Numbers 15

Laws About Offerings

1 The Lord instructed Moses:
2 "Speak to the Israelites and tell them: When you enter the land I am giving you to settle in,
3 and you make a fire offering to the Lord from the herd or flock-either a burnt offering or a sacrifice, to fulfill a vow,[a] or as a freewill offering, or at your appointed festivals-to produce a pleasing aroma for the Lord,
4 the one presenting his offering to the Lord must also present a grain offering of two quarts[b] of fine flour mixed with a quart[c] of oil.
5 Prepare a quart[d] of wine as a drink offering with the burnt offering or sacrifice of each lamb.
6 "If you prepare a grain offering with a ram, it must be four quarts[e] of fine flour mixed with a third of a gallon[f] of oil.
7 Also present a third of a gallon[g] of wine for a drink offering as a pleasing aroma to the Lord.
8 "If you prepare a young bull as a burnt offering or as a sacrifice, to fulfill a vow, or as a fellowship offering to the Lord,
9 a grain offering of six quarts[h] of fine flour mixed with two quarts[i] of oil must be presented with the bull.
10 Also present two quarts[j] of wine as a drink offering. It is a fire offering of pleasing aroma to the Lord.
11 This is to be done for each ox, ram, lamb, or goat.
12 This is how you must prepare each of them, no matter how many.
13 "Every Israelite is to prepare these things in this way when he presents a fire offering as a pleasing aroma to the Lord.
14 When a foreigner resides with you or someone else is among you and wants to prepare a fire offering as a pleasing aroma to the Lord, he is to do exactly as you do throughout your generations.
15 The assembly is to have the same statute for[k] both you and the foreign resident as a permanent statute throughout your generations. You and the foreigner will be alike before the Lord.
16 The same law and the same ordinance will apply to both you and the foreigner who resides with you."[l]
17 The Lord instructed Moses:
18 "Speak to the Israelites and tell them: After you enter the land where I am bringing you,
19 you are to offer a contribution to the Lord when you eat from the food of the land.
20 You are to offer a loaf from your first batch of dough[m] as a contribution; offer it just like a contribution from the threshing floor.[n]
21 Throughout your generations, you are to give the Lord a contribution from the first batch of your dough.
22 "When you sin unintentionally and do not obey all these commands that the Lord spoke to Moses[o]-
23 all that the Lord has commanded you through Moses, from the day the Lord issued the commands and onward throughout your generations-
24 and if it was done unintentionally without the community's awareness, the entire community is to prepare one young bull for a burnt offering as a pleasing aroma to the Lord, with its grain offering and drink offering according to the regulation, and one male goat as a sin offering.
25 The priest must then make atonement for the entire Israelite community so that they may be forgiven, for the sin was unintentional. They are to bring their offering, one made by fire to the Lord, and their sin offering before the Lord for their unintentional sin.
26 The entire Israelite community and the foreigner who resides among them will be forgiven, since it happened to all the people unintentionally.
27 "If one person sins unintentionally,[p] he is to present a year-old female goat as a sin offering.
28 The priest must then make atonement before the Lord on behalf of the person who acts in error sinning unintentionally, and when he makes atonement for him, he will be forgiven.
29 You are to have the same law for the person who acts in error, whether he is an Israelite or a foreigner who lives among you.
30 "But the person who acts defiantly,[q] whether native or foreign resident, blasphemes the Lord.[r] That person is to be cut off from his people.
31 He will certainly be cut off, because he has despised the Lord's word and broken His command; his guilt remains on him."

Sabbath Violation

32 While the Israelites were in the wilderness, they found a man gathering wood on the Sabbath day.[s]
33 Those who found him gathering wood brought him to Moses, Aaron, and the entire community.
34 They placed him in custody, because it had not been decided what should be done to him.
35 Then the Lord told Moses, "The man is to be put to death. The entire community is to stone him outside the camp."
36 So the entire community brought him outside the camp and stoned him to death, as the Lord had commanded Moses.

Tassels for Remembrance

37 The Lord said to Moses,
38 "Speak to the Israelites and tell them that throughout their generations they are to make tassels[t] for the corners of their garments, and put a blue cord on the tassel at [each] corner.
39 These will serve as tassels for you to look at, so that you may remember all the Lord's commands and obey them and not become unfaithful by following your own heart and your own eyes.
40 This way you will remember and obey all My commands and be holy to your God.
41 I am the Lord your God who brought you out of the land of Egypt to be your God; I am the Lord your God."[u]

Numbers 15 Commentary

Chapter 15

The law of the meat-offering and the drink-offering The stranger under the same law. (1-21) The sacrifice for the sin of ignorance. (22-29) The punishment of presumption The sabbath-breaker stoned. (30-36) The law for fringes on garment. (37-41)

Verses 1-21 Full instructions are given about the meat-offerings and drink-offerings. The beginning of this law is very encouraging, When ye come into the land of your habitation which I give unto you. This was a plain intimation that God would secure the promised land to their seed. It was requisite, since the sacrifices of acknowledgment were intended as the food of God's table, that there should be a constant supply of bread, oil, and wine, whatever the flesh-meat was. And the intent of this law is to direct the proportions of the meat-offering and drink-offering. Natives and strangers are placed on a level in this as in other like matters. It was a happy forewarning of the calling of the Gentiles, and of their admission into the church. If the law made so little difference between Jew and Gentile, much less would the gospel, which broke down the partition-wall, and reconciled both to God.

