Numbers 29 27

Numbers 29:27 kjv

And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:

Numbers 29:27 nkjv

and their grain offering and their drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, by their number, according to the ordinance;

Numbers 29:27 niv

With the bulls, rams and lambs, offer their grain offerings and drink offerings according to the number specified.

Numbers 29:27 esv

with the grain offering and the drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, in the prescribed quantities;

Numbers 29:27 nlt

Each of these offerings of bulls, rams, and lambs must be accompanied by its prescribed grain offering and liquid offering.

Numbers 29 27 Cross References

VerseTextReference
Num 29:13And you shall present a burnt offering... thirteen bulls...Initial large offering for Sukkot
Lev 23:33-43Details on the Feast of Tabernacles, living in booths.Feast instructions for Sukkot
Ex 29:38-42Daily burnt offerings, a regular burnt offering for all generations.Regular daily offerings
Lev 1:3-4If his offering is a burnt offering from the herd... a male without blemishRequirement for unblemished offering
Num 28:19a burnt offering to the Lord, two young bulls, one ram...Other feast offering specifications
Deut 16:13-15You shall keep the Feast of Booths seven days...Command to observe Sukkot seven days
Ezra 3:4They kept the Feast of Booths, as it is written, and offered...Post-exilic observance of Sukkot
Neh 8:14-18How the Feast of Booths was found written in the Law and kept.Restoration-era observance of Sukkot
John 7:37-38On the last day of the feast, Jesus stood and cried out...Jesus at Sukkot, symbolizing living water
Col 2:16-17Therefore let no one pass judgment on you... regarding a festival... shadowOld Covenant rituals point to Christ
Heb 10:1-4For since the law has but a shadow... sacrifices can never perfect thoseOld Testament sacrifices' inadequacy alone
Heb 10:11-14And every priest stands daily at his service... Christ offered for all timeChrist's one perfect sacrifice supersedes
Heb 9:14how much more will the blood of Christ... purify our conscience!Christ as the ultimate, unblemished sacrifice
1 Pet 1:18-19knowing that you were ransomed... with the precious blood of Christ, a lambChrist as the sinless Lamb
Gen 2:3So God blessed the seventh day and made it holy...Sanctity and significance of the number seven
Rev 1:4Grace to you... from the seven spirits who are before his throneSymbolic use of number seven in Revelation
Lev 1:9...the priest shall burn all of it on the altar, as a burnt offering...Ritual for burnt offerings explained
Ex 30:20they shall wash with water... so that they may not die.Purity required for service to God
Eph 5:2walk in love, as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us, a fragrant offeringChrist's sacrifice as a pleasing aroma
Rom 12:1Present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to GodChristian call to self-offering

Numbers 29 verses

Numbers 29 27 Meaning

On the seventh day of the Feast of Tabernacles (Sukkot), the Israelites were commanded to bring specific burnt offerings to the Lord: seven bullocks, two rams, and fourteen male lambs, all one year old and unblemished. This meticulous prescription underscores God's demand for precise obedience, wholehearted worship, and ongoing atonement, emphasizing the progressive culmination of the feast's ritual acts.

Numbers 29 27 Context

Numbers chapter 29 outlines the specific daily Musaf (additional) burnt offerings required for each of the Lord's appointed feasts. This chapter is a continuation of detailed liturgical instructions given to Israel. Verses 12-38 are dedicated specifically to the seven-day Feast of Tabernacles (Sukkot), with an eighth concluding day. Each day of Sukkot had unique offerings, most notably characterized by a progressive reduction in the number of bulls offered daily. Verse 27 prescribes the sacrifices for the seventh day, leading to the conclusion of the primary festival period before the concluding eighth day. This structure emphasizes the specific, divine order and the Israelites' national participation in worship, remembrance of the wilderness wanderings, and thanksgiving for the harvest.

Numbers 29 27 Word analysis

  • And on the seventh day: This signifies a specific point in the Sukkot festival, a pivotal moment leading to its climax. The number "seven" (Hebrew: sheva') is foundational in biblical numerology, representing completion, perfection, divine fullness, and sacred cycles (creation, Sabbath). Its recurrence emphasizes the divine ordination and holistic nature of the feast.
  • you shall present: A direct divine command to the people of Israel, underscoring their communal responsibility and obedience. It highlights that these offerings were not optional acts but obligations from the covenant.
  • seven bulls: (Hebrew: parim, plural of par). Bullocks or young cattle, mature enough for sacrifice but not old. Bulls were the most significant and costly of the sacrificial animals, indicating the weight and importance of the offering. A unique characteristic of Sukkot was the diminishing number of bulls offered each day, starting with thirteen on day one and concluding with seven on day seven, a total of seventy bulls. This diminishing count may symbolize a progressive focus or an offering on behalf of the seventy nations (Gen 10), inviting blessings upon all humanity.
  • two rams: (Hebrew: elim, plural of ayil). Rams, male sheep of breeding age, represented strength and substitution. Their number remained constant throughout the feast.
  • fourteen male lambs a year old: (Hebrew: kəḇāsim bəne šānâ). Lambs were common and foundational sacrifices. "A year old" indicates them to be in their prime, without flaw, and at peak health for a proper offering. The "fourteen" (double seven) emphasizes the abundance and completeness of the lamb offering, representing the community's full devotion.
  • without blemish: (Hebrew: təmīmîm). This crucial qualification demanded physical perfection—no deformities, injuries, or sickness. It ensured the highest quality sacrifice to God, symbolizing purity, holiness, and setting apart. This principle consistently pointed forward to the perfect, unblemished sacrifice of Christ.

Numbers 29 27 Bonus section

The Feast of Tabernacles, known as the "season of our joy," contrasted sharply with the solemnity of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur preceding it. The high number of offerings, especially the progressive reduction of bulls culminating on this seventh day, is seen by some scholars as representing a prayer for the seventy nations of the world (according to Jewish tradition, based on Gen 10), demonstrating God's universal care and Israel's role as a light to the Gentiles even through their ritual. The extensive detail in Numbers about the number and type of sacrifices reveals God's precision and expectation of strict adherence from His people, signifying His complete provision and their complete dependence and gratitude. It's a reminder that true worship isn't improvised but offered according to divine instruction.

Numbers 29 27 Commentary

Numbers 29:27, nestled within the elaborate liturgical calendar, provides the precise offering required for the penultimate day of the main week of Sukkot. The emphasis on specific numbers (seven bulls, two rams, fourteen lambs) and the unchanging "unblemished" condition underscores divine order and holiness. The unique daily reduction in bull offerings throughout Sukkot sets it apart from other festivals and points to a culmination of spiritual intent. This prescribed burnt offering, signifying complete surrender and atonement, transformed the Israelites' thanksgiving for the harvest into a sacred act of worship. It reminds the believer that true devotion requires specific obedience, and that only perfection, ultimately embodied in Christ, can fully satisfy God's holy standard.