Leviticus

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LEVITICUS
1. Scope.—The book has received its title from the name ‘the Levitical book,’ which was prefixed to it in the LXX [Note: Septuagint.] . Since, however, the special functions of the Levites are not referred to, the scope of the book is better brought out in the title ‘Law of the Priests,’ which is given to it in the Talmud. As such, Leviticus practically confines itself to legislation, and, except in the section chs. 17–26, to priestly legislation. Even the few passages, such as chs. 8 and 10, which are cast in the form of narrative, do not aim at describing what once happened, but use this form in order to prescribe what is to continue. The JE [Note: Jewish Encyclopedia.] narrative, which was a history, does not appear to have been drawn upon; and Leviticus, unlike Exodus and Numbers, offers no exact dates of month and year. The book does not give a history of Israel’s past, but chiefly embodies some of the rules of the one living institution which persisted in Israel from its formation as a nation to the destruction of the Temple. Since, however, this institution was moulded to meet the nation’s changing circumstances, the praxis which regulated its services required and received constant modification. Some of these changes can be traced in Leviticus; but it is impossible to detail them in a brief sketch like the present. Readers who wish more details on the ritual can find them and their justification in the art. in Hastings’ DB [Note: Dictionary of the Bible.] , or in Driver’s LOT [Note: OT Introd. to the Literature of the Old Testament.] .
2. Sources—The general editor is the same as the editor who arranged Exodus in its present form, though a little has been added by later hands. (1) He took from P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] that history of the sacred institutions which appeared in Exo_25:1-40; Exo_26:1-37; Exo_27:1-21; Exo_28:1-43; Exo_29:1-46 (see Exodus): chs. 8, 9, with Exo_10:12-15 (which supplements Exo_9:21), Exo_10:1-7 (Exo_10:16-20) Exo_16:2-4; Exo_16:6; Exo_16:12 f., Exo_24:1-9, These sections are not all of the same period.
Thus ch. 8, which relates the anointing of the priests, is the fulfilment of Exo_29:1-46 and Exo_40:12-15. It formed part of that expansion of Exo_25:1-40; Exo_26:1-37; Exo_27:1-21; Exo_28:1-43; Exo_29:1-46 which now occupies Exo_35:1-35; Exo_36:1-38; Exo_37:1-29; Exo_38:1-31; Exo_39:1-43; Exo_40:1-38, and to which also belong Exo_24:1-4 on the Tabernacle lamps, Exo_24:5-9 on the shewbread—sections which in some inexplicable way have strayed into their present incongruous position. Ch. 9 with Exo_10:12-15, which recounts the sacrifices at the inauguration of the Tabernacle, originally formed the sequel of Exo_25:1-40; Exo_26:1-37; Exo_27:1-21; Exo_28:1-43; Exo_29:1-46, and was followed by Exo_10:1-7 (the story of Nadab and Abihu offering strange fire), and was closed by Exo_16:2-4; Exo_16:6; Exo_16:12 f. (the rule as to the time and way for Aaron to approach the Holy Place which had thus vindicated its awful sanctity). Exo_10:16-20 (on the goat of the sin-offering) is a later addition, and gives an interesting illustration of the way in which it was sought to reconcile differences in the older laws (cf. it with Exo_9:15 and Exo_6:24-30).
(2) Chs. 1–6.—Into this framework the editor has fitted laws from other sources. Thus he seems to have separated ch. 8 from its natural position after Exo_40:1-38, because he counted it suitable, after the Tabernacle was set up and before the priests were anointed or the Tabernacle inaugurated, to insert the laws prescribing the sacrifices which the priests when anointed were to offer in the Tabernacle.
This law-book has its own history, and in particular once existed in two sections. Thus Lev_6:8 to Lev_7:21, with its subscription Lev_7:37 f., was originally a code addressed to the priests, dealing with matters ancillary to the sacrifices, and especially concerned with the priestly dues. Because of this esoteric character of the little code, Lev_6:20-23 (on the priests’ meal-offering) was inserted. With the exception of that section, each of the regulations is introduced by the formula ‘this is the law of’; and this formula appears in the subscription. It represents the early rules on this subject.
Again, Lev_1:1 to Lev_6:7 is a book addressed to the people, defining their sacrifices, but it has received large modification. From a comparison of Lev_1:2 f. with Lev_3:1 it is evident that ch. 3 (the law of the peace-offering) once followed immediately on ch. 1 (the burnt-offering). These are probably very old. The different formulæ used in ch. 2 (3rd person in Lev_3:1-3; Lev_3:2 nd person in Lev_3:4 ff.) and its intrusive position prove that the law of the meal-offering has been developed. A comparison between the law of the sin-offering in ch. 4 and similar laws elsewhere proves how largely this part of the ritual has been elaborated. Thus the sin-offering for the congregation is a bullock in Lev_3:14 instead of the goat of Lev_9:15 and Num_15:24; and the high priest’s sin-offering (Num_15:3-12) is more elaborate than that in Num_9:8-11 and Num_29:10-14; Lev_5:1-13 (examples of unintentional sins which require a sin-offering, and mitigations for the case of those who cannot afford a lamb or a goat) has suffered change, since Lev_5:2-3 evidently break the connexion between Lev_5:1 and Lev_5:4. It is, however, older than ch. 4, though the relation is specially difficult to define. Lev_5:15 to Lev_6:7 defines the cases which require a guilt-offering, and makes it clear that originally this sacrifice was a composition for fraud practised upon God (Lev_5:15 ff.) or man (Lev_6:1-7). When he united these codes on the sacrifices, the editor added a rule (Lev_7:22-25) forbidding fat and blood more expressively than Lev_3:17, and a rule (Lev_7:28-34) giving heave leg and wave breast to the priest, and a subscription (Lev_7:35 f.).
(3) Chs. 11–15.—The priests, however, had other functions in the life of the people besides those immediately connected with the sacrifices. It was their business to determine on all questions connected with uncleanness. As soon, therefore, as the editor had described the inauguration of the Tabernacle and the priesthood, he grouped together a series of regulations bearing on this side of the priestly duties.
Chs. 11–15 deal with this more civil yet priestly function. The rules in ch. 11 on clean and unclean animals (Lev_11:2-23; Lev_11:41-45, with their subscription Lev_11:46 f.) appear in a more primitive form in Deu_14:4-20, and have probably been taken from the Law of Holiness (see below). The law of defilement from touching unclean animals and all carcases (Lev_11:24-29), which prescribes also the purification required in case of neglect of the regulations, is ignored in the subscription Lev_11:46 f. and must be an insertion. Chs. 12, 15 prescribe the forms of purification after childbirth and after certain physical secretions. In their basis these rules are very old, but the careful detail of derivative uncleanness (cf. esp. Lev_15:1-12; Lev_15:19-27) shows where a slow elaboration has been at work. Chs. 13, 14 contain a series of directions for the diagnosis of leprosy in human beings, clothing, leather, and houses, and for the method of purification. The primitive character of the prescribed purification (Lev_14:2-8), along with the fact that this can be carried out apart from the Temple, proves the early origin of the rules. The gravity of the task thus imposed on the priest and the serious issues involved make it even probable that the directions were not left to the discretion of individuals, but were early committed to writing.
(4) In ch. 16 the sacrificial ritual culminates in the Day of Atonement. This embodies very old elements (see Azazel), but has been so altered that its original character is no longer to be distinguished. The chapter in its present form contains two parts. The historical introduction (Lev_16:1-4; Lev_16:6; Lev_16:12 f., once connected with ch. 10) prescribes how and when the high priest may approach the Holy Place. The ritual of the Day of Atonement (Lev_16:5; Lev_16:7-10; Lev_16:15-34) was united with this, because it defines the purpose for which the high priest made his annual entry. The place given to this ritual after chs. 11–15 is appropriate, because in its sacrifices priest and people united to make atonement for the sanctuary and holy things, and purge them from the pollution contracted through the forms of uncleanness specified in these chapters.
(5) Law of Holiness or H.—Chs. 17–26 form an independent body of laws, which have had their own history, and which, after receiving something of their peculiar form from an earlier collector, have been incorporated, after considerable modifications by the general editor, into the greater law-book. That these were once independent is proved by: (a) the long hortatory conclusion in ch. 26 and the opening instructions as to the place of sacrifice; (b) the presence in them of matters which have already been dealt with (cf., e.g., Lev_17:10-14 with Lev_7:26 f., Lev_19:6-8 with Lev_7:15-18, Lev_20:25 with ch. 11); (c) the fact that the laws have a much wider scope than those of chs. 1–16. But this early code has not survived in its integrity, for (i.) certain subjects are broken off before completion (Lev_19:5-8, Lev_20:25); and (ii.) the arrangement of subjects shows a considerable confusion (cf. Lev_19:5-8; Lev_19:20-22, Lev_20:27).
Ch. 17 prescribes that all animals suitable for sacrifice must be slain at the sanctuary, that such animals, when sacrificed, must be offered to Jahweh alone, that blood and the flesh of carcases must not be eaten. If Lev_17:1-6 were ever in force while the Israelites inhabited Palestine, the order requiring every goat, sheep, or ox which was slaughtered to be brought to the Jerusalem Temple practically made it illegal to kill these animals. P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] , which required all sacrifices to be brought to the Jerusalem Temple as the only sanctuary, permitted all animals to be freely slaughtered, but forbade the eating of fat and blood. Probably the code, in its early form, recognized the local sanctuaries, and required the slaughter of animals suitable for sacrifice to take place before the Lord, i.e. at ooe of these accessible shrines. The change is due to the desire to discredit these shrines.
Ch. 18 is a series of laws on incest (and Molech-worship), with admonitory introduction and conclusion. Ch. 19 contains a group of miscellaneous laws, with introduction and conclusion. These laws, which are curt and direct, give an interesting view of the morals of early Israel, and should be compared and contrasted with the relative sections in Exo_20:1-26; Exo_21:1-36; Exo_22:1-31; Exo_23:1-33, Deu_22:1-30; Deu_23:1-25; Deu_24:1-22; Deu_25:1-19. Ch. 20, which is different in character from the preceding chapters, prescribes in general penalties for certain offences already specified. In it Lev_20:10-21 (with the penalties for incest) may be the conclusion of ch. 18. The fact, however, that it is followed by a conclusion (Lev_18:22-24), while ch. 18 is provided with its own, has led some to count the two sections independent. Again, Lev_18:25 f. show where laws corresponding with ch. 11, if not that collection itself, originally stood in H [Note: Law of Holiness.] ; Lev_18:2-6 (against Molech-worship), Lev_18:6; Lev_18:2 (against traffic with familiar spirits), Lev_18:9 (against cursing father or mother) may have been brought together here, because, like most of the laws in Lev_18:10-21, they prescribe the death-penalty.
Chs. 21, 22 deal with priests and offerings. They state the ceremonial restraints required of the priests in their domestic life (Lev_21:1-15), demand bodily perfection in every officiating priest (Lev_21:16-24), ordain that sacrificial food may be eaten only by those who are ceremonially clean and who can claim membership in a priestly family (Lev_22:1-16), and require the sacrificial animals to be perfect (Lev_22:17-25). Three minor regulations as to the sacrifices (Lev_22:26-30) are followed by an exhortation (Lev_22:31-33). Not only the recurrent formula, ‘I am the Lord,’ but the insistence on a ceremonial holiness, which characterizes the early code, proves that the basis of these chapters is old. The material has been largely revised by P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] , but the elaborate analysis cannot be entered into here.
Ch. 23 is a calendar of the sacred seasons, which has necessarily received much change. In general, it may be said that Lev_23:8-20; Lev_23:22; Lev_23:39 b, Lev_23:40-43, though not left without minor modifications, belong to the early code. Here the festivals still represent the religious life of a people which is settled on the land and engaged in agriculture. No more precise date than, e.g., “when ye reap the harvest of your land,’ is laid down for a festival, because no other was practicable. The people celebrated the harvest when the harvest was gathered. The other sections (Lev_23:1-8; Lev_23:21; Lev_23:23-39 ac, Lev_23:44) give rigid dates and betray the change which became necessary, as soon as many of the worshippers were no longer agriculturists and were scattered beyond the limits of Palestine. The definite dates prescribed by a centralized priesthood became a necessity of the national and religious life. These later sections come from P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] .
Ch. 24 (on Lev_24:1-9 see above) deals with blasphemy (Lev_24:15 f.) and injuries to men and cattle (Lev_24:17-22). These early sections closely resemble ch. 20, and may once have stood in closer connexion with it. The penalty pronounced on blasphemy was specially interesting to P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] , and was illustrated by an incident taken from the desert-wanderings (Lev_24:10-14; Lev_24:23; cf. Num_15:32-35).
Ch. 25 contains the rules for the Sabbatical year (Lev_25:1-7; Lev_25:20-22) and those for the year of Jubilee (Lev_25:8-19; Lev_25:23-55). The section, Lev_25:20-22, has been separated from its original context in order to make the regulations contained in it apply to the Jubilee as well as the Sabbatical year. The analysis of the chapter is very uncertain. H [Note: Law of Holiness.] seems to have contained the rule as to the Sabbatical year (cf. Lev_25:1-7 with Exo_23:10 f. and note the prominent interest in agriculture). In connexion with the Jubilee, it ordered that land must not be alienated absolutely, but must revert to its original owners at the Jubilee (Lev_25:13-15). It also provided for the relief of an impoverished Israelite by ordering: (a) that his land might be redeemed by a kinsman (Lev_25:25); (b) that usury was not to be exacted from him (Lev_25:35-38); (c) that, when he was in bondage, he must be treated humanely (Lev_25:39-40 a, Lev_25:43; Lev_25:47; Lev_25:53; Lev_25:55). P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] took over this early law with a number of modifications, added fresh regulations as to the redemption of land (Lev_25:9 b, Lev_25:10-12; Lev_25:23; Lev_25:25-34), and especially extended the benefits of the Jubilee from land to persons (Lev_25:40-42; Lev_25:44-45; Lev_25:48-52; Lev_25:54). A comparison of Lev_25:40-42 with Deu_15:12-18 suggests that in the course of time the latter rule had proved impracticable, and that this relaxation was designed to take its place.
Ch. 26, after two fragments, of which Lev_26:1 is parallel to Lev_19:4; Lev_26:2 identical with Lev_19:30, contains the hortatory conclusion (Lev_26:3-45), which the collector of H [Note: Law of Holiness.] appended to his law-book. It closes with the subscription (Lev_26:46), which the editor of Leviticus added when he inserted the collection in is present position. The resemblances between Lev_26:3-45 and the Book of Ezekiel are too numerous to be catalogued here, but they deserve special attention.
As H [Note: Law of Holiness.] is evidently incomplete and its character is strongly marked, efforts have been made to detect fragments of its legislation in other parts of the Pentateuch. In particular, Exo_31:13-14 a, Lev_11:1-23; Lev_11:41-47, Num_15:37-41 have been asigned to it. It is necessary, however, to remember that undue stress should not be laid on the appearance of such characteristic formulæ as ‘I am the Lord,’ ‘I am the Lord which sanctify you,’ since, when once some laws had been countersigned by these formulæ, it was natural to introduce them into others. Even in the case of Lev_11:1-23, all that can be said is that similar legislation must have been in H [Note: Law of Holiness.] ; it is unwise to suppose that this section belonged to H [Note: Law of Holiness.] , for laws of this type must have appeared in several of the codes, and in the nature of the case the language used could not greatly vary.
The law-book which is obtained after the excision of the later elements is a valuable survival of one of the codes which represented and guided the life of early Israel under the monarchy. To estimate it, both in its uniqueness and in its common characteristics, it is useful briefly to compare H [Note: Law of Holiness.] with the other codes which have come down. Thus it agrees with Deut. and the Book of the Covenant (Exo_20:1-26; Exo_21:1-36; Exo_22:1-31; Exo_23:1-33) in the prominence given to the social as well as to the ceremonial life of the people, and in the recognition that this life is still largely an agricultural life. Its closer affinity to the Book of the Covenant is found in the concise formulæ into which its laws are cast, as though they were meant for direct popular use, and in the fact that these laws are addressed to the people, not to the priest. It resembles Deut. very closely in forbidding certain forms of idolatry and semi-heathen practices which were common in Palestine. The two codes are penetrated throughout by the sense that what gives Israel its distinctive character is its religion, though they express this in different ways—H [Note: Law of Holiness.] dogmatically forbidding (‘for I am the Lord’), Deut. developing the reason why some things are forbidden. On the other hand, Dent. betrays the existence of a more complex and developed social life than H [Note: Law of Holiness.] , though the basis for both is still the land. Thus H [Note: Law of Holiness.] leaves the great festivals connected with the agricultural life, while Deut. seeks to add historical motives to them, and thus prepares for the time when the people, even though torn from the land, can find a bond of national and religious life in these festivals. Again, to H [Note: Law of Holiness.] the centralized priesthood and developed ritual of Deut. are unknown: it ignores the central sanctuary and the Levites. The chief distinction between H [Note: Law of Holiness.] and the Book of the Covenant is that H [Note: Law of Holiness.] is more detailed and shows a larger interest in the ceremonial side of Israel’s life. The latter point must not, however, be pressed too far, since H [Note: Law of Holiness.] has not survived in its entirety, and, having passed through the hands of a Priestly editor, may have retained more particularly those sections which interested him, and which therefore may have been made to appear relatively more conspicuous.
Further, when compared with P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] , H [Note: Law of Holiness.] does not conceive of Israel as grouped round the sanctuary, but regards the local sanctuaries as forming an element in the popular life. It knows nothing of the centralized and hierarchical priesthood, and the priesthood it knows is one side of a larger life, not its controlling factor. Its sacrifices are the older and simpler burnt-offering and thank-offering, without the development of guilt- and sin-offerings. Though Lev_6:2-7 be taken to represent the early sin-offering required by this code, its place is very secondary compared with P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] . The laws of H [Note: Law of Holiness.] are generally cast into concise formulæ to meet practical needs. They are backed continually by religion, but the religion supplies a sanction and a command rather than a reason and a motive. The book is specially conscious of Israel’s religion as one which requires separation from all heathen pollution. Holiness is separateness, ‘for I Jahweh sanctify you.’ The period at which the laws were compiled is still debated, but the affinity between H [Note: Law of Holiness.] and Ezekiel is so close that a direct connexion must be presumed. This affinity does not consist in common phrases, nor can it be measured by identity of language; it shows itself in the common point of view which justified Ezekiel in borrowing phrases, because no others could be found which were so adequate to embody his meaning. To both holiness is the stamp of Israel’s religion, and this holiness is largely construed as absence of ceremonial pollution—a pollution which includes more than ethical elements. The law-book probably arose at some sanctuary other than Jerusalem, and expressed and determined the religious life which centred there. As such, it offers a welcome and pleasant sketch of pre-exilic Israelitish life. It probably owed its survival through the Exile, in spite of the superior influence of Deut., to the fact that it deeply influenced the thought of Ezekiel. The priest-prophet preserved a book to which he owed so much; and it is not impossible that certain features in the conclusion (Eze_26:4-21) which have seemed to several to point to the Exile, may be due to Ezekiel himself or to a member of his school.
Ch. 27 contains rules on the commutation of vows and tithes. It belongs to P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] , and owes its present position to the fact that it presupposes the year of Jubilee (ch. 25).
A. C. Welch.
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
Edited by James Hastings, D.D. Published in 1909


