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A56632 A commentary upon the fourth Book of Moses, called Numbers by ... Symon, Lord Bishop of Ely. Patrick, Simon, 1626-1707. 1699 (1699) Wing P774; ESTC R2078 399,193 690

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XXV Exod. 16. XL. 3. And over all the Vessels thereof and over all things that belong unto it Not to use them in any Sacred Ministry which belonged to the Priests alone but to carry them when they were to be removed and to keep them in Safety at all times See VIII ult Where it is expresly said they shall do no Service there They shall bear the Tabernacle and all the Vessels therefore As is particularly directed in the fourth Chapter And they shall minister unto it Which Ministry is at large described in the third Chapter And shall encamp round about the Tabernacle As a Guard unto it They being like to the Legions about the Palace of a great King to secure and defend it from Violence or Rudeness Which was the reason that they did not march under any of the Standards of the other Tribes because they were to make a Camp by themselves the order of which is directed in the same third Chapter And for the same reason they were not to go to the Wars because their Camp was to attend upon the Tabernacle the House of God Ver. 51. And when the Tabernacle setteth forward the Levites shall take it down and when it is to be pitched the Levites shall set it up When the Israelites removed to a new station the Tabernacle was Verse 51 taken in pieces that it might be the more easily carried from place to place In which the Levites were to be employed and likewise in putting it together again when it was to be set up where they rested in their Journeys as is more fully ordered in the fourth Chapter Where the manner of taking it down and setting it up again is directed and every ones Office about it whether Priests for they had some hand in it or Levites exactly appointed And the Stranger Who is not of this Tribe though an Israelite That comes nigh To perform any of the forenamed Offices Shall be put to death As a presumptuous Person in medling with that which doth not belong unto him The Author of Schebet Jehudah extends this to all Strangers who worshipped strange Gods and saith there was a Golden Sword hung up in the Gate of the Temple with this Inscription The Stranger that cometh nigh shall be put to death Ver. 52. And the Children of Israel The rest of the Verse 52 Tribes before-mentioned Shall pitch their Tents every Man by his own Camp c. In the order prescribed in the next Chapter Ver. 53. But the Levites shall pitch round about the Verse 53 Tabernacle of Testimony As is directed Chap. III. where they are ordered to make a Camp nearer the Tabernacle within the other Camp of the Israelites That there be no Wrath upon the Congregation of the Children of Israel To prevent the other Camp of the Israelites from coming too nigh the Tabernacle whereby they might have incurred God's Displeasure And the Levites shall keep the Charge of the Tabernacle of Testimony That is therefore they were to be a constant guard about it that no Man might approach nearer than God allowed and so bring heavy Punishments upon himself and upon the Congregation Verse 54 Ver. 54. And the Children of Israel did according to all that the LORD commanded Moses so did they Consented to all that is here required and did accordingly CHAP. II. Chapter II Verse 1 Ver. 1. AND the LORD spake unto Moses and Aaron saying The just number of Days that were spent in taking the fore-named Account of the People is uncertain see I. 19. but that being finished now order is given for their Encamping under their several Standards And it is directed to Aaron as well as Moses though the Order for numbring them was directed to Moses only Chap. I. 1. Aaron having by that first Order been joined with him in taking the Account of them Verse 2 Ver. 2. Every Man of the Children of Israel shall pitch by his own Standard By the Banner of that Tribe to which he was joined by the following Order With the Ensign of their Fathers House Every Family and Houshold had their particular Ensigns beside that great Banner under which they encamped and marched it being pitched and carried as will appear in the midst of them How these Banners and Ensigns were distinguished one from another we have no certain Knowledge The later Jews say particularly Aben Ezra upon this place that Judah carried in his Standard the Figure of a Lion and Reuben the Figure of a Man Ephraim of an Ox and Dan of an Eagle for which I can see no ground For though Judah be compared to a Lion yet the Reasons he gives for the other are very absurd with which I shall not trouble the Reader But only observe that there is not one word of any such thing in their ancient Writers no not in the whole body of the Talmud as the famous Bochartus assures us And it is not likely that they who so lately smarted for making the Golden Calf would adventure to make any other Images and expose them to the Eyes of all the People Nor is it impertinent to observe that when Vitellius in after-ages was to march against the Arabians through Judaea the great Men of the Nation met him and beseeched him to march another way The Law of their Country not allowing Images such as were in the Roman Ensigns to be brought into it So Josephus relates L. XVIII Antiq. cap. 7. for which one can see no reason if their Ancestors in the Wilderness had by the Command or Allowance of Moses carried an Eagle in any of their Standards See Bochart in his Hieroz P. I. L. III. C. V. It is more probable if there be room for Conjecture in this matter that the Name of Judah might be embroidered in great Letters in his Standard and of Reuben in his and so of the rest or they were distinguished by their Colours only as now our Regiments are Far off about the Tabernacle of the Congregation shall they pitch At such a distance as might show their Reverence to the Tabernacle and that there might be another Camp of the Levites within them who made a nearer Inclosure about it in the same Form with the Camp of Israel which was Quadrangular This Distance of the Camp of Israel from the Tabernacle is reasonably judged by III Josh 4. to have been Two thousand Cubits That is a Mile Verse 3 Ver. 3. And on the East-side toward the rising of the Sun These are two Expressions after the manner of the Hebrews for the same thing Or Kedma which we here translate on the East may be translated on the fore part viz. of the Tabernacle Which was towards the Sun's Rising Shall they of the Standard of the Camp of Judah pitch These had the most honourable Post as we now speak of all others pitching before the most holy Place where Moses and Aaron had their Station in the Camp of the Levites III. 38. And therefore the
XXIII Lev. 36. See there Ye shall do no servile work therein It was to be observed as the first day of the Feast of Tabernacles both of them being called a Sabbath 23 Lev. 39. Verse 36 Ver. 36. But ye shall offer a Burnt-offering a Sacrifice made by fire of sweet savour unto the LORD Here is a peculiar Sacrifice appointed upon this day in the same terms as upon the first day of the Feast of Tabernacles v. 13. One Bullock one Ram seven Lambs of the first year c. But though this was an extraordinary day and a distinct Festival as I showed upon XXIII Lev. 39. yet here are fewer Sacrifices prescribed on this day than upon any of the foregoing seven For on every one of them two Rams were offered and fourteen Lambs and here but half so many And seven Bullocks were the fewest that were offered upon any of those days and on the first day thirteen but here only one By which God consulted perhaps the weakness of Mankind who naturally grew weary both of the Charge and of the Labour of such Services when they are long continued And therefore he made them every day less toilsom and expensive and put them in mind likewise that the multitude of Sacrifices did not procure their acceptance with God and that in length of time they would come to nothing and be utterly abolished to establish something better in their room Ver. 37. Their Meat-offering and their Drink-offerings for the Bullock for the Ram and for the Lambs and shall be according to their number after the manner In such proportions as God had before Verse 37 ordained in the XVth Chapter of this Book in the beginning of it as I have often observed Ver. 38. And one Goat for a Sin-offering beside the Verse 38 continual Burnt-offering c. This is never omitted upon any Festival XXVIII 15 22 30. XXIX 5 11 16 19 c. to put them in mind that after all their Services they stood in need of forgiveness Ver. 39. These things shall ye do or offer unto the Verse 39 LORD in your set Feasts All these Feasts were fixed and stated at certain times on which God was to be worshipped after the manner here prescribed in these two Chapters For all these Offerings except one Sin-offering upon each set day were wholly Burnt-offerings as I have already observed which may properly be said to be done that is offered unto the LORD neither People nor Priest having any share in them Besides your Vows and your Free-will-offerings for your Burnt-offerings Besides these every Man might offer other Burnt-offerings either in performance of a Vow or freely out of his Affection to God See XV. 3. For your Meat-offerings and for your Drink-offerings There were five several sorts of Meat-offerings which were left to every Man 's free will to bring as he pleased See the second Chapter of Leviticus where they are described And for your Peace-offerings These are described in the third Chapter of that Book A great number of which it is likely Men offered voluntarily upon all the fore-mentioned Festivals For otherwise they would have had no means to feast with God at his House nor to entertain their Friends and Neighbours as the custom was at such times of Publick Rejoyceing Which they did upon that part of the Peace-offerings which was given them after the Fat was offered to God and the Wave-breast and Heave-shoulder given to the Priest VII Lev. 15 c. 34. Verse 40 Ver. 40. And Moses told the Children of Israel according to all that the LORD commanded Moses He acquainted all the People by the Heads of their Tribes perhaps of whom we read in the beginning of the next Chapter with all these Commands of God which concerned his Worship and Service CHAP. XXX Chapter XXX Verse 1 Ver. 1. AND Moses spake unto the Heads of the Tribes There were wont to be extraordinary Assemblies of these or other great Men upon special Occasions as Mr. Selden observes Lib. II. de Synedr cap. 14. n. 4. who are sometimes called as they are here the Heads of all their Tribes and the Elders V Deut. 23. and in other places the Heads of the People XXX Deut. 5. the whole Congregation of the Children of Israel XVIII Josh 1. XXII 12. the chief of all the People XX Judg. 2. all Israel 1 Sam. VII 5. all the Princes of Israel the Princes of the Tribes 1 Chron. XXVIII 1. all the Elders of Israel and Heads of the Tribes and chief of the Fathers 2 Chron. V. 2. the counsel of the Princes and Elders X Ezra 8. And it is commonly said by the Hebrew Doctors concerning such Assemblies that wheresoever the Children of Israel were met together or the greater part of them there the SCHECHINAH that is the Divine Majesty or the Holy Ghost as they sometimes speak was wont to rest Concerning the Children of Israel saying Acquainted them with a Matter which concerned all the People willing them to communicate it to them This is the thing which the LORD hath commanded It is very probable there had been some Case propounded to him about Vows concerning which he here gives such Rules as might direct them in time to come Ver. 2. If a Man It is reasonable to think that Verse 2 this includes the other Sex also provided they be in their own power and not subject to another and be in their right mind Vow a vow unto the LORD Promise solemnly unto God something that is for his Honour and Service for that seems to be meant by unto the LORD As that he will offer some Sacrifice at the Feasts above-mentioned more than is prescribed or afflict his Soul on some other day besides the great Day of Atonement See v. 13. Or swear an Oath to bind his Soul with a bond Whether it be a simple Vow or bound also with a solemn Oath which made a double Obligation by calling God to witness the Sincerity of his Intentions He shall not break his word In the Hebrew it is he shall not prophane his word for it being solemnly passed to God it made him vile and contemptible if he did not keep it The Jewish Doctors very prudently advise their Scholars not to accustom themselves to make Vows but to content themselves with doing what the Law commands and abstaining from what it forbids But if they did make them to look upon it as an high affront to God not to perform them He shall do according to all that proceedeth out of his mouth If the thing be lawful and possible And if he appointed no time for the doing of it he was to think himself obliged to do it presently without delay XXIII Deut. 21. Verse 3 Ver. 3. If a woman also vow a vow unto the LORD As most Interpreters think the word Man in the foregoing verse comprehends Women who were in as perfect liberty as the Men he speaks of so the word Woman here comprehends all
words are to be understood I observed XXXII 33. Moses gave unto them the Kingdom of Sihon c. Verse 15 Ver. 15. The two Tribes and an half have received their Inheritance on this side Jordan c. By the Gift of God as they themselves understood it XXXII 31. The bounds of which the Hierusalem Targum here undertakes to set down and makes them extend Eastward as far as the great River Euphrates having respect I suppose to XV Genesis 18. and XXIII Exod. 30. Where he sets down the utmost Bounds of the Countries he intended to bestow upon them in future times See there but here only describes the Limits of that Land which they were to enjoy in present possession and was all that God granted to Abraham when he brought him out of Chaldaea and made his first Promise unto him XII Gen. 1 7. XIII 14 15 17. XV. 7. Verse 16 Ver. 16. And the LORD spake unto Moses saying Having told them what they should divide it was proper to appoint some Persons to take care to see the Division made Verse 17 Ver. 17. These are the names of the Men which shall divide the Land Though the Land was to be divided by Lot yet it was fit there should be some Persons to oversee the Business and take care there should be no Fraud in the drawing of them And when they were drawn to prevent all quarrels by determining what Portion those who had too much should give to those who had too little XXVI 54 55. Eleazar the Priest and Joshua the Son of Nun. These were the principal Persons concerned in this great Affair who were so conscientious therein that they did it in the presence of God at the Door of the Tabernacle XVIII Josh 6 8 10. XIX 51. Ver. 18. And ye shall take one Prince of every Tribe Verse 18 to divide the Land by Inheritance They are called in the place last named The Heads of the Fathers of the Tribes of the Children of Israel Ver. 19. The names of the Men are these of the Tribe Verse 19 of Judah Caleb the Son of Jephunneh I have nothing to observe upon this and the following verses to the end of the Chapter but that the Tribes are not mentioned in such order as they were at their first numbring I. 5 6 c. or at their second XXVI 5 c. yet great exactness and a particular direction of God may be noted in their placing here for they are set down according to their situation which they had afterwards in the Land of Canaan as if Moses foresaw who should be next Neighbours one to another For Judah having his Inheritance given him first XV Josh Simeon who is here next mentioned was so near him in the Land of Canaan that he had a Portion given him out of the Lot of Judah which proved too large for that Tribe XIX Josh 9. I Judg. 3 17. Then Benjamin who here follows in the third place was so near to Judah that they never separated when the ten Tribes were rent from them Dan was not far from Judah and the Children of Joseph also were their Neighbours And the rest of the Tribes Zebulun Issachar Asher Naphtali are set down here just in the order wherein their Lots fell to them in Canaan XIX Josh 10 17 24 32. An Evidence that Moses was guided by a Divine Spirit in all his Writings CHAP. XXXV Chapter XXXV Verse 1 Ver. 1. AND the LORD spake unto Moses in the Plains of Moab by Jordan near Jericho saying See XXII 1. Hitherto nothing hath been said of the Levites but that they should have no Lot in the Land of Canaan But now God provides that they should have Habitations assigned them to dwell in though they had no Fields nor Olive-yards c. as the rest of their Brethren had They might indeed have been able to purchase Houses for themselves out of the Tithes and other things which God had long ago bestowed upon them for their Portion but it was not fit that God's Ministers should be left without any certain dwelling And besides God would have them live comfortably and not only have Houses but a little Ground about them for their more commodious Subsistence Verse 2 Ver. 2. Command the Children of Israel that they give unto the Levites of the Inheritance of their possession Out of their share that shall fall to them in the Land of Canaan and on this side Jordan Cities to dwell in That they might not be in danger to wander up and down to seek an Habitation And ye shall give also to the Levites Suburbs for the Cities round about them Some Ground lying round about their Cities the reason of which is given in the next verse Ver. 3. And the Cities they shall have to dwell in Verse 3 That they may build Houses for themselves to dwell in Which did not make it unlawful for them to hire or purchase Houses in any other City particularly at Jerusalem or the place where the Tabernacle was settled for we find in Scripture many proofs of their dwelling in other Cities beside these which are here assigned to them And in like manner other People with their permission might dwell with them in these Cities without any breach of this Law And the Suburbs shall be for their Cattle To afford Pasture for their Oxen and Sheep And for their Goods The Hebrew word signifies not only all kind of Houshold-stuff but whatsoever was necessary for them and their Cattle without doors And for their Beasts Horses Asses Mules and all sorts of living Creatures as the Hebrew word signifies But it was not lawful for them to build Houses in these Fields nor plant Vineyards nor sow Corn but they were given them only to make their Dwellings more sweet and that they might have the convenience of Cattle about them for Provisions and all other uses Ver. 4. And the Suburbs and Cities which ye shall give Verse 4 unto the Levites To be their Possession by as good and full a right as their Brethren of the other Tribes had in their Lands which fell to them for their Inheritance by Lot See XXV Lev. 31 32 33. where they themselves are disabled to alienate either the Houses or Fields of their Cities But if they sold a House it was to revert at the Jubilee and the Fields they could not so much as sell till that time Shall reach from the Walls of the City and outward a thousand Cubits round about This space was for their Out-houses as Stables Places for Hay and Straw and such like things and perhaps for Gardens of Herbs and Flowers The Gemara upon the Ninth Chapter of Sota sect 9. saith That under the second Temple the Levites had no Suburbs which were not restored to them after the Captivity of Babylon But there being great care taken that the People shall pay all the Tithe of their ground unto the Levites X Nehem. 37. it is unreasonable to think
fed with Bread and Water of Affliction till his Bowels were sorely pinched c. if we may believe the Jewish Doctors mentioned by Selden Lib. IV. de Jure Nat. Gent. cap. 1. Verse 31 Ver. 31. Moreover ye shall take no satisfaction for the Life of a Murderer If a Murderer would have given all his Estate to save his Life or the Avenger of Blood would have accepted a Compensation or freely let him go the Judges when they had found him guilty could not restore him to the City of Refuge but he was to suffer Death For the Life of him that was slain was not as Maimonides speaks part of the Goods of the Avenger of Blood but belonged to Almighty God who set such a value on a Man's Life that he would not suffer any price to be taken for it See Selden in the same Chapter p. 470. Ver. 32. And ye shall take no satisfaction for him that is fled to the City of Refuge that he may come to dwell in the Land until the death of the High-Priest No Money was to purchase his Liberty to dwell any Verse 32 where else but there till the time appointed by the Law but this Punishment for Man-slaughter was as indispensable as death for Murder And therefore if any Man hapned to kill another in the City of Refuge to which he was confined he was forced to flee to another City of Refuge and there abide till the death of the High-Priest Ver. 33. So ye shall not pollute the Land wherein ye Verse 33 are for blood defileth the Land By this it appears that the next of Kin was bound to prosecute the Murderer unto death for the good of his Country which otherwise would have had a Guilt upon it and that very grievous For they are the greatest Crimes as Maimonides observes which are said to pollute the Land or them or God's Sanctuary viz. Idolatry XX Lev. 3. all the filthiness that is forbidden XVIII 24 25. and Murder here mentioned More Nevoch P. III. cap. 47. And the Land cannot be cleansed of the Blood that is shed therein but by the blood of him that shed it The same Maimonides observes in the XLI Chapter of that Book That it is a piece of Universal Justice to make a Man suffer what he hath made another suffer If he have hurt his Body he must suffer for it in his own Body if in his Money his own Purse must pay for it if he have taken away his Life he must die for it himself And the Punishment can neither be mitigated nor any compensation accepted for it For which he quotes these words and upon this account resolves that if he that was murdered should live a few days or hours after his deadly wound and being in sound understanding should desire he that killed him might not die for it declaring that he freely forgave him his desire was not to be granted but Blood was to be punished with Blood whether he that was slain was a great Man or a mean a freeman or a slave a wise Man or a fool because there is no Sin committed by Men greater than this is Verse 34 Ver. 34. Defile not therefore the Land which ye shall inhabit By suffering a Murderer to live Wherein I dwell This is given as a reason elsewhere See V. 3. why they should put all polluted People out of their Camps because God dwelt in them viz. in his Sanctuary which made this Land be called the holy Land and God's Possession 2 Chron. XX. 11. For I the LORD dwell among the Children of Israel See XXV Exod. 8. The very same was practised among the Athenians with some little Alteration For Demosthenes says it was one of their Laws 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that he who out of fore-thought killed a Man should be put to death And he tells us also that it was not lawful for the Judges to take Money to remit the Punishment after he was Condemned though if the Prosecutors compounded with him or his Friends before-hand and desisted from the Prosecution his Life was saved If he fled from Justice all his Goods were confiscated and he forfeited all the Rights of a Citizen both Civil and Sacred See Sam. Petitus his Comment in Leges Atticas Lib. VII Tit. 1. CHAP. XXXVI Chapter XXXVI Ver. 1. AND the chief Fathers of the Families of the Verse 1 Children of Gilead the Son of Machir the Son of Manasseh c. Not the Fathers of those Families whose Inheritance had been assigned them already on this side Jordan in the Land of Gilead but the other half of the Tribe of Manasseh who were to have their Inheritance in Canaan where the Daughters of Zelophehad also had their Portion as appears from XVII Josh 3 4 c. Come near and speak before Moses and before the Princes the chief Fathers of the Children of Israel Who were met together in a great Assembly as they used to do about Publick Affairs See XXVII 2. XXI XXXII 2. Ver. 2. And they said the LORD commanded my Verse 2 Lord. This shows that one of them was the Mouth of the rest To give the Land for an Inheritance by lot to the Children of Israel See XXVI 52 53. For there the Foundation of all these Doubts was laid And my Lord was commanded by the LORD to give the Inheritance of Zelophehad Which should have faln to Zelophehad had he been alive Our Brather So they called their near Relations Vnto his Daughters Who petitioned him for the Possession which should have been their Fathers and it was granted them See XXVII 6 7. Ver. 3. And if they be married to any of the Sons of the other Tribes of the Children of Israel They being rich many it might be supposed of the other Tribes Verse 3 as well as their own would court them for their Wives and if they should choose an Husband that was not of their own Tribe they represent to Moses the Inconveniencies which from thence would follow Then shall their Inheritance be taken from the Inheritance of our Fathers i. e. Go out of our Tribe to which it originally belonged And shall be put to the Inheritance of the Tribe whereinto they are received Become a part of the Inheritance of that Tribe into which they married So shall it be taken from the lot of our Inheritance For it must have descended unto their Children who were of another Tribe by the Father's side which alone was considered and not the Mothers in this case Verse 4 Ver. 4. And when the Jubilee of the Children of Israel shall be Which was ordained for the preserving Estates in the Tribes and Families to which they originally appertained XXV Lev. 10 13. Then shall their Inheritance be put unto the Inheritance of the Tribe whereunto they are received The Jubilee will not help us in this Case by making their Inheritances return as other Lands do because they are become the Inheritance of another Tribe by the
right of Marriage So shall their Inheritance be taken away from the Inheritance of the Tribe of our Fathers So will their Estate go out of our Tribe without remedy because the Jubilee it self will give us no Relief Verse 5 Ver. 5. And Moses commanded the Children of Israel according to the Word of the LORD Whom I suppose he consulted about this matter as he did when the first doubt was moved about the Inheritance of these Women XXVII 5. and received the answer by which he here commanded the Israelites to govern themselves The Tribe of Joseph In whose name the chief Fathers of their several Families made this representation to Moses as became Men who took care of the concerns of the whole Tribe Hath said well In desiring the Inheritance of these Women might not go out of their Tribe which was prevented by the following Law Ver. 6. This is the thing which the LORD doth Verse 6 command concerning the Daughters of Zelophehad saying Let them marry to whom they think best They were not confined to any particular Persons but might have their choice among those who were descended from the same Stock as it immediately follows Only to the Family of the Tribe of their Father shall they marry Only with these two limitations that they might not marry a Man of another Tribe nor a Man of another Family in their own Tribe For it is very manifest that they are tied to marry into the Family of their Father and accordingly they did actually marry their Cosin-Germans as we now speak v. 11. For this Law was made for the preservation of Families as well as of Tribes as the Law for the Redemption of Lands was And therefore these words the Family of the Tribe of their Father is well translated by Grotius upon I St. Matthew 16. familia stirpis paternae the Family of the Sto●k of their Father which was that they desired might not perish XXVII 4. and was the ground of the Law which commanded a Man to marry the Wife of his Brother who left no Issue XXV Deut. 16. Therefore there being several Families in the Tribe of Manasseh XXVI 29 30 31 32. these Women could marry only into the Family of the Hepherites Verse 7 Ver. 7. So shall not the Inheritance of the Children of Israel remove from Tribe to Tribe For by preserving it in the Family to which it was given it was necessarily preserved in the Tribe For every one of the Children of Israel shall keep himself to the Inheritance of the Tribe of his Fathers And not endeavour to get any part of the Inheritance of another Tribe by marrying an Heiress in it Plato himself took care of this that when a Man left only a Daughter his Estate should not be carried by her to a Stranger but she should be bound to marry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one that was nearest of kin to her And if there was a want of near Kindred 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. it should descend to the Children of her Father's Brother or the Children of the Grandfather some of which he ordains should marry her Lib. XI de Legibus p. 924 925. Edit Serrani Verse 8 Ver. 8. And every Daughter that possesseth an Inheritance in any Tribe of the Children of Israel Here this Law is made general that all Women who were Heiresses as the Daughters of Zelophehad were should do as they are here commanded And this was one of the Attick Laws which as Grotius observes were plainly borrowed from the Law of Moses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. That an Heiress should not marry out of her Kindred but dispose of her self and Estate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to one nearest of kin to her which was one of the Laws of Solon as Sam. Petitus observes out of Isaeus Pollux and others in his Comment in Leges Atticas Lib. VI. Tit. 1. p. 441. Shall be Wife to one of the Family of the Tribe of her Father Here she is confined to her Family and not merely to her Tribe But this concerned only such as were Heiresses all other Women might marry into what Tribe they pleased as appears by these very Books wherein we read that Aaron himself married the Sister of the Prince of Judah VI Exod. 22. And if any object that this was before the giving of the Law it is evident that Jehoiada a Priest and consequently of the Tribe of Levi married King Jehoram's Sister who was of the Tribe of Judah 2 Chron. XXII 11. And long before this all the Tribes of Israel being in great solicitude how to find Wives for their Brethren of Benjamin did not scruple their having them out of any Tribe if it had not been for their Oath XXI Judg. 18. And to add no more David himself of the Tribe of Judah married Michael the Daughter of Saul who was of the Tribe of Benjamin The Talmudists add that even these Heiresses might marry into what Tribe they pleased after the first Division of the Land by Joshua to which they imagine this Law was restrained it being a common saying among them That it did not belong to any Age but that in which it was made In the following Ages they pretend a Man might purchase Land in any Tribe and possess it alway or have the Inheritance of it by Marriage though he were of another Tribe as Selden shows their Opinion to be Lib. de Successionibus ad Leges Hebr. cap. 18. and Lib. III. de Synedr c. 4. n. 1. and Buxtorf de Sponsal Divortiis sect 44. But this is well confuted by Grotius in his Annotations upon I St. Matthew v. 16. Ver. 9. Neither shall the Inheritance remove from one Tribe to another Tribe This establishes in general what he had said before v. 7. with particular respect Verse 9 to the Daughters of Zelophehad But Moses ben Nachman upon these very words asserts the Talmudick Opinion before-mentioned that this concerns only the present Time not future Ages And puts this Case which is the strongest that can be thought of if a Woman were married into another Tribe after which Marriage her Father and all her Brethren dying without Children the Inheritance fell to her and consequently saith he the Possession must devolve from one Tribe to another into which she had married But according to the Letter of these words the Inheritance was rather to descend to the next of her Kindred than by her be carried out of the Tribe to which it belonged But every one of the Tribes of the Children of Israel shall keep himself to his own Inheritance Shall cleave or stick close to his own Inheritance as the Hebrew word signifies and as the Greek and Latin expresses it The reason of the Command was as Procopius Gazaeus observes to prevent the Confusion of Tribes How the Vulgar Latin came to deviate so much from the Hebrew Text and from the Intention of this Law as it hath done in this and the
