of which, according to the above writer, in the third and sixth years it was given to the poor, and called theirs; of this second tithe, Jarchi interprets this law, and so does Maimonides q:
whether of the seed of the land, or of the fruit of the tree, is the Lord's: is to be given to him as an acknowledgment of his being the proprietor of the land, and that all the increase of it is owing to his blessing, and therefore is given in way of gratitude to him: the former of these takes in all sorts of corn that is man's food, as wheat and barley; and the latter wine and oil, and all sorts of fruits that are eatable; for it is said to be a general rule, that whatever is for food, and is preserved (having an owner, and not being common), and grows up out of the earth, is bound to tithes r:
it is holy unto the Lord; the first tithe was eaten by the priests and Levites only, and the other before the Lord in Jerusalem only, and that by clean persons. Something of this kind obtained among the Heathens, it may be in imitation of this, particularly among the Grecians; Pisistratus s tells Solon, that everyone of the Athenians gave a tenth part of his inheritance, not to me, says he, who was their governor, but for public sacrifices, and the common good, and when engaged in war, to defray the charge of it; and so, by the oracle of Apollo, the Corcyraenans were directed to send to Olympia and Delphos the tenth part of the produce of their fields t; and by the same oracle, the island of the Syphnians, in which was a golden mine, were ordered to bring the tenth of it to the same place u. So the Pelasgi w in a time of scarcity vowed the tithes of all their increase to the gods, and having obtained their wish, devoted the tenth of all their fruits and cattle to them.

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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Lev 27:1-34
TSK Synopsis: Lev 27:1-34 - --1 He that makes a singular vow must be the Lord's.3 The estimation of the person;9 of a beast given by vow;14 of a house;16 of a field, and the redemp...
MHCC -> Lev 27:26-33
MHCC: Lev 27:26-33 - --Things or persons devoted, are distinguished from things or persons that were only sanctified. Devoted things were most holy to the Lord, and could ne...
Matthew Henry -> Lev 27:26-34
Matthew Henry: Lev 27:26-34 - -- Here is, I. A caution given that no man should make such a jest of sanctifying things to the Lord as to sanctify any firstling to him, for that was ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Lev 27:30-31
Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 27:30-31 - --
Lastly, the tenth of the land, both of the seed of the land - i.e., not of what was sown, but of what was yielded, the produce of the seed (Deu 14:2...
Constable: Lev 17:1--27:34 - --II. The private worship of the Israelites chs. 17--27
The second major division of Leviticus deals with how the ...

Constable: Lev 27:1-34 - --H. DIRECTIONS CONCERNING VOWS ch. 27
The blessings and curses (ch. 26) were in a sense God's vows to His...
