2-8. When a man shall make a singular vow, &c.--Persons have, at
all times and in all places, been accustomed to present votive
offerings, either from gratitude for benefits received, or in the event
of deliverance from apprehended evil. And Moses was empowered, by
divine authority, to prescribe the conditions of this voluntary duty.
the persons shall be for the Lord, &c.--better rendered
thus:--"According to thy estimation, the persons shall be for the
Lord." Persons might consecrate themselves or their children to the
divine service, in some inferior or servile kind of work about the
sanctuary
(1Sa 3:1).
In the event of any change, the persons so devoted had the privilege in
their power of redeeming themselves; and this chapter specifies the
amount of the redemption money, which the priest had the discretionary
power of reducing, as circumstances might seem to require. Those of
mature age, between twenty and sixty, being capable of the greatest
service, were rated highest; young people, from five till twenty, less,
because not so serviceable; infants, though devotable by their parents
before birth
(1Sa 1:11),
could not be offered nor redeemed till a month after birth; old people
were valued below the young, but above children; and the poor--in no
case freed from payment, in order to prevent the rash formation of
vows--were rated according to their means.
JFB.
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