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Leviticus
Chapter Nineteen
New King James Version (NKJV)
INTRODUCTION TO LEVITICUS 19
This
chapter contains various laws, ceremonial and moral, tending to the
sanctification of men, in imitation of the holy God, Leviticus 19:1; as
concerning the reverence of parents, and observing the sabbaths, Leviticus 19:3;
against idolatry, Leviticus 19:4;
about offering and eating of peace offerings, Leviticus 19:5;
concerning harvest and gleaning of fields and vineyards, Leviticus 19:9;
respecting the breach of several of the commandments of the law, as the eighth,
ninth, and third, particularly, Leviticus 19:11;
and others relating to the ill usage of the deaf and blind, and having respect
to persons rich or poor in judgment, and acting the part of a tale bearer among
people, Leviticus 19:14;
and bearing hatred and ill will to any of their neighbours, Leviticus 19:17;
and others forbidding mixtures in the generation of cattle, sowing fields, and
wearing apparel, Leviticus 19:19;
and concerning the punishment of a man that lay with a bondmaid, and the
offering he should bring for his atonement, Leviticus 19:20;
then follow certain laws concerning fruit trees, when the fruit of them should
be eaten, Leviticus 19:23;
and concerning eating with blood, using enchantments, and observing times, and
managing the hair of the head and beard, and avoiding to make any marks,
prints, and cuttings in the flesh for the dead, Leviticus 19:26; a
caution not to prostitute a daughter to whoredom, and to observe the sabbath,
and reverence the sanctuary of God, and pay no regard to wizards and familiar
spirits, Leviticus 19:29; to
show reverence to ancient persons, and not to vex and distress strangers, Leviticus 19:32;
and to do no injustice in weight and measure, Leviticus 19:35;
all which instructions are to be carefully observed, and put in execution, Leviticus 19:37.
Leviticus 19:1. And
the Lord
spoke to Moses, saying,
YLT 1And Jehovah speaketh unto Moses, saying,
And the Lord spake unto Moses,.... About the same, or
quickly after he had delivered the above laws to him; and there are many in
this chapter, which were before given, and here repeated:
saying; as follows.
Leviticus 19:2.
2 “Speak to all the
congregation of the children of Israel, and say to them: ‘You shall be holy,
for I the Lord
your God am holy.
YLT 2`Speak unto all the company of the sons of
Israel, and thou hast said unto them, Ye are holy, for holy [am] I, Jehovah,
your God.
Speak unto all the congregation of the children of Israel,.... They
could not be all spoke to together, but tribe after tribe, or family after
family; or rather the heads of the tribes, and at most the heads of families were
convened, and the following instructions were given, to be communicated to
their respective tribes and families. Jarchi says this section was spoken in
the congregation, because the greater part of the body of the law, or the more
substantial parts of it, depend upon it; and indeed all the ten commandments
are included in it, with various other laws, both judicial and ceremonial. Aben
Ezra remarks, that all the congregation are spoken to, to include the
proselytes, because they had been warned of incests, as the Israelites, in the
preceding chapter; see Gill on Leviticus 18:26,
and say unto them, ye shall be holy: a separate people from
all others, abstaining from all the impurity and idolatry they are cautioned
against in the foregoing chapter, and observing the holy precepts expressed in
this:
for I the Lord your God am holy; in his
nature, essence, originally, independently, immutably, and perfectly; and the
more holy they were, the more like they would be to him; See Gill on Leviticus 11:44 and
See Gill on Leviticus 11:45;
where the same words are used, after the laws given about creatures clean and
unclean to be eaten, as here, after those about impure copulations and incests.
Leviticus 19:3. 3 ‘Every
one of you shall revere his mother and his father, and keep My Sabbaths: I am
the Lord
your God.
YLT 3`Each his mother and his father ye do fear,
and My sabbaths ye do keep; I [am] Jehovah your God.
Ye shall fear every man his mother and his father,.... This has
respect to the fifth command, which is the first with promise, and is here
referred to first, because a man has his beginning in the world from his
parents, and by them he is trained up in the observance of all the other laws
of God, equally to be respected; and the fear of them is not servile, but
filial, joined with love and affection to them, and includes an inward esteem
and reverence of them, an outward respect unto them, a readiness to obey their
commands, and giving due and equal honour unto them; See Gill on Exodus 20:12;
Pythagoras, Phocylides, and other Heathens, next to honouring God, exhort to
the honour and reverence of parents:
and keep my sabbaths; this is expressed in the
plural number, because there were various sabbaths. The seventh day sabbath,
and the seventh year sabbath, and the jubilee, which was once in seven times
seven years; the seventh day sabbath is chiefly meant: this follows upon the
other, because it lay upon parents to teach their children the observance of
the sabbath, and to train them up in it; and indeed the fear of them greatly depends
on it, for children that are sabbath breakers have seldom much respect to their
parents; and besides this suggests, that though children are to honour,
reverence, and obey their parents, yet not in anything that is contrary to the
laws of God; and, particularly should they suggest to them that sabbaths were
not to be observed, they should not hearken to them:
I am the Lord your God; that gave them their
being, parents being but instruments, and who had a right to enjoin them what
laws he pleased; and among the rest had ordered them to observe the sabbath,
and which in gratitude they were obliged unto, as well as in point of duty.
Leviticus 19:4. 4 ‘Do
not turn to idols, nor make for yourselves molded gods: I am the Lord your God.
YLT 4`Ye do not turn unto the idols, and a molten
god ye do not make to yourselves; I [am] Jehovah your God.
Turn ye not unto idols,.... From the one only
true and living God to them that are not gods, as the word used signifies, who
are nothing; for, as the apostle says, an idol is nothing in the world, 1 Corinthians 8:4,
is of no worth and value, of no consequence and importance, of no avail and
usefulness to its devotees; wherefore to turn from the true God to such as
these is the greatest stupidity, as well as wickedness: or "look not"
at themF7אל תפנו
"ne respiciatis", Montanus, Tigurine version, Drusius. for help or
assistance, for they are not able to give it: and to look at them so as to view
them attentively, and consider their likeness, the Jews sayF8Pesichta,
Maimonides. is forbidden; and even in the heart and mind, as Aben Ezra
observes, to have respect unto them was not right; or in the thoughts, as
Gersom:
nor make to yourselves molten gods; of gold, silver, or
brass, melted and cast into a mould, as the golden calf was, to which respect
may be had. These laws have a respect unto the first and second commandments, Exodus 20:3,
I am the Lord, your God; who only is to be
worshipped, and who has forbid the making and worshipping any image, molten or
graven, and who will therefore resent idolatry of every sort, and punish for
it.
Leviticus 19:5. 5 ‘And
if you offer a sacrifice of a peace offering to the Lord, you shall
offer it of your own free will.
YLT 5`And when ye sacrifice a sacrifice of
peace-offerings to Jehovah, at your pleasure ye do sacrifice it;
And if ye offer a sacrifice of peace offerings unto the Lord,.... Which
were of three sorts, a thanksgiving, a vow, and a voluntary offering, Leviticus 7:11; the
latter seems to be here meant, as appears by what follows:
ye shall offer it at your own will; a voluntary freewill
offering, of their own accord, and not by force, as Aben Ezra; and in such
offerings they were left to their liberty to offer what they pleased, it might
be of the flock, or of the herd, a male or a female, Leviticus 3:1. The
Targum of Jonathan is"for your acceptation;'that is, that should be
offered, and in such a manner as to be accepted of you with God; which sense is
countenanced by Leviticus 19:7; and
becomes acceptable, when what follows about eating them is attended to.
Leviticus 19:6. 6 It
shall be eaten the same day you offer it, and on the next day. And if
any remains until the third day, it shall be burned in the fire.
YLT 6in the day of your sacrificing it is eaten,
and on the morrow, and that which is left unto the third day with fire is
burnt,
It shall be eaten the same day ye offer it, and on the morrow,.... The
meaning is, that if it could be, it was best to eat it all up the same day it
was offered, but if not, the remainder was to be eaten on the morrow, but by no
means to be kept any longer; this shows that that sort of peace offering is
intended, which was either a vow or a voluntary offering, Leviticus 7:16; and
the Jews gather from hence, that sacrifices were to be slain in the day, and
not in the nightF9Bartenora in Misn. Zebachim, c. 13. sect. 7. &
Misn. Yoma, c. 8. sect. 1. :
and if ought remain unto the third, it shall be burnt with fire; as it is
ordered, Leviticus 7:16;
that so the owner might have no profit by it, and therefore be under no
temptation to keep it longer than the fixed time.
