Leviticus 27
The concluding chapter addresses the voluntary vow system — the legal framework for honoring voluntary commitments made to God. A valuation table establishes the redemption price for persons dedicated to the Lord, graduated by age and gender (the prime working-age male at fifty shekels, declining for children and the elderly, with a poverty provision allowing the priest to set an affordable value). Animals, houses, and fields may all be dedicated, with the priest providing valuations and the redemption option available at the valuation plus twenty percent. Land valuations are Jubilee-adjusted, reflecting the remaining years of agricultural use rather than the land's permanent value. Unredeemed fields that pass through the Jubilee become priestly property. The most absolute category is the herem (devoted thing) — irrevocable dedication to God that cannot be redeemed or sold; Joshua 7 records Achan's fatal violation of this category. The tithe of agricultural produce and flocks belongs to the Lord as holy, with the tithe animal designated by the objective passing of every tenth animal under the shepherd's rod rather than by selection. The book closes: these are the commands the Lord gave Moses on Mount Sinai for the Israelites — Leviticus ends where it began, in the divine voice at the mountain of covenant.
Leviticus 27:1
The Lord said to Moses. The vow and dedication regulations of Leviticus 27 are appended to the Holiness Code after the blessings-and-curses conclusion of chapter 26. The appendix character of chapter 27 communicates that the vow regulations are not part of the Holiness Code's systematic structure but are a practical addition addressing the community's voluntary commitments to God. The covenant community's voluntary religious obligations require the same legal precision as its mandatory ones.
Leviticus 27:2
Speak to the Israelites and say to them: if anyone makes a special vow to dedicate a person to the Lord by giving the equivalent value. The vow to dedicate a person to the Lord — a commitment to give a person to the sanctuary's service (like Hannah's vow in 1 Samuel 1:11) or to pay their value in silver — requires a precise valuation system. The equivalent value — the redemption price — is what the chapter will establish for persons, animals, houses, and land.
Leviticus 27:3
Set the value of a male between the ages of twenty and sixty at fifty shekels of silver, according to the sanctuary shekel. The valuation of persons for vow purposes begins with the prime working-age male (20–60 years): fifty shekels of silver, the highest valuation in the table. The highest valuation for the prime working-age male communicates the economic productivity of the person as the basis for the valuation. The sanctuary shekel standard maintains the official covenant standard for the transactions.
Leviticus 27:4
For a female, set her value at thirty shekels. The female valuation at the same age range: thirty shekels — sixty percent of the male valuation. The gender differential in the valuation reflects the wage differential in ancient Near Eastern society: the valuation is economic, based on the labor value the person represents, not on the person's inherent worth. The valuation table is a legal convention for vow redemption, not a theological statement about the relative value of men and women before God.