This chapter, in its immediate bearing on the daily life of the
Israelites, stands as the first of four Lev. 17–20 which set forth
practical duties, directing the Israelites to walk, not in the way of
the pagan, but according to the ordinances of Yahweh.... [ Continue Reading ]
Every domesticated animal that was slain for food was a sort of
peace-offering Leviticus 17:5. This law could only be kept as long as
the children of Israel dwelt in their camp in the wilderness. The
restriction was removed before they settled in the holy land, where
their numbers and diffusion over... [ Continue Reading ]
THE STRANGERS WHICH SOJOURN - The foreigners who dwell. See Leviticus
16:29 note.
OR SACRIFICE - i. e., a slaughtered offering of any kind, generally a
peace-offering.... [ Continue Reading ]
The prohibition to eat blood is repeated in seven places in the
Pentateuch, but in this passage two distinct grounds are given for the
prohibition: first, its own nature as the vital fluid; secondly, its
consecration in sacrificial worship.
Leviticus 17:11
Rather, For the soul of the flesh is in t... [ Continue Reading ]
This law appears to be grounded on the fact that the body of an animal
killed by a wild beast, or which has died of itself, still retains a
great portion of its blood. The importance ascribed to this law in
later times may be seen in 1 Samuel 14:32; Ezekiel 4:14; Ezekiel
44:31, and still more in the... [ Continue Reading ]