5. The priest shall examine him again on the seventh day, and if in his opinion the sore looks the same and has not spread, he shall isolate him for another seven days.
6. The priest shall examine him again on the seventh day, and if the sore has faded and has not spread, he shall pronounce him ritually clean; it is only a sore. The person shall wash his clothes and be ritually clean.
7. But if the sore spreads after the priest has examined him and pronounced him clean, he must appear before the priest again.
8. The priest will examine him again, and if it has spread, he shall pronounce him unclean; it is a dreaded skin disease.
9. If anyone has a dreaded skin disease, he shall be brought to the priest,
40-41. If a man loses his hair at the back or the front of his head, this does not make him unclean.
42. But if a reddish-white sore appears on the bald spot, it is a dreaded skin disease.
43. The priest shall examine him, and if there is a reddish-white sore,
44. the priest shall pronounce him unclean, because of the dreaded skin disease on his head.
45. A person who has a dreaded skin disease must wear torn clothes, leave his hair uncombed, cover the lower part of his face, and call out, “Unclean, unclean!”
46. He remains unclean as long as he has the disease, and he must live outside the camp, away from others.
47. When there is mildew on clothing, whether wool or linen,
48. or on any piece of linen or wool cloth or on leather or anything made of leather,
49. if it is greenish or reddish, it is a spreading mildew and must be shown to the priest.
50. The priest shall examine it and put the object away for seven days.
51. He shall examine it again on the seventh day, and if the mildew has spread, the object is unclean.
52. The priest shall burn it, because it is a spreading mildew which must be destroyed by fire.
53. But if, when he examines it, the priest finds that the mildew has not spread on the object,