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Leviticus
Chapter Eleven
New King James Version (NKJV)
INTRODUCTION TO LEVITICUS 11
This
chapter treats of creatures clean and unclean, as fit or not fit to be eaten;
and first of beasts, whose signs are given, Leviticus 11:1 then
of fishes, which are likewise described, Leviticus 11:9
after that of fowls, and those that are not to be eaten are particularly named,
Leviticus 11:13
next of creeping things, which are distinguished into two sorts, as flying
creeping things, of which those that are unclean, their carcasses are not even
to be touched, as neither the carcasses of unclean beasts, Leviticus 11:20 and
creeping things on the earth, which defile by touching, as well as eating, and
make everything unclean, upon which, being dead, they fall, Leviticus 11:29 and
these laws are enforced from the holiness and goodness of God, Leviticus 11:44 and
the chapter is concluded with a recapitulation of them, Leviticus 11:46.
Leviticus 11:1. Now
the Lord
spoke to Moses and Aaron, saying to them,
YLT 1And Jehovah speaketh unto Moses and unto
Aaron, saying unto them,
And the Lord spake unto Moses, and unto Aaron,.... The one
being the chief magistrate, and the other the high priest, and both concerned
to see the following laws put into execution; according to Jarchi, the Lord
spoke to Moses that he might speak to Aaron; but being now in office, and one
part of his office being to distinguish between clean and unclean, the
following discourse is directed equally to him as to Moses:
saying unto them; as follows.
Leviticus 11:2.
2 “Speak to the children of
Israel, saying, ‘These are the animals which you may eat among all the
animals that are on the earth:
YLT 2`Speak unto the sons of Israel, saying, This
[is] the beast which ye do eat out of all the beasts which [are] on the earth:
Speak unto the children of Israel, saying,.... For to
them only belong the following laws, and not unto the Gentiles, as Jarchi
rightly observes; these were parts of the ceremonial law, which was peculiarly
given to them, and lay, among other things, in meats and drinks, and now
abolished; for it is not what goes into a man that defiles him; nor is anything
common or unclean of itself, but every creature of God is good if received with
thanksgiving. The sons of Noah had free liberty, without any restraint or
limitation, of using for food any living creature that moved upon the face of
the earth; in the choice of which they were left to exercise their reason and
judgment, and is the case with us now; but as men have not so nice a smell as
some animals have, and cannot distinguish by their senses so well as they what
food is most wholesome, which makes the exercise of their reason and judgment
necessary, and the people of the Jews being a special people, and for whom the
Lord had a peculiar regard; for the sake of their health, and to preserve them
from diseases they were subject to, such as the leprosy and others, and to
direct them to what was most salubrious and healthful, gave them the following
laws; and which, though they are not obligatory upon us, yet may be a direction
to us, in the use of what may be most suitable and proper food for us, the
difference of climates, and of the constitutions of men's bodies, being
considered: not that we are to suppose, that the case of health was the only
reason of delivering out these laws to the children of Israel, for other ends,
besides that, may be thought to be had in view; as to assert his sovereign
right to the creatures, and his disposal of them to them according to his will
and pleasure; to lay a restraint on their appetites, to prevent luxury, and to
teach them self denial, and compliance with his will; as also to keep them the
more from the company and conversation of the Gentiles, by whom they otherwise
might be led into idolatry; and to give them an aversion to their idols, to
whom the creatures forbidden them to eat, many of them were either now or would
be sacred to them; and chiefly to excite to a care for purity, both inward and
outward, and create in the man abhorrence of those vices which may be signified
by the ill qualities of several of the creatures; and to instruct them in the
difference between holy and unholy persons, with whom they should or should not
have communion; see Acts 10:11.
these are the beasts that ye shall eat among all the beasts that
are on the earth; they are not particularly mentioned here, but they are in Deuteronomy 14:4
and they are these ten; the ox, the sheep, and the goat, the hart, and the
roebuck, and the fallow deer, and the wild goat, and the pygarg, and the wild
ox, and the chamois; of all which; see Gill on Deuteronomy 14:4, Deuteronomy 14:5,
here only some general things are observed to describe them by, as follow.
Leviticus 11:3.
3 Among the animals,
whatever divides the hoof, having cloven hooves and chewing the cud—that
you may eat.
YLT 3any dividing a hoof, and cleaving the cleft
of the hoofs, bringing up the cud, among the beasts, it ye do eat.
Whatsoever parteth the hoof, and is cloven footed,.... That is,
whose hoof is parted and cloven quite through; for there are some creatures
that have partitions in their feet, but not quite through, they are parted
above, but underneath are joined together by a skin; wherefore both these
phrases are used to describe the beasts lawful to be eaten: the Egyptians seem
to have borrowed this law from the Jews, for Chaeremon saysF24Apud
Porphyr. de Abstinentia, l. 4. sect. 7. , that they abstain from such four
footed beasts that have only one hoof, or have many partitions, or have no horns:
and so the Targum of Jonathan adds here,"which have horns,'which, though
not in the text, agrees well with the creatures allowed by this law to be
eaten, see Deuteronomy 14:4
for such are all horned cattle; nor are there any cattle horned forbid to be
eaten:
and cheweth the cud among the beasts, that shall ye eat: who having no
upper teeth cannot thoroughly chew their food at once, and therefore bring it
up again out of their stomachs into their mouths and chew it over again, that
it may be better prepared for digestion in the stomach, and so yield better
nourishment; and this makes the flesh of such creatures fitter for food: and
these creatures have more stomachs than one; the ventricles for rumination are
four; the first is the paunch, which in oxen is so big as to hold food of fifty
pound weight, the second the honeycomb, the third the tripe, the fourth the
honey tripe, and to which are helpful the pectoral muscle, the abdomen, with
the diaphragmF25Scheuchzer. Physic. Sacr. vol. 2. p. 278, 279. : all
this might have a moral and spiritual meaning in it, and may be applied either
to ministers of the word; who ought rightly to divide the word of truth, and
give to everyone their part, and who should walk uprightly according to it, and
who should give themselves up wholly to the meditation of it, and thoroughly
digest it; and study to show themselves workmen, that need not to be ashamed;
or to private Christians, who have a discerning spirit in spiritual things, and
can distinguish not only morality from immorality, but spiritual things from
carnal, heavenly things from earthly, the voice of Christ from the voice of a
stranger, and the doctrines of Christ from the doctrines of men; and who also
walk as they should do, by faith on Christ, in the ways of God, and according
to the Gospel; these chew the cud, meditate on the word, feed upon it while
delivered, recall it, and have it brought to their remembrance by the divine
Spirit, and ponder it in their hearts; see Psalm 1:1.
Leviticus 11:4.
4 Nevertheless these you
shall not eat among those that chew the cud or those that have cloven hooves:
the camel, because it chews the cud but does not have cloven hooves, is unclean
to you;
YLT 4`Only, this ye do not eat -- of those bringing
up the cud, and of those dividing the hoof -- the camel, though it is bringing
up the cud, yet the hoof not dividing -- it [is] unclean to you;
Nevertheless, these shall ye not eat,.... To whom
one of these descriptive characters may agree but not the other:
of them that chew the cud, or of them that divide the hoof: there being
some that chewed the cud but did not divide the hoof; others that divided the
hoof but did not chew the cud, of which instances are given as follow:
as the camel, because he
cheweth the cud, but divideth not the hoof; he is unclean unto you; and not to be
eaten, whether male or female; or rather, "though he cheweth the
cud"; and this account agrees with what naturalists give of it; so
AristotleF26De Part. Animal. l. 3. c. 14. says it has not both rows
of teeth, but wants its upper teeth, and chews as horned cattle do, and has
bellies like theirs; for they have more bellies than one, as the sheep, and
goat, and hart, and others; since the service of the mouth is not sufficient to
grind the food for want of teeth, this is supplied by the bellies, which
receive the food one after another; in the first it is undigested, in the
second somewhat more digested, in the third more fully, in the fourth
completely: and so many bellies the camel has, as a very learned searcherF1Scheuchzer.
ib. p. 280. into these things observes; the first is the biggest, the second
very small, the third much greater than the second, and the fourth equal to the
second; in the second belly between the tunics, he says, seem to be the
hydrophylacia, in which the water they drink is kept, very commodious for these
animals passing through sandy deserts, so that they can long bear thirst: PlinyF2Nat.
Hist. l. 8. c. 18. says four days: Leo AfricanusF3Descriptio Africae,
l. 1. p. 75. relates a method used by travellers in the deserts of Lybia, who
being in extreme want of water kill one of their camels, out of whose
intestines they press out water; this they drink, this they carry about till
they find a well, or must die with thirst: and the account also which is given
of the feet of these creatures agrees; it parts the hoof, but not thoroughly,
it is not cleft quite through, and so comes not up to Moses's descriptive
character of clean creatures; its hoof is divided in two, but so divided, as
AristotleF4Hist. Animal. l. 2. c. 1. observes, that it is but little
divided on the back part unto the second joint of the toes; the fore part is
very little divided, to the first joint of the toes, and there is something
between the parts, as in the feet of geese: and so Pliny saysF5L.
11. c. 45. it has two hoofs, but the lower part of the foot is but very little
divided, so that it is not thoroughly cleft: but though the flesh of these
creatures was forbidden the Jews, it was eaten by people of other nations; both
AristotleF6Hist. Animal. l. 6. c. 26. and PlinyF7Nat.
Hist. l. 11. c. 41. commend the milk of camels; and by the former the flesh of
them is said to be exceeding sweet; and Diodorus Siculus relatesF8Bibliothec.
l. 2. p. 137. , that what with their milk and their flesh, which is eaten, as
well as on account of their carrying burdens, they are very profitable unto
men; and StraboF9Geograph. l. 16. p. 535. says, the Nomades eat the
flesh and milk of camels; and so the Africans, according to Leo AfricanusF11Descriptio
Africae, l. 1. p. 48. l. 6. 617,620. Arab. Geogr. Clim. 1. par. 1. 3. ; and a
countryman of oursF12Pitts's Account of the Mahometans, c. 8. p.
106. Vid. Hieron, adv. Jovinian. l. 2. , who lived some time in Arabia,
relates, that when a camel falls they kill it, and the poorer sort of the
company eat it; and he says that he himself ate of camel's flesh, and that it
was very sweet and nourishing: these creatures, in the mystic sense, may be an
emblem of such persons, that carry their heads high, are proud and haughty,
that boast of their riches, or trust in their righteousness.
Leviticus 11:5.
5 the rock hyrax, because it
chews the cud but does not have cloven hooves, is unclean to you;
YLT 5and the rabbit, though it is bringing up the
cud, yet the hoof it divideth not -- unclean it [is] to you;
And the coney,.... Or rabbit:
because he cheweth the cud; or "though he
cheweth"; which yet, some observe, the coney or rabbit does not, it having
upper teeth, and therefore they think some other creature is meant by Shaphan,
the word here used; and BochartF13Hierozoic par. 1. l. 3. c. 33.
col. 1015, 1016. is of opinion, that the Aljarbuo of the Arabians, a sort of
mountain mouse, is meant, which chews the cud and divides not the hoof, and
resides in rocks, which agrees with the account of the Shaphan in Proverbs 30:26 but
this is rejected by Dr. ShawF14Travels, p. 177, 348. Ed. 2. , who
takes the creature here to be the Daman Israel, or Israel's lamb, an animal of
Mount Lebanon, a harmless creature of the same size and quality with the
rabbit, and with the like incurvating posture, and disposition or the fore
teeth, but is of a browner colour, with smaller eyes, and a head more pointed,
like the marmots; the fore feet likewise are short, and the hinder are nearly
as long in proportion as those of the jerboa; and though this animal is known
to burrow sometimes in the ground, yet its usual residence and refuge is in the
holes and clifts of the rocks; but a learned manF15Scheuchzer. ut
supra, (Physic. Sacr. vol. 2.) p. 281. , and very inquisitive in the things of
nature, tells us, that the "cuniculus", coney, or rabbit, this sort
of animals do chew half an hour after eating:
but divideth not the hoof; which is well known of
this creature:
he is unclean unto you; not fit or proper to be
eaten of, but to be abstained from as an unclean animal; and may be an emblem
of timorous persons, as these creatures by AristotleF16Hist. Animal.
l. 1. c. 1. are observed to be, and it is well known they are; even of the
fearful and unbelieving, reckoned among the impure, who will have their portion
in the lake of fire, Revelation 21:8.
