Meat Offering in Smiths Bible Dictionary
The law or ceremonial of the meat offering is described in
Le 2:1 ... and Levi 6:14-23
It was to be composed of fine flour, seasoned with
salt and mixed with oil and frankincense, but without
leaven; and it was generally accompanied by a drink offering
of wine. A portion of it, including all the frankincense,
was to be burnt on the altar as "a memorial;" the rest
belonged to the priest; but the meat offerings offered by
the priests themselves were to be wholly burnt. Its meaning
appears to be exactly expressed in the words of David. 1Ch
29:10-14 It will be seen that this meaning involves neither
of the main ideas of sacrifices --the atonement for sin and
self-dedication to God. It takes them for granted, and is
based on them. Rather it expresses gratitude and love to God
as the giver of all. Accordingly the meat offering, properly
so called, seems always to have been a subsidiary offering,
needing to be introduced by the sin offering which
represented the one idea, and to have formed an appendage to
the burnt offering, which represented the other. The
unbloody offerings offered alone did not properly belong to
the regular meat offerings; they were usually substitutes
for other offerings. Comp. Le 5:11; Nu 5:15 [MEAT]
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