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Leviticus 1:8

Context
1:8 Then the sons of Aaron, the priests, must arrange the parts with the head and the suet 1  on the wood that is in the fire on the altar. 2 

Leviticus 3:14

Context
3:14 Then he must present from it his offering as a gift to the Lord: the fat which covers the entrails and all the fat on the entrails, 3 

Leviticus 3:16

Context
3:16 Then the priest must offer them up in smoke on the altar as a food gift for a soothing aroma – all the fat belongs to the Lord.

Leviticus 4:8

Context

4:8 “‘Then he must take up all the fat from the sin offering bull: 4  the fat covering the entrails 5  and all the fat surrounding the entrails, 6 

Leviticus 6:6

Context
6:6 Then he must bring his guilt offering to the Lord, a flawless ram from the flock, convertible into silver shekels, 7  for a guilt offering to the priest.

Leviticus 6:11

Context
6:11 Then he must take off his clothes and put on other clothes, and he must bring the fatty ashes outside the camp to a ceremonially 8  clean place,

Leviticus 7:5

Context
7:5 Then the priest must offer them up in smoke on the altar 9  as a gift to the Lord. It is a guilt offering.

Leviticus 8:14

Context
Consecration Offerings

8:14 Then he brought near the sin offering bull 10  and Aaron and his sons laid their hands on the head of the sin offering bull,

Leviticus 8:18

Context

8:18 Then he presented the burnt offering ram and Aaron and his sons laid their hands on the head of the ram,

Leviticus 8:22

Context

8:22 Then he presented the second ram, the ram of ordination, 11  and Aaron and his sons laid their hands on the head of the ram

Leviticus 8:27

Context
8:27 He then put all of them on the palms 12  of Aaron and his sons, who waved 13  them as a wave offering before the Lord. 14 

Leviticus 9:3

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9:3 Then tell the Israelites: ‘Take a male goat 15  for a sin offering and a calf and lamb, both a year old and flawless, 16  for a burnt offering,

Leviticus 9:6

Context
9:6 Then Moses said, “This is what the Lord has commanded you to do 17  so that the glory of the Lord may appear 18  to you.”

Leviticus 9:12

Context
The Burnt Offering for the Priests

9:12 He then slaughtered the burnt offering, and his sons 19  handed 20  the blood to him and he splashed 21  it against the altar’s sides.

Leviticus 9:22-23

Context

9:22 Then Aaron lifted up his hands toward the people and blessed them and descended from making the sin offering, the burnt offering, and the peace offering. 9:23 Moses and Aaron then entered into the Meeting Tent. When they came out, they blessed the people, and the glory of the Lord appeared to all the people.

Leviticus 13:17

Context
13:17 The priest will then examine it, 22  and if 23  the infection has turned white, the priest is to pronounce the person with the infection clean 24  – he is clean.

Leviticus 14:19

Context

14:19 “The priest must then perform the sin offering 25  and make atonement for the one being cleansed from his impurity. After that he 26  is to slaughter the burnt offering,

Leviticus 14:35

Context
14:35 then whoever owns the house 27  must come and declare to the priest, ‘Something like an infection is visible to me in the house.’

Leviticus 14:38

Context
14:38 then the priest is to go out of the house to the doorway of the house and quarantine the house for seven days. 28 

Leviticus 14:40

Context
14:40 then the priest is to command that the stones that had the infection in them be pulled and thrown 29  outside the city 30  into an unclean place.

Leviticus 14:42

Context
14:42 They are then to take other stones and replace those stones, 31  and he is to take other plaster and replaster the house.

Leviticus 14:49

Context
14:49 Then he 32  is to take two birds, a piece of cedar wood, a scrap of crimson fabric, and some twigs of hyssop 33  to decontaminate 34  the house,

Leviticus 15:28

Context
Purity Regulations from Female Bodily Discharges

15:28 “‘If 35  she becomes clean from her discharge, then she is to count off for herself seven days, and afterward she will be clean.

Leviticus 16:6

Context
16:6 Then Aaron is to present the sin offering bull which is for himself and is to make atonement on behalf of himself and his household.

Leviticus 16:9

Context
16:9 Aaron must then present the goat which has been designated by lot for the Lord, 36  and he is to make it a sin offering,

Leviticus 16:19

Context
16:19 Then he is to sprinkle on it some of the blood with his finger seven times, and cleanse and consecrate it 37  from the impurities of the Israelites.

Leviticus 16:23

Context
The Concluding Rituals

16:23 “Aaron must then enter 38  the Meeting Tent and take off the linen garments which he had put on when he entered the sanctuary, and leave them there.

