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pure frankincense (לְבוֹנָה זָךְ levonah zakh) The components are still being studied and are not determined with absolute certainty. Stacte is variously described as being the extract of the transparent portion of the myrrh resin which exudes spontaneously from the tree, or a balsam from a tree such as opobalsamum or a styrax.
The major types of sacrificial offerings, their purpose and circumstances, details of their performance and distributions afterwards are delineated in the Book of Leviticus 1:1-7:38. [ 17 ] The animals were required to be "unblemished"; [ 18 ] the list of blemishes includes animals "that are blind or broken or maimed, or have an ulcer or eczema ...
The Rabbis taught in a Baraita that because Leviticus 2:15 says with regard to a meal offering of first-fruits, "you shall ... lay frankincense thereon; it is a meal-offering," Leviticus 2:15 meant to include within the requirement for frankincense the meal-offering that Leviticus 9:4 required Aaron to offer on the eighth day of consecration. [63]
Showbread (Hebrew: לחם הפנים Leḥem haPānīm, literally: "Bread of the Faces" [1]), in the King James Version shewbread, in a Biblical or Jewish context, refers to the cakes or loaves of bread which were always present, on a specially-dedicated table, in the Temple in Jerusalem as an offering to God.
RELATED ARTICLES: Tzav - 613 Mitzvot - Priestly Code - lying - deception - Robbery - Korban - Ram - Kohen - Linen - Vestments - Altar - Flour - Oil - Frankincense - Unleavened bread - Tabernacle - Ephah - Blood. ENGLISH TEXT: American Standard - Douay-Rheims - Free - King James - Jewish Publication Society - Tyndale - World English - Wycliffe
Sacrifices of well-being (shelamim) can be male or a female cattle, sheep, or goats, from which the priest will dash the blood on the sides of the altar and burn the fat around the entrails, the kidneys, and the protuberance on the liver on the altar.
Frankincense, also known as olibanum (/ oʊ ˈ l ɪ b ə n ə m /), [1] is an aromatic resin used in incense and perfumes, obtained from trees of the genus Boswellia in the family Burseraceae. The word is from Old French franc encens ('high-quality incense'). [ 2 ]
[86] The incense gum olibanum, or frankincense (Boswellia), is also endemic to the Dhofar region of Oman [87] and to Ethiopia, where, in the case of the latter, six species are known to grow. The most common species is that of Boswellia papyrifera (Del.) Hochst. , known in Amharic as "itan zaf" (Incense tree), and that of B. rivae (Engl.) . [ 88 ]