Leviticus 11:6.
6 the hare, because it chews
the cud but does not have cloven hooves, is unclean to you;
YLT 6and the hare, though it is bringing up the
cud, yet the hoof hath not divided -- unclean it [is] to you;
And the hare, because he cheweth the cud,.... Or,
"though he chews" it:
but divideth not the hoof, he is unclean to you; and so not to
be eaten; so PlutarchF17Sympos. l. 9. c. 5. says, that the Jews are
said to abstain from the hare, disdaining it as a filthy and unclean animal,
and yet was in the greatest esteem with the Romans of any four footed beast, as
Martial saysF18L. 13. Epigr. 87. : Moses, as BochartF19Ut
supra, (Hierozoic par. 1. l. 3.) c. 31. col. 977. and other learned men
observe, is the only writer that speaks of the hare as chewing the cud; though
they also observe, that AristotleF20De Part. Animal. l. 3. c. 15.
& Hist. Animal. l. 3. c. 21. makes mention of that in common with those
that do chew the cud, namely a "coagulum" or "runnet" in
its stomach; his words are,"all that have many bellies have what is called
πυετια, a coagulum or runnet,
and of them that have but one belly, the hare;'only that: this creature being
prone to lust, may be an emblem of lustful persons, who give up themselves to
lasciviousness, to work all uncleanness with greediness, Ephesians 4:19.
(The "hare" is this verse may be an animal that is now is extinct but
was alive at the time of Moses. It is only other mentioned in Deuteronomy 14:7.
Editor.)
Leviticus 11:7.
7 and the swine, though it
divides the hoof, having cloven hooves, yet does not chew the cud, is
unclean to you.
YLT 7and the sow, though it is dividing the hoof,
and cleaving the cleft of the hoof, yet the cud it bringeth not up -- unclean
it [is] to you.
And the swine, though he divide the hoof, and be cloven footed,.... Not only
its hoofs are parted, but cloven quite through, and so in this respect answers
Moses's first descriptive character of clean creatures; though AristotleF21Hist.
Animal. l. 2. c. 1. and PlinyF23Nat. Hist. l. 11. c. 46. speak of
some kind of swine in Illyricum, Paeonia, and other places, which have solid
hoofs; but perhaps these were not properly swine, though so called:
yet he cheweth not the cud; and a learned physician
observesF24Scheuchzer. ut supra, (Physic. Sacr. vol. 2.) p. 282. ,
that such creatures that chew not the cud, so perfect a chyle cannot be
elaborated by them as is by those that chew the cud, and therefore their flesh
must be less wholesome; and of the swine, he saysF25Ib. p. 284. ,
they have but one belly, and so there is no rumination or chewing the cud by
them; wherefore they are to be placed, and are in a lower degree than the
camel, the coney, and the hare; and as they cannot digest the chyle so well as
those that chew the cud, and also live upon most sordid and filthy food, the
eating of swine's flesh, he observes, must produce many inconveniences to the
body, as especially scorbutic, arthritic, scabious, and leprous disorders: so
Manetho the Egyptian saysF26Apud Aelian. de Animal. l. 10. c. 16. ,
that he that eats swine's milk is liable to be filled with the leprosy; and
MaimonidesF1Moreh Nevochim, par. 3. c. 48. gives it as the principal
reason of its being forbid the Jews, because it is such a filthy creature, and
eats such filthy things:
he is unclean to you: and so it has always
been accounted by the Jews, and nothing is more abominable to them, as is even
testified by HeathenF2"Et vetus indulget", &c.
Juvenal. Satyr. 6. "nec distare putant", &c. Ib. Satyr. 14. Vid.
Porphyr. de Abstinentia, l. 4. sect. 11, 12. writers; and in this they have
been imitated by many nations, particularly the Egyptians, who, as Herodotus
saysF3Euterpe, sive, l. 2. c. 47. , reckon swine a very filthy
creature; so that if anyone does but touch it passing by, he is obliged to
plunge himself into a river with his clothes on; and keepers of them may not go
into any of their temples, nor do the rest of the Egyptians intermarry with
them, but they marry among themselves; the reason of this their abhorrence of
swine, Aelianus saysF4Ut supra. (Apud Aelian. de Animal. l. 10. c.
16.) , is because they are so gluttonous that they will not spare their own
young, nor abstain from human flesh; and this, says he, is the reason why the
Egyptians hate it as an impure and voracious animal: likewise the Arabians
entirely abstain from swine's flesh, as Solinus saysF5Polyhistor. c.
46. , who adds, that if any of this sort of creatures is carried into Arabia,
it immediately dies; and the same PlinyF6Nat. Hist. l. 8. c. 52.
attests: and so the Phoenicians, the near neighbours of the Jews, would not eat
the flesh of them; hence Antoninus is said to abstain from it after the manner
of the PhoeniciansF7Herodian. Hist. l. 5. c. 16. , unless the
historian should mean the Jews; also the Gallo-Grecians or GalatiansF8Pausan.
Achaica, sive, l. 7. p. 430. ; nay, even the Indians have such an abhorrence of
it, that they would as soon taste of human flesh as taste of thatF9Ctesias
apud Aelian. de Animal. l. 16. c. 37. , and it is well known that the Mahometans
abstain from it; and they have such an aversion to it, that if any chance to
kill a wild pig, for tame they have none, they look on the merit of it to be
almost equivalent to the killing a Christian in fightF11Pitts's
Account of the Mahometans, p. 163. : now these creatures may be an emblem of
filthy and impure sinners, especially apostates, who return to their former
impurities and wallow in them, 2 Peter 2:22.
Leviticus 11:8.
8 Their flesh you shall not
eat, and their carcasses you shall not touch. They are unclean to you.
YLT 8`Of their flesh ye do not eat, and against
their carcase ye do not come -- unclean they [are] to you.
Of their flesh shall ye not eat,.... Meaning, not of
swine only, but of the camel, coney, and hare:
and their carcass shall ye not touch; which must
not be understood of touching them in any sense; for then it would have been
unlawful for a Jew to have rode upon a camel, or to take out and make use of
hog's lard in medicine; but of touching them in order to kill them, and prepare
them for food, and eat them; and indeed all unnecessary touching of them is
forbidden, lest it should bring them to the eating of them; though perhaps it
may chiefly respect the touching of them dead:
they are unclean to you: one and all of them; for
as this was said of each of them in particular, so now of all of them together;
and which holds good of all wild creatures not named, to whom the description
above belongs, and which used to be eaten by other nations; some of which were
called Pamphagi, from eating all sorts, and others Agriophagi, from eating wild
creatures, as lions, panthers, elephantsF12Plin. l. 6. c. 30.
Solinus, c. 43. , &c.
Leviticus 11:9. 9 ‘These
you may eat of all that are in the water: whatever in the water has fins
and scales, whether in the seas or in the rivers—that you may eat.
YLT 9`This ye do eat of all which [are] in the
waters; any one that hath fins and scales in the waters, in the seas, and in
the brooks, them ye do eat;
These shall ye eat of all that are in the waters,.... In the
waters of the sea, or in rivers, pools, and ponds; meaning fishes; for though
some persons abstain from eating them entirely, as the Egyptian priests, as
HerodotusF13Euterpe, sive, l. 2. c. 37. relates; and it was a part
of religion and holiness, not with the Egyptians only, but with the Syrians and
Greeks, to forbear eating themF14Plutarch. Sympos. p. 730. ; and
JulianF15Orat. 5. p. 330. gives two reasons why men should abstain
from fishes; the one because what is not sacrificed to the gods ought not to be
used for food; and the other is, because these being immersed in the deep
waters, look not up to heaven; but God gave the people of Israel liberty of
eating them, under certain limitations:
whatsoever hath fins and scales, in the waters, in the seas, and
in the rivers, them shall ye eat; some render it
disjunctively, "fins or scales"F16So Bootius. ; but as
MaimonidesF17Hilchot Maacolot Asurot, l. 1. sect. 24. observes,
whatsoever has scales has fins; and who also says, if a fish has but one fin
and one scale, it was lawful to eat: fins to fishes are like wings to birds,
and oars to boats, with which they swim and move swiftly from place to place;
and scales are a covering and a protection of them; and such fishes being much
in motion, and so well covered, are less humid and more solid and substantial,
and more wholesome: in a spiritual sense, fins may denote the exercise of
grace, in which there is a motion of the soul, Godward, Christward, and heavenward;
and scales may signify good works, which adorn believers, and protect them from
the reproaches and calumnies of men.
Leviticus 11:10. 10 But
all in the seas or in the rivers that do not have fins and scales, all that
move in the water or any living thing which is in the water, they are
an abomination to you.
YLT 10and any one that hath not fins and scales in
the seas, and in the brooks, of any teeming creature of the waters, and of any
creature which liveth, which [is] in the waters -- an abomination they [are] to
you;
And all that have not fins nor scales in the seas, and in the
rivers,.... Such as eels, lampreys, &c.
of all that move in the waters, and of any living thing which is
in the waters; the former of these are interpreted by Aben Ezra and Ben Gersom
of little fishes that have but a small body, and such as are created out of the
waters; and the latter, of such as are produced of a male and female; or, as
MaimonidesF18Hilchot Maacolot Asuret, l. 1. c. 2. sect. 12. explains
it, the one signifies the lesser creatures, such as worms and horse leeches;
the other greater ones, sea beasts, as sea dogs, &c.
they shall be an abomination to you; not only unclean, and so
unfit to eat, but to be had in abhorrence and detestation, as being exceeding
disagreeable and unwholesome; and, as a learned man observesF19Scheuchzer.
ut supra, (Physic. Sacr. vol. 2.) p. 287. , to these prohibited in general
belong all those animals in lakes, rivers, or seas, which are of a slow motion,
and which, because of the slow motion of their bodies, do not so well digest
their food; and for that may be compared with four footed beasts that have but
one belly, and so unwholesome as they.
Leviticus 11:11. 11 They shall be an
abomination to you; you shall not eat their flesh, but you shall regard their
carcasses as an abomination.
YLT 11yea, an abomination they are to you; of their
flesh ye do not eat, and their carcase ye abominate.
They shall be even an abomination to you,.... This is
repeated again and again, to deter from the eating of such fishes, lest there
should be any desire after them:
ye shall not eat of their flesh, here mention is made of
the flesh of fishes, as is by the apostle, 1 Corinthians 15:39.
Aben Ezra observes, that their wise men say, this is according to the usage of
words in those ages:
but you shall have their carcasses in abomination; not only
abstain from eating them and touching them, but to express the utmost aversion
to them.
Leviticus 11:12. 12 Whatever
in the water does not have fins or scales—that shall be an abomination
to you.
YLT 12`Any one that hath not fins and scales in the
waters -- an abomination it [is] to you.
Whatsoever hath no fins nor scales in the waters,.... Which is
repeated that they might take particular notice of this law, and be careful to
observe it, this being the only sign given:
that shall be an abomination unto you; the Targum of
Jonathan says, that not only the flesh of such fish, but the broth, and pickles
made of them, were to be an abomination; which contradicts what PlinyF20Nat.
