Gefunden 543 Ergebnisse für: Burnt Offering
the man who eats any of the victim for a welcome-offering, when he is himself defiled, is lost to his people; (Leviticus 7, 20)
Anyone who eats the fat which ought to be offered, as part of the Lord’s burnt-sacrifice, is lost to his people. (Leviticus 7, 25)
giving him this message, too, for the sons of Israel: The man who brings the Lord a welcome-offering must surrender, in doing so, his sacrificial due, the choice portions of the victim. (Leviticus 7, 29)
The right shoulder of the victim slain in welcome-offering is also the priest’s prerogative; (Leviticus 7, 32)
The breast that is held up in sign of consecration, the shoulder that is separated from the rest, are the portions of the welcome-offering which I demand of the Israelites; making them over to Aaron, my priest, and to his descendants, as a right due to them at all times from the sons of Israel. (Leviticus 7, 34)
Thus far the rules which govern burnt-sacrifice,✻ and sacrifices for a fault or a wrong done, for the hallowing of priests, and for the victims used in welcome-offering, (Leviticus 7, 37)
He offered a ram, too, as a burnt-sacrifice; Aaron and his sons laid their hands on its head, (Leviticus 8, 18)
first washing its entrails and its feet; so he burnt the whole ram on the altar, a sacrifice such as the Lord had commanded, to please him with the smell of its burning. (Leviticus 8, 21)
So they were handed back to Moses, and he burnt them on the sacrificial altar as an offering for their consecration, a smell of burning for the Lord to accept. (Leviticus 8, 28)
Choose out a young bullock to atone for your faults, and a ram for burnt-sacrifice, both without blemish, and offer them to the Lord. (Leviticus 9, 2)
And bid the sons of Israel choose out a goat to atone for their faults, with a bullock and a lamb, both one year old, both without blemish, for their burnt-sacrifice; (Leviticus 9, 3)
an ox, too, and a ram, by way of welcome-offering. They must immolate them here before the Lord, and offer up flour kneaded with oil to accompany each sacrifice; this day, the Lord means to appear among you. (Leviticus 9, 4)