Verses 22-29 Though ignorance will in a degree excuse, it will not justify those who might have known their Lord's will, yet did it not. David prayed to be cleansed from his secret faults, those sins which he himself was not aware of. Sins committed ignorantly, shall be forgiven through Christ the great Sacrifice, who, when he offered up himself once for all upon the cross, seemed to explain one part of the intention of his offering, in that prayer, Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do. It looked favourably upon the Gentiles, that this law of atoning for sins of ignorance, is expressly made to extend to those who were strangers to Israel.

Verses 30-36 Those are to be reckoned presumptuous sinners, who sin designedly against God's will and glory. Sins thus committed are exceedingly sinful. He that thus breaks the commandment reproaches the Lord. He also despises the word of the Lord. Presumptuous sinners despise it, thinking themselves too great, too good, and too wise, to be ruled by it. A particular instance of presumption in the sin of sabbath-breaking is related. The offence was gathering sticks on the sabbath day, to make a fire, whereas the people were to bake and seethe what they had occasion for, the day before, ( Exodus 16:23 ) . This was done as an affront both to the law and to the Lawgiver. God is jealous for the honour of his sabbaths, and will not hold him guiltless who profanes them, whatever men may do. God intended this punishment for a warning to all, to make conscience of keeping holy the sabbath. And we may be assured that no command was ever given for the punishment of sin, which, at the judgment day, shall not prove to have come from perfect love and justice. The right of God to a day of devotion to himself, will be disputed and denied only by such as listen to the pride and unbelief of their hearts, rather than to the teaching of the Spirit of truth and life. Wherein consists the difference between him who was detected gathering sticks in the wilderness on the day of God, and the man who turns his back upon the blessings of sabbath appointments, and the promises of sabbath mercies, to use his time, his cares, and his soul, in heaping up riches; and waste his hours, his property, and his strength in sinful pleasure? Wealth may come by the unhallowed effort, but it will not come alone; it will have its awful reward. Sinful pursuits lead to ruin.

Verses 37-41 The people are ordered by the Lord to make fringes on the borders of their garments. The Jews were distinguished from their neighbours in their dress, as well as in their diet, and thus taught not to be conformed to the way of the heathen in other things. They proclaimed themselves Jews wherever they were, as not ashamed of God and his law. The fringes were not appointed for trimming and adorning their clothes, but to stir ( 2 Peter. 3:1 ) tempted to sin, the fringe would warn them not to break God's commandments. We should use every means of refreshing our memories with the truths and precepts of God's word, to strengthen and quicken our obedience, and arm our minds against temptation. Be holy unto your God; cleansed from sin, and sincerely devoted to his service; and that great reason for all the commandments is again and again repeated, "I am the Lord your God."

Footnotes 21

  • [a]. Nm 15:8; Lv 22:21; 27:2
  • [b]. Lit a tenth (of an ephah)
  • [c]. Lit a fourth hin
  • [d]. Lit a fourth hin
  • [e]. Lit two-tenths (of an ephah)
  • [f]. Lit a third hin
  • [g]. Lit a third hin
  • [h]. Lit three-tenths (of an ephah)
  • [i]. Lit a half hin
  • [j]. Lit a half hin
  • [k]. Sam, LXX join The assembly to v. 14, reading Lord, the assembly must do exactly as you do. 15 The same statute will apply to
  • [l]. Ex 12:19,49; Lv 16:29-31; 17:8-16
  • [m]. Neh 10:37; Ezk 44:30
  • [n]. Lv 2:14
  • [o]. Lv 4:2
  • [p]. Lv 4:27
  • [q]. Lit with a high hand
  • [r]. 2 Kg 19:6,22; Isa 37:6,23; Ezk 20:27
  • [s]. Ex 35:2-3
  • [t]. Dt 22:12; Mt 23:5
  • [u]. Ex 29:46; Lv 19:36; 25:38; 26:13

Chapter Summary

INTRODUCTION TO NUMBERS 15

In this chapter the children of Israel are instructed about the meat offerings and drink offerings, and the quantities of them, which were always to go along with their burnt offerings and peace offerings they should offer when they came into the land of Canaan, Nu 15:1-12; and they are told that the same laws and ordinances would be binding equally on them that were of the country, and on the strangers in it, Nu 15:13-16; and an order is given them to offer a cake of the first dough for an heave offering, Nu 15:17-21; and they are directed what sacrifices to offer for sins of ignorance, both of the congregation and particular persons, Nu 14:22-29; but as for presumptuous sinners, they were to be cut off, Nu 14:30,31; and an instance is recorded of stoning a sabbath breaker, Nu 14:32-36; and the chapter is concluded with a law for wearing fringes on the borders of their garments, the use of which is expressed, Nu 14:35-41.

Numbers 15 Commentaries

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