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The Priests’ Burnt Offering
Leviticus 8:18–21 — The Priests’ Burnt Offering. Each verse below carries the full apparatus: the Berean Standard Bible, the vocalized original (tap any word), and a parsed breakdown of every term transcribed from the interlinear. Synthesized commentary, canonical threads, and the reading of Christ gather at the end, over the whole unit.
18Then Moses presented the ram for the burnt offering, and Aaron and his sons laid their hands on its head.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yaq·rêḇ ’êṯ ’êl hā·‘ō·lāh ’a·hă·rōn ū·ḇā·nāw ’eṯ- way·yis·mə·ḵū yə·ḏê·hem ‘al- rōš hā·’ā·yil
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And he brought near the ram of the burnt offering, and Aaron and his sons leaned their hands upon the head of the ram.
Where the English smooths the original
After their sins had been expiated by the sin offering, Moses offered for the consecrated priests one of the two rams which he was ordered to take (see Leviticus 8:2 ) as a burnt offering. With the exception of performing the sacerdotal rites himself, the ritual here described is in accordance with rules laid down in Leviticus 1:3-9 .
was followed by a burnt-offering, consisting of a ram, which was offered according to the ordinary ritual of the burnt-offering ( Leviticus 1:3-9 ), and served to set forth the priests, who had appointed it as their substitute through the laying on of hands, as a living, holy, and well-pleasing sacrifice to the Lord, and to sanctify them to the Lord with all the faculties of both body and soul.On the meaning of the laying-on of hands: the ram is the priests' appointed substitute.
Hereby they gave God the glory of this great honour which was put upon them, and returned him praise for it; and also signified the devoting themselves and all their services to the honour of God. Thus Paul thanked Jesus Christ for putting him into the ministry, and devoted himself and all he had to his service.
and Aaron and his sons laid their hands on the head of the ram; as they had done before on the head of the bullock, see Leviticus 8:14 their right hands, as the Targum of Jonathan, and that at the same time; not first Aaron and then his sons, as a famous grammarian, Aben Ezra makes mention of, thought; but, as he himself says, they laid them on together.Preserves a rabbinic dispute (Ibn Ezra) over whether the hands were laid simultaneously.
There is no deviation on the present occasion from the ritual appointed for the burnt offering . After the sin offering, righteousness is symbolically imputed to Aaron; after the burnt offering, holiness; then follows the peace offering of the ram, which completes and sacrificially effects the consecration.Reads the three offerings as a graded sequence — sin offering for righteousness, burnt offering for holiness, peace offering completing consecration. A schematic frame to weigh, not a claim the text makes explicitly.
brought the ram, &c.—as a token of their entire dedication to the service of God.JFB's terse summary of the burnt offering's meaning across vv. 18–21: total self-dedication.
19Moses slaughtered the ram and splattered the blood on all sides of the altar.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mō·šeh ’eṯ- way·yiš·ḥāṭ way·yiz·rōq had·dām sā·ḇîḇ ‘al- ham·miz·bê·aḥ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And he slaughtered it; and Moses dashed the blood against the altar all around.
Where the English smooths the original
That is, Moses himself slaughtered the victim, and not the offerer, as was usually the case. (See Leviticus 8:15 .) And Moses sprinkled the blood. —Better, and Moses cast the blood. The word here is not the same in the original as in Leviticus 8:15 .Corrects "sprinkled" to "cast" — the Hebrew zâraq, not the hizzāh of v. 15.
He killed it; either Moses, as in the following clause, the pronoun being put for the noun; or some other person by Moses’s appointment; which may be the reason why he is not named here, as he is to the sprinkling of the blood, which was an action more proper to the priest, and more essential to the sacrifice, as the learned have observed.
sprinkled ] See note on Leviticus 1:5 ; threw against .Confirms the rendering "threw against" for zâraq.
That is, Moses killed the ram, as the Septuagint version expresses it: and Moses sprinkled the blood upon the altar round about; as he did the blood of the bullock, Leviticus 8:15 .
