Leviticus 19; Psalms 23-24; Eccl. 2; 1 Timothy 4
Don Carson
PERHAPS THE MOST STRIKING FEATURE OF LEVITICUS 19
is the repeated clause, “I am the LORD.” In each case, it provides the
reason why the Israelites are to obey the particular command.
Each must respect his mother and
father, and must obey God’s Sabbaths: “I am the LORD” (19:3). They are
not to succumb to idolatry: “I am the LORD” (19:4). When they harvest,
they are to leave enough of the produce behind that the poor may find
something to eat: “I am the LORD” (19:10). They are not to swear falsely using the name of God: “I am the LORD” (19:12).
They are not to play foul jokes on the handicapped, such as cursing the
deaf or putting a stumbling block in front of the blind: “I am the
LORD” (19:14). They are not to take any action that endangers a neighbor’s life: “I am the LORD” (19:16).
They are neither to seek revenge nor bear a grudge against a neighbor,
but each is to love his neighbor as himself: “I am the LORD” (19:18).
Upon entering the Promised Land, after planting any fruit tree they are
not to eat its fruit for three years, and then must offer all the fruit
to the Lord in the fourth year, before eating the fruit from the fifth
year onward: “I am the LORD” (19:23-25). They are not to mutilate or
tattoo their bodies: “I am the LORD” (19:28). They are to observe God’s Sabbaths and have reverence for his sanctuary: “I am the LORD” (19:30). They are not to resort to mediums or spiritists: “I am the LORD” (19:31). They are to rise in the presence of the aged, show respect for the elderly, and revere God: “I am the LORD” (19:32).
Foreigners resident in the land must be treated as one of the
native-born: “I am the LORD” (19:33-34). Business standards must be
aboveboard: “I am the LORD” (19:35-36).
Although some of the commandments and
prohibitions in this chapter do not end with this formula, they are
nevertheless blessed with the same motive, for the closing verse wraps
the chapter up: “Keep all my decrees and all my laws and follow them. I
am the LORD” (19:37).
Moreover, judging by the opening verse
of the chapter, the formula “I am the LORD” is in fact a reminder of
something longer: “Speak to the entire assembly of Israel and say to
them: ‘Be holy because I, the LORD your God, am holy’” (19:1). We have
already meditated a little on what holy means (cf. April 8). Here, what
is striking is that many of these commandments are social in their
effect (honesty, generosity, integrity, and so forth); yet the Lord’s
holiness is the fundamental warrant for them. For the covenant people of
God, the highest motives are bound up with pleasing him and fearing his
sanctions.
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