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Birth-Right

first-born, priesthood, priest, brethren and received

BIRTH-RIGHT (rInt2 ; Sept. rpco-roT6K(a).

This term denotes the rights or privileges ing to the first-born among the Hebrews. The particular advantages which these conferred were the following : I. A right to the priesthood. The first-born became the priest in virtue of his priority of descent, provided no blemish or defect attached to bins. Reuben was the first-born of the twelve patriarchs, and therefore the honour of the priesthood belonged to his tribe. God, however, transferred it from the tribe of Reuben to that of Levi (Numb. iii. 12, 13; viii. IS). Hence the first-born of the other tribes were redeemed from serving God as priests, by a sum not exceeding five shekels. Being presented before the Lord in the temple, they were redeemed immediately after the thirtieth day from their birth (Numb. xviii. 15, 16 ; Luke ii. 22). It is to be observed, that only the first-born who were fit for the priesthood (I. e., such as had no defect, spot, or blemish) were thus presented to the priest.

2. The first-born received a double portion of his father's property. There is some difficulty in deter mining precisely what is meant by a double portion. Some suppose that half the inheritance was received by the elder brother, and that the other half was equally divided among the remaining brethren. This is not probable. The Robbins believe that the elder brother received twice as much as any of the rest ; and there is no reason to doubt the cor rectness of this opinion. When the first-born died before his father's property was divided, and left children, the right of the father descended to the children, and not to the brother next of age.

3. He succeeded to 'the official authority pos sessed by his father. If the latter was a king, the former was regarded as his legitimate successor, un less some unusual event cr arrangement interfered.

After the law was given through Moses, the right of primogeniture could not be transferred from the first-born to a younger child at the father's option. In the patriarchal age, however, it was in the power of the parent thus to convey it from the eldest to another child (Dent. xxi. 15-17; Gen. xxv. 31, 32).

It is not difficult to perceive the reason why the first-born enjoyed greater privileges than the rest of the children. Apart from reasons common to all mankind, the first born among the Hebrews was viewed as having reference to the Redeemer, the first-born of the virgin. hence in the epistle to the Romans, viii. 29, it is written concerning the Son, that he might be the first-bon; among many brethren ;' and in Col. i. 18, who is the begin ning, the first-born from the dead ; that in all things he might have the pre-eminence' (see also Heb. i. 4, 5, 6). As the first-bons had a double portion, so the Lord Jesus, as Mediator, has an inheritance superior to his brethren ; he is exalted to the right hand of the Majesty on high, where he reigns until all his enemies shall be subdued. The universe is his rightful dominion in his media tonal character. Again, he alone is a true priest : he fulfilled all the functions of the sacerdotal .office ; and the Levites, to whom, under the law, the priesthood was transferred from all the first born of Israel, derived the efficacy of their minis trations from their connection with the great high priest (Jahn's Biblical Archoology, sec. I65).—S. D.