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Leviticus 18 (NIV)

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Leviticus 18 (NIV)
Commentary 1 source group
Tyndale Commentary 4 notes
TyndaleStudyNotes

Lev.18.1-20.27

18:1–20:27 Chapters 18 and 20 primarily discuss sexual matters, warning against engaging in pagan practices both religious and secular. These chapters bracket exhortations to pursue holiness in everyday life (ch 19).

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
TyndaleStudyNotes

Lev.18.12-13

18:12-13 your father’s sister . . . mother’s sister: These actions would dishonor your father or mother.

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
TyndaleStudyNotes

Lev.18.14

18:14 Having sexual relations with your aunt would dishonor your uncle. In turn, this would also dishonor your father (see 20:20).

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
TyndaleStudyNotes

Lev.18.15

18:15 Just as having sexual relations with your father’s wife would dishonor your father, having sexual relations with your daughter-in-law would dishonor your son. The law called for daughters-in-law to be treated like natural daughters (Exod 21:9; cp. Gen 38:1-30).

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0
Cross Reference8 items
TyndaleCross References

genesis 2:22-24

genesis 2:22-24

TyndaleCross References

genesis 3:1-24

genesis 3:1-24

TyndaleCross References

genesis 19:30-38

genesis 19:30-38

TyndaleCross References

genesis 29:16-24

genesis 29:16-24

TyndaleCross References

genesis 35:22

genesis 35:22

TyndaleCross References

genesis 38:1-30

genesis 38:1-30

Dictionary & Themes1 item
TyndaleTheme Notes

Family, Community, and Sexual Sin

Family, Community, and Sexual Sin

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Family, Community, and Sexual Sin In Israel, the family was the basic building block for the solidarity of the entire people. Each of the twelve tribes was a conglomeration of families and clans. The twelve tribes together comprised the people of Israel as a whole. Although the level of solidarity might decrease at a distance from one’s immediate family, this familial notion permeated all of Israelite society. A kinsman was often called a brother, not just a relative, to express the close intimacy. By extension of the family model, the term often translated “brother” could also be used of a fellow Israelite (see Deut 1:16, “fellow Israelites”; Deut 3:18, “Israelite relatives”). Since Israel was seen as an extended family, its existence depended on the integrity of the home. Crimes such as incest and adultery were punished very severely because they weakened the foundation of the family. Incest introduced competition, threatening the safety of the home by violating the trust, intimacy, and sense of belonging shared by its members. Adultery fragmented the home by allowing intimacy with someone outside it to divide the loyalties of its participants. These powerful enemies of fam...

Tyndale Open Resources - CC BY-SA 4.0