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Numbers 15:15

Context
15:15 One statute must apply 1  to you who belong to the congregation and to the resident foreigner who is living among you, as a permanent 2  statute for your future generations. You and the resident foreigner will be alike 3  before the Lord.

Numbers 19:10

Context
19:10 The one who gathers the ashes of the heifer must wash his clothes and be ceremonially unclean until evening. This will be a permanent ordinance both for the Israelites and the resident foreigner who lives among them.

Numbers 19:21

Context

19:21 “‘So this will be a perpetual ordinance for them: The one who sprinkles 4  the water of purification must wash his clothes, and the one who touches the water of purification will be unclean until evening. 5 

Numbers 25:13

Context
25:13 So it will be to him and his descendants after him a covenant of a permanent priesthood, because he has been zealous for his God, 6  and has made atonement 7  for the Israelites.’”

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[15:15]  1 tn The word “apply” is supplied in the translation.

[15:15]  2 tn Or “a statute forever.”

[15:15]  3 tn Heb “as you, as [so] the alien.”

[19:21]  4 tn The form has the conjunction with it: וּמַזֵּה (umazzeh). The conjunction subordinates the following as the special law. It could literally be translated “and this shall be…that the one who sprinkles.”

[19:21]  5 sn This gives the indication of the weight of the matter, for “until the evening” is the shortest period of ritual uncleanness in the Law. The problem of contamination had to be taken seriously, but this was a relatively simple matter to deal with – if one were willing to obey the Law.

[25:13]  7 tn The motif is reiterated here. Phinehas was passionately determined to maintain the rights of his God by stopping the gross sinful perversions.

[25:13]  8 sn The atonement that he made in this passage refers to the killing of the two obviously blatant sinners. By doing this he dispensed with any animal sacrifice, for the sinners themselves died. In Leviticus it was the life of the substitutionary animal that was taken in place of the sinners that made atonement. The point is that sin was punished by death, and so God was free to end the plague and pardon the people. God’s holiness and righteousness have always been every bit as important as God’s mercy and compassion, for without righteousness and holiness mercy and compassion mean nothing.



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