Leviticus 8:35
Tent <0168> [the tabernacle.]
keep <08104> [keep.]
Leviticus 12:2
woman <0802> [If a woman.]
days ........ days <03117> [according.]
Leviticus 12:5
Leviticus 13:5
Leviticus 13:21
quarantine .... seven <05462 07651> [shut him.]
Leviticus 13:26
priest ........................... priest <03548> [then the priest.]
Leviticus 15:13
seven days <03117 07651> [seven days.]
wash <03526> [wash.]
Leviticus 15:19
discharge <02101> [and her issue.]
menstruation <05079> [put apart. Heb. in her separation.]
Leviticus 15:24
Leviticus 23:8
Leviticus 23:34
fifteenth <02568> [The fifteenth.]
Festival .... Shelters <05521 02282> [the feast of tabernacles.]
This feast was celebrated in commemoration of the Israelites' dwelling in tents in the wilderness for forty years; and was kept with greater hilarity than any of the other festivals. Hence, in the Talmud, it is often called {chag,} the feast, by way of excellence; and by Philo, [heorton megisten,] the greatest of the feasts; it was therefore more noticed by the heathen than any other. It is probable that Cecrops borrowed from it the law which he made in Athens, "that the master of every family should after harvest make a feast for his servants, and eat together with them who had taken pains with him in tilling his grounds."
Leviticus 23:41
Leviticus 25:29
A very proper difference is here made between houses in a city and houses in the country. The former might be redeemed any time in the course of a year; but after that time could not be redeemed, or go out with the Jubilee: the latter might be redeemed at any time; and if not redeemed must go out with the jubilee. The reason in both cases is sufficiently evident; the house in the city might be built merely for the purposes of trade or traffic--the house in the country was builded on, or attached to, the inheritance which God had divided to the respective families. It was therefore necessary that the same law should apply to the house as to the inheritance; which necessity did not exist with regard to the house in the city. And, as the house in the city might be purchased for the purpose of trade, it would be very inconvenient for the purchaser, when his business was established, to be obliged to remove.