20He cut the ram into pieces and burned the head, the pieces, and the fat.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·’eṯ- mō·šeh ’eṯ- nit·taḥ hā·’a·yil lin·ṯā·ḥāw way·yaq·ṭêr hā·rōš wə·’eṯ- han·nə·ṯā·ḥîm wə·’eṯ- hap·pā·ḏer
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And the ram — Moses cut it into its pieces; and Moses turned to smoke the head and the pieces and the suet.
Where the English smooths the original
and the fat ] a different Heb. word from that in Leviticus 8:16 ; Leviticus 8:25 , used here and in Leviticus 1:8 ; Leviticus 1:12 only. The fat of the intestines is probably indicated.Names the rare word pāder (H6309), restricted to burnt-offering texts.
And he cut the ram into pieces,.... Cut off its head and quartered it: and Moses burnt the head, and the pieces, and the fat; even all of it, as the following verse shows.
And he cut the ram into pieces; and Moses burnt the head, and the pieces, and the fat.The Geneva note simply re-prints the verse, the era's plainest witness to the text received.
In these types we see our great High Priest, even Christ Jesus, solemnly appointed, anointed, and invested with his sacred office, by his own blood, and the influences of his Holy Spirit.Henry's whole-section comment reading the consecration ritual as a type of Christ's priesthood.
21He washed the entrails and legs with water and burned the entire ram on the altar as a burnt offering, a pleasing aroma, a food offering to the LORD, just as the LORD had commanded Moses.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·’eṯ- rā·ḥaṣ haq·qe·reḇ wə·’eṯ- hak·kə·rā·‘a·yim bam·mā·yim mō·šeh ’eṯ- way·yaq·ṭêr kāl- hā·’a·yil ham·miz·bê·ḥāh hū ‘ō·lāh nî·ḥō·aḥ lə·rê·aḥ- ’iš·šeh hū Yah·weh ka·’ă·šer Yah·weh ṣiw·wāh ’eṯ- mō·šeh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And the entrails and the legs he washed with water; and Moses turned the whole ram to smoke on the altar — it is a burnt offering for a soothing aroma, a fire-offering it is to the LORD, just as the LORD had commanded Moses.
Where the English smooths the original
And he washed the inwards and the legs in water,.... The one being taken out, the other cut off: and Moses burnt the whole ram upon the altar: it was a burnt sacrifice for a sweet savour, and an offering made by fire unto the Lord; as the Lord commanded Moses; see Exodus 29:18 .Cross-references the original command at Exodus 29:18.
for a sweet savour ] See on Leviticus 1:9 . an offering made by fire ] See on Leviticus 23:8 .Renders ’iššeh as "an offering made by fire" — the traditional reading BSB sets aside for "food offering."
and Moses burnt the whole ram upon the altar: it was a burnt sacrifice for a sweet savor, and an offering made by fire unto the LORD; as the LORD commanded Moses.
served to set forth the priests, who had appointed it as their substitute through the laying on of hands, as a living, holy, and well-pleasing sacrifice to the Lord, and to sanctify them to the Lord with all the faculties of both body and soul.K&D reads the whole ram as the priests' substitute, given body and soul — the language Paul later turns to in Romans 12:1.
the victim, which was to be sent up to Yahweh as "a burnt sacrifice for a sweet savour, an offering made by fire unto the Lord." All was done strictly according to the ritual Leviticus 1:3-9 , except that Moses performed the duties of the priest.Barnes' section-comment, pointed to v. 21's closing formula; like the older voices he reads ’iššeh as "an offering made by fire."
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
The burnt offering does not come first. As Keil & Delitzsch set it out, "the sin-offering, through which the priests and the altar had been expiated… had been taken away, was followed by a burnt-offering, consisting of a ram." The sequence is doctrine: only after guilt is dealt with (the sin offering of vv. 14–17) can a person give himself up to God. The Pulpit Commentary reads the same grammar of grace — "after the sin offering, righteousness is symbolically imputed to Aaron; after the burnt offering, holiness." The Hebrew opens with way·yaq·rêḇ (H7126), the Hifil "brought near" — the verb-root that names sacrifice itself (qorbān). Forgiveness precedes consecration; you cannot offer a defiled self.
