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												Verse 1Leviticus 22:1. The foregoing 
												rules relate to the personal 
												qualifications of priests: here 
												follow several cautions relating 
												to the privileges which they and 
												their families had of eating 
												their share of the sacrifices, 
												from Leviticus 22:1 to Leviticus 
												22:17, which cautions served to 
												remind them of that reverence 
												and moral purity wherewith their 
												worship ought to be paid to God.
 
 Verse 2
 Leviticus 22:2. That they 
												separate themselves — When any 
												uncleanness is upon them, as 
												appears from Leviticus 22:3-4. 
												From the holy things — This is 
												the first caution. No priest, or 
												other person, was to presume to 
												eat any part of a consecrated 
												victim, while he was under any 
												degree of legal uncleanness. 
												Neither were they, in that 
												state, to eat of the 
												first-fruits, which were also 
												consecrated to God, Numbers 
												18:12. But they might eat of the 
												tithes, which were allowed for 
												their constant maintenance. That 
												they profane not what they — The 
												children of Israel; hallow — It 
												ill became the priests to 
												profane or pollute what the 
												people hallowed.
 
 Verse 3
 Leviticus 22:3. Goeth unto the 
												holy things — To eat them, or to 
												touch them; for if the touch of 
												one of the people — having his 
												uncleanness upon him defiled the 
												thing he touched, much more was 
												it so in the priest. Cut off — 
												From my ordinances by 
												excommunication: he shall be 
												excluded both from the 
												administration and from the 
												participation of them. Le Clerc 
												takes it for cutting off by 
												death.
 
 Verse 7
 Leviticus 22:7. His food — His 
												portion, the means of his 
												subsistence. This may be added, 
												to signify why there was no 
												greater nor longer a penalty put 
												upon the priests than upon the 
												people in the same case, because 
												his necessity craved some 
												mitigation: though otherwise the 
												priests, being more sacred 
												persons, deserved a greater 
												punishment.
 
 Verse 9
 Leviticus 22:9. Lest they bear 
												sin — Incur guilt and 
												punishment. For it — For the 
												neglect or violation of it.
 
 Verse 10
 Leviticus 22:10. There shall no 
												stranger eat of the holy thing — 
												By holy thing here is meant, 
												that portion of the sacrifices 
												which belonged to the priests. 
												And by stranger is not meant one 
												of another nation, in 
												distinction from a native Jew, 
												but one who was not of the 
												priest’s own family, whether 
												Jew, or Gentile proselyte. A 
												sojourner — One that came to his 
												house, and abode there for a 
												season, and ate at his table, 
												was not to eat of it. There is 
												one exception, however, to this 
												rule, in the next verse.
 
 Verse 11
 Leviticus 22:11. If the priest 
												buy any soul — Either one of the 
												Jewish nation, obliged, through 
												poverty, to sell himself, 
												(Leviticus 25:39,) or of another 
												nation, (v. 44, 45,) who being 
												proselyted to the Jewish 
												religion, became part of the 
												priest’s family, and so was 
												permitted to eat of his 
												consecrated meat.
 
 Verse 12
 Leviticus 22:12. If the priest’s 
												daughter be married to a 
												stranger — To one of another 
												family, who is no priest. Yet 
												the priest’s wife, though of 
												another family, might eat. The 
												reason of which difference is, 
												because the wife passeth into 
												the name, state, and privileges 
												of her husband, from whom the 
												family is denominated.
 
 Verse 14
 Leviticus 22:14. The fifth part 
												unto it — Over and above the 
												principal, and besides the ram 
												to be offered to God, Leviticus 
												5:15. And shall give unto the 
												priest the holy thing — That is, 
												the worth of it, which the 
												priest was either to take to 
												himself or to offer to God, as 
												the nature of the thing was.
 
 Verse 15
 Leviticus 22:15. They — The 
												people; shall not profane them, 
												by eating them: or the priests 
												shall not profane them, that is, 
												suffer the people to profane 
												them, without censure and 
												punishment.
 
