Verse 1
Leviticus 25:1. In mount Sinai —
That is, in the wilderness of
Sinai, or near mount Sinai, as
the Hebrew particle beth
frequently signifies. For they
did not remove from this
wilderness till the 20th day of
the seventh month after their
coming out of Egypt.
Verse 2
Leviticus 25:2. When ye come
into the land — So as to be
settled in it: for the
injunction neither could nor was
intended to be observed during
the time of the wars, nor till
Joshua’s distribution of the
land among them. The land shall
keep a sabbath — That is, enjoy
rest from ploughing and tilling;
unto the Lord — In obedience and
unto the honour of God. This was
instituted, 1st, For the
assertion of God’s sovereign
right to the land, in which the
Israelites were but tenants at
God’s will. 2d, For the trial of
their obedience. 3d, For the
demonstration of his providence,
as well in general toward men,
as especially toward his own
people. 4th, To wean them from
the inordinate love and pursuit
of worldly advantages, and to
inure them to depend upon God
alone, and upon God’s blessing
for their subsistence. 5th, To
put them in mind of that blessed
and eternal rest provided for
all good men.
Verse 4-5
Leviticus 25:4-5. A sabbath of
rest to the land — They were
neither to do any work about it,
nor expect any harvest from it.
All yearly labours were to be
intermitted in the seventh year,
as much as daily labours on the
seventh day. Of its own accord —
From the grains that fell out of
the ears the last reaping time.
Thou shalt not reap — That is,
as thy own peculiarly, but only
so as others may reap it with
thee, for present food.
Undressed — Not cut off by thee,
but suffered to grow for the use
of the poor. Proselytes and
servants, rich and poor, had all
an equal privilege: one man’s
beast was to graze as freely as
another’s; all were to live at
rest and enjoy the comforts of
this law, the merciful
appointment of Heaven. It is a
year of rest unto the land —
This seems to have been one
purpose of the institution, that
the land might lie fallow, in
order to recruit its strength.
Verse 6
Leviticus 25:6. The sabbath of
the land — That is, the
accidental crop that grew in the
sabbatical year. Shall be meat
for you — For all promiscuously,
to take food from thence as you
need. It is true the land would
produce little corn without
being tilled and sown, but the
vines and other fruit-trees
which abounded in the country,
even without pruning, would
yield a considerable increase,
so that the poorer sort might
thus enjoy many comforts,
together with rest, of which
they were destitute on other
years.
Verse 8
Leviticus 25:8. Thou shalt
number seven sabbaths of years
unto thee — Besides the rest of
the seventh year, God now
appoints, as another perpetual
ordinance, that every fiftieth
year should be celebrated as an
extraordinary year of rest,
freedom, and rejoicing, of which
public notice was to be given
through the whole country, by
sound of trumpet. On this year
every ancient owner of lands and
estates, that had been alienated
by sale, was to be restored to
his possession; and every
Israelitish slave set at perfect
liberty, to return to the family
to which he belonged. So that
how often soever an estate had
been sold or alienated between
one jubilee and another, or how
many hands soever it had passed
through, yet, in fifty years, or
at the next jubilee, it must
return to the heirs of the
persons who were first possessed
of it. All this was intended to
shadow forth that true liberty
from men’s spiritual debts and
slaveries which was to be
purchased by Christ, and to be
published to the world by the
sound of the gospel.
Verse 9
Leviticus 25:9. Cause the
trumpet of jubilee to sound —
The name jubilee is taken either
from the Hebrew word יובל jobel,
which signifies first a ram, and
then a ram’s horn by the sound
whereof it was proclaimed; or
from Jubal, the inventor of
musical instruments, (Genesis
4:21,) because it was celebrated
with music and all expressions
of joy. The seventh month —
Which was the first month of the
year for civil affairs; the
jubilee therefore began in that
month; and, as it seems, upon
this very tenth day, when the
trumpet sounded, as other feasts
generally began when the trumpet
sounded. In the day of atonement
— A very fit time, that when
they fasted and prayed for God’s
mercy to them in the pardon of
their sins, then they might
exercise their charity to men in
forgiving their debts; and to
teach us, that the foundation of
all solid comfort must be laid
in repentance and atonement for
our sins through Christ.
