God's New Revelations

The Third Book of Moses: Leviticus

Catholic Public Domain Version 2009

- Chapter 2 -

(Leviticus 6:14–23)
1
When a soul will offer an oblation of sacrifice to the Lord, his oblation shall be of fine wheat flour, and he shall pour oil over it, and he shall set down frankincense,
2
and he shall bring it to the sons of Aaron, the priests. One of them shall take a handful of the flour with oil, as well as all the frankincense, and he shall place it as a memorial upon the altar, as a most sweet odor to the Lord.
3
Then what will remain of the sacrifice shall be for Aaron and his sons, the Holy of holies from the oblations of the Lord.(a)
4
But when you will offer a sacrifice baked in the oven from fine wheat flour, specifically: loaves without leaven, sprinkled with oil, and unleavened wafers, rubbed with oil:
5
if your oblation will be from the frying pan, of flour tempered with oil and without leaven,
6
you shall divide it into little pieces and pour oil over it.
7
But if the sacrifice will be from the oven grating, equally the fine wheat flour shall be sprinkled with oil.
8
When you are offering it to the Lord, you shall deliver it into the hands of the priest.
9
And when he has offered it, he shall take a memorial from the sacrifice and burn it upon the altar as a sweet odor to the Lord.
10
But whatever is left shall be for Aaron and his sons, the Holy of holies from the oblations of the Lord.
11
Every oblation that is offered to the Lord shall be made without leaven; neither shall any leaven or honey be burned with the sacrifice to the Lord.(b)
12
You shall offer only the first-fruits of these along with the gifts. Yet truly, these shall not be placed upon the altar as an odor of sweetness.(c)
13
Whatever sacrifice you will offer, you shall season it with salt; neither shall you take away the salt of the covenant of your God from your sacrifice. In all your oblations, you shall offer salt.(d)
14
But if you will offer a gift of the first-fruits of your grain to the Lord, from ears of grain still green, you shall parch it at the fire, and break it open in the manner of meal. And so shall you offer your first-fruits to the Lord:
15
pouring oil over it, and imposing frankincense, because it is an oblation of the Lord.
16
From this, the priest shall burn, as a memorial of the gift, a portion of the cracked grain and the oil, as well as all of the frankincense.

Footnotes

(a)2:3 Holy of holies:That is, most holy, as being dedicated to God, and set aside by his ordinance for the use of his priests.(Challoner)
(b)2:11 Without leaven or honey:No leaven nor honey was to be used in the sacrifice offered to God; to signify that we are to exclude from the pure worship of the gospel, all double dealing and affection to carnal pleasures.(Challoner)
(c)2:12 So the first fruits of leaven and honey were to be offered along with the gifts, but these were not to be combined with flour, or baked into loaves, for the oblations or offerings on the altar.(Conte)
(d)2:13 Salt:In every sacrifice salt was to be used, which is an emblem of wisdom and discretion, without which none of our performances are agreeable to God.(Challoner)