Leviticus 17
The blood theology chapter bridges the ritual sections of Leviticus 1–16 and the holiness sections of chapters 18–27. All slaughter of the three major domesticated animals must occur at the tabernacle — redirecting from open-field sacrifices (potentially to other gods) to the covenant's authorized worship. The theological foundation is declared with maximum clarity: the life of a creature is in the blood, and God gave the blood to make atonement on the altar. This dual principle — blood is life, and life belongs to God — grounds both the prohibition on eating blood (absolute, covering every bird and animal, for both Israelites and foreigners among them) and the requirement to drain and cover the blood of game animals. The chapter communicates the covenant's integrated theology: the offering system's blood application at the altar and the dietary prohibition on eating blood are two expressions of the same foundational truth. Hebrews 9:22 says without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness — Leviticus 17:11 is the Old Testament foundation for that New Testament declaration.
Leviticus 17:1
The Lord said to Moses. The blood regulations of Leviticus 17 form the theological bridge between the ritual sections of Leviticus 1–16 and the holiness sections of Leviticus 18–27. The chapter addresses three related concerns: where sacrifices may be made (only at the tabernacle), what to do with blood (never eat it), and what to do with game animals (drain and cover the blood). The unifying principle is the sanctity of blood as the medium of atonement.
Leviticus 17:2
Say to Aaron and his sons and to all the Israelites: this is what the Lord has commanded. The regulations are addressed to Aaron and his sons and to all the Israelites — the comprehensive address communicates that both the priests and the people are governed by the blood regulations that follow. The priestly administration of blood and the community's use of blood are both under divine command. The what the Lord has commanded formula grounds the regulations in divine authority before any specific rule is stated.
Leviticus 17:3
Any Israelite who sacrifices an ox, a lamb or a goat in the camp or outside it. The regulation addresses the slaughter of the three major domesticated animals — ox, lamb, goat — whether in the camp or outside it. The location-spanning prohibition communicates that the regulation applies everywhere the community lives, not only in proximity to the tabernacle. The animals that are used for food and for sacrifice cannot be killed in just any location for any purpose.
Leviticus 17:4
Instead of bringing it to the entrance to the tent of meeting to present it as an offering to the Lord in front of the tabernacle of the Lord — that person shall be considered guilty of bloodshed; they have shed blood and must be cut off from their people. The requirement to bring the animals to the tabernacle for slaughter is grounded in the bloodshed principle: unauthorized slaughter of the covenant animals is treated as the shedding of blood. The cut off penalty for unauthorized animal slaughter communicates the gravity of the violation: the community's food animals are so deeply integrated into the sacrificial system that their slaughter outside the sacrificial context is treated as a form of murder.