Verse 10
Leviticus 25:10. The fiftieth
year — The year of jubilee was
not the forty and ninth year, as
some learned men have
erroneously thought, but
precisely the fiftieth. The old
weekly sabbath is called the
seventh day, because it truly
was so, being next after the six
days of the week, and distinct
from them all: and the year of
release is called the seventh
year, (Leviticus 25:4,) as
immediately following the six
years, (Leviticus 25:3,) and
distinct from them all. And in
like manner the jubilee is
called the fiftieth year,
because it comes next after
seven times seven or forty-nine
years, (Leviticus 25:8,) and is
distinct from them all. Unto all
the inhabitants — Understand
such as were Israelites;
principally to all servants,
even to such as would not and
did not go out at the seventh
year, and to the poor, who now
were acquitted from all their
debts, and restored to their
possessions, which had been sold
or otherwise alienated from
them. This law was not at all
unjust, because all buyers and
sellers had an eye to this
condition in their bargains; but
it was expedient in many
regards, as, 1st, To put them in
mind that God alone was the Lord
and proprietor both of them and
of their lands, and that they
were only his tenants; a point
which they were apt to forget.
2d, That hereby inheritances,
families, and tribes, might be
kept entire and clear until the
coming of the Messiah, who was
to be known as by other things,
so by the tribe and family out
of which he was to come. And
this accordingly was done by the
singular providence of God until
the Lord Jesus did come. Since
which time those characters are
miserably confounded: which is
no small argument that the
Messiah is come. 3d, To set
bounds both to the insatiable
avarice of some, and the foolish
prodigality of others, that the
former might not wholly and
finally swallow up the
inheritances of their brethren,
and the latter might not be able
to undo themselves and their
posterity for ever, which was a
singular privilege of this law
and people.
His family — From whom he was
gone, being sold to some other
family either by himself or by
his father.
Verse 12
Leviticus 25:12. It shall be
holy — So it was, because it was
sequestered, in great part, from
worldly employments, and
dedicated to God, and to the
exercise of holy joy and
thankfulness; and because it was
a type of that holy and happy
jubilee which they were to
expect and enjoy under the
Messiah. The increase thereof —
Such things as it produced of
itself. Out of the field —
Whence they, in common with
others, might take it as they
needed it; but must not put it
into barns. See Leviticus 25:5,
and Exodus 23:11.
Verse 14
Leviticus 25:14. Ye shall not
oppress — Neither the seller, by
requiring more, nor the buyer,
by taking the advantage from his
brother’s necessities to give
him less than the worth of it.
Verse 15
Leviticus 25:15. According to
the number of years — thou shalt
buy — The purchase of all lands,
houses, or estates, was to be at
a price proportionable to the
greater or less number of years
that remained from the time of
the purchase to the next
jubilee. Years of fruits — Years
in which, having sowed, they
reaped the fruits of the land,
in opposition to those years in
which they were neither allowed
to sow nor reap.
Verse 16-17
Leviticus 25:16-17. The number
of the years of fruits — The
meaning is, he selleth not the
land, but only the fruits
thereof, and that but for a
certain time. Ye shall not
oppress one another — By seeking
to turn each other out of the
perpetual possession of his
lands, as Ahab did Naboth; but
thou shalt fear thy God — The
best proof men can give of
fearing God is to abstain from
evil, and to comply with his
will.
Verse 21
Leviticus 25:21. For three years
— Not completely, but in great
part; namely, for that part of
the sixth year which was between
the beginning of the harvest and
the beginning of the seventh
year, for the whole seventh
year, and for that part of the
eighth year which was before the
harvest, which reached almost
until the beginning of the ninth
year. This is added to show the
equity of this command. As God
would hereby try their faith and
obedience, so he gave them an
evident proof of his own exact
providence and tender care over
them in making provisions
suitable to their necessities.
Verse 23
Leviticus 25:23. For ever — So
as to be for ever alienated from
the family of him that sells it.
Or, absolutely and properly, so
as to become the property of the
buyer. Or, to the extermination
or utter cutting off, namely, of
the seller, from all hopes and
possibility of redemption. The
land is mine — Procured for you
by my power, given to you by my
grace and bounty, and the right
of propriety is reserved by me.
Ye are sojourners with me — That
is, in my land or houses: thus
he is said to sojourn with
another that dwells in his
house. Howsoever in your own or
other men’s opinions you pass
for lords and proprietors, yet
in truth ye are but strangers
and sojourners, not to possess
the land for ever, but only for
a season, and to leave it to
such as I have appointed for it.