Leviticus 19:7. 7 And
if it is eaten at all on the third day, it is an abomination. It shall
not be accepted.
YLT 7and if it be really eaten on the third day,
it [is] an abomination, it is not pleasing,
And if it be eaten at all on the third day,.... Or
"in eating be eaten"F11האכל יאכל "comedendo, comedetur", Drusius. any of it
be eaten, the least bit of it:
it is abominable; it is as any common
thing, as if it was no sacrifice; yea, as if it was corrupt and putrefied
flesh; nay, as what is abominable to God: and therefore it follows:
it shall not be accepted; of the Lord, but
rejected, his will not being attended to.
Leviticus 19:8. 8 Therefore
everyone who eats it shall bear his iniquity, because he has profaned
the hallowed offering of the Lord; and that person shall be
cut off from his people.
YLT 8and he who is eating it his iniquity doth
bear, for the holy thing of Jehovah he hath polluted, and that person hath been
cut off from his people.
Therefore everyone that eateth it shall bear his iniquity,.... Be
chargeable with sin, be pronounced guilty, and endure the punishment, which is
cutting off, Leviticus 7:20,
because he hath profaned the hallowed thing of the Lord; the flesh of
the peace offerings, by keeping it longer than the fixed time for it, when it
was liable to corruption and putrefaction; for after the inwards and the fat of
them were offered, as Aben Ezra says, the flesh was holy, and to be eaten as an
holy thing, and within the time the law required, or otherwise it was profaned
and polluted:
and that soul shall be cut off from among his people; be deprived
of his civil and religious privileges, or be punished by the hand of the civil
magistrate, or else by the immediate hand of God.
Leviticus 19:9. 9 ‘When
you reap the harvest of your land, you shall not wholly reap the corners of
your field, nor shall you gather the gleanings of your harvest.
YLT 9`And in your reaping the harvest of your land
ye do not completely reap the corner of thy field, and the gleaning of thy
harvest thou dost not gather,
And when ye reap the harvest of your land,.... Of the
land of Canaan, when come into it, which having sown, and it was harvest,
either barley harvest or wheat harvest, or both, and especially the latter, to
which reaping seems best to agree:
thou shall not wholly reap the corner of the field; but a part
was to be left for the poor. This follows upon the peace offerings: and, as
Aben Ezra observes, as the fat of them was to be given to God, so somewhat of
the harvest was to be given for the glory of God to the poor and stranger. In
the Misnah is a whole treatise, called "Peah", which signifies
"the corner", in which there are many decisions concerning this
affair; and among the rest, whereas it is not fixed in the law how large the
corner should be, what quantity should be left, how many ears of corn, or what
a proportion of the field, this is there determined by the wise men, who say,
they do not leave less than a sixtieth part; for though they say there is no
measure (certain) for the corner, yet the whole is according to the largeness
of the field, or according to the multitude of the poor, or according to the
plenty of the increaseF12Misn. Peah, c. 1. sect. 2. , so that, as
these were, more or less were left: and though the place to be left is called a
corner, it was a matter indifferent in what part of the field it was; for so it
follows, they give (or leave) the corner at the beginning of the field, or in
the middleF13Ibid. sect. 3. ; and Ben Gersom observes, that the
corner was at the end of the field, where the harvest is finished; and it is plain
where the harvest is finished, he says, the corner should be left; for the law
does not precisely determine, only that part of the corner should be left to
the poor; and it is of no consequence to the poor whether it is in the middle
of the field or in the end of it; but MaimonidesF14Hilchot Mattanot
Anayim, c. 2. sect. 12. thinks it was to be left at the end of the field, that
the poor might know where to come for it: and in the above treatise the times
are also set when the poor should come and gather it, which they might not do
at any time; and there were three times on a day they had leave to come, in the
morning, in the middle of the day, and at the evening sacrificeF15Misn.
Peah. c. 4. sect. 5. , i.e. about three o'clock in the afternoon; the morning
was appointed, as the commentators sayF16Maimon & Bartenora in
ib. , for the sake of women that had young children, who were then asleep, the
middle of the day for the sake of nurses, and the evening for the sake of
ancient persons:
neither shalt thou gather the gleanings of thy harvest; ears of corn
which fall from the hand or sickle of the reaper, or in gathering the reaps to
bind up in sheaves. In the above treatise it is asked, what is a gleaning? that
which falls in reaping; if the reaper reaps his handful, or plucks up an
handful, and a thorn strikes him, and it falls out of his hand to the ground,
lo, it is the owner's; but if out of the middle of his hand, or out of the
middle of the sickle, it is the poor's; if from the further part of his hand,
or of the sickle, it is the owner's; but if from the top of his hand (or tip of
his fingers) or the point of the sickle, it is the poor'sF17Ib.
sect. 10. : and it is further saidF18Maimon. & Bartenora in
Misn. Peah, c. 6. sect. 5. ,"two ears are a gleaning, but three are
not,'and so Jarchi on the text, that is, when three fall together; this is
according to the school of Hillel, but according to the school of Shammai, if
there were three ears that fell together, they were the poor's, if four they
belonged to the owner.
Leviticus 19:10. 10 And
you shall not glean your vineyard, nor shall you gather every grape of
your vineyard; you shall leave them for the poor and the stranger: I am
the Lord
your God.
YLT 10and thy vineyard thou dost not glean, even
the omitted part of thy vineyard thou dost not gather, to the poor and to the
sojourner thou dost leave them; I [am] Jehovah your God.
And thou shalt not glean thy vineyard,.... Or cut
off the little clusters which are, as Aben Ezra observes, like an infant, as
the word signifies, infant clusters, which were small in comparison of the
large ones, as infants are to men; those which had but a grape or two, or very
few upon them, were not to be cut off, but left for the poor: and Gersom says,
if the whole vine consisted of such clusters, it all belonged to the poor:
neither shall thou gather every grape of thy vineyard; every
particular single grape; these were such as were left on the vine after the
large clusters were gathered, and a man upon viewing it again might not gather
such as had only a single grape or two upon them; for the Misnic doctors sayF19Maimon.
& Bartenora in Misn. Peah, c 6 sect. 5. , two grapes or berries make a
"peret" (the word here rendered "every grape"), but three
do not; so that if there were three grapes upon a cluster it was the owner's,
and might be gathered, but if fewer, then it belonged to the poor; or this may
be understoodF20So it is interpreted by R Sol. Urbin. Ohel Moed,
fol. 59. 1. also of such single grapes that fell to the ground in gathering,
which might not be taken up by the owners, but were to be left to the poor;
and, as Gersom says the grape gatherers might not put a bushel under the vines
in the time of gathering, to catch the single grapes that fell:
thou shall leave them for the poor and stranger: for the poor
Israelite, and the stranger that sojourns with you, as Aben Ezra interprets it;
the stranger intends a proselyte, not a proselyte of the gate, but a proselyte
of righteousness, as Gersom and it is a rule laid down by MaimonidesF21Mattanot
Anayim, c. 1. sect. 9. , that every stranger spoken of concerning the gifts of
the poor is no other than a proselyte of righteousness, one that has been
circumcised upon embracing the Jewish religion, and agreeing to conform to all
the laws and rituals of it; though the same writer observes, that they do not
restrain the poor of the Gentiles from these gifts, but they are in general included
among the poor of Israel; and they come and take them because of the ways of
peace; for the sake of peace, to promote peace and harmony among them:
I am the Lord your God; that gave them fields
and vineyards, and times of harvest, and vintage, and blessed them with
fruitful seasons, and therefore had a right to require such things of them; and
they were in duty and gratitude bound to observe his commands; and this shows
his regard unto, and concern for the poor, and that he is the father and patron
of them.
Leviticus 19:11. 11 ‘You shall not steal, nor
deal falsely, nor lie to one another.
YLT 11`Ye do not steal, nor feign, nor lie one
against his fellow.