Wayyiqra' is the Hebrew name, from the initial word; the middle book of the Pentateuch. The laws "which the Lord commanded Moses in Mount Sinai, in the day that he commanded the children of Israel to offer their oblations unto the Lord in the wilderness of Sinai" (Lev_7:38). Given between the setting up of the tabernacle and its departure from Sinai, i.e. between the first day of the first month and the 20th day of the second month of the second year of the Exodus (Exo_40:2; Exo_40:17; Num_10:11). Two chief subjects are handled:
(1) Leviticus 1-16, the fundamental ordinances of Israel's fellowship with Jehovah;
(2) Leviticus 17-27, the laws for hallowing Israel in this covenant fellowship. Privilege and duty, grace conferred and grace inwrought, go hand in hand.
First;
(1) The law of offerings, Leviticus 1-7.
(2) Investiture of Aaron and consecration of priests, Leviticus 8-10.
(3) Rules as to clean and unclean, Leviticus 11-15.
(4) The day of atonement, the summing up of all means of grace for the nation and the church, annually.
Second;
(1) Israel's life as holy and separate from heathendom, in food, marriage, and toward fellow men, Leviticus 17-20; the mutual connection of Leviticus 18; Leviticus 19; Leviticus 20, is marked by recurring phrases, "I are the Lord," "ye shall be holy, for I ... am holy."
(2) Holiness of priests and of offerings, Leviticus 21-22.
(3) Holiness shown in the holy convocations, sabbaths, perpetual light in the tabernacle, shewbread, Leviticus 23-24.
(4) Perpetuation of the theocracy by the sabbatical and Jubilee years, the perpetual tenure of land, the redemption of it and bond servants (Leviticus 25); and by fatherly chastisement of the people and restoration on repentance, Leviticus 26.
(5) Appendix on vows, which are not encouraged especially, yet permitted with some restrictions (Leviticus 27).
The only history in Leviticus is that of Aaron's consecration, Nadab and Abihu's death, and the doom of the blasphemer (Leviticus 8-10; Lev_24:10-23), a solemn exhibition of Jehovah's laws in their execution. Aaron's "holding his peace" under the stroke is a marvelous exhibition of grace; yet his not eating the sin offering in the holy place shows his keen paternal anguish which excused his violation of the letter of the law in Moses' judgment. As Jehovah drew nigh Israel in the tabernacle, so Israel drew nigh Jehovah in the offering. The sacrificial ordinances fall into three divisions, each division consisting of a Decalogue of directions, a method frequent in the Mosaic law. Many of the divisions are marked by the opening, "and the Lord spoke unto Moses" or such like, or by closing formulas as "this is the law," etc. (Lev_7:37-38; Lev_11:46-47; Lev_13:59; Lev_14:54-57; Lev_15:32-33).
The direction as to the people's offerings is distinguished from that as to the priests' by a repetition of the same formula (Lev_1:2; Lev_6:9; Lev_6:19-20; Lev_6:24-25; Lev_6:21; Lev_6:22). In Lev_5:6 translated not "trespass offering" which is the term for one kind of sin offering (Lev_5:14), namely, for an injury done to some one, "a fine offering" (Num_5:5-8), but "he shall bring as his forfeit," etc., asham. Also in Lev_23:2 for "feasts" translated "the appointed times." The Epistle to the Hebrew is the New Testament commentary on Leviticus, showing the correspondence yet superiority of the Antitype to the typical sacrifices. Peter (1Pe_1:16) quotes Lev_11:44, "be ye holy, for I am holy;" but New Testament holiness rises above the restrictions as to meats, seasons, and places (Joh_4:20-24; Acts 10,15).
Psa_89:15; "blessed is the people that know the joyful sound, they shall walk, O Lord, in the light of Thy countenance," alludes to the Jubilee year enjoined in Leviticus; Isa_61:1-3, and our Lord's application of the prophecy to Himself, show that the gospel dispensation is the antitype. The exhaustive consummation and final realization of the type shall be in the "times of restitution of all things," "the regeneration" of the heaven and earth," "the creature's deliverance from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God," "the adoption, to wit the redemption of the body" (Act_3:19-21; Rom_8:19-23; Mat_19:28-29). Leviticus 16 is the grand center of the book. Previously it was shown that God can only be approached by sacrifice, next that man is full of "uncleanness" which needs cleansing.
The annual atonement now teaches that not by several cleansings for several sins and uncleannesses can guilt be removed. One great covering of all transgressions must take place to meet God's just wrath, and then Israel stands accepted and justified typically (Lev_16:16; Lev_16:20). Hebrew 9 and Hebrew 10, explains antitypically how Christ by one offering once for all and forever perfected them that are being sanctified. In Lev_18:18 the prohibition against marriage with a wife's sister is during the wife's lifetime. In Lev_17:11 translated "the soul (nephesh) of the flesh is in the blood, and I have given it to you upon the altar to make atonement for your souls; for it is the blood which makes atonement by means of the soul." The two reasons of prohibiting blood as food are:
1. It is the vital fluid.
2. It was the appointed typical mean of atonement.
It is not blood as blood, but as containing in it the principle of life, that God accepted. The division into Decalogues is frequent throughout the Mosaic code, based no doubt upon the model of the Ten Commandments, each subject being set forth in ten ordinances, as Bertheau has observed (for details see his Commentary). Leviticus 1-3, contain the first Decalogue, namely, the burnt offering in three sections, the meat offering in four, and the peace offering in three. The second decalogue is in Leviticus 4-5, the sin offering in four cases; three kinds of transgression needing atonement; the trespass offering in three cases. Then, Leviticus 6-7, five Decalogues. Thus, there are seven Decalogues in all as to putting away guilt. The next seven chapters are about putting away impurity, Leviticus 11-16. Then, Leviticus 17-20 contain seven decalogues as to Israel's holiness. Lastly, Leviticus 21 - 26:2, contain the concluding seven decalogues.
This arrangement leaves unnoticed Lev_23:39-44 and Leviticus 24; because Lev_23:37-38, "these are the feasts," etc., evidently close chapter 23; Lev_23:39-44 are appended as a fuller description of the feast already noticed in Lev_23:34. And Leviticus 24 sets forth the duty of the people in maintaining public worship, and narrates the stoning of the blasphemer. The decalogues are closed with promises of rich blessing upon obedience, awful threats upon disobedience; the latter predominate, for already Israel had shown its tendency to disobey. The first division of the law, the covenant (Exo_23:20-33), ended with blessings only; for there Israel had not yet betrayed its unfaithfulness: But now (Exodus 32-33) when Israel had shown its backsliding tendency, the second division of the law ends here with threats as well as promises. Leviticus 27, is an appendix, Leviticus 26 having already closed the subject of the book with the words "these are the statutes," etc. The appendix however is an integral part of the whole, as is marked by its ending with the same formula, "these are the commandments," etc.
Fausset's Bible Dictionary
By Andrew Robert Fausset, co-Author of Jamieson, Fausset and Brown's 1888.


a canonical book of Scripture, being the third book of the Pentateuch of Moses; thus called because it contains principally the laws and regulations relating to the Levites, priests, and sacrifices; for which reason the Hebrews call it the law of the priests, because it includes many ordinances concerning their services. See PENTATEUCH.
Biblical and Theological Dictionary by Richard Watson
PRINTER 1849.


Israel’s priesthood was commonly known as the Levitical priesthood (Heb_7:11), and the book that deals more than any other with that priesthood is known as the Levitical book, or Leviticus. The priests, however, were only one family in the tribe of Levi. Matters relating to the non-priestly Levites are dealt with in the next book, Numbers. There is no break between these books, because what we call the five books of Moses (or the Pentateuch) were originally one book (see PENTATEUCH).
Features of the book
God had brought the people of Israel out of Egypt and set them on their way to Canaan, all according to the covenant promises he had given to Abraham. After three months they arrived at Mt Sinai, and there God established his covenant with them. He declared Israel to be his people, and they responded by promising to do whatever he required of them (Gen_12:2; Gen_15:18-21; Gen_17:6-8; Exo_2:24; Exo_6:6-8; Exo_19:4-6; Exo_24:7-8). The regulations that God laid down under the covenant begin in Exodus and carry on through Leviticus into Numbers.
First of all God announced the covenant’s basic principles and some of its practical requirements (Exodus 20-23). He then gave his plans for a central (but portable) place of worship, the tabernacle, and for a priesthood to oversee religious affairs (Exodus 25- 40). He gave the people a sacrificial system by which they could express their relationship with him (Leviticus 1-10); he set out laws to regulate cleanliness and holiness (Leviticus 11-22); he gave details concerning festivals and other special occasions (Leviticus 23-27); and he outlined certain duties, particularly in relation to the Levites (Numbers 1-10).
A central theme of Leviticus is that priests and common people alike were to be pure in their relations with God and with one another. Because God was holy, they were to be holy (Lev_11:44-45; Lev_20:26). This holiness extended to every part of the people’s lives, including personal cleanliness and public health. The laws of cleanliness, besides having practical usefulness, were an object lesson in a more basic problem, the problem of sin.
In his grace God helped his people deal with sin by giving them the sacrificial system. It taught them the seriousness of sin and gave them a way of approach to him to seek his forgiveness. People did not have to try to squeeze forgiveness from an unwilling God; God himself took the initiative by giving them the blood of animals to make atonement for their sin (Lev_17:11; see BLOOD; SACRIFICE). Whether repentant sinners knew it or not, their sacrifices could not in themselves take away sin. The basis on which God accepted the blood sacrifices of the ancient Israelites was the perfect blood sacrifice yet to be offered, the sacrifice of Jesus Christ (Heb_9:22; Heb_10:1-4; Heb_10:11-14).
Contents of the book
With the tabernacle now completed, God gave the Israelite people his regulations for the sacrifices. There were five basic sacrifices – the burnt offering, the cereal offering, the fellowship offering, the sin offering and the guilt offering (1:1-6:7). God gave additional details of these offerings for the priests who officiated (6:8-7:38). Moses ordained Aaron and his four sons as priests, after which they began their duties (8:1-9:24). Two of the sons were struck dead when they tried to act independently of God (10:1-20).
God then set out his requirements in relation to cleanliness. He laid down laws concerning food, disease and bodily health (11:1-15:33), and followed with regulations concerning the Day of Atonement and the sacredness of blood (16:1-17:16). Further instructions on practical holiness concerned sexual relationships and a range of miscellaneous matters (18:1-20:27). There were additional rules specifically concerned with priests (21:1-22:33).
Israel was to have a regulated timetable of festivals to acknowledge the overruling care of God throughout the year (23:1-24:23). Sabbatical and jubilee years were designed to prevent the rich from gaining control over the poor (25:1-55). God promised blessing for obedience, but warned of judgment for disobedience (26:1-46). Honesty was essential at all times, and people had to treat their vows seriously (27:1-34).
Bridgeway Bible Dictionary by Don Fleming
PRINTER 1990.


lḗ-vit?i-kus:
I. GENERAL DATA
1. Name
2. Character of Book
3. Unity of Book: Law of Holiness
Examination of Critical Theory
II. STRUCTURE
1. Modern Analyses
(1) Theories of Disintegration
(2) Reasons for Dismemberment
(3) Insufficiency of These Reasons
2. Structure of the Biblical Text
(1) Structure in General
(2) Structure of the Individual Pericopes
III. ORIGIN
1. Against the Wellhausen Hypothesis
(1) The Argument from Silence
(2) Attitude of Prophets toward Sacrificial System
(3) The People's Disobedience
(4) Indiscriminate Sacrificing
(5) Deuteronomy and Priestly Code
2. Connection with Mosaic Period
(1) Priestly Code and Desert Conditions
(2) Unity and Construction Point to Mosaic Origin
IV. THE SIGNIFICANCE
1. Positive
(1) The Law Contains God's Will
(2) The Law Prepares for the Understanding of Christianity
(3) The Law as a Tutor unto Christ
2. Negative
LITERATURE

I. General Data.
1. Name:
The third book of the Pentateuch is generally named by the Jews according to the first word, ויּקרא, wayyiḳrā' (Origen Ούικρά, Ouikrá, by the Septuagint called according to its contents Λευιτικόν, Leuitikón, or Λευειτικόν, Leueitikón, by the Vulgate, accordingly, ?Leviticus? (i.e. Liber), sometimes ?Leviticum?). The Jews have also another name taken from its contents, namely, כּהנים תּורת, tōrath kōhănı̄m, ?Law of the Priests.?

2. Character of Book:
As a matter of fact ordinances pertaining to the priesthood, to the Levitical system, and to the cults constitute a most important part of this book; but specifically religious and ethical commands, as we find them, e.g. in Lev 18 through 20, are not wanting; and there are also some historical sections, which, however, are again connected with the matter referring to the cults, namely the consecration of the priests in Lev 8 and 9, the sin and the punishment of two sons of Aaron, Nadab and Abihu (Lev_10:1 ff), and the account of the stoning of a blasphemer (Lev_24:10 ff). Of the Levites, on the other hand, the book does not treat at all. They are mentioned only once and that incidentally in Lev_25:32 ff. The laws are stated to have been given behar ṣı̄nay (Lev_7:38; Lev_25:1; Lev_26:46; Lev_27:34), which expression, on account of Lev 11, in which Yahweh is described as speaking to Moses out of the tent of meeting, is not to be translated ?upon? but ?at? Mt. Sinai. The connection of this book with the preceding and following books, i.e. Exodus and Numbers, which is commonly acknowledged as being the case, at least in some sense, leaves for the contents of Leviticus exactly the period of a single month, since the last chronological statement of Exo_40:17 as the time of the erection of the tabernacle mentions the 1st day of the 1st month of the 2nd year of the Exodus, and Num_1:1 takes us to the 1st day of the 2nd month of the same year. Within this time of one month the consecration of the priests fills out 8 days (Lev_8:33; Lev_9:1). A sequence in time is indicated only by Lev_16:1, which directly connects with what is reported in Lev 10 concerning Nadab and Abihu. In the same way the ordinances given in Lev_10:6 ff are connected with the events described in 8:1 through 10:5. The laws are described as being revelations of Yahweh, generally given to Moses (compare Lev_1:1; Lev_4:1; Lev_5:14; Lev_6:19, Lev_6:24 (Hebrew 12, 17); Lev_7:22, Lev_7:28, etc.); sometimes to Moses and Aaron (compare Lev_11:1; Lev_13:1; Lev_14:33; Lev_15:1, etc.), and, rarely, to Aaron alone (Lev_10:8). In Lev_10:12 ff, Moses gives some directions to the priests, which are based on a former revelation (compare Lev_6:16 (Hebrew 9) ff; Lev_7:37 ff). In Lev_10:16 ff, we have a difference of opinion between Moses and Aaron, or rather his sons, which was decided on the basis of an independent application of principles given in Leviticus. Most of these commands are to be announced to Israel (Lev_1:2; Lev_4:2; Lev_7:23, Lev_7:19; Lev_9:3 ff; Lev_11:2; Lev_12:2; Lev_15:2; Lev_18:2, etc.); others to the priests (Lev_6:9, Lev_6:25 (Hebrew 2, 18); Lev_21:2; Lev_22:2, etc.); or to the priests and the Israelites (Lev_17:2; Lev_22:18), while the directions in reference to the Day of Atonement, with which Aaron was primarily concerned (Lev_16:2), beginning with Lev_16:29, without a special superscription, are undeniably changed into injunctions addressed to all Israel; compare also Lev_21:24 and Lev_21:2. As the Book of Exodus treats of the communion which God offers on His part to Israel and which culminates at last in His dwelling in the tent of meeting (Exo_40:34 ff; compare under EXODUS, I., 2.), the Book of Leviticus contains the ordinances which were to be carried out by the Israelites in religious, ethical and cultural matters, in order to restore and maintain this communion with God, notwithstanding the imperfections and the guilt of the Israelites. And as this book thus with good reason occupies its well established place in the story of the founding and in the earliest history of theocracy, so too even a casual survey and intelligent glance at the contents of the book will show that we have here a well-arranged and organic unity, a conviction which is only confirmed and strengthened by the presentation of the structure of the book in detail (see under II., below).

