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Text -- Leviticus 8:15 (NET)
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Lev 8:14-17
JFB: Lev 8:14-17 - -- A timely expression of their sense of unworthiness--a public and solemn confession of their personal sins and a transference of their guilt to the typ...
A timely expression of their sense of unworthiness--a public and solemn confession of their personal sins and a transference of their guilt to the typical victim.
TSK -> Lev 8:15
TSK: Lev 8:15 - -- he slew it : Lev 1:5, Lev 1:11, Lev 3:2, Lev 3:8; Exo 29:10, Exo 29:11
Moses : Lev 4:7, Lev 4:17, Lev 4:18, Lev 4:30; Exo 29:12, Exo 29:36, Exo 29:37;...
he slew it : Lev 1:5, Lev 1:11, Lev 3:2, Lev 3:8; Exo 29:10, Exo 29:11
Moses : Lev 4:7, Lev 4:17, Lev 4:18, Lev 4:30; Exo 29:12, Exo 29:36, Exo 29:37; Eze 43:19-27; Heb 9:18-23
to make : Lev 6:30, Lev 16:20; 2Ch 29:24; Eze 45:20; Dan 9:24; Rom 5:10; 2Co 5:18-21; Eph 2:16; Col 1:21, Col 1:22; Heb 2:17; The beginning of this verse may be rendered, ""And Moses slew it, and took the blood,""etc. We find it expressly said in Exodus, that Moses slew the sacrifices. Exo 29:11; Yet, in general, the offerer seems to have killed his own sacrifice.
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Lev 8:14-36
Barnes: Lev 8:14-36 - -- Moses as the mediator of the covenant of the Law Gal 3:19; Heb 8:6 was called to perform the priestly functions, in consecrating those on whom hence...
Moses as the mediator of the covenant of the Law Gal 3:19; Heb 8:6 was called to perform the priestly functions, in consecrating those on whom henceforth those functions were to devolve, and in inaugurating the legal order of sacrifices. See Exo 40:23 note. The sin-offering was now offered for the first time. The succession in which the sacrifices followed each other on this occasion, first the sin-offering, then the burnt-offering, and lastly the peace-offering, has its ground in the meaning of each sacrifice, and became the established custom in later ages. The worshipper passed through a spiritual process. He had transgressed the Law, and he needed the atonement signified by the sin-offering: if his offering had been made in truth and sincerity, he could then offer himself as an accepted person, as a sweet savour, in the burnt-offering; and in consequence, he could enjoy communion with the Lord and with his brethren in the peace-offering.
See the marginal references. The flesh of the sin-offering could not be eaten by any but a legally consecrated priest (Lev 6:25 note). Moses therefore could not eat of it himself, though he was, for the occasion, performing the duties of a priest. Those whom he was consecrating could not eat it, not only because they were not yet duly installed, but because the sacrifice was offered on their behalf, and the body of the victim stood to them in the same relation as that of the regular sin-offering afterward stood to the high priest.
Purified the altar ... sanctified it, to make reconciliation upon it - The altar had been sanctified by the anointing oil Lev 8:11 like the priests who were to officiate at it; it was now, like them, sanctified by blood, in acknowledgment of the alienation of all nature, in itself, from God, and the need of a reconciliation to Him of all things by blood. Col 1:20; Heb 9:21-22. See Lev 17:11; Exo 28:38.
Atonement having been made, Aaron and his sons were now permitted, by the laying on of their hands, to make themselves one with the victim, which was to be sent up to Yahweh as "a burnt sacrifice for a sweet savour, an offering made by fire unto the Lord."All was done strictly according to the ritual Lev 1:3-9, except that Moses performed the duties of the priest.
The ram of consecration - The sacrifice of this ram was by far the most unique part of the whole ceremony. The words may be literally rendered "the ram of the fillings", and the name has been supposed to have reference to the ceremony in which Moses filled the hands of the priests; see Lev 8:27. The offering was in the highest sense "the sacrifice of completion or fulfilling", as being the central point of the consecrating rite. The final perfection of the creature is consecration to the Lord.
Before casting forth the blood round the altar in the usual manner, Moses took a portion of the blood and put some of it on the right extremities of each of the priests. This, being performed with the blood of the peace-offering, has been supposed to figure the readiness of the priest who is at peace with Yahweh to hear with the ear and obey the divine word, to perform with the hand the sacred duties of his office, and to walk with the feet in the way of holiness.
