1Then the Lord spoke to Moses and said, 2‘Speak to the children of Israel and tell them; Whenever someone wishes to make a vow to offer the value of a life to Jehovah, 3the value of a male between twenty and sixty years old must be fifty double-silver coins by the standards of the Holy Place. 4The value of a female must be thirty double-silver coins; 5the value for a male child between five and twenty years old must be twenty double-silver coins, and ten double-silver coins for a female. 6‘As for a child between one month and five years old; the value for a male must be five double-silver coins, and for a female, three double-silver coins. 7And for those who are over sixty, the value must be fifteen double-silver coins for a male and ten double-silver coins for a female. 8And if a person is too poor to pay these values, he must go before the Priest, and the Priest will value him at whatever the man says he can afford in his vow; and this is [the price] that the Priest must set for him. 9‘And when cattle are offered as gifts to Jehovah by anyone, they become holy. 10So, the [person] may not trade a good one for a bad one, or a bad one for a good one. And if someone does decide to make a trade, it must be with an equal… and both will be holy. 11‘And if [someone brings] an unclean animal (which must never be offered as a gift to Jehovah), he must bring the animal to the Priest, 12and the Priest must determine whether it is valuable or not, and whatever value the Priest sets is what must be paid for it. 13And if he wishes to buy it back, he must pay a fifth more than that amount. 14‘And if a man chooses to set aside his house as holy to Jehovah, the Priest must determine whether it is valuable or not, and whatever value the Priest sets is what must be paid. 15And if he wishes to buy it back, he must pay a fifth more for it than the valuation. 16‘And if a man should choose to designate a portion of a field that he owns as holy to Jehovah, then it must be valued by whatever is planted there. It will be worth fifty double-silver coins per two hundred and fifty quarts of barley. 17And if he [sets aside] his field as holy on the Year of Release, that’s how much it should be valued. 18But if he donates his field sometime after the Release, the Priest must figure its value to the next Year of Release, and deduct the appropriate amount from the full valuation. 19But if the one who made the field holy wishes to buy it back [before the Year of Release], he must add a fifth more to its value and it will be his. 20‘And if he doesn’t buy back the field, it may be sold to someone else, and he can’t buy it back later. 21However, after the Release, the field will be holy to Jehovah and subdivided, for the Priest will then own it. 22‘And if a man should set aside a field to Jehovah that he has bought and which isn’t a family possession, 23the Priest must calculate its value to the Year of Release, and that’s how much he must pay that day as holy to Jehovah. 24Then in the Year of Release, the land must be restored to the man who sold it and [really] owned the land. 25‘All the values must be determined by using the holy weights. A double-silver coin is worth twenty copper coins. 26‘All the firstborn cattle are Jehovah’s, so no man can [set them aside] as holy… whether it’s a calf or a sheep, it is Jehovah’s. 27‘If [a man] chooses to buy back an unclean animal, he must add a fifth more to its valuation. But if he doesn’t buy it back, it may be sold at its stated value. 28‘Anything a man has that he chooses to curse before Jehovah, whether it’s a man, an animal, or a field that he owns; it may never be sold or taken back. Everything that is cursed for destruction becomes very holy to Jehovah. 29And whoever is cursed among men must not be ransomed, but must surely be put to death. 30‘Anything in the land that is to be offered, whether it is seeds or the fruit of trees, is Jehovah’s… it is holy to Jehovah. 31And if any man should ever wish to buy back his offering, he must add a fifth more to its [value], and it will be his. 32‘And a tenth of everything, including bulls, sheep, and anything else that is taxable, will be holy to Jehovah. 33So, you may not exchange anything good for anything bad, or anything bad for something good. If you should make an exchange, it must be an equivalent, and since it is holy, it cannot be repurchased.’ 34These are the commandments that Jehovah gave to Moses for the sons of Israel on Mount Sinai.
Matthew Henry - Complete Commentary 1 This is part of the law concerning singular vows, extraordinary ones, which though God did not expressly insist on, yet, if they were consistent with and conformable to the general precepts, he would be well pleased with. Note, We should not only ask, What must we do, but, What may we do, for the glory and honour of God? As the
liberal devises liberal things (
Isa 32:8), so the pious devises pious things, and the enlarged heart would willingly do something extraordinary in the service of so good a Master as God is. When we receive or expect some singular mercy it is good to honour God with some singular vow.