A COMMENTARY UPON THE Fourth Book of MOSES CALLED NUMBERS BY The Right Reverend Father in GOD SYMON Lord Bishop of ELY LONDON Printed for Ri. Chiswell at the Rose and Crown in St. Paul's Church-yard MDCXCIX A COMMENTARY UPON NUMBERS A COMMENTARY UPON THE Fourth Book of MOSES CALLED NUMBERS CHAP. I. Chapter I THIS Book is called by the Name of NVMBERS in our Language because it begins with an Account of the Numbering of the People in the beginning of the second Year after they came out of Egypt though it contain a great many things besides that particularly another Numbering of them Chapter XXVI towards the conclusion of their Travels in the Wilderness For this Book comprehends an History of about thirty eight Years though the most of the things related in it fell out in the first and in the last of these Years and it doth not appear when those things were done which we read of about the middle of the Book from the XVth to the XXth Chapter Verse 1 Verse 1. And the LORD spake unto Moses Who undertook nothing without order from God In the Wilderness of Sinai Where they had continued near a full Year as appears by comparing XIX Exod. 1. with this place and shortly after this removed from it X. 11. In the Tabernacle of the Congregation From whence the LORD delivered those Laws which we read in the foregoing Book See on I Lev. 1. and now seems to have admitted him into the Tabernacle whereas before he only spake to him out of it On the first day of the second Month in the second year after they were come out of the Land of Egypt All that is related in the foregoing Book seems to have passed in the first Month of the second Year after their coming out of Egypt In the beginning of which the Tabernacle was set up XL Exod. 2 17. and in the middle of it the Passover was kept as appears by this Book IX 1 2 c. Verse 2 Ver. 2. Take ye the sum There had been a Muster as we may call it of the People before the Tabernacle was erected XXX Exod. 12. and consequently some Months before this for it was in order to a Contribution which every one was to make towards that holy work XXXVIII Exod. 26. Whereas this was for the better disposing of their Camps about the Tabernacle now that it was set up and for their more regular march when they removed from Mount Sinai which they were to do shortly Of all the Congregation of the Children of Israel Who alone were numbred all except the Levites but none of the mixt Multitude that came with them out of Egypt XII Exod. 38. After their Families It appears by VII Joshua 16 17 c. that the several Tribes of Israel were divided into Families and those Families into Housholds and those Housholds had every one of them an Head or Chief who is called the Father of it There were LXX of these Families in all but some Tribes had more others fewer according to the number of Souls as they are called that is Persons who were in each when they went down into Egypt XLVI Gen. 27. By the House of their Fathers Every Family as I said being distributed into Houses which we now call Families these Houses were denominated from their Chief whom they called their Father For no Houses were denominated from the Mother as the Jews say With the number of their Names The Names of every Person in the several Houses were set down and registred that they might be the better known Every Male by their pole But no Women for the reason which follows Ver. 3. From twenty years old and upward Which Verse 3 was ever after this the Age when Men were thought fit for War All that are able to go forth to war in Israel One would think by this they were not to number very aged and decrepit People because they were no more able to go to war than Women and Children and those under twenty years old And if we may believe Josephus L. II. Antiq. cap. 9. after fifty Years old Men were not bound to pay the half Shekel which was due in such Musters and therefore we may reasonably think were excused from going to war unless they had a mind themselves Thou and Aaron Who had the highest Authority in the Nation Shall number them by their Armies This seems to import that in taking the account of them they distributed them into certain Troops or Companies out of which were formed Regiments as we now speak and greater regular Bodies which composed several Armies We do not read this was required in the former numbering XXX Exod. that being for another end as I now observed not for their more orderly march in their remove from Mount Sinai And here I cannot but take notice what a vast difference there was between this method and that rude way which Cecrops the first King of Attica after the Ogygian Flood which hapned about the time of Moses took to know the number of his People which the Greek Writers say was by requiring every one of them to bring a Stone 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and throw it down before them which he counting found them Twenty thousand So the Scholiast upon Pindar Od. IX and others in Meursius de Regibus Atheniens L. I. cap. 7. Verse 4 Ver. 4. And there shall be with you a Man of every Tribe Whom they were to take for their Assistants Every one Head of the House of his Fathers The LXX and the Vulgar understand this to signifie the principal Persons in each Tribe who were best acquainted with every Family and Houshold in that Tribe And so it is expounded v. 6. And many think these were the First-born in their Tribe But there is this Objection against it That Nahshan who is named for the Tribe of Judah v. 7. was not descended from the First-born of that Tribe For Pharez was not Judah's eldest Son Selah being before him who had Children as we find XXVI of this Book v. 20. Besides when the Princes of the Tribes rre reckoned again XXXIV of this Book in the last Year of their abode in the Wilderness none of them are derived from these Men here mentioned but from others And therefore these were the most eminent Men in the several Tribes upon a different account either for Wisdom or Valour or some other excellent quality Ver. 5. And these are the Names of the Men that shall Verse 5 stand Be Assistants With you i. e. With Moses and Aaron Of the Tribe of Reuben Elizur the Son of Shedeur There is little to be observed concerning these Tribes but that they are here placed not in the order of their Birth but of their Mothers who bare them First the Children of Leah who are all reckoned in the same order wherein they were born of her ver 6 7 8 9. Then the Children of Rachel v. 10 11. And after them the
Children of the two Hand-maids in the four following Verses Where v. 12. Dan is set first he being the First-born of Bilhah whom Rachel gave Jacob for his Wife XXX Gen. 5. But then the next that follow are not reckoned according to the order of their Birth for Naphtali who was born next is placed the last and the youngest Son of Zilpah placed before the eldest For which we cannot now discern the reason though it is likely it was upon the account of some Pre-eminence or other which they had gained as Ephraim the youngest Son of Joseph is mentioned before Manasseh the eldest v. 10. because Jacob had given him the precedence when he blessed them before his Death XLVIII 19. Verse 6 Ver. 6. Of Simeon Shelumiel the Son of Zurishaddai There is less to be observed concerning the Names of these great Men of each Tribe for whatsoever the import of them may be in the Hebrew Language which Chytraeus and others have endeavoured to make out it signifies nothing to us Only most of them show how much God was in the Thoughts of those who imposed these Names on their Children for Elizur signifies my God the Rock and Shelumiel is as much as God my Peace or God my Rewarder and Zurishaddai my Rock Omnipotent or All-sufficient c. Verse 14 Ver. 14. The Son of Deuel So he is called also VII 42. and yet in the second Chapter v. 14. he is called the Son of Reuel For these two Letters Daleth and Resch are very often changed the one for the other As Ripath X Gen. 3. is called Dipath 1 Chron. I. 6. As on the other hand Dodanim X Gen. 4. is called Rodanim 1 Chron. I. 7. And it is to no purpose to heap up more Examples there are of this Verse 16 Ver. 16. These were the renowned of the Congregation The Hebrew word Keruim signifies properly Men called or named that is who had the Honour to be named by God to this Employment which made them more noble than they were before But without this respect to their Nomination by God this word signifies in general famous Men as we translate it XVI 2. XXVI 9. or renowned XXIII Ezek. 23. accordingly the vulgar translates it most noble Princes of the Tribes of their Fathers As appears more plainly from the noble Offerings which each of them made for the Dedication of the Altar Chap. VII Heads of thousands in Israel Men not only of great Authority such as Jethro advised Moses to take to his Aid in governing the People XVIII Exod. 21. but the highest of that Rank being chief Commanders over all the Thousands that were in their several Tribes under whom no doubt were many inferiour Officers of great account For so all People have found it necessary to submit themselves to the Government of some Supreme Power with several subordinate Rulers under it In which Israel excelled all other Nations being under the Government of God himself who appointed Moses immediately under him with several others as we here find to assist him For it is truly observed by Xenophon that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nothing is either so profitable for Men or so becoming as good Order And on the contrary nothing so mischievous or unseemly as Confusion Now Order is nothing else but the apt Disposition of every thing in its proper place for certain Ends and Uses Accordingly among Men nothing is more necessary than that every one should know and keep his place in that Degree and Rank that belongs to him As was here ordered by God for the Preservation and good Government of his People Ver. 17. And Moses and Aaron took these Men. To Verse 17 be their Associates in the numbering of the People Which are expressed by their Names Whom God himself marked out by name to be joined with them For as People cannot be preserved without Order so that cannot be preserved without Rulers and Governors and they will signifie nothing if their Authority be not reverenced and nothing can gain them such Reverence as a particular Designation by God to their Office Verse 18 Ver. 18. And they assembled all the Congregation together on the first Day of the second Month. They immediately executed their Commission on the same day they received it v. 1. summoning all the People to appear before them And they declared their Pedigrees The People instantly obeyed and every one showed from whom he was descended or it may refer to Moses and Aaron and the rest who set down every Man 's Original in the publick Tables After their Families by the house of their Fathers c. First they showed of what Family they were and then of what House in that Family and then the Name of every Person in that House was given in See v. 2. Such a kind of Distinction Cecrops made in Attica when he numbered the People whom he divided into four Tribes which in the days of Alcmaeon their last King were increased into ten every one of which had several People in it which were like the Families in Israel there being no less than ten or eleven People in that Tribe which was called after his own Name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 See Meursius L. I. de Reg. Athen. cap. 7. Lib. II. cap. X. And every one knows how Rome at the first had three Tribes instituted by Romulus which were divided into ten Courts if I may so call them and those into certain Families which in after-times were increased into Five and thirty Tribes according to the Regions of the City Ver. 19. As the LORD commanded Moses so he Verse 19 numbered them With the assistance of the forenamed Persons In the Wilderness of Sinai Before they removed from Sinai which being upon the Twentieth Day of this Month X. 11. they finished this Work in so many Days or less Ver. 20. And the Children of Reuben Israels eldest Verse 20 Son by their Generations c. The word Generations seems to be larger than Families as that is than Houses comprehending every Family in that Tribe as Families comprehend every Houshold and Houshold comprehends every Person therein So the meaning is all that were descended from Reuben according to their several Families and Houses in those Families and Persons in those Houses Ver. 21. Those that were numbred of them c. were Verse 21 forty and six thousand and five hundred Some have observed that this Tribe was one of those who had the smallest number of Men in it in which they think was fulfilled the Prophecy of Jacob who foretold that Reuben should not excel XLIX Gen. 4. But I do not look upon this as solid for there were several Tribes who all this time had fewer Persons in it than this Particularly the Children of Joseph whom Jacob compared to a fruitful Bough XLIX Gen. 22. were very much fewer See below v. 33 35. Gad also Benjamin and Asher were fewer in number than Reuben who in this regard excelled Five Tribes
is the reason perhaps why these are ordered here in the next words to bring up the Rear They shall go hindmost with their Standards Here the Standard comprehends Ensigns for there was but one Standard for this Camp as there were no more for the other three Therefore the meaning is they shall march hindermost under their several Colours as we now speak Which was ordered for the greater Security of the Sanctuary by the two strongest Bodies marching before and behind where there was the greatest danger Ver. 32. These are those which were numbred of the Verse 32 Children of Israel by the House of their Fathers c. That is Thus were all these Persons disposed under their several Standards whose Number was taken by Moses and Aaron with their Associates I. 44 45. Ver. 33. But the Levites were not numbred among Verse 33 the Children of Israel as the LORD commanded Moses And consequently did not belong to any of these Standards being to make another Camp by themselves I. 47 c. Ver. 34. And the Children of Israel did according to Verse 34 all that the LORD commanded Moses As they gave in their Names when they were to be numbred I. 54. so they now joyned together under such Standards as God appointed So they pitched by their Standards and so they set forward c. Each Tribe encamped under the Standard that was assigned to them and they also marched when they set forward in such order as is here directed Some order no doubt had been observed before both when they rested and when they marched See XIII Exod. 18. but it was not so exact and regular as this form into which they were now cast by God himself nor can we think it was so strictly observed The Jews say that this Camp made a Square of Twelve Miles in compass about the Tabernacle as Dr. Lightfoot hath observed in his Centur. Chorogr CXLVIII and J. Wagenseil more lately in his Annotations upon the Gemara of Sota Cap. 1. Sect. 51. where several of them say that the Camp was three Parasots in compass and a Parasot was four Miles CHAP. III. Chapter III Verse 1 Ver. 1. THese are the Generations of Aaron and Moses Being now to give an account of the Levites who had not been numbred with the rest of the Children of Israel he sets down the descendants of the principal Persons among them viz. Aaron whom he puts in the first place because he was the elder Brother and his Posterity were advanced to the Dignity of Priests and Moses whose Posterity were only Ministers to the Priests as all the common Levites were It may seem indeed at first fight as if he gave an account only of Aaron's Posterity v. 2. But if we look further to v. 27 28. we shall find the Posterity of both here numbred in the Family of the Amramites of which both Aaron and Moses were Amram being their Father from whom the Genealogy of the Children of Moses is derived 1 Chron. XXIII 13 14 c. through their Generations as here those of Aaron Concerning the word Generations See Dr. Hammond on the first of St. Matthew Not. a. In the day that the LORD spake unto Moses in Mount Sinai This Circumstance seems to be particularly specified because at that time Nadab and Abihu who are mentioned in the next Verse were both alive and very eminent Persons XXIV Exod. 1 9 10. though they were now dead at this numbring of the Levites Ver. 2. These are the Names of the Sons of Aaron Verse 2 Nadab the first-born c. There seems no necessity of setting down the Names of Aaron's Sons they not being here to be numbred But it was of great Concernment to have the Distinction preserved between the Priests and the Levites their Offices being very different and therefore Moses here sets down who belonged to the one and who to the other Ver. 3. These are the Names of the Sons of Aaron Verse 3 the Priests which were anointed See VIII Levit. 30. Which he consecrated In the Hebrew whose Hand he filled See XXVIII Exod. 41. XXIX 9. To minister in the Priests Office He would have it noted that Aaron's Posterity were solemnly consecrated to an higher Office than the rest of the Tribe of Levi who were to be their Servants The very name of Cohen carries Dignity in it signifying sometime a Prince as well as a Priest Accordingly the Priests had very little servile Work imposed upon them but their chief business was to draw near to God to present him with the Blood and the Fat and some part of the Sacrifices which might be killed by other Persons This shows that they were God's Familiars insomuch that some Sacrifices were divided between him and them and it was the same thing whether they were consumed on the Alter or eaten by the Priests And those things are said to be given to God which were put into their hands though they never came to the Altar Which is an Evidence of the near relation they had to the Divine Majesty which the Levites had not for they could not come nigh to offer any thing to him no more than the rest of the Israelites but were employed in inferior Services about the Tabernacle that the Priests might wholly attend to the Service of God at the Altar Verse 4 Ver. 4. And Nadab and Abihu died before the LORD c. A little after their Consecration X Lev. 1 c. And they had no Children Which is here recorded that all Posterity might know there were none to be admitted to the Office of Priesthood but such as could derive their Genealogy from Eleazar or Ithamar If the other had left any Sons they would have inherited their Father's Office before Eleazar as Maimonides observes out of Siphre See Schickard his Jus Regium Cap. VI. Theorem XX. And Eleazar and Ithamar ministred in the Priests Office in the sight of their Father The LXX rightly translate it together with their Father Who was the High Priest and they Lower Priests under him And so were all their Sons which it is likely they had in good number For they are appointed v. 38. for the guard of the Tabernacle towards the East And thus the Gemara Hieorosol in the Title concerning Fasting saith That Moses appointed VIII Classes of Priests four of the Family of Eleazar and as many of Ithamar which continued till the time of Samuel the Prophet and David who admitted many more See Selden de Success in Pontif. Cap. I. Ver. 5. And the LORD spake unto Moses saying Now he gives order about the rest of the Tribe of Levi who had been omitted in the late Muster Verse 5 Ver. 6. Bring the Tribe of Levi near and present Verse 6 them They had consecrated themselves to God by a noble Act mentioned XXXII Exod. 29. Which procured them this Blessing to be presented to God and consecrated to him in a solemn manner for such Services as he should assign
First-born of the Children of Israel for whom they were to be exchanged v. 40.42 Were twenty and two thousand If the particular Sums before-mentioned v. 22 28 34. be put together they amount to three hundred more than twenty two thousand Therefore it is a reasonable Conjecture that the three hundred are omitted in this account because they were the first-born of the Levites themselves and upon that score belonging to God already by the Law in XIII Exod. 2. XXXIV 20. could not be exchanged for the first-born of other Tribes and substituted in their stead as other Levites were It is very observable here also that the Levites were the fewest in number of any Tribe being but Two and twenty thousand three hundred from a Month old and upward when some Tribes were twice nay thrice as many See I. 27. not reckoning Children but only Men from twenty years old and upward In which the Divine Providence was very conspicuous Which so ordered it that this whole Tribe might be dedicated to him Whereas if it had grown proportionably to the rest there would have been more Levites by far than the first-born of all the Tribes Verse 40 Ver. 40. And the LORD said unto Moses To whom alone this Command is directed as I observed above Number all the first-born of the Males of the Children of Israel from a month old and upward The first-born Males were to be a Month old before their Parents were bound to redeem them If they died before they were not to pay any thing for them Which depends upon another Law XII Lev. 4.6 Where if a Woman brought forth a Male besides the seven days of her Separation she was to stay three and thirty days more before she went unto the Sanctuary At which time the Child being to be presented to God it appears that he acknowledged them for his when they were a Month old Yet they distinguish between the time when the Redemption-Money was due and when it was offered This latter was deferred till the Mother was abroad again but it was due and the Father obliged to pay it as soon as the Child was a Month old So Const L'Empereur observes out of Maimonides upon Bava kama cap. VII Sect. 6. And take the number of their Names That their number and that of the Levites might be compared one with the other for the reason which here follows Ver. 41. And thou shalt take the Levites for me I Verse 41 am the LORD instead of all the First-born among the Children of Israel God had taken them before as we read v. 12. by declaring his Will to Moses about it And now he commands Moses to declare his Will to the People and actually to make this exchange after he had taken the Number both of the First-born and of the Levites For he had Authority to take which he pleased being their LORD And the Cattel of the Levites instead of all the Firstlings among the Cattel of the Children of Israel Not that they should be sacrificed or taken from the Levites but that they should be accounted God's Cattel they being the Cattel of the Levites who were his entirely And therefore were presented unto him as the Levites were but still continued in their possession by his Allowance for their Encouragement in his Service See v. 45. Ver. 42. And Moses numbred as the LORD commanded Verse 42 him all the First-born of the Children of Israel But we do not find that he numbred the Firstlings of their Cattel or the Cattel of the Levites because the exchange of them was not made in particular by substituting one for one but generally by substituting all the Cattel of the Levites instead of all the Firstlings of the Israelites Cattel Ver. 43. And all the first-born Males by the number Verse 43 of Names c. and were Twenty and two thousand two hundred and threescore and thirteen It may appear something strange that from above Six hundred thousand Men reckoning from twenty years old and upward I. 46. there should not be more than this number of first-born Sons till it be considered that thus many were born since the Slaughter of the Egyptian First-born which was not much above a year ago after which time all the First-born of Israel became God's but not those that were born before For so the Law is XIII Exod. 2. Whatsoever openeth the Womb i. e. hereafter both of Man and Beast shall be mine Verse 44 Ver. 44. And the LORD spake unto Moses saying Still he is the Person solely employed in this business Verse 45 Ver. 45. Take the Levites instead of all the First-born among the Children of Israel and the Cattel of the Levites instead of their Cattel Having numbred both the Levites and the First-born now he bids him take those Two and twenty thousand Levites instead of so many First-born As for the Cattel they were not numbred as I observed before but exchanged in the lump as we speak And the Levites shall be mine I think it is remarkable that he doth not add and their Cattel shall be mine also For he did not take their Cattel from them when they became his but left them the use of them who still enjoyed them in his Right I am the LORD This exchange is made by my Authority who am the LORD both of them and all they have Ver. 46. And for those that are to be redeemed of the Verse 46 two hundred and threescore and thirteen c. There being Two hundred threescore and thirteen First-born more than there were Levites they are directed in the next Verse what to do about them For there could be no exchange of Levites for them because there was not a sufficient number to be taken in their stead Ver. 47. Thou shalt even take five Shekels apiece by Verse 47 the pole This was the Price of Redemption ever after as appears from XVIII 16. For it had been lately constituted the value of a Man-child from a Month to five years old in XXVII Levit. 6. After the Shekel of the Sanctuary c. See XXX Exod. 13 c. The only difficulty in this matter was to determine which of the First-born should be redeemed by paying this Money and which should be exchanged for the Levites For every one of the Israelites no doubt was desirous rather to have his First-born redeemed by a Levite than by paying five Shekels and yet some of them must be put to this expence there not being Levites enough to answer for them all The Jews think particularly R. Solomon that there was no way to satisfie this doubt like that by drawing of lots Which was done in this manner Moses saith the fore-named Doctor took Two and twenty thousand Scrolls of Parchment and wrote in them these words a Son of Levi and Two hundred and seventy and three more wherein he wrote five Shekels and then putting them all together in an Urn and shaking it to mingle them he commanded every
Numb 11 14. and with the Solemnity of Blowing with Trumpets LXXXI Psal 3. And they were the more careful to observe the New Moons because their great Festivals depended upon it though they are not reckoned among their Festivals or Solemn Assemblies XXIII Levit. but only the first Day of the seventh Month was a memorial of Blowing of Trumpets v. 24. which gave occasion perhaps for observing all the New Moons in the Year And there being no express Command for observing the first Day of the Month but only for peculiar Sacrifices upon it and Blowing of Trumpets some argue from thence that in the most ancient Times before the Law of Moses New Moons were observed with Festival Joy it being plain that they were so in the Days of Hesiod of which though we can have no certainty yet it is very probable that the Idolatry of worshipping the Sun Moon and Stars being then in the World they were wont at the appearance of every Moon to express much Joy and offer Sacrifices to it From which God intended to preserve his People by appointing special Sacrifices with blowing of Trumpets to be offered unto himself at that time And it is manifest the Jews were so observant of the New Moons that they seem to have regarded them next to their Sabbath as Times of Religious Worship of the Divine Majesty 2 Kings IV. 23. and LXVI Isai 23. VIII Amos 5. And thus I find that among the Athenians whose Laws are observed by many to have been derived from Moses the first day of the Month was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Plutach speaks a most holy day and yet it was not a Festival nor was it consecrated to any particular God but unto all And there was a Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that they offer Sacrifices upon the first Day of the Month when they went up to the Acropohi as Demisthenes tells us to pray for the Publick Welfare of the City and for their own Private Happiness See Sam. Petit● in his Comment in Leges Atticas Lib. I. Tit. 1. p. 85. Over the Burnt-offerings Especially the Morning Sacrifice at the offering of which the Trumpets began to Sound 2 Chron. XXIX 27. And over the Sacrifice of your Peace-offerings Which being Sacrifices of Thanksgiving it was very proper to have them attended with the Sound of the Trumpets That they may be to you for a memorial before your God i. e. That he may graciously accept your Offerings and bless you as the Phrase signifies in the foregoing Verse when he sees his Service to be your Delight and Joy I am the LORD your God By whose Soveraign Authority these Commands were given and in the observance of which they might be assured of his Blessing Ver. 11. And it came to pass on the twentieth Day of Verse 11 the second Month in the second Year After their coming out of Egypt as appears from Chapt. I. 1. That the Cloud was taken up In token that they were to begin to move as the Cloud did IX 17. From off the Tabernacle of the Testimony i. e. The most holy Place over which it resided IX 15. Ver. 12. And the Children of Israel took their Journeys Verse 12 After the Cloud was taken up it stood still for some time till they had taken down the Tabernacle and packt up their own Tents and Houshold-stuff Or else while those under the first Standard moved they took down the Tabernacle But still the three Tribes which first moved upon the going up of the Cloud must have some time allowed to take up their own Tents c. Out of the Wilderness of Sinai Where they had stayed near a Year And the Cloud rested After three Days motion v. 33. In the Wilderness of Paran Where they had several Stations besides this which was the Mid-way between the Red Sea and the Land of Canaan and from the Graves of those that lusted was called Ribroth-hattaavah XI 33. XXXIII 16. where they stayed a Month and from thence went to Hazeroth and were still in the Wilderness of Paran XII 16. Verse 13 Ver. 13. And they first took their Journey In the Hebrew the words are They journeyed at the first i. e. at their first Removal which was this According to the Commandment of the LORD by the hand of Moses Not whether they pleased themselves but according as God had before directed when the Cloud was taken up and in such order as he appointed See IX 18. And there seems to have been a special Direction by an express Command for this first Removal I Deut. 6 7. Verse 14 Ver. 14. In the first place went the Standard of the Children of Judah c. By this it appears that the foregoing words concerning their Removal according to the Commandment of the LORD relates to the order o their M●rch as well as to the way they went See concerning those that marcht under his Standard and their Commanders which are here mentioned and in the wo next verses Chapt. II. 1 3 5 7. Verse 17 Ver. 17. And the Tabernacle was taken down By the Levites I. 51. who went about this work as 〈◊〉 as the Cloud went up from the Tabernacle while 〈◊〉 three Tribes under the Standard of Judah were sitting themselves to move And the Sons of Gershon and the Sons of Merari set forward They immediately followed the three Tribes which encamped on the East of it under the Standard of Judah Bearing the Tabernacle Such parts of it as were committed to each of their Charge IV. 24 c. 31 c. Ver. 18. And the Standard of the Camp of Reuben Verse 18 set forward according to their Armies c. Of this and the two following Verses see II. 10 12 14. Ver. 21. And the Kohathites set forward bearing Verse 21 the Sanctuary That is the Ark the Holy Table the Candlestick c. and other things belonging to the Sanctuary IV. 15 16 c. which the Kohathites carried in the middle of the four Camps for their greater Security And the other i. e. The Gershonites and the Merarites before-mentioned v. 17. Did set up the Tabernacle against they came When the Cloud rested the two fore-going Camps under the Standards of Judah and Reuben rested also and settled themselves in their Tents Which while they were doing the Gershonites and Merarites who marched between them set up the Tabernacle that it might be ready to receive the Ark and the other Holy things which followed immediately under the care of the Kohathites This shows the excellent Order wherein they always moved not only without any tumult or confusion but with such a Discipline as signified they were under the Conduct of a most skilful Leader Ver. 22. And the Standard of the Children of Ephraim set forward according to their Armies After the Kohathites followed three other Tribes who were under this Standard See Chap. II. 18 20 22 24. Where Verse 22 all that was needful hath been said of the two following