Ye shall not steal,.... Which is the eighth command; See Gill
on Exodus 20:15;
though Jarchi thinks something different from that law is here intended; that
this is a caution against stealing of money, that in the decalogue against
stealing of souls, or men. And it may be observed, that one is expressed in the
singular number, the other in the plural, as here, and takes in more; not the
actual thief only, but he that sees and is silent, who, as Aben Ezra observes,
is even as the thief; and perhaps this follows upon the preceding laws, to
suggest, that he that deprives the poor of the corner of the field, and of the
gleaning Of the harvest and vintage, is as if he robbed; and the last mentioned
writer seems to make the force of this depend on that: and MaimonidesF23Mattanot
Anayim, c. 4. sect. 16. on the above law observes, that he that put a basket
under a vine, in the time of gathering grapes, robbed the poor:
neither deal falsely; in any respect
defrauding and over reaching in trade and commerce, particularly not being
faithful to a trust committed to them; so Aben Ezra restrains it to what is
deposited with a man to keep, which he denies he ever had; and he observes,
that he that knows it, and does not bear witness of it, is as he that deals
falsely; and such an one, according to a former law, having sworn falsely, and,
when convicted, was obliged to restore the principal, and add a fifth part, and
bring a trespass offering to make atonement for his sin likewise, Leviticus 6:2,
neither lie one to another; in common speech and
conversation, in trade and business, and particularly by demanding money of a
man who never had anything of him, as Aben Ezra; and who owes him nothing, and
yet affirms, with a lie, that he is indebted to him, and insists on payment.
Leviticus 19:12. 12 And
you shall not swear by My name falsely, nor shall you profane the name of your
God: I am the Lord.
YLT 12`And ye do not swear by My name to falsehood,
or thou hast polluted the name of thy God; I [am] Jehovah.
And ye shall not swear by my name falsely,.... Or
"to a falsehood"F24לשקר "ad
fallaciam ullam", Junius & Tremellius, Piscator; so Ainsworth. , to
any of the above cases; as that a man has not the deposit of another's in his
hands, when he has; or that such a man owes him so much money, when he does
not, or any other false thing. Stealing, dealing falsely, lying, and false
swearing, are mentioned together, as following one another, and as tending to
lead on, the one to the other, as Jarchi observes;"if thou stealest, this
will lead thee on to deal falsely, and then to lie, and after that to
swear;'and who further remarks, because it may be thought a man is guilty only
because of the proper name (of God he may swear by); therefore to comprehend
all the surnames (or epithets of God, such as gracious, merciful, &c.) it
is said, "ye shall not swear by, my name falsely": every name which
is mine, by which he is called; and so Gersom, any epithet or attribute of his,
or any word or phrase by which he is described, as he that made the heavens, or
that dwelleth in the heavens, or liveth for ever and ever, and the like; and
the word being of the plural number, ye shall not swear, takes in, as Aben Ezra
thinks, him that causes to swear, as well as him that swears:
neither shall thou profane the name of thy God: through
swearing falsely by it, or through any rash or vain oath in common
conversation; not only perjury in a court of judicature, but all profane oaths,
curses, and imprecations are forbidden, as breaches of the third command, which
this refers to; See Gill on Exodus 20:7,
I am the Lord; whose name is holy, and
who can and will revenge every abuse of it in a profane way, and to the injury
of men.
Leviticus 19:13. 13 ‘You
shall not cheat your neighbor, nor rob him. The wages of him who is
hired shall not remain with you all night until morning.
YLT 13`Thou dost not oppress thy neighbour, nor
take plunder; the wages of the hireling doth not remain with thee till morning.
Thou shalt not defraud thy neighbour, neither rob him,.... Not
defraud him secretly, nor rob him openly and by force, as Aben Ezra; not
defraud him in buying and selling, in retaining wages due to him, and refusing
to return to him what has been committed to trust, or to repay him what has
been borrowed of him: the Vulgate Latin is, "thou shall not calumniate him",
or get anything from him, by raising a calumny upon him; nor rob him by coming
into his house, or entering into his fields, and taking away his goods, or his
cattle without his will, and in a forcible manner; or by meeting him on the
highway and demanding his money, and taking it from him:
the wages of him that is hired shall not abide with thee all night
until the morning; unless he that is hired agrees to it; for then it may be kept
two or three days, or a week, or for whatsoever time may be agreed upon between
them: this must be understood of one that is hired by the day, whose wages are
due at night, and who may want his money to buy food for his family, and
therefore should not without his consent be detained from him; and not of one
that is hired by the week, or by the year, whose wages are not due until the
end of the week or year for which he is hired; and the Jewish writersF25Vid.
Misn. Bava Metzia, c. 9. sect. 11. & Maimon. & Bartenora in ib. Jarchi
& Ben Gersom in loc. observe, that this Scripture speaks of a day hireling,
or a day labourer, whose wages became due at night; as another Scripture, Deuteronomy 24:15;
speaks of a night hireling, or a night labourer, whose hire is not due until
the pillar of the morning arises, or the sun is up, and therefore it must be
paid him before it goes down; to detain the wages of such, or defraud them of
it, is a very crying sin; see Jeremiah 22:13.
Leviticus 19:14. 14 You
shall not curse the deaf, nor put a stumbling block before the blind, but shall
fear your God: I am the Lord.
YLT 14`Thou dost not revile the deaf; and before
the blind thou dost not put a stumbling block; and thou hast been afraid of thy
God; I [am] Jehovah.
Thou shalt not curse the deaf,.... Who are naturally
so, born deaf, or become so through some accident, and cannot hear what is
objected to them, and they are cursed for; and so cannot reply in their own
defence, and remove the calumny cast upon them, if it be such which is the
cause of their being cursed; and therefore there is something mean and base as
well as wicked in cursing such: the Targums of Onkelos and Jonathan render it,
"him that heareth not", and respects any absent person who is not
within the hearing of the curse, and so equally incapable of answering for
himself as a deaf man: Gersom observes, that this is a caution not to curse any
Israelite; for if we are cautioned, says he, not to curse a deaf man who hears
not, and therefore cannot be moved at it, much less should we curse him that is
not deaf, from whence quarrels and fightings arise:
nor put a stumblingblock before the blind: to cause him
to fall; and in this negative is implied, that a man should be serviceable and
helpful to the blind as much as may be; as to lead, and guide, and direct them
in the way, and not put them out of it, as well as not do anything to cause
them to stumble in it; Jarchi and Ben Gersom interpret this figuratively, of
ignorant persons imposed upon by the bad advice of others: on the other hand,
agreeably to this sense, Job says, he was "eyes to the blind", Job 29:15; gave
good advice to the ignorant, instructed them what ways and methods to take to
do themselves justice, or obtain it, which otherwise they knew not:
but shalt fear thy God: who, as Aben Ezra
observes, can punish thee by making thee deaf and blind also; by striking them
with deafness and blindness at once; wherefore the awe and fear of God should
be on persons, and make them cautious and fearful how they abused those in such
circumstances:
I am the Lord; the Lord God,
omnipresent and omniscient, that hears when the deaf are cursed, though they do
not; and sees the stumblingblocks laid before the blind, and knows who laid
them, though they do not, and will revenge such abuses and injuries: the
apostle seems to have respect to this law in Romans 14:13
Leviticus 19:15. 15 ‘You
shall do no injustice in judgment. You shall not be partial to the poor, nor
honor the person of the mighty. In righteousness you shall judge your neighbor.
YLT 15`Ye do not do perversity in judgment; thou
dost not lift up the face of the poor, nor honour the face of the great; in
righteousness thou dost judge thy fellow.