I. The case is here put of persons vowed to God by a singular vow,
Lev 27:2. If a man consecrated himself, or a child, to the service of the tabernacle, to be employed there in some inferior office, as sweeping the floor, carrying out ashes, running of errands, or the like,
the person so consecrated
shall be for the Lord, that is, God will graciously accept the good-will.
Thou didst well that it was in thy heart, 2Chr 6:8. But forasmuch as he had no occasion to use their service about the tabernacle, a whole tribe being appropriated to the use of it, those that were thus vowed were to be redeemed, and the money paid for their redemption was employed for the repair of the sanctuary, or other uses of it, as appears by
2Kgs 12:14, where it is called, in the margin, the
money of the souls of his estimation. A book of rates is accordingly provided, by which the priests were to go in their estimation. Here is, 1. The rate of the middle-aged, between twenty and threescore, these were valued highest, because most serviceable; a male fifty shekels, and a female thirty,
Lev 27:3,
Lev 27:4. The females were then less esteemed, but not so in Christ; for in
Christ Jesus there is neither male nor female, Galat 3:28. Note, Those that are in the prime of their time must look upon themselves as obliged to do more in the service of God and their generation than can be expected either from minors, that have not yet arrived to their usefulness, or from the aged, that have survived it. 2. The rate of the youth between five years old and twenty was less, because they were then less capable of doing service,
Lev 27:5. 3. Infants under five years old were capable of being vowed to God by their parents, even before they were born, as Samuel was, but not to be presented and redeemed till a month old, that, as one sabbath passed over them before they were circumcised, so one new moon might pass over them before they were estimated; and their valuation was but small,
Lev 27:6. Samuel, who was thus vowed to God, was not redeemed, because he was a Levite, and a particular favourite, and therefore was employed in his childhood in the service of the tabernacle. 4. The aged are valued less than youth, but more than children,
Lev 27:7. And the Hebrews observe that the rate of an aged woman is two parts of three to that of an aged man, so that in that age the female came nearest to the value of the male, which occasioned (as bishop Patrick quotes it here) this saying among them,
That an old woman in a house is a treasure in a house. Paul sets a great value upon the aged women, when he makes them
teachers of good things, Titus 2:3. 5. The poor shall be valued according to their ability,
Lev 27:8. Something they must pay, that they might learn not to be rash in vowing to God, for
he hath no pleasure in fools, Qoh 5:4. Yet not more than their ability, but
secundum tenementum -
according to their possessions, that they might not ruin themselves and their families by their zeal. Note, God expects and requires from men according to what they have, and not according to what they have not,
Luke 21:4.
II. The case is put of beasts vowed to God, 1. If it was a clean beast, such as was offered in sacrifice, it must not be redeemed, nor any equivalent given for it:
It shall be holy, Lev 27:9,
Lev 27:10. After it was vowed, it was not to be put to any common use, nor changed upon second thoughts; but it must be either offered upon the altar, or, if through any blemish it was not meet to be offered, he that vowed it should not take advantage of that, but the priests should have it for their own use (for they were God's receivers), or it should be sold for the service of the sanctuary. This teaches caution in making vows and constancy in keeping them when they are made; for
it is a snare to a man to devour that which is holy, and after vows to make enquiry, Prov 20:25. And to this that rule of charity seems to allude (
2Cor 9:7),
Every man, according as he purposeth in his heart, so let him give. 2. If it was an unclean beast, it should go to the use of the priest at such a value; but he that vowed it, upon paying that value in money, and adding a fifth part more to it, might redeem it if he pleased,
Lev 27:11-
Lev 27:13. It was fit that men should smart for their inconstancy. God has let us know his mind concerning his service, and he is not pleased if we do not know our own. God expects that those that deal with him should be at a point, and way what they will stand to.
