Daily, weekly, and monthly offerings
The Lord orders Israel’s public worship through a fixed pattern of daily, weekly, monthly, and annual sacrifices. These offerings are not optional religious extras but the covenant structure by which Israel’s time is consecrated, atonement is maintained, and the nation’s life is kept oriented to Yah
Commentary
28:1 The Lord spoke to Moses:
28:2 “Command the Israelites: ‘With regard to my offering, be sure to offer my food for my offering made by fire, as a pleasing aroma to me at its appointed time.’
28:3 You will say to them, ‘This is the offering made by fire which you must offer to the Lord: two unblemished lambs one year old each day for a continual burnt offering.
28:4 The first lamb you must offer in the morning, and the second lamb you must offer in the late afternoon,
28:5 with one-tenth of an ephah of finely ground flour as a grain offering mixed with one quarter of a hin of pressed olive oil.
28:6 It is a continual burnt offering that was instituted on Mount Sinai as a pleasing aroma, an offering made by fire to the Lord.
28:7 “‘And its drink offering must be one quarter of a hin for each lamb. You must pour out the strong drink as a drink offering to the Lord in the holy place.
28:8 And the second lamb you must offer in the late afternoon; just as you offered the grain offering and drink offering in the morning, you must offer it as an offering made by fire, as a pleasing aroma to the Lord.
28:9 “‘On the Sabbath day, you must offer two unblemished lambs a year old, and two-tenths of an ephah of finely ground flour as a grain offering, mixed with olive oil, along with its drink offering.
28:10 This is the burnt offering for every Sabbath, besides the continual burnt offering and its drink offering.
28:11 “‘On the first day of each month you must offer as a burnt offering to the Lord two young bulls, one ram, and seven unblemished lambs a year old,
28:12 with three-tenths of an ephah of finely ground flour mixed with olive oil as a grain offering for each bull, and two-tenths of an ephah of finely ground flour mixed with olive oil as a grain offering for the ram,
28:13 and one-tenth of an ephah of finely ground flour mixed with olive oil as a grain offering for each lamb, as a burnt offering for a pleasing aroma, an offering made by fire to the Lord.
28:14 For their drink offerings, include half a hin of wine with each bull, one-third of a hin for the ram, and one-fourth of a hin for each lamb. This is the burnt offering for each month throughout the months of the year.
28:15 And one male goat must be offered to the Lord as a purification offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering and its drink offering.
28:16 “‘On the fourteenth day of the first month is the Lord’s Passover.
28:17 And on the fifteenth day of this month is the festival. For seven days bread made without yeast must be eaten.
28:18 And on the first day there is to be a holy assembly; you must do no ordinary work on it.
28:19 “‘But you must offer to the Lord an offering made by fire, a burnt offering of two young bulls, one ram, and seven lambs one year old; they must all be unblemished.
28:20 And their grain offering is to be of finely ground flour mixed with olive oil. For each bull you must offer three- tenths of an ephah, and two-tenths for the ram.
28:21 For each of the seven lambs you are to offer one-tenth of an ephah,
28:22 as well as one goat for a purification offering, to make atonement for you.
28:23 You must offer these in addition to the burnt offering in the morning which is for a continual burnt offering.
28:24 In this manner you must offer daily throughout the seven days the food of the sacrifice made by fire as a sweet aroma to the Lord. It is to be offered in addition to the continual burnt offering and its drink offering.
28:25 On the seventh day you are to have a holy assembly, you must do no regular work.
28:26 “‘Also, on the day of the first fruits, when you bring a new grain offering to the Lord during your Feast of Weeks, you are to have a holy assembly. You must do no ordinary work.
28:27 But you must offer as the burnt offering, as a sweet aroma to the Lord, two young bulls, one ram, seven lambs one year old,
28:28 with their grain offering of finely ground flour mixed with olive oil: three-tenths of an ephah for each bull, two- tenths for the one ram,
28:29 with one-tenth for each of the seven lambs,
28:30 as well as one male goat to make an atonement for you.
28:31 You are to offer them with their drink offerings in addition to the continual burnt offering and its grain offering – they must be unblemished.
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Historical setting and dynamics
The passage addresses Israel in the wilderness after Sinai, with the tabernacle already established as the central place of divine presence and sacrifice. It assumes a priestly system in which public worship is regulated by divine command, not by priestly invention or popular preference. The schedule of offerings anticipates life in the land, when Israel’s calendar, agricultural seasons, and covenant memory will need to be organized around the Lord’s appointed times. The repeated emphasis on regular, corporate offerings underscores that covenant fellowship with Yahweh is maintained through ordered, continual worship under the Mosaic covenant.
Central idea
The Lord orders Israel’s public worship through a fixed pattern of daily, weekly, monthly, and annual sacrifices. These offerings are not optional religious extras but the covenant structure by which Israel’s time is consecrated, atonement is maintained, and the nation’s life is kept oriented to Yahweh. The repeated “in addition to” language shows that the calendar’s special days build on, rather than replace, the continual sacrifice.
Context and flow
Numbers 28 begins a major legal section that follows the second census and the appointment of Joshua as Moses’ successor. After the wilderness generation is judged and the new generation prepared, the book turns from leadership and inheritance to worship order. This unit establishes the daily, Sabbath, monthly, Passover/Unleavened Bread, and Weeks offerings; Numbers 29 then continues with the rest of the festal calendar. The literary movement is from the most frequent sacrifice to the most annual, showing that all of Israel’s time belongs to the Lord.
Exegetical analysis
This unit is a priestly schedule of public sacrifices. It is structured by time: every day, every Sabbath, every new month, then the first month’s Passover and Unleavened Bread, and finally the Feast of Weeks. The repeated formulas are deliberate; they make worship orderly, regular, and communal rather than sporadic or self-designed.