"Aaron and his sons laid their hands on its head" — but the verb way·yis·mə·ḵū (H5564, çâmak) means to lean, bear down with weight. Keil & Delitzsch name what the gesture does: the ram is "their substitute through the laying on of hands," the priests set forth "as a living, holy, and well-pleasing sacrifice to the Lord… with all the faculties of both body and soul." John Gill, preserving the rabbinic record, notes that all of them pressed with their right hands "at the same time… they laid them on together." Benson hears in it self-dedication: they "signified the devoting themselves and all their services to the honour of God," and reaches at once for Paul, "who thanked Jesus Christ for putting him into the ministry, and devoted himself and all he had to his service."
The translators have long quarreled over one verb. Ellicott corrects the old "sprinkled": "Better, and Moses cast the blood. The word here is not the same in the original as in Leviticus 8:15." The Hebrew is way·yiz·rōq (H2236, zâraq) — blood dashed against the altar, not dripped; Cambridge agrees, glossing it "threw against." Then in v. 21 the entrails and legs are washed (rā·ḥaṣ, H7364): even the offering wholly given must be made clean before it rises. Blood applied without, body cleansed within — the two halves of how a thing is made fit for God.
The ram is jointed (nâthach, H5408 — a rare, deliberate butchery-word) and "turned to smoke" (qâṭar, H6999) entire. This is the mark of the ‘ōlāh, the "ascending offering": nothing is eaten, all goes up. The result is rê·aḥ nî·ḥō·aḥ — a "soothing aroma," from the root for rest; the same phrase God smelled over Noah's altar (Gen 8:21). The voices split over the last technical term. Cambridge and Geneva keep "an offering made by fire" (’iš·šeh, H801, heard near ’ēsh, "fire"); BSB prints "food offering." The honest note (⚙): the etymology is genuinely disputed, and we name both rather than choose for the reader.
The unit closes where Leviticus 8 keeps returning: ka·’ă·šer ṣiw·wāh — "just as the LORD had commanded Moses." Gill points back to the original blueprint at Exodus 29:18; the rite is not Moses' design but God's, executed to the letter. Matthew Henry lifts the whole scene to its end: "In these types we see our great High Priest, even Christ Jesus, solemnly appointed, anointed, and invested with his sacred office, by his own blood." The last Hebrew word of the unit is mō·šeh — the obedient mediator, naming the very pattern the New Testament will say Christ fulfilled.
Read against the rule that Scripture alone is final, three things stand out in these four verses — offered as a reading to be tested, not a verdict to be trusted. First, atonement is the doorway, not the destination. The text refuses to let the burnt offering come before the sin offering; guilt is removed, then the whole self is given. A self-surrender that skips the cross is not the order Scripture teaches. Second, substitution is bodily and total. The priests do not gesture at the ram; they lean their full weight on its head, and the whole creature — washed within, jointed, turned to smoke — goes up. Keil & Delitzsch's phrase, "with all the faculties of both body and soul," is the same reach Paul makes in Romans 12:1: "present your bodies as a living sacrifice." Third, the rite is governed end to end by what is written. Five times the chapter says "as the LORD commanded"; obedience to the revealed word, not priestly creativity, is what makes the offering acceptable. The Berean test applies: weigh even this against the text — including the place where the voices disagree on whether ’iš·šeh means "fire-offering" or "food offering," a point Scripture leaves genuinely open.
Forgiveness is the door; the whole self, washed and given up to ascend, is the room you walk into — and the smoke that rests God's heart was always pointing past a ram.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
Every voice — Ellicott, Barnes, Keil & Delitzsch — says the same: "all was done strictly according to the ritual Leviticus 1:3–9, except that Moses performed the duties of the priest." The verbal overlap is dense and rare: cut into pieces (nâthach/nêthach, H5408/H5409, each in only 9 verses), the suet/fat (peder, H6309, in just 3 verses), the head on the altar, and the closing formula of the soothing aroma. Leviticus 8 is the general law of chapter 1 enacted on a particular day. The shared peder alone — three occurrences in the whole Bible — makes this a confirmed verbal link.