Hist. l. 31. c. 8. relates, that the Jews made a pickle of fishes that lacked
scales; so Grotius understands him: this law of the Jews is taken notice of by
PorphyryF21De Abstinentia, l. 4. c. 14. , who says, it is forbidden
all the Jews to eat horse flesh, or fishes that lack scales, or any animal that
has but one hoof: and PlinyF23Nat. Hist. l. 32. c. 2. , from an
ancient author, Cassius Hemina, makes mention of a law of Numa, forbidding the
use of fish that had not scales, in feasts made for the gods.
Leviticus 11:13. 13 ‘And
these you shall regard as an abomination among the birds; they shall not be
eaten, they are an abomination: the eagle, the vulture, the buzzard,
YLT 13`And these ye do abominate of the fowl; they
are not eaten, an abomination they [are]: the eagle, and the ossifrage, and the
ospray,
And these are they which ye shall have in abomination among
the fowls,.... No description or sign is given of fowls, as of beasts and
fishes, only the names of those not to be eaten; which, according to
Maimonides, are twenty four; so that all the rest but these are clean fowls,
and might be eaten; wherefore the same writer observesF24Maacolot
Asurot, c. 1. sect. 14, 15. , that,"whoever was expert in these kinds, and
in their names, might eat of every fowl which was not of them, and there was no
need of an inquiry:'but what creatures are intended by these is not now easy to
know; very different are the sentiments both of the Jews and Christians
concerning them; and indeed it does not much concern us Christians to know what
are meant by them, but as curiosity may lead us to such an inquiry, not
thinking ourselves bound by these laws; but it is of moment with the Jews to
know them, who think they are; wherefore, to supply this deficiency, they
venture to give some signs by which clean and unclean fowls may be known, and
they are three; such are clean who have a superfluous claw, and also a craw,
and a crop that is uncovered by the handF25T. Bab. Cholin, fol. 75.
1. Maimon. ib. sect. 15. ; and on the contrary they are unclean, and not to be
eaten, as says the Targum of Jonathan, which have no superfluous talon, or no
craw, or a crop not uncovered:
they shall not be eaten, they are an abomination; and they are
those that follow:
the eagle, and the ossifrage, and the ospray; about the
first of these there is no difficulty, all agree the eagle is intended; which
has its name either from the nature of its sight, or from the casting of its
feathers, or from its tearing with its bill: it is a bird of prey, a very
rapacious creature, and sometimes called the bird of Jupiter, and sacred to the
gods; and these may be the reasons why forbid to be eaten, as well as because
its flesh is hard, and not fit for food, and unwholesome; "the
ossifrage" or "bone breaker" has its name from its tearing its
prey and breaking its bones for the marrow, as the word "peres" here
used signifies, Micah 3:3 it is
said to dig up bodies in burying places to eat what it finds in the bonesF26Calmet's
Dictionary in the word "Ossifraga". : this is thought to be of the
eagle kind, as it is reckoned by PlinyF1Nat. Hist. l. 10. c. 3. ,
though AristotleF2Hist. Animal. l. 6. c. 6. l. 8. c. 3. & l. 9.
c. 34. speaks of it as very different from the eagle, as larger than that, and
of an ash colour; and is so kind to the eagle's young, that when they are cast
out by that, it takes them and brings them up: the "ospray" is the
"halioeetus", or sea eagle, as the Septuagint version and several
others render it; which AristotleF3Ib. l. 9. c. 32. describes as
having a large and thick neck, crooked wings, and a broad tail, and resides
about the sea and shores: PlinyF4Ut supra. (Nat. Hist. l. 10. c. 3.)
speaks of it as having a very clear sight, and, poising itself on high, having
sight of a fish in the sea, will rush down at once and fetch it out of the
water; and he also reports that she will take her young before they are
fledged, and oblige them to look directly against the rays of the sun, and if
any of them wink, or their eyes water, she casts them out of her nest as a
spurious brood. AristotleF5Ib. c. 34. , who relates the same, says
she kills them. The name of this creature, in the Hebrew text, seems to be
taken from its strength; wherefore BochartF6Hierozoic. par. 2. l. 2.
c. 6. col. 188. is of opinion, that the "melanoeetos", or black
eagle, which, though the least of eagles as to its size, exceeds all others in
strength, as both AristotleF7Ut supra, (Hist. Animal. l. 9.) c. 32.
and PlinyF8Ut supra. (Nat. Hist. l. 10. c. 3.) say; and therefore,
as the latter observes, is called by the Romans "valeria", from its
strength. MaimonidesF9Maacolot Asurot, c. 1. sect. 17. says of these
two last fowls, which we render the ossifrage and the ospray, that they are not
to be found on the continent, but in the desert places of the isles of the sea
very far off, even those which are at the end of the habitable world.
Leviticus 11:14. 14 the
kite, and the falcon after its kind;
YLT 14and the vulture, and the kite after its kind,
And the vulture, and the kite after his kind. Perhaps it
might be better if the version was inverted, and the words be read, "and
the kite, and the vulture, after his kind"; and the last word is by us
rendered the vulture in Job 28:7 and very
rightly, since the kite is not remarkable for its sight, any other than all
rapacious creatures are, whereas the vulture is to a proverb; and besides, of
the vulture there are two sorts, as Aristotle saysF11Hist. Animal.
l. 8. c. 3. , the one lesser and whiter, the other larger and more of an ash
colour; and there are some that are of the eagle kindF12Aristot. ib.
l. 9. c. 32. Plin. Nat. Hist. l. 10. c. 3. Aelian. de Animal. l. 2. c. 46. ,
whereas there is but one sort of kites; though Ainsworth makes mention of two,
the greater of a ruddy colour, common in England, and the lesser of a blacker
colour, known in Germany, but produces no authority for it; however, these are
both ravenous creatures: of the kite, Aelianus saysF13De Animal. l.
2. c. 42. , it is very rapacious, and will take meat out of the meat market,
but not touch any sacrificed to Jupiter; the truth of which may well be
questioned; and of vultures he reportsF14Ib. c. 46. , that they will
watch a dying man, and follow armies going to battle, expecting prey; See Gill
on Matthew 24:28.
Leviticus 11:15. 15 every
raven after its kind,
YLT 15every raven after its kind,
Every raven after his kind. The red raven, night
raven, the water raven, river raven, wood raven, &c. this also includes
crows, rooks, pies, jays, and jackdaws, &c. The raven was with the Heathens
sacred to ApolloF15Aelian. De Animal. l. 1. c. 48. & l. 7. c.
18. , is a voracious creature, and so reckoned among unclean ones, and unfit
for food; nor does the care that God takes of these creatures, or the use he
has made of them, contradict this; see Job 38:41.
Leviticus 11:16. 16 the
ostrich, the short-eared owl, the sea gull, and the hawk after its kind;
YLT 16and the owl, and the night-hawk, and the
cuckoo, and the hawk after its kind,
And the owl,.... The great and little owls being after mentioned, it seems
best, by the word here used, to understand the "ostrich" with the
Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, the Oriental versions, and the Targums of Onkelos
and Jonathan: the account which PlinyF16Nat. Hist. l. 10. c. 1. Vid.
Aristot. de Part. Animal. l. 4. c. 14. gives of the African and Ethiopic
ostriches is this; that they are the largest of birds, and almost of the kind
of beasts; that they exceed the height of a horseman on horseback, and are
swifter than the horses; that their wings are given them to help them in their
running, otherwise they are not flying fowls, nor are they lifted up from the
earth. Their hoofs are like to those of harts, with which they fight, and are
cloven, and serve to gather up stones, which in their flight they throw with
their feet against them that follow them; they have a wonderful concoction,
digesting whatever is swallowed down; and, according to GalenF17Apud
Bochart. Hierozoic. par. 2. l. 2. c. 14. col. 226. , all the parts of them,
their flesh and their eggs, are hard and difficult of digestion, and
excermentitious: Aben Ezra saysF18Pirush in Exod. xxiii. 19. , their
flesh is as dry as a stick, and it is not usual to eat it, for there is no
moisture in it; and therefore nothing can be eaten of the whole species, but
the daughter or young one, for that being a female and little, there is some
moisture in it; but not so the male when little; wherefore as the flesh of this
creature is always reckoned by the Jews as unlawful to be eaten, it may the
rather be supposed to be intended here, since if not here, it cannot be thought
to be any where observed; and yet we find that both the eggs and the flesh of
this creature have been eaten by some people: their eggs with the Indians were
reckoned delicate eating, as AelianusF19De Animal. l. 14. c. 13.
reports; and near the Arabians and Ethiopians were a people, as both Diodorus
SiculusF20Bibliothec. l. 3. p. 162. and StraboF21Geograph.
l. 16. p. 531. relate, who were called Struthophagi, from their living on
ostriches; and they eat them in Peru, where they are commonF23Calmet's
Dictionary in the word "Ostrich". ; and in several parts of Africa,
as Nubia, Numidia, and Lybia, as Leo AfricanusF24Descriptio Africae,
l. 6. p. 601, 605, 613. l. 9. p. 766. relates:
and the night hawk; which, according to PlinyF25Nat.
Hist. l. 10. c. 8. , is sometimes called "cymindis", and is seldom to
be found in woods, sees not so well in the day time, and wages a deadly war
with the eagle, and they are often found joined together: BochartF26Ut
supra, (Apud Bochart. Hierozoic. par. 2. l. 2.) c. 15. col. 235. who thinks
that the female ostrich is meant by the preceding bird, is of opinion that the
male ostrich is meant here, there being no general name in the Hebrew language
to comprehend both sexes:
and the cuckoo; a bird well known by its voice at least:
some have thought it to be the same with the hawk, changing its figure and
voice; but this has been refuted by naturalistsF1Aristot. Hist.
Animal. l. 6. c. 7. Plin. Nat. Hist. l. 10. c. 9. : but though it is here
forbidden to be eaten, yet its young, when fat, are said to be of a grateful
savour by Aristotle: and PlinyF2Ibid. says, no bird is to be
compared to it for the sweetness of its flesh, though perhaps it may not be
here intended: the word is by the Septuagint rendered a "sea gull",
and so it is by Ainsworth, and which is approved of by BochartF3Ut
supra, (Apud Bochart. Hierozoic. par. 2. l. 2. c. 15.) col. 26. :
and the hawk after his kind; a well known bird, of
which, according to AristotleF4Hist. Animal. l. 9. c. 36. , there
are not less than ten sorts: PlinyF5Nat. Hist. l. 10. c. 8. says
sixteen; it has its name in Hebrew from flying, it being a bird that flies very
swiftly; see Job 39:26 the hawk
was a symbol of deity with the Egyptians, and was reverenced and worshipped by
themF6Plutarch. de Iside & Osyr. Strabo. Geograph. l. 17. p.
559, 562. Diodor. Sicul. l. 1. p. 78. Clement. Alex. Stromat. l. 5. p. 566. .
