Chapter 22:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Exodus Numbers
Leviticus 22
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have divers laws concerning the priests and
sacrifices all for the preserving of the honour of the sanctuary. I. That the
priests should not eat the holy things in their uncleanness (v. 1-9). II. That
no stranger who did not belong to some family of the priests should eat of the
holy things (v. 10-13), and, if he did it unwittingly, he must make
restitution, (v. 14-16). III. That the sacrifices which were offered must be
without blemish (v. 17-25). IV. That they must be more than eight days old (v.
26-28), and that the sacrifices of thanksgiving must be eaten the same day
they were offered (v. 29, etc.).
Verses 1-9
Those that had a natural blemish, though they were forbidden to
do the priests' work, were yet allowed to eat of the holy things: and the
Jewish writers say that "to keep them from idleness they were employed in
the wood-room, to pick out that which was worm-eaten, that it might not be used
in the fire upon the altar; they might also be employed in the judgment of
leprosy:" but,
I. Those that were under any ceremonial uncleanness, which
possibly they contracted by their own fault, might no so much as eat of the holy
things while they continued in their pollution. 1. Some pollutions were
permanent, as a leprosy or a running issue, v. 4. These separated the people
from the sanctuary, and God would show that they were so far from being more
excusable that really they were more abominable in a priest. 2. Others were more
transient, as the touching of a dead body, or any thing else that was unclean,
from which, after a certain time, a man was cleansed by bathing his flesh in
water, v. 6. But whoever was thus defiled might not
eat of the holy things,
under pain of God's highest displeasure, who said, and ratified the saying,
That
soul shall be cut off from my presence, v. 3. Our being in the presence of
God, and attending upon him, will be so far from securing us that it will but
the more expose us to God's wrath, if we dare to draw nigh to him in our
uncleanness. The destruction shall come
from the presence of the Lord (2
Th. 1:9), as the fire by which Nadab and Abihu died came
from before the
Lord. Thus those who profane the holy word of God will be cut off by that
word which they make so light of; it shall condemn them. They are again warned
of their danger if they eat the holy thing in their uncleanness (v. 9),
lest
they bear sin, and die therefore. Note, (1.) Those contract great guilt who
profane sacred things, by touching them with unhallowed hands. Eating the holy
things signified an interest in the atonement; but, if they ate of them in their
uncleanness, they were so far from lessening their guilt that they increased it:
They shall
bear sin. (2.) Sin is a burden which, if infinite mercy
prevent not, will certainly sink those that bear it: They shall
die
therefore. Even priests may be ruined by their pollutions and presumptions.
II. As to the design of this law we may observe, 1. This obliged
the priests carefully to preserve their purity, and to dread every thing that
would defile them. The holy things were their livelihood; if they might not eat
of them, how must they subsist? The more we have to lose of comfort and honour
by our defilement, the more careful we should be to preserve our purity. 2. This
impressed the people with a reverence for the holy things, when they saw the
priests themselves
separated from them (as the expression is, v. 2) so
long as they were in their uncleanness. He is doubtless a God of infinite purity
who kept his immediate attendants under so strict a discipline. 3. This teaches
us carefully to watch against all moral pollutions, because by them we are
unfitted to receive the comfort of God's sanctuary. Though we labour not under
habitual deformities, yet actual defilements deprive us of the pleasure of
communion with God; and therefore
he that is washed needeth to wash his feet
(Jn. 13:10),
to wash his hands, and so to
compass the altar, Ps.
26:6. Herein we have need to be jealous over ourselves, lest (as it is
observably expressed here) we
profane God's holy name in those things which
we hallow unto him, v. 2. If we affront God in those very performances
wherein we pretend to honour him, and provoke him instead of pleasing him, we
shall make up but a bad account shortly; yet thus we do if we profane God's
name, by doing that in our uncleanness which pretends to be hallowed to him.
Verses 10-16
The holy things were to be eaten by the priests and their
families. Now,
I. Here is a law that no stranger should eat of them, that is,
no person whatsoever but the priests only, and those that pertained to them, v.
