Leviticus 12 KJV
Purification After Childbirth
Leviticus Chapter 12: Purification After Childbirth
The doubled purification period for daughters (fourteen days initial uncleanness plus sixty-six days) may encode an implicit recognition that the female child will herself one day participate in the same cycle of generation, thereby extending the ritual consequence across generations rather than merely punishing the mother.
1nd the LORD spake unto Moses, saying,
2 Speak unto the children of Israel, saying, If a woman have conceived seed, and born a man child: then she shall be unclean seven days; according to the days of the separation for her infirmity shall she be unclean.
3 And in the eighth day the flesh of his foreskin shall be circumcised.
4 And she shall then continue in the blood of her purifying three and thirty days; she shall touch no hallowed thing, nor come into the sanctuary, until the days of her purifying be fulfilled.
5 But if she bear a maid child, then she shall be unclean two weeks, as in her separation: and she shall continue in the blood of her purifying threescore and six days.
6 And when the days of her purifying are fulfilled, for a son, or for a daughter, she shall bring a lamb of the first year for a burnt offering, and a young pigeon, or a turtledove, for a sin offering, unto the door of the tabernacle of the congregation, unto the priest:
7 Who shall offer it before the LORD, and make an atonement for her; and she shall be cleansed from the issue of her blood. This is the law for her that hath born a male or a female.
8 And if she be not able to bring a lamb, then she shall bring two turtles, or two young pigeons; the one for the burnt offering, and the other for a sin offering: and the priest shall make an atonement for her, and she shall be clean.
โ โ arrow keys to navigate chapters ยท spacebar to play/pause audio
Did You Know?
The doubled purification period for daughters (fourteen days initial uncleanness plus sixty-six days) may encode an implicit recognition that the female child will herself one day participate in the same cycle of generation, thereby extending the ritual consequence across generations rather than merely punishing the mother.
By requiring a sin offering after an event explicitly commanded and blessed in Genesis, the chapter subtly signals that the effects of the Fall have penetrated even the most ordinary processes of human reproduction, making ordinary birth a site of theological rupture.
The chapterโs placement immediately after the animal classification laws of Leviticus 11 creates a deliberate literary progression from the ordering of the animal world to the ordering of human birth, suggesting that the same priestly logic of separation governs both cosmic and bodily realms.
The concession allowing two birds instead of a lamb for the poor is one of the earliest biblical instances of a sliding-scale sacrificial tariff calibrated to economic capacity, a principle later invoked when Luke cites this very law to frame the presentation of the infant Jesus.
Unlike many ancient Near Eastern postpartum rites that treated the new mother as a source of contagious danger requiring magical expulsion, Leviticus 12 channels her return to the community exclusively through the centralized sanctuary and its priests, thereby subordinating private blood taboos to public covenantal worship.
Commentary & Study Notes Jamieson-Fausset-Brown (1871) ยท Public Domain If a woman, &c. โ The mother of a boy was ceremonially unclean for a week, at the end of which the child was circumcised (Ge 17:12; Ro 4:11-13); the mother of a girl for two weโฆ
Classic verse-by-verse commentary on Leviticus 12 from Jamieson, Fausset & Brown (1871). Covers: Woman's uncleanness by childbirth.
- 2
- If a woman, &c. โ The mother of a boy was ceremonially unclean for a week, at the end of which the child was circumcised (Ge 17:12; Ro 4:11-13); the mother of a girl for two weeks (Le 12:5) โ a stigma on the sex (1Ti 2:14, 15) for sin, which was removed by Christ; everyone who came near her during that time contracted a similar defilement. After these periods, visitors might approach her though she was still excluded from the public ordinances of religion [Le 12:4].
- 6-8
- the days of her purifying โ Though the occasion was of a festive character, yet the sacrifices appointed were not a peace offering, but a burnt offering and sin offering, in order to impress the mind of the parent with recollections of the origin of sin, and that the child inherited a fallen and sinful nature. The offerings were to be presented the day after the period of her separation had ended โ that is, forty-first for a boy, eighty-first for a girl.
Read all 3 notes on Leviticus 12 โ