Verse 2
Leviticus 27:2. Shall make a
singular vow — The Hebrew may be
rendered, Shall separate, or set
apart a vow; that is, shall, by
solemn promise; separate any
thing from a common to a sacred
use. For vows were religious
promises made to God, for
obtaining some blessing or
deliverance from some evil or
danger, and were accompanied
with prayer, and paid with
thanksgiving. The words,
however, יפלא נדר, japhli neder,
may be properly translated, as
here, Shall make a singular, or
hard, or eminent vow. And this
is to be understood, not of
things, but of persons, which he
devoted to the Lord. Although
vows of this kind were not
usual, yet there want not
instances of persons who devoted
either themselves or their
children, and that either more
strictly, as the Nazarites and
the Levites, (1 Samuel 1:11,)
and for these no redemption was
admitted, but they were in
person to perform the service to
which they were devoted; or more
largely, as some who were not
Levites might yet, through zeal
for God, or to obtain a blessing
which they wanted, devote
themselves or their children to
the service of God and of the
sanctuary, though not in such a
way as the Levites, which was
forbidden, yet in some kind of
subserviency to them. And
because there might be too great
a number of persons thus
dedicated, which might be
burdensome to the sanctuary, an
exchange is allowed, and the
priests are directed to receive
a tax for their redemption. A
book of rates is, accordingly,
provided here, by which the
priests were to be guided in
their valuation. 1st, The
middle-aged, between twenty and
sixty, were valued highest, the
males at fifty shekels each, and
the females at thirty,
(Leviticus 27:3-4,) women being
generally inferior to men in
strength and serviceableness.
2d, The rate of the youth
between five years old and
twenty was less, because they
were then less capable of doing
service. 3d, Infants under five
years old were capable of being
vowed to God by their parents,
as Samuel was, but were not to
be presented and redeemed till
they were a month old; that, as
one sabbath passed over them
before they were circumcised, so
one new moon might pass over
them before they were estimated;
and their valuation was but
small, Leviticus 27:6. Samuel,
who was thus vowed to God, was
not redeemed, because he was a
Levite, and designed by his
parents to be lent to the Lord
as long as he lived, 1 Samuel
1:28. Therefore he was employed
in his childhood in the service
of the tabernacle. 4th, The aged
are valued at a less rate than
youth, but greater than
children, Leviticus 27:7. And
the Hebrews observe, that the
rate of an aged woman is two
parts of three to that of an
aged man, so that in that age
the female came nearest to the
value of the male. 5th, The poor
were to be valued according to
their ability, Leviticus 27:8.
Something they must pay, that
they might not be rash in vowing
to God; for he hath no pleasure
in fools, Ecclesiastes 2:6; yet
not more than their ability,
that they might not ruin
themselves and their families by
their zeal.
Verse 9
Leviticus 27:9. If it be a beast
— it shall be holy, &c. — A
second sort of things vowed to
God are beasts. With respect to
which the law is, that the very
individual beast was to be
disposed of by the owner
according to the first intention
of his vow, whether to be
sacrificed upon the altar, or
given to the priests, or sold
for the use of the sanctuary,
the price to be applied to the
repairs of the house of God, or
to purchase the usual
sacrifices. This is what we are
to understand by its being holy,
as appears from Leviticus 27:10.
The design of this law was to
preserve a reverence toward
things once consecrated, that
they might not return to common
uses.
Verse 10
Leviticus 27:10. He shall not
alter it, nor change it — Two
words expressing the same thing
more emphatically; that is, he
shall in no wise change it,
neither for one of the same nor
of another kind: partly because
God would preserve the sanctity
and reverence of consecrated
things, and therefore would not
have them alienated; and partly
to prevent abuses of them by
those who on this pretence might
exchange what had been vowed for
the worse. It and the exchange —
That is, both the thing first
vowed, and the thing offered and
given in exchange. This was
inflicted upon him as a just
penalty for his levity in such
weighty matters.
Verse 11
Leviticus 27:11. Unclean —
Either for the kind or for the
quality of it; if it were such a
one as might not be offered. In
the case of any unclean beast;
that is, which was not allowed
to be offered in sacrifice, such
as a horse, camel, &c., it was
to be valued by the priest, and
then the owner had liberty to
leave the beast at the priest’s
disposal, or to redeem it by
paying the price set upon it,
with a fifth part more. This
served as a proper check to
men’s levity and fickleness in
making vows and religious
resolutions. It put them in mind
not to be rash in opening their
mouths to God, and made them
feel the inconvenience of
repenting of their vows.
