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27 ‎(1) the LORD spoke to Moses, saying: ‎(2) Speak to the Israelite people and say to them: When any party explicitly vows to the LORD the equivalent for a human being, ‎(3) the following scale shall apply: If it is a male from twenty to sixty years of age, the equivalent is fifty shekels of silver by the sanctuary weight; ‎(4) if it is a female, the equivalent is thirty shekels. ‎(5) If the age is from five years to twenty years, the equivalent is twenty shekels for a male and ten shekels for a female. ‎(6) If the age is from one month to five years, the equivalent for a male is five shekels of silver, and the equivalent for a female is three shekels of silver. ‎(7) If the age is sixty years or over, the equivalent is fifteen shekels in the case of a male and ten shekels for a female. ‎(8) But if one cannot afford the equivalent, that person shall be presented before the priest, and the priest shall make an assessment; the priest shall make the assessment according to what the vower can afford. ‎(9) If [the vow concerns] any animal that may be brought as an offering to the LORD, any such that may be given to the LORD shall be holy. ‎(10) One may not exchange or substitute another for it, either good for bad, or bad for good; if one does substitute one animal for another, the thing vowed and its substitute shall both be holy. ‎(11) If [the vow concerns] any impure animal that may not be brought as an offering to the LORD, the animal shall be presented before the priest, ‎(12) and the priest shall assess it. Whether high or low, whatever assessment is set by the priest shall stand; ‎(13) and if one wishes to redeem it, one-fifth must be added to its assessment. ‎(14) If any party consecrates a house to the LORD, the priest shall assess it. Whether high or low, as the priest assesses it, so it shall stand; ‎(15) and if the one who has consecrated the house wishes to redeem it, one-fifth must be added to the sum at which it was assessed, and then it shall be returned. ‎(16) If any party consecrates to the LORD any land-holding, its assessment shall be in accordance with its seed requirement: fifty shekels of silver to a *ḥomer* of barley seed. ‎(17) If the land is consecrated as of the jubilee year, its assessment stands. ‎(18) But if the land is consecrated after the jubilee, the priest shall compute the price according to the years that are left until the jubilee year, and its assessment shall be so reduced; ‎(19) and if the one who consecrated the land wishes to redeem it, one-fifth must be added to the sum at which it was assessed, and it shall be passed back. ‎(20) But if the one [who consecrated it] does not redeem the land, and the land is sold to another party, it shall no longer be redeemable: ‎(21) when it is released in the jubilee, the land shall be holy to the LORD, as land proscribed; it becomes the priest’s holding. ‎(22) If one consecrates to the LORD land that was purchased, which is not one’s land-holding, ‎(23) the priest shall compute the proportionate assessment up to the jubilee year, and the assessment shall be paid as of that day, a sacred donation to the LORD. ‎(24) In the jubilee year the land shall revert to the one from whom it was bought, whose holding the land is. ‎(25) All assessments shall be by the sanctuary weight, the shekel being twenty *gerah*s. ‎(26) A firstling of animals, however, which—as a firstling—is the LORD’s, cannot be consecrated by anybody; whether ox or sheep, it is the LORD’s. ‎(27) But if it is of impure animals, it may be ransomed at its assessment, with one-fifth added; if it is not redeemed, it shall be sold at its assessment. ‎(28) But of all that anyone owns, be it human or beast or land-holding, nothing that has been proscribed for the LORD may be sold or redeemed; every proscribed thing is totally consecrated to the LORD. ‎(29) No human being who has been proscribed can be ransomed: that person shall be put to death. ‎(30) All tithes from the land, whether seed from the ground or fruit from the tree, are the LORD’s; they are holy to the LORD. ‎(31) If any party wishes to redeem any tithes, one-fifth must be added to them. ‎(32) All tithes of the herd or flock—of all that passes under the shepherd’s staff, every tenth one—shall be holy to the LORD. ‎(33) One must not look out for good as against bad, or make substitution for it. If one does make substitution for it, then it and its substitute shall both be holy: it cannot be redeemed. ‎(34) These are the commandments that the LORD gave Moses for the Israelite people on Mount Sinai.
Mishneh Torah, Rest on a Holiday
Mishneh Torah, Positive Mitzvot
Mishneh Torah, Negative Mitzvot
Mishneh Torah, Appraisals and Devoted Property
Mishneh Torah, Diverse Species
Mishneh Torah, Things Forbidden on the Altar
Mishneh Torah, Sabbatical Year and the Jubilee
Mishneh Torah, Second Tithes and Fourth Year's Fruit
Mishneh Torah, Gifts to the Poor
Mishneh Torah, Heave Offerings
Mishneh Torah, The Chosen Temple
Version: The Contemporary Torah, Jewish Publication Society, 2006
Source: https://www.nli.org.il/he/books/NNL_ALEPH002529489/NLI
License: CC-BY-NC