Verse 24-25
Leviticus 25:24-25. A redemption
— A right of redemption, in the
time and manner following. If
any of his kin come — Or, If the
redeemer come, being near akin
to him, who, in this, was an
eminent type of Christ, who was
made near akin to us by taking
our flesh, that he might perform
the work of redemption for us.
Verse 27-28
Leviticus 25:27-28. The years of
the sale — That is, from the
time of the sale to the jubilee.
See above, Leviticus 25:15-16.
The overplus — That is, a
convenient price for the years
from the time of this redemption
to the jubilee. Go out — That
is, out of the buyer’s hand,
without any redemption-money.
Verses 29-31
Leviticus 25:29-31. A
dwelling-house in a walled city
— Here the law makes a great
difference between houses in
walled cities and houses in the
country. The former, if sold,
were either to be redeemed
within a year, or else not at
all, but were to be the property
of the purchaser for ever;
whereas, houses in the villages
which had no walls round them
were to be counted as the fields
of the country — That is, they
were to fall under the same law
with the lands to which they
were an appendage, and for the
management of which they were
necessary: they might be
redeemed at any time. The
following seem to be the chief
reasons of this distinction:
1st, There was no danger of
confusion in tribes or families
by the final alienation of
houses in cities, as tribes and
families were not distinguished
by them as they were by those in
the country that were annexed to
their lands, and therefore to be
considered as a part of their
inheritance. 2d, The seller had
a greater property in houses
than in lands, as being commonly
built at the owner’s cost, and
therefore a fuller power is
granted him to dispose of them.
3d, God would hereby encourage
persons to buy and possess
houses in cities, as the
frequency and populousness of
them was a great strength,
honour, and advantage to the
whole land.
Verse 34-35
Leviticus 25:34-35. The field of
the suburbs (namely, of the
cities of the Levites) may not
be sold — Not at all; partly,
because it was of absolute
necessity for them for the
keeping of their cattle, and
partly because these were no
enclosures, but common fields,
in which all the Levites that
lived in such a city had an
interest, and therefore no
particular Levite could dispose
of his part in it. A sojourner —
Understand it of proselytes
only, for of other strangers
they were permitted to take
usury, Deuteronomy 23:20.
Verse 36
Leviticus 25:36. Take no usury
of him — That is, of thy
brother, whether he be Israelite
or proselyte. Or increase — All
kinds of usury are in this case
forbidden, whether of money, or
of victuals, or of any thing
that is commonly lent by one man
to another upon usury, or upon
condition of receiving the thing
lent with advantage and
overplus. If one borrow in his
necessity, there can be no doubt
this law is binding still. But
it cannot be thought to bind
where money is borrowed for
purchase of lands, trade, or
other improvements. For there it
is reasonable that the lender
should share with the borrower
in the profit.
Verse 39
Leviticus 25:39. To serve as a
bond-servant — Neither for the
time, for ever, nor for the
manner, with the hardest and
vilest kinds of service,
rigorously and severely exacted.
Verses 41-43
Leviticus 25:41-43. Then shall
he depart — Thou shalt not
suffer him or his to abide
longer in thy service, as thou
mightest do in the year of
release, Exodus 21:2; Exodus
21:6. They are my servants —
They, no less than you, are
members of my church and people;
such as I have chosen out of all
the world to serve me here, and
to enjoy me hereafter, and
therefore are not to be
oppressed, neither are you
absolute lords over them to deal
with them as you please. Fear
thy God — Though thou dost not
fear them who are in thy power,
and unable to right themselves,
yet fear that God who hath
commanded thee to use them
kindly, and who can and will
avenge their cause, if thou
oppress them.
Verse 47
Leviticus 25:47. The stock of
the strangers — Hebrew, root,
that is, one of the root or
stock. So the word root is
elsewhere used for the branch or
progeny growing from it. He
seems to denote one of a foreign
race and country, transplanted
into the land of Israel, and
there having taken root among
the people of God; yet even such
a one, though he hath some
privilege by it, shall not have
power to keep a Hebrew servant
from the benefit of redemption.
Verse 50
Leviticus 25:50. According to
the time of a hired servant —
Allowance shall be made for the
time wherein he hath served,
proportionable to that which was
given to a hired servant for so
long service, because his
condition is in this like
theirs; it is not properly his
person, but his work and labour
that were sold.
Verse 53
Leviticus 25:53. In thy sight —
Thou shalt not suffer this to be
done, but whether thou art a
magistrate or a private person,
thou shalt take care according
to thy capacity to get it
remedied. |