the Fifth Week after Easter
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La Biblia Reina-Valera
LevÃtico 11:40
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- AmericanParallel Translations
"Y el que coma parte de su cadáver lavará sus vestidos y quedará inmundo hasta el atardecer; y el que levante el cadáver lavará sus vestidos y quedará inmundo hasta el atardecer.
Y el que comiere de su cuerpo muerto, lavará sus vestiduras, y será inmundo hasta la tarde; asimismo el que sacare su cuerpo muerto, lavará sus vestiduras, y será inmundo hasta la tarde.
y el que comiere de su cuerpo muerto, lavará sus vestidos, y será inmundo hasta la tarde; asimismo el que sacare su cuerpo muerto, lavará sus vestidos, y será inmundo hasta la tarde.
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
eateth: Leviticus 11:25, Leviticus 17:15, Leviticus 17:16, Leviticus 22:8, Exodus 22:31, Deuteronomy 14:21, Isaiah 1:16, Ezekiel 4:14, Ezekiel 36:25, Ezekiel 44:31, Zechariah 13:1, 1 Corinthians 6:11, 1 Corinthians 10:21, 1 John 1:7
shall wash: Leviticus 11:28, Leviticus 14:8, Leviticus 14:9, Leviticus 15:5-10, Leviticus 15:27, Leviticus 16:26, Leviticus 16:28, Numbers 19:7, Numbers 19:8, Numbers 19:19
Reciprocal: Leviticus 11:39 - General Leviticus 13:6 - wash Numbers 19:21 - General 1 Samuel 20:26 - he is not clean
Gill's Notes on the Bible
And he that eateth of the carcass of it,.... For though it might be eaten, if rightly killed, yet not if it died of itself, or was strangled, or torn to pieces by wild beasts:
shall wash his clothes; besides his body, which even he that touched it was obliged to:
and be unclean until the even; though he and his clothes were washed, and he might not go into the court of the tabernacle, or have any concern with holy things, or conversation with men:
he also that beareth the carcass of it; removes it from one place to another, carries it to the dunghill, or a ditch, and there lays it, or buries it in the earth:
shall wash his clothes, and be unclean until the even; from whence, as before observed by the Jewish writers, uncleanness by bearing is greater than uncleanness by touching, since the former obliged to washing of clothes, not so the latter; so Jarchi here; and yet still was unclean until the evening, though he had washed himself in water, as Aben Ezra notes; and so says Jarchi, though he dips himself, he has need of the evening of the sun.