Ye shall do no unrighteousness in judgment,.... This is
said with respect to judges and witnesses, as Aben Ezra notes; that the one
should not bear false witness in a court of judicature to the perversion of
justice, and the other should not pronounce an unrighteous sentence, justifying
the wicked and condemning the righteous:
thou shalt not respect the person of the poor; that is, in
judgment, or in a court of judicature, when a cause of his is brought before
it; though privately his person may be respected, and he relieved in his
distress as a poor man; but in a court of justice his person and character as a
poor man are not to be regarded; the cause is not to be given either for him or
against him on that account, without regard to the justice and equity of it; he
may be pitied in other respects but in a cause between him and another, even a
rich man, not pity, but justice, must take place; see Gill on Exodus 23:3,
nor honour the person of the mighty; not fear to put him to
shame and blushing, by giving the cause against him, if he is in the wrong; his
riches, his grandeur, his honour, must not came into any account, or have any
weight or influence on the court to pervert justice: the Jewish writers, particularly
MaimonidesF26Hilchot Sanhedrin, c. 21. sect. 1, 2, 3. suggest that
there was to be no difference between a rich man and a poor man while their
cause was trying; that they were to be clothed either both in a rich habit, or
both in a mean one; and that their posture was to be alike, whether sitting or
standing; as well as that no favour should be shown to one more than to
another; as that one might have liberty to speak as much and as long as he
pleased, and the other bid to be short; or the one be spoken tenderly to, and
the other harshly:
but in righteousness shall
thou judge thy neighbour; be he rich or poor, doing justice to both, and showing no
partiality to either; see Proverbs 18:5.
Leviticus 19:16. 16 You
shall not go about as a talebearer among your people; nor shall you take
a stand against the life of your neighbor: I am the Lord.
YLT 16`Thou dost not go slandering among thy
people; thou dost not stand against the blood of thy neighbour; I [am] Jehovah.
Thou shall not go up and down as a talebearer among thy
people,.... The word used signifies a merchant, and particularly one
that deals in drugs and spices, and especially a peddler in those things, that
goes about from place to place to sell them; and such having an opportunity and
making use of it to carry stories of others, and report them to their
disadvantage, hence it came to be used for one that carries tales from house to
house, in order to curry favour for himself, and to the injury of others; and
such a man is a detestable person, and ought not to be encouraged, see 1 Timothy 5:13,
neither shall thou stand against the blood of thy neighbour; either by
bearing a false testimony, whereby his blood is in danger of being shed when
innocent; or by being silent, and not hearing a testimony for him, whereby the
shedding of his innocent blood might have been prevented; either way may be
interpreted standing against it: the Jewish writers think, that a man by this
law, is bound to do all he can to preserve the life of his neighbour, when it
is by any means in danger, by drowning, or by thieves and wild beasts, so
Jarchi:
I am the Lord; the just and righteous
One, who will resent and punish for all unjust proceedings in courts of
judicature, secret tale bearing, doing any injury to another, or not preventing
it when in the power of his hands.
Leviticus 19:17. 17 ‘You
shall not hate your brother in your heart. You shall surely rebuke your
neighbor, and not bear sin because of him.
YLT 17`Thou dost not hate thy brother in thy heart;
thou dost certainly reprove thy fellow, and not suffer sin on him.
Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thine heart,.... Although no
hatred may be expressed either by words or deeds, yet being in the heart is a
breach of the sixth command, see Matthew 5:21; and
of this a man may be guilty, when he does not attempt to save the life of his
neighbour, either by bearing a testimony for him, or by delivering from danger,
as preserving him from drowning, from wild beasts and thieves, as in Leviticus 19:16; or
when he does not reprove him for sin, as in the next clause, but suffers him to
go on in it to his ruin, either of which by interpretation is an hatred of him:
thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour, for any sin
committed by him, though secretly, yet known; which rebuke should be private,
and repeated as may be found necessary, and given gently in meekness and
tenderness:
and not suffer sin upon him; unconvinced of,
unrepented of and persisted in, which may prove of fatal consequence to him;
and therefore to let him alone, and go on in it without telling him of it, and
reproving him for it, would be so far from acting the kind and friendly part,
and showing him love and respect, that it would be an evidence of hating him at
heart, at least it might be strongly suspected: or, "and not bear sin for
him"F1לא תשא
עליו חטא "ne feras
propter eum peccatum", Tigurine version; so Sept. Syr. Ar. Targum
Jonathan, Aben Ezra, Ainsworth. ; become a partner with him in his sin, and so
become liable to bear punishment for it; which is a strong reason for reproving
sin, in a proper manner, lest we should be partakers of other men's sins; see 1 Timothy 5:20.
Leviticus 19:18. 18 You
shall not take vengeance, nor bear any grudge against the children of your
people, but you shall love your neighbor as yourself: I am the Lord.
YLT 18`Thou dost not take vengeance, nor watch the
sons of thy people; and thou hast had love to thy neighbour as thyself; I [am]
Jehovah.
Thou shalt not avenge,.... That is, not avenge
ourselves on him that has done us an ill thing, but leave it to him to whom
vengeance belongs, see Romans 12:19; which
is done when a man does an ill thing for another, or denies to grant a favour
which he has been denied by another; Jarchi thus illustrates it, one says to
him (his neighbour) lend me thy sickle; he answers, no (I will not); on the
morrow (the neighbour comes, who had refused, and) says to him, lend me thy hatchet;
he replies, I will not lend thee, even as thou wouldest not lend me; this is
vengeance: this was reckoned mean and little, a piece of weakness with the very
HeathensF2-----quippe minuti, &c. Juvenal. Satyr. 13. :
nor bear any grudge against the children of thy people; those of the
same place, city, or kingdom; or "not observe"F3ולא תטר "et non
observabis", Montanus. the injury done, take no notice of it, nor lay it
up in the mind and memory, but forget it; or "not keep"F4"Non
servabis", Pagninus, Drusius; "neque iram asservato"; Junius
& Tremellius, Piscator. or retain enmity, as the Targum of Jonathan
supplies it; and so do an ill turn, or refuse to do a good one; or if that is
done, yet upbraids with the former unkindness; for upbraiding with unkindness
shows that a grudge is retained, though the suit is not denied:
but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself; sincerely and
heartily, as a man loves himself, doing all the good to him as a man does to
himself, or would have done to himself, and hindering all the mischief done to
him he would have himself preserved from: Jarchi observes, that it was a saying
of R. Akiba, that this is"the great universal in the law,'and it does
indeed comprehend the whole of the second table of the law, and is the summary
of it, and is pretty much the same our Lord says of it, that it is the second
and great commandment, and like unto the first, on which two all the law and
the prophets hang, Matthew 22:37; and
so the Apostle Paul makes all the laws of the second table to be comprehended
in this, Romans 13:9,
I am the Lord; the Creator of all men,
and who has commanded them to love one another, and to whom alone vengeance
belongs, and who expects obedience to the above laws of his.
Leviticus 19:19. 19 ‘You
shall keep My statutes. You shall not let your livestock breed with another
kind. You shall not sow your field with mixed seed. Nor shall a garment of
mixed linen and wool come upon you.
YLT 19`My statutes ye do keep: thy cattle thou dost
not cause to gender [with] diverse kinds; thy field thou dost not sow with
diverse kinds, and a garment of diverse kinds, shaatnez, doth not go up upon
thee.
