圣经 Leviticus Leviticus_Chapter 13
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Leviticus_Chapter 13

The Lord spoke to Moses and Aaron, saying,

If a person’s skin is covered with boils, ringworm, or fiery spots, and it becomes a leprosy on his skin, he shall be brought before Aaron the priest or one of Aaron’s sons as a priest.

The priest shall examine the plague on the skin of the flesh, and if the hair at the spot of the plague has turned white and the plague is deeper than the skin on the flesh, this is the plague of leprosy. The priest shall examine him and pronounce him unclean.

If the fire spot is white on his skin, and the phenomenon is not deeper than the skin, and the hair on it has not turned white, the priest shall lock the person with the plague for seven days.

On the seventh day, the priest shall examine him, and if he finds that the plague has stopped and has not spread on the skin, the priest shall lock him up for seven days.

On the seventh day, the priest shall examine him again. If the plague has darkened and has not spread on the skin, the priest shall pronounce him clean. If it is a ringworm, the person shall wash their clothes and be clean.

But after showing his body to the priest for cleanliness, if the ringworm spreads on the skin, he must show his body to the priest again.

The priest shall examine, and if the ringworm spreads on the skin, he shall pronounce it unclean, it is leprosy.

If a person suffers from the plague of leprosy, they must be brought before the priests.

The priest is to examine, and if there is a white boil on the skin that turns the hair white, and if there is red and stagnant flesh at the point of the white boil,

This is an old leprosy on the skin of the flesh, and the priest shall pronounce him unclean, and there is no need to lock him up, because he is unclean.

If leprosy spreads on all sides of the skin and covers the skin of the afflicted, according to the priest’s examination, there is no place from head to foot,

The priest shall examine, and if the flesh of his whole body is covered with leprosy, he shall pronounce him clean, and his whole body shall turn white, and he shall be clean.

But whenever red meat appears on him, it becomes unclean.

The priest judged the red flesh as unclean upon seeing it. Red meat is originally unclean, it’s leprosy.

If the red flesh is restored and turns white again, he shall come to the priest.

The priest shall examine, and if the affected area turns white, the priest shall pronounce the affected person clean, and he shall be clean.

If a person has sores on their skin and flesh, but they are cured,

If there is a white boil or a reddened white spot in the area of the sore, it should be shown to the priest for examination.

The priest shall examine, and if the appearance is deeper than the skin, and the hair on it has turned white, he shall pronounce it unclean, for the plague of leprosy has spread in the boil.

If the priest examines it and finds no white hair on it, nor is it below the skin, but it is dark, then he shall lock it up for seven days.

If it spreads on the skin, the priest shall pronounce it unclean and a plague.

If the fire spot stops in its original place and does not spread, it is a mark of a sore, and the priest shall pronounce it clean.

If a person’s skin and flesh are infected with fire poison, the stagnant flesh of the fire poison becomes fire spots, either white with a reddish hue or completely white,

The priest shall examine, and if the hair in the spot of the fire turns white, and the appearance is deeper than the skin, it is leprosy that emanates from the venom of the fire. He shall pronounce him unclean, it is the plague of leprosy.

But when the priest examines and finds that there is no white hair in the fire spot, nor is it deeper than the skin, but it is dark, he shall lock it up for seven days.

On the seventh day, the priest shall examine him, and if the spot of fire spreads on the skin, he shall be declared unclean, a plague of leprosy.

If the spot of the fire stops in its original place and does not spread on the skin, but becomes dark, it is a burning poison. The priest shall pronounce it clean, but it is a mark of the burning poison.

Regardless of gender, if there is a plague on the head or on a man’s beard,

The priest shall examine, and if the plague is deeper than the skin and has fine yellow hair in between, he shall pronounce it unclean: it is a scab, a leprosy on the head or beard.

If the priest observes a scab that is not deeper than the skin, and there is no black hair in between, he shall lock up the scab for seven days.

On the seventh day, the priest shall examine the plague, and if the scab has not spread, and there is no yellow hair in between, and the scab is not deeper than the skin,

That person must shave off his beard, but he must not shave off the scabies. The priest shall lock the one with scabies for another seven days.

On the seventh day, the priest shall examine the scab. If the scab does not spread on the skin and does not appear deeper than the skin, the priest shall pronounce him clean, and he shall wash his clothes and become clean.

But if the scabs spread on the skin after he is cleansed,

The priest shall examine him. If the scabies spread on the skin, there is no need to look for the yellow hair, as it is unclean.

If the priest sees that the scab has stopped and black hair has grown in it, and the scab has healed, then the person is clean, and he must pronounce him clean.

Regardless of gender, if there is a fire spot on the skin and flesh, it is a white fire spot,

The priest shall examine them, and if the blemish on their skin is white with a black tint, it is a white ringworm emanating from their skin, and that person is clean.

If a person’s hair falls off, they are just bald and still clean.

If he loses his hair in front of his head, he is just bald and still clean.

If there is a white with red plague in the bald area of the head or the bald area of the top, it is a case of leprosy occurring in the bald area of the head or the bald area of the top,

The priest shall examine, and if there is any white to red mark on the bald area of the head or the bald area of the top of the head, as if it were a leprosy on the skin of the flesh,

That person is leprous and unclean, and the priests shall pronounce him unclean. His plague is on his head.

Those who suffer from leprosy will have their clothes torn and their heads disheveled. They will cover their upper lips and shout, “I am unclean, I am unclean.”.

On the day when the plague falls on him, he is unclean. Since he is unclean, he must live alone outside the camp.

Clothes infected with leprosy, whether wool or linen,

Whether it is in warp or weft, linen, wool, leather, or any object made of leather,

If the plague turns green or red on clothing, leather, warp or weft, or on any object made of leather, it is a plague of leprosy, it must be shown to the priest.

The priest shall examine the plague and lock the object infected with the plague for seven days.

On the seventh day, he shall examine the plague, whether it be on his clothes, warp, weft, or skin, and if it be spread out, no matter what use the skin may be for, the plague is a devouring leprosy, and it is unclean.

He shall burn the clothes that have been afflicted with the plague, whether it be warp, weft, wool, linen, or any object made of leather, because it is a leprosy that devours, and it shall be burned in the fire.

The priest is to examine, and if the plague does not spread on clothing, warp, weft, or any object made of leather,

The priest shall command them to wash the objects that have been infected with the plague and lock them up for seven more days.

After being washed, the priest shall examine it, and if the object has not changed color, and the plague has not dissipated, then the object shall be unclean and a severe plague, whether on the front or back, shall be burned in the fire.

After washing, the priest shall examine and if he sees that the plague has darkened, he shall tear it off from his clothes, skin, warp, and weft.

If it is still on clothes, or on warp, weft, or any object made of leather, it is a plague that has spread again, and the infected object will be burned with fire.

If the clothes, whether warp, weft, or any object made of leather, which have been washed, are left with a plague, they must be washed again, and they will be clean.

This is the law of the leprosy plague, which can be declared clean or unclean on woolen clothing, linen clothing, warp and weft, and any object made of leather.

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