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Leviticus 2:3

Context
2:3 The remainder of the grain offering belongs to Aaron and to his sons 1  – it is 2  most holy 3  from the gifts of the Lord.

Leviticus 2:5

Context
2:5 If your offering is a grain offering made on the griddle, it must be choice wheat flour mixed with olive oil, unleavened.

Leviticus 2:9-10

Context
2:9 Then the priest must take up 4  from the grain offering its memorial portion and offer it up in smoke on the altar – it is 5  a gift of a soothing aroma to the Lord. 2:10 The remainder of the grain offering belongs to Aaron and to his sons – it is 6  most holy from the gifts of the Lord.

Leviticus 6:23

Context
6:23 Every grain offering of a priest must be a whole offering; it must not be eaten.”

Leviticus 7:10

Context
7:10 Every grain offering, whether mixed with olive oil or dry, belongs to all the sons of Aaron, each one alike. 7 

Leviticus 7:37

Context
Summary of Sacrificial Regulations in Leviticus 6:8-7:36

7:37 This is the law 8  for the burnt offering, the grain offering, 9  the sin offering, the guilt offering, the ordination offering, 10  and the peace offering sacrifice,

Leviticus 9:17

Context
9:17 Next he presented the grain offering, filled his hand with some of it, and offered it up in smoke on the altar in addition to the morning burnt offering. 11 

Leviticus 14:20

Context
14:20 and the priest is to offer 12  the burnt offering and the grain offering on the altar. So the priest is to make atonement for him and he will be clean.

Leviticus 23:16

Context
23:16 You must count fifty days – until the day after the seventh Sabbath – and then 13  you must present a new grain offering to the Lord.
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[2:3]  1 tn Heb “…is to Aaron and to his sons.” The preposition “to” (לְ, lamed) indicates ownership. Cf. NAB, NASB, NIV and other English versions.

[2:3]  2 tn The words “it is” (הוּא, hu’) are not in the MT, but are supplied for the sake of translation into English. The Syriac also for translational reasons adds it between “most holy” and “from the gifts” (cf. 1:13, 17).

[2:3]  3 tn Heb “holy of holies”; KJV, NASB “a thing most holy.”

[2:9]  4 tn The Hebrew verb הֵרִים (herim, “to take up”; cf. NAB “lift”) is commonly used for setting aside portions of an offering (see, e.g., Lev 4:8-10 and R. E. Averbeck, NIDOTTE 4:335-36). A number of English versions employ the more normal English idiom “take out” here (e.g., NIV, NCV); cf. NRSV “remove.”

[2:9]  5 tn The words “it is” (הוּא, hu’) both here and in vv. 10 and 16 are not in the MT, but are assumed. (cf. vv. 2b and 3b and the notes there).

[2:10]  7 tn See the note on “it is” in v. 9b.

[7:10]  10 tn Heb “a man like his brother.”

[7:37]  13 sn The Hebrew term translated “law” (תוֹרָה [torah]) occurs up to this point in the book only in Lev 6:9 [6:2 HT], 14 [7 HT], 25 [18 HT], 7:1, 7, 11, and here in 7:37. This suggests that Lev 7:37-38 is a summary of only this section of the book (i.e., Lev 6:8 [6:1 HT]-7:36), not all of Lev 1-7.

[7:37]  14 tc In the MT only “the grain offering” lacks a connecting ו (vav). However, many Hebrew , Smr, LXX, Syriac, and some mss of Tg. Onq. have the ו (vav) on “the grain offering” as well.

[7:37]  15 sn The inclusion of the “ordination offering” (מִלּוּאִים, miluim; the term apparently comes from the notion of “filling [of the hand],” cf. Lev 8:33) here anticipates Lev 8. It is a kind of peace offering, as the regulations in Lev 8:22-32 will show (cf. Exod 29:19-34). In the context of the ordination ritual for the priests it fits into the sequence of offerings as a peace offering would: sin offering (Lev 8:14-17), burnt and grain offering (Lev 8:18-21), and finally peace (i.e., ordination) offering (Lev 8:22-32). Moreover, in this case, Moses received the breast of the ordination offering as his due since he was the presiding priest over the sacrificial procedures (Lev 8:29; cf. Lev 7:30-31), while Aaron and his sons ate the portions that would have been consumed by the common worshipers in a regular peace offering procedure (Exod 29:31-34; cf. Lev 7:15-18). For a general introduction to the peace offering see the note on Lev 3:1.

[9:17]  16 sn The latter part of the verse (“in addition to the morning burnt offering”) refers to the complex of morning (and evening) burnt and grain offerings that was the daily regulation for the tabernacle from the time of its erection (Exod 40:29). The regulations for it were appended to the end of the section of priestly consecration regulations in Exod 29 (see Exod 29:38-40) precisely because they were to be maintained throughout the priestly consecration period and beyond (Lev 8:33-36). Thus, the morning burnt and grain offerings would already have been placed on the altar before the inaugural burnt and grain offerings referred to here.

[14:20]  19 tn Heb “cause to go up.”

[23:16]  22 tn Heb “and.” In the translation “then” is supplied to clarify the sequence.



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