him in the fifth Month called Ab as St. Hierom notes from the Jews of the second Year after they came out of Egypt It is not certain upon what day but it is likely in the beginning of the Month which answers to the nineteenth of our July sent them from the Wilderness of Paran From Radesh-Barnea XXXII 8. I Deut. 19 20. IX 23. XIV Josh 7. All those Men were heads of the Children of Israel So the Rulers of Thousands and Hundreds are called XVIII Exod. 25. as well as the Princes I Numb 16. But these were a lower sort of Heads or great Men in the several Tribes of Israel Ver. 4. And these are their Names Of the Tribe of Verse 4 Reuben Shammua the Son of Zaccur There is little to be observed concerning this Verse and those that follow to the XVIth but that it is evident these were not the same Men who in the first Chapter of this Book are called the Heads and Princes of the Tribes being inferiour Persons who ruled over some part not over a whole Tribe The three first Tribes also that are here mentioned sprang from the three eldest Sons for Levi did not make a Tribe in Israel of Jacob But in the Enumeration of the rest there is not any Order observed of which I can give an account Perhaps they being to disperse themselves when they entred the Country they were to search see verse 22. and thinking it not prudent to go above two at the most in company cast Lots who should be associated And the first Lot fell to those of the Tribe of Reuben and Simeon the next to those of Judah and Issachar and so to the rest Verse 11 Ver. 11. Of the Tribe of Joseph i. e. Of the other Branch of Joseph's Family viz. of the Tribe of Manasseh as it here follows Verse 16 Ver. 16. These are the Names of the Men that Moses sent to spy out the Land He would have their Names remembred which is the reason of this Remark for the sake of those two worthy Men Caleb and Joshua whose Vertue was very illustrious in the midst of a crooked and perverse Generation And Moses called Oshea the Son of Nun. So he is called v. 8. being named for the Tribe of Ephraim Jehoshua He was called by this name presently after they came out of Egypt XVII Exod. 9. when he went to fight with Amalek Whom he having overcome Moses lookt upon it as a Token that he should save and deliver the People of Israel and then called him by this Name Which imports some thing more than Oshea for that denotes only a Prayer for Salvation as Menochius observes but this carries in it a Promise of it And some think the addition of the first Letter in the name Jehoshua was from the name of JEHOVAH Implying that the LORD would imploy him in leading and conducting his People into the Land of Promise Wherein he was a Type of the Saviour of the World the LORD JESUS whose Name is the same with this who conducts those that believe on him to an Heavenly Inheritance If I could find the like comfortable Signification in the rest of the Names of these Men I should think there might be some ground for their Opinion who fancy Moses chose Joshua because there was a good Omen in his very Name For all Nations took great care that no Man should be imployed in Affairs of moment whose Names carry any unlucky Signification in them So Cicero observes in his first Book of Divination that the Generals of Armies and the Censors took care that none should so much as lead the Sacrifices to the Altar but who were bonis Nominibus of Names that signified Good Of which the Consuls also were very observant ut primus miles fiat bono nomine that the first Souldier whom they listed should be of a good Name such as Valerius Salvius Statorius or the like On the contrary the Name of Naevius was deemed so bad that in his Oration pro Quinct Sext. he saith having named the Man methinks I have said enough Ver. 17. And Moses sent them to spy out the Land and Verse 17 said unto them That is when he sent them to spy out the Land as was said in the foregoing Verse he gave them the following Directions Get ye up this way Southward This South-part of Canaan fell afterward to be part of the Lot of the Tribe of Judah XV Josh 1 2 3. and was very dry and consequently barren I Judg. 15. and therefore fittest for their entrance to spy out the Land unobserved being less inhabited than the better parts of the Country Besides it was nearest to the place where they now were encamped And go up into the Mountain Where the Amorites dwelt I Deut. 19. together with some Amalekites and other People XIV 43 45. From whence they were to go down into the Valleys Verse 18 Ver. 18. And see the Land what it is and the People that dwell therein These are the general Directions which he gave them to inform themselves both of the Country and of its Inhabitants Whether they be strong or weak few or many In particular with respect to the latter he directs them to inform themselves whether the Inhabitants were strong bodied or feeble and whether their number was great or small Verse 19 Ver. 19. And what the Land is that they dwell in whether it be good or bad And with respect to the former he would have them bring an account first what sort of Country it was whether healthful and delightful or unwholesome and unpleasant And what Cities there be that they dwell in And then how large their Cities were and of what strength Whether in Tents or in strong Holds Whether they lived in Tents as the Arabians did and the Israelites while they were in the Wilderness or in Houses and whether they were fortified Or rather as we would say in our Language whether in open Villages or in walled Cities For so the word Mahanaim signifies not Tents as we here translate it but Hosts or Camps XXXII Gen. 1. and here Towns without Walls as the LXX interprets it And the Vulgar Verse 20 also only inverting the order of the words whether in walled Towns or without walls Ver. 20. And what the Land is c. And last of all what is the Soil of the Country whether rich and fertile or poor and barren and also whether it be a woody Country or otherwise And be ye of good courage and bring of the fruit of the Land In which Discoveries there being some hazard he bids them be confident God would preserve them so that they might venture to bring away with them some of the Fruit which the Country produced Now the time was the time of the first ripe Grapes Towards the Vintage Ver. 21. So they went up and searched the Land Verse 21 from the Wilderness of Zin Which was on the South of the Land of Canaan XXXIV
great a difference between the Children of two Brothers who were of equal Deserts Nay Aben-Ezra thinks that he wholly disliked the late Exchange of the First-born for the Levites And besides it may be thought that he stomacht the late Preferment of Elizaphan the Son of Vzziel who was the youngest Son of Kohath to be chief of the Family of the Kohathites III. 30. which he thought rather belonged to himself who was the Son of the second Son of Kohath And finding himself too weak to make an Insurrection alone he perswaded Dathan and Abiram of the Tribe of Reuben and those in whom they had an interest to joyn with him upon another pretence that they were descended from the eldest Son of Israel to whom the chief Authority in the Nation belonged which Moses had taken upon himself and likewise preferred the Tribe of Judah to the principal place in their encampment II. 3. and also the LXX Elders to be his Assistants without their Advice and leaving them out of the number Such as these may be thought to be the grounds upon which they proceeded Korah seeking the Priesthood and the Sons of Reuben the Civil Dignity But it seems to me that the ground of the Quarrel was wholly upon the account of the Priesthood as I shall show upon the next verse and that they struck at Moses only as advancing his Brother and his Family by his own Authority and not as they pretended by God's direction For as Dathan and Abiram did not appear openly when they had formed this Faction for we find them in their Tents v. 12. and refusing to come to Moses when he sent for them so in the next verse they seem to speak of nothing but the Priesthood And so Moses understood their meaning v. 5 10 15. Before Moses In an open defiance of his Authority who they pretended had no power to make such Alterations as he had done With certain of the Children of Israel It is not said out of what Tribe but it is likely out of several if not some out of every Tribe in whom they had any interest Two hundred and fifty Princes of the Assembly c. The LXX divide their Character into three parts First That they were Princes of the Assembly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rulers of Thousands and Rulers of Hundreds c. And Secondly Famous in the Congregation Which they translate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who used to be called to Publick Consultations when they were to deliberate about weighty Affairs And so several both ancient and modern Translations as Mr. Selden hath shown L. II. de Synedriis cap. 4. n. 10. where he saith they were called maxime puto si non solum deliberandi causa chiefly if not only to have their Advice And then lastly Men of renown Such who had got a great Name that is Fame and Credit among the People upon these or other accounts This made the Insurrection the more dangerous that such great Persons were engaged and appeared in it Verse 3 Ver. 3. And they gathered themselves together The fore-named Company came in a Body Against Moses As an arbitrary Disposer of all Preferment And against Aaron Who was promoted by Moses to the Office of High-Priest which he himself had discharged before Aaron's Consecration which perhaps they made a ground of their Quarrel And said unto them Ye take too much upon you In the Hebrew the words are Rab-lachem it is sufficient for you That is you have domineered long enough resign your Places to others for all of us nay every Man in Israel is as good as you Seeing all the Congregation are holy every one of them Here seems to be the Root of the Quarrel Before Moses's time every one might offer Sacrifice in his own Family as I have often observed which Custom these Men would have had still continued being angry that this high Office was confined to one Family alone who were to enjoy all the Benefits of it which were exceeding great For the Priests had a large share in most Offerings and some things wholly to themselves This is the more probable because it was so very hard to convince the People that God had settled this Dignity and all the Profits belonging to it in Aaron's Family For though God did a new thing never heard of before to demonstrate these People that rose against Moses and Aaron to be Seditious yet it was necessary still to do more For after the Earth had swallowed up Dathan and Abiram and Fire consumed Korah and his Company and a Plague destroyed many more of them the LORD did another Miracle XVII 8. in making Aaron's Rod blossom and bud and bring forth Almonds in one Nights time when all the rest of the Rods remained dry Sticks Which makes it probable as I said before there were some in all the Tribes who were engaged in this Sedition and were so deeply infected with the false Notions of Korah that it was necessary to give them all this Satisfaction And the LORD is among them The People need no other Governour but him who dwells among them in his Tabernacle where they can present their Sacrifices to him themselves without your Assistance Wherefore then lift you up your selves above the Congregation of the LORD Since God owns us all for his special and peculiar People why do you take upon you such high Places and Dignity above us all For Moses disposed and ordered all things and Aaron by his order took upon him to be solely God's chief Minister in his Sanctuary Verse 4 Ver. 4. And when Moses heard it he fell upon his face With Aaron also it is likely as they did lately XIV 5. And for the same end See there to deprecate God's displeasure which they might justly think would now rise higher than ever and to beg his direction what to do in such a dangerous state of things Verse 5 Ver. 5. And he spake unto Korah and unto all his Company This shows that Korah was the Head of this Faction and Dathan and Abiram did not at the first I guess from hence appear with him Saying Being risen up from Prayer he made this Answer to the Seditious People by order from God who no doubt directed him to this way of suppressing them Even to morrow the LORD will show c. In the Hebrew the words are To morrow or in the Morning and the LORD will show c. That is stay but till to Morrow and it shall appear without any further delay whether you or we be in the right He would keep them in suspense no longer and yet gave them so much time to consider better and repent Some observe that the Morning was the time of executing Justice and therefore here appointed Will the LORD show By some visible Token Who are his Or Who appertain to him viz. As his Ministers And who is holy Separated and solemnly Consecrated by his appointment to the Sacred Office of Priesthood And will
new Murmuring shows this not to be a true Excuse for them Verse 42 Ver. 42. And it came to pass when the Congregation was gathered against Moses and against Aaron Their Murmuring presently proceeded to an Insurrection That they looked toward the Tabernacle of the Congregation i. e. Moses and Aaron implored help from God which is implyed in their looking toward his Dwelling-place And behold the Cloud covered it One would think by this that it had for some time withdrawn it self from the Tabernacle when the dead Bodies of Korah's Company lay dead at the Door of it And the Glory of the LORD appeared To comfort them in this Distress and to show he was ready to support and vindicate them Verse 43 Ver. 43. And Moses and Aaron came before the Tabernacle of the Congregation Perhaps for Safety and Security or to hear what Directions God would give them Ver. 44. And the LORD spake unto Moses saying Out of the Tabernacle before which he stood waiting for the LORD's Orders Ver. 45. Get ye up from among this Congregation Verse 44 He speaks to Aaron and Eleazar I suppose as well as Verse 45 unto Moses That I may consume them as in a moment As he was inclined to do before v. 21. and now had a greater reason And they fell on their faces To beseech God not to punish the People as they deserved v. 22. Ver. 46. And Moses said unto Aaron By God's Verse 46 Direction Take a Censer and put Fire therein from off the Altar Near to which they now were v. 43. And put on Incense Upon the Fire but not till he came into the midst of the Congregation v. 47. And go quickly unto the Congregation With the Incense which regularly was to be offered only at the golden Altar within the Sanctuary but now in this extraordinary Case by God's special Order Aaron is sent with it into the Camp that they might all be Witnesses of his Power with God and that by his Authority he was settled in the Priesthood And make an Atonement for them Which was usually performed by the Blood of a Sacrifice but there was not time for that and therefore now it was made by the Incense wherewith their daily Sacrifices Morning and Evening were concluded and was accompanied by the Prayers of the People while the Priest as he offered it made Intercession for them CXLI Psalm 2. Thus as St. Hierom glosses Currens ira Dei Sacerdotij voce prohibebatur the Divine Anger coming with full speed upon them was stopped by the Voice of the Priest Which was a notable Type of the Power of our great High Priest and Intercessor with God the LORD Jesus For there is Wrath gone out from the LORD Who would not wholly grant their Prayer for a Pardon v. 45. but inflicted some Punishment upon them The Plague is begun A Pestilence in all probability of which several immediately died Verse 47 Ver. 47. And Aaron took as Moses commanded A Censer and Fire from the Altar with Incense ready to be put upon it v. 46. And ran According to the Command of Moses v. 46. who bad him go quickly Into the midst of the Congregation Perhaps into the midst of each of the four Camps of Judah Reuben Ephraim and Dan mentioned in the second Chapter being broke out every where And behold the Plague was begun among the People He saw People die on all sides of him And he put on Incense Whereupon he put Incense upon the Fire which he brought along with him from the Altar v. 46. And made an Atonement for the People Interceded with God for them and obtained what he desired Verse 48 Ver. 48. And he stood between the dead and the living This seems to intimate that the Plague began in the Skirts of their Camps and was proceeding into the heart of them where Aaron stood as a Mediator for those who were not yet smitten And the Plague was stayed A stop was put to its progress Which was a further Evidence of Aaron's right to the Priesthood by God's appointment who not only preserved him when he offered Incense together with Korah's Company v. 17. but now makes him an Instrument of preserving others from destrustion Ver. 49. Now they that died in the Plague were Fourteen Verse 49 thousand and seven hundred Who it is likely were of the forwardest Men to associate themselves with Korah v. 19. Besides them that died about the matter of Korah Whose just number is not known for besides the Two hundred and fifty Men mentioned v. 25. the whole Families of Korah Dathan and Abiram were swallowed up Ver. 50. And Aaron returned unto Moses unto the Verse 50 door of the Tabernacle of the Congregation To carry back his Censer And the Plague was stayed Or rather For the Plague was stayed and so having done his business he returned to the Tabernacle CHAP. XVII Chapter XVII Ver. 1. AND the LORD spake unto Moses saying Verse 1 Not long after the Plague was stayed For though there had been enough done to satisfie the People that Aaron was advanced to the Priesthood by God's appointment and not by Moses his Affection to his Kindred yet their Minds had been so poisoned by Korah and his Complices with the contrary Opinion that it was necessary to do still more to root it out Which was the occasion of what follows Verse 2 Ver. 2. Speak unto the Children of Israel Order them to bring what I require thee to take of them And take of every one of them i. e. Of every Tribe A Rod. Or a Staff as the Hebrew word Matteh is often translated Which some take for an ordinary Walking-staff or for the Staff which was the Badge of their Authority as Princes of the several Tribes neither of which seems to me to be true For what reason have we to think that every Man's Staff which he commonly used was made of the Wood of an Almond Tree as these were one may probably conclude from the 8th verse And therefore I take it they were all now cut off from some Tree of that kind and it is likely from one and the same Tree that none might fancy there was any difference between them For the Miracle was great enough which here follows without supposing as some do that these Rods were all of some other common Wood and yet Aaron's Rod produced Almonds which were not the proper Fruit of it Though it must be confessed that if they were not of the wood of an Almond Tree the wonder was greater that his Rod should bring forth Almonds and struck their Minds more strongly According to the House of their Fathers In the Hebrew it is Father in the Singular Number denoting the principal Person or Patriarch as we call them of whose House or Family he was to take one Rod. Of all their Princes according to the House of their Fathers This explains the meaning more fully that the Prince of every Tribe who was
LORD by Vrim and Thummim but only before the most holy Place See XXVII 21. And therefore it seems to me far more likely that he means the Ark which was wont to be carried in following times into the Field when they went to fight with their Enemies 1 Sam. IV. 4 5. XIV 18. 2 Sam. XI 1. Yea Joshua himself not long after this time ordered the Ark to be carried with Priests blowing the Trumpets before it when he surrounded Jericho VI Josh 4 6 7 c. And therefore the holy Instruments being here joyned with the Trumpets to blow in his hand it makes it the more probable that the Ark may be here meant There being also something in this very Book to countenance this Opinion See XIV 44. but especially XXXII 20 22. But it must be confessed that it is never thus expressed in any other place of Holy Scripture but always called the Ark of God or of the Covenant or the Testimony or the like And therefore perhaps they give the truest sence of these words who take the following words to be an Explication of them That is the Trumpets were the holy Instruments which he carried in his hand And the Trumpets to blow in his hand Which he delivered to the Priests who followed him to sound an Alarm when they went to fight according to the direction X. 8 9. and as the practice was in future Ages 2 Chron. XIII 12. Ver. 7. And they warred against the Midianites Verse 7 It is not certain whether the Midianites came out of their Country to give them battle or they first broke into their Country and then fought their Army As the LORD commanded Moses One would think this meant no more but that they obeyed the Commandment of God before-mentioned v. 2. But the Jews think he hath respect to another particular Commandment which they say was given by Moses when they went out to this War That they should not when they besieged any City begirt it quite round but only on three sides leaving one naked that the besieged might flee away if they pleased by which means effusion of Human Blood was prevented So Guil. Schickart observes out of Siphri in his Mischpat Hammelech cap. 5. Theor. 18. and Mr. Selden since him Lib. VI. de Jure Nat. Gent. cap. 15. where he shows they understand this of all Wars but those against the seven Nations in Canaan and Amalek towards whom this kindness was not shown as appears by the Siege of Jericho But the Laws about managing Wars which are mentioned in the Book of Deuteronomy do not seem to have been yet given though the Jews fancy this Law was now given about Midian and observed ever after And slew all the Males Who were in this fight and did not save themselves by flight Verse 8 Ver. 8. And they slew the Kings of Midian Little Kings called Princes XIII Josh 21. where they are said to be Dukes of Sihon i. e. great Men tributary to Sihon while he continued King of the Amorites But after the Israelites had conquered him they took perhaps the Title of Kings Besides the rest of them that were slain They made not only a great slaughter of the People but killed their chief Commanders who led them on Namely Evi and Rekem and Zur c. They are particularly named that all their Neighbours might be satisfied of the truth of this History And he that is called Zur is thought to have been the Father of Cozbi whom Phineas slew Balaam also the Son of Beor they slew with the sword He had seen such good success of his wicked Counsel which he gave either as he went home or returning again to them See XXIV ult that presuming the Israelites were forsaken of their God he adventured to go along with the Midianites unto this Battle hoping he might curse the Israelites now that iniquity i. e. Idolatry was found among them which he could not do while they were free from it Thus he perished by his own wicked devices and was so far from having his wish that he might die the death of the righteous that is live long that as the Jews say he was slain in the Thirty fourth year of his Age. The Doctors in the Gemara of the Sanhedrim cap. 11. sect 11. ask what did he here To which R. Johanan makes answer he went to receive his Reward for the Death of the Twenty four thousand Israelites which he had procured XXV 9. And thus saith another it hapned unto him according to the Proverb The Camel went to desire horns and they cut off his ears Ver. 9. And the Children of Israel took all the Women Verse 9 of Midian captive and their little ones After they were Masters of the Field as we speak by the overthrow of their Armies they fell upon their Cities and according to the ancient custom in the most bloody Wars they killed only the Men but no Women nor Children XXXIV Gen. 25. 1 Kings XI 16. And so the Law of God afterward required they should do when they took any City that did not belong to the Canaanites XX Deut. 13 14. who were utterly to be destroyed v. 16 17. where he saith Thou shalt save nothing alive that breatheth And they took the spoil of all their Cattle and all their Flocks and all their Goods As belonging to them by the right of Conquest in a just War Verse 10 Ver. 10. And they burnt all their Cities wherein they dwelt and their goodly Castles with fire Made the Country desolate that they who fled might have no encouragement to return again nor be able without great hazzard to settle themselves there where they had not a Fortress left to defend them This was but a necessary care notwithstanding which they had peopled the Country again so well in the space of about Two hundred years that they were able to oppress the Israelites as we read VI Judg. 1. Verse 11 Ver. 11. And they took all the spoil and all the prey both of Men and of Beasts They had possessed themselves of them before v. 9. but now they carried them away Verse 12 Ver. 12. And they brought the Captives and the Prey and the Spoil Here are three different words to express their Booty which they brought to the Camp of Israel The first of which signifies the Women and Children that were taken The second the Cattle and the Flocks though sometimes it includes in it Men and Women and the third their Money and Goods Vnto Moses and Eleazar the Priest and unto the Congregation of the Children of Israel Unto the LXX Elders and Princes of the Tribes who were assembled with them See XXIX 1. as it seems to be expounded in the next verse Vnto the Camp at the plains of Moab c. From whence they marched against Midian and had been encamped there a great while XXII 1. XXVI 3 63. Ver. 13. And Moses and Eleazar the Priest and all Verse 13 the
XVII Josh 1. Verse 40 Ver. 40. And Moses gave Gilead unto Machir the Son of Manasseh i. e. To the Children of Machir for he was dead long ago who had a considerable Portion of that half of the Land of Gilead which was given to the half Tribe of Manasseh For one half was given to the Reubenites and Gadites and the other half to them III Deut. 12 13. where Gilead signifies all that Country properly so called neither so much as the whole Territory which these Tribes demanded v. 1. nor so little as was given to Machir v. 15. where Moses says And I gave Gilead unto Machir i. e. to that Family of Manasseh which were properly called Machirites XXVI Numb 29. and to that Family descended from his Son which from him were called Gileadites For as Manasseh had only this Son Mach●r so Machir had only Gilead but he had many XXVI 30 31 32. who all raised Families And as to the Macharites and I suppose the Gileadites was given a Portion in this Country XIII Josh 29 30 c. so Joshua gave to the rest an Inheritance in the Land of Canaan XVII 2. And he gives a reason in the foregoing verse why he gave Gilead and Bashan to the Posterity of Machir because they were a warlike People inheriting their Father's Valour who was a Man of War and therefore fit to be placed in the Frontiers of that Country Ver. 41. And Jair the Son of Manasseh One of Verse 41 the Posterity of Manasseh by his Mother's side For he was the Grandson of Gilead the Son of Machir by his Daughter 1 Chron. II. 21 22. but his Father was of the Tribe of Judah It seems he joyned with the Children of Machir in their Expedition against Gilead mentioned v. 39. and was so successful that he took several small Towns in that Country and so had his Inheritance among the Children of Manasseh on this side Jordan where they now were There were threescore of them in the whole which were afterward called Cities XIII Josh 13. 1 Kings IV. 23. but he had only twenty three for his Possession 1 Chron. II. 22 23. And called them Havoth-Jair That is the Habitations of Jair For Havah is a dwelling as Bochartus observes in his Phaleg Lib. IV. cap. 29. And among the Arabians the word Havoth properly signifies many Tents orderly disposed in a Ring or Circle which in those Countries made that which we call a Village For Hava in their Language signifies to compass The same he observes in his Hierozoicon P. I. Lib. II. c. 44. p. 466. Verse 42 Ver. 42. And Nobah Who he was we find in no other place but an eminent Person no doubt in some of the Families of the Manassites either of the Machirites or the Gileadites For they only as I take it inherited on this side Jordan Went and took Kenath and the Villages thereof At the same time I suppose that Jair took the Towns above-mentioned of which this was one 1 Chron. II. 23. But though Jair was the chief Conductor in that Expedition yet he kept as I said only twenty three Towns to himself the rest were given to them who accompanied him of whom it is probable Nobah was one And called it Nobah after his own Name But it retained its old name also for St. Hierom says in his time there was a City called Canatha in the Region of Trachonitis not far from Bosra Thus this Country being settled upon these two Tribes and an half the Land of Canaan was divided by God's Command for an Inheritance to the remaining nine Tribes and the other half of the Tribe of Manasseh XIII Josh 7. CHAP. XXXIII Chapter XXXIII Ver. 1. THESE are the Journeys of the Children Verse 1 of Israel which went forth out of the Land of Egypt A brief recapitulation of the Travels of the Children of Israel through the Wilderness whereby the wonderful Providence of God over them appears in their Protection and Preservation from the time they departed out of Egypt till they came to the Borders of the Land of Canaan With their Armies For they marched in an orderly manner as Armies do See XII Exod. 41 51. XIII 18. Vnder the Hand of Moses and Aaron By whom they were conducted as the Ministers of God XII Exod. 1 28 50. Ver. 2. And Moses wrote their goings out according Verse 2 to their Journeys Every removal which they made from the place where they were unto another whither they journeyed By the commandment of the LORD This may refer either to their Journeys which were by God's commandment X. 13. or rather to Moses his writing this Epitome of their Travels of which God ordered him to give a distinct account Which was no unnecessary Work but most useful to Posterity there being no History extant in the World as David Chytraeus well observes except that of the Birth Life Death and Resurrection of Christ which contains so many wonderful Instances of Divine Providence as this of bringing the Children of Israel out of Egypt and leading them through the Red-Sea and through the Wilderness Concerning which Maimonides hath an excellent Discourse in his third Part of More Nevochim cap. 50. the Substance of which is this That it being impossible any Miracles should continue throughout all Generations due care should be taken that the Memory of them be not lost but faithfully preserved by the History and Narration of them in future times Now there being no greater Miracle than the Subsistence of the Children of Israel in the Desert for Forty years a Desert full of Scorpions and Serpents destitute of Water uninhabited through which no Man had been wont to pass as Jeremiah speaks II. 6. where they ate no Bread nor drank Wine or strong Drink XXIX Deut. 6 c. God would have the particular places set down distinctly where they pitched in that howling Wilderness That all Men might be satisfied who would take the pains to examine things by what a marvellous Providence such a multitude of People were fed every day for Forty years together and none might be able to Cavil and say that they travelled through a Country good enough and pitched in habitable places where they might plough and sow and reap or where they might have Herbs and Roots for their Sustenance or where Manna ordinarily came down from the Clouds for Mens support And these are their Journeys according to their goings out As if he had said Having received this Commandment from God this is a true and exact Account which here follows of their Travels from place to place Ver. 3. And they departed from Ramsees See XII Exod. 37. Here in all likelyhood they Sacrificed the Paschal Lamb and were preserved from the destroying Angel which made this place very remarkable for Verse 3 they seem to have been all summoned hither to meet here as in a common Rendevouz as they now speak to be ready to march away when God gave the word of
