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Numbers 28:6 meaning

This command exemplifies how Israel was meant to maintain perpetual worship to the LORD.

The verse in Numbers 28:6 reveals that the LORD required Israel to present daily sacrifices to Him, stating “It is a continual burnt offering which was ordained in Mount Sinai as a soothing aroma” (v.6). This command underscores God’s expectation for consistent worship and obedience. In Exodus and Leviticus, the LORD gave detailed instructions about burnt offerings, which symbolized dedication to Him. Moses, the divinely appointed leader of Israel during the mid-15th century BC, mediated these instructions at Mount Sinai (located in the Sinai Peninsula, northeast of Egypt) when God established His covenant with the Israelites and taught them how to maintain fellowship with Him. According to rabbinic tradition, this “continual burnt offering” was the first daily sacrifice, a pattern that set the foundation for Israel’s entire sacrificial system.Mount Sinai itself was a critical location in Israel’s history. Called Horeb in some passages, it was there that God made a covenant treaty with His people, wherein they accepted His laws and promised to follow His ways. This ongoing sacrifice, mentioned in Numbers 28:6, originated at that covenant moment to signify the people’s constant posture of reverence. It also foreshadowed the need for complete consecration before the LORD—a concept that later prophets and even the New Testament would echo when speaking of living sacrifices and wholehearted devotion to God (Romans 12:1 not italicized here as a supporting verse reference).

Numbers 28:6