3. Unity of Book: Law of Holiness:
As a rule, critics are accustomed first of all to regard Lev 17 through 25 or 26 as an independent section, and find in these chapters a legal code that is considered to have existed at one time as a group by itself, before it was united with the other parts.
It is indeed true that a series of peculiarities have been found in these chapters of Leviticus. To these peculiarities belongs the frequent repetition of the formula: ?I am Yahweh your God? (Lev_18:2, Lev_18:4; Lev_19:2, Lev_19:4, etc.); or ?I am Yahweh? (Lev_18:5, Lev_18:6, Lev_18:21; Lev_19:14, Lev_19:16, etc.), or ?I am Yahweh ... who hath separated you? (Lev_20:24), or ?who sanctifieth you? (Lev_20:8; Lev_21:8, Lev_21:15, Lev_21:23, etc.). To these peculiarities belong the references in words, or, in fact, to the land of Canaan, into which Israel is to be led (Lev_18:3, Lev_18:14 ff; Lev_19:23 ff, 29; Lev_20:22 ff; 23; 25), and also to Egypt, out of which He has led the people (Lev_18:3; Lev_19:34; Lev_22:33; Lev_26:13, Lev_26:15, etc.); as, further, the demand for sanctification (Lev_19:2), or the warning against desecration (Lev_19:12; Lev_21:23, etc.), both based on the holiness of Yahweh. In addition, a number of peculiar expressions are repeatedly found in these chapters. Because of their contents these chapters have, since Klostermann, generally been designated by the letter H (i.e. Law of Holiness); or, according to the suggestion of Dillmann, by the letter S (i.e. Sinaitic Law), because, according to Lev_25:1; Lev_26:46, they are said to have been given at Mt. Sinai, and because in certain critical circles it was at one time claimed that these chapters contain old laws from the Mosaic period, although these had been changed in form. These earlier views have apparently now been discarded by the critics entirely.

Examination of Critical Theory.
We, however, do not believe that it is at all justifiable to separate these laws as a special legal code from the other chapters. In the first place, these peculiarities, even if such are found here more frequently than elsewhere, are not restricted to these chapters exclusively. The Decalogue (Exo_20:2) begins with the words, ?I am Yahweh thy God, who brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage.? Exo_22:31 contains the demand, ?Ye shall be holy men unto me.? Exo_29:44, Exo_29:45 contains a promise that God will dwell in the midst of the Israelites, so that they shall learn that He is Yahweh, their God, who has brought them out of Egypt in order to dwell in their midst as Yahweh, their God (compare, further, Exo_6:6-8; Exo_31:13 f; Lev_10:10, Lev_10:11; Lev_11:44; Num_15:37-41; Num_33:52 f, 55 f; Deu_14:2, Deu_14:21). It is a more than risky undertaking to find in these and in other sections scattered remnants of H, especially if these are seen to be indispensable in the connection in which they are found, and when no reason can be given why they should be separated from this collection of laws. Then, too, the differences of opinion on the part of the critics in assigning these different parts to H, do not make us favorably inclined to the whole hypothesis. Hoffmann, especially (Die wichtigsten Instanzen gegen die Graf-Wellhausensche Hypothese, 16 ff), has shown how impossible it is to separate H from the other ordinances of the Priestly Code in so radical a manner. In saying this we do not at all wish to deny the peculiar character of these chapters, only we do not believe that Lev 17 can be added or Lev 26 can be taken away from this section; for in Lev 17 all the characteristic peculiarities of the Holiness Law are lacking; and, on the other hand, in Lev 26 the expression ?I am Yahweh your God,? or a similar one in Lev_26:12, Lev_26:13, Lev_26:14 f, is found. The subscription in Lev_26:46 connects Lev 26 with the preceding; and, further, the reference to the Sabbatical year as described in Lev 25, found in Lev_26:34 f, 43, is not to be overlooked. Finally, also, other legal codes, such as that in the first Book of the Covenant (Exo_23:20-33) and that of Dt (27:11-28:68) close with the offer of a blessing or a curse.
The chapters under consideration (Lev 18 through 26) are most closely connected with each other solely through their contents, which have found expression in a particular form, without these facts being sufficient to justify the claim of their being a separate legal code. For since in Lev 1 through 17 all those things which separate the Israelites from their God have been considered and bridged over (compare Lev 1 through 7, the laws concerning sacrifices; Lev 8 through 10, the mediatorship of the priests; Lev 11 through 15, the unclean things; Lev 16, the Day of Atonement; Lev 17, the use made of blood), we find in Lev 18 through 26 an account of the God-pleasing conduct, which admits of nothing that desecrates; namely, Lev 18 through 20 contain laws dealing with marriage and chastity and other matters of a religious, ethical or cultural kind, together with the punishments that follow their transgression; Lev 21 f determine the true character of the priests and of the sacred oblations; Lev 23 f, the consecration of the seasons, of life and death, etc.; Lev 25, the Sabbath and the Jubilee year; Lev 26 contains the offer of a blessing or a curse. Lev 1 through 17 have, as it were, a negative character; Lev 18 through 26 a positive character. In Lev 1 through 17 the consciousness of what is unclean, imperfect and guilty is awakened and the possibility of their removal demonstrated; while in Lev 18 through 26 the norm of a holy life is set forth. Even if these two parts at certain places show so great a likeness that the occurrence of an interchange of ordinances could be regarded as possible, nevertheless the peculiar character of each part is plainly recognized; and this is also a very essential argument for the view that both parts have one and the same author, who intentionally brought the two parts into closer connection and yet separated the one from the other. On this supposition the peculiarities of Lev 18 through 26 are sufficiently explained, and also the positive contents of these chapters and the fact that just these chapters are referred to in pre-exilic literature oftener than is the case with Lev 1 through 17, and particularly the close connection between Ezekiel and H is to be regarded as a consequence of the common tendency of both authors and not as the result of their having used a common source (see EZEKIEL, II, 2). In Lev_26:46 we have what is clearly a conclusion, which corresponds to Lev_25:1; Lev_7:37 f; Lev_1:1, and accordingly regards Lev 1 through 26 as a unity; while Lev 27, which treats of vows and of tithes, with its separate subscription in Lev_27:34, shows that it is an appendix or a supplement, which is, however, in many ways connected with the rest of the book, so that this addition cannot, without further grounds, be regarded as pointing to another author.

II. Structure.
1. Modern Analyses:
Modern criticism ascribes the entire Book of Leviticus, being a special legal code, to the Priestly Code (P). The questions which arise in connection with this claim will be discussed under III, below. At this point we must first try to awaken a consciousness of the fact, that in this special particular, too, the documentary theory has entered upon the stage of total disintegration; that the reasons assigned for the separation of the sources are constantly becoming more arbitrary and subjective; and that the absurd consequences to which they consistently lead from the very outset arouse distrust as to the correctness of the process. Just as in the historical parts the critics have for long been no longer content with J (Jahwist) and E (Elohist), but have added a J1 and Later additions to J, an E1 and Later additions to E, and as Sievers and Gunkel have gone farther, and in detail have completely shattered both J and E into entirely separate fragments (see GENESIS), So the Priestly Code (P), too, is beginning to experience the same fate. It is high time that, for both the historical and the legal sections, the opposite course be taken, and that we turn from the dismemberment to the combination of these documents; that we seek out and emphasize those features which, in form and content, unite the text into a clear unity. For this reason we lay the greatest stress on these in this section, which deals with the structure of the book, and which treats of the matter (1) negatively and (2) positively (see also EXODUS, II.).

(1) Theories of Disintegration.
We have already seen in the article DAY OF ATONEMENT in connection with Lev 16 an example of these attempts at dissection, and here still add several examples in order to strengthen the impression on this subject.

(a) General Considerations:
If we for the present disregard the details, then, according to Bertholet (Kurzer Hand-Kommentar zum Alten Testament), not only Lev 17 through 26 (see, above, under I.) at one time existed as a separate legal corpus, but also the sacrificial legislation in Lev 1 through 7, and also the laws concerning the clean and the unclean in Lev 11 through 15. Concerning Lev 16 see above. Then, too, Lev 27 is regarded as a supplement and is ascribed to a different author. Finally, the so-called ?fundamental document? of P (marked Pg) contained only parts from Lev 9 f (also a few matters from Lev 8), as also one of the three threads of Lev 16, for Lev 8 through 10, it is said, described the consecration of the priests demanded in Ex 25 ff, which also are regarded as a part of Pg, and Lev_16:1 is claimed to connect again with Lev 10 (compare on this point DAY OF ATONEMENT). All these separate parts of Leviticus (i.e. Lev 1 through 7; 8 through 10; 11 through 15; 16; 17 through 26; 27) are further divided into a number of more or less independent subparts; thus, e.g., Lev 1 through 7, containing the sacrificial laws, are made to consist of two parts, namely, Lev 1 through 5 and Lev 6 through 7; or the laws concerning the clean and the unclean in Lev 11 through 15 are divided into the separate pieces, Lev 11; Lev_12:1-8; 13:1 through 46; and these are regarded as having existed at one time and in a certain manner independently and separated from each other. But how complicated in detail the composition is considered to be, we can see from Lev 17 through 26.

(b) Lev_17:1 Considered in Detail:
While Baentsch (Hand-Kommentar zum Alten Testament) accepts, to begin with, three fundamental strata (H1 = Lev 18 through 20 and certain portions from Lev 23 through 25; H2 = Lev 21 f; H3 = Lev 17), Bertholet, too (op. cit., x), regards the development of these chapters as follows: ?In detail we feel justified in separating the following pieces: (i) Lev_17:3, Lev_17:4 (5, 7a), 8, 9, 10-14; (ii) Lev_18:7-10, Lev_18:12-20, Lev_18:22 f; and this united with (iii) Lev_19:3 f, 11 f, 27 f, 30, 31, 35, 36, which was probably done by the author of (iii). The following were inserted by the person who united these parts, namely, Lev_18:6, Lev_18:27, Lev_18:25, Lev_18:26, Lev_18:28, Lev_18:30; (iv) Lev_19:9, Lev_19:10, Lev_19:13-18, Lev_19:19, Lev_19:29, Lev_19:32; (v) Lev_19:5-8, Lev_19:23-26; (vi) Lev_20:2(3), 6(27); (vii) Lev_20:9, Lev_20:10-21; Lev_19:20; (viii) Lev_21:1-5, Lev_21:7, Lev_21:9-15, Lev_21:17-24; Lev_22:3, Lev_22:8, Lev_22:10-14, Lev_22:18-25, Lev_22:27-30; (ix) Lev_23:10-20, Lev_23:39-43; (x) Lev_24:15-22, except verses 16aβb; (xi) Lev_25:2-7 (4), 18-22, 35-38, 39, 40a, 42 f, 47, 53, 15; (xii) Lev_25:8, Lev_25:9, Lev_25:10, Lev_25:13, Lev_25:14-16, Lev_25:17, Lev_25:24 f. In uniting these pieces Rh (the Redactor of the Law of Holiness) seems to have added de suo the following: Lev_17:5 (beginning); Lev_18:2-5, Lev_18:21, Lev_18:24, Lev_18:26,Lev_18:29; Lev_19:33 f, 37; Lev_20:4 f, 7 f, 22-26; Lev_21:6, Lev_21:8; Lev_22:2, Lev_22:9, Lev_22:15 f, 31-33; Lev_23:22; Lev_25:11 f; Lev_26:1 f. At the same time he united with these an older parenetic section, 26:3-45, which, by inserting Lev_26:10, Lev_26:34 f, 39-43, he changed into a concluding address of this small legal code. All the rest that is found in Lev 17 through 26 seems to be the result of a revision in the spirit of the Priestly Code (P), not, however, as though originally it all came from the hand of Rp (Redactor P). That he rather added and worked together older pieces from P (which did not belong to Pg) is seen from an analysis of Lev 23... As far as the time when these parts were worked together is concerned, we have a reliable terminus ad quem in a comparison of Neh_8:14-18 with Lev_23:36 (P), 39 ff (H). Only we must from the outset remember, that still, after the uniting of these different parts, the marks of the editorial pen are to be noticed in the following Lev 17 through 26, i.e. that after this union a number of additions were yet made to the text. This is sure as far as Lev_23:26-32 is concerned, and is probable as to Lev_24:1-9, Lev_24:10-14, Lev_24:23; Lev_25:32-34; and that this editorial work even went so far as to put sections from P in the place of parts of H can possibly be concluded from Lev_24:1-9.?

(c) Extravagance of Critical Treatment:
This is also true of all the other sections, as can be seen by a reference to the books of Bertholet and Baentsch. What should surprise us most, the complicated and external manner in which our Biblical text, which has such a wonderful history back of it, is declared by the critics to have originated, or the keenness of the critics, who, with the ease of child's play, are able to detect and trace out this growth and development of the text, and can do more than hear the grass grow? But this amazement is thrust into the ackground when we contemplate what becomes of the Bible text under the manipulations of the critics. The compass of this article makes it impossible to give even as much as a general survey of the often totally divergent and contradictory schemes of Baentsch and Bertholet and others on the distribution of this book among different sources; and still less possible is it to give a criticism of these in detail. But this critical method really condemns itself more thoroughly than any examination of its claims would. All who are not yet entirely hypnotized by the spell of the documentary hypothesis will feel that by this method all genuine scientific research is brought to an end. If the way in which this book originated had been so complicated, it certainly could never have been again reconstructed.

(2) Reasons for Dismemberment.
We must at this place confine ourselves to mentioning and discussing several typical reasons which are urged in favor of a distribution among different authors.

(a) Alleged Repetitions:
We find in the parts belonging to P a number of so-called repetitions. In Lev 1 through 7 we find a twofold discussion of the five kinds of sacrifices (1-5; Lev_6:1 ff); in Lev 20 punitive measures are enacted for deeds which had been described already in Lev 18; in Lev_19:3, Lev_19:10; Lev_23:3; Lev_26:2 the Sabbath command is intensified; in Lev_19:5 ff; Lev_22:29 f, we find commands which had been touched upon already in Lev_7:15 ff; Lev_19:9 f we find almost verbally repeated in Lev_23:22; Lev_24:2 ff repeats ordinances concerning the golden candlestick from Exo_27:20 ff, etc. The existence of these repetitions cannot be denied; but is the conclusion drawn from this fact correct? It certainly is possible that one and the same author could have handled the same materials at different places and from different viewpoints, as is the case in Lev 1 through 7 in regard to the sacrifices. Lev 18 and 20 (misdeeds and punishments) are even necessarily and mutually supplementary. Specially important laws can have been repeated, in order to emphasize and impress them all the more; or they are placed in peculiar relations or in a unique light (compare, e.g., Lev_24:1 ff, the command in reference to the golden candlestick in the pericope Lev 23 through 24; see below). Accordingly, as soon as we can furnish a reason for the repetition, it becomes unobjectionable; and often, when this is not the case, the objections are unremoved if we ascribe the repetitions to a new author, who made the repetition by way of an explanation (see EXODUS, II., 2., (5)).

(b) Separation of Materials:
Other reasons will probably be found in uniting or separating materials that are related. That Lev 16 is connected with Lev 8 through 10, and these connect with Ex 25 ff, is said to prove that this had been the original order in these sections. But why should materials that are clearly connected be without any reason torn asunder by the insertion of foreign data? Or has the interpolator perhaps had reasons of his own for doing this? Why are not these breaks ascribed to the original author? The sacrificial laws in Lev 1 through 7 are properly placed before Lev 8 through 10, because in these latter chapters the sacrifices are described as already being made (Lev_9:7, Lev_9:15, the sin offering; Lev_9:7, Lev_9:12, Lev_9:16, the burnt offering; Lev_9:17; Lev_10:12, the meal offering; Lev_9:18, the peace offering; Lev_9:3 f, all kinds). In the same way Lev 11 through 15, through Lev_15:31, are inwardly connected with Lev 16, since these chapters speak of the defiling of the dwelling-place of Yahweh, from which the Day of Atonement delivers (Lev_16:16 f, 33). As a matter of course, the original writer as well as a later redactor could have at times also connected parts in a looser or more external manner. In this way, in Lev_7:22 ff, the command not to eat of the fats or of the blood has been joined to the ordinances with reference to the use of the peace offerings in Lev_7:19 ff. This again is the case when, in Lev 2, Lev_2:11-13 have been inserted in the list of the different kinds of meal offering; when after the general scheme of sin offerings, according to the hierarchical order and rank in Lev 4, a number of special cases are mentioned in Lev_5:1 ff; and when in Lev_5:7 ff commands are given to prevent too great poverty; or when in Lev_6:19 ff the priestly meal offerings are found connected with other ordinances with references to the meat offerings in general (Lev_6:14 ff); or when the share that belongs to the priest (Lev_7:8 ff) is found connected with his claim to the guilt offering (Lev_7:1 ff); or the touching of the meat offering by something unclean (Lev_7:19 ff) is found connected with the ordinances concerning the peace offerings; or when in Lev 11 the ordinances dealing with the unclean animals gradually pass over into ordinances concerning the touching of these animals, as is already indicated by the subscription Lev_11:4, Lev_11:6 f (compare with Lev_11:2). Still more would it be natural to unite different parts in other ways also. In this way the ordinances dealing with the character of the sacrifices in Lev_22:17-30 could, regarded by themselves, be placed also in Lev 1 through 7. But in Lev 22 they are also well placed. On the other hand, the character of Lev 1 through 7 would have become too complicated if they were inserted here. In such matters the author must have freedom of action.

(c) Change of Singular and Plural:
Further, the frequent change between the singular and the plural in the addresses found in the laws which are given to a body of persons is without further thought used by the critics as a proof of a diversity of authors in the section under consideration (compare Lev_10:12 ff; Lev_19:9, Lev_19:11 ff, 15 ff, etc.). But how easily this change in numbers can be explained! In case the plural is used, the body of the people are regarded as having been distributed into individuals; and in the case of a more stringent application the plural can at once be converted into the singular, since the author is thinking now only of separate individuals. Naturally, too, the singular is used as soon as the author thinks again rather of the people as a whole. Sometimes the change is made suddenly within one and the same verse or run of thought; and this in itself ought to have banished the thought of a difference of authors in such cases. In the case of an interpolator or redactor, it is from the outset all the more probable that he would have paid more attention to the person used in the addresses than that this would have been done by the original writer, who was completely absorbed by the subject-matter. Besides, such a change in number is frequently found in other connections also; compare in the Book of the Covenant (Exo_22:20-25, Exo_22:29 f; Exo_23:9 ff; compare Deu_12:2 ff, 13 ff). In regard to these passages, also, the modern critics are accustomed to draw the same conclusion; and in these cases, too, this is hasty. In the same way the change in the laws from the 3rd to the 2nd person can best be explained as the work of the lawgiver himself, before whose mind the persons addressed are more vividly present and who, when speaking in the 2nd person, becomes personal (compare Lev_2:4 ff with Lev_2:1-3, and also Lev_1:2; Lev_3:17; Lev_6:18, Lev_6:21, Lev_6:25 ff).

