Leviticus 7:35-38
Context7:35 This is the allotment of Aaron and the allotment of his sons from the Lord’s gifts on the day Moses 1 presented them to serve as priests 2 to the Lord. 7:36 This is what the Lord commanded to give to them from the Israelites on the day Moses 3 anointed them 4 – a perpetual allotted portion throughout their generations. 5
7:37 This is the law 6 for the burnt offering, the grain offering, 7 the sin offering, the guilt offering, the ordination offering, 8 and the peace offering sacrifice, 7:38 which the Lord commanded Moses on Mount Sinai on the day he commanded the Israelites to present their offerings to the Lord in the wilderness of Sinai.


[7:35] 1 tn Heb “the day he”; the referent (Moses) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
[7:35] 2 tn Heb “in the day of he presented them to serve as priests to the
[7:36] 3 tn Heb “the day he”; the referent (Moses) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
[7:36] 4 tn Heb “which the
[7:36] 5 tn Heb “for your generations”; cf. NIV “for the generations to come”; TEV “for all time to come.”
[7:37] 5 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] 6 tc In the MT only “the grain offering” lacks a connecting ו (vav). However, many Hebrew , Smr, LXX, Syriac, and some
[7:37] 7 sn The inclusion of the “ordination offering” (מִלּוּאִים, milu’im; 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.