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These may you eat of all that are in the waters: whatever has fins and scales in the waters, in the seas, and in the rivers, that may you eat.
Verse Takeaways
1
The 'Fins and Scales' Rule
The law for aquatic creatures was straightforward: if it had both fins and scales, it was clean to eat. Commentators note this excluded shellfish, eels, and sharks. While some suggest this was for health reasons, as scale-less fish were often seen as unwholesome in the ancient world, the primary purpose was to follow God's specific command.
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Book Overview
Leviticus
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5
18th Century
Presbyterian
Any fish from either salt water or fresh water could be eaten if it had both scales and fins, but no other creature that lives in the waters was pe…
19th Century
Anglican
These you shall eat. —Water animals, which, as we have seen, constitute the second division of the animal kingdom, now fo…
16th Century
Protestant
These shall you eat of all that are in the waters. Here, also, some who know little of religion plausibly contend that God is acting as a …
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17th Century
Reformed Baptist
These shall you eat of all that [are] in the waters In the waters of the sea, or in rivers, pools, and ponds; meanin…
These laws seem to have been intended,
As a test of the people's obedience, as Adam was forbidden to eat from the tree of knowledge…