Ye shall keep my statutes,.... Those which follow,
and which are of a different sort from what are last mentioned, of a moral
nature, and are planted in the heart, as Aben Ezra says; are agreeably to the
law and light of nature, and part of the work of the law written on the heart,
as the apostle calls it, Romans 2:15; but
the following are of positive institution, and depend upon the will of the
lawgiver, the reasons of which are not so apparent and manifest; and therefore
Jarchi calls them the decree of the king, who gives no reason for it;
ordinances and appointments of a ceremonial kind, which, though there is a
meaning in them, and a reason for them, yet not clear and plain:
thou shall not let thy cattle gender with a diverse kind; or
"cause them to gender"F5תרביע
"non facies coire", V. L. Pagninus, Drusius. for cattle do not
usually of themselves gender with a diverse kind, unless directed and solicited
to it, as a male of one kind with a female of another; for instance, an horse
with a she ass, or an he ass with a mare, and even creatures that were like one
another, yet of different kinds, were not to mix together; as a wolf and a dog,
a hound and a fox, goats and roebucks, goats and sheep, a horse and a mule, a
mule and an ass, an ass and a wild ass; for though they are like one another,
they are of different kindsF6Misn. Gelaim, c. 1. sect. 6. : a
creature thus gendered was not forbidden to be used, as a mule; and if a clean
creature and gendered of clean ones, though of a different kind, it might be
eaten, as MaimonidesF7Hilchot Gelaim, c. 9. sect. 3. affirms; for
not the creature gendered was unlawful for use, but the act of causing to
gender is what is forbidden: the design was to preserve the order of beings,
and the nature of creatures as they were at the first creation; that there
might be no change among them, or anything taken from or added to what God had
made; not to separate what God had joined, or join what God had separated,
which to do must reflect upon his wisdom; as also, that men and women, as PhiloF8De
Special. Leg. p. 784. observes, might abstain from unlawful converse, from
unnatural lusts and mixtures; and as Ainsworth thinks, this was to lead Israel
to the simplicity and sincerity of religion, and of all the parts and doctrines
of the law and Gospel in their distinct kinds, as faith and works, to mingle
which together in our justification before God is forbidden; or rather to teach
the saints not to mix with the men of the world, in evil conversation, or in
superstitious worship; to which may be added, to show that spiritual
regeneration is not partly of corruptible and partly of incorruptible seed, nor
partly of the will of man, and partly of the will of God; nor partly of the
power of man, and partly of the power of God, but wholly of the Spirit and
grace of God:
thou shalt not sow thy field with mingled seed: or seed of
divers sorts, as wheat and barley, and which, according to the JewsF9,
was not mingled unless there be two grains of wheat and one of barley, or one
of wheat and two of barley; or wheat, and barley, and rye: they also include
herbs and trees in this law, and make an graft of them a forbidden mixture;
hence, they sayF11Misn. Celaim, c. 1. sect. 7, 8. , they do not
ingraft one tree in another, nor one herb in another, nor a tree in an herb,
nor an herb in a tree, of which they give instances: and there are various
sorts of seeds, herbs, roots, and trees, which are and are not of divers kinds,
and some that are alike and yet diverse; for they have a whole treatise of such
like things, called "Celaim", or divers kinds: as to the mystical
sense, the "field" may represent the church of God, which is not an
open but an enclosed field, enclosed by the grace of God, and separated from
others by it, well manured and cultivated by the Spirit of God, and through the
word and ordinances, as means, in which manner of fruit and flowers grow, and
is the property of Christ; see Song of Solomon 4:12;
the seed may signify the word or doctrine of the Gospel, sown by the ministers
of it, skilfully and plentifully, which should be pure and unmixed, not
contradictory, nor inconsistent, but all of a piece; the doctrines of it, as
those of election, justification, peace, pardon, and salvation, are to be
represented, not as partly of works and partly of grace, but as entirely of the
grace of God through Christ: or good and bad men may be signified by the
mingled seed; good men, who are made so by the grace of God, and are the good
seed, or the good ground which receives it, which hear the word, understand it,
and bring forth fruit; bad men, such as are of bad principles and practices,
these are not to be mixed together in a church state; bad men are neither to be
received nor retained:
neither shall a garment mingled of linen and woollen come upon
thee; for, as JosephusF12Antiqu. l. 4. c. 8. sect. 11.
says, none but the priests were allowed to wear such a garment, and with which
the MisnahF13Celaim, c. 9. sect. 1. agrees; in which it is asserted,
that the priests have no other clothing to minister in, in the sanctuary, but
of woollen and linen; which seems to be a better reason of this prohibition
than what MaimonidesF14Moreh Nevochim, par. 3. c. 37. gives, that it
was on the account of idolatrous priests, who used to go clothed with such a
garment, and a metal ring on their fingers: the Jewish tradition is, nothing is
forbidden on account of divers kinds (i.e. in garments) but wool and flax;
camels' wool, and sheep's wool, mixed together, if the greater part is camels',
it is free, but if the greater part is sheep's wool, it is forbidden, if half
and half, it is forbidden; and so flax and hemp mixed together; also that
nothing is forbidden on such account but what is spun and woveF15:
the design of this, as of the other, seems to be in general to caution against
unnatural lusts and impure mixtures, and all communion of good and bad men, and
particularly against joining the righteousness of Christ with the works of men,
in the business of justification: Christ's righteousness is often compared to a
garment, and sometimes to line linen, clean and white; and men's righteousness
to filthy rags, Revelation 19:8;
which are by no means to be put together in the said affair; such who believe
in Christ are justified by the obedience of one and not of more, and by faith
in that obedience and righteousness, without the works of the law, Romans 5:19 Romans 3:28; to
join them together is needless, disagreeable, and dangerous.
Leviticus 19:20. 20 ‘Whoever
lies carnally with a woman who is betrothed to a man as a concubine, and
who has not at all been redeemed nor given her freedom, for this there shall be
scourging; but they shall not be put to death, because she was not free.
YLT 20`And when a man lieth with a woman with seed
of copulation, and she a maid-servant, betrothed to a man, and not really
ransomed, or freedom hath not been given to her, an investigation there is;
they are not put to death, for she [is] not free.
And whosoever lieth carnally with a woman,.... Has
carnal knowledge of her: a man and woman are expressed, signifying those that
are of age, Aben Ezra observes, that according to the mystical exposition of
these words, this same carnally lying is as of divers kinds, of a free man with
a bondwoman, and so follows upon the above law and in connection with it: the
woman is described as one
that is a bondmaid; either meaning a
Canaanitish maid, as Jarchi, or an Israelitish one, as Aben Ezra, whom her
father had sold, Exodus 21:7,
betrothed to her husband: to an Hebrew servant, as
Jarchi, or who was promised marriage, either by her master or his son, as Aben
Ezra, Exodus 21:8,
and not at all redeemed, nor freedom given her: or redeemed
and not redeemed, as Jarchi; or, as the Targum of Jonathan, not yet redeemed
with an entire redemption (or wholly redeemed) with silver, nor a writing of
her freedom given her, part of the redemption price being paid, but not the
whole; so that she was, as Jarchi and Ben Gersom express it, half a bondmaid
and half free:
she shall be scourged; and not he, as the
Targum of Jonathan and Jarchi remark, though the Vulgate Latin version renders
it, "both shall be beaten"; and the original text does not clearly
determine it whether one or both should be scourged, since it may be rendered,
"there shall be a scourging"F15בקרת
תהיה "vapulatio erit", Fagius, Vatablus,
Ainsworth; "flagellatio adhibetor"; Junius & Tremellius,
Piscator. ; and seeing both were guilty of sin, it is reasonable to suppose
that both should be scourged, but this is contrary to the sense of the Jewish
writers; so KimchiF16Sepher Shorash. rad. בקר.
observes, the word is תהיה in the singular number and
feminine gender, and not in the plural; wherefore, according to the simple
sense, she is to be beaten, and not he to be beaten; and this was done with the
thong of an ox's hide, as is the sense of the word used, according to Gaon, and
so some in Aben Ezra; and so it is remarked in the MisnahF17Ceritot,
c. 2. sect. 4. , all the uncleannesses, whether of a man or woman, are alike as
to stripes and sacrifice, but with respect to a bondmaid, he (i.e. God) hath
not made the man equal to the woman as to stripes, nor the woman to the man as
to sacrifice:
they shall not be put to death, because she was not free; otherwise
adultery was punished with death of both parties, when committed with a woman
married to an husband, Deuteronomy 22:22;
and she a free woman, but this not being so, were not guilty of death, because,
as Jarchi says, her espousals were no espousals, whereas they would had she
been free, and so have been guilty of death: this difference the law made
between a bond and free woman, but in Christ Jesus and under the Gospel
dispensation there is no difference, Galatians 3:28.
Leviticus 19:21. 21 And he shall bring his
trespass offering to the Lord,
to the door of the tabernacle of meeting, a ram as a trespass offering.
YLT 21`And he hath brought in his guilt-offering to
Jehovah, unto the opening of the tent of meeting, a ram [for] a guilt-offering,
He shall bring his trespass offering unto the Lord,.... To the
priest of the Lord, to offer it for him; he, and not she, as the Targum of
Jonathan has it; See Gill on Leviticus 19:20,
unto the door of the tabernacle of the congregation; where all
offerings were to be brought, Leviticus 17:4,
even a ram for a
trespass offering; which was the usual creature for such a sacrifice, Leviticus 5:15; the
woman was not obliged to bring any, she being a bondmaid; and so having nothing
of her own, but what was her master's, her circumstances are considered, and
scourging was sufficient.