Leviticus 11:17. 17 the
little owl, the fisher owl, and the screech owl;
YLT 17and the little owl, and the cormorant, and
the great owl,
And the little owl, and the cormorant, and the great owl. Ainsworth
translates the words just the reverse, and takes the first word to signify the
great owl, and the last the little one; the great owl may intend the great horn
owl, called sometimes the eagle owl, which is thus described; it is of the size
of a goose, and has large wings, capable of extending to a surprising breadth:
its head is much of the size and figure of that of a cat, and has clusters of
black feathers over the ears, rising to three fingers' height; its eyes are
very large, and the feathers of its rump long, and extremely soft; its eyes have
yellow irises, and its beak black and crooked: it is all over mottled with
white, reddish, and black spots; its legs are very strong, and are hairy down
to the very ends of the toes, their covering being of a whitish brownF7Ray's
Ornithol. p. 63. apud Supplement to Chambers's Dictionary in the word
"Bubo". : and as this is called the great horn owl, others, in
comparison of it, may be called the little owl. Some reckon several species of
owls--there are of three sizes; the large ones are as big as a capon, the
middle sized are as big as a wood pigeon, the smaller sort about the size of an
ordinary pigeon--the horned owl is of two kinds, a larger and a smaller--the
great owl is also of two sorts, that is, of a larger and a smaller kindF8Calmet's
Dictionary in the word "Owl". ; it is a bird sacred to Minerva: but
though it is pretty plain that the last of the words used signifies a bird that
flies in the twilight of the evening, from whence it seems to have its name, as
Aben Ezra, Ben Gersom, and other Jewish writers observe, and fitly agrees with
the owl which is not seen in the day, but appears about that time; yet the
first is thought by BochartF9Ut supra, (Apud Bochard. Heirozoic.
par. 2. l. 2.) c. 20. col. 275. to be the "onocrotalus" or
"pelican", which has under its bill a bag or sack, which will hold a
large quantity of anything; and the word here used has the signification of a
cup or vessel, see Psalm 102:6. The
word we render "cormorant", the Targums of Onkelos and Jonathan
paraphrase it, a drawer of fish out of the sea, so Baal Hatturim; and thus it
is interpreted in the TalmudF11Bab. Cholin, fol. 63. 1. ; and the
gloss upon it says, this is the water raven, which is the same with the
cormorant; for the cormorant is no other than "corvus aquaticus", or
water raven; See Gill on Zephaniah 2:14. The
Septuagint render it by "catarrhactes", which, according to the
description of itF12, resides by rocks and shores that hang over
water; and when it sees fishes swimming in it, it will fly on high, and
contract its feathers, and flounce into the water, and fetch out the fish; and
so is of the same nature, though not the same creature with the cormorant. Aben
Ezra observes, that some say this is a bird which casts its young as soon as
born; and this is said of the "catarrhactes", that it lets down its
young into the sea, and draws them out again, and hereby inures them to this
exerciseF13Ibid. .
Leviticus 11:18. 18 the
white owl, the jackdaw, and the carrion vulture;
YLT 18and the swan, and the pelican, and the gier
eagle,
And the swan,.... This is a bird well known to us, but it
is a question whether it is intended by the word here used; for though it is so
rendered in the Vulgate Latin, it is differently rendered by many others: the
Targums of Jonathan and Jerusalem call it "otia", which seems to be
the same with the "otus" of AristotleF14Hist. Animal. l.
8. c. 12. Vid. Plin. l. 10. c. 23. , who says it is like an owl, having a tuft
of feathers about its ears (from whence it has its name); and some call it
"nycticorax", or the owl; and here, by BochartF15Ut supra,
(Apud Bochard Hierozoic. par. 2. l. 2.) c. 23. , and others, the owl called
"noctua" is thought to be meant; and with which agrees the account
some Jewish writers give of it, as Aben Ezra and Baal Hatturim, who say it is a
bird, which every one that sees is astonished at it, as other birds are at the
owl, are frightened at the sight of it, and stupefied. But as the same word is
used Leviticus 11:30
among the creeping things, for a mole, what Jarchi observes is worthy of
consideration, that this is "calve (chauve) souris" (the French word
for a bat), and is like unto a mouse, and flies in the night; and that which is
spoken of among the creeping things is like unto it, which hath no eyes, and
they call it "talpa", a mole. The Septuagint version renders it by
"porphyrion", the redshank; and so Ainsworth; and is thought to be
called by the Hebrew name in the text, from the blowing of its breath in
drinking; for it drinks biting, as Aristotle saysF16Ut supra, (Hist.
Animal. l. 8.) c. 6. so Plin. l. 10. c. 46. :
and the pelican; which has its name in Hebrew from vomiting;
being said by Aben Ezra and Baal Hatturim to be a bird that vomits its food;
and it is observed by several naturalistsF17Aristot. Hist. Animal.
l. 9. c. 10. Aelian. de Animal. l. 3. c. 20, Plin. Nat. Hist. l. 10. c. 40. ,
of the pelican, that it swallows down shellfish, and after they have lain some
time in its stomach, it vomits them up again; where having been heated, the
shells open, and it picks out the meat:
and the gier eagle; or vulture eagle, the "gypoeetos"
of AristotleF18Hist. Animal. l. 9. c. 32. , and who says it is
called also "oripelargos", or the mountain stork; and which PlinyF19Nat.
Hist. l. 10. c. 3. also makes to be an eagle of the vulture kind. Dr. Shaw saysF20Travels,
p. 449. Ed. 2. , that near Cairo there are several flocks of the "ach bobba"
(white father, differing little from the stork but in its colour), the
"percnopterus" or "oripelargos", which like the ravens
about London feed upon carrion, and nastiness that is thrown without the city;
this the Arabs call "rachama", the same with רחם,
Leviticus 11:18 and
רחמה in Deuteronomy 14:17
and whatever bird is here meant, it must be one that is tender toward its
young, as its name signifies, as Aben Ezra and Baal Hatturim observe; and
though both the eagle and the vulture are rapacious birds, yet have a great
regard to their young; of the eagle see Deuteronomy 32:11
and the vulture, with the Egyptians, was an "hieroglyphic" of a
tender mother, or any merciful person; it being reported of it, that during the
one hundred twenty days its young are under its care, it very rarely flies from
them, being so solicitous of nourishing them; and that by making incisions in
its thigh, it lets out a bloody flow of milk, when it has nothing else to
support themF21. The TalmudistsF23T. Bab. Cholin, fol.
63. 1. say, that the bird "racham", as it is here called, is the same
with "serakrak", and is by the Targum of Jonathan, and in the Syriac
version, here rendered "serakraka", so called from שרק, which signifies to "squall"; and, according
to MunsterF24Dictionar. Chald. p. 4. 18. , is thought by some to be
the "pica", magpie, or rather the jay; and Dr. ShawF25Travels,
p. 183. observes, that by a small transmutation of letters, that and the
"shagarag" of the Arabs are the same; which he says is of the size
and shape of a jay, though with a smaller bill, and shorter legs; the back is
brownish; the head, neck, and belly, of a light green; and upon the wings and
tail there are several spots or ringlets of a deep blue; it makes a
"squalling" noise; and, he adds, it has no small affinity both in
voice and plumage with the jay. The Septuagint version renders the word by the
"swan"; which if not intended by the first word in this text, may by
this, being kind to its young, though otherwise reckoned a cruel and unmerciful
bird, as BochartF26 observes; some think the woodpecker is meant, so
called from its love to its parentsF1Plin. l. 10. c. 33. .
Leviticus 11:19. 19 the
stork, the heron after its kind, the hoopoe, and the bat.
YLT 19and the stork, the heron after its kind, and
the lapwing, and the bat.
And the stork,..... A bird of passage, Jeremiah 8:7 it has
its name from kindness, which it exercises both to its dam, and to its young.
Various writersF2Aristot. Hist. Animal. l. 9. c. 13. Aelian. de
Animal. l. 3. c. 23. & l. 10. c. 16. Plin. Nat. Hist. l. 10. c. 23. speak
of the kindness of these birds to their dams, which when they are old they take
care of and feed them, to which the apostle is thought to allude, 1 Timothy 5:4 and
its tenderness to its young is no less manifest: when the city of Delf in
Holland was on fire, the storks were seen very busy to save their young from
the flames, and which when they could not do, threw themselves into the midst
of them, and perished with them, as Drusius from the Dutch historians relates.
It is said to feed upon serpents; and hence by VirgilF3Georgic. l.
2. to be "invisa colubris"; and JuvenalF4Satyr. 14. says,
it nourishes its young with them; and which may be a reason of its being forbid
to be eaten, and is the reason given by the MahometansF5Apud
Bochart. ut supra, (Hierozoic. par. 2. l. 2.) c. 29. col. 329. for the
prohibition of it; though on this account it was in great honour in Thessaly,
that country being freed from serpents by it, and therefore they made it a
capital crime to kill them, as PlinyF6Ut supra. (Plin. Nat. Hist. l.
10. c. 23.) relates; formerly people would not eat the stork, but at present it
is much esteemed for the deliciousness of its fleshF7Calmet in the
word "Stork". .
the heron after her kind; this bird has its name
in Hebrew from its being soon angry, as Aben Ezra observes; and Jarchi calls it
the angry vulture or kite, as it is in the TalmudF8T. Bab. Cholin,
fol. 63. 1. ; and adds, and it appears to me to be what they call the
"heron", one sort of which named "asterias", as there is
one sort so called by PlinyF9; it becomes tame in Egypt, and so well
understands the voice of a man, as AelianusF11De Animal. l. 5. c.
36. reports, that if anyone by way of reproach calls it a servant or slothful,
it is immediately exceeding angry. There are three kinds of herons, as both
AristotleF12Hist. Animal. l. 9. c. 1. and PlinyF13Ut
supra. (Plin. Nat. Hist. l. 10. c. 23.) ; and by a learned man of oursF14Ainsworth's
Dictionary, in voce "Ardea". , their names are thus given, the criel
or dwarf heron, the blue heron, and the bittour; some reckon nineteen:
and the lapwing; the upupa or hoopoe; it has its name in Hebrew,
according to Jarchi, from its having a double crest; and so PlinyF15Nat.
Hist. l. 10. c. 29. ascribes to it a double or folded crest, and speaks of it
as a filthy bird; and, according to AristotleF16Hist. Animal. l. 9.
c. 15. and AelianF17De Animal. l. 3. c. 26. , its nest is chiefly
made of human dung, that by the ill smell of it men may be kept from taking its
young; and therefore may well be reckoned among impure fowl. CalmetF18Dictionary,
in the word "Lapwing". says, there is no such thing as a lapwing to
be seen in any part of England; but there are such as we call so, whether the
same bird with this I cannot say:
and the bat; a little bird which flies in the night, Aben Ezra says; KimchiF19Sepher
Shorash. in voc. עטלף. describes it a mouse with wings,
which flies in the night, and we sometimes call it the "flitter
mouse"; it is a creature between a fowl and a beast; and, as Aristotle
saysF20De Part. Animal. l. 4. c. 13. , it partakes of both, and is
of neither; and it is the only fowl, as PlinyF21Nat. Hist. l. 10. c.
61. l. 11. c. 37. observes, that has teeth and teats, that brings forth
animals, and nourishes them with milk. It is a creature so very disagreeable,
that one would think almost there was no need of a law to forbid the eating of
it; and yet it is said by some to be eatable, and to be eaten, as StraboF23Geograph.
l. 16. affirms, yea, to be delicious food. It is assertedF24Calmet's
Dictionary in the word "Bat". , that there is a sort of them in the
east, larger than ordinary, and is salted and eaten--that there are bats in
China as large as pullets, and are as delicate eating. Of these several fowls
before mentioned, some are of the ravenous kind, and are an emblem of
persecutors and covetous persons, and such as live by rapine and violence;
others are of a lustful nature, and are an emblem of those who serve various
lusts and pleasures, and give up themselves to uncleanness; others are night
birds, and are a proper emblem of them whose works are works of darkness, and
love darkness rather than the light; and others never rise higher than the
earth, and so may denote earthly minded persons; and others live on impure
things, and so fitly represent such who live an impure life; with all such the
people of God are to have no fellowship.
Leviticus 11:20. 20 ‘All
flying insects that creep on all fours shall be an abomination to
you.
YLT 20`Every teeming creature which is flying,
which is going on four -- an abomination it [is] to you.
All fowls that creep,.... Or rather
"every creeping thing that flies"; for what are designed are not
properly fowls, but, as the Jewish writers interpret them, flies, fleas, bees,
wasps, hornets, locusts, &c. so the Targum of Jonathan, Jarchi, Ben Gersom,
and MaimonidesF25Maacolot Asurot, c. 2. l. 5. :
going upon all four; that is, upon their four
feet, when they walk or creep:
these shall be an abomination
to you; not used as food, but detested as such.
Leviticus 11:21. 21 Yet
these you may eat of every flying insect that creeps on all fours: those
which have jointed legs above their feet with which to leap on the earth.
