Introduction to the book of Leviticus
The Book of Leviticus receives its English title from the Latin Vulgate, which is derived from the Greek Septuagint (LXX) title Leuitikon (Λευιτικόν), meaning “Levitical” or “pertaining to the Levites.”
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Genesis 1:29 – Commentary
The Divine Gift of Food and the Original Paradise
This verse establishes the primordial diet given by God to humanity in the state of original righteousness. The Creator provides vegetation—seed-bearing plants and fruit trees—as nourishment for Adam and Eve, revealing both divine providence and the peaceful harmony of Paradise before the Fall. This passage carries profound significance for Orthodox theology and spirituality.
Patristic Interpretation: St. Basil the Great, in his Hexaemeron, emphasizes that this original provision demonstrates God’s fatherly care for humanity. The vegetarian diet of Paradise reflects the absence of death and violence in creation before sin entered the world. St. John Chrysostom similarly notes that the need to kill animals for food came only after the Fall, and permission to eat meat was granted explicitly only after the Flood to Noah. The Fathers understood this verse as depicting the peaceful coexistence of all creatures under human stewardship.
Typological Significance: The fruits and plants of Paradise prefigure the Eucharistic gifts. Just as God provided bread from the earth for bodily sustenance, so Christ—the Bread of Life—offers Himself for our spiritual nourishment. The Tree of Life in Eden finds its fulfillment in the Cross, from which flows the fruit of immortality. St. Ephrem the Syrian draws connections between the garden’s abundance and the eschatological banquet of the Kingdom.
Liturgical and Ascetical Connections: The Orthodox practice of fasting, particularly the strict fasts when the faithful abstain from meat and return to a plant-based diet, represents a voluntary return to the Edenic state. During Great Lent and other fasting periods, believers symbolically recover something of Paradise’s original simplicity. The Lenten Triodion speaks of fasting as the first commandment given in Paradise—Adam and Eve were to abstain from one tree—and our fasting continues this discipline of the appetite.
Eschatological Hope: Orthodox theology anticipates the restoration of all things in Christ. The Prophet Isaiah’s vision of the wolf dwelling with the lamb and the lion eating straw like the ox echoes the peace of the original creation. This verse thus points both backward to Paradise lost and forward to Paradise restored in the age to come, when creation will be liberated from corruption and death.
The verse reminds the faithful that food itself is a divine gift requiring thanksgiving—the very word Eucharist means thanksgiving. Every meal, approached with gratitude and blessing, becomes a participation in God’s providential care first manifested in Eden.
The Book of Leviticus receives its English title from the Latin Vulgate, which is derived from the Greek Septuagint (LXX) title Leuitikon (Λευιτικόν), meaning “Levitical” or “pertaining to the Levites.”

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