Leviticus 8:20 · Leviticus 1:12 · Leviticus 1:8
basis: rare shared lexemes computed by Verifier: H6309 peder (in 3 vv), H5409 nêthach (in 9 vv), H5408 nâthach (in 9 vv); plus H7218 rôʼsh (Lev 8:20 ↔ Lev 1:12). The low frequency of peder/nêthach makes the verbal dependence certain.
The closing phrase of v. 21, rê·aḥ nî·ḥō·aḥ ("soothing aroma," H7381 + H5207), is one of Scripture's oldest sacrificial formulas. Its first sounding is over Noah's burnt offerings after the flood (Genesis 8:21), where "the LORD smelled the soothing aroma" and resolved never again to curse the ground. The same two words, in the same order, frame the consecration ram — binding the priesthood's surrender to the post-flood promise that an ascending offering can bring God's heart to rest. Tiered honestly: the two lexemes are not rare (43 and 55 verses), and rê·aḥ nî·ḥō·aḥ is a recurring liturgical formula sounded dozens of times across Exodus–Numbers, not a quotation of Genesis. So this is a shared formulaic motif, not a verbal citation — tiered structural rather than verbal, and downgraded from an earlier draft that overclaimed it.
Leviticus 8:21 · Genesis 8:21
basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes: H5207 nîychôwach (in 43 vv), H7381 rêyach (in 55 vv). The fixed phrase rê·aḥ nî·ḥō·aḥ is a recurring sacrificial formula, not a rare word or a quotation — moderate frequency, shared motif. Downgraded verbal→structural to avoid overclaiming a formula as a citation.
Moses "dashed the blood" (zâraq, H2236) "all around" (sā·ḇîḇ) the altar. The same blood-rite governs the law of the burnt offering (Lev 1:5) and the priestly portions in Numbers 18:17, where the firstling's blood is likewise dashed and its fat turned to smoke as a soothing aroma. Ezekiel later turns the imagery dark, indicting the "bloody city" with the very verbs of the altar. The link is a shared ritual pattern, not a quotation.
Leviticus 8:19 · Numbers 18:17 · Leviticus 1:5
basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes: H2236 zâraq (in 33 vv), H1818 dâm (in 295 vv), H4196 mizbêach (in 338 vv) for Num 18:17; plus H7819 shâchaṭ and H5439 çâbîyb for Lev 1:5. Shared blood-manipulation pattern, no quotation claim — tiered structural.
The verb nâthach (H5408, "to cut into joints") occurs only nine times. Most are sacrificial; but the same word cuts up the Levite's concubine (Judges 19:29) and the oxen Saul sends through Israel (1 Sam 11:7), and the noun nêthach describes the "pieces" of Ezekiel's boiled flesh (Ezek 24:6). The shared rarity means these are genuinely the same lexeme — a sober reminder that the altar's controlled, God-commanded division of a body stands at the opposite pole from the chaos and judgment its rare cognate elsewhere names.
Leviticus 8:20 · Judges 19:29 · Exodus 29:17
basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes: H5408 nâthach (in 9 vv), H5409 nêthach (in 9 vv) — both rare; Exodus 29:17 adds H352 ʼayil and H7218 rôʼsh. The 9-verse frequency makes the verbal identity certain, though the contexts differ sharply.
The priests "leaned their hands" (çâmak, H5564) on the ram's head — the same gesture, by the same Aaron, that on the Day of Atonement transfers the people's sins to the live goat (Lev 16:21). Here it is identification unto consecration (a burnt offering); there it is transfer unto removal (the scapegoat). One verb, two faces of one truth: the worshipper and the victim are made one.
Leviticus 8:18 · Leviticus 16:21
basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes: H5564 çâmak (in 47 vv), H175 ʼAhărôwn (in 328 vv), H7218 rôʼsh (in 547 vv), H3027 yâd (in 1445 vv). Shared rite of laying-on-of-hands; the lexemes are not rare, so tiered structural/thematic rather than verbal.
