Chapter 19:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Read Leviticus 19 |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Exodus Numbers
Leviticus 19
Various Precepts to be holy, ver. 1, 2. To honour parents and
sabbaths, ver. 3. To shun idolatry, ver. 4. Duty to eat their peace-offering, ver. 5-8. To leave gleanings for the poor, ver. 9, 10. Not to steal, lie,
swear falsely, or defraud, ver. 11-13. Not to curse the deaf, or put
a stumbling-block before the blind, ver. 14. Not to judge unjustly,
carry tales, or bear false witness, ver. 15, 16. To reprove sinners,
not to revenge themselves; to love their neighbours, ver. 17, 18.
Not to mix different things, ver. 19. Not to lie with their bond-
maids, ver. 20-22. Not to eat of the fruit of the land for four years,
ver. 23-25. Not to eat blood, use enchantments, or heathen
customs, ver. 26-28. Or prostitute their daughters, ver. 29. To
reverence God and his sanctuary, ver. 30. Not to regard wizards,
ver. 31. To honour the aged, ver. 32. Love and right the stranger,
ver. 33, 34. Do no injustice, ver. 34, 35, 36.
Verse 2. Be ye holy - Separated from all the forementioned defilements,
and entirely consecrated to God and obedient to all his laws. I am
holy - Both in my essence, and in all my laws, which are holy and
just and good.
Verse 3. His mother - The mother is put first, partly because the practice
of this duty begins there, mothers, by perpetual converse, being
sooner known to their children than their fathers; and partly
because this duty is commonly neglected to the mother, upon
whom children have not so much dependence as they have upon
their father. And this fear includes the two great duties of
reverence and obedience. And keep my sabbaths - This is added,
to shew, that, whereas it is enjoined to parents that they should
take care the sabbath be observed both by themselves and their
children, it is the duty of children to fear and obey their parents in
this matter. But that, if parents should neglect their duty herein, or
by their command, counsel, or example, draw them to pollute the
sabbath, the children in that case must keep the sabbath, and
prefer the command of God before the commands of their parents.
Verse 4. Idols - The word signifies such as are no Gods, or nothings, as
they are called, 1 Cor. viii, 4, many idols having no being, but in
the fancy of their worshippers, and all of them having no virtue or
power to do good or evil, Isaiah xli, 23.
Verse 5. At your own will - Or, according to your own pleasure, what
you think fit: For though this in general was required, yet it was
left to their choice to determine the particulars.
Verse 6. On the morrow - He speaks here of that sort of peace-offerings,
which were offered either by vow or freely for the obtaining of
some mercy, for the other sort, which was by way of gratitude for
mercies received, were to be eaten the same day.
Verse 10. I am the Lord your God - Who gave you all these things with
a reservation of my right in them, and with a charge of giving part
of them to the poor.
Verse 12. Ye shall not swear falsely - This is added, to shew how one
sin draws on another, and that when men will lye for their own
advantage, they will easily be induced to perjury. Profane the
name - By any unholy use of it. So it is an additional precept, thou
shalt not abuse my holy name by swearing either falsely or rashly.
Verse 14. Before the blind - To make them fall. Under these two
particulars are manifestly forbidden all injuries done to such as
are unable to right or defend themselves; of whom God here takes
the more care, because they are not able to secure themselves.
Fear thy God - Who both can and will avenge them.
Verse 15. The poor - So as through pity to him to give an unrighteous
sentence.
Verse 16. Stand against the blood - In judgment as a false accuser or
false witness, for accusers and witnesses use to stand, whilst the
Judges sit in courts of judicature.
Verse 17. Thou shalt not hate - As thou dost, in effect, if thou dost not
rebuke him. Thy brother - The same as thy neighbour, that is,
every man. If thy brother hath done wrong, thou shalt neither
divulge it to others, nor hate him, and smother that hatred by
sullen silence; nor flatter him therein, but shalt freely and in love,
tell him of his fault. And not suffer sin upon him - Not suffer him
to lie under the guilt of any sin, which thou by rebuking him, and
thereby bringing him to repentance, couldst free him from.
Verse 18. Thy neighbour - Every man, as plainly appears,
1. By comparing this place with ver. 34, where this law is applied
to strangers.
2. Because the word neighbour is explained by another man, chap.
xx, 10 Rom. xiii, 8. As thyself - With the same sincerity, though
not equality of affection.
Verse 19. Thou shalt not let thy cattle gender - This was prohibited,
partly to restrain the curiosity and boldness of men, who might
attempt to amend or change the works of God, partly that by the
restraint here laid even upon brute-creatures men might be taught
to abhor all unnatural lusts, partly to teach the Israelites to avoid
mixtures with other nations, either in marriage or in religion,
which also may be signified by the following prohibitions.
