Leviticus 24
CambridgeCh. Leviticus 24:1-23. Regulations, Ceremonial and Moral (H and P) The separation of materials derived from different sources in this ch. is fairly simple. P as in ch. 23, takes a prominent place. Leviticus 24:1-9 clearly belong to the Priestly Code. Their tone is that of P throughout, and the passage contains various words characteristic of that source, e.g. Leviticus 24:5 ‘esrônîm, the tenth part (of an ephah, occurring in H only in Leviticus 23:17), Leviticus 24:9 most holy, lit. holiness of holinesses. Leviticus 24:10-14; Leviticus 24:23 owe their present form to P.To mark, as is here done, the connexion between laws and the actual events of life is, as Dillm. remarks, quite in P’s manner (cp. Leviticus 10:16 ff.; Numbers 9:6 ff; Numbers 15:32-36), while Leviticus 24:15-22 unmistakably have their origin in H, while showing indications of modification from the later source. See on Leviticus 24:16; Leviticus 24:22. It is not easy to account for the combination with one another of the subjects in this ch. and at least as difficult to suggest a reason for their incorporation at this point in the Law of Holiness. The conjecture might be hazarded that Leviticus 24:1-9 follow on the sacrificial duties of the priesthood as set forth in ch. 23 in order to add an account of the continuous service demanded of them from day to day. But, then, should we not have expected as well the regulation concerning the daily Burnt-Offering (Exodus 29:38 ff.) and Incense-Offering (Exodus 30:7 ff.)? Or the connexion may be the application of the results of the ingathering and harvest (such as corn and olives), dealt with in ch. 23, to the purposes here mentioned. It may be, however, that there has been at some stage a shifting in position of the material of the ch. such as cannot now be traced. The contents may be thus sub-divided: (1) Leviticus 24:1-4, the care of the Tabernacle lamps; (2) Leviticus 24:5-9, the ordering of the shewbread; (3) Leviticus 24:10-23, the incident of the blasphemer, and laws arising out of, or suggested by, that circumstance.
Leviticus 24:1-3
1–3. These vv. agree almost verbatim with Exodus 27:20 f. The care of the lamps is also enjoined in Exodus 25:31 ff.; cp. Exodus 37:17 ff.
Leviticus 24:2
- beaten] i.e. skimmed off the liquid obtained by pounding the olives in a mortar and then straining the pulp.
Leviticus 24:3
- the testimony] the attestation, affirmation of God’s will, which was contained on the Tables of Stone, within the Holy of Holies. tent of meeting] See p. 1 and Driver (C.B.) on Exodus 27:21. Aaron] The LXX. have ‘Aaron and his sons,’ as in the parallel in Exod.
Leviticus 24:4
- The v. ‘has somewhat the air of a later addition to make the directions quite plain’ (Oxf. Hex.). For ‘continually’ the LXX. have ‘until the morning.’
Leviticus 24:5-9
5–9. The ordering of the shewbread Cp. Exodus 25:30; Exodus 37:10 ff.; Numbers 4:7. The ‘twelve cakes’ are not here given this name. For its origin and for parallels to the custom in other religions, see Driver, Exodus 25:30, and HDB. s.v. The undoubtedly correct rendering is presence-bread (lit. bread of the countenance [of God]), as in R.V. mg. there, i.e. bread which was placed as an offering in the presence of the Lord. Cp. the expression used of this bread in the story of 1 Samuel 21:6 [Matthew 7], ‘taken from before [from the presence of] the Lord.’ The LXX. mostly render by ἄρτοιτῆςπρθέσεως, loaves of the setting forth (or, before [God]).
Leviticus 24:6
- rows … row] rather, as R.V. mg., piles. So the word ‘shewbread’ should be rendered pile-bread in 1 Chronicles 9:32; 1 Chronicles 23:29; Nehemiah 10:33. the pure table] i.e. overlaid with pure gold (Exodus 25:24). For a reproduction of the familiar likeness of it as depicted on the Arch of Titus in the Roman Forum, see Driver (C.B.) on Exod. at p. 272, or HDB. Art. Music, iii. 462.
Leviticus 24:7
- frankincense] The LXX. add ‘and salt,’ apparently in view of the rule in Leviticus 2:13. According to a tradition preserved by Josephus (Ant. iii. 10. 7) the frankincense was not poured on the bread, but placed beside it in two golden bowls. an offering made by fire] The frankincense was burnt on the altar of Burnt-Offering. See Jos. Ant. l.c.
Leviticus 24:9
- they shall eat it] The Tal. Bab. (Sukkah 56 a) says that half was eaten by the outgoing and half by the incoming division of priests.
Leviticus 24:10-23
10–23. Incident of the blasphemer, and laws arising out of that occurrence or suggested by it. This section closely resembles Numbers 15:32-36, which relates the punishment of the man found gathering sticks on the sabbath day. The blasphemer was only half Israelite; according to Deuteronomy 23:8 children of the Edomites and the Egyptians were admitted into the congregation in the third generation, but after the Return alliances with Egyptians and other ‘strange’ nations were prohibited (Ezra 9, 10; Nehemiah 13) on the ground that from such mixed marriages harmful results to the Jewish faith might be anticipated.
Leviticus 24:11
- blasphemed the Name] The Heb. verb denotes ‘to indicate by name’ either honourably or with reproach. In the latter sense it is used in Numbers 23:8; Proverbs 11:26, etc., and obviously must be so interpreted here. But the Jews, taking the word in its more general sense, understood the passage as forbidding the mention of the Sacred Name, and wherever it occurs in the Scriptures they either pronounced it Adônai instead (rendered in English by ‘the Lord’), or, where the word Adônai was itself in immediate juxtaposition with the Sacred Name, they substituted for the latter Elôhîm.
Leviticus 24:12
- that it might be declared unto them at the mouth of the Lord] more exact than the A.V. ‘that the mind of the Lord might be shewn them.’
Leviticus 24:14
- let all that heard him lay their hands upon his head] Cp. the inclusion of the witnesses in the account of the stoning of St Stephen (Acts 7:58).
Leviticus 24:16
- all … stone him] probably to be attributed to P or Rp[72], as the original word for ‘congregation’ is not found elsewhere in H. [72] A Reviser, who, probably after that collection had been combined with the Priestly Code, introduced further elements from that Code.The occurrence just related having brought about the enactment of a law dealing with the particular case of blasphemy, an occasion is thus offered for adding penalties for other transgressions. For the death penalty as prescribed in this v. for smiting a man mortally, cp. Exodus 21:12-14.
Leviticus 24:18
- There is no exact parallel for this direction in Exodus 21-23. Exodus 21:33-34 is dealing with a different case.
Leviticus 24:19
- Cp. Exodus 21:23-25. The lex talionis or law of retaliation bulks largely in the Code of Hammurabi (op. cit.), e.g. in the case of human life, §§ 116, 210, 219, 229; of tooth for tooth, § 200; of eye for eye, § 196; and so of ox for ox, §§ 245, 263; of sheep for sheep, § 263; and of goods for goods, § 232. Cp. the Koran, Sura, 2. 173 ff.
Leviticus 24:21
- A repetition, introduced apparently in order to emphasize the direction to exercise no discrimination (Leviticus 24:22) between ‘the stranger’ and the ‘homeborn.’ P repeatedly urges this matter. Cp. Exodus 12:49; Leviticus 16:29; Leviticus 17:15, etc.
