But if he who consecrated his house redeems it, he must add a fifth to the assessed value, and it will belong to him.
Here is the law concerning real estates dedicated to the service of God by a singular vow. I. Suppose a man, in his zeal for the honour of God, should sanctify his house to God (Lev 27:14), the house must be valued by the priest, and the money got by the sale of it was to be converted to the use of the sanctuary, which...
Commenting on Leviticus 27:14-25
And if a man shall sanctify unto the Lord some part of a field of his possession,.... That which he enjoyed by inheritance from his father, to distinguish it from a field of his own purchase, as in Lev 27:22; and which might be devoted, not all of it, but a part of it; partly that he might have something to live upon, or to...
Lev 27:14-15 When a house was vowed, the same rules applied as in the case of unclean cattle. Knobel's supposition, that the person making the vow was to pay the valuation price if he did not wish to redeem the house, is quite a groundless supposition. The house that was not redeemed was sold, of course, for the good of the sanctuary.
Commenting on Leviticus 27:14-15