(22) Received the blood.--Caught it in bowls of sprinkling (Numbers 8:14). And sprinkled it on the altar.--Threw it against (literally, towards) the altar (Leviticus 8:19; Leviticus 8:24). Likewise, when.--And they slaughtered the rams . . . and they slaughtered the lambs. The three clauses of the verse are symmetrical. The repetition is a mark of the writer's anxiety to show how carefully the legitimate ritual was observed in each instance. Killed.--Slaughtered (shahat; ?????, Genesis 37:31). Specially used of slaying sacrificial victims (Leviticus 1:5). Verse 22. - Received... sprinkled. The sprinkling of the blood marked the expiation (Leviticus 4:7, 18, 30; Leviticus 5:9; Leviticus 8:14, 15; Hebrews 9:12-14, 19-22). 29:20-36 As soon as Hezekiah heard that the temple was ready, he lost no time. Atonement must be made for the sins of the last reign. It was not enough to lament and forsake those sins; they brought a sin-offering. Our repentance and reformation will not obtain pardon but in and through Christ, who was made sin, that is, a sin-offering for us. While the offerings were on the altar, the Levites sang. Sorrow for sin must not prevent us from praising God. The king and the congregation gave their consent to all that was done. It is not enough for us to be where God is worshipped, if we do not ourselves worship with the heart. And we should offer up our spiritual sacrifices of praise and thanksgiving, and devote ourselves and all we have, as sacrifices, acceptable to the Father only through the Redeemer.So they killed the bullocks,.... The seven bullocks, that is, the priests killed them:and the priests received the blood; into basins provided for that purpose: and sprinkled it on the altar; according to the law of Moses, Leviticus 1:5 and so they did with the rams and lambs. |