Leviticus 19:22. 22 The
priest shall make atonement for him with the ram of the trespass offering
before the Lord
for his sin which he has committed. And the sin which he has committed shall be
forgiven him.
YLT 22and the priest hath made atonement for him
with the ram of the guilt-offering before Jehovah, for his sin which he hath
sinned, and it hath been forgiven him because of his sin which he hath sinned.
And the priest shall make an atonement for him,.... By
offering his sacrifice for him, typical of the atoning sacrifice of Christ:
with the ram of his trespass offering before the Lord; presented
before him at the door of the tabernacle, and offered up on his altar:
for his sin which he hath done; or "sinned",
which is so expressed, according to Jarchi, to take in his sin, whether done
ignorantly or presumptuously:
and the sin which he hath done shall be forgiven him; upon the
atonement made, as all the sins of God's people are forgiven through Christ,
upon the foot of his atoning sacrifice, see Hebrews 9:22.
Leviticus 19:23. 23 ‘When
you come into the land, and have planted all kinds of trees for food, then you
shall count their fruit as uncircumcised. Three years it shall be as
uncircumcised to you. It shall not be eaten.
YLT 23`And when ye come in unto the land, and have
planted all [kinds] of trees [for] food, then ye have reckoned as uncircumcised
its fruit, three years it is to you uncircumcised, it is not eaten,
And when ye shall come into the land,.... The land
of Canaan, whither they were now going:
and shall have planted all manner of trees for food; such that
brought forth fruit that was eatable, as figs, grapes, olives, &c. so that
all such trees as did not bear fruit fit for man's food came not under the
following law; nor such as grew up of themselves and were not planted; nor such
as were planted for any other use than for fruit; nor such as were planted by
the Canaanites before the Israelites came into their land; for so say the Jews,
what were planted for an hedge or for timber are free from the law; and add, at
the time our fathers came into the land, what they found planted was free, what
they planted, though they had not subdued it (the land), was bound:
then ye shall count the fruit thereof as uncircumcised; not fit to be
eaten, but to be taken off and cast away as the foreskin of the flesh:
three years it shall be as uncircumcised unto you, it shall not be
eaten of; which was a provision partly for the benefit of fruit trees
newly planted, whose fruit, when they first bear, gardeners frequently take off
immediately, and do not suffer them to grow to any perfection, by which means a
tree will grow stronger, and will bear more and better fruit another year; and
partly for the health of man, which physical reason is given by Aben Ezra, who
observes that the fruit that comes unto the third year there is no profit by
it, but is hurtful; and chiefly because, as it is proper that the first fruits
should be given to the Lord before any is eaten, so it is right that it should
be given seasonably, and when it is brought to its perfection: three years were
to be reckoned, as Jarchi and Ben Gersom say, from the time the tree was
planted.
Leviticus 19:24. 24 But
in the fourth year all its fruit shall be holy, a praise to the Lord.
YLT 24and in the fourth year all its fruit is holy
-- praises for Jehovah.
But in the fourth year all the fruit thereof shall be holy,.... Separated
and devoted to the service of God, to be given to the priest, or to be bought
again of him; wherefore the Targum of Jonathan adds, at the end of the verse,
"redeemed from the priest", a redemption price being given to the
priest; and, as Jarchi observes, as the tithe was not eaten without the walls
of Jerusalem, but by redemption, even so likewise this:
to praise the Lord withal; for his abundant
goodness in blessing and making the trees fruitful, and bringing their fruit
unto perfection; and by devoting the first fruits to God, his name was praised
and glorified, as well as by eating them with joy and gladness before the Lord
in Jerusalem.
Leviticus 19:25. 25 And
in the fifth year you may eat its fruit, that it may yield to you its increase:
I am the Lord
your God.
YLT 25And in the fifth year ye do eat its fruit --
to add to you its increase; I [am] Jehovah your God.
And in the fifth year shall ye eat of the fruit thereof,.... And so in
all succeeding years as long as the tree lasted and bore:
that it may yield unto you the increase thereof; may be so
abundantly blessed, and produce so large an increase as to answer the three
years' want of any fruit from it, and the dedication of the fruit of the fourth
year to the Lord:
I am the Lord your God; who has promised this
increase, is both able and faithful to make it good.
Leviticus 19:26. 26 ‘You
shall not eat anything with the blood, nor shall you practice divination
or soothsaying.
YLT 26`Ye do not eat with the blood; ye do not
enchant, nor observe clouds.
Ye shall not eat anything with the blood,.... Or upon,
over, or by the bloodF19על הדם "super sanguine", Montanus, Munster;
"super sanguinem", Fagius. , for this law seems different from that
in Genesis 9:4, and
from those in Leviticus 3:17; and
is variously interpreted by the Jewish writers; some of not eating flesh, the
blood not being rightly let out of it, as not being thoroughly cleared of itF20Joseph.
Antiqu. l. 6. c. 6. sect. 4. T. Bab. Sanhedrin, fol. 63. 1. , and so comes
under the notion of things strangled; others of not eating of sacrifices until
the blood stands in the basinF21Targum Jon. in loc. T. Bab.
Sanhedrin, ib. ; and others of not eating any flesh whose blood is not
sprinkled on the altar, if near the holy placeF23Aben Ezra in loc. :
some think it refers to the custom of murderers who eat over the person slain,
that the avengers of the slain may not take vengeance on them, supposing
something superstitious in it, because of what followsF24Baal
Hatturim in loc. ; though it rather has respect to an idolatrous practice of
the Zabians, as MaimonidesF25Moreh Nevochim, par. 3. c. 46. informs
us, who took blood to be the food of devils, and who used to take the blood of
a slain beast and put it in a vessel, or in a hole dug in the earth, and eat
the flesh sitting round about the blood; fancying by this means they had
communion with devils, and contracted friendship and familiarity with them,
whereby they might get knowledge of future things; See Gill on Ezekiel 33:25,
neither shall ye use enchantment; soothsaying or
divination by various creatures, as by the weasel, birds, or fishes, as the
TalmudistsF26T. Bab. Sanhedrin, fol. 66. 1. Jarchi in loc. ; or
rather by serpents, as the word used is thought to have the signification of;
or by any odd accidents, as a man's food falling out of his mouth, or his staff
out of his hand, or his son calling after him behind, or a crow cawing to him,
or a hart passing by him, or a serpent on his right hand and a fox on his left,
or one says, do not begin (any work) tomorrow, it is the new moon, or the going
out of the sabbathF1Kimchi, Sepher Shorash. rad. נחש.
:
nor observe times; saying, such a day is a lucky day to begin
any business, or such an hour an unlucky hour to go out in, as Jarchi, taking
the word to have the signification of times, days, and hours, as our version
and others; but Aben Ezra derives it from a word which signifies a cloud, and
it is well known, he says, that soothsayers view and consult the clouds, their
likeness and motion; but some of the ancient writers, as Gersom observes,
derive it from a word which signifies an eye, and suppose that such persons are
intended who hold the eyes of people, cast a mist before them, or use some
juggling tricks whereby they deceive their sight.
Leviticus 19:27. 27 You
shall not shave around the sides of your head, nor shall you disfigure the
edges of your beard.
YLT 27`Ye do not round the corner of your head, nor
destroy the corner of thy beard.
Ye shall not round the corners of your heads,.... The
extremities of the hairs of the head, round about, on the forehead, temples,
and behind the ears; this is done, as Jarchi says, when any one makes his
temples, behind his ears, and his forehead alike, so that the circumference of
his head is found to be round all about, as if they had been cut as with a
bowl; and so the Arabians cut their hair, as HerodotusF2Thalia,
sive, l. 3. c. 8. reports; see Gill on Jeremiah 9:26,
neither shall thou mar the corners of thy beard; by shaving
them entirely; Jarchi and other Jewish writers say, there are five of them, two
on the right, as Gersom reckons them, one on the upper jaw, the other on the
nether, and two over against them on the left, and one in the place where the
nether jaw joins the right to the left, the chin; the same observes, that it
was the manner of idolaters to do the above things; and MaimonidesF3Moreh
Nevochim, par. 3. c. 37. Hilchot Obede Cochabim, c. 12. sect. 1. is of opinion
that the reason of the prohibition is, because the idolatrous priests used this
custom; but this law does not respect priests only, but the people of Israel in
general; wherefore rather it was occasioned by the Gentiles in common cutting
their hair, in honour of their gods, as the Arabians did, as Herodotus in the
above place relates, in imitation of Bacchus, and to the honour of him; and so
with others, it was usual for young men to consecrate their hair to idols; but
inasmuch as such practices were used on account of the dead, as Aben Ezra
observes, it seems probable enough that these things are forbidden to be done
on their account, since it follows,
Leviticus 19:28. 28 You
shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead, nor tattoo any marks on
you: I am the Lord.
