2. An offering is to be made if anyone sins against the Lord by refusing to return what a fellow-Israelite has left as a deposit or by stealing something from him or by cheating him
3. or by lying about something that has been lost and swearing that he did not find it.
6. He shall bring to the priest as his repayment offering to the Lord a male sheep or goat without any defects. Its value is to be determined according to the official standard.
7. The priest shall offer the sacrifice for the man's sin, and he will be forgiven.
8. The Lord commanded Moses
9. to give Aaron and his sons the following regulations for burnt offerings. A burnt offering is to be left on the altar all night long, and the fire is to be kept burning.
16-17. The priests shall eat the rest of it. It shall be made into bread baked without yeast and eaten in a holy place, the courtyard of the Tent of the Lord's presence. The Lord has given it to the priests as their part of the food offerings. It is very holy, like the sin offerings and the repayment offerings.
18. For all time to come any of the male descendants of Aaron may eat it as their continuing share of the food offered to the Lord. Anyone else who touches a food offering will be harmed by the power of its holiness.
19. The Lord gave Moses the following regulations
20. for the ordination of an Aaronite priest. On the day he is ordained, he shall present as an offering to the Lord one kilogramme of flour (the same amount as the daily grain offering), half in the morning and half in the evening.
21. It is to be mixed with oil and cooked on a griddle and then crumbled and presented as a grain offering, a smell pleasing to the Lord.