(d) Proofs of Religious Development:
A greater importance seemingly must be attributed to the reasons based on a difference in the terminology or on contradictions in the laws, as these appear to lead to a religio-historical development. But the following examples are intended to show how all important it is to be slow in the acceptance of the materials which the critics offer in this connection.

(3) Insufficiency of These Reasons.
(a) In Lev_5:1-7, in the section treating of the sin offering (4:1 through 5:13), we find the word 'āshām, which also signifies ?guilt offering? (compare Lev_5:14 ff; Lev_7:1 ff). Accordingly, it is claimed, the author of Lev_5:1-7 was not yet acquainted with the difference between the two kinds of offerings, and that this part is older than that in Lev_4:1 ff; Lev_5:14 ff. However, in Lev_5:1 ff the word 'āshām is evidently used in the sense of ?repentance,? and does not signify ?sin offering? at all; at any rate, already in Lev_5:6 f we find the characteristic term ḥaṭṭā'th to designate the latter, and thus this section appears as entirely in harmony with the connection.
(b) Critics find a contradiction in Lev_6:26; Lev_7:33, Lev_7:37, and in Lev_6:29; Lev_7:31, Lev_7:36, since in the first case the officiating priest and in the other case the entire college of priests is described as participating in the sacrifice. In reply it is to be said that the first set of passages treat of the individual concrete cases, while the second set speak of the general principle. In Lev_7:8 f, however, where the individual officiating priest is actually put in express contrast with all the sons of Aaron, the matter under consideration is a difference in the meal offerings, which, beginning with Lev 2, could be regarded as known. Why this difference is made in the use of this sacrifice is no longer intelligible to us, as we no longer retain these sacrifices, nor are we in possession of the oral instruction which possibly accompanied the written formulation of these laws; but this is a matter entirely independent of the question as to the author.
(c) According to Exo_29:7; Lev_4:3, Lev_4:5, Lev_4:16; Lev_6:20, Lev_6:22; Lev_8:12; Lev_16:32; Lev_21:10, Lev_21:12, the high priest is the only one who is anointed; while, on the other hand, in Exo_28:41; Exo_29:21; Exo_30:30; Exo_40:15; Lev_7:36; Lev_10:7, all the priests are anointed. But the text as it reads does not make it impossible that there was a double anointing. According to the first set of passages, Aaron is anointed in such a manner that the anointing oil is poured out upon his head (compare especially Exo_29:7 and Lev_8:12). Then, too, he and all his sons are anointed in such a way that a mixture of the oil and of the blood is sprinkled upon them and on their garments (compare especially Exo_29:21 and Lev_8:30). Were we here dealing with a difference in reference to theory and the ranks of the priesthood, as these discussions were current at the time of the exile (see III., below), then surely the victorious party would have seen to it that their views alone would have been reproduced in these laws, and the opposing views would have been suppressed. But now both anointings are found side by side, and even in one and the same chapter!
(d) The different punishments prescribed for carnal intercourse with a woman during her periods in Lev_15:24 and Lev_20:18 are easily explained by the fact that, in the first passage, the periods are spoken of which only set in during the act, and in the second passage, those which had already set in before.
(e) As far as the difference in terminology is concerned, it must be remembered that in their claims the critics either overlook that intentional differences may decide the preference for certain words or expressions; or else they ignore the fact that it is possible in almost every section of a writer's work to find some expressions which are always, or at least often, peculiar to him; or finally, they in an inexcusable way ignore the freedom of selection which a writer has between different synonyms or his choice in using these.
All in all, it must be said that however much we acknowledge the keenness and the industry of the modern critics in clearing up many difficulties, and the fact that they bring up many questions that demand answers, it nevertheless is the fact that they take the matter of solving these problems entirely too easily, by arbitrarily claiming different authors, without taking note of the fact that by doing this the real difficulty is not removed, but is only transferred to another place. What could possibly be accepted as satisfactory in one single instance, namely that through the thoughtlessness of an editor discrepancies in form or matter had found their way into the text, is at once claimed to be the regular mode of solving these difficulties - a procedure that is itself thoughtlessness. On the other hand, the critics overlook the fact that it makes little difference for the religious and the ethical value of these commands, whether logical, systematic, linguistic or aesthetic correctness in all their parts has been attained or not; to which must yet be added, that a failure in the one particular may at the same time be an advantage in the other. In this respect we need recall only the anacoluths of the apostle Paul.

2. Structure of the Biblical Text:
(1) Structure in General.
The most effective antidote against the craze to split up the text in the manner described above will be found in the exposition of all those features which unite this text into one inseparable whole. What we have tried to demonstrate in the arts GENESIS; EXODUS, II.; DAY OF ATONEMENT (compare also EZEKIEL, I, 2, (2)) can be repeated at this point. The Book of Leviticus shows all the marks of being a well-constructed and organic literary product, which in its fundamental characteristics has already been outlined under I above. And as this was done in the several articles just cited, we can here add further, as a corroborative factor in favor of the acceptance of an inner literary unity of the book, that the division of the book into its logical parts, even down to minute details, is here, as is so often the case elsewhere, not only virtually self-evident in many particulars, but that the use made of typical numbers in many passages in this adjustment of the parts almost forces itself upon our recognition. In other places the same is at least suggested, and can be traced throughout the book without the least violence to the text. The system need not be forced upon the materials. We often find sections but loosely connected with the preceding parts (compare under 1 above) and not united in a strictly logical manner, but which are nevertheless related in thought and association of ideas. In harmony with the division of the Book of Gen we find at once that the general contents, as mentioned under I above, easily fall into 10 pericopes, and it is seen that these consist of 2 sets each of 5 pericopes together with an appendix.

(a) Ten Pericopes in Two Parts:
Part I, the separation from God and the removal of this separation: (i) Lev 1 through 7; (ii) Lev 8 through 10; (iii) Lev 11 through 15; (iv) Lev 16; (v) Lev 17.
Part II, the normal conduct of the people of God: (i) Lev 18 through 20; (ii) Lev 21 through 22; (iii) Lev 23 through 24; (iv) Lev 25; (v) Lev 26.
Appendix, Lev 27; compare for the number 10 the division of Ex 1:8 through 7:7; 7:8 through 13:16; 13:17 through 18:27; also the Decalogue, Exo_20:1 ff; 21:1 through 23:19; 32:1 through 35:1; and see EXODUS, II., 2.; and in Lev probably Lev_18:6-18; Lev_19:9-18, and with considerable certainty 19:1-37 (see below).

(b) Correspondence and Connections:
I leave out of consideration in this case the question whether an intentional correspondence among the different parts be traced or not, even in their details. Thus, e.g.; when the 2nd pericope (Lev 8 through 10 and 21 f) treats particularly of the order of the priests, or when the 4th pericope of the 2nd set (Lev 25) states that the beginning of the Year of Jubilee fell on the 10th day of the 7th month, i.e. on the Day of Atonement as described in Lev 16, in the 4th pericope of the 1st set (compare Lev_25:9 with Lev_16:29); or when both sets close with two shorter pericopes, which evidently express high stages of development (Lev 16 and 17, respectively, Lev 25 and 26 treating of the Day of Atonement, of the use made of blood and the purposes of blood for the altar or the Jubilee Year, of the blessing and the curse).
And, as far as the order in other respects is concerned, it is throughout to be regarded as founded in the subject-matter itself that Lev 1 through 17 must precede Lev 18 through 26. First that which separates the people from God must be removed, and then only is a God-pleasing conduct possible. Just as easily, and in agreement with the context, it is possible that the consecration of the priests in Lev 8 through 10 presupposes the sacrificial tōrāh (Lev 1 through 7; compare under 1 above) and follows the latter, and is immediately introduced by the mention made of the installation sacrifices for which otherwise there are no reasons assigned in the concluding formula in Lev_7:37 (compare Lev_8:22-32). The Day of Atonement (Lev 16), which in Lev_16:16 f and Lev_16:33 is spoken of in connection with the purification of the sanctuary, is in turn introduced by Lev 11 through 15, or more particularly by the remark in Lev_15:31, where mention is made of the pollution of the dwelling-place of Yahweh. And on the other hand, the ordinances dealing with the priests (Lev 8 through 10) in Lev_10:10, where the command is given to discriminate between what is holy and what is unholy and to teach Israel accordingly, already point to the contents of Lev 11 through 15. The sacrifices, with which the first part in Lev 1 through 7 begins, are taken up again by the conclusion in Lev 17, in the commandment concerning the blood for the altar. The second part, too, already at the beginning (Lev 18 through 20) in its religiously cultural and ethical ordinances, shows in the clearest possible manner what matters it proposes to discuss. In this way the systematic structure of the book is apparent in all particulars.
Close connections: comparison with Exodus: And, further, the different pericopes are also so closely Connected among themselves and with the corresponding pericopes in the books of Ex and Nu, that many have thought it necessary to regard them as a special body of laws. But the connection is so close and involves all the details so thoroughly, that all efforts to divide and distribute them after the examples described under 1 above must fail absolutely. We shall now give the proofs for the different pericopes in Lev, but in such a manner as to take into consideration also Ex 25 through 31; 35 ff, treating of the tabernacle and its utensils and the Aaronitic priesthood, which are most intimately connected with Lev. All details in this matter will be left out of consideration.
(i) Tabernacle and priesthood: That Lev 8 through 10 (the consecration of the priests, etc.), together with Ex 25 ff, constitutes a single whole is accepted on all hands. But the tent of meeting and its utensils, and also the priesthood, both with and without any emphasis on the Aaronitic origin, are presupposed also in almost each one of the other pericopes of Leviticus; compare for Lev 1 through 7, e.g., Lev_1:3, Lev_1:1; Lev_3:2, Lev_3:8, Lev_3:13; Lev_4:4, Lev_4:5, Lev_4:7, Lev_4:14, Lev_4:16, Lev_4:18; Lev_6:26 (tent of meeting); Lev_1:5, Lev_1:12; Lev_3:5; Lev_4:7, Lev_4:25, Lev_4:30; Lev_6:12 (altar of burnt sacrifices); Lev_4:7, Lev_4:18 (altar of incense sacrifices); Lev_4:6, Lev_4:17 (veil); Lev_6:9, Lev_6:19 (court); Lev_1:5, Lev_1:7, Lev_1:8, Lev_1:11; Lev_2:2; Lev_3:2, Lev_3:5, Lev_3:8, Lev_3:13; Lev_6:9, Lev_6:14, Lev_6:16, Lev_6:20, Lev_6:25, etc. (Aaron and his sons as priests); for Lev 11 through 15 see Lev_12:4, Lev_12:6; Lev_14:11, Lev_14:23; Lev_15:14, Lev_15:29, Lev_15:31 (sanctuary, tent of meeting, dwelling-place); Lev_11:1; Lev_12:6 f; Lev_13:1 ff; Lev_14:2 ff, 33 ff; Lev_15:1 (priesthood); for Lev 16 see Lev_16:2, Lev_16:7, Lev_16:16 f, 20, 23, 13 (sanctuary and Holy of Holies tent of meeting); Lev_16:2, Lev_16:12 (veil); Lev_16:2, Lev_16:13 ff (lid of the Ark of the Covenant); Lev_16:12, Lev_16:18, Lev_16:20, Lev_16:33 (altar); Lev_16:1 ff (Aaronitic priesthood); for Lev 17 see Lev_17:4-6, Lev_17:9 (tent of meeting); Lev_17:6, Lev_17:11 (altar); Lev_17:5 (priesthood); for Lev 18 through 20 see Lev_19:30, Lev_19:21 (sanctuary of Yahweh, tent of meeting); Lev_19:22 (priesthood); for Lev 21 f see Lev_21:12 (sanctuary); Lev_21:23 (sanctuaries of Yahweh); Lev_21:23 (veil, altar); Lev_21:1 ff, 21 (Aaronitic priesthood); for Lev 23; 24 see Lev_23:2, Lev_23:4, Lev_23:21, Lev_23:24, Lev_23:27, Lev_23:36 f (sanctuary); Lev_24:1 ff (candlestick, tent of meeting); Lev_24:5 ff (table of showbread); Lev_23:10, Lev_23:20 (priesthood); Lev_24:3, Lev_24:1 (Aaronitic priesthood); for Lev 26 see Lev_26:2, Lev_26:11, Lev_26:31 (sanctuary, dwelling-place of Yahweh, sanctuaries); for Lev 27 see Lev_27:10, Lev_27:33 (sanctuary); Lev_27:8 ff (priesthood).
(ii) In the same way the sacrificial laws of Lev 1 through 7 are mentioned in the following pericopes as matters that are well known. For Lev 8 through 10 see Lev_9:7, Lev_9:15 (sin offering); Lev_9:7, Lev_9:12, Lev_9:16 (burnt offering); Lev_9:17; Lev_10:12 (meal offering); Lev_9:18 (peace offering); Lev_9:3 f (all together); compare also Exo_29:14, Exo_29:18, Exo_29:28. In Lev_9:21; Lev_10:14 f (wave-breasts and heave-thigh) direct reference is made to Lev_7:30-36. In the same manner Lev_10:16 ff presupposes the ordinances dealing with the different ways of offering the sin offerings in Lev_4:3 ff, 13 ff; Lev_6:24-30; for Lev 11 through 15 see Lev_12:6 ff; Lev_14:12 ff (compare especially Lev_14:13 with Lev_4:24); Lev_14:21 ff; Lev_15:14 f, 29 f; for Lev 16 see Lev_16:3, Lev_16:5 f, 9, 11, 15, 24 f, 27; for Lev 17 see Lev_17:5 ff, 8, 11; for Lev 18 through 20 see Lev_19:6 ff, 21 f (here is therefore the 'āshām found in H, which is claimed to be of a later date); for Lev 21 f see Lev_21:6, Lev_21:21 f; Lev_22:17 ff, 29 f; for Lev 23; 24 see Lev_23:12 f; Lev_18:19, Lev_18:27, 37; Lev_24:9; for Lev 26 see Lev_26:30 f; for Lev 27 compare Lev_27:15, Lev_27:19, Lev_27:27, Lev_27:31 with Lev_5:16; Lev_6:5.
(iii) Laws on clean and unclean: The laws in reference to the clean and the unclean in Lev 11 through 15 are also interwoven with the whole book. For Lev 1 through 7 see Lev_5:2 f; Lev_6:27; Lev_7:19 ff; for Lev 8 through 10 see Lev_10:10 f; for Lev 16 see Lev_16:16, Lev_16:19; for Lev 17 see Lev_17:13, Lev_17:15 f; for Lev 18 through 20 compare Lev_20:25 with Lev_11:44, and in general with Lev 11; for Lev 21 f see Lev_21:10; Lev_13:45; Lev_22:3 ff with Lev 13 through 15; for Lev 27 see Lev_27:11 and Lev_27:27, as also Lev 11.
(iv) The laws in reference to the Day of Atonement found in Lev 16 are prepared for by those found in Lev 11 through 15, namely, in Lev_14:4 ff, 49 ff (the ceremony with the two birds in connection with the purification from leprosy), and in Lev_15:31 (compare Lev_16:16, Lev_16:19; see above). For Lev 23; 24 compare Lev_23:26 ff with Lev_16:29 if, and for Lev_25:9 with Lev_16:29 see above; compare also Exo_30:10.
(v) Leviticus 17 is re-echoed in Lev 1 through 7 (Lev_7:26 f) and in Lev 18 through 20 (Lev_19:26).
(vi) Finally Lev 25 (Year of Rest and Year of Jubilee) is presupposed in Lev_26:34 f, 43 and in Lev_27:17 ff, 23 f.
The above, however, by no means exhausts this list of references and similar thoughts, and we have here given only some leading illustrations. What literary tricks must be resorted to when, over against this overwhelming mass of evidence, critics yet insist that the different parts of the book were originally independent writings, especially, too, when the entire tabernacle and utensils of the Aaronitic priesthood, the Day of Atonement, the Year of Jubilee, the whole sacrificial scheme and the laws dealing with the great festivals, the restriction of the slaying of the sacrificial animals to the central sanctuary, are regarded as the products of imagination alone, according to the Wellhausen hypothesis (compare III, below, and see also EXODUS, III., 5.; DAY OF ATONEMENT; EZEKIEL, II, 2). And how little is gained in addition when, as is sometimes done, in a most arbitrary manner, the statements found in Lev 1 through 3 concerning the tabernacle of revelation (?tent of meeting?) and concerning Aaron's sons, or concerning Aaron and his sons together, are regarded as later additions. In Lev and Ex 25 ff; 35 ff, everything is so entirely of one and the same character and has so clearly emanated from one and the same spirit, that it is impossible to separate from this product any constituent parts and to unite these into groups that were originally independent, then to split up these still further and to trace the parts to their sources, and even to construct a scheme of religious and historical development on this reconstruction of the sources.

(2) Structure of the Individual Pericopes.
As the windows and the column capitals of a medieval cathedral are arranged according to different schemes and this divergence is regarded as an enrichment of the structure, thus, too, we find it to be in the structure of the various pericopes of the Book of Leviticus. These latter, too, possess a certain symphony of different tones, but all are rhythmically arranged, and only when united do they produce the entire symphony.

