Bible Cross References
peace
Leviticus 3:1
When any of you offer one of your cattle as a fellowship offering, it is to be a bull or a cow without any defects.
Leviticus 3:6
If a sheep or goat is used as a fellowship offering, it may be male or female, but it must be without any defects.
Leviticus 7:11-38
11
The following are the regulations for the fellowship offerings presented to the LORD.
12
If you make this offering as a thanksgiving offering to God, you shall present, together with the animal to be sacrificed, an offering of bread made without yeast: either thick loaves made of flour mixed with olive oil or thin cakes brushed with olive oil or cakes made of flour mixed with olive oil.
13
In addition, you shall offer loaves of bread baked with yeast.
14
You shall present one part of each kind of bread as a special contribution to the LORD; it belongs to the priest who takes the blood of the animal and throws it against the altar.
15
The flesh of the animal must be eaten on the day it is sacrificed; none of it may be left until the next morning.
16
If you bring a fellowship offering as fulfillment of a vow or as your own freewill offering, not all of it has to be eaten on the day it is offered, but any that is left over may be eaten on the following day.
17
Any meat that still remains on the third day must be burned.
18
If any of it is eaten on the third day, God will not accept your offering. The offering will not be counted to your credit but will be considered unclean, and whoever eats it will suffer the consequences.
19
If the meat comes into contact with anything ritually unclean, it must not be eaten, but must be burned. Any of you that are ritually clean may eat the meat,
20
but if any of you who are not clean eat it, you shall no longer be considered one of God's people.
21
Also, if you eat the meat of this offering after you have touched anything ritually unclean, whether from a person or an animal, you shall no longer be considered one of God's people.
22
The LORD gave Moses the following regulations
23
for the people of Israel. No fat of cattle, sheep, or goats shall be eaten.
24
The fat of an animal that has died a natural death or has been killed by a wild animal must not be eaten, but it may be used for any other purpose.
25
Anyone who eats the fat of an animal that may be offered as a food offering to the LORD will no longer be considered one of God's people.
26
No matter where the Israelites live, they must never use the blood of birds or animals for food.
27
Anyone who breaks this law will no longer be considered one of God's people.
28
The LORD gave Moses the following regulations
29
for the people of Israel. When any of you offer a fellowship offering you must bring part of it as a special gift to the LORD,
30
bringing it with your own hands as a food offering. You shall bring the fat of the animal with its breast and present it as a special gift to the LORD.
31
The priest shall burn the fat on the altar, but the breast shall belong to the priests.
32
The right hind leg of the animal shall be given as a special contribution
33
to the priest who offers the blood and the fat of the fellowship offering.
34
The breast of the animal is a special gift, and the right hind leg is a special contribution that the LORD has taken from the people of Israel and given to the priests. This is what the people of Israel must give to the priests for all time to come.
35
This is the part of the food offered to the LORD that was given to Aaron and his sons on the day they were ordained as priests.
36
On that day the LORD commanded the people of Israel to give them this part of the offering. It is a regulation that the people of Israel must obey for all time to come.
37
These, then, are the regulations for the burnt offerings, the grain offerings, the sin offerings, the repayment offerings, the ordination offerings, and the fellowship offerings.
38
There on Mount Sinai in the desert, the LORD gave these commands to Moses on the day he told the people of Israel to make their offerings.
to accomplish
Genesis 28:20
Then Jacob made a vow to the LORD: "If you will be with me and protect me on the journey I am making and give me food and clothing,
Genesis 35:1-3
1
God said to Jacob, "Go to Bethel at once, and live there. Build an altar there to me, the God who appeared to you when you were running away from your brother Esau."
2
So Jacob said to his family and to all who were with him, "Get rid of the foreign gods that you have; purify yourselves and put on clean clothes.
3
We are going to leave here and go to Bethel, where I will build an altar to the God who helped me in the time of my trouble and who has been with me everywhere I have gone."
Numbers 15:3
A bull, a ram, a sheep, or a goat may be presented to the LORD as a burnt offering or as a sacrifice in fulfillment of a vow or as a freewill offering or as an offering at your regular religious festivals; the odor of these food offerings is pleasing to the LORD.
Numbers 15:8
When a bull is offered to the LORD as a burnt offering or as a sacrifice in fulfillment of a vow or as a fellowship offering,
Deuteronomy 23:21-23
21
"When you make a vow to the LORD your God, do not put off doing what you promised; the LORD will hold you to your vow, and it is a sin not to keep it.
22
It is no sin not to make a vow to the LORD,
23
but if you make one voluntarily, be sure that you keep it.
Psalm 50:14
Let the giving of thanks be your sacrifice to God, and give the Almighty all that you promised.
Proverbs 7:14
"I made my offerings today and have the meat from the sacrifices.
Ecclesiastes 5:4
So when you make a promise to God, keep it as quickly as possible. He has no use for a fool. Do what you promise to do.
Ecclesiastes 5:5
Better not to promise at all than to make a promise and not keep it.