Leviticus 18:18

Context
18:18 You must not take a woman in marriage and then marry her sister as a rival wife 39  while she is still alive, 40  to have sexual intercourse with her.

Leviticus 19:25

Context
19:25 Then in the fifth year you may eat its fruit to add its produce to your harvest. 41  I am the Lord your God.

Leviticus 23:6

Context
23:6 Then on the fifteenth day of the same month 42  will be the festival of unleavened bread to the Lord; seven days you must eat unleavened bread.

Leviticus 23:16

Context
23:16 You must count fifty days – until the day after the seventh Sabbath – and then 43  you must present a new grain offering to the Lord.

Leviticus 25:41

Context
25:41 but then 44  he may go free, 45  he and his children with him, and may return to his family and to the property of his ancestors. 46 

Leviticus 27:11

Context
27:11 If what is vowed is an unclean animal from which an offering must not be presented to the Lord, then he must stand the animal before the priest,

1 tc A few Hebrew mss, Smr, LXX, Syriac, and Tg. Onq. have the conjunction “and” before “the head,” which would suggest the rendering “and the head and the suet” rather than the rendering of the MT here, “with the head and the suet.”

sn “Suet” is the specific term used for the hard, fatty tissues found around the kidneys of sheep and cattle. A number of modern English versions have simplified this to “fat” (e.g., NIV, NCV, TEV, CEV, NLT).

2 tn Heb “on the wood, which is on the fire, which is on the altar.” Cf. NIV “on the burning wood”; NLT “on the wood fire.”

3 sn See the note on this phrase in 3:3.

4 tn Heb “all the fat of the bull of the sin offering he shall take up from it.”

5 tc The MT has here the preposition עַל (’al, “on, upon” [i.e., “which covers on the entrails,” as awkward in Hebrew as it is in English]), but Smr, LXX, Syriac, and Targums read אֶת (’et), which is what would be expected (i.e., “which covers the entrails”; cf. Lev 3:3, 9, 14). It may have been mistakenly inserted here under the influence of “on (עַל) the entrails” at the end of the verse.

6 tn Heb “and all the fat on the entrails.” The fat layer that covers the entrails as a whole (i.e., “that covers the entrails”) is different from the fat that surrounds and adheres to the various organs (“on the entrails,” i.e., surrounding them; J. Milgrom, Leviticus [AB], 1:205-7).

7 tn The words “into silver shekels” are supplied here. See the full expression in Lev 5:15, and compare 5:18. Cf. NRSV “or its equivalent”; NLT “or the animal’s equivalent value in silver.”

8 tn The word “ceremonially” has been supplied in the translation to clarify that the uncleanness of the place involved is ritual or ceremonial in nature.

9 tn See the note on Lev 1:9 above.

10 sn See Lev 4:3-12 above for the sin offering of the priests. In this case, however, the blood manipulation is different because Moses, not Aaron (and his sons), is functioning as the priest. On the one hand, Aaron and his sons are, in a sense, treated as if they were commoners so that the blood manipulation took place at the burnt offering altar in the court of the tabernacle (see v. 15 below), not at the incense altar inside the tabernacle tent itself (contrast Lev 4:5-7 and compare 4:30). On the other hand, since it was a sin offering for the priests, therefore, the priests themselves could not eat its flesh (Lev 4:11-12; 6:30 [23 HT]), which was the normal priestly practice for sin offerings of commoners (Lev 6:26[19], 29[22]).

11 tn For “ordination offering” see Lev 7:37

12 sn The “palms” refer to the up-turned hands, positioned in such a way that the articles of the offering could be placed on them.

13 tn Heb “and he waved.” The subject of the verb “he waved” is Aaron, but Aaron’s sons also performed the action (see “Aaron and his sons” just previously). See the similar shifts from Moses to Aaron as the subject of the action above (vv. 15, 16, 19, 20, 23), and esp. the note on Lev 8:15. In the present translation this is rendered as an adjectival clause (“who waved”) to indicate that the referent is not Moses but Aaron and his sons. Cf. CEV “who lifted it up”; NAB “whom he had wave” (with “he” referring to Moses here).

14 sn See Lev 7:30-31, 34.

15 tn Heb “a he-goat of goats.”

16 tn Heb “and a calf and a lamb, sons of a year, flawless”; KJV, ASV, NRSV “without blemish”; NASB, NIV “without defect”; NLT “with no physical defects.”

17 tn Heb “which the Lord commanded you shall/should do.”

18 tn Heb “and the glory of the Lord will appear,” but the construction with the simple vav (ו) plus the imperfect/jussive (וְיֵרָא, vÿyera’; literally, “and he will appear”) suggests purpose in this context, not just succession of events (i.e., “so that he might appear”).

