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												Verse 2Leviticus 19:2. Ye shall be holy 
												— Separated from all the 
												forementioned defilements, and 
												entirely consecrated to God, and 
												obedient to all his laws. I am 
												holy — Both in my essence, and 
												in all my laws, which are holy, 
												and just, and good.
 
 Verse 3
 Leviticus 19:3. His mother — The 
												mother is put first, partly 
												because the practice of this 
												duty begins there, mothers, by 
												perpetual converse, being sooner 
												known to their children than 
												their fathers; and partly 
												because this duty is commonly 
												neglected to the mother, upon 
												whom children have not so much 
												dependance as they have upon 
												their father. And this fear 
												includes the two great duties of 
												reverence and obedience. And 
												keep my sabbaths — This is 
												added, to show that, whereas it 
												is enjoined to parents that they 
												should take care the sabbath be 
												observed both by themselves and 
												their children, it is the duty 
												of children to fear and obey 
												their parents in this matter. 
												But that, if parents should 
												neglect their duty therein, or 
												by their command, counsel, or 
												example, draw them to pollute 
												the sabbath, the children in 
												that case must keep the sabbath, 
												and prefer the command of God, 
												before the command of their 
												parents.
 
 Verse 4
 Leviticus 19:4. Turn ye not unto 
												idols — Hebrew, אלילם, Elilim, 
												No gods, or nothings, as the 
												word signifies, and as idols are 
												called, (1 Corinthians 8:4,) 
												many of them having no being but 
												in the fancy of their 
												worshippers, and all of them 
												having no virtue or power to do 
												good or evil, Isaiah 41:23.
 
 Verse 5
 Leviticus 19:5. At your own will 
												— Or, According to your own 
												pleasure, what you think fit; 
												for though this sacrifice, in 
												general, was required, it was 
												left to their choice to 
												determine the particulars. But 
												the original word may be 
												rendered, For favour to you; 
												that is, in order to procure you 
												the divine favour; or in such a 
												manner as God has prescribed and 
												will accept. And thus it is 
												understood by Le Clerc, after 
												the LXX., the Vulgate, Syriac, 
												and Arabic versions.
 
 Verse 9-10
 Leviticus 19:9-10. Thou shalt 
												not gather the gleanings of thy 
												harvest — They were not to be 
												exact in carrying all off, but 
												were to leave some part to be 
												gleaned and reaped by their poor 
												neighbours, whether Israelites 
												or Gentiles. And thou shall not 
												glean thy vineyard — When they 
												had cut off the great bunches, 
												they were not to examine the 
												vine over again for the 
												scattered grapes or small 
												clusters, but leave them for the 
												poor and stranger. Strangers are 
												joined with the poor, because 
												they could have no possessions 
												of land among the Hebrews, and 
												therefore were often poor. I am 
												the Lord your God — Who gave you 
												all these things, with a 
												reservation of my right in them, 
												and with a charge of giving part 
												of them to the poor. This, and 
												many other laws which provide 
												for the indigent, the widow, the 
												orphan, and the stranger, show 
												the genius of the Jewish 
												religion to have been much more 
												humane than we are apt to 
												conceive, from examining the 
												lives of its narrow-minded 
												professors.
 
 Verse 12
 Leviticus 19:12. Ye shall not 
												swear falsely — This is added to 
												show how one sin draws on 
												another, and that when men will 
												lie for their own advantage, 
												they will easily be induced to 
												perjury. Profane the name — By 
												any unholy use of it. So it is 
												an additional precept, thou 
												shall not abuse my holy name by 
												swearing either falsely or 
												rashly.
 
 Verse 14
 Leviticus 19:14. Before the 
												blind — To make them fall. Under 
												these two particulars are 
												manifestly forbidden all 
												injuries done to such as are 
												unable to right or defend 
												themselves; of whom God here 
												takes the more care, because 
												they are not able to secure 
												themselves. Fear thy God — Who 
												both can and will avenge them.
 
 Verse 15
 Leviticus 19:15. The poor — So 
												as, through pity to him, to give 
												an unrighteous sentence.
 