threatned the same before he died XXIII 13. Of which an Angel or Messenger of the LORD minded them II Judges 3. And so it came to pass as we read there v. 14. and throughout that whole Book And shall vex you in the Land wherein ye dwell Make you very uneasie nay sigh and groan in the good Land which God gives you by reason of their oppression II Judg. 18. IV. 3. VI. 6 c. Ver. 56. Moreover I will do unto you as I thought Verse 56 to do unto them As I purposed to do unto them i. e. make you their Slaves as they were to several People whom they served many years III Judg. 8 14. VI. 2. and many other places Or make you flee before them and at last expel you from the Land I give you CHAP. XXXIV Chapter XXXIV Verse 1 Ver. 1. AND the LORD spake unto Moses saying In the same place where they were when he last spake to him for they made no other Removals till they marched for Canaan Verse 2 Ver. 2. Command the Children of Israel Charge them to take notice of this And say unto them when ye come into the Land of Canaan this is the Land that shall fall unto you for your Inheritance Having spoken to them concerning their dispossessing the Canaanites and dividing their Land among their Tribes it was fit to describe the Bounds of their Country that they might know whom they were to destroy and into whose Possessions they were to enter Even the Land of Canaan and the Coasts thereof The Land beyond Jordan and the Limits or Bounds thereof Verse 3 Ver. 3. Then your South quarter shall be from the Wilderness of Zin Mentioned in the foregoing Chapter v. 36. Along by the Coast of Edom. Which bordered upon this Wilderness XX. 1 14. And your South border shall be the utmost Coast of the Salt Sea From the very tongue of it as it is expressed XV Josh 2. where it appears this was the Portion of the Tribe of Judah The Salt-Sea is that which is called sometimes the Dead-Sea and in other Authors Lacus Asphaltites See XIV Gen. 3. The Hebrews call all great Lakes by the Name of Seas and this is called the Salt-Sea because the Water of it is very Salt or as some express it bitter and the Dead-Sea propter aquae immobilitatem as Justin speaks Lib. XXXVI because of the immoveableness of the Water which is never stirred by the greatest Winds See Vossius de Orig. Progr Idolal Lib. II. cap. 68. Eastward Where the Eastern and the Southern Border meet Ver. 4. And your Border That is this South Verse 4 Border Shall turn Not go on in a strait Line but bending toward the West From the South to the ascent of Akrabbim Or to Maale-Akrabbim a Mountain on the South-end of the Dead-Sea XV Josh 3. I Judg. 36. So called as Bochartus conjectures from the vast multitude of Scorpions found here From which Mountain also it is probable the Region called Acrabatena near to Idumaea had its name 1 Maccab. V. 3. See Hierozoicon P. II. Lib. IV. cap. 29. And pass on to Zin Either to a place called Zin or part of the Wilderness of Zin which lay on the South of the Land of Canaan XIII 21. And the going forth thereof shall be from the South That is still on towards the South as appears from what goes before and follows after To Kadesh-barnea From whence the Spies were sent to search out the Land and are said expresly to have gone up by the South XIII 22 26. And shall go on to Hazar-Addar Or to the Village of Addar as the Vulgar Latin renders it which seems to be justified by XV Josh 3. where it is simply called Addar There is indeed a place called Hezron joyned with it which may be thought to be the same with Hazar But so is another place also called Karkaa both which may as well be thought to be here omitted for brevities sake And pass on to Azmon A place lying on the West-end of the Mount of Edom. Verse 5 Ver. 5. And the border shall fetch a compass There shall be a greater turn than that mentioned v. 4. bending still more Westward From Azmon unto the River of Egypt By the River of Egypt is properly understood Nile and so Jonathan here renders the Hebrew word Nahal River by Nilus Which may seem to have taken its name from the word Nahal which the Ancients did not pronounce as we now do but called it Neel as we find in Epiphanius From whence Nilus was very easily made as Bochartus observes Hierozoic P. II. Lib. V. cap. 15. But if Nile be here meant it must be the more Northerly mouth of it where Pelusium stood See XV Gen. 18. And the goings out of it shall be at the Sea This Border ended at the Sea called the Great Sea in the next verse Verse 6 Ver. 6. And as for the Western border ye shall have even the great Sea That is the Mediterranean or midland Sea which lay on the West of Judaea And is called by the Hebrews the Great Sea in comparison with the Lake of Genesaret and Aspaltites which they also called Seas For your border On the West as it here follows This shall be your Western border From the River of Egypt as far as Zidon which was a part of the promised Land as appears from XIII Josh 6. I Judg. 31. All the Cities indeed on the shore of this Sea were held by the Philistines and others till the time of David but the Israelites had a right to them And the famous Rabbi Juda understands these words as if they should have the Western Ocean it self for their Portion as well as the Land adjacent to it For so he expounds these words as if Moses had said this shall be your Western Border viz. The Border of the Sea and the Isles near unto it And the Hierusalem Targum more plainly And let the great Sea be your Border i. e. the Ocean and the Isles thereof and the Cities and the Ships with the ancient Waters that are in the midst of it See Selden in his Mare Clausum Lib. I. cap. 6. where he alledges this as a proof that Men anciently thought they might have a Dominion over the Sea as well as the Land Ver. 7. And this shall be your Northern border from Verse 7 the great Sea From the Mediterranean which lay on the West Ye shall point out for you Mark out for your Direction Mount Hor. Not that Mount where Aaron died for that was on the South of the Land of Canaan towards Edom but this was diametrically opposite on the North of it And therefore must in all likelyhood be some part of Mount Libanus which with Antilibanus more towards the great Sea bounded the promised Land on the North. But there were several parts of Mount Libanus which were called by several Names and probably one of them was called Hor because of
its eminency or height above the rest So the Vulgar translates it reading I suppose the Hebrew not Hor hahar i. e. Hor the Mountain but Har hahar the Mountain of Mountain i. e. the highest Mountain The Jews generally by this Mount Hor understand Amanus which is a part of Taurus as Mr. Selden observes in the place before-named which the Hierusalem Targum calls more briefly Manus Verse 8 Ver. 8. From Mount Hor ye shall point out your border to the entrance of Hamath There were two Hamaths one called by the Greeks Antiochia the other Epiphania The former called Hamath the Great VI Amos 2. to distinguish it from the latter which is the City that is always meant when we read the Bounds of Judaea were to the entrance of Hamath Northward as here and XIII 21. For it is certain as Bochartus observes they did not reach to Antiochia but came near to Epiphania Lib. IV. Phaleg cap. 36. And this makes it probable that Hor as I said before may be a Promontory of Libanus because in XIII Josh 5. Hermon is joyned with the entrance of Hamath as Hor is here Now Hermon was certainly a part of Libanus by some called Sirion by others Senir III Deut. 9. and by others Sion IV Deut. 48. And the goings forth of the border shall be to Zedad Which in Ezekiel's time was reckoned the Northern Border together with Hamath from the great Sea just as it is here XLVII Ezek. 15 16. Ver. 9. And the border shall go on to Ziphron Another Town in those parts of which I find no mention any where else And the goings out of it shall be at Hazar-Enam Verse 9 Here it ended which was a place that retained its name till Ezekiel's time XLVII 17. David Chytraeus seems to have given a full account of this Northern Border in a few words It extended saith he from the Mediterranean by the Mountains of Libanus to the Fountain of Jordan In which Tract are the Towns of Hamath Zadad in the Tribe of Naphthali Ziphron in the same Tribe at the foot of Libanus and Hazar-Enan which he takes to signifie a Village at the Fountain viz. of Jordan Ver. 10. And ye shall point out your East border from Verse 10 Hazar-Enan From the Fountain of Jordan as was said before To Shepham A place not far from thence for the River Jordan was certainly the Eastern Limits Ver. 11. And the Coast. The Limits or Bounds Verse 11 Shall go down from Shepham to Riblah A place no doubt near to Jordan with which River the Eastern Limits go along St. Hierom takes Riblah to be Antiochia but that was in Syria to which the promised Land did not reach On the East side of Ain The Vulgar reads it the Fountain of Daphne And indeed Ain signifies a Fountain and both Jonathan and the Hierusalem Targum take Riblah for Daphne as they do Shepham before-mentioned for Apamia But this is only a vain Conceit of the Jews who would extend their Bounds beyond what God gave them For it is certain the Land of Canaan never extended to these places as Bochartus observes Lib. I. Canaan cap. 16. And therefore Daphne which was in the Suburbs of Antiochia cannot be here meant unless we understand another place mentioned by Josephus Lib. IV. de Bello Judaico cap. 1. which lay near the Lake of Semechonites through the middle of which Jordan ran And then Ain must signifie another Fountain of Jordan for it had more than one And thus David Chytraeus explains this part of the verse and the fore-going The Eastern Bounds were the River Jordan near to which were these places Enan which had its name from the Fountain of the River and Shepham not far from thence and Riblah which was also near to Jordan lying between the Lake of Semechonites and Genesaret And the border shall descend and shall reach unto the side of the Sea of Cinnereth Eastward To the East side of this Sea or Lake which had its name from a City so called XIX Josh 35. and a Country 1 Kings XV. 20. or else it gave them their names For David Chytraeus will have it called Cinnereth from the Hebrew word Cinnor which signifies an Harp or Lute the Lake being of that shape and figure about four German Miles long and two and a half broad It is called the Sea of Galilee or Tiberias in the Gospel Verse 12 Ver. 12. And the border i. e. this Eastern Border Shall go down to Jordan That is to the River which was eminently so called and was on the East part of Canaan XIII Gen. 11. for it was very small till it came to the Lake of Genesaret before-mentioned From whence being augmented by several Torrents and Rivulets it ran in a wider Stream till it fell into the Salt or Dead-Sea See Bonfrerius out of Josephus Lib. IV. de Bello Judaico cap. 1. And its goings out shall be at the Salt-Sea There was the end of this Border where it met with the Southern as was observed above v. 3. This shall be your Land with the Coasts thereof round about As was said before v. 2. therefore they were not to extend their Right any farther this being the Country he promised Abraham when he bad him lift up his Eyes and look from the place where he was Northward and Southward and Eastward and Westward and walk through the length of the Land and breadth of it which he assures to his Posterity XIII Gen. 14 15 16 17. which now he lays out for them with the exact Limits of it in all those four quarters Ver. 13. And Moses commanded the Children of Israel Verse 13 saying This is the Land which ye shall inherit by lot He repeats it so often that they might know what People they were to dispossess and with whom they might make Friendship and not extend their Desires beyond the bounds of Gods gracious Grant to them By which they were placed in a very fertile and pleasant Country bounded as appears by the foregoing description on the South v. 4 5. by great Mountains which sheltred them from the burning Air of the Desarts of Arabia on the West by the Midland Sea which sent to them refreshing Breezes and on the North by Mount Libanus which kept off the colder Blasts from that quarter and on the East the delightful Plains of Jordan abounding with Palm-trees especially about Jericho which yielded them a great Revenue Which the LORD commanded to give to the nino Tribes and to the half Tribe This he had not said plainly before though it was necessarily inferred from his granting to two Tribes and an half their Inheritance beyond Jordan Ver. 14. For the Tribe of the Children of Reuben Verse 14 according to the House of their Fathers and the Tribe of the Children of Gad c. have received their Inheritance Upon condition they performed their promise to help the rest of their Tribes to win their Inheritance in Canaan So those
Ver. 23. Of the Tribe of Simeon were fifty and nine thousand and three hundred He had six Children when they went down into Egypt and Reuben but Verse 23 four which is a plain reason of the greater increase of this Tribe than the former Verse 24 Ver. 24. Of the Children of Gad c. It is probable that this Tribe is therefore mentioned next though descended from an Hand-maid because they were to encamp and march together with Simeon under the Standard of Reuben as is ordered in the next Chapter v. 14. Verse 25 Ver. 25. Of the Tribe of Gad were forty and five thousand six hundred and fifty He had more Sons than Simeon XLVI Gen. 10 16. when they came out of Egypt and yet fewer descended from him by many Thousands than there did from Simeon of which the Reason doth not appear Verse 27 Ver. 27. Of the Tribe of Judah were threescore and fourteen thousand and six hundred It may be justly thought that Jacob's Prophecy concerning the power and strength of this Tribe XLIX Gen. 8 c. began already to be fulfilled they being far more numerous than any other Verse 28 Ver. 28. Of the Tribe of Issachar c. There is a plain account why this Tribe and Zebulun are mentioned next to Judah because they two marched under his Standard II. 4 5 7. It may be observed also that these two Tribes were more numerous than many other who had more Children when they came out of Egypt Verse 32 Ver. 32. Of the Children of Ephraim He had the preheminence given him to Manasseh long ago XLVIII Gen. 19. and therefore is here placed before him Ver. 33. Of the Tribe of Ephraim were forty thousand and five hundred Though they were hitherto but few in comparison with some other Tribes yet in this the Prophecy of Jacob was fulfilled XLVIII Verse 33 Gen. 19 20. that they were more fruitful than Manasseh there being above Eight thousand Persons more in this Tribe than in the other v. 35. Ver. 35. Of Manasseh were thirty and two thousand Verse 35 and two hundred This was now the smallest Tribe but before they got to Canaan they grew very numerous being increased above Twenty thousand XXVI 34. Ver. 37. Of the Tribe of Benjamin were thirty five Verse 37 thousand and four hundred Though Benjamin had more Children than any of the rest of his Brethren when they went down into Egypt XLVI Gen. 21. where it appears he had ten Sons yet his Tribe had the fewest Men in it of all other except Manasseh Ver. 39. Of Dan were threescore and two thousand Verse 39 and seven hundred On the contrary Dan who had but one Son when they went down into Egypt XLVI Gen. 23. grew to a greater Number than any other Tribe except Judah So variously did the Divine Providence work in fulfilling the Promise to Abraham of multiplying his Seed Ver. 41. Of Asher were forty and one thousand and Verse 41 five hundred The growth of this Tribe was not proportionable to that of some other considering how many Children Asher had at their going down into Egypt But they increased near Twelve thousand more before they got out of the Wilderness XXVI 47. Ver. 43. Of Naphtali were fifty and three thousand and four hundred The great increase of this Tribe is alledged by Bochartus to justifie his Interpretation Verse 43 of XLIX Gen. 21. by altering the punctation of the words But I have there observed that Five other Tribes were more numerous than Naphtali when this account was taken of them Verse 44 Ver. 44. These are those that were numbred This is the account that was taken of the Number of Men in each Tribe Which Moses and Aaron numbred and the Princes of Israel being twelve Men. V. 3 4 c. Each one was for the House of his Fathers Who could the better judge to what Tribe every one belonged Verse 45 46. Ver. 45 46. So were all those that were numbred c. Six hundred thousand and three thousand and five hundred and fifty By which it appears there was not one Man dead since their last Numeration Seven Months ago when they were taxed for the Tabernacle For they were at that time just so many as are here mentioned XXXVIII Exod. 26. As for Nadab and Abihu they were of the Tribe of Levi who are not here reckon'd and the Man that was stoned for Blasphemy XXIV Lev. was not of Israel by the side of his Father Verse 47 Ver. 47. But the Levites after the Tribe of their Fathers were not numbred among them There was no account taken of them among the other Tribes as it is likely they were not comprehended in the former Number XXXVIII Exod. 26. being the Persons who took the account v. 21. and had before this consecrated themselves to the LORD XXXII 29. After the Tribe of their Fathers Is an Hebraism for the Fathers of their Tribe Expressing in short what is at large said of all the rest by their Generations after their Families by the House of their Fathers v. 20 22 24 c. Ver. 48. For the LORD had spoken unto Moses Verse 48 saying He had received an Order from God when he commanded him to number the People not to number them Which he sets down that it might not be thought he favoured them because he was of their Tribe and therefore exempted them from the Wars unto which all others were engaged Ver. 49. Only thou shalt not number the Tribe of Levi Verse 49 c. Because they were intended for another Service and therefore were to be numbred by themselves There were as stout and valiant Men in this Tribe as any other which appeared sufficiently when God's Honour was to be vindicated XXXII Exod. but God did not design them for the Wars of Canaan they having imployment enough in carrying and guarding the Tabernacle And from this Example the Heathen learnt to exempt all those who ministred to their Gods from all other Services particularly from the War Strabo notes Lib. IX Geograph this Custom to have been as old as Homer's time For in all his Catalogue there is no mention of any Ship that went against Troy from Alalcomenon because that City was Sacred to Minerva who is thence called by Homer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The same is observed by Caesar Lib. VI. of the ancient Druids that they were freed from the Wars and from Tribute also Which Priviledge St. Basil challenges as belonging to the Clergy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the ancient Law Epist. CCLXIX and S. Greg. Nazianzen doth the same in many places particularly by his Letter to Julianus Epist CLXVI Verse 50 Ver. 50. But thou shalt appoint the Levites over the Tabernacle This was their work to attend continually upon the House of God Of Testimony So it is called because the Ark of the Testimony was there for which it was principally made See XXXVIII Exod. 21. and what I have noted upon
LXX translate the first Words of this Verse thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. they that encamp first towards the East shall be c. Throughout their Armies They being as we read before and as the next Verse tells us again Threescore and fourteen thousand and six hundred Men were divided into several bodies such as we now call Companies and Regiments and Brigades under their several Officers for which the Hebrews have no name but that of Army or Host And Nahshon the Son of Amminadab He who was imployed as the principal Person in that Tribe to help to take the number of them I. 7. Shall be the Captain of the Children of Judah Their Commander in Chief or General as we now speak Ver. 4. And his Host and those that were numbred of Verse 4 them were threescore and fourteen thousand c. Hitherto Moses had set down the Words that God spake to him But these are his own Words which he intermixes all along with those of God's Ver. 5. And those that do pitch next unto him These Verse 5 now are the Words of God ordering what Tribes should pitch under the Standard of Judah Shall be the Tribe of Issachar He and Zebulun were two of the Sons of Leah as well as Judah And therefore their Tribes are fitly placed under the Standard of the Tribe of Judah as likely to agree well together And Nethaneel the Son of Zur shall be Captain of the Children of Issachar It may be noted once for all that the Commanders in Chief of the several Tribes were those very Persons who were chosen to take the number of them Which shows they were Men of Eminence among them as I observed I. 4. Ver. 6. And his Host and those that were numbred Verse 6 thereof were c. These are the Words of Moses which to the end of the Chapter as I noted before are interspersed with the Orders that God gave for the forming of their Camp Ver. 9. And all that were numbred in the Camp of Verse 9 Judah were an hundred thousand c. This was the greatest Body of all other which had the Honour to be placed just before the Oracle as the strongest Guard to it The Tribe of Judah lying in the midst and the Tribes of Issachar and Zebulun on each side of his Standard unto which all their Ensigns were in some sort of Subjection Throughout their Armies This great Body was divided into several smaller Companies for which they had no other name as I observed before but that of Armies These shall first set forth When they removed from one Station to another this Camp marched first For they commonly went Eastward in which Quarter this Camp was pitch'd v. 3. Verse 10 Ver. 10. And on the South side shall be the Standard of the Camp of Reuben according to their Armies c. There is nothing to be observed concerning this Camp but that the Tribe of Reuben had the honour to pitch in the midst of it and the Tribes of Simeon and Gad lay on either side of him under his Standard or Banner just as Issachar and Zebulun did on either side of Judah And there was an evident congruity in it Simeon being his next Brother and Gad the eldest Son of Zilpah the Hand-maid of their Mother Leah XXX Gen. 10 11. Verse 14 Ver. 14. Eliasaph the Son of Reuel See Note upon I. 14. Verse 16 Ver. 16. And they shall set forth in the second rank That is when they removed the Three Tribes that were pitch'd on the East marched first under the Banner of Judah as was said before v. 9. and then followed these Three that lay on the South under the Banner of Reuben Verse 17 Ver. 17. Then the Tabernacle of the Congregation shall set forward with the Camp of the Levites After the fore-named Camps the Tabernacle was to follow between those two that went before and the Camp of Ephraim and the Camp of Dan that came after So they did not march as they lay pitch'd for then there was a Camp on each side of the Tabernacle Whereas when they marched there was none on the sides but two Camps went before it and two followed it In the midst of the Camp Not intirely in the midst for it appears by the tenth Chapter of this Book v. 17. that after the first Camp under the Standard of Judah was gone forward the Tabernacle was taken down and carried by the Sons of Gershom and Merari between the Camp of Judah and that of Reuben which next followed And then the Sanctuary set forward born by the Kohathites v. 21. who marched exactly in the midst between the Standards of Judah and Reuben and the Standards of Ephraim and Dan. As they encamp so shall they set forward This may refer either to the Levites the Sons of Kohath that as they lay encamped on the same side of the Tabernacle that the Standard of Reuben did so they should immediately march after them Compare v. 10. of this Chapter with III. 29. Or to the two Camps forenamed that they should march in the same order wherein they lay encamped Judah for instance in the midst of Issachar and Zebulun before and behind him or on each side of him Every Man in his place by their Standards Every Man keeping his place which was assigned him under the Standard to which he belong'd that there might be no disorder among them Ver. 18. And on the West side shall be the Standard of the Camp of Ephraim c. There is little to be noted here but that Ephraim is plainly preferred before Verse 18 his Brother as he was in Jacob's Blessing XLVIII Gen. 19 20. and that the two Tribes which encamped under his Standard viz. Manasseh v. 20. and Benjamin v. 22. are fitly joyned with him they being all descended from Rachel Verse 24 Ver. 24. All that were numbred of the Camp of Ephraim were an hundred and eight thousand c. This was the smallest Body of all the Four And they shall go forward in the third rank And therefore though they lay on the West side in their Encampment yet when they marched they did not go in the Rear of all but immediately behind the Tabernacle Verse 25 Ver. 25. The Standard of the Camp of Dan shall be on the North side c. This Tribe we may reasonably think was advanced to this Dignity of bearing one of the four Standards though they descended from an Hand-maid because Dan was the eldest of Jacob's Sons of that sort XXX Gen. 6. and this Tribe was the most numerous of all others except Judah as the fore-going Chapter shows v. 39. With whom the Tribes of Asher and Naphtali are fitly joyned being descended from Hand-maids also Verse 31 Ver. 31. All that were numbred in the Camp of Dan were an hundred and fifty seven thousand c. This was the greatest Body of Men except that under the Standard of Judah who marched in the Front and
a just Right to them and by that solemn Dedication which he then commanded to be made of them unto his uses XIII Exod. 2 12 13. I hallowed unto me all the First-born in Israel c. He separated them unto himself by sparing them when he killed all other First-born but only theirs Mine they shall be Both by that Act of his own and by the Act of the Children of Israel whom he commanded to Sanctifie them to him XIII Exod. 2. XXII 29. they became God's By which it appears that he had not a peculiar Right in the First-born more than in any other of their Children till their coming out of Egypt And therefore the taking of the Levites to be his instead of the First-born is no Argument that the First-born had hitherto been the Priests who ministred unto God till this Exchange of them for the Levites So our learned Dr. Lightfoot seems to infer in his Notes upon this passage The First-born saith he had been Priests till the Consecration of the Levites but now that Function must be confined to that Tribe In which words with due respect be it spoken to that excellent Man's Labours there are several Mistakes For as the Priesthood was not now confined to this Tribe but to one Family in this Tribe that of Aaron so it was not confined to it upon this occasion but he and his Sons were Consecrated before this Exchange of the Levites for the First-born Who were now given to minister unto them but had nothing to do with the Priesthood no more than the First-born had for whom they were exchanged that peculiar Right which God had in the First-born being since their coming out of Egypt Upon all which Considerations we may look upon this Exchange as an Argument rather that the First-born were not Priests in former times than that they were as the Jews fancy and as many have suggested from this very taking of the Levites to be God's portion in their stead For so Menochius himself L. II. de Repub. Jud. cap. 1. asserts from this very place Jus Sacerdotum in Levitas translatum eos loco primogenitorum acceptos quibus hoc jus debebatur that the Right of Priests was transferred to the Levites and they were accepted in stead of the First-born to whom that Right belonged In which there is not a word of truth but only that the Levites were accepted instead of the First-born who had the same Right to the Priesthood that the Levites had that is none at all I am the LORD Who may take whom I please to be imployed in my Service and think it reasonable that those whom I spared when I slew the Egyptian First-born should be mine Ver. 14. And the LORD spake unto Moses There was some reason no doubt why Moses alone is commanded to take the number of the Levites upon this occasion as he alone did v. 16. when Aaron Verse 14 is joined with him in numbring the Israelites I. 3. and in numbring the Levites themselves who were fit for service IV. 2 41 45. nay the chief of the Israelites assisted therein v. 46. And it is most probable he alone was employed to take this account because Aaron was a party in it the Money that was to be paid for so many of the first-born as exceeded the number of the Levites being given to him and to his Sons v. 48. In the Wilderness of Sinai This Command immediately followed the other in the two preceding Chapters before they departed from the Wilderness of Sinai where they had been ever since God delivered the Law to them from that Mountain Ver. 15. Number the Children of Levi after the House Verse 15 of their Fathers by their Families Just as they had numbred the rest of the Children of Israel See I. v. 2. Only those they numbred from Twenty years old and upward but the Levites from a Month old and upward Every Male from a month old and upward shalt thou number them The reason of this difference was that this was the Age at which they were to redeem their First-born XVIII 16. in whose stead the Levites were to be given unto God See v. 40. of this Chapter Ver. 16. And Moses numbred them according to the Verse 16 word of the LORD c. This Charge was committed to him alone v. 10. and he alone as I there observed performed it Ver. 17. And these were the Sons of Levi by their names Gershon and Kohath and Merari The same account we had before XLVI Gen. 11. VI Exod. 16. Verse 18 Ver. 18. And these are the Names of the Sons of Gershon by their Families Libni and Shimei The same is said VI Exod. 17. Verse 19 Ver. 19. And the Names of the Sons of Kohath c. They are mentioned in the same order in that VI Exod. 18 19. Verse 20 Ver. 20. These are the Families of the Levites according to the House of their Fathers These were the principal Families in this Tribe from whence the several Housholds and the Persons in them were derived Verse 21 22. Ver. 21 22. Of Gershon was the Family c. From his two Sons sprung two Families who had in them Seven thousand and five hundred Male Children from a Month old and upward Verse 23 Ver. 23. And the Families of the Gershonites shall pitch behind the Tabernacle westward Where the most holy place was and where they under the Standard of Ephraim lay in the great Camp of Israel II. 18. between whom and the Tabernacle this part of the Camp of Levi pitched Verse 24 Ver. 24. And the Chief of the House of the Father of the Gershonites c. The Commander in Chief as we may stile him or the principal Officer in this part of the Camp of the Levites was Eliasaph the Son of Lael but of what Family he was whether of the Libnites or Shimites is not related Verse 25 Ver. 25. And the Charge of the Sons of Gershon That which was committed peculiarly to their care In the Tabernacle of the Congregation In the things belonging to the Tabernacle for none went into it but the Priests alone Shall be the Tabernacle Not the Boards and Pillars and Bases of it for they belonged to the care of the Sons of Merari v. 36. but the Ten Curtains which were the inward Hangings of it and are called the Mischcan or Tabernacle XXVI Exod. 1. and see the next Chapter of this Book v. 25. And the Tent. The outward Curtains of Goats Hair which are called Ohel the Tent XXVI Exod. 7.12 The Covering thereof The Michse as the Hebrews call it or the Covering of the Tent were the Rams Skins and Badgers Skins which lay outmost of all upon the Curtains of Goats Hair XXVI Exod. 14. And the hanging for the Door of the Tabernacle of the Congregation The outward Vail mentioned XXVI Exod. 36. for the inward Vail which hung before the most holy Place was the Charge of the Kohathites Ver. 26.