Verse 14
Leviticus 27:14. When a man
shall sanctify his house — By a
vow; for of that way and manner
of sanctification he speaks in
this whole chapter. This is the
third case, and was to be
regulated by the same law as the
last- mentioned. It was to be
justly valued by the priest; and
if the party chose rather to pay
the price than part with the
house, he was to submit to the
law made in the foregoing case.
Verse 16
Leviticus 27:16. Shall sanctify
some part of his field — This
intimates that it was not lawful
for a man to vow his whole field
or estate, because God would
have no man’s family made
beggars to enrich his sanctuary.
The design of consecrating a
part to God, was to procure his
blessing upon the rest of their
possessions. Thy estimation
shall be according to the seed
thereof — That is, it shall be
valued according to the quantity
of seed required to sow it. A
homer of barley-seed shall be
valued at fifty shekels — That
is, so much land as a homer of
barley would sow was to be rated
at fifty shekels, or about five
pounds seventeen shillings; and
so, proportionably, for greater
or less quantities of ground so
devoted. There is a great
difference between this measure
and that which occurs Exodus
16:16; this is written homer,
and that ghomer. Now, a ghomer
was but the tenth part of an
ephah, as we learn from Exodus
16:36; whereas the homer, which
is the measure here spoken of,
was ten ephahs, Ezekiel 45:11.
By this we may explain that
threatening in Isaiah 5:10, The
seed of a homer shall yield an
ephah; that is, ten bushels
shall yield but one.
Verse 17-18
Leviticus 27:17-18. If he
sanctify his field from the year
of jubilee — That is, if the vow
has been made immediately after
the jubilee, then the land
requiring a homer of barley-seed
is to be valued at fifty
shekels, as before mentioned. If
after the jubilee — That is,
some considerable time after,
then the priest was to deduct
from the above rate of fifty
shekels, either more or less,
according as more or fewer years
remained till the next jubilee.
For no land could be alienated
for a longer period than
forty-nine years, that is, from
one jubilee to another, except
in the case after mentioned. If
he will not redeem the field —
If the owner choose rather to
part with his land than redeem
it at the price which the priest
hath set upon it, and the
priest, upon his refusal, have
sold it, or rather let it, till
the next jubilee, to another
man; then he that vowed it shall
be excluded from all future
privilege of redemption; and,
when the jubilee is come, the
land shall return to the
priesthood for ever. For
preventing ambiguity, instead
of, If he have sold the field,
it ought to be rendered, If the
priest have sold, as in the
Arabic version; or, If it be
sold to another, as in the
Vulgate; for the he cannot refer
to the owner or vower of the
land, as our version makes it,
since the vower had no power to
sell the land after he had
consecrated it, but it was to be
sold or let by the priest or
treasurer of the sanctuary, who
converted the price thereof to a
holy use.
Verse 21
Leviticus 27:21. When it goeth
out — That is, out of the
possession of the other man to
whom the priest sold it. The
possession shall be the priest’s
— For his maintenance. Nor is
this repugnant to that law, that
the priests should have no
inheritance in the land, Numbers
18:20; for that is only spoken
of the tribe of Levi in general,
in reference to the first
division of the land, wherein
the Levites were not to have a
distinct part of land, as other
tribes had; but this does not
imply that some particular lands
might not be vowed and given to
the priests, either for their
own benefit, or for the service
of the sanctuary.
Verse 22-23
Leviticus 27:22-23. Not of the
fields of his possession — His
patrimony or inheritance. Thy
estimation — That is, the price
which thou, O Moses, by my
direction, hast set in such
cases. To the jubilee — As much
as it is worth, for that space
of time between the making of
the vow and the year of jubilee:
for he had no right to it for
any longer time, as the next
verse tells us. As a holy thing
— As that which is to be
consecrated to God instead of
the land redeemed by it.
Verse 25
Leviticus 27:25. The shekel of
the sanctuary — About 2 Samuel 6
d.
