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"When a person has touched a ceremonially unclean thing inadvertently, such as the carcass of an unclean animal, or some unclean creeping thing, he will be unclean and guilty nevertheless.
The carcass of an animal that died of its own and an animal torn by wild beast may be used for any purpose except for eating.
Whoever carries their carcass is to wash their clothes, because they've become unclean until evening. They're unclean for you.
and anything into which their carcass falls becomes unclean. An oven or stove is to be broken in pieces. They're unclean and therefore unclean for you.
"A spring or a cistern that holds water is clean, but whoever touches the carcass of an unclean animal will be unclean.
If their carcass falls on a seed, which is for sowing, what is to be sown is clean.
But if water is put on the seed and part of their carcass falls on it, then it has become unclean for you.
"If any of the animals that you may eat dies, the one who touches its carcass becomes unclean until evening.
The one who eats from its carcass is to wash his clothes, because he has become unclean until evening. Even the one who carries the carcass is to wash his clothes, because he has become unclean until evening."
"Any person who eats a carcass or an animal that was torn by beasts (whether that person is native born or is a resident alien), is to wash his clothes and bathe himself with water, and he will remain unclean until evening, and then he'll become clean.
He is not to eat the carcass of an animal that was torn by animals, thereby defiling himself with it. I am the LORD.
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- Leviticus (11)
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Related Words
Related Topics
- Carcass, Figurative Use
- Carcass, Literal Use
- Lack Of A Proper Burial
- Corpses Of Other People
- Death
- Animals Eating People
- Dirt
- Defecation
- Eating Corpses