that he may make them weary of their Lives or destroy them No his Precepts are right the whole Law is Divine and God doth not bring any Man into Judgment but for the Violation of that which was expresly commanded and which he might have been able to fulfil But the Particle Vau in the beginning of this Verse signifies sometimes as much as if as I observed upon v. 7. And so the Jews here commonly understand it If the Man be guiltless from iniquity For thus the Rule is expressed in the Gemara upon the fifth Chapter of SOTA When the Husband is free from Iniquity i. e. from Adultery then the Water tries his Wife but if he be not free i. e. be himself also guilty of Adultery then the Water hath no power to try her that is produces none of the Effects before-mentioned And so the Author of Etz Hachajim in Wagenseil upon Sota p. 595. concludes from these very words That the bitter Water then only had power when the Man was free from the Sin of which he suspected his Wife And gives this as the reason why in the latter end of the Second Temple this way of Trial ceased and was quite taken away by the Sanhedrim because the Number of Adulterers was then so great that the Water had no effect according to those words of the Prophet Hosea IV. 14. I will not punish your Daughters when they commit Whoredom nor your Spouses when they commit Adultery c. For that is another Rule of theirs When Adulterers were multiplied the bitter Waters ceased i. e. there was no Trial by them See Selden L. III. Vxor Hebr. cap. 15. p. 408. Yet the Jews seem to have continued in after Ages since their Temple was destroyed some form of dreadful Imprecations in their Synagogues for the discovery of Truth in doubtful Cases For St. Chrysostom saith he himself saw a very modest good Christian Woman brought by a sensless Fellow who also had the Name of a Christian into a Jewish Assembly whom he would have compelled to take their Oath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 concerning some things wherein he desired Satisfaction From which the Woman being rescued by St. Chrysostom's Assistance when he examined the Man about it How he came to forsake the Church and resort to their Sanhedrim his Answer was That he had been told by many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that there were more horrible Adjurations among them then among Christians Homil. I. adv Judaeos Which no doubt arose from the direful Effects of this Adjuration here prescribed if the Woman was guilty of what she was suspected CHAP. VI. Chapter VI Ver. 1. AND the LORD spake unto Moses saying Verse 1 This Law very properly follows the foregoing about Women suspected of Adultery as a Remedy against all such Sins by abstaining from Wine and all other Incitements to Lust and by devoting themselves for some time in a peculiar way to the Service of God And there seems to be a plain opposition between a Woman professing her self a Nazarite and forbearing Wine and the Care of her Hair and a Woman that loved Company and was intangled in the Love of other Men besides her Husband Ver. 2. Speak unto the Children of Israel Who Verse 2 were all concerned in this Law When either Man or Woman For Women as well as Men might make this Vow if they were at their own disposal and not under the power of their Parents or Husbands by whose Authority this Vow might be disanulled XXX 4 5 c. Shall separate themselves The Hebrew word japhli signifies the doing something extraordinary beyond the common rate of other Men. And therefore Forsterus hath well translated it when a Man or Woman shall vow a singular vow To vow a vow of a Nazarite The Hebrew word Nazar which signifies in general to separate in the Conjugation Niphal as they call it signifies to separate from others by a Profession of some special Acts of Religion Whence Nazir signifies one that beyond the common prescription of the Law dedicates not his Goods but himself to God in a peculiar kind of Sanctimony So Philo who calls this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the great Vow because he that makes it devotes not his Corn or Beasts c. but his own Self unto God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for every Man is to himself the greatest possession he hath To separate themselves unto the LORD To separate themselves for some time to a higher Measure of Purity then other Men practised that they might attend to the Service of God From whence this Vow was called Separation unto the LORD For they who observed it were holy saith Maimonides yea were placed for the present in the Dignity of the High Priest as to Sanctity being forbidden to pollute themselves for their Father or Mother as it follows afterward More Nevochim P. III. cap. 48. The Jewish Doctors are wont to be so curious in marking every word and scrupulously adhering to it that it is something strange they should allow a Father the liberty to separate his Child to be a Nazarite without its consent when the Text expresly speaks of those who separate themselves But so the Mischna determines in Sota cap. 3. sect 8. and it allows this liberty to the Father though not to the Mother though we find Hannah vowing Samuel to be a Nazarite before he was born 1 Sam. I. 10 11. See Wagenseil on that place Annot. 2 3. Ver. 3. He shall separate himself from Wine In this consisted one part of the special Sanctity of Nazarites Verse 3 that by abstinence from Wine or any thing that was Intoxicating they might the better attend to the study of the Law or other Exercises of Religion And strong Drink As Wine was made of Grapes so Shecar was a Liquor made of other Fruit as Dates c. See X. Lev. 9. To which add that other Authors call the Juyce of Dates as well as Grapes by the name of Wine Nay Pliny saith that praecipua vina the choisest Wines were made of those Dates called Caryotae which grew about Jericho though they were iniqua Capiti hurtful to the Head from whence they had their Name L. XIII Nat. Histor cap. 4. With great reason therefore such intoxicating Liquors were forbidden to those who set themselves apart to attend upon God during the time of their Separation Which justifies in part what Maimonides saith that Nazarites were advanced to the Dignity of Priests who might not drink any Wine or strong Drink in the time of their Ministration to God in the Sanctuary And shall drink no Vinegar of Wine c. For that had the same effect with Wine and strong Drink of which it was made Neither shall he drink any Liquor of Grapes i. e. Secondary Wine which was made by maceration of Grapes in Water after the Juice had been pressed out to make Wine Pliny speaks of various kinds of it L. XIV Nat. Hist cap. 10. Nor
and let Blood And whosoever suffered a Rasor to pass upon his Flesh was required to wash himself in pure Fountain-water as he shows More Nevochim P. III. cap. 47. Verse 19 Ver. 19. And the Priest shall take the sodden shoulder of the Ram. The left Shoulder which he was to take out of the Pot as it was boiling for the right Shoulder which is called the Heave-shoulder in the next Verse was the Priest's Portion by a Law made before this VII Lev. 32 33. And one unleavened Cake out of the Basket and one unleavened Wafer The Basket of unleavened Bread was ordered to be offered before v. 17. and now he orders one of the Cakes and one of the Wafers mentioned with the Bread v. 15. to be put into the Hands of the Nazarite the rest being burnt I suppose upon the Altar And shall put them into the hands of the Nazarite That he might give them to the Priest in token of his Thankfulness to him for his pains After the Hair of his Separation is shaved And his Vow in a manner compleated as it was immediately after these things were presented unto God Ver. 20. And the Priest shall wave them Both Verse 20 the sodden Shoulder and the Cake and Wafer For a Wave-offering before the LORD See VII Lev. 30 31. This is holy for the Priest with the Wave-Breast and Heave-shoulder These two were the Priests Portion out of all Peace-offerings as I observed before from VII Lev. 34. but in this Peace-offering he had moreover the other Soulder as a special Token of the Nazarite's Gratitude for his Cleansing And after that the Nazarite may drink Wine He was restored to his former Freedom to live as other Men did Ver. 21. This is the Law of the Nazarite who hath Verse 21 vowed and of his Offering to the LORD for his Separation All these things he was bound to perform betore he could be freed from his Vow though he was never so poor Besides that that his hand shall get Besides which he might add if he pleased according to his Ability According to the Vow which he vowed so must he do after the Law of his Separation There was a necessity that he should perform what his Vow obliged him unto according to the Law of Nazariteship though he might voluntarily offer what he thought good over and above his Oblation now that he was executing his Vow His Friends also might joyn with him in the Expense he was at for so many Sacrifices as he was enjoyned to offer or in providing voluntary Offerings beyond his Oblation Thus we read in XXI Acts 23 24. that St. Paul by the advice of St. James and the Elders Jerusalem was at charges with certain Men that had this Vow upon them and purified himself with them Which was agreeable to the Custom among the Jews as Petitus and others have observed out of Maimonides who says others might help the Nazarites to fulfil their Vow and partake with them in it by abstaining from Wine c. for some time as they did Verse 22 Ver. 22. And the LORD spake unto Moses saying The Tabernacle having been lately erected to which the People were all to resort they are invited to it by the Directions here given how they should be dismissed when they came to Worship Which was in such a manner that they might not doubt as R. Menachem glosses but the Divine Benediction would come down upon them from his Celestial Habitation when they devoutly frequented his House here on Earth Verse 23 Ver. 23. Speak unto Aaron and unto his Sons saying Whose proper Office it was to bless the People as it was to offer their Sacrifices and burn Incense XXI Deut. 5. On this wise he shall bless the Children of Israel saying unto them Standing so that they might be seen with their Hands lifted up and spread speaking with a loud voice with their Faces towards the People See IX Lev. 22. Verse 24 Ver. 24. The LORD bless thee and keep thee Give thee all good things and preserve thee from all evil Ver. 25. The LORD make his Face to shine upon thee and be gracious unto thee Be favourable unto thee and pardon all thy Sins Ver. 26. The LORD lift up his Countanance upon Verse 25 thee and give thee Peace Be always with thee to Verse 26 protect and defend thee and give thee perfect Happiness When this Benediction was said in the Sanctuary if we may believe the Jews it was but one and pronounced without any Pause The People keeping a profound Silence but out of the Sanctuary in their Synagogues they made three of it the Priest pausing at the end of every Verse and the People saying Amen to each of them In the Sanctuary also they pronounced the name JEHOVAH which is here thrice repeated but in their Synagogues they used some other name instead of it So the Mischna Sotae Cap. VII Sect. 6. The Repetition of this Name three times in these three Verses and that with a different Accent in each of them as R. Menachem observes hath made the Jews themselves think there is some Mystery in it Which we understand though they do not For it may well be lookt upon by us as having respect to the three Persons in the Blessed Trinity who are one God from whom all Blessings slow unto us 2 Corinth XIII 14. This Mystery as Luther wisely expresses it upon Psalm V. is here occultè insinuatum secretly insinuated though not plainly revealed And it is not hard to show if this were a place for it how properly God the Father may be said to bless and keep us and God the Son to be gracious unto us and God the Holy Ghost to give us Peace Ver. 27. And they shall put my Name upon the Children of Israel To put God's Name upon them was to commend them to his Almighty Goodness or to bless them by calling upon the LORD and beseeching him to bestow all that they desired upon them And I will bless them The Jews from hence observe that God's Blessing in some sort depends upon the Blessing of the Priest Which they thought so necessary that such Priests as were admitted to no other Service might perform this for fear the People should at any time want it So Chaskuin upon XXI Deut. 5. and Jalkut as Wagenseil observes upon the Gemara Sotae Cap. VII Sect. 26. whose words are these The Blessing pronounced by a Priest who hath some blemish in his Body ought to be accounted legitimate Jonathan here paraphrases these words in this manner I will bless them in my WORD or by my WORD Which is the Apostolical Doctrine that God the Father hath blessed us with all Spiritual Blessings in or by Christ 1 Ephes 3. Who with the Holy Ghost is most high in the Glory of God the Father And it is observable that the Jews think it utterly unlawful to add a fourth Benediction to these three though they find one in the
Words and Actions as Mr. Selden observes Lib. III. de Synedr Cap. XIII n. 1. and Cap. XV. n. 3. And so among the Latins the word inchoare when applied to Sacred things signifies to perfect or consummate as Servius observes upon the VI Aenead And both Civil and Sacred Initiations were accompanied with great Joy and Gladness But this is not to be understood as if the Dedication of the Altar was the setting of it apart and sanctifying it for the Service of God which had been done before and VII days spent therein XXIX Exod. 27. VIII Lev. 11. but as the word properly signifies the beginning to use it after it had been so sanctified In the day that it was anointed At the time that it was set apart and all other things ordered for the Safe-guard of the Tabernacle See v. 1. Even the Princes offered their Offering Presented their Gifts as the LXX translate it which they desired God would accept upon this great occasion Before the Altar At the Door of the Tabernacle near unto which the Altar stood XL Exod. 6. for he speaks of the Altar of Burnt-offerings Verse 11 Ver. 11. And the LORD said unto Moses they shall offer their Offering Here again Rasi observes that Moses would not receive their Offering till he knew the Mind of God Who directed in what manner and order their Gifts should be offered to him Each Prince on his day for the dedication of the Altar This made the Dedication a very long Solemnity which continued twelve days When these XII days began it is not easie to determine but it seems to me a very reasonable Computation which Fortunatus Scacchus hath made of this whole business Myrothec Sacr. Elaeochrism Lib. 2. Cap. LXXIV Where he supposes that the Tabernacle being erected the first Day of the first Month of the second Year after they came out of Egypt seven days were spent in the Consecration of it and of the Altar c. And on the eighth day Moses began to consecrate Aaron and his Sons which lasted VII days longer Then the fifteenth day of that Month was the first day of Unleavened Bread Which God commanded as we read here Chap. IX to be observed in the first Month and lasted till the Two and twentieth The rest of the Month we may well suppose was spent in giving receiving and delivering the Laws mentioned in the Book of Leviticus After which on the first day of the second Month he began to number the People according to the Command in the beginning of this Book Which may be supposed to have lasted three days And then on the fourth the Levites were numbred On the next day we may suppose they were offered to God and given unto the Priests on the sixth Day they were expiated and consecrated as we read in the next Chapter And on the seventh Day their several Charges were parted among them of which we read Chapter IV. After which the Princes he supposes began to offer upon the eighth Day of the second Month for the Dedication of the Altar which lasted till the nineteenth Day inclusively and on the twentieth Day of this Month they removed as we read X. 11 12. from Sinai to the Wilderness of Paran Ver. 12. And he that offered his Offering the first Verse 12 day By God's order no doubt Was Nahshon the Son of Amminadab of the Tribe of Judah He held the principal place among the Israelites being the NASI the Prince or Captain as we translate it II Numb 3. of the Children of Judah who had the first Standard And yet he alone of all the Twelve great Men here mentioned is not called NASI Prince of Judah as all the rest are called Princes of their Tribe v. 18 24 30 c. but simply Nahshon of the Tribe of Judah The Jews give several reasons of it but perhaps it was because he offered first which was honour enough and there needed no more to be said of him Ver. 13. And his Offering was one silver Charger Verse 13 the weight thereof was an hundred and thirty Shekels and one silver Bowl c. It appears by the Metal that this Charger and Bowl were of that they were for the use of the Altar of Burnt-offerings in the outward Court for all the Vessels of the Sanctuary were of Gold And I take this Charger or broad Dish or Platter to have been offered for receiving the Flesh which was offered at the Altar or the fine Flour for the Meat-offerings And the Bowl received the Blood or was used for pouring out Wine Both of them were full of fine Flour mingled with Oyl for a Meat-offering Which was to attend upon the Burnt-offering and the Peace-offering mentioned v. 15 17. See IV. 7. where I observed it was not difficult to procure this fine Flour in the Wilderness Verse 14 Ver. 14. One Spoon of ten Shekels of Gold full of Incense Both the Metal of which it was made and that which was in it shows this Spoon was for the use of the Golden Altar in the Sanctuary Which may incline one to think that both Altars were now dedicated that is first began to be used for the Service of the whole Congregation See v. 88. Verse 15 Ver. 15. One young Bullock one Ram one Lamb of the first Year There are so many Sacrifices mentioned here and in the two following Verses no less than XXI in all that together with the silver and gold Plate they look like too great a Present to be made out of one Man's private estate And therefore some have thought that the rest of the great Men of the Tribe of Judah joyned with Nahshon in their Contributions towards it and that it was offered in his own and their Names For a Burnt-offering This is first mentioned as being the most ancient sort of Sacrifice long before we read of any other and being an Acknowledgment of God's Soveraign Dominion over all Verse 16 Ver. 16. One Kid of the Goats for a Sin-offering This in all likelyhood was first offered though the other be first mentioned For in the next Chapter we find the Burnt-offering enjoyned in the first place but the Sin-offering offered before it VIII 8 12. The like I observed before VI. 16. See there Ver. 17. And for a Sacrifice of Peace-offerings two Oxen five Rams five He-goats five Lambs of the first year These Sacrifices were more numerous than the Burnt-offering or the Sin-offering because the Verse 17 Priests and the Princes and as many of the People as they invited had their share of them and feasted before the LORD upon them with great rejoycing Which Custom as Mr. Selden observes flowed from hence to the Gentiles who dedicated their Altars and Temples and Statues c. with much ceremony and the ancient Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with more sumptuous Sacrifices See L. III. de Synedriis cap. 14. num 111. Where he also shows how they were dedicated among the Romans with Plays
kindled greatly Which brake forth shortly after in a great plague upon them v. 34. And Moses also was displeased The same Phrase with that v. 1. It was evil in the Eyes of Moses i. e. Grieved him so that it made him wish himself rid of the burden of their Government Ver. 11. And Moses said unto the LORD I suppose Verse 11 he went into the Sanctuary to bewail himself and pray God to relieve him See v. 24. Wherefore hast thou afflicted thy Servant By committing this People to his charge And wherefore have I not sound favour in thy sight By granting the Prayer which he made at his first Call to this Office III Exod. 2. IV. 10. That thou layest the burden of this People upon me i. e. The principal Care of such an untractable Multitude upon one Man to whom they resorted in all difficulties XVIII Exod. 22 26. Ver. 12. Have I conceived all this People have I begotten Verse 12 them Are they my Children that I should make provision for the Satisfaction of all their desires That thou hast said unto me carry them in thy Bosom as a nursing Father beareth the sucking Child unto the Land c. Take a tender Care of them as a Parent doth of a little Infant and conduct them into Canaan c. Nothing can more lively express the Affection that Princes ought to have for their People if they have any regard to the Will of God than this Divine Command to Moses Verse 13 Ver. 13. Whence should I have Flesh to give unto all this People It is impossible for me to do what they desire For they weep unto me saying Give us Flesh that we may eat And yet they will not be satisfied without it He seems to be affected with their weeping as the most loving Parents are with the Tears of a sucking Child when it cries for that which they have not for it Verse 14 Ver. 14. I am not able to bear all this People alone because it is too heavy for me Let me have some joined to me to take part of this trouble with me and help to manage them in such Mutinies For it is beyond my strength to undergo the toil of hearing all their Complaints and appeasing their Tumults Some may imagine there was no reason for this request he having several Persons already appointed to assist him by the advice of Jethro XVIII Exod. But Rasi thinks those Men were burnt in the late fire because they did not suppress the beginning of this Mutiny v. 1. but perhaps join in it And so Bechai But the true account is rather this that they were set only to hear and judge smaller Causes all the weighty and difficult Causes being still brought before Moses to whom also the last Appeal was made in every Cause Which was so great a burden that he complained for want of help in those great things which lay wholly upon him See XVIII Exod. 22. Ver. 15. And if thou deal thus with me If thou leavest me still alone in this Office Kill me I pray thee out of hand if I have found favour in thy sight I shall take it for the greatest Verse 15 kindness to be taken immediately out of the World And let me not see my wretchedness Live to be a most miserable Creature For to see wretchedness is to be wretched as to see death is to dye LXXXIX Psal 48. And what could make such a tender Parent as he was more miserable than their perpetual untowardness together with the intolerable trouble it would give him to see heavy Punishments continually befal them for their Wickedness and the Enemies of God rejoyce in their Ruin Ver. 16. And the LORD said unto Moses Here Verse 16 is not the least sign of God's dislike of this Expostulation of Moses with God which seems not very dutiful because the Vexation this stubborn People gave him was really so great that he had reason to desire to be eased of it Which though he begged with much earnestness yet no doubt with no less submission to God's holy Will and Pleasure Gather unto me These words are interpreted by the Talmudists as if the meaning was that they may be a Sanhedrim to my Land i. e. a holy perpetual standing Council to endure throughout all Generations For wheresoever we meet with this word li unto me they think it signifies a thing to be established by God to all Generations The Examples they alledge of it are these of Aaron and his Sons he saith they shall Minister unto me in the Priests Office XXVIII Exod. 41. and of the Levites he saith III Numb 12. they shall be mine or unto me and of the Israelites XXV Lev. 55. unto me the Children of Israel are Servants The like is said of the First-born III Numb 13. of the Sanctuary XXV Exod. 18. of the Altar XX Exod. 24. of the holy Oyntment XXX Exod. 31. of the Kingdom of David 1 Sam. XVI 1. and of the Sacrifices XXVIII Numb 2. See Mr. Selden Lib. II. de Synedr cap. 4. n. 2. Seventy Men of the Elders of Israel This Number is generally thought both by the Jewish and Christian Writers to be derived from the number of Persons that came down into Egypt with Jacob XLVI Gen. 27. Who saith R. Bechai were a kind of Prototype of this Number in future Ages For hence they were governed by so many Elders when they were in Egypt III Exod. 16. where there is no mention indeed made of Seventy but he gathers it from what followed and those were the Seventy whom we find at the giving of the Law a little after they came out of Egypt XXIV Exod. 1 9. who are called Nobles or Great Men v. 11. So that this number was not now first constituted but rather continued and confirmed Whom thou knowest to be the Elders of the People For there were many Elders out of whom Seventy were chosen See XXIV Exod. 1. And Officers over them That is saith R. Bechai whom thou knowest to be of the number of those who when they were Officers in Egypt over the People were beaten by Pharaoh's Task-masters V Exod. 14. Which word Officers doth not signifie Men that had any Judicial Authority but only such as had an inspection over others to see they did their Work and to give an account of them But it is very likely they were Persons of note who had more than ordinary Understanding and Breeding which advanced them to be Inspectors of others And therefore the Talmudists rightly observe that the Elders and Officers here mentioned were no doubt Men of Wisdom and Judgment who knew how to use the Authority that was committed to them And it is not improbable as some of them affirm that they were chosen out of those lesser Courts which were erected by the Advice of Jethro See Selden in the same place sect 5. who at large confutes Baronius and others who say that the number of the great Sanhedrim which
to the Holy Scriptures will look upon this rather as the Holy Ghost's Testimony concerning Moses than Moses his Testimony concerning himself But we have to do now with a Generation of Men that write upon these Books not as of a Divine Original but as they do upon common Authors Verse 4 Ver. 4. And the LORD spake suddenly unto Moses The LORD thought fit immediately to stifle their Insurrection which might have proved dangerous if it had spread among the People And perhaps the word suddenly may relate to the manner of his calling to them with a quick and hasty Speech as one provoked and highly displeased And unto Aaron and unto Miriam It is uncertain whether God spake to these two by himself or by Moses It is likely he spake to them all together while Aaron and Miriam were expostulating with Moses with such a Voice as he was wont to use when he communicated his Mind to the Prophets Come out ye three It is likely they were all in Moses his Tent whether his Brother and Sister were come to utter their Complaint Vnto the Tabernacle of the Congregation Which was God's Tent wherein he dwelt among them and from whence he declared his Will to them And they came out To attend the Pleasure of the Divine Majesty Ver. 5. And the LORD came down in the Pillar Verse 5 of the Cloud The Pillar of the Cloud which was wont to be over the most Holy Place where the LORD dwelt came down from thence and the SCHECHINAH in it and stood as it here follows at the Door of the Tabernacle And stood in the Door of the Tabernacle As if it would leave them as it did v. 9. And called Aaron and Miriam Who were at some distance I suppose and are commanded to come nearer And they came forth From the place where they were when he called them Or from Moses with whom they came from his Tent and now are required to stand by themselves Ver. 6. And he said hear now my Words Mark Verse 6 what I say to you If there be a Prophet among you This doth not make a doubt of it but supposes that they and others among the People were Prophets as they alledged v. 2. But God would have them to understand that he did not communicate his Mind to all alike nor in the same way and manner but so differently as to make a remarkable Distinction between Moses and others Whether there were in those days Men brought up and trained to be made fit to receive this Gift bestow'd upon them we do not know But in after-times it is evident there were certain Colledges of Prophets wherein Disciples of Prophets were bred Such was that 1 Sam. X. 5. and XIX 18 c. Where the Sons of the Prophets i. e. their Scholars or Disciples as Jonathan always translates that Phrase were brought up And for the most part such only were endued with this Gift who were so educated in those Schools in the Study of the Law and in Piety Though God did not tye himself to dispense it to such Persons alone but bestowed it upon whom he pleased though they had spent no time in those Schools of the Prophets This is apparent from that Proverbial Speech Is Saul also among the Prophets 1 Sam. X. 11. XIX 24. This had been no wonder as this Saying imports if it had been usual for Persons to be endowed with this Gift on a sudden who was never bred up in such a course as led to it But to show how this came to pass one of that place answered and said as it there follows v. 12. but who is their Father That is this is no such wonder if it be considered who makes Men Prophets viz. God who is the Father of all the Children of the Prophets and therefore may inspire whom he pleases As he now might have imparted this Gift to meaner Persons than the LXX Elders presented to him by Moses and made them equal if he had thought fit with Aaron and Miriam For this was the case of Amos in after-ages who was no Prophet nor a Prophet's Son as he himself relates VII 14. but an Herds-man and yet the LORD took him as he followed the Flock and bad him go and prophesie unto his People Israel I the LORD Here is the Original of Prophecy will make my self known unto him communicate to him my Mind and Will In a Vision This was one way of discovering his Mind to the Prophets by representing things to them when they were awake as if they had perceived them by their Senses which at that time were lockt up and all transacted by a Divine Operation upon their Mind and Imagination See XV Gen. 1. and VIII Dan. 1 15. Abarbinel mentions one who observes that the word Marah the Plural of which Maroth signifies Looking-Glasses in XXXVIII Exod. 8. is a different word from Mareh which is commonly used for Vision And teaches us that all the Representations made in this way to the Prophets were only as the Images of things represented in a Glass in which we behold the outward Shape or Shadow as we may call it but not the thing it self And so St. Paul seems to have understood this word if he alludes to this place as Grotius thinks he doth when he saith now we see 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through a Glass darkly 1 Corinth XIII 12. And I will speak unto him in a Dream This was another way of God's revealing his Mind unto the Prophets in their sleep when they not only saw things represented them but also heard a voice And both these seem some times to have been mixed together or to have followed one another as in XVI Gen. 12. VII Dan. 1. VIII 16 17 18. And it is a Maxim among the Jews that there is no degree of Prophecy but it is comprehended under one of these Visions or Dreams So Maimonides in his More Nevochim P. II. cap. 32. and 41. and again cap. 43. where he saith There is no third degree of Prophecy besides these two For as for that Divine Spirit which moved Men to speak of things appertaining to the Knowledge of God and his Praises beyond their natural or acquired Abilities without seeing any Figures asleep or awake though with Assurance that it was from God they will not have it called Prophecy though they acknowledge those Parts of Scripture which they call Cetuvim and the LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. written by the Holy Ghost were indited by that Divine Spirit and therefore we cannot reasonably deny those that were inspired by it the Name of Prophets Verse 7 Ver. 7. My Servant Moses is not so Doth not receive my Mind in either of those ways and therefore is more than a Prophet having it communicated to him in a far more noble and clearer manner which placed him in a higher rank than any other inspired Person Who is faithful in all my House Because he was intrusted so
