Encontrados 543 resultados para: Burnt Offering
When the days needed for her purification, after the birth of boy or girl, have run out, she must bring a lamb of one year old as a burnt-sacrifice, and a young pigeon or a turtle-dove by way of amends, to the tabernacle door. These she will hand over to the priest, (Leviticus 12, 6)
If she cannot lay her hand on a lamb fit to be offered, she must bring two turtle-doves or two young pigeons, one as a burnt-sacrifice and one by way of amends; these will suffice, and at the priest’s intercession she will be purified.✻ (Leviticus 12, 8)
And if, after that, patches begin to shew where all was once unspotted, it is leprosy spreading this way and that, and the thing must be burnt. (Leviticus 13, 57)
On the eighth day he will take two lambs and a yearling ewe, all without blemish, three tenths of a bushel of flour, kneaded with oil, for a bloodless offering, and a pint of oil besides. (Leviticus 14, 10)
The lamb must be immolated on holy ground, where the offerings for faults and the burnt-sacrifices are offered; and the victim for wrong done, like the victim for a fault, becomes the property of the priest; it is set apart for holy uses. (Leviticus 14, 13)
So he will intercede for him in the Lord’s presence, and offer, first a sacrifice for his fault, then a burnt-sacrifice; (Leviticus 14, 19)
If he is poor, and cannot lay his hand on all the victims aforesaid, he must bring a lamb by way of offering for wrong done, with which the priest will make intercession for him, the tenth of a bushel of flour, kneaded with oil, for a bloodless offering, and a pint of oil, (Leviticus 14, 21)
and two turtle-doves or two young pigeons, one by way of offering for his fault, and the other as a burnt-sacrifice. (Leviticus 14, 22)
The priest will take the lamb, the offering for wrong done, and the pint of oil, and hold them up together; (Leviticus 14, 24)
one of them as for a fault and one by way of burnt-sacrifice, together with the gifts that accompany it. (Leviticus 14, 31)
Such is the offering to be made by a leper who cannot afford the full price of his cleansing. (Leviticus 14, 32)
The priest will sacrifice one as a victim for his fault, and the other as a burnt-sacrifice, and so make intercession for him in the Lord’s presence, that he may be clean from the defilement of his body. (Leviticus 15, 15)