 Verse 16
 Leviticus 22:16. They — That is, 
												the priests; shall not (the 
												negative particle being 
												understood out of the foregoing 
												clause) suffer them — That is, 
												the people; to bear the iniquity 
												of trespass — That is, the 
												punishment of their sin, which 
												they might expect from God, and 
												for the prevention whereof the 
												priest was to see restitution 
												made.
 
 Verse 17-18
 Leviticus 22:17-18. The Lord 
												spake unto Moses — The following 
												laws relate to the 
												qualifications required in any 
												offering made either by the 
												Israelites or proselytes. For 
												such proselytes as had renounced 
												idolatry, and were proselytes of 
												the gate, termed, Leviticus 
												22:18, strangers in Israel — 
												Though not circumcised, and 
												obliged to keep the whole law of 
												Moses, were yet permitted, in 
												testimony of their worshipping 
												the true God, to offer free- 
												will-offerings at the Jewish 
												altar, as well as proselytes to 
												the whole Mosaic system, termed 
												proselytes of righteousness.
 
 Verse 19
 Leviticus 22:19. Ye shall offer 
												it at your own will — This is 
												better rendered by the Seventy, 
												the Arabic, and other versions, 
												In order to its being accepted 
												ye shall offer a male. And so we 
												render the same word לרצון, 
												leratson, in the next verse. 
												Males were required in 
												burnt-offerings: but females 
												were accepted in peace-offerings 
												and sin-offerings.
 
 Verse 21
 Leviticus 22:21. To accomplish a 
												vow — It was not unusual with 
												them to make such a vow when 
												they undertook a journey, went 
												to sea, were sick, or in any 
												danger. It shall be perfect — 
												That sacrifice was accounted 
												perfect which wanted none of its 
												parts, nor had any defect in any 
												of them; so that perfect here is 
												the same as without blemish, 
												Leviticus 22:19. The design of 
												this law was still to remind 
												them that they ought to offer to 
												God the most excellent of every 
												thing in its kind, and to guard 
												the worship of God from falling 
												into contempt, as it might have 
												done, had they been allowed to 
												offer to their Maker what men 
												despised, Malachi 1:8. It served 
												also to keep up a due 
												distinction between things 
												sacred and things common, for 
												these same animals which were 
												unfit to be offered to God might 
												be used for common food.
 
 Verse 23
 Leviticus 22:23. That mayest 
												thou offer — The Hebrew here 
												will bear a different 
												translation, which, indeed, 
												seems necessary to reconcile 
												this with the twenty-first 
												verse, namely, Shouldest thou 
												offer it for a 
												free-will-offering or for a vow, 
												it would not be accepted.
 
 Verse 25
 Leviticus 22:25. Neither from a 
												stranger’s hand — From 
												proselytes: even from those, 
												such should not be accepted, 
												much less from the Israelites. 
												The bread of your God — That is, 
												the sacrifices.
 
 Verse 28
 Leviticus 22:28. The cow or ewe, 
												and her young, in one day — This 
												Maimonides considers as a 
												precaution of humanity, lest the 
												dam should be brought to the 
												altar while she is yet mourning 
												the loss of her young, slain 
												perhaps before her eyes. And, 
												indeed, there is a degree of 
												cruelty in the very idea of 
												imbruing the hand in the blood 
												of both parent and offspring at 
												the same time. Therefore 
												Jonathan, in his paraphrase, 
												considers this as a symbolical 
												precept, to teach the Israelites 
												to be merciful, as their Father 
												in heaven is merciful.
 
 Verse 32
 Leviticus 22:32. I will be 
												hallowed — Or, sanctified, 
												either by you, in keeping my 
												holy commands, or upon you, in 
												executing my holy and righteous 
												judgments. I will manifest 
												myself to be a holy God, that 
												will not bear the transgression 
												of my laws. I am the Lord who 
												hallow you — Who have separated 
												you to myself as a special 
												people.
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