Leviticus 2:15
Context2:15 And you must put olive oil on it and set frankincense on it – it is a grain offering.
Leviticus 7:32
Context7:32 The right thigh you must give as a contribution offering 1 to the priest from your peace offering sacrifices.
Leviticus 25:19
Context25:19 “‘The land will give its fruit and you may eat until you are satisfied, 2 and you may live securely in the land.
Leviticus 26:11
Context26:11 “‘I will put my tabernacle 3 in your midst and I will not abhor you. 4


[7:32] 1 tn Older English versions (e.g., KJV, ASV) translate this Hebrew term (תְּרוּמָה, tÿrumah) “heave offering,” derived from the idea of “to raise, to lift” found in the verbal root (cf. NAB “a raised offering”). “Contribution offering” is a better English rendering because it refers to something “taken out from” (i.e., “lifted up from”; cf. the Hebrew term הֵרִים (herim) in, e.g., Lev 2:9; 4:8, etc.) the offering as a special contribution to the specific priest who presided over the offering procedures in any particular instance (see the next verse and R. E. Averbeck, NIDOTTE 4:335-37). Cf. TEV “as a special contribution”; NCV, NLT “as a gift.”
[25:19] 1 tn Heb “eat to satisfaction”; KJV, ASV “ye shall eat your fill.”
[26:11] 1 tn LXX codexes Vaticanus and Alexandrinus have “my covenant” rather than “my tabernacle.” Cf. NAB, NASB, NRSV “my dwelling.”
[26:11] 2 tn Heb “and my soul [נֶפֶשׁ, nefesh] will not abhor you.”