New American Bible, Revised Edition

Ezekiel 46:11-23 New American Bible, Revised Edition (NABRE)

11. On feasts and festivals, the grain offering shall be an ephah for a bull, an ephah for a ram, but for the lambs whatever they please, and a hin of oil with each ephah.

12. When the prince makes a freewill offering to the Lord, whether a burnt offering or communion offering, the gate facing east shall be opened for him, and he shall bring his burnt offering or peace offering as he does on the sabbath. Then he shall leave, and the gate shall be closed after his departure.

13. Every day you shall bring as a burnt offering to the Lord an unblemished year-old lamb; you shall offer it every morning,

14. and with it every morning a grain offering of one sixth of an ephah, with a third of a hin of oil to moisten the fine flour. This grain offering for the Lord is a perpetual statute.

15. The lamb, the grain offering, and the oil you must bring every morning as a perpetual burnt offering.

16. Thus says the Lord God: If the prince makes a gift of part of his heritage to any of his sons, it belongs to his sons; that property is their heritage.

17. But if he makes a gift of part of his heritage to one of his servants, it belongs to him until the year of release; then it reverts to the prince. Only the heritage given to his sons belongs to him.

18. The prince shall not seize any part of the heritage of the people by forcing them off their property. From his own property he shall provide heritage for his sons, so that none of my people will be driven off their property.

19. Then he brought me through the entrance at the side of the gateway to the chambers reserved for the priests, which faced north. There I saw a place at the far west end,

20. about which he said to me, “This is the place where the priests cook the reparation offerings and the purification offerings and bake the grain offerings, so they do not have to bring them into the outer court and so transmit holiness to the people.”

21. Then he led me into the outer court and had me cross to the four corners of the court, and there, in each corner, was another court!

22. In all four corners of the courtyard there were courts set off, each forty cubits long by thirty cubits wide, all four of them the same size.

23. A stone wall surrounded them on four sides, and ovens were built along the bottom of the walls all the way around.