Passage
and he hath brought near his offering to Jehovah, one he-lamb, a son of a year, a perfect one, for a burnt-offering, and one she-lamb, a daughter of a year, a perfect one, for a sin-offering, and one ram, a perfect one, for peace-offerings,
and he hath brought near his offering to Jehovah, one he-lamb, a son of a year, a perfect one, for a burnt-offering, and one she-lamb, a daughter of a year, a perfect one, for a sin-offering, and one ram, a perfect one, for peace-offerings,
Numbers 6:12 and he hath separated to Jehovah the days of his separation, and he hath brought in a lamb, a son of a year, for a guilt-offering, and the former days are fallen, for his separation hath been defiled.
Numbers 6:13 `And this <FI>is<Fi> the law of the Nazarite; in the day of the fulness of the days of his separation doth <FI>one<Fi> bring him in unto the opening of the tent of meeting,
Numbers 6:14 and he hath brought near his offering to Jehovah, one he-lamb, a son of a year, a perfect one, for a burnt-offering, and one she-lamb, a daughter of a year, a perfect one, for a sin-offering, and one ram, a perfect one, for peace-offerings,
Numbers 6:15 and a basket of unleavened things of flour, cakes mixed with oil, and thin cakes of unleavened things anointed with oil, and their present, and their libations.
Numbers 6:16 `And the priest hath brought <FI>them<Fi> near before Jehovah, and hath made his sin-offering and his burnt-offering;
The verse centers on "hath", "brought", "near", "offering", "jehovah", "he-lamb", "year", and "perfect". It is saying that the verse draws attention to "hath" and "brought", so its meaning should be read from those terms before moving to application.
The nearby context moves from verse 13's "And this FI is Fi the law..." into verse 15's "and a basket of unleavened things of...", so "hath" and "brought" belong inside that flow. In Numbers context, the local focus is covenant, worship, and faithfulness.
A plain takeaway is to answer the verse's own emphasis on "hath" and "brought" with trust shaped by these words, not by a vague optimism outside the passage.