
Text -- Leviticus 4:27 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Lev 4:27-34
JFB: Lev 4:27-34 - -- In this case the expiatory offering appointed was a female kid, or a ewe-lamb without blemish; and the ceremonies were exactly the same as those obser...
In this case the expiatory offering appointed was a female kid, or a ewe-lamb without blemish; and the ceremonies were exactly the same as those observed in the case of the offending ruler [Lev 4:22-26]. In these two latter instances, the blood of the sin offering was applied to the altar of burnt offering--the place where bloody sacrifices were appointed to be immolated. But the transgression of a high priest, or of the whole congregation, entailing a general taint on the ritual of the tabernacle, and vitiating its services, required a further expiation; and therefore, in these cases, the blood of the sin offering was applied to the altar of incense [Lev 4:6, Lev 4:17].
Clarke -> Lev 4:27
Clarke: Lev 4:27 - -- The common people - עם הארץ am haarets , the people of the land, that is, any individual who was not a priest, king, or ruler among the peopl...
The common people -
The law relative to the general cases of sins committed through ignorance, and the sacrifices to be offered on such occasions, so amply detailed in this chapter, may be thus recapitulated. For all sins and transgressions of this kind committed by the people, the prince, and the priest, they must offer expiatory offerings. The person so sinning must bring the sacrifice to the door of the tabernacle, and lay his hands upon its head, as in a case already referred to, acknowledging the sacrifice to be his, that he needed it for his transgression; and thus he was considered as confessing his sin, and the sin was considered as transferred to the animal, whose blood was then spilt to make an atonement. See Clarke on Lev 1:4 (note). Such institutions as these could not be considered as terminating in themselves, they necessarily had reference to something of infinitely higher moment; in a word, they typified Him whose soul was made an offering for sin, Isa 53:10. And taken out of this reference they seem both absurd and irrational. It is obviously in reference to these innocent creatures being brought as sin-offerings to God for the guilty that St. Paul alludes 2Co 5:21, where he says, He (God) made him to be sin (
TSK -> Lev 4:27
TSK: Lev 4:27 - -- any one : Heb. any soul, Lev 4:2; Num 15:27
common people : Heb. people of the land , Amos haaretz ; that is, any individual who was not a priest, ...
any one : Heb. any soul, Lev 4:2; Num 15:27
common people : Heb. people of the land ,

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Lev 4:27
Barnes: Lev 4:27 - -- The common people - literally, as in the margin, "the people of the land."Compare Lev 20:2, Lev 20:4; 2Ki 11:18. It was the ordinary designatio...
Poole -> Lev 4:27
Poole: Lev 4:27 - -- The common people whether Israelites, or strangers embodied with them and proselytes; for both were under one and the same law, Exo 12:49 Num 15:16 ....
Haydock -> Lev 4:27
Haydock: Lev 4:27 - -- The land. A rustic or plebeian. (Menochius) ---
The offences of such might be expiated by the sacrifice of a goat, ewe, lamb, ram, two pigeons, or...
The land. A rustic or plebeian. (Menochius) ---
The offences of such might be expiated by the sacrifice of a goat, ewe, lamb, ram, two pigeons, or flour, chap. v. 7. and xi. 15. (Calmet)
Gill -> Lev 4:27
Gill: Lev 4:27 - -- And if anyone of the common people sin through ignorance,.... Or, "if one soul of the people of the earth": that is, a single person, and so is distin...
And if anyone of the common people sin through ignorance,.... Or, "if one soul of the people of the earth": that is, a single person, and so is distinguished from the congregation, one of the common sort of people; however is neither an high priest, nor a prince, or king, but either a common priest, or Levite, or Israelite; no man is free from sin; all sorts of persons, of all ranks and degrees, high and low, rich and poor, men in office, civil or ecclesiastical, or in whatsoever state of life, are liable to sin, and do sin continually, either ignorantly or willingly; and Christ is a sacrifice for all sins and for all sorts of sinners:
whilst he doeth somewhat; &c. See Gill on Lev 4:2, Lev 4:13, Lev 4:22.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Lev 4:1-35
TSK Synopsis: Lev 4:1-35 - --1 The sin offering of ignorance;3 for the priest;13 for the congregation;22 for the ruler;27 for any of the people;
MHCC -> Lev 4:27-35
MHCC: Lev 4:27-35 - --Here is the law of the sin-offering for a common person. To be able to plead, when charged with sin, that we did it ignorantly, and through the surpri...
Matthew Henry -> Lev 4:27-35
Matthew Henry: Lev 4:27-35 - -- I. Here is the law of the sin-offering for a common person, which differs from that for a ruler only in this, that a private person might bring eith...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Lev 4:27-35
Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 4:27-35 - --
In the case of the sin of a common Israelite ("of the people of the land,"i.e., of the rural population, Gen 23:7), that is to say, of an Israelite...
Constable: Lev 1:1--16:34 - --I. The public worship of the Israelites chs. 1--16
Leviticus continues revelation concerning the second of three...

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