YLT 28`And a cutting for the soul ye do not put in
your flesh; and a writing, a cross-mark, ye do not put on you; I [am] Jehovah.
Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead,.... Either
with their nails, tearing their cheeks and other parts, or with any instrument,
knife, razor, &c. Jarchi says, it was the custom of the Amorites, when
anyone died, to cut their flesh, as it was of the Scythians, as HerodotusF4Melpomene,
sive, l. 4. c. 71. relates, even those of the royal family; for a king they cut
off a part of the ear, shaved the hair round about, cut the arms about, wounded
the forehead and nose, and transfixed the left hand with arrows; and so the
Carthaginians, who might receive it from the Phoenicians, being a colony of
theirs, used to tear their hair and mouths in mourning, and beat their breastsF5Alex.
ab Alex. Genial. Dier. l. 3. c. 7. ; and with the Romans the women used to tear
their cheeks in such a manner that it was forbid by the law of the twelve
tables, which some have thought was taken from hence: and all this was done to
appease the infernal deities, and to give them satisfaction for the deceased,
and to make them propitious to them, as VarroF6Apud Servium in
Virgil. Aeneid. 3. affirms; and here it is said to be made "for the
soul", for the soul of the departed, to the honour of it, and for its
good, though the word is often used for a dead body: now, according to the
Jewish canonsF7Misn. Maccot, c. 3. sect. 5. , whosoever made but one
cutting for a dead person was guilty, and to be scourged; and he that made one
for five dead men, or five cuttings for one dead man, was obliged to scourging
for everyone of them:
nor print any marks upon you; Aben Ezra observes,
there are some that say this is in connection with the preceding clause, for
there were who marked their bodies with a known figure, by burning, for the
dead; and he adds, and there are to this day such, who are marked in their
youth in their faces, that they may be known; these prints or marks were made
with ink or black lead, or, however, the incisions in the flesh were filled up
therewith; but this was usually done as an idolatrous practice; so says Ben
Gersom, this was the custom of the Gentiles in ancient times, to imprint upon
themselves the mark of an idol, to show that they were his servants; and the
law cautions from doing this, as he adds, to the exalted name (the name of
God): in the Misnah it is saidF8Ibid. sect. 6. , a man is not guilty
unless he writes the name, as it is said, Leviticus 19:28;
which the TalmudistsF9T. Bab. Maccot, fol. 21. 1. and the
commentatorsF11 interpret of the name of an idol, and not of God:
I am the Lord; who only is to be
acknowledged as such, obeyed and served, and not any strange god, whose mark
should be imprinted on them.
Leviticus 19:29. 29 ‘Do
not prostitute your daughter, to cause her to be a harlot, lest the land fall
into harlotry, and the land become full of wickedness.
YLT 29`Thou dost not pollute thy daughter to cause
her to go a-whoring, that the land go not a-whoring, and the land hath been
full of wickedness.
Do not prostitute thy daughter, to cause her to be a whore,.... Not by
delaying to marry her, which is the sense the Jews giveF12Targ. Jon.
in loc. T. Bab. Sanhedrin, fol. 76. 1. , but it refers to a wicked practice
among the Phoenicians or Canaanites, AthanasiusF13Contra Gentes, p.
21. speaks of, whose women used to prostitute themselves in the temples of
their idols; and to such filthy services, in a religious way, the Israelites,
in imitation of them, are forbid to expose their daughters: such filthy
practices, under a notion of religion, were committed at Babylon, Corinth, and
other places; See Gill on Micah 1:7,
lest the land fall to whoredom, and the land become full of
wickedness: of the wickedness of whoredom, both corporeal and spiritual,
fornication and idolatry; both of which would be promoted by such abominable
practices, and in process of time the land be filled with them.
Leviticus 19:30. 30 ‘You
shall keep My Sabbaths and reverence My sanctuary: I am the Lord.
YLT 30`My sabbaths ye do keep, and My sanctuary ye
do reverence; I [am] Jehovah.
Ye shall keep my sabbaths,.... By attending to the
worship and service of God on sabbath days, they and their children would be
preserved from the idolatry of the Gentiles, and all the filthy practices
attending it:
and reverence my sanctuary; and not defile it by
such impurities as were committed in the temples of idols: the sanctuary being
an holy place, sacred to him whose name is holy and reverend, and where was the
seat of his glorious Majesty, and therefore not to be defiled by fornication or
idolatry, or by doing anything in it unseemly and unbecoming; see Gill on Mark 11:16,
I am the Lord; who had appointed the
observance of the sabbath day, and dwelt in the sanctuary, and therefore
expected that the one would be kept and the other reverenced, and neither of
them polluted.
Leviticus 19:31. 31 ‘Give no regard to mediums
and familiar spirits; do not seek after them, to be defiled by them: I am
the Lord
your God.
YLT 31`Ye do not turn unto those having familiar
spirits; and unto wizards ye do not seek, for uncleanness by them; I [am]
Jehovah your God.
Regard not them that have familiar spirits,.... The word
used signifies "bottles", and that sort of diviners here intended go
by this name, either because what they sat on when they divined was in the form
of a bottle, or they divined by one, or they were swelled and inflated as
bottles when they delivered out their answers, or spoke as out of a bottle or
hollow place; hence they are called masters or mistresses of the bottle: they
seem to be the same with the ventriloquists, and so the Septuagint version here
calls them; such whose voice seemed to come out of their bellies, and even the
lower parts of them; and such was the Pythian prophetess at Delphos, and very
probably the maid in the times of the apostles, who had a spirit of divination,
or of Python, Acts 16:16; and so
the words may be rendered here, "look not to the Python"F14אל תפנו אל
האבת "ne respiciatis ad Pythonas",
Montanus; so Junius & Tremellius, Piscator. , or those who have the spirit
of Python; so Jarchi from the MisnahF15Misn. Sanhedrin, c. 7. sect.
7. interprets the word here used, "Baal Ob" or the master of the bottle,
this is Python, one that speaks from under his arm holes:
neither seek after wizards; such as pretend to a
great deal of knowledge, as the word signifies; such as are called cunning men,
who pretend to know where lost or stolen goods are, and to tell people their
fortunes, and what will befall them hereafter:
to be defiled by them; for by seeking to them,
and believing what is said by them, and trusting thereunto, and expecting
events answerable to their predictions, they would be guilty of a gross sin,
and so bring pollution and guilt on them; according to the Jewish canonsF16lbid.
, such sort of persons as are cautioned against were to be stoned, and they
that consulted them to be reproved:
I am the Lord your God; who only is to be
regarded and sought unto for advice and assistance; see Isaiah 8:19.
Leviticus 19:32. 32 ‘You
shall rise before the gray headed and honor the presence of an old man, and
fear your God: I am the Lord.
YLT 32`At the presence of grey hairs thou dost rise
up, and thou hast honoured the presence of an old man, and hast been afraid of
thy God; I [am] Jehovah.