Verse 26
Leviticus 27:26. No man shall
sanctify it — By vow; because it
is not his own, but the Lord’s
already, and therefore to vow
such a thing to God is a tacit
derogation from, and a
usurpation of, the Lord’s right,
and a mocking of God by
pretending to give what we
cannot withhold from him. Ox or
sheep — Under these two eminent
kinds he comprehends all other
beasts which might be sacrificed
to God, the firstlings whereof
could not be redeemed, but were
to be sacrificed; whereas the
firstlings of men were to be
redeemed, and therefore were
capable of being vowed, as we
see, 1
Samuel Leviticus 1:11.
Verse 27
Leviticus 27:27. An unclean
beast — That is, if it be the
firstborn of an unclean beast,
as appears from Leviticus 27:26,
which could not be vowed,
because it was a firstborn, nor
offered, because it was unclean;
and therefore is here commanded
to be redeemed or sold. It shall
be sold — And the price thereof
was given to the priests, or
brought into the Lord’s
treasury.
Verse 28
Leviticus 27:28. No devoted
thing — That is, nothing which
is absolutely devoted to God
with a curse upon themselves or
others if they disposed not of
it according to their vow; as
the Hebrew word implies. Most
holy — That is, only to be
touched or employed by the
priests, and by no other
persons; no, not by their own
families, for that was the state
of the most holy things.
Verse 29
Leviticus 27:29. Devoted of men
— Not by men, as some would
elude it, but of men, for it is
manifest both from this and the
foregoing verses, that men are
here not the persons devoting,
but devoted to destruction,
either by God’s sentence, as
idolaters, Exodus 22:20;
Deuteronomy 23:15; the
Canaanites, Deuteronomy 20:17;
the Amalekites, Leviticus 25:19;
1 Samuel 15:3; 1 Samuel 15:26;
Benhadad, 1 Kings 20:42; or by
men, in pursuance of such a
sentence of God, as Numbers
21:2-3; Numbers 31:17; or for
any crime of a high nature, as
21:5. But this is certainly not
to be understood, as some have
taken it, as if a Jew might, by
virtue of this text, devote his
child or his servant to the
Lord, and thereby oblige himself
to put them to death. For this
is expressly limited to all that
a man hath or which is his; that
is, which he hath a power over.
But the Jews had no power over
the lives of their children or
servants, but were directly
forbidden to take them away, by
that great command, thou shalt
do no murder. And seeing he that
killed his servant casually by a
blow with a rod was surely to be
punished, as is said, Exodus
21:20, it could not be lawful
wilfully to take away his life
upon pretence of any such vow as
this. But for the Canaanites,
Amalekites, &c., God, the
undoubted Lord of all men’s
lives, gave to the Israelites a
power over their persons and
lives, and a command to put them
to death. And this verse may
have a special respect to them,
or such as them.
Verse 30
Leviticus 27:30. The tithe —
There were divers sorts of
tithes, but this seems to be
understood only of the ordinary
and yearly tithes belonging to
the Levites, as the very
expression intimates, and the
addition of the fifth part in
case of the redemption thereof
implies.
Verse 32
Leviticus 27:32. Under the rod —
Either, 1st, The tithers’ rod,
it being the manner of the Jews
in tithing to cause all their
cattle to pass through some gate
or narrow passage, where the
tenth was marked by a person
appointed for that purpose, and
reserved for the priest. Or, 2d,
The shepherd’s rod, under which
the herds and flocks passed, and
by which they were governed and
numbered. See Jeremiah 33:13;
Ezekiel 20:37.
Verse 34
Leviticus 27:34. These are the
commandments which the Lord
commanded Moses for the children
of Israel in mount Sinai — This
has reference to the whole book.
Many of these commandments are
moral; others ceremonial, and
peculiar to the Jewish economy;
which yet are instructive to us,
who have a key to the mysteries
that are contained in them. Upon
the whole, we have cause to
bless God that we are not come
to mount Sinai, that we are not
under the dark shadows of the
law, but enjoy the clear light
of the gospel. The doctrine of
our reconciliation to God by a
Mediator, is not clouded with
the smoke of burning sacrifices,
but cleared by the knowledge of
Christ, and him crucified. And
we may praise him that we are
not under the yoke of the law,
but under the sweet and easy
instructions of the gospel,
which pronounces those the true
worshippers that worship the
Father in spirit and in truth,
by Christ only, who is our
priest, temple, altar,
sacrifice, purification, and
all. |