In a word, yes.

חרם is the key term here in 27:29, Karl, as it relates to your inquiry.

The textual referent is someone who is dedicated to the LORD in the sense of 
being given over to destruction as a result of divine judgment.

Evidently, there were subcultures in the ANE that were so debauched and evil, 
they posed a threat to surrounding nations in general and to the Israelites in 
particular. God commanded that they be excised (a sort of radical surgery, one 
might say). 

Have you ever seen the TV sci-fi series FRINGE, produced by J.J. Abrams (who 
did the most recent Star Trek movie)? The show is built on the 
premise—suggested by theoretical quantum physics—that there are parallel 
realities and multiverses. If God is infinite, He presumably has the capability 
to envision all possible alternatives and outcomes in any given set of 
circumstances. And there have been situations throughout salvation history 
where certain people (or cultures, as in the case of the Canaanites) evidently 
had to be destroyed—as horrible as that seems to us, with our delicate 21st 
century sensitivities—in order to avoid even worse consequences.

So yes, Karl, I'd say the "consecrated" individual dies. The Hebrew text 
certainly sounds that way: כל־חרם אשר יחרם מן־האדם לא יפדה מות יומת׃ 

Notice the interesting parallelism, presumably for the purpose of emphasis, in 
the text: "devoted that he was devoted" (חרם אשר יחרם) juxtaposed with "to die 
he must die" (מות יומת׃).

One example of this radical, surgical removal of evil would be the Canaanites, 
as Wenham points out in his commentary on Leviticus (NICOT):

The ban (28–29)
Banning or devoting was a more solemn and irreversible vow than ordinary 
dedication. Anyone or anything that was devoted to the Lord could not be 
ransomed. It was usual to invoke the ban in wars against the native inhabitants 
of Canaan. In divine judgment all Israel’s enemies and their property were 
devoted to the Lord (e.g., Num. 21:2; Deut. 7:2; 1 Sam. 15). It could also be 
used as a judicial sentence against idolaters (Exod. 22:19 [Eng. 20]; Deut. 
13:16 [15]). It seems unlikely that ordinary Israelites could pronounce such 
vows; only the recognized leaders had authority to declare a death sentence.12

Gary Hedrick
San Antonio, Texas USA

On Jun 6, 2011, at 9:49 AM, K Randolph wrote:

> Dear B-Hebrew Haburim:
> 
> This is a verse that has puzzled me for some time, Leviticus 27:29. In the
> context, it appears that the consecrated person is to be executed, i.e.
> human sacrifice.
> 
> What say ye?
> 
> Karl W. Randolph.
> _______________________________________________
> b-hebrew mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/b-hebrew
> 

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