_A.M. 2514. B.C. 1490._
The manner of cleansing a leper, Leviticus 14:1. The sacrifices to be
offered for him, Leviticus 14:10. The management of a house suspected
of leprosy, Leviticus 14:33. The summary of the whole, Leviticus
14:54.... [ Continue Reading ]
The priests having been instructed in the foregoing chapter how to
judge of the leprosy, are here directed concerning the kinds and
manner of those sacrifices and ceremonies which were requisite for the
legal purification of the leper, after the priest judged him to be
healed, in order that he might... [ Continue Reading ]
_He shall be brought to the priest_ Not to the priest's tent or house,
but to some place without the camp, or city, where the priest should
appoint to meet him.... [ Continue Reading ]
_Healed_ By God, for God alone did heal or cleanse him really, the
priest only declaratively.... [ Continue Reading ]
_Two birds_ The one to represent Christ as dying for his sins, the
other to represent him as rising again for his purification or
justification. _Alive and clean_ Allowed for food and for sacrifice.
_Cedar-wood_ A stick of cedar, to which the hyssop and one of the
birds were tied by the scarlet thre... [ Continue Reading ]
_That one of the birds be killed_ By some other man. The priest did
not kill it himself, because it was not properly a sacrifice, as being
killed without the camp, and not in that place to which all sacrifices
were confined. _In an earthen vessel_ That is, _over running water_
put _in an earthen ves... [ Continue Reading ]
_Into the open field_ The place of its former abode, signifying the
taking off that restraint which was laid upon the leper, and that he
was restored to free conversation with his neighbours.... [ Continue Reading ]
_All his hair_ Partly to discover his perfect soundness, partly to
preserve him from a relapse through any relics of it which might
remain in his hair or in his clothes. _Out of his tent_ Out of his
former habitation, in some separate place, lest some of his leprosy,
yet lurking in him, should break... [ Continue Reading ]
_He shall shave all his hair_ Which began to grow again, and now, for
more caution, is again shaved off. _He shall be clean_ Legally
declared so to be, so as to be readmitted both to his family and the
public worship.... [ Continue Reading ]
_Two he-lambs, and one ewe-lamb_ For three kinds of sacrifice, namely,
a trespass-offering, a sin-offering, and a burnt-offering. _Flour for
a meal-offering_ For to each of these sacrifices there was a meal or
bread- offering appropriated, consisting of a tenth part of an ephah
of fine flour. _Mingl... [ Continue Reading ]
_Maketh him clean_ The healing is ascribed to God, (Leviticus 14:13,)
but the ceremonial cleansing was an act of the priest, using the rites
which God had prescribed.... [ Continue Reading ]
_A trespass-offering_ This being the first time of the leper's
appearing in the assembly for God's worship after his recovery, it was
proper he should pay this public testimony of homage and gratitude to
his deliverer, beginning with an act of humiliation for sin, which is
the source of all those pa... [ Continue Reading ]
_The priest shall put it_ To signify that he was now free to hear
God's word in the appointed places, and to touch any person or thing
without defiling it, and to go whither he pleased.... [ Continue Reading ]
_The oil_ As the _blood_ signified Christ's blood, by which men obtain
remission of sins, so the oil denoted the graces of the Spirit, by
which they are renewed. _Before the Lord_ Before the second veil which
covered the holy of holies. _Upon the blood_ Upon the place where that
blood was put.... [ Continue Reading ]
_The priest shall put the blood_ Upon the extremities of the body, to
include the whole. And some of the oil was afterward put in the same
places upon the blood. That blood seems to have been a token of
forgiveness, the oil of healing; for God first _forgiveth our
iniquities_, and then _healeth our... [ Continue Reading ]
_I put the plague of leprosy in a house_ Now they were in the
wilderness, dwelt in tents, and had no houses; and therefore this law
is made only as an appendix to the former laws concerning the leprosy,
because it related not to their present state, but to their future
settlement in Canaan. The lepr... [ Continue Reading ]
_That all be not made unclean_ It is observable here, that neither the
people nor the household stuff were polluted till the leprosy was
discovered and declared by the priest, to show what great difference
God makes between sins of ignorance, and sins against knowledge.... [ Continue Reading ]
_In the walls of the house_ This, it seems, was an extraordinary
judgment of God peculiar to this people, either as a punishment of
their sins, which were much more aggravated and inexcusable than the
sins of other nations; or as a special help to repentance, which God
afforded them above other peop... [ Continue Reading ]
_That they may take away the stones_ Some have thought the leprosy in
the house was typical of the idolatry which did strangely cleave to
the Jewish Church, and though some of the reforming kings took away
the infected stones, yet still it broke out again, till, by the
captivity in Babylon, God took... [ Continue Reading ]
To _teach when it is unclean and when it is clean_ To direct the
priest when to pronounce a person or house clean or unclean. Upon the
whole, we may see in these laws the religious care we ought to take of
ourselves to keep our minds from the dominion of all sinful affections
and dispositions, which... [ Continue Reading ]