YLT 21`Only -- this ye do eat of any teeming thing
which is flying, which is going on four, which hath legs above its feet, to
move with them on the earth;
Yet these may ye eat,.... Which are after
described and named:
of every flying creeping thing that goeth upon all four; even though
it is a creeping thing that flies and goes upon four feet, provided they be
such:
which have legs above their feet, to leap withal upon the earth; there is a
double reading of this clause; the textual reading is, "which have not
legs", and is followed by several interpreters and translators; and the
marginal reading, which we follow, is, "which have legs"; and both
are to be regarded as true, and written by Moses, as Ainsworth observes; for
locusts are born without legs, and yet creep low, as Pliny assertsF26Nat.
Hist. l. 11. c. 29. , and they have them afterwards; and it is a canon of the
Jews, that what have not legs or wings now, or have not wings to cover the
greatest part of them, but shall have after a time when grown up, these are as
free (to eat) now, as when grown upF1Maimon. ib. c. 1. sect. 23. .
Dr. Shaw thinksF2Travels, p. 420. the words may bear this
construction, "which have knees upon" or "above their hinder
legs, to leap withal upon the earth"; and applying this to the locust
afterwards, and only instanced in, he observes, that this has the two
hindermost of its legs and feet much stronger, larger, and longer than any of
the foremost. In them the knee, or the articulation of the leg and thigh, is
distinguished by a remarkable bending or curvature, whereby it is able,
whenever prepared, to jump, to spring, or raise itself up with great force and
activity. And these AristotleF3De Part. Animal. l. 4. c. 6. calls
the leaping parts; and though he attributes to the locust six feet, as does
also PlinyF4Nat. Hist. l. 11. c. 48. , yet he takes the two leaping
parts into the account; whereas Moses distinguishes those two from the four
feet; and so AustinF5Retract. l. 2. c. 15. observes, that Moses does
not reckon among the feet the two hinder thighs with which locusts leap, which
he calls clean, and thereby distinguishes them from such unclean flying
creatures which do not leap with their thighs, such as beetles; and so the
Jewish writers always describe a clean locust as having four feet, and two
legs, thighs, or knees. MaimonidesF6Maacolot Asurot, c. 1. sect. 22.
gives three signs of them, which are these, whatsoever has four feet and four
wings, which cover the greatest part of its body in length, and the greatest part
of the compass of it, and has two thighs or knees to leap with, they are of the
clean kind; and although its head is long, and it hath a tail, if its name is
"chagob" (a locust) it is clean.
Leviticus 11:22. 22 These
you may eat: the locust after its kind, the destroying locust after its kind,
the cricket after its kind, and the grasshopper after its kind.
YLT 22these of them ye do eat: the locust after its
kind, and the bald locust after its kind, and the beetle after its kind, and
the grasshopper after its kind;
Even these of them
ye may eat, &c. The four following ones, which seem to be no other than
four sorts of locusts:
the locust after his kind; this is the common
locust, called by the name of Arbeh, from the great multiplication and vast
multitudes of them; the phrase, "after his kind", and which also is
used in all the following instances, signifies the whole entire species of
them, which might be eaten:
and the bald locust after his kind; which in the Hebrew text
is Soleam, and has its name, as Aben Ezra suggests, from its ascending rocks:
but since locusts do not climb rocks, or have any peculiar regard for them,
rather this kind of locust may be so called, from their devouring and consuming
all that come in their wayF7So R. Sol. Urbin. Ohel Moed, fol. 88. 1.
, from the Chaldee word סלעם, which signifies to
swallow, devour, and consume; but why we should call it the bald locust is not
so clear, though it seems there were such, since the Jews describe some that
have no baldness, which the gloss explains, whose head is not baldF8T.
Bab. Cholin, fol. 65. 2. , which shows that some are bald; and so, this is
described by KimchiF9Sepher Shorash. in voc. סלעם.
, it has an eminence, a rising, or bunch upon it; some render it baldness, and
it hath no tail, and its head is long; and so Ben Melech:
and the beetle after his kind; which is another sort of
locust called Chargol, and should not be rendered a beetle, for no sort of
beetles are eatable, nor have legs to leap withal, and so come not under the
general description given of such flying, creeping things, fit to eat: Kimchi
says it is one kind of a locustF11Ib. in voc. חרגול.
, and Hiscuni derives its name from תחד and רגל, because it strives to leap with its feet, which
answers to the above descriptive character: the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin
versions, and some others, render it by Ophiomachus, a fighter with serpents,
to which the locust is an enemy, and kills them, taking fast hold of their
jaws, as Pliny saysF12Ut supra. (Nat. Hist. l. 11. c. 29.) , and so
AristotleF13Hist. Animal. l. 9. c. 6. :
and the grasshopper after his kind; this is another, and the
fourth kind of the locust that might be eaten; its name is Chagab, from the
Arabic word Chaguba, "to vail", locusts vailing the light of the sun:
and according to the Jewish doctors, it is a name which every locust fit to eat
should have;"among the locusts (fit for food) are these, who have four
feet, and four wings and thighs, and wings covering the greatest part of them,
and whose name is ChagabF14Misn. Cholin, c. 3. sect. 7. ;'and
commentators sayF15Maimon. & Bartenora in ib. , it must be
called by this name, as well as have those signs: the difference between these
several sorts is with them this; the Chagab has a tail, but no bunch; Arbeh
neither bunch nor tail; and Soleam has a bunch, but not a tail; and Chargol has
both bunch and tailF16Vid. T. Bab. Cholin, fol. 65. 2. : MaimonidesF17Maacolot
Asurot, c. 1. sect. 21. reckons up eight sorts of them fit to eat; and these
creatures were not only eaten by the Jews, but by several other nations: with
the Parthians they were very agreeable and grateful food, as PlinyF18Nat.
Hist. l. 11. c. 29. relates; who also saysF19Ib. l. 6. c. 30. , that
some part of the Ethiopians live only upon them all the year, hardened in
smoke, and with salt: Diodorus SiculusF20Bibliothec. l. 3. p.
162,163. makes mention of the same, and calls them Acridophagi, locust eaters,
and gives a particular account of their hunting and taking them, and preserving
them for food; and so does StraboF21Geograph. l. 16. p. 531. ; and
the same SolinusF23Polyhistor. c. 43. relates of those that border
on Mauritania; and they are still eaten in Barbary, where they dry them in
ovens to preserve them, and then either eat them alone, or pounded and mixed
with milk: their taste is said to be like shrimpsF24Sir Hans
Sloane's Natural History of Jamaica, vol. 1. p. 29. ; and BochartF25Hierozoic.
par. 2. l. 4. c. 7. Colossians 490,491. has shown,
from various writers, that they were a delicious food with the Greeks,
especially among the common people; and so they are with the IndiansF26Agreement
of Customs of the East Indians and Jews, art. 12. p. 60. .
Leviticus 11:23. 23 But
all other flying insects which have four feet shall be an
abomination to you.
YLT 23and every teeming thing which is flying,
which hath four feet -- an abomination it [is] to you.
But all other flying creeping things,.... Excepting
the four sorts before mentioned, wherefore we rightly supply the word
"other":
which have four feet; or more; the Vulgate
Latin version adds, "only", but wrongly; for those that have more are
unclean, and forbidden to be eaten, excepting those in the preceding verse; and
most creeping things that fly have six feet, as the locusts themselves,
reckoning their leaping legs into the number; though it may be observed, that
those creatures that have six feet have but four equal ones, on which they walk
or creep; and the two foremost, which are longer, are as hands to them to wipe
their eyes with, and protect them from anything that may fall into them and
hurt them; they not being able to see clearly because of the hardness of their
eyes, as AristotleF1Ut supra. (Hist. Animal. l. 9. c. 6.) observes,
and particularly it may be remarked of the fly, as it is by LucianF2De
Musca. , that though it has six feet it only goes on four, using the other two
foremost as hands; and therefore you may see it walking on four feet, with
something eatable in its hands, lifting them up on high, just after the manner
of men: now all such creatures that have four feet or more, excepting the
above:
shall be an abomination
unto you; abhorred as food, and abstained from.
Leviticus 11:24. 24 ‘By
these you shall become unclean; whoever touches the carcass of any of them
shall be unclean until evening;
YLT 24`And by these ye are made unclean, any one
who is coming against their carcase is unclean till the evening;
And for these ye shalt be unclean,.... That is, for eating
them; or should they eat them they would be unclean:
whosoever toucheth the carcass of them shall be unclean until the
even; not only he was unclean that ate them, but he that even touched
their dead bodies was reckoned unclean; might not go into the tabernacle, nor
have conversation with men, nor eat of the holy things, which were forbid men
in any uncleanness; and though there is no mention of his washing himself, it
may be understood, this being a short or concise way of speaking, as Aben Ezra
observes; who adds, that it was necessary that he should wash himself in water;
which was typical of washing and cleansing by the grace and blood of Christ,
without which a man cannot be cleansed from the least sin, and pollution by it;
and may signify that during the legal dispensation there was no proper
cleansing from sin, until the evening of the world, when Christ came and shed
his blood for the cleansing of it.
Leviticus 11:25. 25 whoever
carries part of the carcass of any of them shall wash his clothes and be
unclean until evening:
YLT 25and anyone who is lifting up [aught] of their
carcase doth wash his garments, and hath been unclean till the evening: --
And whosoever beareth ought of the carcass of them,.... That
carries them from one place to another, out of the camp, city, village, or
house or field where they may lie; and though this is done with a good design,
as being offensive or infectious, yet such an one
shall wash his clothes, and be unclean until the even; from whence
both Jarchi and Aben Ezra infer, that the pollution by hearing or carrying is
greater than that by touching; since such a man, so defiled, was obliged to
wash his clothes as well as his body; so saints, that have contracted pollution
by any manner of sin, are to wash their garments and make them white in the
blood of the Lamb, Revelation 7:14.
Leviticus 11:26. 26 The carcass of any animal which
divides the foot, but is not cloven-hoofed or does not chew the cud, is
unclean to you. Everyone who touches it shall be unclean.
YLT 26even every beast which is dividing the hoof,
and is not cloven-footed, and the cud is not bringing up -- unclean they [are]
to you; any one who is coming against them is unclean.
The carcasses of every beast
which divideth the hoof, and is not cloven footed,.... As the
camel:
nor cheweth the cud; though it may divide the
hoof, as the swine; and on the other hand, such as may chew the cud, and yet
not dividing the hoof, as the coney and hare; for the Scripture here, as Aben
Ezra observes again, uses a short and concise way of speaking: these
are unclean unto you; to be
reckoned by them such, and neither to be eaten nor touched:
everyone that toucheth them shall be unclean; until the
evening; and obliged to washing, though not expressed: this is not to be
understood of touching them while alive, as some Sadducees or Karaites
understand it, according to Aben Ezra; for camels, horses, mules, &c. might
be, and were rode upon, and so touched; but of them when dead, or their
carcases, as is rightly supplied in the beginning of the verse; and the Jewish
writersF3Misn. Edaiot, c. 6. sect. 3. & Maimon. & Bartenora
in ib. understand this of the flesh of the carcass only, not of the bones,
horns, and hoofs, which, they say, do not defile, only the flesh: this is
repeated from Leviticus 11:8.
Leviticus 11:27. 27 And
whatever goes on its paws, among all kinds of animals that go on all
fours, those are unclean to you. Whoever touches any such carcass shall
be unclean until evening.
YLT 27`And any one going on its paws, among all the
beasts which are going on four -- unclean they [are] to you; any one who is
coming against their carcase is unclean until the evening;
Whatsoever goeth upon his paws,.... Or "the
palms"F4על כפיו
"super volas suas", Pagninus, Montanus, "super manus suas",
Munster, Tigurine version, Drusius. of his hands; meaning such creatures, whose
feet are not divided into two parts, but into many, like the fingers of an
hand, as apes, lions, bears, wolves, foxes, dogs, cats, &c.
among all manner of beasts that go on all four; this is
added, to distinguish them from fowl, such as are clean; who walk but on two
feet, though their feet are divided into fingers or talons, and may be called
hands on which they walk:
these are unclean unto you: and as they might not be
eaten, so neither touched, as follows:
whoso toucheth their carcass shall be unclean until the even; See Gill on Leviticus 11:24.