Thou shall rise up before the hoary head,.... Or
"before old age"F17מפני שיבה "ante canitiem", Pagninus; so Tigurine
version, Junius & Tremellius, Piscator. , which may be discerned by the
hoary or grey hairs upon the head; that is, before a grey-headed man, or an old
man, and one was reckoned so when he was of seventy years of age; for so it is
saidF18Pirke Abot, c. 5. sect. 21. , one of sixty years is arrived
to old age, and one of seventy to grey hairs. Fagius relates, that according to
the tradition of the Hebrews, a young man was obliged to rise up when an
ancient man was at the distance of four cubits from him, and to sit down again
as soon as he had passed by him, that it might appear it was done in honour of
him. And this was not only observed among the Jews, but anciently among
Heathens, who reckoned it abominable wickedness, and a capital crime, if a
young man did not rise up to an old man, and a boy to a bearded personF19"Improbitas
illo fuit", &c. Juvenal. Satyr. 13. v. 53, 54, 55, 56. . HerodotusF20Euterpe,
sive, l. 2. c. 80. reports, that the Egyptians agreed in this with the
Lacedaemonians, and with them only of the Grecians, that the younger, when they
met the elder, gave them the way and turned aside, and when coming towards them
rose up out of their seat; and this law was enjoined them by Lycurgus, and which
AelianusF21Hist. Animal. l. 6. c. 61. commends as of all the most
humane. And this respect to ancient persons is due to them from younger
persons, because of their having been in the world before them, and of their
long continuance in it, and because of the favour and honour God has bestowed
upon them in granting them long life, as also because of the experience,
knowledge, and wisdom, they may be supposed to have attained unto: the Targums
of Onkelos and Jonathan restrain this to such as are expert in the law; so
Jarchi says, there is no old man but he that has acquired wisdom; but it seems
not to be the intention of this law to limit the respect to such only; though
it must be allowed that ancient persons, who are wise and good, are worthy of
special regard, see Proverbs 16:31,
and honour the face of the old man; who for the wrinkles of
it, and his withered countenance, might be liable to be despised. The Targum of
Jonathan interprets it, the face of a wise man, which agrees with what is
observed before; and so Jarchi, Ben Gersom, and other Jewish writers explain
it; and the former asks, what is this honour? he may not sit in his place, nor
contradict his words. All this may be applied to elders by office, as well as
in age, to magistrates, masters, and teachers; and particularly, as Ben Gersom
observes, this may admonish us to give honour to God, who is the Ancient of
days, who always was, and ever will be:
and fear thy God, I am the Lord; who has
commanded such reverence of ancient persons, and will punish for any marks of
irreverence shown them; and who is himself to be feared and reverenced above
all, being, from everlasting to everlasting, God, and whose name is holy and
reverend.
Leviticus 19:33. 33 ‘And
if a stranger dwells with you in your land, you shall not mistreat him.
YLT 33`And when a sojourner sojourneth with thee in
your land, thou dost not oppress him;
And if a stranger sojourn with you in your land,.... Ben
Gersom, and others, understand this of a proselyte of righteousness, who was
circumcised, and in all things conformed to the Jewish religion; but it may be
interpreted of a proselyte of the gate, who was not an idolater, since he is
described as one sojourning with them, and indeed of any stranger, who for a
time was providentially cast among them:
ye shall not vex him: with hard and grievous words,
upbraiding him with his former ignorance and idolatry, and saying unto him, as
Jarchi observes, yesterday thou wast a worshipper of idols, and now thou comest
to learn the law; nor distress him by any means in business, or with law suits;
See Gill on Exodus 22:21.
Leviticus 19:34. 34 The
stranger who dwells among you shall be to you as one born among you, and you
shall love him as yourself; for you were strangers in the land of Egypt: I am
the Lord
your God.
YLT 34as a native among you is the sojourner to you
who is sojourning with you, and thou hast had love to him as to thyself, for
sojourners ye have been in the land of Egypt; I [am] Jehovah your God.
But a stranger that dwelleth
with you shall be unto you as one born among you,.... Especially if a
proselyte of righteousness; for then he enjoyed the same privileges, civil and
religious, the Israelites did, for there was one law for them both, Exodus 12:49,
and thou shalt love him as thyself; and show it by doing all
the good things for him they would have done for themselves in like
circumstances:
for ye were strangers in the land of Egypt: and therefore
knew what hardships such were exposed unto; and it became them to put on bowels
of compassion, and show pity to those in a like condition, and particularly
consider, as Jarchi suggests, that they were idolaters there also, and
therefore ought not to upbraid strangers with their former idolatry:
I am the Lord your God; who showed kindness to
them when strangers in Egypt, and had brought them out of that land, and
therefore ought to obey his commands, and particularly in this instance.
Leviticus 19:35. 35 ‘You
shall do no injustice in judgment, in measurement of length, weight, or volume.
YLT 35`Ye do not do perversity in judgment, in
mete-yard, in weight, or in liquid measure;
Ye shall do no unrighteousness in judgment,.... This is
repeated from Leviticus 19:15;
and in order to lead on to some other laws and instructions; though Aben Ezra
thinks this is said in connection with the preceding words, and in reference to
the stranger, agreeably to Deuteronomy 1:16;
but Jarchi refers it to what follows concerning weights and measures, and
observes, that a measurer is a judge; and if he acts deceitfully, he perverts
judgment, and does that which is detestable and abominable, and is the cause of
the five following things said of a judge; he defiles the land, and profanes
the name of God, and causes the Shechinah or divine Majesty to remove, or
causes Israel to fall by the sword, or carries them captive out of their land:
in meteyard, in weight, or in measure; the first of
these, according to Jarchi, signifies the measure of land, of fields, &c.
and so likewise of anything that is measured, not only by the rod or line, but
by the yard or ell, as cloth and other things, whether broad or narrow, that
are measured in their length; and the second may respect the weight of all
sorts of things that are weighed in scales, as money in former times, as well
as various sorts of goods; and the last has respect to the measure of both dry
and liquid things, by the bushel, peck, quart, pint, &c.
Leviticus 19:36. 36 You
shall have honest scales, honest weights, an honest ephah, and an honest hin: I
am the Lord
your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt.
YLT 36righteous balances, righteous weights, a
righteous ephah, and a righteous hin ye have; I [am] Jehovah your God, who hath
brought you out from the land of Egypt;
Just balances, just weights,.... Which were for such
sort of things as were bought and sold by weight, and these were to be
according to the custom and usage which universally obtained among them, or
were fixed and settled by them; they were to be neither lighter nor heavier;
they were not to have one sort to buy with, and another to sell with, which was
not just, and was an abomination to the Lord, Proverbs 11:1; for
"weights", it is in the original text "stones", for those
were formerly used in weighing, and were with us: hence it is still in use to
say, so much by the stone. And according to MaimonidesF23Hilchot
Genibah, c. 8. sect. 4. , the Jews were not to make their weights neither of
iron, nor of lead, nor of the rest of metals, lest they should rust and become
light, but of polished rock, and the like:
a just ephah, and a just hin, shall ye have; the first of
these was the measure of things dry, as corn, and the like, the latter of
things liquid, as oil and wine; the one held three seahs or pecks, or ten
omers, Exodus 16:36; or,
according to a nicer calculation, the ephah held seven gallons, two quarts, and
half a pint; and the other, according to some, held three quarts; but, as more
exactly calculated, it held a wine gallon, and a little more than a quart; see
Gill on Exodus 30:24. Some
Jewish writersF24Torath Cohanim apud Yalkut in loc. Maimon. &
Bartenora in Misn. Sheviith, c. 10. sect. 9. refer this to words, promises, and
compacts, expressed by yea and nay, which they were to abide by; that their yea
should be yea, and their nay, nay, Matthew 5:37; that
their affirmation should be just, and so their negation:
I am the Lord your God, which brought you out of the land
of Egypt; and therefore were under great obligations to observe his
commands, as follows.
Leviticus 19:37. 37 ‘Therefore
you shall observe all My statutes and all My judgments, and perform them: I am
the Lord.’”
YLT 37and ye have observed all my statutes, and all
my judgments, and have done them; I [am] Jehovah.'
Therefore shall ye observe all my statutes, and all my judgments,.... Delivered
in this and the preceding chapters, and elsewhere, whether ceremonial or
judicial, or moral, as there were of each, which had been delivered to them;
and which are all comprehended in these two words, "statutes", or
ordinances, which were the determinations of his sovereign will, and of mere
positive institution; and "judgments", which were such laws as
respected their civil or religious conduct, formed according to the rules of
justice and equity: "all" and everyone of which were to be
"observed", taken notice of, and regarded, in order to be put in
practice, as follows:
and do them; act according to them, in civil, moral, and religious life:
I am the Lord; who enjoined all these
things, and had a right to do so, and expected obedience to them, which it was
right fit that they should give.
──《John Gill’s
Exposition of the Bible》