(a) The Laws Concerning the Sacrifices (Leviticus 1 through 7):
In the first place, the five different kinds of sacrifices in Israel are mentioned in succession twice, in Lev 1:1 through 7:21: Part I, Lev 1 through 5, namely (i) Lev 1, burnt offerings; (ii) Lev 2, meal offering; (iii) Lev 3, peace offerings; (iv) 4:1 through 5:13, sin offering; (v) Lev_5:14 -26, guilt offering; Part II, 6:1 through 7:21, namely (i) Lev_6:8-13, burnt offerings; (ii) Lev_6:14-23, meal offering; (iii) Lev_6:24-30, sin offering; (iv) Lev_7:1-7 with appendix, Lev_7:8-10, dealing with that part of the sacrifices which belongs to the priest (see under 1., above), guilt offering; (v) Lev_7:11-21, peace offerings. With this is found connected in Lev_7:22-27 the prohibition of the use of the fat or the blood, and in Lev_7:28-36, the laws concerning the wave-breast and the heave-thigh. We have accordingly at once twelve of these laws (compare on Ex 25:1 through 30:10 in article on EXODUS, II., 2., (5) and on EZEKIEL, I, 2, 5)). But even apart from this we have no right to ascribe Lev 1 through 5 and 6:1 through 7:21, on the ground that they are duplicates, to different authors.
That there is a difference between these two accounts is proved, not only by the fact that the first set of laws from Lev 1 through 5 is addressed to all the Israelites (compare Lev_1:2; Lev_4:2), and the second set Lev_6:8; Lev_7:21 to Aaron and his sons (compare Lev_6:9, Lev_6:25); but the second set has also in content a number of altogether different viewpoints as compared with the first set, so that the same author found himself induced or compelled to write both sets. On the other hand, the fact that both have the same author is evident from the very close connection between the two sections. In addition to the fact that both make mention of all five kinds of sacrifices, we can yet compare Lev_3:5 with Lev_6:22 (fat pieces of the peace offering over the burnt sacrifices upon the pieces of wood); and, further, the express reference of Lev_6:17 to Lev 4, while Lev_6:30 presupposes the distinct separation of the sin offering, the blood of which is brought into the tent of meeting, from the other sacrifices, as these are given in Lev_4:3 ff, 13 ff over against Lev_4:22 ff, 27 ff. Leviticus 4, with its reference to the peace offerings (Lev_4:10, Lev_4:26, Lev_4:31, Lev_4:35), is again most closely connected with Lev 3. We must accordingly insist that the whole account is most intimately interwoven. Over against this, the omission within the first set, Lev 1 through 5, in Lev_5:14-16, of the ritual for the peace offering, is sufficiently explained only by the fact that this ritual was to be used in the second set (6:8 through 7:21), and here for the first time only in Lev_7:1-15, which fact again speaks for the same author for both sets and against the supposition that they were merely mechanically united by a redactor. The fact that the second set 6:8 through 7:21 has a different order from that of Lev 1 through 5, by uniting the sin offering immediately with the meal offering (Lev_6:24 ff with Lev_6:14-23), is probably on account of the similar ordinances in Lev_7:9 and Lev_7:19 (manner of eating the meal offering and the sin offering). On the other hand, the position of the peace offering at the close of the second set (Lev_7:11 ff) furnished the possibility of giving to the piece of the entire pericope embraced in Lev_7:22-27, Lev_7:28-36 a suitable conclusion; since Lev_7:22 ff (prohibition of the eating of the fat and the blood), connected with Lev_7:19 ff, contained in Lev_7:28 ff an ordinance that pertained to the peace offering (heave-breast and wave-thigh). At any rate, these last two pieces are to be regarded separately from the rest, since they are no longer addressed to the priests, as is 6:8 through 7:21, but to all Israel; compare Lev_7:23, Lev_7:29. On some other data less intimately connected with the matter, compare above under 1.

(b) Consecration of priests and related matters (Lev 8 through 10):
In this pericope, as in the following, down to Lev 17 inclusive, but especially from Lev 11 on, the principle of division on the basis of the number four predominates, in many cases in the details, too; so that this could scarcely be regarded as an accidental feature (compare also the history of Abraham in Gen 12 through 26; further, in Ex 35:4 through 40:38; and in EXODUS, II., 2., (7); Lev 16, under DAY OF ATONEMENT; Dt 12 through 26, too, is probably to be divided on this principle, even to the minutest details (compare finally Lev 21 through 22:16; Lev_22:17-30; Lev 23 f and 26).
(i) Leviticus 8, treating of the first seven days of the consecration of the priests: The outline is found in Lev_8:2, namely Aaron, the sacred garments, the anointing oil, the bullock of the sin offering, two rams, unleavened bread (compare Lev_8:6, Lev_8:7 ff, 10 ff, 14 ff, 18 ff, 22 ff, 26 ff). (ii) Leviticus 9 the first sacrifices of Aaron and his sons on the 8th day (Lev_9:2-4 contain the outline, after the manner of Lev_8:2; compare Lev_9:7 ff, 11 ff, the sin offering and the burnt offering of Aaron, with Lev_9:2; also Lev_9:15-18, treating of what the people brought for the sacrifices, with Lev_9:3 f; but it is to be noticed that the meal offering and the peace offering (Lev_9:17, Lev_9:18) are given in inverted order from that found in Lev_9:3 f). Here too we find the number seven, if we add the burnt offering for the morning (Lev_9:17). (iii) Lev_10:1-7, the sin of Nadab and Abihu and their punishment by death; (iv) Lev_10:8-20, ordinances concerning the priests, occasioned by 8:1 through 10:7 and provided with a new superscription in Lev_10:8, namely Lev_10:8, dealing with the prohibition of the use of wine and intoxicants; Lev_10:9 f, distinction between the holy and the unholy; Lev_10:12-15, the eating of the sacred oblations; Lev_10:16-20, the treatment of the goat for the sin offering.

(c) Laws Concerning the Clean and Unclean (Lev 11 through 15):
(i) Lev 11, treating of clean and unclean animals. The outline of the chief contents is found in Lev_11:46 with a free transposition of one number. There are accordingly four pieces, namely, Lev_11:2-8, quadrupeds; Lev_11:9-12, water animals; Lev_11:13-23, birds (with an appendix, treating of contact with the unclean, Lev_11:24-28, which give a summary of the animals mentioned (see under 1.); 11:29-45, the small animals upon the earth (again in four subdivisions, namely, (i) Lev_11:29-38; (ii) Lev_11:39 ff; (iii) Lev_11:41 f; (iv) Lev_11:44 f).
(ii) Lev_12:1-8 treats of women in confinement, also in four pieces (Lev_12:2-4, birth of a male child; Lev_12:5, birth of a female child; Lev_12:6 f, purification ceremony; Lev_12:8, ordinances in case of extreme poverty). These parts are not joined logically, but in a rather external manner.
(iii) The passage 13:1 through 14:53, containing the laws of leprosy, with the subscription in Lev_14:54 ff. (Because seven points are to be enumerated, Lev_14:55 (garments and houses), this is not as in its further exposition separated from the other laws and is placed in their midst.) The exposition contains four pieces, namely, 13:1-44, leprosy on human beings (with concluding Lev_13:45 f), with seven subdivisions, of which the first five longer ones are constructed along fairly parallel lines, and again can be divided into four sub-subdivisions, namely, Lev_13:1-8; Lev_1:9-17; 1:18-23; 1:24-28; 1:29-37; 1:38 f; 1:40-44. The significance of the number seven for the structure (see (2), (b), i, above) is akin to that found, e.g., in Ex 24:18b through 31:18 (see EXODUS, II., 2., (5)); Lev 8; 9 (see above); Lev 23; 25; and 27; and possibly Lev_26:3-13, 14-39 (see below); finally, the whole Book of Ex is divided into seven parts (see EXODUS, II., 1.). Lev_13:47-59, leprosy in connection with garments, with four subdivisions, namely Lev_13:47-50; Lev_13:51 f; Lev_13:53 f; Lev_13:55 ff. The last subdivision can again be readily separated into four sub-subdivisions, namely, Lev_13:55; Lev_13:56; Lev_13:57; Lev_13:58; 14:1-32, purifications (Lev_14:2 being a special superscription), with 4 subdivisions, namely, (i) Lev_14:2-3, the leper before the priest; (ii) Lev_14:3-9, the purification ceremonies on the first seven days, again divided into 4 sub-subdivisions: Lev_14:3 f; Lev_14:5-7; Lev_14:8; Lev_14:9; (iii) Lev_14:10-20, the ceremony of the eighth day (4 sacrifices, namely Lev_14:12-18, guilt offering; Lev_14:19, sin offering; Lev_14:19, burnt offering; Lev_14:20, meal offering; in the 4 sacrifices (5:12 through 6:7) there are again 4 different actions: Lev_14:14; Lev_14:15 f; Lev_14:17; Lev_14:18; (iv) Lev_14:21-32 (in cases of poverty) 14:33-53, leprosy in houses, with four subdivisions: Lev_14:33-35; Lev_14:36-38; Lev_14:39-42; Lev_14:43-53.
(iv) Leviticus 15, sickness or natural issues, with 4 subdivisions, namely, Lev_15:1-15, checked or running issues together with their purification (Lev_15:3-12 contain 12 laws: Lev_15:3; Lev_15:4; Lev_15:4; Lev_15:5; Lev_15:6; Lev_15:7; Lev_15:8; Lev_15:9; Lev_15:10; Lev_15:10; Lev_15:11; Lev_15:12); Lev_15:16-18, issue of seed; Lev_15:19-24, periods; Lev_15:25-30, other flows of blood and their purification. Lev_15:1-15 and Lev_15:16-18 refer to men, and Lev_15:19-24 and Lev_15:25-30 to women; and in addition to these implied suggestions, as Lev_15:1-15 and Lev_15:25-30 to dealing with abnormal issues and their purification ceremonies, Lev_15:16-18 and Lev_15:19-24 deal with normal issues.

(d) The Day of Atonement (Lev 16):
See IV., 1., (2), 2., and under ATONEMENT, DAY OF.

(e) Uses and significance of the blood of sacrifices (Lev 17):
(i) Lev_17:3-7, only one place for killing the Sacrifices and the rejection of all foreign cultures; (ii) Lev_17:8, Lev_17:9, only one place for sacrificing; (iii) Lev_17:10-14, prohibitive of eating the blood; (iv) Lev_17:15, pertaining to carcasses of animals found dead or which have been torn by wild beasts.
Here the form and the contents of the section have been brought into perfect harmony by the author. Lev_17:3 ff, 8 ff, 10 ff, 13 ff begin with same words, and each contains a similar formula in reference to the punishment, while logically Lev_17:10 ff and 13 ff are evidently only subdivisions of the third part in Lev_17:10-14, which treats of the prohibition of eating blood. In the fourth division, again, while in substance connected with the rest, there is lacking the formal agreement with the first three divisions.

(f) (g) (Lev 18 through 20; 21):
These naturally fall each into 2 parts. Leviticus 18 through 20 contain (i) Lev 18 f, religious and ethical laws; (ii) Lev 20, laws dealing with punishments.

(f i) Religious and ethical laws (Lev 18 f):
(a) Leviticus 18:
Ordinances with reference to marriage and chastity. Lev_18:1-5, introductory; Lev_18:6-18, prohibition of marriage between kindred of blood; Lev_18:19-23, prohibition of other sexual sins; Lev_18:24-30, warnings.
The subdivision can perhaps be divided into 10 subordinate parts, if it is permitted to combine the different degrees of relationship mentioned in Lev_18:12-14 (namely, Lev_18:7, Lev_18:8, Lev_18:9, Lev_18:10, Lev_18:11, Lev_18:12-14, Lev_18:15, Lev_18:16, Lev_18:17, Lev_18:18). Since it, of itself, manifestly consists of 5 ordinances (Lev_18:19, Lev_18:20, Lev_18:21, Lev_18:22, Lev_18:23), this whole section, if we are permitted to divide it into 5 commandments (Lev_18:2, Lev_18:3, Lev_18:3, Lev_18:4, Lev_18:5) and also into 5 (Lev_18:24 f, 26-28, 29, 30a, 30b), would contain 5 X 5 words; but this is uncertain.

(b) Leviticus 19:
Various commands of the deepest significance. In order to discover the divisions of this chapter we must note the characteristic formula, ?I am Yahweh, your Gods? or a similar expression, which often appears at the beginning and at the end of certain divisions, e.g. in series (1) (9) and (10), but which in the middle series appears in each case only once, and which in all the series is found also at the conclusion.
In this way we can compute 10 tetralogues. Thus after the superscription in Lev_19:2 containing a summary, we have (i) Lev_19:3, Lev_19:1 (Lev_19:3, Lev_19:3, Lev_19:4, Lev_19:4); (ii) Lev_19:5-10 (Lev_19:5 f, 7 f, 9, 10); (iii) Lev_19:11 f (Lev_19:11, Lev_19:11(?), 11b(?), 12); (iv) Lev_19:13 f (Lev_19:13, Lev_19:13, Lev_19:14, Lev_19:14); (v) Lev_19:15 f (15a, 15b, 16a, 16b); (vi) Lev_19:17 f (Lev_19:17, Lev_19:17, Lev_19:18, Lev_19:18); (vii) Lev_19:19-25 (Lev_19:19, Lev_19:19, Lev_19:20-22, Lev_19:23-25); (viii) Lev_19:26-28 (Lev_19:26, Lev_19:26, Lev_19:27, Lev_19:28), (ix) Lev_19:29-32 (Lev_19:29, Lev_19:30, Lev_19:31, Lev_19:32); (x) Lev_19:33-36 (Lev_19:33, Lev_19:14, Lev_19:35, Lev_19:36); Lev_19:37 constitutes the conclusion of the whole. (Note that the number ten here is certain in the conviction of the present writer; but he is not quite so sure of the number of subdivisions within the main divisions; we may have to do here with pentalogues and not with tetralogues. If this is the case, then the agreements with Lev 18 would under certain circumstances be even greater.)
Possibly groupings of two can yet form a closer union (compare on Ex 1 through 18; 21 through 23, EXODUS, II., 2., (1-4)). At any rate (iii) and (iv) can be summarized under the general heading of defrauding one's neighbors; (v) and (vi) under that of observation of the laws; (vii) and (viii) under that of heathen abuses; while (ix) and (x) perhaps intentionally mingle together the religious and cultural and ethical elements, in order thereby already to express that all these things are most intimately connected (but compare also Lev_19:12, Lev_19:14, Lev_19:17, in the middle sections). In Lev_19:5 ff, 20 ff, 23 ff, the author develops his subject somewhat more fully.

(f ii) Laws dealing with punishments (Lev 20):
The regulations in reference to punishments stand in such close relation to the contents of Lev 18 and to parts of Lev 19, that it is absolutely incomprehensible how the Critics can assign these three chapters to different authors. Even if certain regulations of Lev 18 are not found here in Lev_20:7, Lev_20:10, Lev_20:17, Lev_20:18, and even if another order has been followed, this variation, which doubtless also hangs together with a new grouping of the materials, is rather an advantage than a disadvantage for the whole. It is impossible to conceive that a redactor would have altered anything in two entirely parallel and similar texts, or would himself have written a parallel text differing from the other. Leviticus 20 can probably be divided into 4 parts, namely, (i) Lev_20:1-8, punishments for idolatry and witchcraft with a concluding formula, Lev_20:7 f; (ii) Lev_20:9-18, punishment of death for ten crimes, all of which, with the exception of the first, are of a sexual nature (Lev_20:9-18). It is a question whether the first in the second group (Lev_20:14), i.e. the sixth in the whole series, was intended to be made prominent by the peculiar character of the punishment (burning to death); (iii) Lev_20:19-21, other sexual sins, with lighter punishments; (iv) Lev_20:22-27, with 4 subdivisions (warning, Lev_20:22 f; promise, Lev_20:24; emphatic repetitions of two commands already given, Lev_20:25 ff; (compare with Lev_11:44 ff, and in general with Lev 11); and Lev_20:27 with Lev_19:26, Lev_19:31; Lev_20:6). Perfectly certain in this chapter is the fact that the different kinds of punishments are likewise decisive for their order. It is doubtless not to be regarded as accidental that both at the beginning and at the end death by stoning is mentioned.

(g) (Lev 21:1 through 22:33):
(i) Laws concerning the quality of the priests (21:1-22, Lev_21:16); and (ii) concerning sacred oblations (Lev_22:17-30) with the subscription Lev_22:31-33.

(g i) Qualities of Priests:
Lev 21:1 through 22:16 in four sections (Lev_21:1 ff, 10 ff, 16 ff; Lev_22:1 ff; note also in Lev_21:18-20 the 12 blemishes; in Lev_22:4-8 the 7 cases of uncleanness).

(g ii) Sacred oblations:
Lev_22:17-30 in four sections (Lev_22:18-20, Lev_22:21-25, Lev_22:26-28, Lev_22:29 f).

(h) Consecration of seasons, etc. (Lev 23; 24):
(i) Lev 23, laws for the feasts (7 sections, namely, Lev_23:3, Lev_23:4 f, 6-14, 15-22, 23-25, 26-32, 33-36, with the appendix that in every particular suits the connection, in Lev_23:39 ff, added to the feast of the tabernacles); (ii) Lev_24:1-4, treating of the sacred candlestick, which represents the moral conduct of the Israelites, and for this reason suits admirably in the connection; as this is true also of (iii) Lev_24:5-9, treating of the showbread, which represents the results of the labor of Israel; (iv) Lev_24:10-23, containing the report of the punishment of a blasphemer of God and of one who cursed.
Probably the example was made of a person who took the name of God in vain at the time which this chapter describes. But possibly there is a still closer connection to be found with that which precedes. The showbread and the candlestick were found in the holy place, which with its utensils pictured the relation of Israel's character to their God; while the utensils in the Holy of Holies indicated God's relation to His people (compare Hengstenberg, Beitrage, III, 644 ff). But since the holy place, in addition to the showbread and the candlestick, contained only the incense altar, which symbolized the prayers of Israel, and as the blasphemer represents the exact opposite of prayer, it is probable that in Lev_24:10 ff prayer is indicated by its counterpart. This section consists of 4 parts, namely, Lev_24:10-12; Lev_24:13-14; Lev_24:15-22 (giving a series of punishments for certain wrongdoings which are more or less closely connected with that found in the text); Lev_24:23.