14 Here is the law concerning real estates dedicated to the service of God by a singular vow.
I. Suppose a man, in his zeal for the honour of God, should
sanctify his house to God (
Lev 27:14), the house must be valued by the priest, and the money got by the sale of it was to be converted to the use of the sanctuary, which by degrees came to be greatly enriched with
dedicated things, 1Kgs 15:15. But, if the owner be inclined to redeem it himself, he must not have it so cheap as another, but must add a fifth part to the price, for he should have considered before he had vowed it,
Lev 27:15. To him that was necessitous God would abate the estimation (
Lev 27:8); but to him that was fickle and humoursome, and whose second thoughts inclined more to the world and his secular interest than his first, God would rise in the price. Blessed be God, there is a way of sanctifying our houses to be holy unto the Lord, without either selling them or buying them. If we and our houses serve the Lord, if religion rule in them, and we put away iniquity far from them, and have a church in our house, holiness to the Lord is written upon it, it is his, and he will dwell with us in it.
II. Suppose a man should sanctify some part of his land to the Lord, giving it to pious uses, then a difference must be made between land that came to the donor by descent and that which came by purchase, and accordingly the case altered.
1. If it was the inheritance of his fathers, here called the
field of his possession, which pertained to his family from the first division of Canaan, he might not give it all, no, not to the sanctuary; God would not admit such a degree of zeal as ruined a man's family. But he might sanctify or dedicate only some part of it,
Lev 27:16. And in that case, (1.) The land was to be valued (as our countrymen commonly compute land) by so many measures' sowing of barley. So much land as would take a
homer, or
chomer, of barley, which contained ten ephahs,
Ezek 45:11 (not, as some have here mistaken it, an
omer, which was but a tenth part of an ephah,
Exod 16:36), was valued at fifty shekels, a moderate price (
Lev 27:16), and that if it were sanctified immediately from the year of jubilee,
Lev 27:17. But, if some years after, there was to be a discount accordingly, even of that price,
Lev 27:18. And, (2.) When the value was fixed, the donor might, if he pleased, redeem it for sixty shekels the homer's sowing, which was with the addition of a fifth part: the money then went to the sanctuary, and the land reverted to him that had sanctified it,
Lev 27:19. But if he would not redeem it, and the priest sold it to another, then at the year of jubilee, beyond which the sale could not go, the land came to the priests, and was theirs for ever,
Lev 27:20,
Lev 27:21. Note, What is given to the Lord ought not to be given with a power of revocation; what is devoted to the Lord must be his for ever, by a perpetual covenant.
2. If the land was his own purchase, and came not to him from his ancestors, then not the land itself, but the value of it was to be given to the priests for pious uses,
Lev 27:22,
Lev 27:24. It was supposed that those who, by the blessing of God, had grown so rich as to become purchasers would think themselves obliged in gratitude to sanctify some part of their purchase, at least (and here they are not limited, but they might, if they pleased, sanctify the whole), to the service of God. For we ought to give
as God prospers us, 1Cor 16:2. Purchasers are in a special manner bound to be charitable. Now, forasmuch as purchased lands were by a former law to return at the year of jubilee to the family from which they were purchased, God would not have that law and the intentions of it defeated by making the lands
corban, a gift, Mark 7:11. But it was to be computed how much the land was worth for so many years as were from the vow to the jubilee; for only so long it was his own, and God
hates robbery for burnt-offerings. We can never acceptably serve God with that of which we have wronged our neighbour. And so much money he was to give for the present, and keep the land in his own hands till the year of jubilee, when it was to return free of all encumbrances, even that of its being dedicated to him of whom it was bought. The value of the shekel by which all these estimations were to be made is here ascertained (
Lev 27:25); it shall be twenty gerahs, and every gerah was sixteen barley-corns. This was fixed before (
Exod 30:13); and, whereas there had been some alterations, it is again fixed in the laws of Ezekiel's visionary temple (
Ezek 45:12), to denote that the gospel should reduce things to their ancient standard.
26 Here is, I. A caution given that no man should make such a jest of sanctifying things to the Lord as to sanctify any firstling to him, for that was his already by the law,
Lev 27:26. Though the matter of a general vow be that which we were before obliged to, as of our sacramental covenant, yet a singular vow should be of that which we were not, in such circumstances and proportions, antecedently bound to. The law concerning the firstlings of unclean beasts (
Lev 27:27) is the same with that before,
Lev 27:11,
Lev 27:12.