The daily burnt offering is the foundation. Two unblemished year-old lambs are offered morning and late afternoon, together with grain and drink offerings. The text stresses that this continual burnt offering was instituted at Sinai, tying the practice to covenant revelation rather than later custom. The daily offering functions as the basic rhythm of consecration for Israel’s life before God.
The Sabbath offering adds to, rather than replaces, the continual sacrifice. The same is true of the new moon offerings, which are larger and more elaborate, reflecting the significance of the monthly renewal of sacred time. The goat for a purification offering in verse 15 shows that covenant time itself required cleansing and atonement, not merely celebration.
Verses 16-25 compress the Passover and seven-day Feast of Unleavened Bread. The annual deliverance from Egypt is memorialized not only by eating unleavened bread but also by sacrificial worship. The holy assemblies and prohibition of ordinary work underline that these are set-apart covenant days. The festival sacrifices are again offered in addition to the continual daily burnt offering, showing that Israel’s annual remembrance of redemption rests on the ongoing reality of atonement.
Verses 26-31 move to the Feast of Weeks, here described as the day of the first fruits. This agricultural feast is not treated as a merely economic celebration; it is a holy assembly before the Lord. The same sacrificial pattern appears again, with a male goat for atonement and the same insistence on unblemished offerings. The passage ends where it began: all of it is ordered worship under divine command.
The text’s theology is straightforward. Yahweh does not need food, but he does require covenant obedience expressed in sacrificial worship. The sacrificial idiom of ‘food’ and ‘pleasing aroma’ communicates accepted homage and maintained fellowship. The whole calendar is thus sanctified: daily life, weekly rest, monthly renewal, and annual festivals are all brought under the Lord’s claim.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands squarely within the Mosaic covenant at a point where Israel is being prepared to enter and live in the land. It presupposes the tabernacle, the Aaronic priesthood, and the sacrificial system given at Sinai, and it shows how covenant life is to be ordered around sacred time. The monthly and annual festivals link worship to redemption from Egypt and to harvest life in the land, while the continual sacrifice testifies that Israel’s access to God always depends on atonement. In the broader storyline, these repeated sacrifices anticipate the need for a fuller and final mediation, but they remain first and foremost part of Israel’s covenant vocation under the law.
Theological significance
The passage teaches that the Lord determines the proper way to approach him and the proper times for worship. Holiness is not improvised; it is regulated by divine command, and atonement is necessary even for Israel’s holy days. The repeated unblemished offerings emphasize that acceptable worship requires what is fit and undefiled. The text also presents time itself as belonging to God: daily, weekly, monthly, and annual rhythms are all consecrated to him. Corporate worship, covenant memory, purification, and joyful feasting all belong together under Yahweh’s rule.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No major prophecy, typology, or symbol requires special comment in this unit. The sacrificial calendar is not direct prophecy, though the Passover and firstfruits themes later become important in redemptive-historical development.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The passage uses concrete sacrificial and calendrical language typical of the ancient world, but the Lord’s covenant sharply governs the categories. Expressions like ‘food,’ ‘pleasing aroma,’ and ‘drink offering’ are temple idioms, not crude anthropomorphism. The repeated schedule also reflects an honor-and-obligation framework: sacred time is structured because the covenant Lord deserves regular public homage. Readers should resist treating the offerings as merely symbolic ideas; they are concrete acts of obedient worship.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
Within the Old Testament, this chapter reinforces the need for continual mediation, regular atonement, and sacred time ordered around redemption. Passover later becomes a key redemptive pattern, and the firstfruits language prepares for later biblical reflection on harvest and resurrection. In the fuller canon, the repetition of these sacrifices points to the incompleteness of animal offerings and therefore to the need for a final, sufficient sacrifice. The passage does not itself name Christ, but it contributes to the sacrificial framework that the New Testament sees fulfilled in him, especially in Passover and atoning themes.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God’s people should not treat worship as occasional or self-invented; it must be shaped by God’s word. Regular patterns of worship matter, because faithfulness is sustained through disciplined remembrance and obedience. The passage also guards against casual approaches to holiness: even sacred festivals need atonement. For Christian readers, the text encourages reverence, ordered worship, and gratitude for the greater and final sacrifice that has fulfilled the sacrificial system.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
No major interpretive crux requires special comment.
Application boundary note
Application must respect the covenantal setting. These sacrifices were commanded for Israel under the Mosaic covenant and are not direct regulations for the church. The passage should not be spiritualized away, but neither should its detailed sacrificial calendar be collapsed into a one-to-one blueprint for Christian liturgy.
Key Hebrew terms
qorbani
Gloss: my offering / tribute offering
Introduces the sacrifices as belonging to the Lord; the offerings are not human gifts to manipulate God, but covenant gifts required by his command.
isheh
Gloss: fire offering
A technical sacrificial term repeated throughout the passage; it emphasizes the altar-consumed character of the offerings.
re'aḥ nîḥoach
Gloss: soothing/acceptable aroma
Describes accepted worship in covenantal, anthropomorphic terms; it does not mean God is physically nourished.
tamid
Gloss: regular, continual
Marks the daily burnt offering as the foundational rhythm of Israel’s worship, around which the other appointed sacrifices are arranged.
mo'ed
Gloss: appointed time / festival
Highlights that sacred time is fixed by divine appointment, not by human calendar preference.
minchah
Gloss: tribute offering
The grain offering accompanies the burnt offering as a token of dedication and homage, especially fitting for a covenant people dependent on God’s provision.
chatta't
Gloss: sin offering / purification offering
Appears in the monthly and festival sacrifices to secure atonement and ritual cleansing for the congregation.
pesach
Gloss: Passover
Anchors the calendar in redemption history; Israel’s worship year begins with remembered deliverance from Egypt.
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