Bible Commentary

Numbers 19:2

The Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 19:2

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

This is the ordinance of the law. חֻקַּת הַתּוֹרָה. Law-statute: an unusual combination only found elsewhere in , which also concerns legal purifications. A red heifer. This offering was obviously intended, apart from its symbolic significance, to be studiedly simple and cheap.

In contradiction to the many and costly and ever-repeated sacrifices of the Sinaitic legislation, this was a single individual, a female, and of the most common description: red is the most ordinary colour of cattle, and a young heifer is of less value than any other beast of its kind.

The ingenuity indeed of the Jews heaped around the choice of this animal a multitude of precise requirements, and supplemented the prescribed ritual with many ceremonies, some of which are incorporated by the Targums with the sacred text; but even so they could not destroy the remarkable contrast between the simplicity of this offering and the elaborate complexity of those ordained at Sinai.

Only six red heifers are said to have been needed during the whole of Jewish history, so far-reaching and so long-enduring were the uses and advantages of a single immolation. It is evident that this ordinance had for its distinguishing character oneness as opposed to multiplicity, simplicity contrasted with elaborateness.

Without spot, wherein is no blemish. See on Le . However little, comparatively speaking, the victim might cost them, it must yet be perfect of its kind. The later Jews held that three white hairs together on any part of the body made it unfit for the purpose.

On the sex and color of the offering see below. Upon which never came yoke. Cf. ; . The imposition of the yoke, according to the common sentiment of all nations, was a species of degradation, and therefore inconsistent with the ideal of what was fit to be offered in rids ease.

That the matter was wholly one of sentiment is nothing to the point: God doth not care for oxen of any kind, but he doth care that man should give him what is, whether in fact or in fancy, the best of its sort.

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commentaryMatthew Henry on Numbers 19:1-10The heifer was to be wholly burned. This typified the painful sufferings of our Lord Jesus, both in soul and body, as a sacrifice made by fire, to satisfy God's justice for man's sin. These ashes are said to be laid up…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Ashes of Purification. (b. c. 1471.)THE ASHES OF PURIFICATION. (B. C. 1471.) We have here the divine appointment concerning the solemn burning of a red heifer to ashes, and the preserving of the ashes, that of them might be made, not a beautifying, but a…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 19:1-22DEFILEMENT FROM THE DEAD In the laws given to the Israelites there is much said concerning uncleanness. The ceremonial difference between the unclean and the clean sets forth the real difference between the sinful and t…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 19:1-22EXPOSITION THE ASHES OF AN HEIFER SPRINKLING THE UNCLEAN (Numbers 19:1-22).Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 19:1-22THE REMEDY OF DEATH We have in this chapter, spiritually, death, and the remedy for death. Death is treated of not as the mere physical change which is the end of life, nor as the social and domestic loss which breaks s…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 19:1-22THE WATER OF PURIFICATION, AND ITS LESSONS The extreme difficulty of applying the details of this chapter to the spiritual truths of which they were a shadow forbids us attempting more than a general application of the…Joseph S. Exell and contributors