II. Things or persons devoted are here distinguished from things or persons that were only sanctified. 1. Devoted things were most holy to the Lord, and could neither revert nor be alienated,
Lev 27:28. They were of the same nature with those sacrifices which were called most holy, which none might touch but only the priests themselves. The difference between these and other sanctified things arose from the different expression of the vow. If a man dedicated any thing to God, binding himself with a solemn curse never to alienate it to any other purpose, then it was a thing devoted. 2. Devoted persons were to be put to death,
Lev 27:29. Not that it was in the power of any parent or master thus to devote a child or a servant to death; but it must be meant of the public enemies of Israel, who, either by the appointment of God or by the sentence of the congregation, were devoted, as the seven nations with which they must make no league. The city of Jericho in particular was thus devoted,
Josh 6:17. The inhabitants of Jabesh-Gilead were put to death for violating the curse pronounced upon those who came not up to Mizpeh,
Judg 21:9,
Judg 21:10. Some think it was for want of being rightly informed of the true intent and meaning of this law that Jephtha sacrificed his daughter as one devoted, who might not be redeemed.
III. A law concerning tithes, which were paid for the service of God before the law, as appears by Abraham's payment of them, (
Gen 14:20), and Jacob's promise of them,
Gen 28:22. It is here appointed, 1. That they should pay tithe of all their increase, their corn, trees, and cattle,
Lev 27:30,
Lev 27:32. Whatsoever productions they had the benefit of God must be honoured with the tithe of, if it were titheable. Thus they acknowledged God to be the owner of their land, the giver of its fruits, and themselves to be his tenants, and dependents upon him. Thus they gave him thanks for the plenty they enjoyed, and supplicated his favour in the continuance of it. And we are taught in general to
honour the Lord with our substance (
Prov 3:9), and in particular to support and maintain his ministers, and to be
ready to communicate to them,
Galat 6:6;
1Cor 9:11. And how this may be done in a fitter and more equal proportion than that of the tenth, which God himself appointed of old, I cannot see. 2. That which was once marked for tithe should not be altered, no, not for a better (
Lev 27:33), for Providence directed the rod that marked it. God would accept it though it were not the best, and they must not grudge it though it were, for it was what passed under the rod. 3. That it should not be redeemed, unless the owner would give a fifth part more for its ransom,
Lev 27:31. If men had the curiosity to prefer what was marked for tithe before any other part of their increase, it was fit that they should pay for their curiosity.
IV. The last verse seems to have reference to this whole book of which it is the conclusion:
These are the commandments which the Lord commanded Moses, for the children of Israel. Many of these commandments are moral, and of perpetual obligation; others of them, which were ceremonial and peculiar to the Jewish economy, have notwithstanding a spiritual significancy, and are instructive to us who are furnished with a key to let us into the mysteries contained in them; for
unto us, by those institutions,
is the gospel preached as well as unto them, Hebre 4:2. Upon the whole matter, we may see cause to bless God that
we have not come to mount Sinai, Hebre 12:18. 1. That we are not under the
dark shadows of the law, but enjoy the clear light of the gospel, which shows us
Christ the end of the law for righteousness, Roma 10:4. The doctrine of our reconciliation to God by a Mediator is not clouded with the smoke of burning sacrifices, but cleared by the knowledge of
Christ and him crucified. 2. That we are not under the
heavy yoke of the law, and the carnal ordinances of it (as the apostle calls them,
Hebre 9:10), imposed till the time of reformation, a yoke which
neither they nor their fathers were able to bear (
Acts 15:10), but under the sweet and easy institutions of the gospel, which pronounces those the
true worshippers that worship the Father in spirit and truth, by Christ only, and in his name, who is our priest, temple, altar, sacrifice, purification, and all. Let us not therefore think that because we are not tied to the ceremonial cleansings, feasts, and oblations, a little care, time, and expense, will serve to honour God with. No, but rather have our hearts more enlarge with free-will offerings to his praise, more inflamed with holy love and joy, and more engaged in seriousness of thought and sincerity of intention.
Having boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus, let us draw near with a true heart, and full assurance of faith, worshipping God with so much the more cheerfulness and humble confidence, still saying,
Blessed be God for Jesus Christ!