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Leviticus 27

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And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying,

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Speak unto the children of Israel, and say unto them, When a man shall make a singular vow, the persons shall be for the Lord by thy estimation.

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And thy estimation shall be of the male from twenty years old even unto sixty years old, even thy estimation shall be fifty shekels of silver, after the shekel of the sanctuary.

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And if it be a female, then thy estimation shall be thirty shekels.

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And if it be from five years old even unto twenty years old, then thy estimation shall be of the male twenty shekels, and for the female ten shekels.

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And if it be from a month old even unto five years old, then thy estimation shall be of the male five shekels of silver, and for the female thy estimation shall be three shekels of silver.

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And if it be from sixty years old and above; if it be a male, then thy estimation shall be fifteen shekels, and for the female ten shekels.

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But if he be poorer than thy estimation, then he shall present himself before the priest, and the priest shall value him; according to his ability that vowed shall the priest value him.

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And if it be a beast, whereof men bring an offering unto the Lord, all that any man giveth of such unto the Lord shall be holy.

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He shall not alter it, nor change it, a good for a bad, or a bad for a good: and if he shall at all change beast for beast, then it and the exchange thereof shall be holy.

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And if it be any unclean beast, of which they do not offer a sacrifice unto the Lord, then he shall present the beast before the priest:

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And the priest shall value it, whether it be good or bad: as thou valuest it, who art the priest, so shall it be.

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But if he will at all redeem it, then he shall add a fifth part thereof unto thy estimation.

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And when a man shall sanctify his house to be holy unto the Lord, then the priest shall estimate it, whether it be good or bad: as the priest shall estimate it, so shall it stand.

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And if he that sanctified it will redeem his house, then he shall add the fifth part of the money of thy estimation unto it, and it shall be his.

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And if a man shall sanctify unto the Lord some part of a field of his possession, then thy estimation shall be according to the seed thereof: an homer of barley seed shall be valued at fifty shekels of silver.

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If he sanctify his field from the year of jubile, according to thy estimation it shall stand.

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But if he sanctify his field after the jubile, then the priest shall reckon unto him the money according to the years that remain, even unto the year of the jubile, and it shall be abated from thy estimation.

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And if he that sanctified the field will in any wise redeem it, then he shall add the fifth part of the money of thy estimation unto it, and it shall be assured to him.

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And if he will not redeem the field, or if he have sold the field to another man, it shall not be redeemed any more.

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But the field, when it goeth out in the jubile, shall be holy unto the Lord, as a field devoted; the possession thereof shall be the priest’s.

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And if a man sanctify unto the Lord a field which he hath bought, which is not of the fields of his possession;

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Then the priest shall reckon unto him the worth of thy estimation, even unto the year of the jubile: and he shall give thine estimation in that day, as a holy thing unto the Lord.

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In the year of the jubile the field shall return unto him of whom it was bought, even to him to whom the possession of the land did belong.

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And all thy estimations shall be according to the shekel of the sanctuary: twenty gerahs shall be the shekel.

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Only the firstling of the beasts, which should be the Lord’s firstling, no man shall sanctify it; whether it be ox, or sheep: it is the Lord’s.

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And if it be of an unclean beast, then he shall redeem it according to thine estimation, and shall add a fifth part of it thereto: or if it be not redeemed, then it shall be sold according to thy estimation.

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Notwithstanding no devoted thing, that a man shall devote unto the Lord of all that he hath, both of man and beast, and of the field of his possession, shall be sold or redeemed: every devoted thing is most holy unto the Lord.

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None devoted, which shall be devoted of men, shall be redeemed; but shall surely be put to death.

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And all the tithe of the land, whether of the seed of the land, or of the fruit of the tree, is the Lord’s: it is holy unto the Lord.

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And if a man will at all redeem ought of his tithes, he shall add thereto the fifth part thereof.

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And concerning the tithe of the herd, or of the flock, even of whatsoever passeth under the rod, the tenth shall be holy unto the Lord.

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He shall not search whether it be good or bad, neither shall he change it: and if he change it at all, then both it and the change thereof shall be holy; it shall not be redeemed.

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These are the commandments, which the Lord commanded Moses for the children of Israel in mount Sinai.

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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.

Leviticus 27:5

For a person between the ages of five and twenty, set the value of a male at twenty shekels and of a female at ten shekels. The child and adolescent valuation (5–20 years): twenty shekels for males, ten shekels for females. The lower valuation for the younger age range reflects the lower economic productivity of children and adolescents compared to prime working-age adults. The graduated valuation table by age and gender creates a complete system for every person who might be the subject of a vow.