killed all this People As one Man On a sudden with one stroke as if they had all but one Life Then the Nations which have heard the fame of thee will speak saying Of which the Nations that have heard the fore-named Report of thy Majesty will make this Construction Verse 16 Ver. 16. Because the LORD was not able to bring this People into the Land Because he whom they called Omnipotent was indeed defective in his Power which at last failed him so that he could not compleat what he had undertaken Which he sware unto them XV Gen. 17 18. XXIV 7. Therefore he hath slain them in the Wilderness Killed them all before they came to the Land he had solemnly promised to them for that was an easier work than to make good his word The sum of this Argument is That it would be a great disparagement to the Divine Majesty if he now destroyed this Nation because his Enemies would conclude he had deluded them with false Promises which he wanted Power to effect Ver. 17. And now I beseech thee let the Power of Verse 17 my LORD be great That is let it appear to be unlimited by bringing them into the Land which he sware to give them v. 16. or by pardoning their Sin which had provoked his high displeasure against them v. 11. For by Power may be meant either that which is properly called by that Name viz. his Omnipotence which can conquer all Opposition Or his Mercy and Clemency in overcoming his Anger and bearing with an ungrateful People Which agrees very well with what follows but both tend to the same meaning that he would not destroy them but bestow the Land of Canaan upon them according to his Intentions According as thou hast spoken saying Which will be suitable to thy blessed Nature which thou didst proclaim to me when thy Glory passed by me XXXI Exod. 22. XXXIV 5 6. Ver. 18. The LORD is long-suffering and of great Verse 18 mercy forgiving iniquity c. In these very words though something more largely God proclaim'd his Name to Moses when he showed him his Glory XXXIV Exod. 6 7. where they are explained And by no means clearing the guilty Even these words according to the Interpretation I have there given of them are a plain Argument to move the Divine Goodness to pardon their Sin But the next words visiting the iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children c. seem to be directly contrary to the intention of his Petition till it be considered that they had not now committed Idolatry against which Sin God in these words particularly declares his Severity and that Moses did not now plead for an absolute Pardon without any Punishment at all but only that he would not destroy the whole Nation as one Man and utterly disinherit them as he seemed resolved to do v. 12 15. This Threatning he hoped his gracious Nature would incline him to revoke notwithstanding which he might visit the Sin of the Fathers upon the Children unto the third and fourth Generation That is punish them and their Posterity a long time And so this latter part of the verse is to be interpreted according to what I observed XXXIV Exod. 7. in making desolate he will not make quite desolate though he visit the iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children c. Verse 19 Ver. 19. Pardon I beseech thee the Iniquity of this People So far as not to destroy them utterly According to the greatness of thy Mercy Which God himself had proclaimed v. 18. As thou hast forgiven this People from Egypt even until now This looks like an Argument against them for they having provoked him so often as they had done since they came out of Egypt in the space of one Year and a little more See v. 22. and been as often forgiven it might seem more reasonable that he should now punish them and not forgive them any more But he appeals to that long-suffering Goodness which he mentions as the prime Character of the Divine Nature v. 18. which though it had been exercised by them many ways yet he hoped would still bear longer with them Ver. 20. And the LORD said I have pardoned according to thy word Granted thy desire not to destroy them utterly and altogether v. 12 15. Ver. 21. But as truly as I live all the Earth shall be Verse 20 filled with the Glory of the LORD In the Hebrew Verse 21 the words run plainly thus As true as I live and that all the Earth shall be or hath been filled with the Glory of the LORD For so the Egyptians themselves confessed v. 14. that the fame of it was come to them and afterwards he did many more wonderful things when he brought them into Canaan Unto which if these words be taken in the Future Tense he hath respect when he saith As true as that he would in a most glorious manner subdue the Canaanites not one of these murmuring Israelites should come into that good Land Ver. 22. Because all these Men c. The sence Verse 22 would have been clear if we had left out the word because as we might have done the Hebrew Particle ki being sometimes only an expletive or if we had translated it that as it signifies in XXII Gen. 17. and many other places For the meaning plainly is though the words be something intricate That all the Men of whom he is speaking should perish and not one of them come into Canaan Which have seen my Glory Which appeared to them in the Cloud upon Mount Sinai and resided in the Tabernacle And my Miracles which I did in Egypt Mentioned in the IV VII VIIIth and following Chapters of the Book of Exodus And in the Wilderness Where he divided the Red Sea for them to pass through on dry Land and gave them Manna constantly from Heaven with Water out of a Rock which followed them whithersoever they went c. And have tempted me now these ten times That is very oft as this Phrase ten times signifies XXXI Gen. 7 41. IV Nehem. 12. XIX Job 3. But some of the Hebrews will not be satisfied with this Explication but indeavour to find out precisely just ten Provocations of which they were guilty Though to do this they are forced to begin with one which fell out before they came to the Red Sea XIV Exod. 11 12. and all the other Nine they find in the Wilderness See Pirke Avoth cap. 5. and Paulus Fagius his Scholia upon it with Genebrard upon the LXXVIII Psal v. 46. Mr. Mede hath observed that to tempt God in Scripture Language is to provoke him by some presumptuous Fact to anger as it were to try whether he will punish or not or in fewer words to dare God Book I. Discourse 26. p. 153. And the following words in the next verse justifie this Notion in this place And have not hearkned to my Voice This seems particularly to refer to their Disobedience when he
the way and manner of dying this Colour Which being not easie to compass the Jews at this day instead of this Colour are contented to use White See J. Wagenseil upon the Gemara Sotae cap. 2. Annot. 8. Verse 39 Ver. 39 And it shall be to you for a Fringe Or rather it that is the Riband shall be unto you upon the Fringe or to the Fringe added to it to make it the more noted being of a distinct Colour from the Fringe which was of the same Colour with the Garment The Jews say in the Selvedge of which these Fringes were was their upper Garments called Talish being a kind of Cloak That ye may look upon it and remember all the Commandments of the LORD i. e. When they looked down this Fringe and Lace which they saw there might put them in mind of the Duty they owed to God who commanded this not for it self but to remember them that they were a holy People bound to God by peculiar Laws which they should be as careful to observe as to wear these Fringes Hence it was that they who pretended to greater Sanctity than others enlarged these Fringes as our Saviour observes XXIII Matth. 5. i. e. extended them to a greater length so that they swept the Ground which made them more observable as Braunius notes out of the Gemara of Gittim Lib. I. de Vest. Sacerd. Hebr. cap. 3. n. 16. Where he also observes That their Superstition grew so much as with great Subtilty to contrive that these Fringes might be so wrought as to denote the DCXIII Precepts contained in the Law of Moses and so they might be put in mind of ALL the Commandments of the LORD See Buxtorf also in the place before-named and Bishop Montagu in his Apparatus cap. 7. n. 32. And do them Which was the end of remembring them as that was of their wearing them though the Jews proved so foolish as to pride themselves in the bare use of these Ornaments i. e. in their being a select People which ought to have made them more careful to do the whole Will of God And that ye seek not after your own heart Follow not your own Thoughts and Imaginations as Maimonides expounds it More Nevoch P. I. cap. 39. or rather your own desires Or the word seek may import inventing other ways of serving God according to their own fansies And your own eyes Nor follow the Example of others as they were prone to do it appears by their making the Golden Calf that they might have such a visible Representation of God as other Nations were wont to have After which ye use to go a whoring It appears by this that the foregoing words have a peculiar regard to the Worship of God which he speaks of in the beginning of this Chapter from which when they departed they are said to go a whoring from God unto whom they were espoused Verse 40 Ver. 40. That ye may remember and do all my Commandments He would not have them think there was any Sanctity to be placed merely in wearing these Fringes but they were to be considered only as Instruments to call their Duty to remembrance and excite them to the performance of it And so the Jews themselves sometimes call them as Buxtorf observes in the place before-named Means and Instruments of observing the Precepts And be holy unto your God By observing all his Commandments especially keeping themselves from Idols Verse 41 Ver. 41. I am the LORD your God Their Sovereign and Benefactor Which brought you out of the Land of Egypt He remembers them of the most peculiar Obligation they had upon them to observe this Law and all the rest of his Precepts To be your God They were Redeemed by him on purpose when none else could deliver them that they might acknowledge no other God but only him to whom they owed their Liberty to serve him I am the LORD your God This seems to be repeated to encourage them to hope that he would still continue good to them notwithstanding the Rebellion of their Fathers for which he had condemned them to die in the Wilderness Where he would preserve them their Children and at last bring them into Canaan if they would follow his Directions CHAP. XVI Chapter XVI WE have nothing here said to direct us to the Time and Place when and where this new Rebellion hapned but it is very probable as I said XV. 1. that it was in some part of the latter half of the second Year after they came out of Egypt before they removed from Kadesh-Barnea Ver. 1. Now Korah the Son of Izhar the Son of Verse 1 Kohath the Son of Levi. By this it is evident that Korah was Cosin German as we speak to Moses and Aaron for Izhar Korah's Father was the second Son of Kohath as Amram the Father of Moses and Aaron was his eldest Son VI Exod. 18. 1 Chron. VI. 2. And Dathan and Abiram the Sons of Eliab This Eliab was the Son of Pallu the second Son of Reuben as appears from XXVI 5 8 9. And On the Son of Peleth He also was descended from Reuben as well as Dathan and Abiram as the next words tell us Sons of Reuben but of what Family it doth not appear Nor is this Man any where again mentioned no not in the progress of this Conspiracy which inclines me to think that though he entred into it yet he afterward withdrew himself or was so inconsiderable that no notice was taken of him Took Men. The word Men is not in the Hebrew but simply Korah took Which word took being the first word in the Hebrew Text the whole verse may be thus translated Korah the Son of Izhar c. took both Dathan and Abiram the Sons of Eliab and On the Son of Peleth c. That is he drew these into a Conspiracy with him Or he betook himself to a Party as the Chaldee understands it he divided himself with an intention that is to make a Sedition But the Sence is the same if we follow our Translation he took Men that is Complices or Associates with him in his Rebellion By which we may understand the Two hundred and fifty mentioned in the next verse Verse 2 Ver. 2. And they rose up Made an Insurrection in which Korah seems to have been the Ring-leader having drawn the rest into it Which he might the more easily do because the Kohathites and Reubenites lay encamped on the very same side of the Tabernacle II Numb 10. compared with III. 29. by which means they had opportunity often to Conspire together Whence R. Solomon makes this Reflection Wo to the Wicked and wo to his Neighbour The cause of the Insurrection is generally thought both by Jews and Christians to have been that Korah could not brook the Preferment of Aaron and his Family so high above the rest of the Levites who were made only their Ministers III. 6 9. VIII 19. For he thought this was too
These words relate only to the Trespass-offerings immediately before-named which were attended with a recompense of the Wrongs done either unto the LORD V Lev. 15 16. or unto their Neighbours VI Lev. 5. V Numb 8 9. Shall be most holy for thee and for thy Sons To be used by none else as it follows in the next verse Verse 10 Ver. 10. In the most holy place shalt thou eat it i. e. In the place where they performed their Sacred Office in that part of the Tabernacle next the Sanctuary which is called most holy in comparison with the rest which were further off because none might enter into it but the Priests alone See Note upon VI Lev. 16. where it is said expresly It shall be eaten in the holy place in the Court of the Tabernacle of the Congregation And see v. 26. and X. 12 13. Every Male shall eat it And none else as the places fore-mentioned expresly limit it II Lev. 3 10. VI. 18 29. VII 6. It shall be holy unto thee Peculiarly separated from the use of all other Persons but only Aaron and his Sons Verse 11 Ver. 11. And this is thine Now he mentions the less holy things as before the most holy which he bestowed upon him and his whole Family The Heave-offerings of their Gift with all the Wave-offerings of the Children of Israel That is the Breast of their Peace-offerings which are here called their Gift which was waved before the LORD and the right Shoulder heaved and then given to the Priest for his Portion VII Lev. 30 31 32 33 34. And so was the right Shoulder of the Ram which was offered for the Nazarite VI Numb 19 20. I have given them unto thee and unto thy Sons and to thy Daughters with thee c. These were not confined to the Males only but might be eaten by their Daughters also X Lev. 14. Every one that is clean in thy House shall eat of it Not only their Wives and their Daughters that were not married but those who were Divorced or Widows and returned to their Fathers House without Children or had Children begotten by a Priest See XXII Lev. 13. together with their Servants also whether bought with their Money or born in their House though not hired Servants or mere Sojourners XXII Lev. 10 11. But these things were to be eaten in a clean place X Lev. 14. somewhere within the Camp as afterward in Jerusalem XII Deut. 6 7 17 18. And no unclean Person permitted to eat of them VII Lev. 20 21. XXII 4. And besides when any Israelite killed an Ox a Sheep or a Goat for his own use he was bound to give the Priest the Shoulder the two Cheeks and the Maw as the Jews understand XVIII Deut. 3. Ver. 12. All the best of the Oyl and all the best of Verse 12 the Wine c. The Greek translate the Hebrew word Cheleb fat by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 marrow XLV Gen. 18. but here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the First-fruits of the Oyl c. signifying these First-fruits were to be of the very best of all the things here mentioned which were to be brought in the beginning of the Vintage and of the Harvest The precise quantity of which is no where determined but they say it was at least the sixtieth part of the whole See XXII Exod. 29. XXIII 19. XVIII Deut. 4. where he speaks of the First-fruits which every private Man was to offer beside which there was a First-fruits offered in the Name of the whole Congregation XXIII Lev. 10 17. All which belonged to the Priests as a Reward of their Service The First-fruits of them which they shall offer unto the LORD them have I given thee Our Mr. Thorndike thus distinguishes the two sorts of First-fruits mentioned here and in other places The one was to be taken by the Priests at the Barn and Wine-Press as he thinks that here spoken of was The other was to be brought to the Sanctuary viz. those mentioned XXII and XXIII Exod. and XXVI Deut. 1 2. The quantity of either of them being in the moderate account a fiftieth part as S. Hierom determines upon XLV Ezek. which is agreeable to the Jewish Constitutions in Maimonides of First-fruits cap. 2. and of Separations cap. 3. But the Scripture XLV Ezek. 13. requires only the sixtieth part See Rights of the Church in a Christian State p. 210. Verse 13 Ver. 13. And whatsoever is first ripe in the Land which they shall bring unto the LORD shall be thine Some take this to signifie the First-fruits of all other things besides Corn Wine and Oyl mentioned in the foregoing Verse But it being a different word from that which we translate First-fruits viz. Biccurim not Reshith it is most likely he here intends either the things first ripe as we translate it before the rest of the Harvest and Vintage or those voluntary Offerings of this sort which any one pleased to make which seem to be intended in these words which they shall bring unto the LORD i. e. of their own good will over and above the ordinary First-fruits The Jews generally understand by Biccurim such things as are ripe before the rest either in the Field as elsewhere whether they were Wheat Barley or any other sort of Grain or Figs Grapes Pomegranets Olives or Dates which they bound about with a Rush and said Let this be for the First-fruits Which every Man might bring in what measure he pleased none being appointed by the Law Every one that is clean in thy House shall eat of it The whole Family of the Priests if they were under no pollution See v. 11. Ver. 14. Every thing devoted in Israel shall be thine Verse 14 Of those things which the Hebrews call Cherem a thing devoted Moses speaks in XXVII Lev. 21 28. And they were either simply devoted in such words as these Let this thing be a Cherem Or with an addition determining it to a certain use Let this be a Cherem offered by me for holy uses The first sort were wholly the Priests but the latter were employed about the Temple or the Vessels of it or the Priests Garments And these devoted things which became the Priests Portion differed in this from Free-will-offerings that every thing which was offered as a Cherem might be eaten only by the Priests in the Holy Place but other Free-will-offerings by the whole Family in any clean place Ver. 15. Every thing that openeth the Matrix in all Verse 15 Flesh which they bring unto the LORD whether it be of Men or Beasts shall be thine That which first came out of the Womb of any Creature was to be the Priests if it were a Male. If a Female were the First-born and a Male followed next that was not the Priests because it did not open the Womb as the Hebrews expound it See XIII Exod. 2. Nevertheless the First-born of Man shalt thou surely redeem and the Firstling of unclean Beasts shalt
by above thirty seven thousand than they were at the last numbring See I. 23. Many of them it is probable being in the same Crime with Zimri and the Plague falling most heavily upon this Tribe whom Moses in the XXXIII Deuteronomy doth not bless Verse 15 16 17. Ver. 15 16 17. And the Children of Gad after their Families They are reckoned here next to the Simeonites because they lay encamped next to them under the Standard of Reuben II Numb 10 11 c. Of Zephon the Family of the Zephonites c. They are reckoned up in the same manner XLVI Gen. 16. only he that is here called Zephon is there called Ziphion and Osni is there called Ezbon and Arod called Arodi Verse 18 Ver. 18. These are the Families of the Children of Gad according to those that were numbred of them forty thousand and five hundred This Tribe also was less by above five thousand than before I. 25. Verse 19 Ver. 19. The Sons of Judah Er and Onan These were his eldest Sons but died without Issue before the Children of Israel went down into Egypt as it here follows See XXXVIII Gen. 1 2 c. Verse 20 Ver. 20. And the Sons of Judah after their Families were c. Now he reckons those of his Sons who made Families which were three as we read also XLVI Gen. 12. Ver. 21. And the Sons of Pharez were Hezron c. Here he numbers two of Judah's Grand-children as he did one of Reuben's v. 6. only with this difference that these two made Families in Israel which Verse 21 his Grand-son did not they being substituted instead of Er and Onan who died without Children Or rather the Family of Pharez growing very great there was a sub-division made of it into the other Families who were all still Pharezites for Pharez had no other Children but there two to make a Family of that Name but called by these two Names of Hesronites and Hamulites because the Pharezites were grown too big to be but one Family and therefore parted into two Ver. 22. These are the Families of Judah according Verse 22 to those that were numbred of them threescore and sixteen thousand and five hundred This Tribe was very numerous before above all the rest And now this new Generation which sprung up instead of the old who were all destroyed except Caleb exceeded them two thousand So faithful was God to his Promise that this should be a most powerful Tribe See I Numb 27. Ver. 23. The Sons of Issachar after their Families Verse 23 He and Zebulon are mentioned next because they lay encamped together under the Standard of Judah See II Numb 5 6 7. Of Tola the Family of the Tolaites A wonderful fruitful Family and very valiant there being of this one Family Twenty two thousand and six hundred Men in the days of David 1 Chron. VII 2. Of Pua the Family of the Punites He is called Phuvah XLVI Gen. 13. Ver. 24. Of Jashub Who is called Job in the same place Ver. 25. Threescore and four thousand and three hundred Verse 24 This Tribe also was exceedingly increased Verse 25 being near Ten thousand more now than they were at their first numbring I. 29. II. 6. Verse 26 Ver. 26. Of the Sons of Zebulun after their Families There is no change in their Names which are the same without any alteration as when they went into Egypt XLVI Gen. 14. Verse 27 Ver. 27. Those that were numbred of them threescore thousand and five hundred This Tribe likewise was increased above Three thousand since the former numbring See I. 31. And so the whole Camp of Judah was mightily augmented as that of Reuben was diminished Verse 28 Ver. 28. The Sons of Joseph after their Families See XLVI Gen. 20. Verse 29 Ver. 29. Of the Sons of Manasseh of Machir c. This was his only Son but those descended from him by an usual manner of speaking are called Manasseh's Sons also being his Grand-sons Some think indeed that Manasseh had other Sons which they gather from L Gen. 22. but if he had their Families were extinct for none but Machir and his Posterity had any Inheritance in the Land of Canaan XVII Josh 1 2. where the Grand-children are called his Children Machir begat Gilead and of Gilead came the Family of the Gileadites They were not a distinct Family from the Machirites but the very same Machir having no other Son but Gilead Therefore that Family which at first was called Machirites were afterwards called Gileadites or they were indifferently called either by the one or the other Ver. 30. These are the Sons of Gilead of Jeezer Called Abiezer XVII Josh 2. The Family of the Jeezreites c. The Posterity of Gilead grew so numerous that his Sons made Families Verse 30 and not only Housholds So that the name of Gileadites being too general to distinguish them all they were called at length by the name of his Sons Ver. 31 32. Of Asriel the Family of the Asrielites Verse 31 32. c. This and all the rest that follow are mentioned as the Son 's of Gilead for each of whose Children there was a Lot in the Land of Canaan XVII Josh 2. Ver. 33. And Zelophead the Son of Hepher had no Verse 33 Sons but Daughters c. Whose Case is considered in the next and in the last Chapter of this Book where they are ordered to have an Inheritance among their Father's Brethren but to marry into their own Tribe And their Posterity I suppose were called after their Grand-father's name Hepherites for such a Family there was as Moses tells us in the foregoing verse Ver. 34. Numbred of them fifty two thousand and Verse 34 seven hundred If this be compared with I. 35. it will appear that this Tribe was increased above Twenty thousand Which is the greatest Increase of any other and made good the Prophecy of Jacob concerning the Children of Joseph XLIX Gen. 22. Ver. 35. These are the Sons of Ephraim after their Verse 35 Families He is mentioned after Manesseh because he was his younger Brother yet in their Encampment this Tribe had the Standard under which Manasseh marched II Numb 18 c. Of Shuthelah the Family of the Shuthalites c. He is mentioned first also in 1 Chron. VII 20. Where the next Son Becher is called Bered and Tahan called Tahath For time is wont to make great Alterations in the names of Persons and Places Verse 36 Ver. 36. These are the Sons of Shuthelah of Eran the Family of the Eranites He had it seems but one Son whose Children after the usual manner of speaking before noted were called the Sons of Shuthelah though they made a distinct Family under the name of Eranites Verse 37 Ver. 37. Those that were numbred of them thirty two thousand and five hundred Though this proved a very numerous Tribe in future times yet for the present they were fewer by eight thousand than they were in the
former numbring I. 33. which makes Moses's Prophecy a little after this the more remarkable XXXIII Deut. 17. where he makes the Ephramites Ten to One in comparison with the Manassites Verse 38 Ver. 38. The Sons of Benjamin after their Families This Tribe also was under the Standard of Ephraim and therefore mentioned here together with him and Manasseh When they went into Egypt the Sons of Benjamin were no less than Ten XLVI Gen. 21. Half of which either had no Children or they were all Extinct before this time for here are only Five named Of Belah the Family of the Belaites c. The two first Bela and Ashbel are there named as they are here but the next Ahiram is there called Ehi and in 1 Chron. VIII 1. Ahara such an Alteration doth Time make in Names Ver. 39. Of Shupham c. He is called Muppim in XLVI Gen. 21. and Hupham is there called Huppim Ver. 40. The Sons of Bela were Ard and Naaman Verse 39 Though five of his Sons were dead without Issue Verse 40 yet two of his Grand-sons descended from his eldest Son made distinct Families in Israel And the Son of one of them was called after the name of his Uncle the youngest Son of Benjamin XLVI Gen. 21. whose name was Ard and in I Chron. VIII 3. by a small transposition of Letters is called Adar Ver. 41. There were numbred of them forty five thousand Verse 41 and six hundred This Tribe was grown to be Ten thousand more than they were at the last numbring I. 37. Ver. 42. These are the Sons of Dan. Thus he speaks Verse 42 though he had but one See v. 8. Of Shuham Called Hushim by a transposition of Letters XLVI Gen. 23. Just as the same Tree is called Almugim 1 Kings X. 8. and Algumim 2 Chron. II. 8. And the same City in which Joshua was buried called Timnath-Serach XXIV Josh 30. and Timnath-Cheres II Judg. 9. And to come still nearer the same Man is called Rechum XII Nehem. 3. and Cherim v. 15. of the same Chapter These are the Families of Dan after their Families That is from these Shuhamites came all the rest of the Families of this Tribe which are not here mentioned but into which this Family was sub-divided when it grew very great as it appears from the next words Ver. 43. All the Families of the Shuhamites This Verse 43 shows there were more than one of them who had names from some of the Children of Shuham Were threescore and four thousand and four hundred A vast number to spring from one Man when Benjamin who had ten Sons wanted almost twenty thousand of this number which is Seventeen hundred more than were in this Tribe at the last numbring I. 39. Verse 44 Ver. 44. Of the Children of Asher after their Families c. They all retain the same names which they had when they went into Egypt XLVI Gen. 17. Only he that is here called Jeshui is there called Ishui and another Son there mentioned is here omitted his Family I suppose being quite extinct Verse 45 Ver. 45. Of the Sons of Beriah c. Instead of him whose Family was quite lost the youngest Son of Asher Beriah had two Families sprung from him Verse 46 Ver. 46. And the name of the Daughter of Asher was Sarah Or Serah as she is called XLVI Gen. 17. He doth not say that a Family sprang from her which Corn. Bertramus cap. 6. de Republ. Jud. seems to think probable instead of some that were lost but she was a Woman it is likely as eminent in this Tribe as any of her Brethren for some Vertue or other Insomuch that the Cabbalists in the ancient Book Zohar parting the heavenly Region where the Souls of holy Women are into four Palaces make four great Women to be a kind of Presidents of them viz. Pharaoh's Daughter who educated Moses and this Serah the Daughter of Asher with Jochabed the Mother of Moses and Deborah the famous Prophetess See Selden Lib. II. de Jure Nat. Gent. cap. 4. Ver. 47. Were fifty and three thousand and four hundred This Tribe also fructified exceedingly wanting but an Hundred of Twelve thousand more than they were at the last numbring I. 41. Verse 47 Ver. 48 49. Of the Sons of Naphtali after their Families Verse 48 49. c. There are four of them whose Names were not all changed since they went into Egypt See XLVI Gen. 24. Ver. 50. Were forty five thousand and four hundred Verse 50 They wanted Eight thousand of their number I Numb 43. These two Tribes Asher and Naphtali are mentioned together with Dan because they were encamped under his Standard II Numb 25 26 c. Ver. 51. These were the numbred of the Children of Verse 51 Israel six hundred thousand and a thousand seven hundred and fifty That is the whole Number amounted to this Sum which was but Eighteen hundred and twenty less than they were when they were last numbred Thirty eight year ago I. 46. So great was the Goodness of God and such his Faithfulness to his Word that when he destroyed all the former Generation who were above Twenty years old he multiplyed their Posterity so fast in that space of time as to make them equal in a manner to those that went before them Ver. 52. And the LORD spake unto Moses saying Verse 52 After the People were thus numbred and every Family and the Persons it contained exactly known then the LORD ordered as follows Ver. 53. Vnto these i. e. These Families before-named Verse 53 The Land shall be divided i. e. The Land of Canaan into which they were going For an Inheritance Not to be alienated from those Families According to the number of Names Of the Persons in the several Families from Twenty years old and upward v. 2. So that Minors who had not attained the Age of Twenty years when this account was taken the Jews say were not to have any share in the Land though they were come to that Age at the time of the distribution of it among them But those Minors had Possessions as Heirs of their Fathers according to the Families Verse 54 Ver. 54. To many thou shalt give the more Inheritance and to few thou shalt give the less Inheritance That is order Joshua to assign them a share in the Land proportionable to the number of Persons in every Tribe Some of which were far greater than others and therefore to have more Land proportionble to the largeness of their Families But this was not measured merely by the number of Acres as we speak but by the goodness of the Soil for a little Ground in a rich Country would maintain more Persons than twice as much in a barren So Josephus Lib. V. Antiq. cap. 1. where after he had said that Joshua made a Distribution of the Land 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the bigness of each Tribe he adds that in doing this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
