Verse 3
Leviticus 17:3. That killeth —
Not for common use, for such
beasts might be killed by any
person or in any place,
(Deuteronomy 12:5-14;
Deuteronomy 12:26-27,) but for
sacrifice, as the sense is
limited, Leviticus 17:5, where
the reason of the injunction is
given. It is true, some suppose
that the Israelites were
forbidden by this law, while
they were in the wilderness, to
kill, even for food, any of the
animals that were wont to be
sacrificed, elsewhere than in
the door of the tabernacle,
where the blood and the fat were
to be offered to God upon the
altar, and the flesh returned to
the offerer to be eaten as a
peace-offering according to the
law. And the statute is so
worded in Leviticus 17:3-4, as
to favour this opinion. The
learned Dr. Cudworth understands
if in this sense, and thinks
that while they had their
tabernacle so near them, in the
midst of their camp, they ate no
flesh but what had first been
offered to God; but that when
they were about to enter Canaan,
this constitution was altered,
and they were allowed to kill
their beasts of the flock and
herd at home, as well as the
roe-buck and the hart,
(Deuteronomy 12:21,) only that
thrice a year they were to see
God at his tabernacle, and to
eat and drink before him. It is
indeed probable, that in the
wilderness they did not eat much
flesh but that of their peace-
offerings, preserving what
cattle they had for breed,
against they came to Canaan. And
yet it is hard to construe into
a mere temporary law, what is
expressly said to be a statute
for ever, Leviticus 17:7. And,
therefore, it seems rather to
forbid only the killing beasts
for sacrifice anywhere but at
God’s altar. They must not offer
a sacrifice as they had done in
the open field, (Leviticus
17:5,) no, not to the true God;
but their sacrifices must be
brought to the priest, to be
offered on the altar of the
Lord. And the mighty solemnity
they had lately seen of
consecrating both the priests
and the altar, would serve for a
good reason why they should
confine themselves to both these
which God had so signally
appointed and owned.
Verse 4
Leviticus 17:4. The tabernacle —
This was appointed in opposition
to the heathens, who sacrificed
in all places; to cut off
occasions of idolatry; to
prevent the people’s usurpation
of the priest’s office, and to
signify that God would accept of
no sacrifices but through Christ
and in the church; of both which
the tabernacle was a type. But
though men were tied to this
law, God was free to dispense
with his own law, which he did
sometimes to the prophets, as 1
Samuel 7:9; 1 Samuel 11:15. He
hath shed blood — He shall be
punished as a murderer. The
reason is, because he shed that
blood, which, though not man’s
blood, yet was precious, being
sacred and appropriated to God,
and typically the price by which
men’s lives were ransomed.
Verse 5
Leviticus 17:5. They offer — The
Israelites, before the building
of the tabernacle, did so, from
which they are now restrained.
Peace-offerings — He does not
name these exclusively from
others, as appears from the
reason of the law, and from
Leviticus 17:8-9, but because in
these the temptation was more
common in regard of their
frequency, and more powerful,
because part of these belonged
to the offerers, and the
pretence was more plausible,
because their sanctity was of a
lower degree than that of
others, these being only called
holy, and allowed in part to the
people, whereas the others are
called most holy, and were
wholly appropriated either to
God, or to the priests.
Verse 6
Leviticus 17:6. Upon the altar —
This verse contains a reason of
the foregoing law, because of
God’s propriety in the blood and
fat, wherewith also God was well
pleased, and the people
reconciled. And these two parts
only are mentioned, as the most
eminent and peculiar, though
other parts also were reserved
for God.
Verse 7
Leviticus 17:7. Unto devils — So
they did, not directly or
intentionally, but by
construction and consequence,
because the devil is the author
of idolatry, and is eminently
served and honoured by it. And
as the Egyptians were notorious
for their idolatry, so the
Israelites were infected with
their leaven, Joshua 24:14;
Ezekiel 20:7; Ezekiel 23:2-3.
And some of them continued to
practise the same in the
wilderness, Amos 5:25-26,
compared with Deuteronomy 12:8.
The Hebrew word which we render
devils, שׂעירים, segnirim,
properly signifies goats, from
their rough and shaggy hair, and
hence denotes those idols,
probably deified dead men, who
were worshipped under the symbol
of goats. It is the same word
that we translate satyrs, Isaiah
13:21. What gives light to so
obscure a passage is what we
read in Maimonides, that the
Zabian idolaters worshipped
demons under the figure of
goats, imagining them to appear
in that form, whence they called
them by the name here mentioned,
segnirim, or goats; and that
this custom being general in
Moses’s time, gave occasion to
this precept. After whom they
have gone a whoring — Idolatry,
especially in God’s people, is
commonly termed whoredom in
Scripture, because it is a
violation of that covenant by
which they were peculiarly
betrothed or married to God. And
here the phrase has a peculiar
propriety, and denotes their
having worshipped those goats,
or goat-like demons, with rites
horribly impure, after the
manner of the idolatrous pagans.
Verse 10
Leviticus 17:10. I will set my
face — I will be an enemy to
him, and execute vengeance upon
him immediately; because such
persons probably would do this
in private, so that the
magistrate could not know nor
punish it. Write that man
undone, for ever undone, against
whom God sets his face.
Verse 11
Leviticus 17:11. Is in the blood
— Depends upon the blood, is
preserved and nourished by it.
The blood maketh atonement —
Typically, and in respect of the
blood of Christ which it
represented, and by which the
atonement is really made. So the
reason is double. 1st, Because
this was eating the ransom of
their own lives, which in
construction was the destroying
themselves. 2d, Because it was
ingratitude and irreverence
toward that sacred blood of
Christ, which they ought to have
had in continual veneration.
Verse 15
Leviticus 17:15. That eateth —
Through ignorance or
inadvertency; for if it was done
knowingly, it was more severely
punished. A stranger — Who is a
proselyte to the Jewish
religion: other strangers were
allowed to eat such things,
(Deuteronomy 14:21,) out of
which the blood was either not
drawn at all, or not regularly.
Verse 16
Leviticus 17:16. His iniquity —
The punishment of it, and
therefore must offer a sacrifice
for it. |