Leviticus 27:6

For a person between one month and five years, set the value of a male at five shekels of silver and that of a female at three shekels of silver. The infant valuation (one month to five years): five shekels for males, three shekels for females. The age limit of one month communicates that the valuation system applies to living persons who have survived the first month — the period of highest infant mortality in the ancient world. The exclusion of newborns from the first month may reflect the same principle as the circumcision on the eighth day: the first week is a transitional period.

Leviticus 27:7

For a person sixty years old or more, set the value of a male at fifteen shekels and of a female at ten shekels. The elderly valuation (sixty years and older): fifteen shekels for males, ten shekels for females. The reduced valuation for the elderly (compared to prime working-age adults) reflects the reduced economic productivity of the post-sixty-year-old. The inclusion of the elderly in the valuation table communicates that anyone of any age can be the subject of a vow — the table covers the entire human lifespan from infancy to old age.

Leviticus 27:8

If anyone making the vow is too poor to pay the specified amount, the person is to be presented before the priest, who will set the value according to what the one making the vow can afford. The poverty provision for the vow valuation: if the person who made the vow cannot afford the prescribed amount, the priest sets a value according to the person's means. The poverty provision communicates the covenant's consistent accommodation of limited resources: the vow is honored, the sanctuary receives something, and the impoverished person's commitment is validated. The priest who assesses the means and sets the affordable value is exercising the pastoral wisdom that the Levitical system requires.

Leviticus 27:9

If what they vowed is an animal that is acceptable as an offering to the Lord, such an animal given to the Lord becomes holy. The vow of an acceptable animal — an animal that could be offered at the altar — is the most straightforward category: the vowed animal becomes holy and goes to the altar. The becomes holy communication is the key: the vow makes the animal sacred. What is voluntarily given to God through the vow is as fully God's as what is required by the covenant's mandatory offerings.

Leviticus 27:10

They must not exchange it or substitute a good one for a bad one, or a bad one for a good one; if they do substitute one animal for another, both it and the substitute become holy. The prohibition on animal substitution after the vow communicates the covenant's protection against the exploitation of the vow system: the person who vows an acceptable animal cannot substitute an inferior one after the fact. The both-become-holy rule for attempted substitution is the covenant's practical deterrent: the attempt to downgrade the vow results in both animals being given to God, not just the better one.

Leviticus 27:11

If what they vowed is a ceremonially unclean animal — one that is not acceptable as an offering to the Lord — the animal must be presented to the priest. The unclean animal vow — an animal that cannot be offered at the altar — requires priestly valuation and redemption. The person who vows an unclean animal (perhaps in a moment of enthusiasm or without knowing the regulations) can redeem it through the priest's valuation process. The covenant system accommodates the well-intentioned vow that turns out to involve an unacceptable animal.

Leviticus 27:12

The priest will judge its quality as good or bad. Whatever value the priest then sets, that is what it will be. The priest's valuation of the unclean animal is authoritative: whatever the priest sets, that is the value. The priestly authority in the valuation process communicates the covenant's grounding of the vow system in the priestly mediation. The vow is not a private transaction between the individual and God but a covenant act administered by the priestly community. The priest's judgment and the priest's valuation are the divinely authorized means by which the vow is resolved.

Leviticus 27:13

If the owner wishes to redeem the animal, they must add a fifth to its value. The redemption of the vowed unclean animal requires the priest's valuation plus twenty percent — the same restitution-plus-twenty-percent principle as the guilt offering's restitution (Leviticus 5:16) and the sacred food's inadvertent consumption (Leviticus 22:14). The consistent twenty-percent addition across the redemption categories communicates the covenant's unified approach to the recovery of what has been consecrated: the original value plus a fifth honors the sacred character of what is being redeemed.

Leviticus 27:14

If anyone dedicates their house as something holy to the Lord, the priest will judge its quality as good or bad. Whatever value the priest then sets, so it will remain. The house dedication vow — the dedication of one's house to the Lord — follows the same priestly valuation process as the unclean animal. The priest who evaluates the house sets its value, and that value is authoritative. The dedication of a house to the Lord is one of the practical expressions of the covenant community's generosity: what one owns, one can consecrate to God's service.

Leviticus 27:15

If the one who dedicates it wishes to redeem their house, they must add a fifth to its value, and the house will again become theirs. The redemption of the dedicated house: the priestly valuation plus twenty percent returns the house to the original owner. The redemption option communicates that the vow of dedication is not irrevocable: the covenant system provides a path back from the vow through the redemption process. The twenty-percent addition honors the sacred character of what was dedicated while providing the practical flexibility of redemption.

