Leviticus in Easton's Bible Dictionary
the third book of the Pentateuch; so called in the Vulgate,
after the LXX., because it treats chiefly of the
Levitical
service.
In the first section of the book (1-17), which
exhibits the
worship itself, there is, (1.) A series of laws (1-
7) regarding
sacrifices, burnt-offerings, meat-offerings, and
thank-offerings
(1-3), sin-offerings and trespass-offerings (4; 5),
followed by
the law of the priestly duties in connection with
the offering
of sacrifices (6; 7). (2.) An historical section (8-
10), giving
an account of the consecration of Aaron and his sons
(8);
Aaron's first offering for himself and the people
(9); Nadab and
Abihu's presumption in offering "strange fire before
Jehovah,"
and their punishment (10). (3.) Laws concerning
purity, and the
sacrifices and ordinances for putting away impurity
(11-16). An
interesting fact may be noted here. Canon Tristram,
speaking of
the remarkable discoveries regarding the flora and
fauna of the
Holy Land by the Israel Exploration officers, makes
the
following statement:, "Take these two catalogues of
the clean
and unclean animals in the books of Leviticus [11]
and
Deuteronomy [14]. There are eleven in Deuteronomy
which do not
occur in Leviticus, and these are nearly all animals
and birds
which are not found in Egypt or the Holy Land, but
which are
numerous in the Arabian desert. They are not named
in Leviticus
a few weeks after the departure from Egypt; but
after the people
were thirty-nine years in the desert they are named,
a strong
proof that the list in Deuteronomy was written at
the end of the
journey, and the list in Leviticus at the beginning.
It fixes
the writing of that catalogue to one time and period
only, viz.,
that when the children of Israel were familiar with
the fauna
and the flora of the desert" (Palest. Expl. Quart.,
Jan. 1887).
(4.) Laws marking the separation between Israel and
the heathen
(17-20). (5.) Laws about the personal purity of the
priests, and
their eating of the holy things (20; 21); about the
offerings of
Israel, that they were to be without blemish (22:17-
33); and
about the due celebration of the great festivals
(23; 25). (6.)
Then follow promises and warnings to the people
regarding
obedience to these commandments, closing with a
section on vows.
The various ordinances contained in this book were
all
delivered in the space of a month (comp. Ex. 40:17;
Num. 1:1),
the first month of the second year after the Exodus.
It is the
third book of Moses.
No book contains more of the very words of God. He
is almost
throughout the whole of it the direct speaker. This
book is a
prophecy of things to come, a shadow whereof the
substance is
Christ and his kingdom. The principles on which it
is to be
interpreted are laid down in the Epistle to the
Hebrews. It
contains in its complicated ceremonial the gospel of
the grace
of God.
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