rather to insinuate that he was not guilty of such a Crime as might make Men justly forfeit what they had for their Children as well as for themselves For all the Family of Dathan and Abiram perished and it is taken notice of as a singular Mercy that the Children of Korah did not XXVI 10 11. But died in his own Sin i. e. For his own Sin which God had declared should not affect the Children XIV 31. For to that General Sin in which all the People were engaged these words seem to refer And so it was his own sin not with respect to the rest of the People for they were all alike guilty but with respect to his Children it being a personal Guilt in which they were not concerned The Jews commonly say that Zelophehad was the Man that was stoned for gathering Sticks on the Sabbath-day For which they have no authority but a fancy of R. Aquiba who is sharply reproved for it by another considerable Rabbi who saith it is a rash Judgment for if it were true since the Scripture conceals it he ought not to have revealed it but hath reproached a just Man for any thing that appears See Selden Lib. II. de Synedr cap. 1. sect 9. And had no Son As was found when the People were numbred XXVI 33. Ver. 4. Why should the name of our Father be done Verse 4 away from among his Family One Family of the Tribe of Manasseh viz. the Hepherites being in danger to be wholly extinguished R. Judah will have the word Name in this place to signifie as much as hereditary possession and so he thinks it signifies XXV Deut. 6. as Mr. Selden observes out of Pesikta Lib. de Successionibus cap. 14. Because he hath no Son Merely for want of Issue-Male when he hath left many Daughters Give unto us therefore a possession among the Brethren of our Father Let us come in for a share among those that are descended from Manasseh Which if they did the Name of their Father could not be thereby preserved but by the Son of one of these Daughters taking upon him not the Name of his Father that begat him but of his Mother's Grand-father viz. Hepher which was ordered afterwards by a general Law XXV Deut. 6. Verse 5 Ver. 5. And Moses brought their Cause before the LORD This was too difficult a Cause though there seemed to be a great deal of Reason on their side to be judged by the great Court before-mentioned and therefore it was referred to Moses alone as other weighty Causes used to be See XV. 32. XXV 4. for neither Eleazar nor any other Person before whom it was brought v. 2. are here mentioned as the Judges of this matter And he durst not judge it though the equity appeared very plain without bringing it before the LORD for his direction which he could have upon all important occasions XXV Exod. 22. VII Numb 89. Verse 6 Ver. 6. And the LORD spake unto Moses saying This shows that the Cause was devolved upon Moses alone for the LORD tells him and no other Person how it should be determined Verse 7 Ver. 7. The Daughters of Zelophehad c. The LORD approves of their Claim and gives a Sentence in their favour Thou shalt surely give them a possession of an inheritance among their Father's Brethren Because the word for them in the Hebrew is of the Masculine Gender some think it signifies they were to be considered as if they had been Sons And thou shalt cause the Inheritance of their Father to pass unto them So that they were to enjoy what would have faln to his share had he been alive ob indutam defuncti patris personam as the Lawyers speak because they stood in the place of their dead Father and represented his Person And accordingly they put in their Claim at the Division of the Land and had their Portion therein according to this Decision XVII Josh 2 3 c. How the Portion was divided among them according to the Hebrew Doctors Mr. Selden shows at large in his Book de Successionibus in bona defunctii cap. 23. Ver. 8. And thou shall speak unto the Children of Israel Verse 8 saying Upon this occasion he passes this special Case into a General Law to be hereafter observed If a Man die and have no Son then ye shall cause his Inheritance to pass unto his Daughter It being a reason as Maimonides observes More Nevochim P. III. cap. 42. that what a Man leaves should come to his Family and to those who are next of Kin to him for the nearer any Person is to us we are inclined by natural affection to have the greater regard to him But all this is to be understood of Land as for Money and moveable Goods which were of his own getting the Father might dispose of them by his Will to whom he pleased Ver. 9. And if he have no Daughter then ye shall give his Inheritance unto his Brethren Unless his Father was alive who undoubtedly the Jews say was Verse 9 the next Heir but not mentioned because it was not necessary Or as some say because it was too sad a thing to speak of a Fathers burying all his Children without Issue See Selden de Success in bona defuncti cap. 12. Where he observes that according to the Rule v. 11. it must come to the Father because he is nearest of kin to it And therefore the Jews interpret this as if Moses had said If he have Daughter he shall give his inheritance to the next of his Kindred to his Father for instance and afterwards ye shall give it to his Brethren i. e. the Children of his Father And the same is to be said of the Grandchildren unto whom the Brethren of a Father dying without issue are heirs For the Grandfather stands in the same relation to a Father that a Father doth to his Son Verse 11 Ver. 11. And if his Father have no Brethren then ye shall give it to his Kinsman that is next of Kin to him of his Family and he shall possess it To his Brothers Children or to those who are descended from them or from his Fathers ' Brethren But no consideration was to be had of his Mother's Kindred as the Jewish Lawyers say who could never be capable of the Inheritance Which they gather not only from these words which determine the Inheritance to his Family i. e. the Family of the Father before-mentioned not to the Family of the Mother but from the frequent mention of the Father of Mischpachoth which we translate Families or rather Kindreds of the Fathers in the Books of Moses Chronicles Ezra and others From whence this solemn Maxim of the Talmudists The Family or Kindred of the Mother is never called by the name of Kindred That is it hath not the effect of a Kindred in Successions to Inheritances Which is the same with that in the ancient Book Siphri Families follow the Fathers as Mr. Selden
observes in the place before-mentioned Who in the next Chapter cap. XIII gives an example drawn up by Maimonides of such a Succession out of the holy Scriptures Amram had two Sons Aaron and Moses as we read VI Exod. 20. If they had both died without Issue Miriam their Sister had inherited And if she had died in like manner the Inheritance of the Family would have reverted to Kohath the Father of Amram Or he being dead to his three Sons the Brethren of Amram viz. Izhar Hebron and Vzziel as the Heirs of Kohath And there would have been no consideration of Primogeniture both because none of them was the First-born and because the Inheritance was not in the Possession of their Father at the time of his Death c. And it shall be unto the Children of Israel a Statute of judgment c. A Law whereby to determine such Matters in future times and to be observed inviolably So that no Father should have power to make any other Settlement but if either by Word or Writing he declared his will to be that his Son should not inherit his Act was null and void As the Jewish Lawyers resolve from these very words a Statute or Decree of Judgment i. e. as I said a Rule whereby to Judge of Succession into Inheritances If therefore a Man made a Will wherein he declared his Daughter or Brethren c. should not inherit in case he had no Son it was void because contrary to this Law See Selden de Successionibus cap. 24. Ver. 12. And the LORD said unto Moses get thee up into this Mountain Abarim Either these words were spoken after all that follows here and in the Verse 12 Book of Deuteronomy or they were repeated again when he had repeated his Laws and inforced them by many excellent Discourses and taught them that famous Song XXXII Deut. where in the conclusion of it v. 49. it is said that very day he bad him go up this Mount Abarim And there we learn also that Abarim was a long Tract of Mountains one of which was called Nebo and the very top of it called Pisgah See XXXIV Deut. 1. And see the Land which I have given to the Children of Israel Take a full view of it as he did from that high neighbouring Mountain III Deut. 17. XXXIV 1 2 3 4. Verse 13 Ver. 13. And when thou hast seen it thou also shalt be gathered unto thy People as Aaron thy Brother was gathered Upon Mount Hor as we read in this Book XX. 23 24. Verse 14 Ver. 14. For ye rebelled against my Commandment in the Desert of Zin c. See Chap. XX. 1 12 24. where all this verse is explained Verse 15 Ver. 15. And Moses spake unto the LORD saying He did not speak those words which follow immediately after God bad him go up Mount Abarim and die but first desired he might be permitted to go over Jordan c. III Deut. 24 25 26. Unless we can think that he made the Prayer there mentioned as soon as the Sentence was passed upon him at the Waters of Meribah which doth not seem so likely Verse 16 Ver. 16. Let the LORD the God of the Spirits of all Flesh c. As soon as he found that God was resolved he should not conduct the People into Canaan he was concerned for nothing but for a fitting Person to take that Charge upon him For he had a most generous publick Spirit wholly intent upon the good of this People The God of the Spirits of all Flesh Who hast not only made the Souls of all Men but knowest their Dispositions See XVI 22. and understandest who are fit for this weighty Employment Set a Man over the Congregation To be chief Ruler and Governour of the People in my place Ver. 17. Which may go out before them and which Verse 17 may come in Before them and which may lead them out and which may bring them in If the latter part of these words be not a mere repetition of the former as is usual then the one relates to their Conduct in War and the other to the management of all their Civil Affairs And both of them seem to be a Metaphor from Shepherds watching over their Flocks That the Congregation of the LORD be not as Sheep which have no Shepherd Having none to govern and take care of them This is a description of the most miserable condition a People can be in and became a Proverb among the Hebrews 1 Kings 22.17 X Zachariah 2. XIII 7. IX Matth. 36. Ver. 18. And the LORD said unto Moses take thee Verse 18 Joshua the Son of Nun. Who had been a long time Servant unto Moses and attended upon his Person XXIV Exod. 13. well known to Moses and perfectly acquainted with his administration A Man in whom is the Spirit Of Courage and Prudence and the fear of God with all other Gifts necessary in an excellent Governour Among which Onkelos reckons the Spirit of Prophecy which is not unlikely And lay thine hand upon him Which was a Ceremony usual in Blessing XLVIII Gen. 14 c. and in setting Men apart and Consecrating them to an Office VIII 10. Upon which followed a more abundant measure of the Spirit as appears from XXXIV Deut. 9. Verse 19 Ver. 19. And set him before Eleazar the Priest and before all the Congregation Being all assembled for this purpose that all might acknowledge him for the designed Successor of Moses and be Witnesses of all that Moses commanded him And give him a charge in their sight He told him before them all what God expected from him and bad him not be afraid to execute it See XXXI Deut. 7 8. Where he sets down the words of this Charge unto which God presently after added one of his own v. 14 15 23. Verse 20 Ver. 20. And thou shalt put some of thy honour upon him Communicate some of thy Authority to him at present and not let him be any longer as thy Minister but as an associate in the Government The word we translate honour being glory in the Hebrew it made Onkelos and other Hebrew Doctors imagine these words have respect to that Splendor which shone in Moses his Face after he came down from the Mount Some of which they suppose was imparted unto Joshua to make him appear more venerable in the Eyes of the People And R. Menachem observes that it is not said impart thy glory but of thy glory to him From whence came that ancient saying the Face of Moses shone like the Sun but Joshua's only like the Moon This might have passed for Truth or at least that hereby was meant some great increase of illustrious Gifts of Mind which procured him such reverence as Moses had if it had been said that God put some of Moses his glory upon him whereas Moses is commanded to do it which makes the first sence most reasonable That all the Congregation of Israel may be obedient
Men who are in the same Circumstances with those Women whom he here directs in their Vows Whom he considers in a threefold state before they are married and after marriage and in their widowhood And bind her self by a bond By an Oath wherewith she confirms her Vow as it seems to be interpreted v. 10 13. Being in her fathers house in her youth That is being a part of his Family and still under his government and not married For the Father's power lasts no longer as Grotius observes Lib. II. de Jure Belli Pacis cap. 5. n. 7. In which condition likewise are all Sons who remain in their Father's Family undisposed of in marriage And all Servants who are manifestly in subjection to their Masters and therefore could no more resolve to do what they pleased then the Women here mentioned Ver. 4. And her father heareth her vow and her bond wherewith she hath bound herself The first of these may relate to her simple Vow and the next to an Oath wherewith she binds it to make it firmer Verse 4 Which her Father is supposed to hear either when she spake the words or when she acquainted him with her Vow as in duty she was bound to do And her father shall hold his peace at her If he did not declare that he disallowed what she had promised it was supposed he consented to it Unless he said he would take time to consider and neither allow nor disallow for the present in which case in all reason she was to wait for his Resolution Then all her Vows shall stand c. It was not in his power afterward to disannul any of them if he did not contradict them when he was told of them or after the time he had taken for deliberation Ver. 5. But if her father disallow her in the day that he heareth As soon as he comes acquainted with it Not any of her vows or her bonds wherewith she hath Verse 5 bound her soul shall stand Though she had bound her Vows with an Oath they were not to be performed when her Father had declared his will to the contrary And the LORD shall forgive her The not performing her Vow shall not be imputed to her as a sin Because her father disallowed her Whose consent was supposed to be necessary before the Vow could be binding she being while a part of his Family under his power and not her own Some have fancied that when her Father was dead the Vow revived because then she was at her own disposal but it is plain her Father wholly disannulled the Vow when he did not approve it so that it could not recover a force it never had being made without his consent The same is to be said of a Guardian who was supposed to be in the place of a Father when he died and left his Children to his care And this power was fit to be reserved to Parents as a late learned Man Puffendorf observes not only least Women in their imprudent years should undo themselves by vowing more than their Fortunes could bear but also least the Paternal Estate should be burdened by such Vows or the necessary Affairs of the Family hindred So that this power did not flow from positive Laws but from natural Reason no Body that is subject to another having any right to dispose of those things which are under that power to which they are subject Verse 6 Ver. 6. And if she had at all an husband when she vowed Was a married Woman or espoused to an Husband though still in her Father's House as it appears from v. 10. this must be interpreted when she made this Vow then it was to be considered not what her Father but her Husband under whose power she now was should determine about it Or uttered ought out of her lips wherewith she bound her soul Said any thing which she confirmed by an Oath Verse 7 Ver. 7. And her husband heard it Either was present when she spake it or she told it him afterwards And he held his peace in the day that he heard it Said nothing to signifie his disallowance of it See v. 4. Then her vows shall stand c. As before v. 4. Ver. 8. But if her husband disallow her c. See v. 5. where there is the same Case of a Daughter under the power of her Father as here of a Wife under the power of his Husband Verse 8 Ver. 9. But every vow of a Widow or of her that is Verse 9 divorced wherewith she hath bound her soul shall stand against her The reason of this is so plain that one would think it needed not to have been mentioned because such Women were wholly in their own power being free from their Husbands Therefore it is very probable he speaks here of a Widow or divorced Woman returned to her Father's House as the manner frequently was XXII Lev. 13. who might be supposed to recover his ancient power over her to disannul her Vows as he might before she was married Which is here absolutely condemned for though she lived with him she was her own Woman as we now speak and might dispose of her self and her Goods as she pleased without his consent Ver. 10. And if she vowed in her husbands house or Verse 10 bound her soul by a bond with an oath i. e. Engaged herself in a Vow and perhaps confirmed it with an Oath while she and her Husband lived together or before she was divorced from him Ver. 11. And her husband heard it and held his peace Verse 11 and disallowed it not then all her vows shall stand c. She was bound in this case to make them good after he was dead or she was divorced from him Ver. 12. But if her husband hath utterly made them Verse 12 void on the day he heard them c. Then when she was in her own power by his death or by a divorce she was not bound to make them good because when she made them her Husband under whose power she then was had utterly made them void Ver. 13. Every vow and every binding oath to afflict the soul This shows what the matter of these Vows frequently was to abstain from such or such Meats though in themselves lawful or to fast and eat nothing at all on other days as well as on the great Day of Expiation which was the only Fast ordained by the Law of Moses Her husband may establish it or her husband may make it void There is an excellent Discourse of Maimonides in his More Nevochim P. III. cap. 48. to show that this is most reasonable where he observes that as the Law prohibited some Meats so pious People sometimes vowed to forbear such as were not prohibited that by this means they might learn Contentment with a little or Continence and give a check to an immoderate Appetite From whence the saying among the Doctors That Vows are the hedge of Separation i. e. a great guard
to an holy Life But since through the vehemence of their Affections and Passions many Women are prone to act unadvisedly if Vows were wholly in their power great Inconveniences Dissentions and Confusions might arise in Families whilst this sort of Meat is lawful to the Husband but not to the Wife this permitted to the Daughter but prohibited to the Mother For which reason saith he this Authority was given to the Governours of Families in all things to order them as they saw would be for their profit or detriment Verse 14 Ver. 14. But if her husband Or For if her Husband Altogether hold his peace at her from day to day When he knew what she had vowed as it follows in the end of the verse He establisheth all her vows c. His silence was to be interpreted a Consent to allow what she vowed There was no need to add the contrary which is here to be understood that if he said he did not allow them then they should not bind her Ver. 15. But if he shall any ways make them void Verse 15 after he hath heard them Hinder her from performing her Vow after he had given his consent by saying nothing against it when he heard her make the Vow Then he shall bear her iniquity God will punish him not her for not performing the Vow Paulus Fagius thinks the meaning is that if the first day he heard of her vow he did not disannul it but attempted to do it the next day or the third day after he should bear the blame if the Vow was not made good Ver. 16. These are the Statutes which the LORD Verse 16 commanded Moses between a Man and his Wife between the Father and his Daughter being yet in her youth in her Fathers House It is likely some differences arose in some Families about these Matters and therefore these Laws were made for the settling the power of Husbands over their Wives and Parents over their Children while they were young and continued a part of their Family CHAP. XXXI Chapter XXXI Verse 1 Ver. 1. AND the LORD spake unto Moses saying Not long before his death as appears from the next verse Verse 2 Ver. 2. Avenge the Children of Israel of the Midianites This had been commanded before but no time set for it which now is determined The Moabites are not mentioned because the Midianites seem to have been the first or chief Contrivers of that Mischief which befel the Israelites by the enticements of their Women See XXV 17 18. Afterward shalt thou be gathered unto thy People When he had given a few other Directions concerning their possessing the Countries already conquered and the Land of Canaan XXXII XXXIV XXXV and providing for the Levites there XXXVI God had warned him to prepare for his death before this XXVII 12. but he first let him have the satisfaction of seeing the Midianites punished and gave him some time to settle the Publick Affairs and to make also a long Exhortation to the Israelites to observe all that he had commanded them Verse 3 Ver. 3. And Moses spake unto the People saying He speedily put this Command in Execution which might possibly be in the ninth Month of the fortieth Year Arm some of your selves unto the War He doth not at first determine the number but as many as pleased might offer themselves voluntarily to be ready to obey him And let them go against the Midianites and avenge the LORD of Midian The LORD bad him avenge the Children of Israel v. 2. but Moses bids them avenge the LORD for they had the same interest and were both injured at the same time and by the same means And as God was so gracious as to resent the evil done to Israel so Moses in duty and gratitude to God thought himself bound rather to consider the dishonour that was done to him Whose War this was not only because undertaken by his command but in his quarrel with those who had drawn the Israelites to Idolatry and for the sake of his People Ver. 4. Of every Tribe a thousand throughout all the Verse 4 Tribes of Israel shall ye send to the War When a great many perhaps all the People appeared ready to go to War he ordered that only a select number should be sent of a Thousand out of each of the Twelve Tribes Ver. 5. So there were delivered out of the Thousands Verse 5 of Israel a Thousand of every Tribe Their Officers pickt out this number from among the rest or they were chosen by lot for this Service or they stept out and offered themselves Voluntiers as we speak which the 27th verse may seem to countenance where they are called those that took the War upon them Twelve Thousand armed for war This was but a small number compared with the whole Nation of the Midianites who had five Kings v. 8. But God would have them rely more upon him than upon the multitude of an Host and let them see by their Success against this People that they needed not fear the Conquest of Canaan Ver. 6. And Moses sent them to the war a Thousand of every Tribe He gave them their Commission to fight the Midianites Verse 6 Them and Phinehas the Son of Eleazar the Priest Who was not their Commander in Chief or their General as we now speak for it did not belong to the Priestly Office to conduct Armies and it is said expresly in the words following he went with the holy Instruments c. to be ready to perform all such Sacred Offices as should be required by the General who it is most likely was Joshua It is true indeed that Phineas was a Man of great Courage and had lately performed a singular piece of Service which had won him great Reputation This hath made some think he was the fitter to go and to avenge the LORD of Midian as he had begun to do XXV 8. In after times also in the days of the Maccabees who were of the Family of the Priests the Armies of Israel were led by them against their Enemies But then it must be considered that they were also the Supream Governours of the People and there were no other With the holy Instruments By which Jonathan understands the Vrim and Thummim which some think Phineas carried along with him wherewith to consult the Divine Majesty in case of any difficulty that might arise about the management of the War And to make out this they suppose Eleazar to be old and crazy or labouring under some Infirmity which was the reason that Phineas his Son was substituted in his room to perform this Office See our very learned Dr. Spencer Dissert de Vrim Thummim cap. 6. sect 2. But this may be justly doubted whether Phineas being only the Son of the High-Priest and not yet capable of that Office could be substituted to perform this great Charge which belonged to the High-Priest alone Nor do we find any warrant for consulting the
their Wrists or Hands XXIV Gen. 47. XVI Ezek. 11. Rings They were Ornaments of the Fingers XLI Gen. 42. III Esther 10. Ear-rings Nothing more common in those Countries especially among the Midianites and Ishmaelites as we find VIII Judges 24 25 26. where there is a different word used to express this Ornament yet the word Hagil here used certainly signifying something round and the Ornaments incompassing the Arms and other parts being before-mentioned it cannot well be thought to denote any thing but Rings in their Ears And so we translate it XVI Ezek. 12. And Tablets Some Ornaments about the Breasts See XXXV Exod. 22. To make an Atonement for our Souls before the LORD For the Guilt of which Moses accused them v. 14. or any other which they had contracted in the War Verse 52 Ver. 52. And all the Gold of the Offering which they offered up to the LORD c. was sixteen thousand seven hundred and fifty shekels It hath been observed before that Three thousand Shekels made a Talent and therefore their Offering amounted to above Five Talents and an half Verse 53 Ver. 53. For the men of war had taken spoil every man for himself Or rather had taken the Spoil mentioned v. 12. of which part of the Booty no Division was made between the Men of War and the People v. 26. but they kept it intirely to themselves and now very gratefully made a Present of a considerable part of it to the LORD See v. 12. where the word Spoil is used strictly for a part of the Booty distinct from the other two the Captives and the Prey and so it signifies here Verse 54 Ver. 54. And Moses and Eleazar the Priest took the Gold This was said before v. 51. and therefore the sence here is that having received it as an Offering to the LORD they brought it into the Tabernacle of the Congregation as it here follows in the conclusion of this verse Of the Captains of thousands and of hundreds It was not their Oblation only but the Oblation of every one of the Men of War v. 50 51. But the Commanders received it from the common Soldiers and presented it unto Moses and Eleazar from the whole Host And brought it into the Tabernacle for a Memorial for the Children of Israel before the LORD That God might be mindful of them i. e. propitious to them who were so grateful to him for his Benefits The Hierusalem Targum upon v. 50. fancies these Officers to have represented to Moses their great Chastity when they made this Offering saying We broke into the Chambers and Closets of the Kings of Midian and there we saw their beautiful and charming Daughters from whom we took the golden Ornaments upon their Heads and in their Ears and on their Arms their Fingers and Breasts but did not cast a wanton look upon one of them And therefore they hoped this Oblation they made would rise up for them in the Day of the great Judgment as a Reconciliation for their Souls before the LORD CHAP. XXXII Chapter XXXII Ver. 1. NOW the Children of Reuben and the Children Verse 1 of Gad. Here the Children of Reuben who was Jacob's First-born are mentioned in the first place but in the rest of the Chapter v. 2 6 25 29 32. the Children of Gad are constantly first mentioned because they were the first Movers of that which follows as the Hebrews conjecture Had a very great multitude of Cattle More than any other Tribe And when they saw the Land of Jazer Which was lately taken from the Amorites after they had slain Sihon their King XXI 32. This City and Country belonging to it were near to the Spring of the River Arnon and there is frequent mention of it in the Book of Joshua and in Isaiah XVI 8 9. and Jeremiah XLVIII 34. And the Land of Gilead A noble Country so called from the Mountain Gilead which bounded it on the East as Jordan did on the West the River Jabbok on the South and Mount Libanus on the North. That behold the place was a place of Cattle Which in the fourth verse is called a Land of Cattle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the LXX translate it fit for feeding of Cattle being famous for Pasture and other grazing Ground For Bashan was in this Country III Deut. 12 13. where every one knows the largest and fattest Oxen were bred XXII Psal 12. and Sheep also XXXII Deut. 14. and therefore is joyned with Gilead VII Micah 14. which being woody and mountainous in some part of it was no less famous for breeding Goats See IV Cantic 1. which delight to brouse on such Trees as Mount Gilead abounded withal See Bochartus in his Hierozoicon P. I. Lib. II. cap. 51. Verse 2 Ver. 2. And the Children of Gad and the Children of Reuben Neither here nor in the foregoing verse is there any mention of the Children of Manasseh half of which had their Portion in this Country because they were neither the Contrivers nor Movers of this but it is most probable had a lot assigned them here because these Countries were too much for the other two Tribes alone and they of Manasseh had much Cattle also Came and spake unto Moses and Eleazar and the Princes of the Congregation Who were wont often to assemble to dispatch Publick Affairs XXVII 2. XXX 1. Ver. 3. Ataroth A place which was part of the Verse 3 Portion of Gad as appears by v. 34. And Dibon This is mentioned as a place in the Kingdom of Sihon XXI 30. and was given to Gad also as we read v. 34. And Jazer See v. 1. and 35. where we find this also belonged unto Gad. And Nimrah Called Beth-Nimrah v. 36. and given to the same Tribe It is usual I observed before for the Hebrews to cut off the first part of the Names of places for brevity sake XXV 1. but this place is elsewhere called at length Beth-Nimrah XIII Josh 27. where it is mentioned as a part of Sihon's Kingdom and signifies as much as Domus Pardorum an Habitation of Leopards So Bochartus who observes that when both Isaiah XV. 6. and Jeremiah XLVIII 34. speak of the Waters of Nimrim they mean this very place Which was given to Gad but in the days of those Prophets mentioned as in the Country of the Moabites who had usurped upon their Neighbours the Gadites and taken this Place from them as they had done Jazer also as appears from the places above-mentioned XVI Isa 8 9. XLVIII Jerem. 34. And Heshbon The principal City of Sihon King of the Amorites XXI 26 27 28. and was given to the Reubenites v. 37. And Elealah This is frequently mentioned with Heshbon as a Place adjoyning to it v. 37. XVI Isa 9. And Sheban Called also Shibmah v. 37. and Sibmah XVI Isa 8 9. XLVIII Jerem. 31. where it appears to have been a Place famous for Vines and in the days of that Prophet was faln into the Hands of the