Keil & Delitzsch read the wholly-consumed ram as the priests "set forth… as a living, holy, and well-pleasing sacrifice to the Lord… with all the faculties of both body and soul" — the very shape of Paul's appeal: "present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God." Held honestly: this is a New Testament Greek text and a Hebrew one; they share no original-language lexeme (the Verifier confirms none), so the link cannot be called verbal. It is a genuine thematic and typological resonance — the burnt offering's total self-surrender taken up as the Christian's reasonable worship — argued, not asserted, and left flagged.
Leviticus 8:21 · Romans 12:1 · Ephesians 5:2
basis: Verifier reports no shared original-language lexeme (Greek↔Hebrew cannot share Strong's numbers); the connection is thematic/typological and must be argued. Flagged so the reader weighs it, not trusts it.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
Of all the sacrifices, the ‘ōlāh alone is consumed entirely: no portion eaten, all turned to smoke and ascending to God. The ancient and Reformed reading hears in it the self-offering of Christ, who held nothing back. Matthew Henry names the type directly over this very section: "In these types we see our great High Priest, even Christ Jesus, solemnly appointed, anointed, and invested with his sacred office, by his own blood." The ram washed within, jointed, and wholly given up is the figure; the body of Christ "offered once for all" is the substance — a reading the New Testament's letter to the Hebrews makes explicit, even where the Hebrew and Greek share no single word.
Leviticus 8:20 · Leviticus 8:21 · Hebrews 10:10
The ram ascends as a rê·aḥ nî·ḥō·aḥ, a "soothing aroma" (from the root for rest) — the smell that, since Noah's altar (Gen 8:21), signals God's acceptance. The New Testament takes up exactly this image of Christ: "Christ loved us and gave Himself up for us, a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God" (Eph 5:2). The consecration ram's pleasing smoke is, in the typological reading, a shadow of the one offering in which God's heart truly finds rest. Honestly held: the link is conceptual/typological — the Greek of Ephesians shares no Strong's lexeme with this Hebrew — but the image is the same and the connection is ancient.
Leviticus 8:21 · Ephesians 5:2 · Genesis 8:21
Throughout these verses Moses alone officiates: he brings near, slaughters, dashes the blood, washes, and turns to smoke, because the priests are not yet ordained. He stands between God and Aaron's house as the consecrating mediator — "just as the LORD had commanded Moses." The figure points beyond itself: where Moses must hand the altar to Aaron and the priesthood passes from one mortal to another, the New Testament sets a High Priest who "holds his priesthood permanently, because He continues forever." Moses consecrating priests by another's blood is the shadow; Christ consecrating His people by His own is the fulfillment.
Leviticus 8:18 · Leviticus 8:21 · Hebrews 7:23-25
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.
Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:
This unit is short — four verses of pure ritual narrative — and its commentary stream reflects that: several voices (Matthew Henry, Barnes, Jamieson-Fausset-Brown, Keil & Delitzsch) repeat a single section-comment verbatim across vv. 18–21 in the public-domain sources, so their excerpts here are drawn from that shared block and pointed to the relevant clause. Matthew Poole has "No text… on this verse" for vv. 18, 20, 21; he is quoted only at v. 19, where he does comment. Two honest disagreements are surfaced rather than smoothed: (1) ’iš·šeh (H801, v. 21) — the older voices (Geneva, Cambridge, Gill) render "offering made by fire" (hearing ’ēsh, "fire"); BSB and modern lexica render "food offering"/"food gift." The etymology is genuinely contested; we name both. (2) The agent of the slaughter in v. 19 — Benson and Poole raise whether "he killed it" means Moses himself or an assistant by his appointment, since the blood-rite (more proper to a priest) is expressly attributed to Moses. Cross-reference honesty: all confirmed verbal threads are Hebrew↔Hebrew, grounded in shared Strong's lexemes computed by the Verifier; the Romans 12:1 / Ephesians 5:2 / Hebrews links are Greek↔Hebrew and therefore cannot share a Strong's number — they are tiered thematic/typological or flagged, and argued explicitly, never claimed as verbal quotation. Frequencies cited in the bases (e.g. peder in 3 verses) are the Verifier's whole-Bible counts and are what make the rarest links "confirmed."
✦ = human, public-domain source, quoted and named. ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. Flagged cross-references are left visible on purpose — the verifier working in the open. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)