(i) Sabbatic and Jubilee Years (Lev 25):
Sabbatic and Jubilee years in 7 sections, namely, Lev_25:1-7; Lev_25:8-12; 25:13-28; Lev_25:29-34; Lev_25:35-38; Lev_25:39-46; Lev_25:47-55.

(j) Conclusion:
Curse and blessing (Lev 26): The grand concluding chapter, offering a curse and a blessing and containing all the prophetic utterances of later times in a nutshell, namely, (i) Lev_26:1-2, repetition of four important demands (Lev_26:1, Lev_26:1, Lev_26:2, Lev_26:2); (ii) Lev_26:3-13, the blessing, possibly to be divided into 7 stages, one more spiritual than the other; (iii) 26:4-39, the curse, possibly to be divided into seven stages, one more intense than the other (compare also the play on words 7 times repeated, in reference to shabbāth, possibly found in Lev_26:34 f, and certainly found in Lev_26:18, Lev_26:21, Lev_26:24, Lev_26:27 f); (iv) Lev_26:40-45, the mercy finally shown by Yahweh for His covenant's sake.

(k) Appendix:
Finally, the appendix in Lev 27, dealing with vows and tithes, in 7 parts, namely, Lev_27:1-8; Lev_27:9-13; Lev_27:14-15; Lev_27:16-21; Lev_27:26 f; Lev_27:28-29; Lev_27:30-33.

III. Origin.
1. Against the Wellhausen Hypothesis:
As in the article ATONEMENT, DAY OF, I., 2., (2), we took a stand against the modern attempts at splitting up the text, and in III, 1 against theory of the late origin of the whole pericope, we must, after trying under II to prove the unity of the Book of Leviticus, yet examine the modern claim that the book as a whole is the product of later times. Since the entire book is ascribed to the Priestly Code (see II., 1. above), the answer to the question as to the time when it was written will depend on the attitude which we take toward the Wellhausen hypothesis, which insists that the Priestly Code was not published until the time of the exile in 444 BC (Neh 8 through 10).

(1) The Argument from Silence.
One of the most important proofs for this claim is the ?argument from silence? (argumentum e silentio). How careful one must be in making use of this argument can be seen from the fact that, e.g., the high priest with his full title is mentioned but a single time in the entire Book of Leviticus, namely in Lev_21:10; and that the Levites are not mentioned save once (Lev_25:32 ff), and then incidentally. As is well known, it is the adherents of the Wellhausen hypothesis themselves who now claim that the bulk of the entire literature of the Old Testament originated in the post-exilic period and long after the year 444 BC. Leaving out of consideration for the present the Books of Chronicles, Ezra and Nehemiah, all of which describe the history of Israel from
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
PRINTER 1915.


Leviticus, the third book of Moses.
Contents.?Leviticus contains the further statement and development of the Sinaitic legislation, the beginnings of which are described in Exodus. It exhibits the historical progress of this legislation; consequently we must not expect to find the laws detailed in it in a systematic form. There is, nevertheless, a certain order observed, which arose from the nature of the subject, and of which the plan may easily be perceived. The whole is intimately connected with the contents of Exodus, at the conclusion of which book that sanctuary is described with which all external worship was connected (Exodus 35-40).
Some critics have strenuously endeavored to prove that the laws contained in Leviticus originated in a period much later than is usually supposed. But the following observations sufficiently support their Mosaical origin, and show that the whole of Leviticus is historically genuine. The laws in Leviticus 1-7 contain manifest vestiges of the Mosaical period. Here, as well as in Exodus, when the priests are mentioned, Aaron and his sons are named; as, for instance, in Lev_1:5; Lev_1:7-8; Lev_1:11, etc. The tabernacle is the sanctuary, and no other place of worship is mentioned anywhere. Expressions like the following constantly occur, before the tabernacle of the congregation, or the door of the tabernacle of the congregation (Lev_1:3; Lev_3:8; Lev_3:13, etc.). The Israelites are always described as a congregation (Lev_4:13, sq.), under the command of the elders of the congregation (Lev_4:15), or of a ruler (Lev_4:22). Everything has a reference to life in a camp, and that camp commanded by Moses (Lev_4:12; Lev_4:21; Lev_6:11; Lev_14:8; Lev_16:26; Lev_16:28). A later writer could scarcely have placed himself so entirely in the times, and so completely adopted the modes of thinking of the age, of Moses: especially if, as has been asserted, these laws gradually sprung from the usages of the people, and were written down at a later period with the object of sanctioning them by the authority of Moses. They so entirely befit the Mosaical age, that, in order to adapt them to the requirements of any later period, they must have undergone some modification, accommodation, and a peculiar mode of interpretation. This inconvenience would have been avoided by a person who intended to forge laws in favor of the later modes of Levitical worship. A forger would have endeavored to identify the past as much as possible with the present.
In Leviticus 17 occurs the law which forbids the slaughter of any beast except at the sanctuary. This law could not be strictly kept in Palestine, and had therefore to undergo some modification (Deuteronomy 12). Our opponents cannot show any rational inducement for contriving such a fiction. The law (Lev_17:6-7) is adapted to the nation only while emigrating from Egypt. It was the object of this law to guard the Israelites from falling into the temptation to imitate the Egyptian rites and sacrifices offered to he-goats; which word signifies also demons represented under the form of he goats, and which were supposed to inhabit the desert.
The laws concerning food and purifications appear especially important if we remember that the people emigrated from Egypt. The fundamental principle of these laws is undoubtedly Mosaical, but in the individual application of them there is much which strongly reminds us of Egypt. This is also the case in Leviticus 18, sq., where the lawgiver has manifestly in view the two opposites, Canaan and Egypt. That the lawgiver was intimately acquainted with Egypt, is proved by such remarks as those about the Egyptian marriages with sisters (Lev_18:3); a custom which stands as an exception among the prevailing habits of antiquity.
The book of Leviticus has a prophetical character. The lawgiver represents to himself the future history of his people. This prophetical character is especially manifest in Leviticus 25, 26, where the law appears in a truly sublime and divine attitude, and when its predictions refer to the whole futurity of the nation. It is impossible to say that these were prophecies delivered after the event, unless we would assert that this book was written at the close of Israelitish history. We must rather grant that passages like this are the real basis on which the authority of later prophets is chiefly built. Such passages prove also, in a striking manner, that the lawgiver had not merely an external aim, but that his law had a deeper purpose, which was clearly understood by Moses himself. That purpose was to regulate the national life in all its bearings, and to consecrate the whole nation to God. See especially Lev_25:18, sq.
But this ideal tendency of the law does not preclude its applicability to matters of fact. The law had not merely an ideal, but also a real character, evidenced by its relation to the faithlessness and disobedience of the nation. The whole future history of the covenant people was regulated by the law, which has manifested its eternal power and truth in the history of the people of Israel. Although this section has a general bearing, it is nevertheless manifest that it originated in the times of Moses. At a later period, for instance, it would have been impracticable to promulgate the law concerning the Sabbath and the year of Jubilee: for it was soon sufficiently proved how far the nation in reality remained behind the ideal Israel of the law. The sabbatical law bears the impress of a time when the whole legislation, in its fullness and glory, was directly communicated to the people, in such a manner as to attract, penetrate, and command.




The Popular Cyclopedia of Biblical Literature
by John Kitto.


