Open main menu

Changes

Of This Ye Shall Not Eat for It Is an Abomination

10 bytes added, 23:44, 24 August 2022
no edit summary
}}
Blood symbolizes life, and the giver of all life is God. That's why blood is sacred and, in a way, reserved for God alone. Back when the Temple in Jerusalem still stood (ultimately demolished by the Romans in 70 {{small|CE}}), the Temple's altar was regularly sprinkled with calf or lamb blood as a sacrifice of atonement. And since the blood was meant as a gift for God, it was off-limits to humans. Hence, the strict and oft-repeated Biblical ban on drinking blood. When broken, it was punishable by God himself setting his face against the perpetrator: I see you, see what you did, and won't forget it.
[[File:A. Szyk, Kazimierz Wielki potwierdza Statut Kaliski.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Casimir the Great confirming the Statute of Calisia in 1334.<br>{{small|By Artur Szyk (1927)}}]]