19. Ye shall offer at your own will--rather, to your being
accepted.
a male without blemish--This law
(Le 1:3)
is founded on a sense of natural propriety, which required the greatest
care to be taken in the selection of animals for sacrifice. The reason
for this extreme caution is found in the fact that sacrifices are
either an expression of praise to God for His goodness, or else they
are the designed means of conciliating or retaining His favor. No
victim that was not perfect in its kind could be deemed a fitting
instrument for such purposes if we assume that the significance of
sacrifices is derived entirely from their relation to Jehovah.
Sacrifices may be likened to gifts made to a king by his subjects, and
hence the reasonableness of God's strong remonstrance with the
worldly-minded Jews
(Mal 1:8).
If the tabernacle, and subsequently the temple, were considered the
palace of the great King, then the sacrifices would answer to presents
as offered to a monarch on various occasions by his subjects; and in
this light they would be the appropriate expressions of their feelings
towards their sovereign. When a subject wished to do honor to his
sovereign, to acknowledge allegiance, to appease his anger, to
supplicate forgiveness, or to intercede for another, he brought a
present; and all the ideas involved in sacrifices correspond to these
sentiments--those of gratitude, of worship, of prayer, of confession
and atonement [BIB. SAC.].
JFB.
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