Leviticus
so called in the Vulgate from treating chiefly of the Levitical service; in the Heb. וִיַּקְרָא, and he called, being the word with which it begins; in the Sept. ΛευÞτικόν; the third book of the Pentateuch, called also by the later Jews תּוֹרִת כֹּהֲנַים, "law of the priests," and תּוֹרִת קָרְבָּנוֹת, "law of offerings." In our treatment of it we have especial regard to the various sacrifices enumerated.
I. Contents. — Leviticus contains the further statement and development of the Sinaitic legislation, the beginnings of which are described in Exodus. It exhibits the historical progress of this legislation; consequently, we must not expect to find the laws detailed in it in a systematic form. There is, nevertheless, a certain order observed, which arose from the nature of the subject, and of which the plan may easily be perceived. The whole is intimately connected with the contents of Exodus, at the conclusion of which book that sanctuary is described with which all external worship was connected (Exodus 35-40).
Leviticus begins by describing the worship itself (chapters 1-17), and concludes with personal distinctions and exhortations as to the worshippers (chapters 18-27). More specifically the book may be divided into seven leading sections.
(I.) The Laws directly relating to Sacrifices (chapters 1-7). — At first God spoke to the people out of the thunder and lightning of Sinai, and gave them his holy commandments by the hand of a mediator; but henceforth his presence is to dwell not on the secret top of Sinai, but in the midst of his people, both in their wanderings through the wilderness and afterwards in the Land of Promise. Hence the first directions which Moses receives after the work is finished have reference to the offerings which were to be brought to the door of the tabernacle. As Jehovah draws near to the people in the tabernacle, so the people draw near to Jehovah in the offering. Without offerings none may approach him. The regulations respecting the sacrifices fall into three groups, and each of these groups again consists of a decalogue of instructions. Bertheau has observed that this principle runs through all the laws of Moses. They are all modeled after the pattern of the ten commandments, so that each distinct subject of legislation is always treated of under ten several enactments or provisions. 1. The first group of regulations (chapters 1-3) deals with three kinds of offerings: the burnt-offering (עוֹלָה), the meat-offering (מַנְחָה), and the thank-offering (שְׁלָמַים זֶבִח)
a. The burnt-offering (chap. 1) in three sections. It might be either
(1) a male without blemish from the herds (מַן הִבָּקָר) (Lev_1:3-9), or
(2) a male without blemish from the flocks, or lesser cattle (הִצּאֹן) (Lev_1:10-13), or
(3) it might be fowls, an offering of turtle-doves or young pigeons (Lev_1:14-17). The subdivisions are here marked clearly enough, not only by the three kinds of sacrifice, but also by the form in which the enactment is put. Each begins with, "If his offering," etc., and each ends with, "An offering made by fire, of a sweet savor unto Jehovah."
b. The next group (chapter 2) presents many more difficulties. Its parts are not so clearly marked, either by prominent features in the subject-matter, or by the more technical boundaries of certain initial and final phrases. We have here the meat-offering, or bloodless offering, in four sections:
(1) in its uncooked form, consisting of fine flour with oil and frankincense (Lev_2:1-3);
(2) in its cooked form, of which three different kinds are specified- baked in the oven, fricel, or boiled (Lev_2:4-10);
(3) the prohibition of leaven, and the direction to use salt in all the meat-offerinrgs (Lev_2:11-13);
(4) the oblation of first-fruits (Lev_2:14-16).
c. The Sheltamins, "peace-offering" (A.V.), or "thankoffering" (Ewald) (chapter 3), in three sections. Strictly speaking, this falls under two heads: first, when it is of the herd; and, secondly, when it is of the flock. But this last has again its subdivision; for the offering, when of the flock, may be either a lamb or a goat. Accordingly, the three sections are, Lev_3:1-5; Lev_3:7-11; Lev_3:12-16. Lev_3:6 is merely introductory to the second class of sacrifices, and Lev_3:17 a general conclusion, as in the case of other laws. This concludes the first decalogue of the book.
2. The laws concerning the sin-offering and the trespass- (or guilt-) offering (chapter 4, 5). The sin-offering (chap. 4) is treated of under four specified cases, after a short introduction to the whole in Lev_4:1-2 :
(1) the sin-offering for the priest, Lev_4:3-12;
(2) for the whole congregation, Lev_4:13-21;
(3) for a ruler, Lev_4:22-26;
(4) for one of the common people, Lev_4:27-35.
After these four cases, in which the offering is to be made for four different classes, there follow provisions respecting three several kinds of transgression for which atonement must be made. It is not quite clear whether these should be ranked under the head of the sin-offering or of the trespass-offering. SEE OFFERING. We may, however, follow Bertheau, Baumgarten, and Knobel in regarding them as special instances in which a sin-offering was to be brought. The three cases are: first, when any one hears a curse, and conceals what he hears (Lev_4:1); secondly, when any one touches, without knowing or intending it, any unclean thing (Lev_4:2-3); lastly, when any one takes an oath inconsiderately (Lev_4:4). For each of these cases the same trespass-offering, "a female from the flock, a lamb or kid of the goats," is appointed; but, with that mercifulness which characterizes the Mosaic law, express provision is made for a less costly offering where the offerer is poor.
This decalogue is then completed by the three regulations respecting the guilt-offering (or trespass-offering): first, when any one sins " through ignorance in the holy things of Jehovah" (Lev_4:14; Lev_4:16); next, when a person, without knowing it, "commits any of these things which are forbidden to be done by the commandments of Jehovah" (Lev_4:17-19); lastly, when a man lies and swears falsely concerning that which was entrusted to him, etc. (Lev_4:20-26). This decalogue, like the preceding one, has its characteristic words and expressions. The prominent word which introduces so many of the enactments is נֶפֶשׁ, "soul" (see Lev_4:2; Lev_4:27; Lev_5:1-2; Lev_5:4; Lev_5:15; Lev_5:17; Lev_6:2), and the phrase, "If a soul shall sin" (Lev_4:2), is, with occasional variations having an equivalent meaning, the distinctive phrase of the section. As in the former decalogue the nature of the offerings, so in this the person and the nature of the offense are the chief features in the several statutes.
3. Naturally upon the law of sacrifices follows the law of the priests' duties when they offer the sacrifices (chapter 6, 7). Hence we find Moses directed to address himself immediately to Aaron and his sons (Lev_6:2; Lev_6:18 to Lev_6:9; Lev_6:25, A.V.). In this group the different kinds of offerings are named in nearly the same order as in the two preceding decalogues, except that the offering at the consecration of a priest follows, instead of the thankoffering, immediately after the meat-offering, which it resembles, and the thank-offering now appears after the trespass-offering. There are, therefore, in all, six kinds of offering, and in the case of each of these the priest has his distinct duties. Bertheau has very ingeniously so distributed the enactments in which these duties are prescribed as to arrange them all in five decalogues. We will briefly indicate his arrangement.
(1.) The first decalogue.
(a.) "This is the law of the burnt-offering" (Lev_6:9, A.V.), in five enactments, each verse (Lev_6:9-13) containing a separate enactment.
(b.) "'And this is the law of the meat-offering" (Lev_6:14), again in five enactments, each of which is, as before contained in a single verse (Lev_6:14-18).
(2.) The next decalogue is contained in Lev_6:19-30.
(a.) Lev_6:19 is merely introductory; then follow, in five verses, five distinct directions with regard to the offering at the time of the consecration of the priests, the first in Lev_6:20 the next two in Lev_6:21, the fourth in the former part of Lev_6:22, and the last in the latter part of Lev_6:22 and Lev_6:23.
(b.) "This is the law of the sin-offering" (Lev_6:25). Then the five enactments, each in one verse, except that two verses (Lev_6:27-28) are given to the third.
(3.) The third decalogue is contained in Lev_7:1-10, the laws of the trespass-offering. But it is impossible to avoid a misgiving as to the soundness of Bertheau's system when we find him making the words "It is most holy," in Lev_7:1, the first of the ten enactments. This he is obliged to do, as Lev_7:3-4 evidently form but one.
(4.) The fourth decalogue, after an introductory verse (Lev_7:11), is contained in ten verses (Lev_7:12-21).
(5.) The last decalogue consists of certain general laws about the fat, the blood, the wave-breast, etc., and is comprised again in ten verses (Lev_7:23-33), the verses, as before, marking the divisions.
The chapter closes with a brief historical notice of the fact that these several commands were given to Moses on Mount Sinai (Lev_7:35-38).
(II.) An entirely historical section (chapters 8-10), in three parts. —
1. In chapter 8 we have the account of the consecration of Aaron and his sons by Moses before the whole congregation. They are washed; he is arrayed in the priestly vestments and anointed with the holy oil; his sons also are arrayed in their garments, and the various offerings appointed are offered.
2. In chapter 9 Aaron offers, eight days after his consecration, his first offering for himself and the people: this comprises for himself a sin- and burnt- offering, and a peace- (or thank-) offering. He blesses the people, and fire comes down from heaven and consumes the burnt-offering.
3. Chapter 10 tells how Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron, eager to enjoy the privileges of their new office, and perhaps too much elated by its dignity, forgot or despised the restrictions by which it was fenced round (Exo_30:7, etc.), and, daring to "offer strange fire before Jehovah," perished because of their presumption.
With the house of Aaron began this wickedness in the sanctuary; with them, therefore, began also the divine punishment. Very touching is the story which follows. Aaron, though forbidden to mourn his loss (Lev_10:6-7), will not eat the sin-offering in the holy place; and when rebuked by Moses, pleads in his defense, "Such things have befallen me: and if I had eaten the sin-offering today, should it have been accepted in the sight of Jehovah?" Moses, the lawgiver and the judge, admits the plea, and honors the natural feelings of the father's heart, even when it leads to a violation of the letter of the divine commandment.
(II.) The laws concerning purity and impurity, and the appropriate sacrifices and ordinances for putting away impurity (chapters 11-16). The first seven decalogues had reference to the putting away of guilt. By the appointed sacrifices the separation between man and God was healed. The next seven concern themselves with the putting away of impurity. That chapters 11-15 hang together so as to form one series of laws there can be no doubt. Besides that they treat of kindred subjects, they have their characteristic words, טמאה טמא, " unclean," "uncleanness," טהר טהור, "clean," which occur in almost every verse. The only question is about chapter 16, which by its opening is connected immediately with the occurrence related in chapter 10. Historically it would seem, therefore, that chapter 16 ought to have followed chapter 10. As this order is neglected, it would lead us to suspect that some other principle of arrangement than that of historical sequence has been adopted. This we find in the solemn significance of the great day of atonement. The high-priest on that day made atonement "because of the uncleanness of the children of Israel, and because of their transgressions in all their sins" (Lev_16:16), and he "reconciled the holy place and the tabernacle of the congregation, and the altar" (Lev_16:20). Delivered from their guilt and cleansed from their pollutions, from that day forward the children of Israel entered upon a new and holy life. This was typified both by the ordinance that the bullock and the goat for the sin-offering were burnt without the camp (Lev_16:27), and also by the sending away of the goat laden with the iniquities of the people into the wilderness. Hence chapter 16 seems to stand most fitly at the end of this second group of seven decalogues. It has reference, we believe, not only (as Bertheau supposes) to the putting away, as by one solemn act, of all those uncleannesses mentioned in chapters 11-15, and for which the various expiations and cleansings there appointed were temporary and insufficient, but also to the making of atonement, in the sense of hiding sin or putting away its guilt. For not only do we find the idea of cleansing as from defilement, but far more prominently the idea of reconciliation. The often-repeated word כפר), "to cover, to atone," is the great word of the section.
1. The first decalogue in this group refers to clean and unclean flesh (chapter 6). Five classes of animals are pronounced unclean. The first four enactments declare what animals may or may not be eaten, whether
(1) beasts of the earth (Lev_11:2-8), or
(2) fishes (Lev_11:9-12), or
(3) birds (Lev_11:13-20), or
(4) creeping things with wings.
The next four are intended to guard against pollution by contact with the carcass of any of these animals:
(5) Lev_11:24-26;
(6) Lev_11:27-28;
(7) Lev_11:29-30;
(8) Lev_11:39-40. The ninth and tenth specify the last class of animals which are unclean for food,
(9) Lev_11:41-42, and forbid any other kind of pollution by means of them,
(10) Lev_11:43-45. Lev_11:46-47 are merely a concluding summary.
2. (a.) Women's purification in childbed (chap. 12). The whole of this chapter, according to Bertheau, constitutes
(1) the first law of this decalogue.
(b.) The remaining nine are to be found in the next chapter (13), which treats of the signs of leprosy in man and in garments:
(2) Lev_13:1-8;
(3) Lev_13:9-17;
(4) Lev_13:18-23;
(5) Lev_13:24-28;
(6) Lev_13:29-37;
(7) Lev_13:38-39;
(8) Lev_13:40-41;
(9) Lev_13:42-46;
(10) Lev_13:47-59.
This arrangement of the several sections is not altogether free from objection, but it is certainly supported by the characteristic mode in which each section opens. Thus, for instance, Lev_12:2 begins with אַשָּׁה כַּי תִזְרַיע; Lev_13:2 with אָדָם כַּי יַהְיֶה, Lev_13:9 with נֶגִע צָרִעִת כַּי תַהְיֶה and so on, the same order being always observed, the substantive being placed first, then כַּי, and then the verb, except only in Lev_13:42, where the substantive is placed after the verb.
3. "The law of the leper in the day of his cleansing," i.e., the law which the priest is to observe in purifying the leper (Lev_14:1-32). The priest is mentioned in ten verses, each of which begins one of the ten sections of this law: Lev_14:3-5; Lev_14:11-12; Lev_14:14-16; Lev_14:19-20. In each instance the word הִכֹּהֵן is preceded by ו consecut. with the perf. It is true that in Lev_14:8, and also in Lev_14:14, the word הִכֹּהֵן occurs twice; but in both verses there is MS. authority, as well as that of the Vulg. and Arab. versions, for the absence of the second. Lev_14:21-32 may be regarded as a supplemental provision in cases where the leper is too poor to bring the required offering.
4. The leprosy in a house (Lev_14:33-57). It is not so easy here to trace the arrangement noticed in so many other laws. There are no characteristic words or phrases to guide us. Bertheau's division is as follows:
(1) Lev_14:34-35;
(2) Lev_14:36-37;
(3) Lev_14:38;
(4) Lev_14:39;
(5) Lev_14:40;
(6) Lev_14:41-42;
(7) Lev_14:43-45.
Then, as usual, follows a short summary which closes the statute concerning leprosy, Lev_14:54-57.
5, 6. The law of uncleanness by issue, etc., in two decalogues (Lev_15:1-31). The division is clearly marked, as Bertheau observes, by the form of cleansing, which is so exactly similar in the two principal cases, and which closes each series:
(1) Lev_15:13-15;
(2) Lev_15:28-30. We again give his arrangement, though we do not profess to regard it as in all respects satisfactory.
(a.)
(1) Lev_15:2-3;
(2) Lev_15:4;
(3) Lev_15:5;
(4) Lev_15:6;
(5) Lev_15:7;
(6) Lev_15:8;
(7) Lev_15:9;
(8) Lev_15:10;
(9) Lev_15:11-12 [these Bertheau considers as one enactment, because it is another way of saying that either the man or thing which the unclean person touches is unclean; but, on the same principle, Lev_15:4-5 might just as well form one enactment];
(10) Lev_15:13-15.
(b.)
(1) Lev_15:16;
(2) Lev_15:17;
(3) Lev_15:18;
(4) Lev_15:19;
(5) Lev_15:20;
(6) Lev_15:21;
(7) Lev_15:22;
(8) Lev_15:23;
(9) Lev_15:24;
(10) Lev_15:28-30.
In order to complete this arrangement, he considers Lev_15:25-27 as a kind of supplementary enactment provided for an irregular uncleanness, leaving it as quite uncertain, however, whether this was a later addition or not. Lev_15:32-33 form merely the same general conclusion which we have had before in Lev_14:54-57.
7. The last decalogue of the second group of seven decalogues is to be found in chapter 16, which treats of the great day of atonement. The law itself is contained in Lev_16:1-28. The remaining verses, 29-34, consist of an exhortation to its careful observance. In the act of atonement three persons are concerned: the high-priest, in this instance Aaron; the man who leads away the goat for Azazel into the wilderness; and he who burns the skin, flesh, and dung of the bullock and goat of the sin-offering without the camp. The last two have special purifications assigned them-the second because he has touched the goat laden with the guilt of Israel, the third because he has come in contact with the sin-offering. The ninth and tenth enactments prescribe what these purifications are, each of them concluding with the same formula, וְאִחֲרֵי כֵן יָבוֹא אֶל הִמִּחֲנֶה, and hence distinguished from each other. The duties of Aaron, consequently, ought, if the division into decades is correct, to be comprised in eight enactments. Now-the name of Aaron is repeated eight times, and in six of these it is preceded by the perf. with 1 consecut., as we observed was the case before when "the priest" was the prominent figure. According to this, then, the decalogue will stand thus:
(1) Lev_16:2, Aaron not to enter the holy place at all times;
(2) Lev_16:3-5, with what sacrifices and in what dress Aaron is to enter the holy place;
(3) Lev_16:6-7, Aaron to offer the bullock for himself, and to set the two goats before Jehovah;
(4) Aaron to cast lots on the two goats;
(5) Lev_16:9-10, Aaron to offer the goat on which the lot falls for Jehovah, and to send away the goat for Azazel into the wilderness; of the goat to make atonement for himself. for his house, and for the whole congregation, as also to purify the altar of incense with the blood;
(7) Lev_16:20-22, Aaron to lay his hands on the living goat, and confess over it all the sins of the children of Israel;
(8) Lev_16:23-25, Aaron after this to take off his linen garments, bathe himself, and put on his priestly garments, and then offer his burnt- offering and that of the congregation;
(9) Lev_16:26, the man by whom the goat is sent into the wilderness to purify himself;
(10) Lev_16:27-28, what is to be done by him who burns the sin-offering without the camp.
(IV.) Laws chiefly intended to mark the Separation between Israel and the Heathen Nations (chapters 17-20). — We here reach the great central point, of the book. All going before was but a preparation for this. Two great truths have been established: first, that God call only be approached by means of appointed sacrifices; next, that man in nature and life is full of pollution, which must be cleansed. Now a third is taught, viz., that not by several cleansings for several sins and pollutions can guilt be put away. The several acts of sin are but so many manifestations of the sinful nature. For this, therefore, also must atonement be made by one solemn act, which shall cover all transgressions, and turn away God's righteous displeasure from Israel. Israel is now reminded that it is the holy nation. The great atonement offered, it is to enter upon a new life. It is a separate nation, sanctified and set apart for the service of God. It may not, therefore, do after the abominations of the heathen by whom it is surrounded. Here, consequently, we find those laws and ordinances which especially distinguish the nation of Israel from all other nations of the earth.
Here again we may trace, as before, a group of seven decalogues; but the several decalogues are not so clearly marked, nor are the characteristic phrases and the introductions and conclusions so common. In ch. 18 there are twenty enactments, and in chapter 19, thirty. In chapter 17 on the other hand, there are only six, and in chapter 20 there are fourteen. As it is quite manifest that the enactments in chapter 18 are entirely separated by a fresh usual arrangement of the laws in decalogues, would transpose this chapter, and place it after chapter 19. He observes that the laws in chapter 17, and those in Lev_20:1-9, are akin to one another, and may very well constitute a single decalogue, and, what is of more importance, that the words in Lev_18:1-5 form the natural introduction to this whole group of laws: "And Jehovah spake unto Moses, saying, Speak unto the children of Israel, and say unto them, I am Jehovah your God. After the doings of the land of Egypt, wherein ye dwelt, shall ye not do; and after the doings of the land of Canaan, whither I bring you, shall ye not do; neither shall ye walk in their ordinances," etc. There is, however, a point of connection between chapters 17 and 18 which must not be overlooked, and which seems to indicate that their position in our present text is the right one. All the six enactments in chapter 17 (Lev_17:3-5, Lev_17:6-7, Lev_17:8-9, Lev_17:10-12, Lev_17:13-14, Lev_17:15) bear upon the nature and meaning of the sacrifice to Jehovah as compared with the sacrifices offered to false gods. It would seem, too, that it was necessary to guard against any license to idolatrous practices which might possibly be drawn from the sending of the goat for Azazel into the wilderness, SEE ATONEMENT, DAY OF, especially, perhaps, against the Egyptian custom of appeasing the evil spirit of the wilderness and averting his malice (Hengstenberg, Mose u. Egypten, page 179; Movers, Phonicier, 1:369). To this there may be an allusion in Lev_17:7. Perhaps, however, it is better and more simple to regard the enactments in these two chapters (with Bunsen, Bibelwerk, II, 1:245) as directed against two prevalent heathen practices, the eating of blood and fornication. It is remarkable, as showing how intimately moral and ritual observances were blended together in the Jewish mind, that abstinence "from blood and things strangled, and fornication," was laid down by the apostles as the only condition of communion to be required of Gentile converts to Christianity. Before we quit this chapter one observation may be made. The rendering of the A.V. in Lev_17:11, "for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul," should be, "for it is the blood that maketh an atonement by means of the life." This is important. It is not blood merely as such, but blood as having in it the principle of life that God accepts in sacrifice; for, by thus giving vicariously the life of the dumb animal, the sinner confesses that his own life is forfeit.
In chapter 18, after the introduction to which we have already alluded, Lev_18:1-5 — and in which God claims obedience on the double ground that he is Israel's God, and that to keep his commandments is life (Lev_18:5) — there follow twenty enactments concerning unlawful marriages and unnatural lusts. The first ten are contained one in each verse (Lev_18:6-15). The next ten range themselves in like manner with the verses, except that Lev_18:17; Lev_18:23 contain each two. Of the twenty the first fourteen are alike in form, as well as in the repeated עֶרוָה לאֹ תְגִלֶּה.
