Interactive Torah Study Guide
The Sacrifices in Leviticus
The book of Leviticus opens with five offerings — each with its own gift, its own ritual, and its own destination. This guide is built around Leviticus 1–7 and the extended rites of chapters 8–9, 12, 14, 15, and 16. The aim is to let you see the system: where each rite happens, who does what, and why the blood travels where it does.
01 The Big Picture
Two families of offerings
Before the details, one distinction reorganizes everything: some offerings are voluntary worship; others are a required response to a specific situation.
Voluntary worship
Drawing near, freely
Brought to express devotion, tribute, or thanks — not triggered by a particular sin.
Required response
Putting things right
Brought to deal with a specific problem — contamination to be purged, or a breach to be repaired.
02 Orientation
The five offerings, at a glance
Each offering keeps the same color throughout this guide. Tap any card to study it in depth.
03 Where to start
First, the place
Almost every instruction in Leviticus assumes you can already picture the sanctuary — the courtyard, the bronze altar, the Holy Place, and the veil before the Most Holy Place. Learn the space first, and the rituals fall into place.