Commentaries:
John Wesley's Notes
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Leviticus 1:9

But the inwards shall he wash - To signify the universal and perfect purity both of the inwards, or the heart, and of the legs, or ways or actions, which was in Christ, and which should be in all Christians. And he washed not only the parts now mentioned, but all the rest, the trunk of the body, and the shoulders. A sweet savour - Not in itself, for so it rather caused a stink, but as it represented Christ's offering up himself to God as a sweet smelling savour.




Other John Wesley's Notes entries containing Leviticus 1:9:

Leviticus 1:6

 

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