Moabites as were Heshbon and Elealah also And Nebo Which was given to the Reubenites v. 38. And Beon There is no mention of this place any where else but it is probable was part of the Reubenites Portion being mentioned together with other Places that were given unto them and possibly may be the Place called Baal-Meon v. 38. which they changed into Beon because of the name of Baal but the Moabites when it fell into their hands restored part of its old name calling it Beth-meon XLVIII Jerem. 23. Verse 4 Ver. 4. Even the Country which the LORD smote before the Congregation of Israel And gave it to them for a Possession as he intended to do the Land of Canaan See XXI 24 25. Is a Land for Cattle and thy Servants have Cattle Is very fit for us v. 2. Verse 5 Ver. 5. Wherefore said they if we have found grace in thy sight A Phrase often used by humble Petitioners even by Moses himself when he speaks to God XI 15. Let this Land be given unto thy Servants for a Possession The Israelites in common possessed it hitherto as belonging to them all XXI ult But they desire to have it assigned to them as their particular Portion And bring us not over Jordan We desire nothing in the Land of Canaan Ver. 6. And Moses said unto the Children of Gad and the Children of Reuben shall your Brethren go to War Can you think it reasonable that the rest of the Tribes should fight still for what they are to possess Verse 6 And shall ye sit here And you take up your rest here and settle in their Conquests which they have already made Ver. 7. And wherefore discourage ye the hearts of the Verse 7 Children of Israel from going over into the Land which the LORD hath given them He seems to have suspected that mere cowardise and a vile love of ease made them desire to stay where they were and go no further Which ill Example might dishearten all the rest of their Brethren and make them have the same Inclination to settle in the Land they had conquered and not engage in a War with the Canaanites Ver. 8. Thus did your Fathers i. e. They disheartned Verse 8 all their Brethren When I sent them from Kadesh Barnea to see the Land XIII 3 26. Ver. 9. For when they went up unto the Valley of Eschol Verse 9 Men do not go up into a Valley therefore the meaning is they went up to search the Country as it is said they did XIII 21 22. and went on in their search till they came to the Valley or Brook of Eschol XIII 23. where they cut down a Branch with a Cluster of Grapes to show what Fruit the Country afforded And saw the Land Had taken a full view of the Country They discouraged the hearts of the Children of Israel Represented the People and the Cities to be so strong that they should not be able to deal with them XIII 28 29. That they should not go into the Land which the LORD had given them And therefore perswaded them not to attempt to possess themselves of it For they said expresly we are not able to go against the People for they are stronger than we XIII 31. Verse 10 Ver. 10. And the LORD's anger was kindled at the same time and he sware saying XIV 21 28. Verse 11 Ver. 11. Surely none of the Men that were come out of Egypt from twenty years old and upward XIV 22 29 35. Shall see the Land which I sware unto Abraham Isaac and Jacob. XIV 23. Because they have not wholly followed me See there v. 22. Verse 12 Ver. 12. Save Caleb the Son of Jephunneh XIV 24. The Kenezite A great deal hath been said by many to prove that Caleb is called a Kenezite because his Father's Name was Kenaz And this they prove because Othniel's Father was Kenaz and he was Caleb's Brother XV Josh 17. his younger Brother I Judg. 13. III. 9. So that their Father must have two Names Kenaz and Jephunneh But it is very strange if this be true that Caleb is no where called the Son of Kenaz but constantly the Son of Jephunneh even there where Othniel is just before called the Son of Kenaz 1 Chron. 4.13 15. nor is Othniel any where called the Son of Jephunneh but always of Kenaz And indeed there is a demonstration against this Opinion for Othniel married Caleb's Daughter which by the Law of Moses was utterly unlawful whatsoever the practice might have been before the Law was given Therefore others think it more probable that Othniel was one of his Brother 's younger Sons for Uncles and Nephews are often called Brethren as Abraham and Lot were and that from this Brother whose Name was Kenaz Caleb is also called a Kenezite But this is very absurd for the Name of Kenezzi in the Hebrew denotes the Descendants from one who gave this denomination to the Family which one Brother could not do to another It is most probable therefore that Kenaz was some common Ancestor both of Othniel and Caleb from whom Othniel's Father took also his Name Accordingly we find Jephunneh called a Kenezite in XIV Josh 14. where it is said that Hebron became the Inheritance of Caleb the Son of Jephunneh the Kenezite And Joshua the Son of Nun for they have followed the LORD Fully XIV 24 30 38. Ver. 13. And the LORD's anger was kindled against Verse 13 Israel He had said this before v. 10. but repeats it again to make them the more sensible of a thing that was done Thirty eight years ago and to deter them from giving him the like provocation And he made them wander in the Wilderness forty years till all that had done evil in the sight of the LORD were consumed XIV 31 32 33. XXVI 64 65. Ver. 14. And behold Mark what I say Verse 14 You are risen up in your Fathers stead an increase of sinful Men to augment yet the fierce anger of the LORD towards Israel Are multiplyed to as great a number as your Fathers only to succeed them in their sins and thereby bring down still more heavy Punishments upon the Nation Ver. 15. For if ye turn away from after him As your Fathers did who refused to go and possess the good Land which he had bestowed upon them Verse 15 He will yet again leave them in the Wilderness Lead them back again into the Desert where your Fathers perished and there forsake you And ye shall destroy all this People Who following your example will refuse to go over Jordan v. 5. to take possession of the Land of Canaan Verse 16 Ver. 16. And they drew near unto him As Petitioners are wont to do when they are assured of their Integrity and hope to obtain their request XLIV Gen. 19. And said we will build Sheepfolds here for our Cattle There are five words in the Hebrew Language for Folds for Sheep and Cattle all signifying a place
fenced in that they might lye safely and be defended from Wild-beasts And so this word gedera plainly imports See Bochartus in his Hierozoic P. I. Lib. I. cap. 45. And Cities for our little ones Which stood in need only of repairing and fortifying v. 17. for they already dwelt in those Cities of the Amorites XXI 25. Verse 17 Ver. 17. But we our selves will go ready armed before the Children of Israel until we have brought them unto their place That is a considerable number of them as many as should be thought necessary III Deut. 18. in all Forty thousand IV Josh 12. And our little ones shall dwell in the fenced Cities Where it was necessary to leave some Men to guard them from their bad Neighbours and to take care of their Cattle Because of the People of the Land That is the Moabites who were the ancient Owners of this Country XXI 26. and the Edomites who had showed no good will to the Israelites as they passed through the Wilderness Ver. 18. We will not return unto our Houses until Verse 18 the Children of Israel have inherited every Man his Inheritance Be settled in the possession of the Land of Canaan as we desire to be in this Country Ver. 19. For we will not inherit with them on yonder Verse 19 side Jordan or forward We will not desire any share in the Country beyond Jordan though it lye near to us nor in that Country which lyes still further Westward Because our Inheritance is faln on this side Jordan eastward We look upon this as our Inheritance with which we shall be fully satisfied here in the Land of Gilead Which lay Eastward of Jordan and of the Land of Canaan Ver. 20. And Moses said unto them if ye will do Verse 20 this thing Be as good as your word If ye will go armed before the LORD to war To go before the LORD was to go before the Ark which was the Symbol of God's Presence over which his Glory resided And it is to be observed that these two Tribes Reuben and Gad together with Simeon alway lay encamped before the Sanctuary as appears from the second Chapter of this Book v. 10 14 15 16 17. And accordingly when the Camp removed they marched immediately before it as is particularly noted X. 18 19 20 21. So that here he requires them only to hold their usual place when they went to the War against the Canaanites And accordingly it is expresly said they did together with half the Tribe of Manasseh who were joyned with them pass over before the LORD unto battle IV Josh 12 13. Verse 21 Ver. 21. And will go all of you As many as shall be required and can be spared v. 17. Armed over Jordan before the LORD until he hath driven out his Enemies from before him Not only bring us into Canaan but continue with us till we have expelled the Inhabitants of that Country Which he incourages them to undertake by representing the Canaanites as the Enemies of the LORD who would therefore fight for them Verse 22 Ver. 22. And the Land be subdued before the LORD By this Expression and that in the foregoing words it appears that the Ark was carried along with them to the War every where till it was ended as it was when it begun at the taking of Jericho VI Josh 6 7 c. Then afterward ye shall return and be guiltless before the LORD and before Israel and this Land shall be your possession Not only be free from all blame in this desire but have what you desire Before the LORD By his order and appointment Verse 23 Ver. 23. But if you will not do so If this be not your intention or if you go back from your word Behold Observe what I say Ye have sinned against the LORD and be sure your sin will find you out Your Guilt is exceeding great and shall be most certainly punished as it deserves Verse 24 Ver. 24. Build ye Cities for your little ones and Folds for your Sheep c. As for the rest of their Proposals about their Children and Cattle he consented to them without any Exception Ver. 25. And the Children of Gad and the Children of Reuben spake unto Moses saying The word for Verse 25 spake in the Hebrew being jomer in the Singular Number instead of jomru in the Plural their Doctors take it for an Indication that some one principal Person spake in the name of all the rest But there is no need of this for the Singular Number in this Language is often used for the Plural and they never spake all of them together but some one in the name of their Brethren And it had been better if they had observed that this signifies one and all as we now speak were of the same mind Thy Servants will do as my LORD commandeth And as they themselves had proposed v. 17. Ver. 26. Our little Ones our Wives our Flocks and Verse 26 all our Cattle shall be there in the Cities of Gilead Here they promise to leave all that was dear to them in this Country and go to serve their Brethren Ver. 27. But thy servants will pass over every man Verse 27 armed for war c. We our selves will go and fight for our Brethren It hath been often said v. 17 21. that this doth not signifie all the Men of War among them should go but as many as could be spared and as were thought sufficient For it is manifest the far greater half of them were left in this Country to defend their Wives and Children and look after their Flocks and Herds as will appear by computing all the Men of War that were found in the Tribes of Gad and of Reuben which were above Fourscore and four thousand XXVI 7 18. to which if we add half of the Tribe of Manasseth who were in all above Fifty two thousand there were much above an Hundred thousand Men able to bear Arms and not above Forty thousand of them marched into Canaan as was before observed Verse 28 Ver. 28. So concerning them Moses commanded Eleazar the Priest and Joshua the Son of Nun and the chief Fathers of the Tribes of Israel He left this in charge with the principal Persons who had the government of Affairs under him particularly with Joshua who was not unmindful of it but remembred these Tribes what Moses had said when he was about to attempt the Conquest of Canaan I Josh 13 14 c. Verse 29 Ver. 29. And Moses said unto them if the Children of Gad and the Children of Reuben will pass with you over Jordan c. He repeats to these great Men who were to see it executed what he had said to the Gadites and Reubenites themselves v. 21 22. Then ye shall give them the Land of Gilead for a possession They had not a right to it till they had performed the Condition upon which it was granted viz. till their Brethren were in possession of
their Inheritance in the Land of Canaan Verse 30 Ver. 30. But if they will not pass over before you armed Perform their Promise v. 17. They shall have possession among you in the Land of Canaan Take what falls to their share there and this Country be disposed of as God shall order Verse 31 Ver. 31. And the Children of Gad and the Children of Reuben said as the LORD hath said unto thy Servants so will we do They confirm what they had promised to Moses v. 25. and here take all that he had said as spoken by the order of God who bestowed this Land upon them on the Condition often mentioned Ver. 32. We will pass over armed before the LORD into the Land of Canaan This they offered at first of themselves v. 17. and solemnly promised when Moses accepted their Proposal v. 27. and again here Verse 32 ratifie and confirm it before Eleazar and Joshua and all the Princes v. 28. That the possession of our Inheritance Which we have desired to have for our Inheritance On this side Jordan They were now in the Land of Gilead and so might properly call it on this side Jordan but when they were in the Land of Canaan it was said to be on that side Jordan May be ours Settled upon us and our Posterity Ver. 33. And Moses gave unto them Not an absolute Verse 33 Grant but a conditional if they did as they engaged v. 29 30 31 c. Even to the Children of Gad and the Children of Reuben and half the Tribe of Manasseh the Son of Joseph This half Tribe is not mentioned before because they did not put in any Claim till they saw how those of Gad and Reuben would succeed in their Petition Which being granted it is likely that thereupon they represented also what store of Cattle they had and that the Country would be more than enough for those who had desired it This being found to be true Moses thought fit to give them a Portion in it rather than any other because the Children of Machir the Son of Manasseh had by their Valour subdued part of this Country v. 39. XVII Josh 1. The Kingdom of Sihon King of the Amorites and the Kingdom of Og King of Bashan XXI 24 29. Which were the first Countries that the Israelites possessed and were the first that were carried Captive out of their Land 2 Kings XV. 29. The Land with the Cities thereof in the Coasts even the Cities of the Country round about The Land with the Cities within such a Compass or Limits and all the Towns within that Circuit Verse 34 Ver. 34. And the Children of Gad built Dibon and Ataroth Repaired and fortified these Towns which are mentioned before v. 3. For they were not destroyed but only their Inhabitants 2 Deut. 34 35. and if they had there was not time now to rebuild them Thus Jeroboam is said to have built Schechem 1 Kings XII 25. which was a City before but gone to decay And Azariah to have built Elah 2 Kings XIV 22. which he restored to Judah as a City formerly belonging to them And Aroer A City of the Amorites upon the brink of the River Arnon as Moses tells us II Deut. 36. III. 11. IV. 48. It formerly belonged to the Moabites but was taken from them by Sihon Verse 35 Ver. 35. And Atroth and Shophan and Jaazer and Jogbehak We do not read of any of these Towns elsewhere but only of Jaazer which seems to be that called Jazer v. 3. Verse 36 Ver. 36. And Beth-Nimrah Called v. 3. Nimrah for shortness sake as it may be further observed Jemini is put for Benjemini II Esther 5. Sheba for Beer-sheba XIX Josh 2. where we find these two mentioned but they do not signifie two several Cities but are two Names for one and the same City as if he had said Beersheba which is also called Sheba This is clear to a demonstration for otherwise there would be more than thirteen Cities in the Tribe of Simeon contrary to v. 6. of that Chapter And Beth-haran A place some say between Dibon and Jordan Fenced Cities and Folds for Sheep All these Cities the Children of Gad fortified and built Folds for Sheep in the Pastures near to them Ver. 37. And the Children of Reuben built Repaired Verse 37 and fortified as I said v. 34. Heshbon and Elealah Mentioned above v. 3. And Kirjathaim A place where a Giant-like People formerly dwelt called Emims XIV Gen. 5. who were expelled by the Moabites as they were by the Amorites Ver. 38. And Nebo This City is mentioned in Verse 38 XLVIII Jerem. 1. when it was faln again into the possession of the Moabites as was also Kirjathaim It seems to have been near Dibon being mentioned together with it XV Isa 2. At least there were in these places two famous Temples for the destruction of which the Prophet represents the People making Lamentation So the LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nebo is destroyed where your Altar is And Hesychius saith of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Dibon that it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a place where a Temple of the Moabites was built And St. Hierom suspects that there was an Oracle at this place the word Nebo importing Prophecy or Divination as he speaks And Baal-Meon Another place where it is likely Baal was worshipped which made them change the names of these places as it here follows Their names being changed For Nebo as well as Baal was the name of a God as we learn from XLVI Isaiah 1. and seems to have been an Assyrian Deity there being footsteps of it in the names of several great Men there such as Nebuchadnezzar Nebuzaradan and many others And it is not unlikely that they therefore changed the names of these Cities into some other because they would abolish all Remainders of Idolatry in this Country according to the Precept XXIII Exod. 13. that they should not take the name of their Gods into their Mouth But notwithstanding this they still retained their ancient Names as appears from XIII Josh 17. XXV Ezek. 9. so hard it is to alter any thing for the better And Sibmah See v. 3. And gave other Names unto the Cities which they builded If this refer to all the Cities here mentioned it is manifest they either retained or recovered their former Names For we read of them all in future times particularly in the XVth and XVIIth of Isaiah And Kirjathaim is mentioned in the place I now quoted out of Ezekiel Verse 39 Ver. 39. And the Children of Machir the Son of Manasseh went to Gilead and took it Here Gilead is used in a strict sence not so largely as before v. 1 26 29. where it is taken for all the Country on that side Jordan where Gilead was but here for a part of it about Mount Gilead This is plain from the next verse and Gilead the Son of Machir one would think was the Person that took it
two preceding verses I shall not here examine It is sufficient to note that Onkelos hath expressed the Hebrew Text word for word and the LXX do not depart from the sence of it Verse 10 Ver. 10. Even as the LORD commanded Moses so did the Daughters of Zelophehad Accordingly they followed this direction when they came into the Land of Canaan and had received their Portion there Now there being no such words added here as there are in other Cases this shall be unto the Children of Israel a Statute of Judgment XXVII 11. much less a Statute of Judgment throughout your Generations XXXV 29. it led I conjecture the Talmudick Doctors into the fore-mentioned Opinion that this Law concerned only the present Generation Ver. 11. For Mahlah Tizzah and Hoglah and Verse 11 Milkah and Noah the Daughters of Zelophehad Thus they are called both in XXVI 33. XXVII 1. though they are not there mentioned in the same order for Tirzah is there named last who here is named in the second place Perhaps they are set down here in the order wherein they were disposed in Marriage and Tirzah who was the younger was married in the second place Were married unto their Fathers Brothers Sons For Hepher no doubt had other Sons besides Zelophehad who had Issue-male though Zelophehad had not What their Names were or how many of them we do not know but some suppose them to have been six one of which died in the Wilderness without Issue See Selden de Successionibus cap. 23. where he discourses at large of the Portion which fell to them in the Land of Canaan Ver. 12. And they were married into the Families Verse 12 c. In the Margin more exactly out of the Hebrew to some that were of the Families i. e. to one of the Families of Manasseh from whom several Families descended XXVI 29 c. And their Inheritance remained in the Tribe of the Family of their Father The word for Tribe signifies sometimes merely a Family in a Tribe And so the LXX as Grotius observes in the place before-named in this very business uses sometimes the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the former of which signifies a part of a whole Tribe And thus Josephus also uses the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to signifie a Family Mr. Selden hath the same Observation in his Book de Successionibus cap. 18. that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is sometimes translated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and then it signifies not a Tribe but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 familiam cognationem seu genus sanguine proximum a Family a Kindred or those that are next in Blood But there is no need of these Observations if the words be translated as they may rightly and their Inheritance remained in the Tribe and the Family of their Father See v. 6. Verse 13 Ver. 13. These are the Commandments and the Judgments which the LORD commanded by the hand of Moses to the Children of Israel in the plains of Moab by Jordan near Jericho He began to deliver the Precepts here intended at the XXVIth Chapter See v. 3. and continues them to this place By Commandments seem to be meant the Precepts about the Worship of God Chapt. XXVIII XXIX XXX and by Judgments the Civil Laws about dividing their Inheritances and regulating their Descent to their Posterity and establishing Cities of Refuge for Man-slayers which are expresly called a Statute of Judgment XXVII 11. XXXV 29. Some other things are interspersed as God's Commandment to number the People which was in order to the assigning them their Inheritances proportionable to their Families to execute Judgment on the Midianites and to set down in Writing their Travels in the Wilderness of which I have given an account in their proper places FINIS By reason of the Distance of the Author these ERRATA have hapned which the Reader is desired to Correct Page 5. Line 7. read are reckoned Page 73. Line 29. r. See Levit. II. 15. Page 74. Line 22. r. were signs Page 82. Line 12. r. Rabboth Page 96. Line 4. r. aquatiles Line ult r. so that they might not Page 107. Line 13. r. other shoulder Page 110. Line 2. r. Chaskuni Page 123. Line 31. r. XL. Exod. Page 140. Line 30. r. may teach Page 152. Line 5. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Page 158. Line 31. r. Acropolis Page 163. Line 10. r. Choten Page 166. Line 31. r. the following story Page 167. Line 3. r. Rise up Page 171. Line 22. r. it is likely Page 190. Line 12. r. Setting forth the Praises Line 20. r. such credit Page 191. Line penult r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Page 195. Line 21. r. whose Presence Page 198. Line 1. r. kadim Page 201. Line 11. r. but besides that there is Line 12. r. and it is Page 210. Line 28. r. as were never bred Page 216. Line 18. r. not deigning to stay Page 221. Line 21. after July begin a new line Page 227. Line 2. r. Torquatus Page 228. Line 3 4. r. a stony place Page 241. Line 1. dele and that Page 251. Line 7. r. Bitter Line 31. r. Spirit with him Page 282. Line 1. r. The Man shall be Page 284. Line 31. r. And the Garment the Jews say in the Selvedge c. Page 284. Line 33. r. Talith Page 316. Line 19. r. it being broke out Page 332. Line 3. r. where as Page 333. Line 21. r. within the veil Page 335. Line 11. r. Zeback Page 358. Line 7. r. more fit to treat Page 367. Line 7. r. as we may call it Page 387. Line 26. r. Successors of Esau Page 402. Line 19. r. by way of apposition Page 404. Line 24. r. the words are Page 406. Line 30. r. Bootius Page 420. Line 6. r. from Arnon Page 426. Line 1. r. whence Hesychius Line 22. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Page 433. Line 18. r. Kosem Page 446. Line 9. r. proffer'd him Page 468. Line 9. r. per juga Page 469. Line 7. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Page 470. Line 15. r. Sepher Cosri Page 482. Line 2. r. Dei nutu Page 501. Line 4. r. Baal-Peor Line 26. r. were called Baalim Page 519. Line 30. r. are reckoned Page 523. Line 14. r. Zelophehad Page 532. Line penult r. who was born Page 539. Line 21. r. being but reason Page 555. Line ult r. pouring out upon Page 556. Line 4. r. Heliogabalus Page 564. Line 18. r. and so doth Page 598. Line 19. r. and what I have Page 618. Line 22. r. Jogbehah Page 634. Line 22. r. to have been places Page 635. Line 9. r. anciently called Abel-shittim Page 673. Line 14. r. XXXI XXXII 2. Books written by Symon Patrick D. D. now Lord Bishop of Ely and Printed for Richard Chiswell THe Parable of the Pilgrim written to a Friend The Sixth Edit 4 to 1681. Mensa Mystica Or a Discourse concerning the Sacrament of the Lords Supper In which
in Egypt See this there explained And she bare unto Amram Aaron and Moses and Miriam their Sister Who seems to have been born before Moses if not before Aaron II Exod. 4. Ver. 60. And unto Aaron was born Nadab and Abihu Eleazar and Ithamar VI Exod. 23. where he tells the name of their Mother Ver. 61. And Nadab and Abihu died when they offered Verse 60 strange Fire before the LORD See X Lev. 2. Verse 61 and the third Chapter of this Book v. 4. But Eleazar who was the eldest next to them was now alive and made High-Priest and it is likely Ithamar also being under Twenty years old when the People murmured upon the Report of the Spies and so not cut off with that wicked Generation XVI 29. All this is here recounted to show that the Tribe of Levi was preserved by the blessing of God as well as the rest of the Israelites though they were to have no Inheritance in the Land of Canaan Ver. 62. And those that were numbred of them were Verse 62 twenty and three thousand c. So they were a thousand more than at the last numbring III. 39. For they were not numbred among the Children of Israel But by themselves for the reason following Because there was no Inheritance given them among the Children of Israel For God was their Inheritance as he told them XVIII 20 c. And therefore they were ordered not to be numbred Thirty eight years ago no more than now I Numb 49 c. The Jews are something curious in their Observations upon these words among or in the midst of the Children of Israel from whence they conclude that the Levites might have Lands out of the Bounds of the Land of Canaan though not within it among their Brethren Ver. 63. These are they that were numbred by Mose● Verse 63 and Eleazar the Priest who numbred the Children of Israel in the plains of Moab c. By a special command of God v. 1 2 c. Ver. 64. But among these there was not a Man of them whom Moses and Aaron the Priest numbred when they numbred the Children of Israel in the Wilderness of Verse 64 Sinai See the first Chapter of this Book v. 1 2 c. so exactly were God's Threatnings fulfilled as well as his Promises Chapter XXVII Verse 65 Ver. 65. For the LORD had said of them they shall surely die in the Wilderness He had pronounced this irreversible Sentence upon the whole Congregation XIV 23 28 29. where he swears they should not enter into the Land of Canaan because they had brought or entertained an evil report of it See also II Deut. 14 15. And there was not left a Man of them save Caleb the Son of Jephunneh and Joshua the Son of Nun. Whom God promised to spare because they were of another Spirit XV. 24 30 38. And their survival was as remarkable an instance of the truth of God's word as the Death of all the rest CHAP. XXVII Verse 1 Ver. 1. THEN came the Daughters of Zelophehad the Son of Hepher c. Who are mentioned before XXVI 33. just as they are here only their Genealogy is here more fully set out that their Father was the Grandson of Manasseh the Son of Joseph from whom he was lineally descended but left no Sons behind him Now these young Women hearing Moses say as he doth in the foregoing Chapter that the LORD commanded the Land of Canaan should be divided among those that were now numbred and observing that only Males from Twenty years old were numbred v. 2. presently apprehended that they being Females were excluded from having any Inheritance among the Israelites and so the Family of the Hepherites XXVI 32. would be extinguished This was the ground of what follows Whereby it appears that every body was immediately acquainted with the Laws which Moses received from God and that there was a faithful Register kept of every one that was born in every Family and Tribe to prevent all Disputes about the true Heirs to Mens Estates Ver. 2. And they stood before Moses c. To represent Verse 2 before him and the rest of the Judges who were now assembled the Case which I have mentioned Before Moses and Eleazar the Priest and before the Princes and all the Congregation These made up the greatest Court of Judicature that at any time sate For by Princes are meant either the Heads of the Tribes or the highest of the Judges appointed XVIII Exod. called the Heads of the People v. 25. And by all the Congregation is meant the LXX Elders mentioned in this Book XI 24. For they are called col ha edah the whole Congregation and sometimes only Edah the Congregation as R. Solomon observes See Bertram de Republ. Jud. p. 72. Now at the Head of all these sat Moses and next to him Eleazar the Priest By the door of the Tabernacle of the Congregation Near to which this august Assembly it is likely was wont to sit when they met together that Moses might presently if there were occasion go and consult with God himself in any difficult matter that came before them And thus Mr. Selden observes out of Maimonides that in future times the great Sanhedrim followed the Tabernacle sitting sometimes in one place sometimes in another according as that was settled As after they came to Canaan it was first at Shiloh then at Mizpeh and afterwards at Gilgal Nob Gibeon the House of Obed-Edom till at last it was fixed in Jerusalem Lib. II. de Synedr cap. 15. n. 4. As concerning that which the Talmudists say concerning the proceedings in this case of Zelophehad's Daughters nothing certain can be determined But they give this account of it That they first brought this Cause into the Courts appointed by the advice of Jethro XVIII Exod. 21. and began with the Rulers of ten who knowing not what to say to them they went to those of fifty and from thence to the Centurions and at last to the Chiliarchs None of which durst adventure to give Judgment but referred the Cause by reason of its difficulty to Moses who brought it to the SCHECHINAH as they speak i. e. to the Divine Majesty Seld. ib. cap. 16. n. 1. Verse 3 Ver. 3. Saying Our Father died in the Wilderness Among the rest mentioned v. 64 65. of the foregoing Chapter They seem to have drawn up their Cause in the form of a Petition or as Mr. Selden speaks in the Legal Phrase presented a Libel to the Court containing the intire matter of their Petition and that artificially enough And he was not one of them that gathered themselves together against the LORD in the Company of Korah They use the very words of Moses concerning that rebellious Company XVI 11. And instance in this Sin rather than any other either to show that their Father had a due regard to the Authority of Moses who they hoped therefore would be the more favourable to his Posterity or