Unclean, Common, Clean, Holy

Define

  1. "Common " (Hebrew: chol; Greek: koinos): Often means ordinary or profane, as opposed to holy or set apart. In the New Testament, it can imply "defiled" in Jewish tradition (e.g., unwashed hands).
  2. "Clean " (Hebrew: tahor; Greek: katharos): Refers to ritual or moral purity, acceptable to God.
  3. "Unclean " (Hebrew: tame; Greek: akathartos): Indicates impurity, whether physical, ceremonial, or moral, requiring separation or cleansing.
  4. Holy (qodesh): Set apart, consecrated, belonging to God, and reflecting His purity and perfection. It’s the opposite of "common" and incompatible with " unclean," often requiring " clean " as a prerequisite.

Notes on Combinations

  1. All Four (Holy, Common, Unclean, Clean): Leviticus 10:10 and Ezekiel 22:26, 44:23 explicitly list all four, focusing on priestly discernment.
  2. Holy with Unclean / Clean: Leviticus 11:44-47, 20:25-26 show holiness requiring separation from uncleanness and alignment with cleanliness.
  3. Holy with Common: 1 Samuel 21:4 - 5 contrasts holy bread with common, implying a clean state for access.
  4. New Testament Shift: Acts 10 and Romans 14 blur old distinctions, with holiness through Christ making all potentially clean (no longer common or unclean inherently).

Connections

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Old Testament Scriptures

Leviticus 10:10

Leviticus 11:44-47

Leviticus 20:25-26

Numbers 16:5

Deuteronomy 23:14

1 Samuel 21:4-5

Ezekiel 22:26

Ezekiel 44:23

New Testament Scriptures

Mark 7:2-5 (with 7:15 implied)

Acts 10:14-15

Acts 10:28

Romans 14:14

Hebrews 9:13-14

Hebrews 10:10-14

1 Peter 1:15-16

Definitions Recap

Analysis of People Groups

General Population Outside the Israelites (Non-Israelites/Foreigners)

Israelite Population (General Tribes, Excluding Levites)

Sons of Levi

Priests (Sons of Aaron)

High Priest (Aaron and Successors)