In chapter 19 are three decalogues, introduced by the words, "Ye shall be holy, for I Jehovah your God am holy," and ending with, “Ye shall observe all my statutes, and all my judgments, and do them. I am Jehovah." The laws here are of a very mixed character, and many of them a repetition merely of previous laws. Of the three decalogues, the first is comprised in Lev_18:3-13, and may be thus distributed:
(1) Lev_19:3, to honor father and mother;
(2) Lev_19:3, to keep the Sabbath;
(3) Lev_19:4, not to turn to idols;
(4) Lev_19:4, not to make molten gods (these two enactments being separated on the same principle as the first and second commandments in the Great Decalogue or Two Tables);
(5) Lev_19:5-8, of thank-offerings;
(6) Lev_19:9-10, of gleaning;
(7) Lev_19:11, not to steal or lie;
(8) Lev_19:12, not to swear falsely;
(9) Lev_19:13, not to defraud one's neighbor;
(10) Lev_19:13, the wages of him that is hired, etc.
The next decalogue, Lev_19:14-25, Bertheau arranges thus: Lev_19:14, Lev_19:15, Lev_19:16 a, Lev_19:16 b, Lev_19:17, Lev_19:18, Lev_19:19 a, Lev_19:19 b, Lev_19:20-22, Lev_19:23-25. We object, however, to making the words in 19a, "Ye shall keep my statutes," a separate enactment. There is no reason for this. A much better plan would be to consider Lev_19:17 as consisting of two enactments, which is manifestly the case.
The third decalogue may be thus distributed: Lev_19:26 a, Lev_19:26 b, Lev_19:27, Lev_19:28, Lev_19:29, Lev_19:30, Lev_19:31, Lev_19:32, Lev_19:33-34, Lev_19:35-36.
We have thus found five decalogues in this group. Bertheau completes the number seven by transposing, as we have seen, chapter 17, and placing it immediately before chapter 20. He also transfers Lev_20:27 to what he considers its proper place, viz., after Lev_20:6. It must be confessed that the enactment in Lev_20:27 stands very awkwardly at the end of the chapter, completely isolated as it is from all other enactments; for Lev_20:22-26 are the natural conclusion to this whole section. But, admitting this, another difficulty remains, that, according to him, the seventh decalogue begins at Lev_20:10, and another transposition is necessary, so that Lev_20:7-8 may stand after Lev_20:9, and so conclude the preceding series of ten enactments. It is better, perhaps, to abandon the search for complete symmetry than to adopt a method so violent in order to obtain it.
It should be observed that chapter Lev_18:6-23, and chapter Lev_20:10-21, stand in such a relation to one another that the latter declares the penalties attached to the transgression of many of the commandments given in the former. But, though we may not be able to trace in chapters 17 -20 seven decalogues, in accordance with the theory of which we have been speaking, there can be no doubt that they form a distinct section of themselves, of which Lev_20:22-26 is the proper conclusion.
Like the other sections, it has some characteristic expressions:
(a) “Ye shall keep my judgments and my statutes" (מַשְׁפָּטִי חַקּתִי) occurs Lev_18:4-5; Lev_18:26; Lev_19:37; Lev_20:8; Lev_20:22, but is not met with either in the preceding or the following chapters.
(b) The constantly recurring phrases, "I am Jehovah," "I am Jehovah your God," "Be ye holy, for I am holy," "I am Jehovah which hallow you." In the earlier sections this phraseology is only found in Lev_11:44-45, and Exo_31:13. In the section which follows (chapter 21-25) it is much more common, this section being in a great measure a continuation of the preceding.
(V.) We come now to the last group of decalogues — that contained in chapters Lev_21:1 to Lev_26:2. The subjects comprised in these enactments are —
1. The personal purity of the priests. They may not defile themselves for the dead; their wives and daughters must be pure, and they themselves must be free from all personal blemish (chapter 21).
2. The eating of the holy things is permitted only to priests who are free from all uncleanness: they and their household only may eat them (chapter 22:16).
3. The offerings of Israel are to be pure and without blemish (chapter Lev_22:17-33).
4. The last series provides for the due celebration of the great festivals when priests and people were to be gathered together before Jehovah in holy convocation (chapter 23, 25), with an episode (chapter 24).
Up to this point we trace system and purpose in the order of the legislation. Thus, for instance, chapter 11-16 treats of external purity; chapter 17-20 of moral purity; chapter 21-23 of the holiness of the priests, and their duties with regard to holy things; the whole concluding with provisions for the solemn feasts on which all Israel appeared before Jehovah. We will again briefly indicate Bertheau's groups, and then append some general observations on this whole section.
a. Leviticus 21, ten laws, as follows:
(1) Lev_21:1-3; (2) Lev_21:4; (3) Lev_21:5-6; (4) Lev_21:7-8; (5) Lev_21:9; (6) Lev_21:10-11; (7) Lev_21:12; (8) Lev_21:13-14; (9) Lev_21:17-21; (10) Lev_21:22-23.
The first five laws concern all the priests; the sixth to the eighth, the high- priest; the ninth and tenth, the effects of bodily blemish in particular cases.
b. Lev_22:1-16.
(1) Lev_22:2; (2) Lev_22:3; (3) Lev_22:4; (4) Lev_22:4-7; (5) Lev_22:8-9; (6) Lev_22:10; (7) Lev_22:11; (8) Lev_22:12; (10) Lev_22:14-16.
c. Lev_22:17-33.
(1) Lev_22:18-20; (2) Lev_22:21; (3) Lev_22:22; (4) Lev_22:23; (5) Lev_22:24; (6) Lev_22:25; (7) Lev_22:27; (8) Lev_22:28; (9) Lev_22:29; (10) Lev_22:30; and a general conclusion in Lev_22:31-33.
d. Leviticus 23.
(1) Lev_23:3; (2) Lev_23:5-7; (3) Lev_23:8; (4) Lev_23:9-14; (5) Lev_23:15-21; (6) Lev_23:22; (7) Lev_23:24-25; (8) Lev_23:27-32; (9) Lev_23:34-35; (10) Lev_23:36; Lev_23:37-38 contain the conclusion, or general summing up of the Decalogue.
On the remainder of the chapter, as well as chapter 24, see below.
e. Lev_25:1-22.
(1) Lev_25:2; (2) Lev_25:3-4; (3) Lev_25:5; (4) Lev_25:6; (5) Lev_25:8-10; (6) Lev_25:11-12; (7) Lev_25:13; (9) Lev_25:15; (10) Lev_25:16; with a concluding formula in Lev_25:18-22.
f. Lev_25:23-38.
(1) Lev_25:23-24; (2) Lev_25:25; (3) Lev_25:26-27; (4) Lev_25:28; (5) Lev_25:29; (6) Lev_25:30; (7) Lev_25:31; (8) Lev_25:32-33; (9) Lev_25:34; (10) Lev_25:35-37; the conclusion to the whole in Lev_25:38.
g. Lev_25:39 to Lev_26:2.
(1) Lev_25:39; (2) Lev_25:40-42; (3) Lev_25:43; (4) Lev_25:44-45; (5) Lev_25:46; (6) Lev_25:47-49; (7) Lev_25:50; (8) Lev_25:51-52; (9) Lev_25:53; (10) Lev_25:54.
It will be observed that the above arrangement is only completed by omitting the latter part of chapter 23 and the whole of chapter 24. But it is clear that Lev_23:39-44 is an addition, containing further instructions respecting the Feast of Tabernacles. Lev_23:39, as compared with Lev_23:34, shows that the same feast is referred to; while Lev_23:37-38 are no less manifestly the original conclusion of the laws respecting the feasts — which are enumerated in the previous part of the chapter. Chapter 24, again, has a peculiar character of its own. First, we have a command concerning the oil to be used in the lamps belonging to the tabernacle, but this is only a repetition of an enactment already given in Exo_27:20-21, which seems to be its natural place. Then follow directions about the shewbread. These do not occur previously. In Exodus the shewbread is spoken of always as a matter of course. concerning which no regulations are necessary (comp. Exo_25:30; Exo_35:13; Exo_39:36). Lastly come certain enactments arising out of a historical occurrence. The son of an Egyptian father by an Israelitish woman blasphemes the name of Jehovah, and Moses is commanded to stone him in consequence; and this circumstance is the occasion of the following laws being given:
(1) That a blasphemer, whether Israelite or stranger, is to be stoned (comp. Exo_22:28);
(2) That he that kills any man shall surely be put to death (comp. Exo_21:12-27);
(3) That he that kills a beast shall make it good (not found where we might have expected it, in the series of laws Exo_21:28 to Exo_22:16);
(4) That if a man cause a blemish in his neighbor he shall be requited in like manner (comp. Exo_21:22-25).
(5) We have then a repetition in an inverse order of Exo_21:17-18; and
(6) the injunction that there shall be one law for the stranger and the Israelite;
(7) finally, a brief notice of the infliction of the punishment in the case of the son of Shelomith, who blasphemed.
Not another instance is to be found in the whole collection in which any historical circumstance is made the occasion of enacting a law. Then, again, the laws (2), (3), (4), (5), are mostly repetitions of existing laws, and seem here to have no connection with the event to which they are referred. Either, therefore, some other circumstances took place at the same time with which we are not acquainted, or these isolated laws, detached from their proper connection, were grouped together here, in obedience perhaps to some traditional association.
(VI.) These decalogues are now fitly closed by words of promise and threat-promise of largest, richest blessing to those that hearken unto and do these commandments; threats of utter destruction to those that break the covenant of their God. Thus the second great division of the law closes like the first, except that the first part, or Book of the Covenant, ends (Exo_23:20-33) with promises of blessing only. There nothing is said of the judgments which are to follow transgression, because as yet the covenant had not been made. But when once the nation had freely entered into that covenant, they bound themselves to accept its sanctions its penalties, as well as its rewards. Nor call we wonder if in these sanctions the punishment of transgression holds a larger place than the rewards of obedience; for already was it but too plain that "Israel would not obey." From the first they were a stiff-necked and rebellious race, and from the first the doom of disobedience hung like a fiery sword above their heads.
(VII.) On Vows. — The legislation is evidently completed in the last words of the preceding chapter: "These are the statutes, and judgments, and laws which Jehovah made between him and the children of Israel in Mount Sinai by the hand of Moses." Chapter 27 is an appendix, again closed, however, by a similar formula, which at least shows that the transcriber considered it to be an integral part of the original Mosaic legislation, though he might be at a loss to assign it its place. Bertheau classes it with the other less regularly grouped laws at the beginning of the book of Numbers. He treats the section Leviticus 27 - Num_10:10 as a series of supplements to the Sinaitic legislation.
II. Integrity. — This is very generally admitted. Those critics even who are in favor of different documents in the Pentateuch assign nearly the whole of this book to one writer, the Elohist, or author of the original document. According to Knobel, the only portions which are not to be referred to the Elohist are — Moses's rebuke of Aaron because the goat of the sin-offering had been burnt (Lev_10:16-20); the group of laws in chapters 17-20; certain additional enactments respecting the Sabbath and the feasts of Weeks and of Tabernacles (23, part of Lev_23:2, from מוֹעֲדֵי יְהוָֹה, and Lev_233, Lev_23:18-19; Lev_23:22; Lev_23:39-44); the punishments ordained for blasphemy, murder, etc, (Lev_24:10-23), the directions respecting the sabbatical year (Lev_25:18-22), and the promises and warnings contained in chapter 26.
With regard to the section chapter 17-20, Knobel does not consider the whole of it to have been borrowed from the same sources. Chapter 17 he believes was introduced here by the Jehovist from some ancient document, while he admits, nevertheless, that it contains certain Elohistic forms of expression, as כֹּל בָּשָׂר, "all flesh," Lev_25:14; נֶפֶשׁ, soul" (in the sense of "person"), Lev_25:10-12; Lev_25:15 חִיָּה, " beast," Lev_25:13, קָרְבָּן, "offering," Lev_25:4, ניחוֹחִ רְיח, "a sweet savor," Lev_25:6; "a statute forever," and "after your generations," Lev_25:7. But it cannot be from the Elohist, he argues, because (a) he would have placed it after chapter 7, or at least after chapter 15; (b) he would not have repeated the prohibition of blood, etc., which he had already given; (c) he would have taken a more favorable view of his nation than that implied in Lev_25:7; and, lastly, (d) the phraseology has something of the coloring of chapter 18-20 and 26, which are certainly not Elohistic. Such reasons are too transparently unsatisfactory to need serious discussion. He observes further that the chapter is not altogether Mosaic. The first enactment (Lev_25:1-7) does indeed apply only to Israelites, and holds good, therefore, for the time of Moses. But the remaining three contemplate the case of strangers living among the people, and have a reference to all time.
Chapters 18-20, though they have a Jehovistic coloring, cannot have been originally from the Jehovist. The following peculiarities of language, which are worthy of notice, according to Knobel (Exod. und Leviticus erklart, in the "Kurzg. Exeg. Hdbuch." 1857), forbid such a supposition, the more so as they occur nowhere else in the O.T.: רָבִע, "lie down to" and "gender," Lev_18:23; Lev_19:19; Lev_20:16, תֶּבֶל, "confusion," Lev_18:23; Lev_20:12; לֶקֶט, "gather," Lev_19:9; Lev_23:22; פֶּרֶט, "grape," Lev_19:10; שִׁאֵָרה, "near kinswomen," Lev_18:17; בַּקּרֶת"scourged," Lev_19:20; חֻפְשָׁה, "free," ibid.; כְּתֹבֶת קִעֲקִע, “print marks," Lev_19:28; הֵקיא, "vomit," in the metaphorical sense, Lev_18:25; Lev_18:28; Lev_20:22, עָרְלָה', "uncircumcised," as applied to fruit-trees, Lev_19:23; and מוֹלֶדֶת, "born," Lev_18:9; Lev_18:11; as well as the Egyptian word (for such it probably is) שִׁעֵטְנֵז, "garment of divers sorts," which, however, does occur once beside in Deu_22:11.
According to Bunsen, chapter 19 is a genuine part of the Mosaic legislation, given, however, in its original form, not on Sinai, but on the east side of the Jordan; while the general arrangement of the Mosaic laws may perhaps be as late as the time of the judges. He regards it as a very ancient document, based on the Two Tables, of which, and especially of the first, it is, in fact, an extension, consisting of two decalogues and one pentad of laws. Certain expressions in it he considers as implying that the people were already settled in the land (Lev_19:9-10; Lev_19:13; Lev_19:15), while, on the other hand, Lev_19:23 supposes a future occupation of the land. Hence he concludes that the revision of this document by the transcribers was incomplete, whereas all the passages may fairly be interpreted as looking forward to a future settlement in Canaan. The great simplicity and lofty moral character of this section compel us, says Bunsen, to refer it at least to the earlier time of the judges, if not to that of Joshua himself.
III. Authenticity, etc. — Some critics, however, such as De Wette, Gramberg, Vatke, and others, have strenuously endeavored to prove that the laws contained in Leviticus originated in a period much later than is usually supposed; but the following observations sufficiently support their Mosaical origin. and show that the whole of Leviticus is historically genuine. The laws in chapters 1-7 contain manifest vestiges of the Mosaical period. Here, as well as in Exodus, when the priests are mentioned, Aaron and his sons are named; as, for instance, in Lev_1:4; Lev_1:7-8; Lev_1:11, etc. The tabernacle is the sanctuary, and no other place of worship is mentioned anywhere (Lev_1:3; Lev_3:8; Lev_3:13, etc.). The Israelites are always described as a congregation (Lev_4:13 sq.), under the command of the elders of the congregation (Lev_4:16), or of a ruler (Lev_4:22). Everything has reference to life in a camp, and that camp commanded by Moses (Lev_4:12; Lev_4:21; Lev_6:11; Lev_14:8; Lev_16:26; Lev_16:28). A later writer could scarcely have placed himself so entirely in the times, and so completely adopted the modes of thinking of the age of Moses; especially if, as has been asserted, these laws gradually sprung from the usages of the people, and were written down at a later period with the object of sanctioning them by the authority of Moses. They so entirely befit the Mosaical age that, in order to adapt them to the requirements of any later period, they must have undergone some modification, accommodation, and a peculiar mode of interpretation. This inconvenience would have been avoided by a person who intended to forge laws in favor of the later modes of Levitical worship. A forger would have endeavored to identify the past as much as possible with the present.
The section in chapter 8-10 is said to have a mythical coloring. This assertion is grounded on the miracle narrated in Lev_9:24. But what could have been the inducement to forge this section? It is said that the priests invented it in order to support the authority of the sacerdotal caste by the solemn ceremony of Aaron's consecration. But to such an intention the narration of the crime committed by Nadab and Abihu is strikingly opposed. Even Aaron himself here appears to be rather remiss in the observance of the law (comp. Lev_10:16 sq., with Lev_4:22 sq.). Hence it would seem that the forgery arose from an opposite or anti-hierarchical tendency. The fiction would thus appear to have been contrived without any motive which could account for its origin.
In chapter 17 occurs the law which forbids the slaughter of any beast except at the sanctuary. This law could not be strictly kept in Palestine, and had therefore to undergo some modification (Deuteronomy 12). Our opponents cannot show any rational inducement for contriving such a fiction. The law (Lev_17:6-7) is adapted to the nation only while emigrating from Egypt. It was the object of this law to guard the Israelites from falling into the temptation to imitate the Egyptian rites and sacrifices offered to he-goats (שְׂעַירַים, seirim, "devils," Sept. ματαῖα, Vulg. daemones), which word signifies also daemons represented under the form of hegoats, and which were supposed to inhabit the desert (comp. Jablonsky, Pantlheon AEgyptiacum, 1:272 sq.).
The laws concerning food and purifications appear especially important if we remember that the people emigrated from Egypt. The fundamental principle of these laws is undoubtedly Mosaical, but in the individual application of them there is much that strongly reminds us of Egypt. This is also the case in Leviticus 18 sq., where the lawgiver has manifestly in view the two opposites, Canaan and Egypt. That the lawgiver was intimately acquainted with Egypt is proved by such remarks as hint at the Egyptian marriages with sisters (Lev_18:3); a custom which stands as an exception among the prevailing habits of antiquity (Diod. Siculus, 1:27; Pausanias, Attica, 1:7).
The book of Leviticus has a prophetical character. This is especially manifest in chapters 25, 26, where the law appears in a truly sublime and divine attitude, and when its predictions refer to the whole futurity of the nation. It is impossible to say that these were vaticinia ex eventu, unless we would assert that this book was written at the close of Israelitish history. We must rather grant that passages like this are the real basis on which the authority of later prophets is chiefly built. Such passages prove also in a striking manner that the lawgiver had not merely an external aim, but that his law had a deeper purpose, which was clearly understood by Moses himself. That purpose was to regulate the national life in all its bearings, and to consecrate the whole nation to God. Seen especially, Lev_25:18 sq. Although this section has a general bearing, it is nevertheless manifest that it originated in the times of Moses. At a later period, for instance, it would have been impracticable to promulgate the law concerning the Sabbath and the year of jubilee; for it was soon sufficiently proved how far the nation in reality remained behind the ideal Israel of the law. The sabbatical law bears the impress of a time when the whole legislation, in its fullness and glory, was directly communicated to the people in such a manner as to attract, penetrate, and command.
IV. We must not quit this book without a word on what may be called its spiritual meaning. That so elaborate a ritual looked beyond itself we cannot doubt. It was a prophecy of things to come; a shadow whereof the substance was Christ and his kingdom. We may not always be able to say what the exact relation is between the type and the antitype. Of many things we may be sure that they belonged only to the nation to whom they were given, containing no prophetic significance, but serving as witnesses and signs to them of God's covenant of grace. We may hesitate to pronounce with Jerome that "every sacrifice, nay, almost every syllable — the garments of Aaron and the whole Levitical system — breathe of heavenly mysteries;" but we cannot read the Epistle to the Hebrews and not acknowledge that the Levitical priests "served the pattern and type of heavenly things" — that the sacrifices of the law pointed to and found their interpretation in the Lamb of God — that the ordinances of outward purification signified the truer inward cleansing of the heart and conscience from dead works to serve the living God. One idea, moreover, penetrates the whole of this vast and burdensome ceremonial, and gives it a real glory, even apart from any prophetic significance. Holiness is its end. Holiness is its character. The tabernacle is holy — the vessels are holy — the offerings are most holy unto Jehovah — the garments of the priests are holy. All who approach him whose name is "Holy," whether priests who minister to him or people who worship before him, must themselves be holy. It would seem as if, amid the camp and dwellings of Israel, was ever to be heard an echo of that solemn strain which fills the courts above, where the seraphim cry one to another, Holy, Holy, Holy.
V. Commentaries. — The following are the special exegetical helps on the whole or major part of this book, to the most important of which we prefix an asterisk: Origen, Selecta (in Opp. 2:179); also Homiliae (ibid. 4:184); Ephrem Syrus, Explanatio (in Syriac, in Opp. 2:236); Theodoret, Quaestiones (in Greek, in Opp. 1); Isidorus Hispalensis, Commentaria (in Opp. 1); Bede, Quaestiones (in Opp. 8); also In Levit. (ibid. 4); Hesychius, In Levit. (in Greek, Paris, 1581, 4to; also in the Biblia Max. Patr. 12); Claudius Taurinensis, Praefatio (in Mabillon, Veter. Analect. page 90); Hugo St.Victor, Annotationes (in Opp. 1); Rupertus Tuitiensis, In Levit. (in Opp. 1:220); Radulphus Flaviacensis, Commentaria (Col. 1536, folio; also in the Biblia Max. Patr. 17:47); Pesiktha-Minus, Commentarius (includ. Numbers and Deut.] (from the Heb. in Ugolino, Thesaur. 15:997; 16 sq.); Phrygio, AExplanatio [together with 1 Timothy] (Basil. 1543, 4to; 1596, 8vo); Brentius, Commentarii (in Opp. 1); Chytraeus, Enarrationes (Vitemb. 1569, 1575, 8vo) Serranus, Commentarius (Antwp. 1572, 1609, fol.); Brocardus, Interpretatio (L.B. 1580, 8vo); Babington, Notes (in Works, page 349); Pelargus, Commentarins (Lips. 1604, 4to); Lorinus, Commentarii (Ludgun. 1619, 1622; Duac. 1620; Antwerp, 1620, fol.); Willet, Sixfold Commentarie (Lond. 1631, fol.); Franzius, Conmmentarius (Lips. 1696, 4to); Spanheim, Observationes (in Opp. 3:617); Cocceius, Observationes (in Opp. 1:158); *Patrick, Commentary (Lond. 1698, 4to; also in Patrick, Lowth, and Whitby's Commentary); Dassovius, Scholia (Kilom. 1707, 4to); Hagemann, Betrachtungen (Brunswick, 1741, 4to); *Rosenmüller, Scholia (Lips. 1824, 8vo); Horsley, Notes (in Bibl. Crit. 1); *Bertheau, Die Sieben Gruppen Mos. Gesetze (Lpz. 1840, 8vo); James, Sermons (Lond. 1847, 8vo); *Bonar, Commentary (Lond. 1851 [3d ed.], 1861; N.Y. 1851, 8vo); *Bush, Notes (N.Y. 1852,12mo); Cumming, Readings (Lond. 1854, 12mo); *Knobel, Erklarung [includ. Exod.] (volume 2 of the Kurtzgef. Exeg. Hdbch. Lpz. 1857, 8vo); Newton, Thoughts (Lond. 1857,12mo); *Kalisch, Commentary (London, 1857 sq., 2 volumes, 8vo); Seiss, Gospel in Levit. (Phila. 1860, 12mo); *Keil, Commentar (in volume 2 of his Pentateuch, Leipsic, 1862, Edinb. 1866, 8vo); Siphra, Commentar (in Heb. Vienna, 1862, folio); Wogue, Levitique (volume 3 of his Pentateuque, Par. 1864, 8vo); *Murphy, Commentary (Lond. and Andover, 1872, 8vo). SEE PENTATEUCH.

CYCLOPEDIA OF BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL
press 1895.





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