 Verse 16
 Leviticus 19:16. Stand against 
												the blood — In judgment, as a 
												false accuser, or false witness, 
												for accusers and witnesses use 
												to stand, while the judges sit, 
												in courts of judicature.
 
 Verse 17
 Leviticus 19:17. Thou shalt not 
												hate — As thou dost, in effect, 
												if thou dost not rebuke him. Thy 
												brother — The same as thy 
												neighbour; that is, every man. 
												If thy brother hath done wrong, 
												thou shalt neither divulge it to 
												others, nor hate him, and 
												smother that hatred by sullen 
												silence; nor flatter him 
												therein, but shalt freely, and 
												in love, tell him of his fault. 
												And not suffer sin upon him — 
												Not suffer him to lie under the 
												guilt of any sin, which thou, by 
												rebuking him, and thereby 
												bringing him to repentance, 
												couldst free him from.
 
 Verse 18
 Leviticus 19:18. Thy neighbour — 
												Every man, as plainly appears, 
												1st, By comparing this place 
												with Leviticus 19:34, where this 
												law is applied to strangers. 2d, 
												Because the word neighbour is 
												explained by another man, 
												Leviticus 20:10; Romans 13:8. As 
												thyself — With the same 
												sincerity, though not equality 
												of affection.
 
 Verse 19
 Leviticus 19:19. Thou shalt not 
												let thy cattle gender — This was 
												prohibited, partly to restrain 
												the curiosity and boldness of 
												men, who might attempt to amend 
												or change the works of God; 
												partly that by the restraint 
												here laid, even upon brute 
												creatures, men might be taught 
												to abhor all unnatural lusts; 
												partly to teach the Israelites 
												to avoid mixtures with other 
												nations, either in marriage or 
												in religion, which also may be 
												signified by the following 
												prohibitions.
 
 Verse 20
 Leviticus 19:20. She shall be 
												scourged — Hebrew, There shall 
												be a scourging, which probably 
												may belong to both of them; for, 
												1st, Both were guilty; 2d, It 
												follows, they shall not be 
												punished with death, which may 
												seem to imply that they were to 
												be punished by some other common 
												and considerable punishment, 
												which scourging indeed was; but 
												the paying of a ram was a small 
												penalty, and very unsuitable to 
												the greatness of the offence. 
												And the offering of the ram, as 
												a trespass-offering for the sin 
												against God, is not inconsistent 
												with making satisfaction other 
												ways for the injury done to men, 
												but only added here as a further 
												punishment to the man, either 
												because he only could do this, 
												and not the woman, who being a 
												bond- woman had nothing of her 
												own to offer; or because his sex 
												and his freedom aggravated his 
												sin. Not put to death — Which 
												they should have been, had she 
												been free, Deuteronomy 22:23-24. 
												The reason of this difference is 
												not from any respect which God 
												gives to persons, for bond and 
												free are alike to him, but 
												because bond-women were scarcely 
												wives, and their marriages were 
												scarcely true marriages, being 
												neither made by their choice, 
												but their masters’ authority, 
												nor continued beyond the year of 
												release, but at their masters’ 
												or husbands’ pleasure.
 
 Verse 23
 Leviticus 19:23. As 
												uncircumcised — That is, as 
												unclean, not to be eaten, but 
												cast away, because the fruit 
												then was less wholesome, and 
												because hereby men were taught 
												to bridle their appetites; a 
												lesson of great use and absolute 
												necessity in a holy life.
 
 Verse 24
 Leviticus 19:24. Holy — 
												Consecrated to the Lord, as the 
												first-fruits and tithes were, 
												and therefore given to the 
												priests and Levites, Numbers 
												18:12,
 
 13; Deuteronomy 18:4; yet so 
												that part of them were 
												communicated to the poor widows, 
												and fatherless, and strangers, 
												see Deuteronomy 14:28; to bless 
												the Lord, by whose power and 
												goodness the trees bring forth 
												fruit to perfection.
 
 Verse 25
 Leviticus 19:25. That it may 
												yield the increase — That God 
												may be pleased to give his 
												blessing, which alone could make 
												them fruitful.
 
