Ezekiel 43:20 - Exposition
And thou shalt take of the blood thereof, and put it . The application of the victim's blood to and upon the altar formed an integral part of every expiatory offering; but "whereas in all the other kinds of sacrifice the blood was poured indifferently round about the altar of the fore court, in the sin offering it was not to be sprinkled , lest the intention should be overlooked, but smeared with the finger upon the horns of the altar ('And the priest shall put of the blood upon the horns,' Le Ezekiel 4:7 , 18, 25, 30, 34). In the present instance the blood was to be carefully put upon the four horns of the altar—the only part to be smeared with blood in the Mosaic consecration ( Exodus 29:12 )— the four corners of the settle , or azarah, but whether the greater or lesser is left undecided, though in all probability it was the under, if not both, and the border round about , that mentioned in Ezekiel 43:17 ; and the effect of this smearing with blood should be to cleanse and purge , or, make atonement for, the altar; not for the people, as Havernick interprets, saying, "without an atoned-for altar, no atoned-for people ( ohne entsuhnten Altar , kein entsuhntes Volk )," but for the altar, either, as Kliefoth suggests, because, being made out of a part of the sinful earth and world, it required to be sanctified, or because, as Plumptre prefers, the sins of the people having been, as it were, transferred to it, it stood in need of cleansing.
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