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Leviticus 22:13

New Century Version

But if the priest’s daughter becomes widowed or divorced, with no children to support her, and if she goes back to her father’s house where she lived as a child, she may eat some of her father’s food. But only people from a priest’s family may eat this food.

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11 Cross References  

Then Judah said to his daughter-in-law Tamar, “Go back to live in your father’s house, and don’t marry until my young son Shelah grows up.” Judah was afraid that Shelah also would die like his brothers. So Tamar returned to her father’s home.

The governor ordered them not to eat any of the food offered to God until a priest had settled this matter by using the Urim and Thummim.

The Lord told Moses and Aaron, “Here are the rules for Passover: No foreigner is to eat the Passover.

They should eat these offerings that were used to remove their sins and to make them holy when they were made priests. But no one else is to eat them, because they are holy things.

You did not take care of my holy things yourselves but put foreigners in charge of my Temple.

“Also, you and your sons and daughters may eat the breast and thigh of the fellowship offering that was presented to the Lord. You must eat them in a clean place; they are your share of the fellowship offerings given by the Israelites.

Only people in a priest’s family may eat the holy offering. A visitor staying with the priest or a hired worker must not eat it.

If a priest’s daughter marries a person who is not a priest, she must not eat any of the holy offerings.

After she leaves his house, she goes and marries another man,

One of Saul’s servants happened to be there that day. He had been held there before the Lord. He was Doeg the Edomite, the chief of Saul’s shepherds.




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