Leviticus 27:16

If anyone dedicates to the Lord part of their family land, its value is to be set according to the amount of seed required to sow it — fifty shekels of silver to a homer of barley seed. The land dedication vow requires a valuation based on agricultural productivity: the amount of seed required to sow the land determines its value. The fifty shekels per homer of barley seed establishes the standard unit of agricultural land value. The agricultural productivity basis for land valuation connects the land dedication to the Jubilee's agricultural economics: the land's value is determined by its productive capacity.

Leviticus 27:17

If they dedicate their field during the Year of Jubilee, the value that has been set remains. The field dedicated in the Jubilee year — when the land returns to its original family — retains the full valuation because the Jubilee has not yet reduced the remaining years of use. The Jubilee-adjusted valuation for field dedications applies the same economic logic as the Jubilee-adjusted pricing for land sales: the value of the remaining use determines the present value.

Leviticus 27:18

But if they dedicate their field after the Jubilee, the priest will determine the value according to the number of years that remain until the next Year of Jubilee, and its set value will be reduced. The post-Jubilee field dedication receives a reduced valuation based on the remaining years until the next Jubilee. The Jubilee-adjusted valuation communicates that the dedicated field's value is the value of its remaining years of use, not its full permanent value. The land dedication to God is as Jubilee-adjusted as any land sale.

Leviticus 27:19

If the one who dedicates the field wishes to redeem it, they must add a fifth to its value, and the field will again become theirs. The redemption of the dedicated field — valuation plus twenty percent — returns the field to the original family. The consistent redemption formula (original valuation plus a fifth) applies to the field as to the house and the unclean animal. The covenant's redemption system is internally consistent across the different categories of dedicated property.

Leviticus 27:20

If, however, they do not redeem the field, or if they have sold the field to someone else, it can never be redeemed. The unredeemed field that is also sold — the double alienation of the dedicated property — cannot be redeemed. The person who dedicated the field and then also sold it has removed the field from both the covenant's redemption system and the family's inheritance. The irrevocability of the doubly-alienated field communicates the covenant's seriousness about consecrated property.

Leviticus 27:21

When the field is released in the Jubilee, it will become holy, like a field devoted to the Lord; it will become priestly property. The unredeemed dedicated field that passes through the Jubilee becomes holy and the priestly community's permanent property. The field that was not redeemed by the original family and returns at the Jubilee goes not to the original family but to the priests. The devoted-to-the-Lord field becomes priestly property because the original family's failure to redeem has transferred the covenant's property rights to the covenant's servants.

Leviticus 27:22

If anyone dedicates to the Lord a field they have bought, which is not part of their family land. The dedication of purchased land — land that the dedicator bought from someone else, not the family's ancestral inheritance — follows different regulations from the inheritance-land dedication. The distinction between the purchased field and the ancestral inheritance communicates the covenant's sensitivity to the difference between property that is part of the covenant's generational transfer (the inheritance) and property that is part of the commercial market.

Leviticus 27:23

The priest will determine its value up to the Year of Jubilee, and the person will pay its value on that day as something holy to the Lord. The purchased field dedicated to the Lord is valued and paid in full on the day of the dedication, up to the Jubilee year. The immediate full payment communicates that the purchased field's dedication is a cash transaction rather than the use-right transfer of the ancestral inheritance dedication. The value goes to the Lord (and therefore to the priests) as a cash offering equivalent.

Leviticus 27:24

In the Year of Jubilee the field will revert to the person from whom it was bought, the one whose land it was. The Jubilee return of the purchased field goes not to the person who bought and dedicated it but to the person from whom it was originally purchased — the original family of the land. The Jubilee's land-return principle applies regardless of what the intermediate buyer did with the land: the land returns to the original family's ancestral inheritance. The dedicated purchased field's Jubilee return is the covenant's protection of the ancestral inheritance system.

Leviticus 27:25

Every value is to be set according to the sanctuary shekel, twenty gerahs to the shekel. The consistent monetary standard — the sanctuary shekel of twenty gerahs — applies to all the vow valuations. The consistent standard communicates the covenant's commitment to honest and transparent transactions in every category of dedicated property. The same sanctuary shekel that was the standard for the census tax (Exodus 30:13) and the guilt offering restitution is the standard for every vow valuation.

