A guilt offering (; plural ashamot), also referred to as a trespass offering (KJV, 1611), was a type of korban, specifically a sacrifice made as a Damages payment for unintentional and certain intentional transgressions. It was distinct from the Biblical sin offering.
The transgressor furnished an unblemished ram for sacrifice at the Temple in Jerusalem, as well as (in cases of sins against holy items, theft, commission of fraud or false oaths) monetary compensation to the victim for their loss, plus a mark-up of 20% of the value to cover the priest's earnings. Monetary restitution had to be given in the pre-exile version of the currency (the shekel of the sanctuary), rather than the currency of the time, giving rise to a need for currency exchange in the Temple (hence the New Testament narrative of Jesus and the Money Changers).
Such compensation payments were given on occasion of: "The final offering is the guilt offering, also called the restitution or reparation offering. ... Three cases are given in which a person had to offer a guilt offering: sinning against a holy item, committing an unknown sin, and swearing falsely in a matter concerning money."
This was also given as part of the purification process for tzaraath.
Guilt offerings are mentioned in . The Philistines are told by priests and fortune-tellers to make an offerings of five golden mice and five golden hemorrhoids in hopes of ending the mice and hemorrhoids that had plagued them since taking the ark of God from Israel. The images of golden mice and golden hemorrhoids are used in the offering.
The Good News Bible (GNT) uses the phrase 'Repayment Offering'.
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