19 tn For smoothness in the English translation, “his” was used in place of “Aaron’s.”

20 tn The verb is a Hiphil form of מָצָא, matsa’, “to find” (i.e., causative, literally “to cause to find,” but here the meaning is “to hand to” or “pass to”; see J. E. Hartley, Leviticus [WBC], 117-18, and J. Milgrom, Leviticus [AB], 1:581-82). The distinction between this verb and “presented” in v. 9 above (see the note there) is that in v. 9 Aaron’s sons held the bowl while Aaron manipulated some of the blood at the altar, while here in v. 12 they simply handed the bowl to him so he could splash all the blood around on the altar (Milgrom, 581).

21 tn For “splashed” (also in v. 18) see the note on Lev 1:5.

22 tn Heb “and the priest shall see it.”

23 tn Heb “and behold” (so KJV, ASV, NASB).

24 tn Heb “the priest shall pronounce the infection clean,” but see v. 4 above. Also, this is another use of the declarative Piel of the verb טָהֵר (taher, cf. the note on v. 6 above).

25 tn Heb “do [or “make”] the sin offering.”

26 tn Heb “And after[ward] he [i.e., the offerer] shall slaughter.” The LXX adds “the priest” as the subject of the verb (as do several English versions, e.g., NAB, NIV, NCV, NLT), but the offerer is normally the one who does the actually slaughtering of the sacrificial animal (cf. the notes on Lev 1:5a, 6a, and 9a).

27 tn Heb “who to him the house.”

28 tn Heb “and he shall shut up the house seven days.”

29 tn Heb “and the priest shall command and they shall pull out the stones which in them is the infection, and they shall cast them.” The second and third verbs (“they shall pull out” and “they shall throw”) state the thrust of the priest’s command, which suggests the translation “that they pull out…and throw” (cf. also vv. 4a, 5a, and 36a above), and for the impersonal passive rendering of the active verb (“be pulled and thrown”) see the note on v. 4 above.

30 tn Heb “into from outside to the city.”

31 tn Heb “and bring into under the stones.”

32 tn The pronoun “he” refers to the priest mentioned in the previous verse.

33 tn Regarding these ritual materials, see the note on v. 4 above.

34 tn Regarding the Piel of חָטָא (khata’, cf. v. 52) meaning to “decontaminate” or “perform a decontamination,” see the notes on Lev 8:15 and 9:15.

sn In Lev 8:15, for example, the “sin offering” is used to “decontaminate” the burnt offering altar. As argued above (see the note on v. 7 above), these ritual materials and the procedures performed with them do not constitute a “sin offering” (contrast vv. 19 and 31 above). In fact, no sin offering was required for the purification of a house.

35 tn Heb “And if…” Although this clause is parallel to v. 13 above, it begins with וְאִם (vÿim, “and if”) here rather than וְכִי (vÿkhi, “and when/if”) there.

36 tn Heb “which the lot has gone up on it for the Lord.”

37 tn Heb “and he shall purify it and he shall consecrate it.”

38 tn Heb “And Aaron shall enter.”

39 tn Or “as a concubine”; Heb “And a woman to her sister you shall not take to be a second wife [or “to be a concubine”].” According to HALOT 1059 s.v. III צרר, the infinitive “to be a second wife” (לִצְרֹר, litsror) is a denominative verb from II צָרָה A (“concubine; second wife”), which, in turn, derives from II צר “to treat with hostility” (cf. J. E. Hartley, Leviticus [WBC], 283, and B. A. Levine, Leviticus [JPSTC], 122).

40 tn Heb “on her in her life.”

41 tn Heb “to add to you its produce.” The rendering here assumes that the point of this clause is simply that finally being allowed to eat the fruit in the fifth year adds the fruit of the tree to their harvest. Some take the verb to be from אָסַף (’asaf, “to gather”) rather than יָסַף (yasaf, “to add; to increase”), rendering the verse, “to gather to you the produce” (E. S. Gerstenberger, Leviticus [OTL], 260, and see the versions referenced in J. E. Hartley, Leviticus [WBC], 306). Others take it to mean that by following the regulations given previously they will honor the Lord so that the Lord will cause the trees to increase the amount of fruit they would normally produce (Hartley, 303, 306; cf. NASB, NIV, NRSV, NLT).

42 tn Heb “to this month.”

43 tn Heb “and.” In the translation “then” is supplied to clarify the sequence.

44 tn Heb “and.” The Hebrew conjunction ו (vav, “and”) can be considered to have adversative force here.

45 tn Heb “may go out from you.”

46 tn Heb “fathers.”



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