10. The priests are charged with this care, not to
profane the holy things
by permitting the strangers to eat of them (v. 15) or
suffer them to bear the
iniquity of trespass (v. 16); that is, suffer them to bring guilt upon
themselves, by meddling with that which they have no right to. Thus it is
commonly understood. Note, We must not only be careful that we do not bear
iniquity ourselves, but we must do what we can to prevent others bearing it. We
must not only not suffer sin to
lie upon our brother, but, if we can help
it, we must not suffer it to
come upon him. But perhaps there is another
meaning of those words: the priests' eating the sin-offerings is said to
signify their
bearing the iniquity of the congregation, to make an atonement
for them, ch. 10:17. Let not a stranger therefore eat of that holy thing
particularly, and so pretend to
bear the iniquity of trespass; for it is
daring presumption for any to do that, but such as are appointed to do it. Those
that set up other mediators besides Christ our priest, to
bear the iniquity
of trespass, sacrilegiously rob Christ of his honour, and invade his rights.
When we warn people not to trust to their own righteousness, nor dare to appear
before God in it, but to rely on Christ's righteousness only for peace and
pardon, it is because we dare not
suffer them to bear the iniquity of
trespass, for we know it is too heavy for them.
II. Here is an explanation of the law, showing who were to be
looked upon as belonging to the priest's family, and who not. 1. Sojourners
and hired servants abode not in the house for ever; they were in the family, but
not of it; and therefore they might not eat of the holy things (v. 10): but the
servant that was born in the house or bought with money, being a heirloom to the
family, though a servant, yet might eat of the holy things, v. 11. Note, Those
only are entitled to the comforts of God's house who make it their
rest for
ever, and resolve to
dwell in it all the days of their life. As for
those who for a time only believe, to serve a present turn. They are looked upon
but as sojourners and mercenaries, and have
no part nor lot in the matter.
2. As to the children of the family, concerning the sons there could be no
dispute, they were themselves priests, but concerning the daughters there was a
distinction. While they continued in their father's house they might eat of
the holy things; but, if they married such as were not priests, they lost their
right (v. 12), for now they were cut off from the family of the priests. Yet if
a priest's daughter became a widow, and had no children in whom she might
preserve a distinct family, and returned to her father's house again, being
neither wife nor mother, she should again be looked upon as a daughter, and
might eat of the holy things. If those whom Providence has made sorrowful
widows, and who are dislodged from the rest they had in the house of a husband,
yet find it again in a father's house, they have reason to be thankful to the
widows' God, who does not leave them comfortless. 3. Here is a demand of
restitution to be made by him that had no right to the holy things, and yet
should eat of them unwittingly, v. 14. If he did it presumptuously, and in
contempt of the divine institution, he was liable to be cut off by the hand of
God, and to be beaten by the magistrate; but, if he did it through weakness in
inconsideration, he was to restore the value, adding a fifth part to it, besides
which he was to bring an offering to atone for the trespass; see ch. 5:15, 16.
III. This law might be dispensed with in a case of necessity, as
it was when David and his men ate of the show-bread, 1 Sa. 21:6. And our Saviour
justifies them, and gives a reason for it, which furnishes us with a lasting
rule in all such cases, that
God will have mercy and not sacrifice, Mt.
12:3, 4, 7. Rituals must give way to morals.
IV. It is an instruction to gospel ministers, who are
stewards
of the mysteries of God, not to admit all, without distinction, to
eat of
the holy things, but to take out the precious from the vile. Those that are
scandalously ignorant or profane are strangers and aliens to the family of the
Lord's priests; and it is not meet to take the children's bread and to cast
it to such. Holy things are for holy persons, for those who are holy, at least,
in profession, Mt. 7:6.
Verses 17-33
Here are four laws concerning sacrifices:
I. Whatever was offered in sacrifice to God should be without
blemish, otherwise it should not be accepted. This had often been mentioned in
the particular institutions of the several sorts of offerings. Now here they are
told what was to be accounted a blemish which rendered a beast unfit for
sacrifice: if it was blind, or lame, had a wen, or the mange (v. 22),if it
was bruised, or crushed, or broken, or cut (v. 24), that is, as the Jewish
writers understand it, if it was, in any of these ways, castrated, if bulls and
rams were made into oxen and weathers, they might not be offered. Moreover a
difference is made between what was brought as a free-will offering and what was
brought as a vow, v. 23. And, though none that had any of the forementioned
blemishes might be brought for either, yet if a beast had any thing superfluous
or lacking (that is, as the Jews understand it, if there was a disproportion or
inequality between those parts that are pairs, when one eye, or ear, or leg, was
bigger than it should be, or less than it should be)if there was no other
blemish than this, it might be accepted for a free-will offering, to which a man
had not before laid himself, nor had the divine law laid him, under any
particular obligation; but for a vow it might not be accepted. Thus God would
teach us to make conscience of performing our promises to him very exactly, and
not afterwards to abate in quantity or value of what we had solemnly engaged to
devote to him. What was, before the vow, in our own power, as in the case of a
free-will offering, afterwards is not, Acts 5:4. It is again and again declared
that no sacrifice should be accepted if it was thus blemished, v. 20, 21.