Leviticus 11:28. 28 Whoever
carries any such carcass shall wash his clothes and be unclean until
evening. It is unclean to you.
YLT 28and he who is lifting up their carcase doth
wash his garments, and hath been unclean until the evening -- unclean they
[are] to you.
And he that beareth the carcass of them,.... Carries
it upon any account, from place to place:
shall wash his clothes, and be unclean until the even; as he that
bore the carcasses of any of the flying creeping things, Leviticus 11:25.
they are unclean to you; even the carcasses of
the one and of the other; and to all the Israelites, men, women, and children,
as Aben Ezra observes.
Leviticus 11:29. 29 ‘These
also shall be unclean to you among the creeping things that creep on the
earth: the mole, the mouse, and the large lizard after its kind;
YLT 29`And this [is] to you the unclean among the
teeming things which are teeming on the earth: the weasel, and the mouse, and
the tortoise after its kind,
These also shall be unclean unto you among the creeping
things that creep upon the earth,.... As distinguished
from those creeping things that fly, these having no wings as they; and which
were equally unclean, neither to be eaten nor touched, neither their blood,
their skin, nor their flesh, as the Targum of Jonathan paraphrases it: and the
Misnic doctors sayF4Misn. Meilah, c. 4. sect. 3. that the blood of a
creeping thing and its flesh are joined together: and MaimonidesF5Pirush.
in ib. observes, that this is a fundamental thing with them, that the blood of
a creeping thing is like its flesh; which in Siphre (an ancient book of theirs)
is gathered from what is said in Leviticus 11:29
"these shall be unclean", &c. hence the wise men say, the blood
of a creeping thing pollutes as its flesh: the creeping things intended are as
follow:
the weasel, and the mouse, and the tortoise after his kind; the first of
these, "the weasel", a creature well known; there are two sorts of
it, as PlinyF6Nat. Hist. l. 29. c. 4. says, the field weasel, and
the house weasel; the former are called by the Jewish writers the weasel of the
bushesF7Misn. Celaim, c. 8. sect. 5. , and the latter the weasel
that dwells in the foundations of housesF8T. Bab. Cholin, fol. 20.
2. ; and of the former there was a doubt among some of them whether it was a
species of the eight reptiles in Leviticus 11:29 or
whether it was a species of animalsF9Maimon. in Misn. ib. ; and
which, Maimonides says, is a species of foxes like to weasels: BochartF11Hierozoic.
par. 1. l. 3. c. 95. col. 1022. thinks the mole is intended; but the generality
of interpreters understand it of the weasel; and so Jarchi and Kimchi, and
Philip AquinasF12Sepher Shorash. & Aquinas in rad. חלד. , interpret it by "mustela", the weasel:
however, all agree the second is rightly interpreted "the mouse";
which has its name in Hebrew from its being a waster and destroyer of fields;
an instance of which we have in 1 Samuel 6:5; see
Gill on 1 Samuel 6:5; so
that this sort may be chiefly intended, though it includes all others, who are
distinguished by their colours, the black, the red, and the white, which are
all mentioned by Jonathan in his paraphrase of the text: this animal, as a
learned physicianF13Scheuchzer. Physic. Sacr. vol. 2. p. 307.
expresses it, eats almost everything, gnaws whatever it meets with, and, among
other things, is a great lover of swine's flesh, which was an abomination to
the Jews; nor does it abstain from dung, and therefore it is no wonder it
should be reckoned among impure creatures; and yet we find they were eaten by
some people, see Isaiah 66:17
especially the dormouse; for which the old Romans made conveniences to keep
them in, and feed them, and breed them for the tableF14Varro de re
Rustic. l. 3. c. 14. apud Sir Hans Sloane's History of Jamaica, vol. 1.
Introduct. p. 24. : so rats in the West Indies are brought to market and sold
for food, as a learned authorF15Sir Hans Sloane, ib. p. 25. of
undoubted credit assures us, who was an eyewitness of it: the last in this
text, "the tortoise", means the land tortoise; it has its name from
the shell with which it is covered, this word being sometimes used for a
covered wagon, Numbers 7:3 there
are various kinds of them, as PlinyF16Nat. Hist. l. 9. c. 10. &
l. 32. c. 4. and other writers observe, and who, as StraboF17Geograph.
l. 16. p. 532. and MelaF18De Situ Orbis, l. 3. c. 8. also, speak of
a people they call Chelonophagi, or tortoise eaters: a tortoise of the land
kind is esteemed a very delicate dish: Dr. ShawF19Travels, p. 178. ,
speaking of the land and water tortoises in Barbary, says, the former, which
hides itself during the winter months, is very palatable food, but the latter
is very unwholesome: the Septuagint version renders it, the "land
crocodile", which, is approved of by BochartF20Ut supra,
(Hierozoic. par. 1.) l. 4. c. 1. : and Leo Africanus saysF21Descriptio
Africae, l. 9. p. 762. , that many in Egypt eat the flesh of the crocodile, and
affirm it to be of good savour; and so BenzonF23Nov. Orb. Hist. c.
3. says, its flesh is white and tender, and tastes like veal; though some among
them, as StraboF24Geograph. l. 17. p. 558, 560, 561, 563. asserts,
have a great antipathy and hatred to them; and others worship them as gods, and
neither can be supposed to eat them; the land crocodiles are eaten by the
Syrians, as JeromF25Adv. Jovin. l. 2. affirms, for those feeding on
the sweetest flowers, as is said, their entrails are highly valued for their
agreeable odour: Jarchi says, it is a creature like a frog; he means a toad; so
Philip Aquinas and many render the word: Dr. Shaw takes the creature designed
to be the sharp-scaled tailed lizardF26Ut supra. Travels, p. 178 .
Leviticus 11:30. 30 the
gecko, the monitor lizard, the sand reptile, the sand lizard, and the
chameleon.
YLT 30and the ferret, and the chameleon, and the lizard,
and the snail, and the mole;
And the ferret,.... Whatever creature is here meant, it has
its name in Hebrew from the cry it makes; and so the ferret has but one note in
its voice, which is a shrill, but small, whining cry: it is used to drive
rabbits out of their holes: the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions render
the word by "mygale", the weasel mouse, or "mus areneus" of
the Latins, the shrew or shrew mouse: it has something of the mouse and weasel,
from whence it has its name in Greek, being of the size of the one, and the
colour of the other: but BochartF2 is of opinion, that a sort of
lizard called "stellio", an evet or newt, is meant; one sort of
which, according to PlinyF3, makes a bitter noise and screaking:
and the chameleon; this is a little
creature like a lizard, but with a larger and longer head; it has four feet,
and on each foot three claws; its tail is long; with this, as well as with its
feet, it fastens itself to the branches of trees; its tail is flat, its nose
long, and made in an obtuse point; its back is sharp, its skin plaited and
jagged like a saw, from the neck to the last joint of the tail, and upon its
head it hath something like a comb; in other respects it is made like a fish;
that is to say, it has no neckF4; what is said of its living on air,
and changing colour according to what it is applied, are now reckoned vulgar
mistakes: but whatever creature is here meant, it seems to have its name in
Hebrew from its strength, wherefore BochartF5 takes the
"guaril" or "alwarlo" of the Arabs to be meant; which is
the stoutest and strongest sort of lizard, and is superior in strength to
serpents, and the land tortoise, with which it often contends:
and the lizard; so Jarchi interprets the word by a
"lizard"; it has a larger letter than usual in it, that this creature
might be taken notice of, and guarded against as very pernicious, and yet with
some people it is eaten: Calmet saysF6, there are several sorts of
lizards, which are well known: there are some in Arabia of a cubit long, but in
the Indies there are some, they say, of twenty four feet in length: in America,
where they are very good, they eat them: one lizard is enough to satisfy four
men: and so in the West Indies, says Sir Hans SloaneF7, I was
somewhat surprised to see serpents, rats, and lizards sold for food, and that
to understanding people, and of a very good and nice palate; and elsewhereF8,
he says, all nations inhabiting these parts of the world (the West Indies) do
the same: "Guanes" or "lizards" are very common in Jamaica,
and eaten there, and were of great use when the English first took this island,
being, as I was assured, says he, commonly sold by the first planters for half
a crown apiece: Dr. ShawF9 says, that he was informed that more than
40,000 persons in Cairo, and in the neighbourhood, live upon no other food than
lizards and serpents, though he thinksF11, because the chameleon is
called by the Arabs "taitah", which differs little in name from לטאה, "letaah", here; that therefore that, which
is indeed a species of the lizard, might, with more propriety, be substituted
for it:
and the snail; so the word is rendered by Jarchi, on the
place, and by Kimchi, and Philip Aquinas, and David de Pomis, in their
lexicons; and these creatures, though forbid to the Jews, yet are not only used
for medicine, but also for food by many: snails of several kinds, we are told,
are eaten with much satisfaction in Italy and France: in Silesia they make
places for the breeding of them at this day, where they are fed with turnip
tops, &c. and carefully preserved for the market; and the Romans took care
of them in the same mannerF12: BochartF13 thinks a kind
of lizard is meant, which lies in sand, called by the Arabs "chulaca",
or "luchaca", because the word here used signifies, in the TalmudicF14
language, sandy ground:
and the mole; and so it is interpreted by Onkelos and
Jarchi here, and by David de Pomis, and Philip Aquinas, in their lexicons: the
same word is used for a certain sort of fowl, which we translate the
"swan"; Leviticus 11:18 but
here of a creeping thing: whatever is intended by it, it seems to have its name
from its breath; either in a contrary signification, if understood of the mole,
which either holds its breath, or breathes not while under ground; or from its
breathing more freely, wherefore BochartF15 takes it to be the
"chameleon"; which, as PlinyF16 says, is always gaping
with its mouth for air; and it has been a vulgar notion, though a wrong one,
that it lives upon it: the Targum of Jonathan interprets it by the
"salamander"; now whoever ate any of the above eight creeping things,
according to the Jewish canons, was to be beatenF17.F2 Ut
supra, (Hierozoic. par. 1.) l. 4. c. 2.F3 Nat. Hist. l. 29. c. 4.F4
Calmet, in the word "Chameleon".F5 Ut supra, (Hierozoic.
par. 1. l. 4.) c. 3.F6 Dictionary, in the word "Lizard",
Vid. Hieron. adv. Jovinian. l. 2.F7 Natural History of Jamaica, vol.
1. Introduct. p. 25.F8 Ibid. vol. 2. p. 333.F9 Travels,
p. 412.F11 Ibid. p. 178.F12 Sir Hans Sloane's Nat. Hist.
ib. p. 23, 24.F13 Ut supra,F5) c. 5.F14 T.
Bab. Sabbat, fol. 31. 1. Gloss. in fol. 54. 1.F15 Ut supra, (Hierozoic.
par. 1. l. 4.) c. 6.F16 Nat. Hist. l. 8. c. 33.F17
Maimon. Maacolot Asurot, c. 2. sect. 7.
Leviticus 11:31. 31 These are unclean
to you among all that creep. Whoever touches them when they are dead shall be
unclean until evening.
YLT 31these [are] the unclean to you among all
which are teeming; any one who is coming against them in their death is unclean
till the evening.