Verse 20. She shall be scourged - Hebrew. There shall be a scourging,
which probably may belong to both of them, for
1. Both were guilty.
2. It follows, they shall not be punished with death, which may
seem to imply that they were to be punished by some other
common and considerable punishment, which scourging indeed
was, but the paying of a ram was a small penalty and very
unsuitable to the greatness of the offense. And the offering of the
ram as a trespass offering for the sin against God, is not
inconsistent with making satisfaction other ways for the injury
done to men, but only added here as farther punishment to the
man, either because he only could do this, and not the woman,
who being a bondwoman had nothing of her own to offer. Or
because his sex and his freedom aggravated his sin. Not put to
death - Which they should have been, had she been free, Deut.
xxii, 23, 24. The reason of this difference is not from any respect
which God gives to persons, for bond and free are alike to him,
but because bond-women were scarce wives, and their marriages
were scarce true-marriages, being neither made by their choice,
but their masters authority, nor continued beyond the year of
release, but at her master's or husband's pleasure.
Verse 23. As uncircumcised - That is, As unclean, not to be eaten but
cast away. This precept was serviceable,
1. To the trees themselves, which grew the better and faster, being
early stript of those fruits, which otherwise would have drawn
away much more of the strength from the tree.
2. To men, both because the fruit then was less wholesome, and
because hereby men were taught to bridle their appetites; a lesson
of great use and absolute necessity in a holy life.
Verse 24. Holy - Consecrated to the Lord, as the first-fruits and tithes
were, and therefore given to the priests and Levites, Num. xviii,
12, 13 Deut. xviii, 4 yet so that part of them were communicated
to the poor widows and fatherless and strangers. See Deut. xiv, 28. To bless the Lord, by whose power and goodness the trees bring forth fruit to perfection.
Verse 25. That it may yield the increase - That God may be pleased to
give his blessing, which alone can make them fruitful.
Verse 26. Any thing with the blood - Any flesh out of which the blood is
poured. Neither shall ye use enchantments - It was unpardonable
in them, to whom were committed the oracles of God, to ask
counsel of the devil. And yet worse in Christians, to whom the
son of God is manifested, to destroy the works of the devil. For
Christians to have their nativities cast, or their fortunes told, or to
use charms for the cure of diseases, is an intolerable affront to the
Lord Jesus, a support of idolatry, and a reproach both to
themselves, and to that worthy name by which they are called.
Nor observe times - Superstitiously, esteeming some days lucky,
others unlucky.
Verse 27. The corners of your heads - That is your temples, ye shall not
cut off the hair of your heads round about your temples. This the
Gentiles did, either for the worship of their idols, to whom young
men used to consecrate their hair, being cut off from their heads,
as Homer, Plutarch and many others write; or in funerals or
immoderate mournings, as appears from Isaiah xv, 2 Jer. xlviii, 37. And the like is to be thought concerning the beard or the hair in the corner, that is, corners of the beard. The reason then of this prohibition is because God would not have his people agree with
idolaters, neither in their idolatries, nor in their excessive
sorrowing, no nor so much as in the appearances of it.
Verse 28. Cuttings in your flesh - Which the Gentiles commonly did
both in the worship of their idols, and in their solemn mournings,
Jer. xvi, 6.
Verse 29. Do not prostitute - As the Gentiles frequently did for the
honour of some of their idols, to whom women were consecrated,
and publickly prostituted.
Verse 31. Wizards - Them that have entered into covenant with the
devil, by whose help they foretel many things to come, and
acquaint men with secret things. See ver. 27 Deut. xviii, 11; 1
Sam. xxviii, 3, 7, 9; 2 Kings xxi, 6.
Verse 32. Rise up - To do them reverence when they pass by, for which
end they were obliged, as the Jews say, presently to sit down
again when they were past, that it might be manifest they arose
out of respect to them. Fear thy God - This respect is due to such,
if not for themselves, yet for God's sake, who requires this
reverence, and whose singular blessing old age is.
Verse 33. Vex him - Either with opprobrious expressions, or grievous
exactions.
Verse 34. As one born among you - Either 1, as to the matters of
common right, so it reacheth to all strangers. Or 2, as to church-
privileges, so it concerns only those who were proselytes. Ye
were strangers - And therefore are sensible of the fears, distresses,
and miseries of such, which call for your pity, and you ought to do
to them, as you desired others should do to you, when you were
such.
Verse 35. In mete-yard - In the measuring of lands, or dry things, as
cloth, ribband. In measure - In the measuring liquid or such dry
things as are only contigious, as corn or wine.
Verse 36. A just ephah and a just hin - These two two measures are
named as most common, the former for dry, the latter for moist
things, but under them he manifestly comprehends all other
measures.
Verse 37. Therefore - Because my blessings and deliverances are not
indulgences to sin, but greater obligations to all duties to God and
men.
Chapter 19:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Read Leviticus 19 |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Exodus Numbers
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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