According to this law great care was taken to search all the beasts that were
brought to be sacrificed, that there might, to a certainty, be no blemish in
them. A blemished sacrifice might not be accepted even
from the hand of a
stranger, though to such all possible encouragement should be given to do
honour to the God of Israel, v. 25. By this it appears that strangers were
expected to come to the house of God from a
far country (1 Ki. 8:41, 42),
and that they should be welcome, and their offerings accepted, as those of
Darius, Ezra 6:9, 10; Isa. 56:6, 7. The heathen priests were many of them not so
strict in this matter, but would receive sacrifices for their gods that were
ever so scandalous; but let strangers know that the God of Israel would not be
so served. Now, 1. This law was then necessary for the preserving of the honour
of the sanctuary, and of the God that was there worshipped. It was fit that
every thing that was employed for his honour should be the best of the kind;
for, as he is the greatest and brightest, so he is the best of beings; and he
that is the best must have the best. See how greatly and justly displeasing the
breach of this law was to the holy God, Mal. 1:8, 13, 14. 2. This law made all
the legal sacrifices the fitter to be types of Christ, the great sacrifice from
which all these derived their virtue. In allusion to this law, he is said to be
a
Lamb without blemish and
without spot, 1 Pt. 1:19. As such a priest,
so such a sacrifice, became us, who was harmless and undefiled. When Pilate
declared,
I find no fault in this man, he did thereby in effect pronounce
the sacrifice without blemish. The Jews say it was the work of the sagan, or
suffragan, high priest, to view the sacrifices, and see whether they were
without blemish or no; when Christ suffered, Annas was in that office; but
little did those who brought Christ to Annas first, by whom he was sent bound to
Caiaphas, as a sacrifice fit to be offered (Jn. 18:13, 24), think that they were
answering the type of this law. 3. It is an instruction to us to offer to God
the best we have in our spiritual sacrifices. If our devotions are ignorant, and
cold, and trifling, and full of distractions, we offer
the blind, and the
lame, and the sick, for sacrifice; but cursed be the deceiver that does so,
for, while he thinks to put a cheat upon God, he puts a damning cheat upon his
own soul.
II. That no beast should be offered in sacrifice before it was
eight days old, v. 26, 27. It was provided before that the firstlings of their
cattle, which were to be dedicated to God, should not be brought to him till
after the eighth day, Ex. 22:30. Here it is provided that no creature should be
offered in sacrifice till it was eight days old complete. Sooner than that it
was not fit to be used at men's tables, and therefore not a God's altar. The
Jews say, "It was because the sabbath sanctifies all things, and nothing
should be offered to God till at least one sabbath had passed over it." It
was in conformity to the law of circumcision, which children were to receive on
the eighth day. Christ was sacrificed for us, not in his infancy, though then
Herod sought to slay him, but in the prime of his time.
III. That the dam and her young should not both be killed in one
day, whether in sacrifice or for common use, v. 28. There is such a law as this
concerning birds, Deu. 22:6. This was forbidden, not as evil in itself, but
because it looked barbarous and cruel to the brute creatures; like the tyranny
of the king of Babylon, that slew Zedekiah's sons before his eyes, and then
put out his eyes. It looked ill-natured towards the species to kill two
generations at once, as if one designed the ruin of the kind.
IV. That the flesh of their thank-offerings should be eaten on
the same day that they were sacrificed, v. 29, 30. This is a repetition of what
we had before, ch. 7:15; 19:6, 7. The chapter concludes with such a general
charge as we have often met with, to
keep God's commandments, and not
to
profane his holy name, v. 31, 32. Those that profess God's name, if
they do not make conscience of keeping his commandments, do but profane his
name. The general reasons are added: God's authority over them
I am the
Lord; his interest in themI am
your God; the title he had to them
by redemption"I
brought you out of the land of Egypt, on purpose
that I might be your God;" the designs of his grace concerning them
I
am the Lord that hallow you; and the resolutions of his justice, if he had
not honour from them, to
get himself honour upon themI will be
hallowed
among the children of Israel. God will be a loser in his glory by no man at
last; but sooner or later will recover his right, either in the repentance of
sinners or in their ruin.
Chapter 22:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Exodus Numbers
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
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Jude
Revelation
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