 Verse 26
 Leviticus 19:26. Any thing with 
												the blood — Any flesh out of 
												which the blood is not first 
												poured. Neither shall ye use 
												enchantments — It was 
												unpardonable in them, to whom 
												were committed the oracles of 
												God, to ask counsel of the 
												devil. And yet worse in 
												Christians, to whom the Son of 
												God is manifested, to destroy 
												the works of the devil. For 
												Christians to have their 
												nativities cast, or their 
												fortunes told, or to use charms 
												for the cure of diseases, is an 
												intolerable affront to the Lord 
												Jesus, a support of idolatry, 
												and a reproach both to 
												themselves and to that worthy 
												name by which they are called. 
												Nor observe times — 
												Superstitiously, esteeming some 
												days lucky, others unlucky.
 
 Verse 27
 Leviticus 19:27. The corners of 
												your heads — That is, your 
												temples; ye shall not cut off 
												the hair of your heads round 
												about your temples. This the 
												Gentiles did, either for the 
												worship of their idols, to whom 
												young men used to consecrate 
												their hair, being cut off from 
												their heads, as Homer, Plutarch, 
												and many others write; or in 
												funerals or immoderate 
												mournings, as appears from 
												Isaiah 15:2; Jeremiah 48:37. And 
												the like is to be thought 
												concerning the beard, or the 
												hair in the corner, that is, 
												corners of the beard. The reason 
												then of this prohibition is, 
												because God would not have his 
												people agree with idolaters, 
												neither in their idolatries, nor 
												in their excessive sorrowing, 
												nor so much as in the 
												appearances of it.
 
 Verse 28
 Leviticus 19:28. Cuttings in 
												your flesh — Which the Gentiles 
												commonly did, both in the 
												worship of their idols and in 
												their solemn mournings, Jeremiah 
												16:6.
 
 Verse 29
 Leviticus 19:29. Do not 
												prostitute — As the Gentiles 
												frequently did for the honour of 
												some of their idols, to whom 
												women were consecrated, and 
												publicly prostituted.
 
 Verse 31
 Leviticus 19:31. Wizards — Them 
												that have entered into covenant 
												with the devil, by whose help 
												they foretel many things to 
												come, and acquaint men with 
												secret things; see Leviticus 
												20:27; Deuteronomy 18:11; 1 
												Samuel 28:3; 1 Samuel 28:7; 1 
												Samuel 28:9; 2 Kings 21:6.
 
 Verse 32
 Leviticus 19:32. Rise up — To do 
												them reverence when they pass 
												by, for which end they were 
												obliged, as the Jews say, 
												presently to sit down again when 
												they were past, that it might be 
												manifest they arose out of 
												respect to them. Fear thy God — 
												This respect is due to such, if 
												not for themselves, yet for 
												God’s sake, who requires this 
												reverence, and whose singular 
												blessing old age is.
 
 Verse 33
 Leviticus 19:33. Vex him — 
												Either with opprobrious 
												expressions, or grievous 
												exactions.
 
 Verse 34
 Leviticus 19:34. As one born 
												among you — Either, 1st, As to 
												the matters of common right, so 
												it reached to all strangers. Or, 
												2d, As to church privileges, so 
												concerned only those who were 
												proselytes. Ye were strangers — 
												And therefore are sensible of 
												the fears, distresses, and 
												miseries of such; which call for 
												your pity, and you ought to do 
												to them, as you desired others 
												should do to you, when you were 
												such.
 
 Verse 35
 Leviticus 19:35. In mete-yard — 
												In the measuring of lands, or 
												dry things, as cloth, riband. In 
												measure — In the measuring 
												liquid or such dry things as are 
												only contiguous, as corn or 
												wine.
 
 Verse 36
 Leviticus 19:36. A just ephah 
												and a just hin — These two 
												measures are named as most 
												common, the former for dry, the 
												latter for moist things, but 
												under them he manifestly 
												comprehends all other measures.
 
 Verse 37
 Leviticus 19:37. Therefore — 
												Because my blessings and 
												deliverances are not indulgences 
												to sin, but greater obligations 
												to all duties to God and men.
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