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Leviticus 7:1-27

Leviticus 7:1-27 CSB

“Now this is the law of the guilt  offering;  it is especially holy. The guilt offering is to be slaughtered at the place where the burnt offering  is slaughtered, and the priest is to splatter its blood on all sides of the altar. The offerer is to present all the fat from it: the fat tail,  the fat surrounding the entrails,  and the two kidneys with the fat on them at the loins; he will also remove the fatty lobe of the liver  with the kidneys. The priest will burn them on the altar as a food offering  to the Lord; it is a guilt offering. Any male among the priests may eat it.  It is to be eaten in a holy place;  it is especially holy.  “The guilt offering is like the sin offering;  the law is the same for both. It belongs to the priest  who makes atonement  with it. As for the priest who presents someone’s burnt offering, the hide of the burnt offering he has presented belongs to him; it is the priest’s. Any grain offering  that is baked in an oven or prepared in a pan or on a griddle belongs to the priest who presents it; it is his. But any grain offering, whether dry or mixed with oil, belongs equally to all of Aaron’s sons. “Now this is the law of the fellowship sacrifice  that someone may present to the Lord: If he presents it for thanksgiving, in addition to the thanksgiving sacrifice,  he is to present unleavened cakes  mixed with olive oil, unleavened wafers  coated with oil, and well-kneaded cakes of fine flour mixed with oil. He is to present as his offering cakes of leavened bread with his thanksgiving sacrifice of fellowship. From the cakes he is to present one portion of each offering as a contribution  to the Lord. It will belong to the priest who splatters the blood of the fellowship offering; it is his. The meat of his thanksgiving sacrifice of fellowship must be eaten on the day he offers it;  he may not leave any of it until morning.  “If the sacrifice he offers is a vow  or a freewill offering,  it is to be eaten on the day he presents his sacrifice, and what is left over may be eaten on the next day. But what remains of the sacrificial meat by the third day must be burned.  If any of the meat of his fellowship sacrifice is eaten on the third day, it will not be accepted.  It will not be credited to the one who presents it; it is repulsive.  The person who eats any of it will bear his iniquity.  “Meat that touches anything unclean must not be eaten; it is to be burned. Everyone who is clean may eat any other meat. But the one who eats meat from the Lord’s fellowship sacrifice while he is unclean, that person must be cut off from his people.  If someone touches anything unclean, whether human uncleanness, an unclean animal, or any unclean, abhorrent  , creature, and eats meat from the Lord’s fellowship sacrifice, that person is to be cut off from his people.” The Lord spoke to Moses: “Tell the Israelites: You are not to eat any fat  of an ox, a sheep, or a goat. The fat of an animal that dies naturally or is mauled by wild beasts  , may be used for any other purpose, but you must not eat it.  If anyone eats animal fat from a food offering presented to the Lord, the person who eats it is to be cut off from his people. Wherever you live, you must not eat the blood  of any bird or animal. Whoever eats any blood is to be cut off from his people.”

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