Leviticus 27:26

No one, however, may dedicate the firstborn of an animal, since the firstborn already belongs to the Lord; whether an ox or a sheep, it is the Lord's. The firstborn animal exclusion from the vow system communicates the covenant's existing claim on the firstborn: the firstborn already belongs to the Lord (Exodus 13:2, 12). The person who vows the firstborn is vowing what is not theirs to vow — the firstborn's prior dedication to God precedes any subsequent vow. The vow system cannot consecrate what is already consecrated.

Leviticus 27:27

If it is one of the unclean animals, the owner may buy it back at the set value, adding a fifth of the value to it. If they do not redeem it, it is to be sold at the set value. The unclean firstborn animal — a firstborn donkey, for example — can be redeemed by the owner at the priestly valuation plus twenty percent, or sold at the priestly valuation. The firstborn unclean animal regulations are consistent with the firstborn regulations of Exodus 13:13: the unclean firstborn is redeemed by a lamb or its monetary equivalent. The vow system's treatment of the unclean firstborn integrates with the firstborn regulations of the covenant.

Leviticus 27:28

But nothing that a person owns and devotes to the Lord — whether a human being or an animal or family land — may be sold or redeemed; everything so devoted is most holy to the Lord. The devoted — herem — property is the most absolute category of dedication: the property devoted to God under the herem vow is most holy and cannot be redeemed or sold. The herem is the irrevocable dedication of property to God's exclusive use. Achan's sin in Joshua 7 involves taking herem property from Jericho — property devoted to God — for personal use, producing the covenant violation that results in Israel's military defeat.

Leviticus 27:29

No person devoted to destruction may be redeemed; they are to be put to death. The herem applied to persons — the irrevocable devotion of a person to destruction — results in death. The herem judgment that appears in the conquest narratives (the devoted cities of Canaan) is the most severe application of the covenant's devotion principle: what is devoted to the Lord under herem cannot be redeemed, converted to ordinary use, or released. The devotion is absolute and irreversible.

Leviticus 27:30

A tithe of everything from the land, whether grain from the soil or fruit from the trees, belongs to the Lord; it is holy to the Lord. The tithe — the tenth of the land's agricultural produce — belongs to the Lord: it is holy to the Lord. The tithe that belongs to God is not a vow but an obligation: the community does not choose to give the tithe, it acknowledges that the tenth is already God's. Malachi 3:10 says bring the whole tithe into the storehouse — the tithe of Leviticus 27:30 is the tithe that Malachi calls Israel to honor and the tithe that the New Testament's giving principle of proportional generosity reflects.

Leviticus 27:31

Whoever would redeem any of their tithe must add a fifth of the value to it. The tithe redemption option — keeping the agricultural tithe while paying its value plus twenty percent in silver — allows the person who needs to keep the actual grain or fruit to do so at a cost. The twenty-percent addition for tithe redemption is the consistent redemption premium of the entire vow system applied to the tithe. The redemption option communicates the covenant's practical flexibility: the tithe obligation can be met in multiple ways.

Leviticus 27:32

Every tithe of the herd and flock — every tenth animal that passes under the shepherd's rod — will be holy to the Lord. The animal tithe — the tenth animal of every flock and herd — is counted by passing the animals under the shepherd's rod and marking every tenth one as holy to the Lord. The counting method communicates the objectivity of the tithe: the tenth animal, whatever it is, belongs to God. The arbitrary character of which specific animal is the tenth prevents both the selection of the best (to give to God) and the worst (to keep the best). The tithe is the tenth, not the best or the worst.

Leviticus 27:33

No one may pick out the good from the bad or make any substitution. If anyone does make a substitution, both the animal and its substitute become holy and cannot be redeemed. The animal tithe substitution prohibition mirrors the vowed-animal substitution prohibition of verse 10: both the original and the substitute become holy if substitution is attempted. The consistent anti-substitution rule across the vow and the tithe communicates the covenant's protection against the exploitation of the sacred offerings: the attempt to game the system results in giving more, not less.

Leviticus 27:34

These are the commands the Lord gave Moses on Mount Sinai for the Israelites. The closing formula of Leviticus: these are the commands the Lord gave Moses on Mount Sinai for the Israelites. The Sinai grounding closes the book as the Sinai grounding opened the Jubilee regulations (25:1): the entire Levitical system is divine command from the mountain of covenant. Hebrews 8:5 says the earthly sanctuary and its regulations are a shadow and copy of the heavenly — the commands given on Mount Sinai for the Israelites are the earthly expression of the heavenly reality that the new covenant fully reveals. Leviticus ends where it began: with the voice of God speaking to Moses from the place of covenant, establishing the structures through which a holy God dwells with and is worshipped by an earthly people.