These are unclean to you of all that creep,.... Unfit for
food, and not to be touched, at least when dead, as in the next clause, that
is, these eight sorts of creeping things before mentioned, as the Targum of
Jonathan expresses it, and these only, as Maimonides saysF18:
whosoever doth touch them when they are dead shall be unclean
until the even; for touching them while alive did not defile, only when dead;
and this the Jews interpret, while they are in the case in which they died,
that is, while they are moist; for, as Ben Gersom says, if they are so dry, as
that they cannot return to their moisture, they do not defile; for which
reason, neither the bones, nor nails, nor nerves, nor skin of these creeping
things, defile; but, they sayF19, while the back bone is whole, and
the bones cleave to it, then a creeping thing is reckoned moist, and while it
is so it defiles.F18 Hilchot, Abot Hatumaot, c. 4. sect. 14.F19
Maimon. & Bartenora in Misn. Niddah, c. 7. sect. 1.
Leviticus 11:32. 32 Anything
on which any of them falls, when they are dead shall be unclean, whether
it is any item of wood or clothing or skin or sack, whatever item it
is, in which any work is done, it must be put in water. And it shall
be unclean until evening; then it shall be clean.
YLT 32`And anything on which any one of them
falleth, in their death, is unclean, of any vessel of wood or garment or skin
or sack, any vessel in which work is done is brought into water, and hath been
unclean till the evening, then it hath been clean;
And upon whatsoever any of them, when they are dead, doth
fall, it shall be unclean,.... Any of the above eight creeping things,
that is, of their flesh, for as for their bones, nails, nerves, and skin, as
before observed, being separated from them and dry, they do not defile:
whether it be any vessel of wood, or raiment, or skin, or
sack; every wooden vessel, as the Targum of Jonathan; and all sorts of
clothes, of woollen, linen, or silk, and all sorts of skins, excepting skins of
sea beasts; for these, according to the JewsF20, received no
pollution; and also sacks or sackcloth, made of goats' hair, and the like:
whatsoever vessel it be, wherein any work is done; any tool or
instrument made use of by any artificer in his trade, or any vessel wrought by
him:
it must be put into water; dipped into it, even
into forty seahs of water, according to the Targum of Jonathan; and which is to
be understood, not of any working tool, or finished vessel only, but of any
vessel of wood, raiment, skin, or sack, before mentioned:
it shall be unclean until the even; even though put into
water and washed:
so it shall be cleansed; in the above manner, by
being put or dipped into water; or "afterwards", as the Septuagint,
when it has been dipped and the even is come, and not before.F20
Bartenora in Misn. Celaim, c. 17. sect. 13.
Leviticus 11:33. 33 Any
earthen vessel into which any of them falls you shall break; and
whatever is in it shall be unclean:
YLT 33and any earthen vessel, into the midst of
which [any] one of them falleth, all that [is] in its midst is unclean, and it
ye do break.
And every earthen vessel, whereinto any of them falleth,.... Any of
the above eight reptiles, should they by chance fall into the midst an earthen
vessel:
whatsoever is in it shall be unclean; if it only by
falling touched the outside of it, it was not unclean; but if it fell into it,
then whatever was contained in it was unclean; for, as Jarchi says, an earthen
vessel does not pollute or receive pollution, but from the air of itF21,
from its inside:
and ye shall break it; other vessels might be
put into water and rinsed, and so be cleansed, but earthen vessels, being of no
great value, were to be broken in pieces: an emblem this, as Ainsworth
suggests, of the dissolution of our bodies, which are as earthen vessels, and
of the destruction of sin thereby, and of the entire removal of it by death.F21
Vid. Misn. Celaim, c. 2. sect. 1. & Maimon. & Bartenora in ib.
Leviticus 11:34. 34 in
such a vessel, any edible food upon which water falls becomes unclean, and any
drink that may be drunk from it becomes unclean.
YLT 34`Of all the food which is eaten, that on
which cometh [such] water, is unclean, and all drink which is drunk in any
[such] vessel is unclean;
Of all meat which may be eaten,.... Which otherwise is
lawful to eat and fit for food, whether herbs, or whether the flesh of clean
creatures:
that on which such
water cometh shall be unclean; that is, such water as is put into an
unclean vessel, become so by the fall of any unclean reptile into it; wherefore
such water poured out upon any sort of food, clean and fit to eat, or that is
put into such water, to be dressed, it becomes unclean and unfit to eat; for
the vessel, being unclean, defiles the water, and the water defiles the food:
Jarchi interprets this of water in general, which coming upon anything eatable,
prepares it for uncleanness; "we learn (says he) that no food is fit and
prepared to receive defilement until water comes upon it once; and after it is
come upon it once, it receives defilement for ever, even though it becomes
dry;' but the former seems to be the true sense:
and all drink that may be drank in every such vessel shall be
unclean; whatever otherwise might be lawfully drank, yet being put into
such a vessel, into which any unclean reptile was fallen, or being in it when
it fell into it, became unclean and not fit to be drank; and those liquors
which receive uncleanness, and make meats unclean by coming on them, according
to the Misnic doctorsF23, are these seven, dew, water, wine, oil,
blood, milk, and honey.F23 Misn. Machshirin, c. 6. sect. 4.
Leviticus 11:35. 35 And
everything on which a part of any such carcass falls shall be
unclean; whether it is an oven or cooking stove, it shall be broken
down; for they are unclean, and shall be unclean to you.
YLT 35and anything on which [any] of their carcase
falleth is unclean (oven or double pots), it is broken down, unclean they
[are], yea, unclean they are to you.
And everything whereupon any part of their carcass falleth
shall be unclean,.... Before the Scripture seems to speak of anyone of the
reptiles perfect, that falling upon anything should pollute it; but here of any
part of them, though ever so small, which should, through any accident, fall
and light upon anything, even that would render it unclean and unfit for use:
whether it be oven, or
ranges of pots; the one to bake bread in, and the other to boil flesh in, as
Aben Ezra observes:
they shall be broken down; and no more made use of
for baking and boiling:
for they are unclean, and
shall be unclean to you; were made hereby unfit for use, and should not be used: the
Jewish writersF24 explain the phrase, "to you", to your
necessity, that which they had need of, but now should not use nor receive
advantage from; even "to you"; all men, women, and children, as
Hiskuni interprets it: all this was ordered to create in them an abhorrence of
these creatures, and to make them cautious of eating and touching them, and
careful that they come not nigh, or touched, or fell upon anything, since it
would give them so much trouble, as well as occasion loss.F24
Maimon. & Bartenora in Misn. Edaiot, c. 7. sect. 8.
Leviticus 11:36. 36 Nevertheless
a spring or a cistern, in which there is plenty of water, shall be
clean, but whatever touches any such carcass becomes unclean.
YLT 36`Only -- a fountain or pit, a collection of
water, is clean, but that which is coming against their carcase is unclean;
Nevertheless, a fountain or pit, wherein there is plenty of
water,.... Or, "a fountain or pit, a collection of waters",
the copulative being wanting, as some observe, Aben Ezra takes notice of; or it
may be by way of apposition, and so may explain what fountain or pit is meant,
even such an one where there is a large continence of water, into which, if any
carcass of a creeping thing fell, or any part of it, yet it
shall be clean: and fit for use, either because of the
abundance of water in it, which could not be affected with the fall of such a
creature into it as where there is but a small quantity; or rather this
exception was made, because pools of water were of considerable value in these
countries, and frequently in use for bathings, &c. and therefore for the
good of men, and that they might not suffer so great a loss by such an
accident, they are declared notwithstanding to be clean and free for use: hence
you may learn, says Jarchi, that he that dips in them is pure from his
uncleanness; that a man might lawfully make use of them for a bath on account
of any uncleanness, notwithstanding the carcass of a creeping thing had fallen
into it; as a mouse, or rat, or any such creature:
but that which toucheth their carcass shall be unclean; not the
waters which touch the carcass, as Aben Ezra interprets it, for then the whole
would be defiled, and unfit for use; but either the man that touched the
carcass, laid hold upon it to pluck it out of the fountain or pit, or that
which he made use of to get it out, or both these, were unclean in a ceremonial
sense: the Targum of Jonathan is, "but he that toucheth their carcasses in
the midst of these waters shall be unclean.'
Leviticus 11:37. 37 And
if a part of any such carcass falls on any planting seed which is to be
sown, it remains clean.
YLT 37and when [any] of their carcase falleth on
any sown seed which is sown -- it [is] clean;
And if any part of their carcass fall upon any sowing seed
that is to be sown,.... That which is selected from the other seed in order to be
sown, and which is laid by and laid up for that purpose; should the carcass, or
any part of the carcass of a creeping thing fall upon an heap of it, into a
vessel in which it was put, as a dead mouse or the like:
yet it shall be clean; be fit for
use and sown in the earth; because being cast into the earth, and dying and
quickening there, and then springing up again in stalk and ear, it would go
through various changes before it became the food of man: the Targum of
Jonathan describes it, such as is sown in its dryness, or being dry; for if it
was wetted it was unfit for use, as follows.
Leviticus 11:38. 38 But
if water is put on the seed, and if a part of any such carcass
falls on it, it becomes unclean to you.
YLT 38and when water is put on the seed, and [any]
of its carcase hath fallen on it -- unclean it [is] to you.
But if any water be put upon the seed,.... Either
accidentally or on purpose; whether on sowing seed, and with water with which
they water the field, as Aben Ezra interprets it; or on seed used for food, by
steeping it in water, as sometimes wheat is, and boiled; and whether it is
water or the rest of the liquors, and whether they are put on the seed, or the
seed falls into them, it matters not, as Jarchi says:
and any part of their carcass fall thereon; that is, on
the seed, though Aben Ezra observes, some say upon the water: the Targum of
Jonathan adds, in its moisture, or while it is wet; and so may be thought to be
more susceptible of impurity from the touch of a dead reptile, or any part of
it, and which would render it unfit for sowing or eating, until it was dried
and cleansed; yea, Jarchi says, if it falls thereon, even after it is dried:
it shall be unclean unto you; unfit for use.
Leviticus 11:39. 39 ‘And
if any animal which you may eat dies, he who touches its carcass shall be
unclean until evening.
YLT 39`And when any of the beasts which are to you
for food dieth, he who is coming against its carcase is unclean till the
evening;
And if any beast of which ye may eat die,.... Any clean
beast, as the ox, sheep, goat, deer, &c. what, if rightly killed, is very
lawful to eat of; but if it died of itself through any distemper, or was torn
by the wild beasts, so the Targum of Jonathan:
he that toucheth the carcass thereof shall be unclean until the
even; not the bones, nerves, horns, hoofs, or skin, as Jarchi
observes; these might be handled, because some of them, at least, were wrought
up into one instrument or another, by artificers, for use and service, but the
flesh of them might not be touched; whoever did touch it was ceremonially
unclean, and might not go into the sanctuary, or have conversation with men,
until the evening of the day in which this was done.
Leviticus 11:40. 40 He
who eats of its carcass shall wash his clothes and be unclean until evening. He
also who carries its carcass shall wash his clothes and be unclean until
evening.
YLT 40and he who is eating of its carcase doth wash
his garments, and hath been unclean till the evening; and he who is lifting up
its carcase doth wash his garments, and hath been unclean till the evening.
And he that eateth of the carcass of it,.... For
though it might be eaten, if rightly killed, yet not if it died of itself, or
was strangled, or torn to pieces by wild beasts:
shall wash his clothes; besides his body, which
even he that touched it was obliged to:
and be unclean until the even; though he and his
clothes were washed, and he might not go into the court of the tabernacle, or
have any concern with holy things, or conversation with men:
he also that beareth the carcass of it; removes it
from one place to another, carries it to the dunghill, or a ditch, and there
lays it, or buries it in the earth:
shall wash his clothes, and be unclean until the even; from whence,
as before observed by the Jewish writers, uncleanness by bearing is greater
than uncleanness by touching, since the former obliged to washing of clothes,
not so the latter; so Jarchi here; and yet still was unclean until the evening,
though he had washed himself in water, as Aben Ezra notes; and so says Jarchi,
though he dips himself, he has need of the evening of the sun.
Leviticus 11:41. 41 ‘And every creeping thing
that creeps on the earth shall be an abomination. It shall not be eaten.
