
Text -- Leviticus 6:7 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Lev 6:2-7
JFB: Lev 6:2-7 - -- This law, the record of which should have been joined with the previous chapter, was given concerning things stolen, fraudulently gotten, or wrongfull...
This law, the record of which should have been joined with the previous chapter, was given concerning things stolen, fraudulently gotten, or wrongfully kept. The offender was enjoined to make restitution of the articles to the rightful owner, along with a fifth part out of his own possessions. But it was not enough thus to repair the injury done to a neighbor and to society; he was required to bring a trespass offering, as a token of sorrow and penitence for having hurt the cause of religion and of God. That trespass offering was a ram without blemish, which was to be made on the altar of burnt offerings, and the flesh belonged to the priests. This penalty was equivalent to a mitigated fine; but being associated with a sacred duty, the form in which the fine was inflicted served the important purpose of rousing attention to the claims and reviving a sense of responsibility to God.
Calvin: Lev 6:7 - -- 7.And the priest shall make an atonement From this form of expression also, which frequently occurs, we must learn that the victim in itself was not ...
7.And the priest shall make an atonement From this form of expression also, which frequently occurs, we must learn that the victim in itself was not the price of redemption, but that expiation was founded on the priesthood. For they have foolishly and falsely invented the notion that men work something themselves in the sacraments, 273 whereas their virtue and effect proceeds from quite another quarter. The offering, therefore, properly speaking, is passive rather than active as regards man. 274 The force of this will be more clearly understood from the delusion of the Papists. They are indeed compelled to acknowledge that in the sacraments men are passive, in so far as they receive the grace there offered to them; but they presently pervert this doctrine, by inventing their opus operatum, as they call it. But, lest the people should think that they bring from their own stores ( domo) the price of their redemption, Moses constantly inculcates that it is the peculiar office of the priest, to appease God, and to blot out sin by expiation. It is also worthy of observation that he adds, “before the Lord,” for by this clause the profane notion is refuted, that men are purged by the legal sacrifices only civilly, as they say, i.e., before men, as if there were no spiritual promise included in them. Now, if this were so, the fathers would have been confirmed in the confidence of pardon by no external symbols, than which nothing can be more absurd; but by this one clause all ambiguity is removed, when Moses declares that they were absolved “before the Lord."

Calvin: Lev 6:7 - -- 1.Likewise this is the law I have just confessed that I do not sufficiently understand how these two words, חטאה , chateah, and אשם , ash...
1.Likewise this is the law I have just confessed that I do not sufficiently understand how these two words,
TSK -> Lev 6:7
TSK: Lev 6:7 - -- make : Lev 4:20, Lev 4:26, Lev 4:31, Lev 5:10, Lev 5:13, Lev 5:15, Lev 5:16, Lev 5:18; Exo 34:7; Eze 18:21-23, Eze 18:26, Eze 18:27; Eze 33:14-16, Eze...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Gill -> Lev 6:7
Gill: Lev 6:7 - -- And the priest shall make an atonement for him before the Lord,.... By offering the ram he brought, by which a typical, but not real atonement was mad...
And the priest shall make an atonement for him before the Lord,.... By offering the ram he brought, by which a typical, but not real atonement was made; for the blood of bulls and goats, of sheep and rams, could not take away sin; but as they were types of Christ, and led to him, the Lamb of God that takes away the sin of the world:
and it shall be forgiven him, for anything of all that he hath done, in trespassing therein; any and everyone of the above sins, with all the aggravations of them, were forgiven, upon the atonement made, though they were so enormous; and, indeed, all manner of sin is forgiven for Christ's sake, except the sin against the Holy Ghost: and L'Empereur o rightly observes, against the Socinians, who deny that sacrifices were offered for crimes very grievous, that these were of such a nature; for what more vile than unfaithfulness in a trust, than cheating and defrauding, stealing, lying, and perjury?

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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

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