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Leviticus 3:17

It shall be a perpetual statute for your generations throughout all your dwellings, that you eat neither fat nor blood.
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George Leo Haydock

AD 1849
Fat. It is meant of the fat, which by the prescription of the law was to be offered on God's altar: not of the fat of meat, such as we commonly eat. (Challoner) This distinction is sufficiently insinuated; (chap. vii. 25,) whence it also appears that the fat, here forbidden, is only that, which, in all sacrifices, appertains to the Lord, ver. 9, 10. The fat which was intermingled with the flesh might be eaten, and even the rest if the animal was not sacrificed. God repeatedly forbids the use of blood, chap. xvii. 13. Yet the Jews abstain from the fat also of all oxen, sheep, and goats; (Josephus, iii. 10,) and some, adhering to the words of this text, forbid the use of fat indiscriminately. (Calmet) Cornelius a Lap ide condemns it, if the animal might be offered in sacrifice, though it were slain at home.

Richard Challoner

AD 1781
Fat: It is meant of the fat, which by the prescription of the law was to be offered on God's altar; not of the fat of meat, such as we commonly eat.

Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation - 2 Peter 1:20

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