YLT 41`And every teeming thing which is teeming on
the earth is an abomination, it is not eaten;
And every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth,.... Nothing
is called a creeping thing, as Jarchi says, but what is low, has short feet,
and is not seen unless it creeps and moves: and "every creeping
thing" comprehends, as Aben Ezra and Ben Gersom observe, the eight
creeping things before mentioned, Leviticus 11:29 and
mention is made of them here, that they might not be eaten, which is not
expressed before; and being described as creeping things "on the
earth", is, according to Jarchi, an exception of worms in pease, beans,
and lentiles; and, as others observe, in figs and dates, and other fruit; for
they do not creep upon the earth, but are within the food; but if they go out
into the air, and creep, they are forbidden:
shall be an abomination; detested and
abhorred as food:
it shall not be eaten; it shall not be lawful
to eat such a creature. This, as Jarchi, is binding upon him that causes
another to eat, as well as he that eats, the one is guilty as the other. And
indeed such are not fit to eat, and cannot be wholesome and nourishing; for, as
a learned physician observesF25, insects consist of particles
exceeding small, volatile, unfit for nourishment, most of them live on unclean
food, and delight in dung, and in the putrid flesh of other animals, and by
laying their little eggs or excrements, corrupt honey, syrups, &c. see Ecclesiastes 10:1
and yet some sorts of them are eaten by some people. Sir Hans Sloane, after
having spoken of serpents, rats, and lizards, sold for food to his great
surprise at Jamaica, addsF26, but what of all things most unusual,
and to my great admiration, was the great esteem set on a sort of
"cossi" or timber worms, called cotton tree worms by the negroes and
the Indians, the one the original inhabitants of Africa, and the other of
America; these, he saysF1, are sought after by them, and boiled in
their soups, pottages, olios, pepper pots, and are accounted of admirable
taste, like to, but much beyond marrow; yea, he observesF2, that not
they only, but the most polite people in the world, the Romans, accounted them
so great a dainty, as to feed them with meal, and endeavour breeding them up.
He speaksF3 also of ants, so large as to be sold in the markets in
New Granada, where they are carefully looked after, and bought up for food; and
says, the negroes feed on the abdomen of these creatures: he observesF4,
that field crickets were found in baskets among other provisions of the
Indians.F25 Scheuchzer. Physic. Sacr. vol. 2. p. 302.F26
Nat. Hist. of Jamaica, vol. 1. Introduct. p. 25.F1 Ib. vol. 2. p.
193.F2 Introduct. ut supra.F1) Vid. Plin. l. 17. c. 24.
& Aelian. de Animal. l. 14. c. 13.F3 Ib. vol. 2. p. 221, 223.F4
Ib. p. 204. Vid. Aristotel. Hist. Animal. l. 5. c. 30.
Leviticus 11:42. 42 Whatever
crawls on its belly, whatever goes on all fours, or whatever has many
feet among all creeping things that creep on the earth—these you shall not eat,
for they are an abomination.
YLT 42any thing going on the belly, and any going
on four, unto every multiplier of feet, to every teeming thing which is teeming
on the earth -- ye do not eat them, for they [are] an abomination;
Whatsoever goeth upon the belly,.... Jarchi's paraphrase
is, "whatsoever goeth", as worms and beetles, and the like to them,
"upon the belly", this is the serpent; and to go upon the belly is the
curse denounced upon it, Genesis 3:14 this
and every such creature are forbidden to be eaten; as there are others who
either have no feet, or what they have so short, that they seem to go upon
their belly; and yet, as horrible and detestable as the serpent is, it has been
the food of some, and accounted very delicious, as by a people mentioned by the
Arabic geographerF5. MelaF6 speaks of a people, who, from
their eating serpents, were called Ophiophagi, serpent eaters; and PlinyF7
says of the Troglodytes, that the flesh of serpents was their food. The
Spaniards, when they first found out the West Indies, going ashore on the isle
of Cuba, found certain spits of wood lying at the fire, having fish on them,
about one hundred pound weight, and two serpents of eight feet long, differing
nothing from the crocodiles in Egypt, but not so big; there is nothing, says my
authorF8, among the delicate dishes (of the natives of that place),
they esteem so much as these serpents, insomuch that it is no more lawful for
the common people to eat of them, than of peacocks and pheasants among us; the
Spaniards at first durst not venture to taste of them, because of their
horrible deformity and loathsomeness; but the brother of Columbus being allured
by a sister of one of the kings of the country to taste of them, found them
very delicious, on which he and his men fell to, and ate freely of them,
affirming them to be of more pleasant taste than either our pheasants or
partridges; and that there is no meat to be compared with the eggs of these
serpentsF9. Diodorus SiculusF11 speaks of serpents in the
island of Taprobane of great size, harmless to men, and whose flesh is eaten,
and of a sweet savour:
and whatsoever goeth upon all four; that is,
whatsoever creeping thing; for otherwise there are beasts that go upon all four
that are clean and fit to eat; but this is observed to distinguish this sort of
creeping things from those that go upon their belly, and from those that have
more feet, as in the next clause; Jarchi particularly instances in the
scorpion:
or whatsoever hath mere feet among all creeping things that creep
upon the earth; such as caterpillars, and particularly the Scolopendra, which
the eastern people call Nedal; so Jarchi says, this is Nedal, a reptile which
hath feet from its head to its tail, called Centipeda; and the Targum of
Jonathan is, "from the serpent, to the Nedal or Scolopendra, which has
many feet.' Some of then, have seventy two, thirty six on a side, and others
eighty four; some fewer, but all have many:
them ye shall not eat, for they are an abomination; abominable
for food, and to be had in the utmost aversion.F5 Clim. 1. par. 6.F6
De Situ Orbis, l. 3. c. 8.F7 Nat. Hist. l. 5. c. 8.F8
Peter Martyr de Angleria, Decad. 1. l. 3.F9 Ib. l. 5.F11
Bibliothec. l. 3. p. 141.
Leviticus 11:43. 43 You
shall not make yourselves abominable with any creeping thing that creeps; nor
shall you make yourselves unclean with them, lest you be defiled by them.
YLT 43ye do not make yourselves abominable with any
teeming thing which is teeming, nor do ye make yourselves unclean with them, so
that ye have been unclean thereby.
Ye shall not make yourselves abominable with any creeping thing
that creepeth,.... With any creeping thing that flies in the air, excepting the
four sorts of locusts, Leviticus 11:22 and
with any creeping thing in the waters, Leviticus 11:10 or
with anything that creeps on the land, by eating any of them; which being
abominable for food, would make the eater of them so to God, he thereby
breaking a command of his:
neither shall you make yourselves unclean with them; by touching
and bearing them, as with dead beasts, so with dead flies and the like:
that ye should be defiled thereby; in a ceremonial sense.
Leviticus 11:44. 44 For
I am the Lord
your God. You shall therefore consecrate yourselves, and you shall be holy; for
I am holy. Neither shall you defile yourselves with any creeping thing
that creeps on the earth.
YLT 44`For I [am] Jehovah your God, and ye have
sanctified yourselves, and ye have been holy, for I [am] holy; and ye do not
defile your persons with any teeming thing which is creeping on the earth;
For I am the Lord your God,.... Their Lord, and
therefore had a right to enjoin them what laws he pleased concerning their
food; and their God, their covenant God, and therefore would consult their
good, and direct them to what was most proper, convenient, and wholesome for
them:
ye shall therefore sanctify yourselves, and ye shall be holy, for
I am holy; that is, separate themselves from all other people, and be distinct
from them, by using a different diet from theirs, as their Lord and God was
different from all others, so called; and thus by observing his commands, and
living according to his will, and to his glory, they would be holy in a moral
sense, as they ought to be, who were under the peculiar care and notice of a
holy God, and so highly favoured by him; and particularly by attending to the
above laws concerning food, they would be kept from mixing with, and having
conversation with the Gentiles, and so be preserved from falling into idolatry,
and continue a holy people, serving and worshipping the Lord their God, and him
only; and which seems to be a principal view as to religion, in delivering out
the above commands:
neither shall ye defile yourselves with any manner of creeping
thing that creepeth upon the earth; which is repeated to
keep them at the utmost distance from these things, and to fill them with an
aversion to them, that they might be careful to avoid them. There is no penalty
annexed to these laws, but the breach of them making them unclean, thereby they
were debarred the use of the sanctuary, and of holy things, and of the
conversation of men, for that day; but, according to the Jewish writers, such
transgressions were punishable with stripes. Jarchi observes out of the TalmudF12,
that he that eateth "putitha" (a small water reptile) was to be
beaten four times, and if an ant or pismire five times, and if a wasp or hornet
six times.F12 T. Bab. Erubin, fol. 28. 1. Pesachim, fol. 24. 1.
Maccot, fol. 16. 2.
Leviticus 11:45. 45 For
I am the Lord
who brings you up out of the land of Egypt, to be your God. You shall therefore
be holy, for I am holy.
YLT 45for I [am] Jehovah who am bringing you up out
of the land of Egypt to become your God; and ye have been holy, for I [am]
holy.
For I am the Lord that bringeth you up out of the land of Egypt,.... He had
brought them out of it, and was now bringing them on in the wilderness towards
Canaan's land, in order to settle them there; and this is observed, to show
what obligations they lay under to him to observe his commands; for since he
had done such great things for them, it became them to be obedient to him in
all things: and the more, since his end herein was, as he observes to them,
to be your God; to make it appear that he was their God,
and they were his special people, whom he had chosen for himself above all
people upon the earth; that he was their King and their God, to protect and
defend them, to provide for them, and take care of them, and bestow all good
things on them proper for them:
ye shall therefore be holy, for I am holy; separate from
all others as he was, living holy lives and conversations, agreeably to his
will made known to them, in imitation or him who had chosen and called them to
be his people; for, since holiness is his nature, it becomes them who are his
house and family, his subjects and people.
Leviticus 11:46. 46 ‘This
is the law of the animals and the birds and every living creature that
moves in the waters, and of every creature that creeps on the earth,
YLT 46`This [is] a law of the beasts, and of the
fowl, and of every living creature which is moving in the waters, and of every
creature which is teeming on the earth,
This is the law of the beasts,.... Clean and
unclean, what were to be eaten, and what not,
and of the fowl; Leviticus 11:2 the
unclean ones, which are particularly mentioned that they might be avoided, all
others excepting them being allowed:, Leviticus 11:13.
and of every living creature that moveth in the waters; all sorts of
fish in the sea, rivers, ponds, and pools, such as have fins and scales, these
were to be eaten, but, if they had neither, were forbidden:, Leviticus 11:9.
and of every creature that creepeth upon the earth; eight of
which are mentioned particularly, which, when dead, defiled by touching; and
all others are forbidden to be eaten, Leviticus 11:29
together with such creeping things that fly, excepting those that had legs
above their feet to leap with, Leviticus 11:20
This is a recapitulation of the several laws respecting them, though not in the
exact order in which they are delivered in this chapter.
Leviticus 11:47. 47 to
distinguish between the unclean and the clean, and between the animal that may
be eaten and the animal that may not be eaten.’”
YLT 47to make separation between the unclean and
the pure, and between the beast that is eaten, and the beast that is not
eaten.'
To make a difference between the unclean and the clean,.... Whether
of beasts, fish, fowl, and flying creeping things:
and between the beast that may be eaten, and the beast that may
not be eaten; the former clause takes in all in general, this instances in a
particular sort of creatures; and the first mentioned of which, that might be
eaten, are, that part the hoof, are cloven footed, and chew the cud; and that
might not, that chew the cud, but divide not the hoof, or divide the hoof, but
chew not the cud; and now, by such like descriptions and distinctions of the
creatures treated of, the Israelites would be able to make a difference between
the one and the other, and know what was to be eaten, and what not.
──《John Gill’s
Exposition of the Bible》