In the rite of filling the hands of the priests, Moses took the portions of the victim which usually belonged to the altar, with the right shoulder (or leg); he placed upon them one cake of each of the three kinds of unleavened bread contained in the basket (see Lev 8:2 note), and then put the whole first upon the hands of Aaron and in succession upon the hands of his sons: in each case, according to Jewish tradition, he put his own hands under the hands of the priest, moving them backwards and forwards, so as to wave the mass to and fro.
In this remarkable ceremony the gifts of the people appear to have been made over to the priests, as if in trust, for the service of the altar. The articles were presented to Yahweh and solemnly waved in the hands of the priests, but not by their own act and deed. The mediator of the Law, who was expressly commissioned on this occasion, was the agent in the process.
The rump - See Lev 3:9 note.
The heave-shoulder was the ordinary perquisite of the officiating priest, but the wave-breast appears to have been awarded to Moses as the servant of Yahweh now especially appointed for the priestly service.
The sprinkling was on their garments as well as their persons, because it belonged to them in reference to the office with which they had been formally invested by putting on the garments. (See Exo 28:3 note). The union of the two symbols of the atoning blood and the inspiring unction appears to be a fit conclusion of the entire rite.
The rites of consecration were to last a whole week, and thus, like the longer of the annual festivals, were connected in an emphatic manner with the sabbatical number of the covenant. During this period the priests were not to leave the holy precinct for the sake of any worldly business; and the whole series of ceremonies, including the sacrifice of the Ram of consecration, was to be gone through on each day. Compare the marginal references.
Rather, ye shall not go away from the entrance of the tent. With this agree Cranmer, the Geneva Bible, etc. The meaning is evidently that they were not to go out of the court, as is more clearly expressed in Lev 8:35.
That ye die not - See Exo 28:35 note.
Gill -> Lev 8:15
Gill: Lev 8:15 - -- And he slew it,.... Not Aaron, nor any of his sons, who as yet were not fully consecrated and installed into their office, but Moses, as follows:
a...
And he slew it,.... Not Aaron, nor any of his sons, who as yet were not fully consecrated and installed into their office, but Moses, as follows:
and Moses took the blood; which was received into a basin when the bullock was slain:
and put it upon the horns of the altar round about with his finger; upon the four horns of the altar, which were at the four corners of it, and dipping his finger into the blood, he besmeared the horns with it, and drew it about with his finger here and there; and so is said to be done round about the altar, as these horns were:
and purified the altar; or cleansed it; not from moral guilt and pollution, which it was incapable of, but from all ceremonial pollution it might be supposed to have:
and poured the blood at the bottom of the altar; the rest of the blood he did not use about the horns:
and sanctified it; separated it from common to sacred use:
to make reconciliation upon it; that it might be fit to have sacrifices offered on it to make atonement and reconciliation for sins; for which reason it was necessary it should itself be pure and holy, in such sense it was capable of being so.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Lev 8:15 Similar to v. 10 above, “and consecrated it” refers to the effect of the blood manipulation earlier in the verse. The goal here was to con...
Geneva Bible -> Lev 8:15
Geneva Bible: Lev 8:15 And he slew [it]; and Moses took the blood, and put [it] upon the horns of the ( c ) altar round about with his finger, and purified the altar, and po...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Lev 8:1-36
TSK Synopsis: Lev 8:1-36 - --1 Moses consecrates Aaron and his sons.14 Their sin offering.18 Their burnt offering.22 The ram of consecration.31 The place and time of their consecr...
MHCC -> Lev 8:14-36
MHCC: Lev 8:14-36 - --In these types we see our great High Priest, even Christ Jesus, solemnly appointed, anointed, and invested with his sacred office, by his own blood, a...
Matthew Henry -> Lev 8:14-30
Matthew Henry: Lev 8:14-30 - -- The covenant of priesthood must be made by sacrifice, as well as other covenants, Psa 50:5. And thus Christ was consecrated by the sacrifice of hims...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Lev 8:14-32
Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 8:14-32 - --
The sacrificial ceremony with which the consecration was concluded, consisted of a threefold sacrifice, the materials for which were not supplied b...
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 8:1--10:20 - --B. The institution of the Aaronic priesthood chs. 8-10
The account of the consecration of the priests an...
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Constable: Lev 8:1-36 - --1. The consecration of the priests and the sanctuary ch. 8
God gave a double command to Moses (v...
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