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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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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looking toward his Dwelling-place And behold the Cloud covered it One would think by this that it had for some time withdrawn it self from the Tabernacle when the dead Bodies of Korah's Company lay dead at the Door of it And the Glory of the LORD appeared To comfort them in this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
so many Wonders it was not seemly it should lye in his own Tent as a common Staff but in the House of God as a Sacred Wand This indeed is no where mentioned no more than many other things which notwithstanding are plainly intimated Ver. 10. And Moses and Aaron gathered the Congregation before the Rock As God had commanded v. 8. Verse 10 And he said unto them Moses who was the chief Actor said unto them Hear ye now ye Rebels The Talmudists fancy that this is the great Sin for which Moses and Aaron were denied to go into Canaan because he called God's People Rebels From whence they have framed this Maxim He that treats the Church contemptuously which ought to be honoured is as if he blasphemed the Name of God But they subvert the Truth who build it upon no better Foundations For Moses the great Minister of God only uses God's own Language to their Fathers XVII 10. where he bids him lay up Aaron's Rod as a Token against the Rebels And if this were a Sin Moses committed it again not long after this and in an higher strain which no Body can think he would have done if it had cost him so dear when he saith IX Deut. 24. Ye have been rebellious against the LORD ever since I knew you Must we fetch you Water out of this Rock In these words also some of the Jews particularly Nachman think they find the Sin of Moses and Aaron who here they fancy ascribe to themselves that which they ought to have acknowledged the Work of God alone But this is without any ground for the plain meaning of the words is quite contrary Is it in our power to bring Water out of a Rock So the Vulgar Latine translates it it being a Speech of those that wonder like that 1 Kings XXI 19. Hast thou killed and also taken possession As if Moses had said Strange that you should think it possible for us to bring you Water out of a Rock which is the work only of an Omnipotent Power Ver. 11. And Moses lift up his hand and with his Rod he smote the Rock twice It seems the Water did not gush out at the first stroke which made him repeat it Verse 11 And the Water came out abundantly and the Congregation drank and their Beasts also So that their present Necessity was supplyed and they also filled their Vessels when they left this place to serve them till they met with the convenience of Water as they did I showed upon v. 2. Ver. 12. And the LORD spake unto Moses and Verse 12 Aaron because ye believed me not Here Interpreters have been much troubled to find what it was for which God was offended at Moses and Aaron for though the Text tells us expresly it was for their Unbelief whereby they gave great Scandal and did not sanctifie him as they did formerly before the Israelites yet it doth not clearly appear wherein this Unbelief declared it self Abarbinel hath collected several Opinions of the Jewish Doctors about this matter which are no less than ten after which he delivers his own which seems to me as unsatisfactory as the rest were to him for it is far fetcht with too much nicety and subtilty and relies also upon Uncertainties The plainest account of it I think is this which none of them take notice of That the Water now ceasing at the same time that Miriam died Moses was very sad both for her Death and perhaps for the Ceasing of the Water And being unexpectedly assaulted by the People who ought to have had a greater Reverence for him in a time of Mourning especially it was the occasion of a greater Commotion of Anger and Indignation than was usually in him Which gave him such a Disturbance in his Mind and so disordered his Thoughts that when God bad him take his Rod and go and speak to the Rock he fell into some doubt whether God would grant them the Favour he had done before either because they were so wretched a People that it was not fit God should do any thing for them or because he thought perhaps Water might be otherways procured for them And because of this doubting I suppose it might be that upon the first striking of the Rock no Water came forth God also perhaps so ordering it that he might try him and hereupon his Diffidence increased into Unbelief and a settled Perswasion they should have no Water His Anger also at such a rebellious Generation it is likely made him the more distrustful that God would do nothing for them For both these are mentioned by the Divine Writers that touch upon this History that he did not believe and that his Spirit was so provoked that he spake unadvisedly with his lips CVI Psalm 32 33. which was when he spake those words v. 10. Must we fetch you Water out of this Rock i. e. is that a likely matter They being words of the same sort with those of Sarah XVIII Gen. 13. Shall I of a surety have a Child who am old that is I cannot believe it And when he saw the Water did not come out at the first stroke he might be so rash as to say Now it is plain God will give you none but let you perish or words to that effect I know nothing more probable than this unless the Reader likes the Opinion of Joseph Albo better which is the ninth Opinion mentioned by Abarbinel That Moses and Aaron having had such long Experience of God's goodness to this People and of his readiness to help them ought not to have gone and made their Complaints to God about the want of Water v. 6. but immediately of themselves gone to the Rock being confident of God's Power and Mercy which had never failed them and called for Water to come out of it For now the Tabernacle was built and they had God dwelling among them which they had not when he smote the Rock at first which ought to have bred in them the highest Assurance that God would supply them Dr. Lightfoot hath another Conjecture which I shall propound that the Reader may judge which is most likely That Moses and Aaron began to distrust God's Promise of entring into the promised Land at the end of forty Years imagining that if they brought Water again out of the Rock it must follow them as long as the other had done For this he makes the sence of their words What ye Rebels must we bring Water out of a Rock as we did at Horeb Are all our Hopes and Expectations of getting out of the Wilderness come to this We never fetcht you Water out of a Rock but once and that was because ye were to stay a long time in the Wilderness c. Now that is gone must we fetch Water out of another Rock O ye Rebels have ye brought it to this pass by your Murmurings that we must have a new stay in the Wilderness Are we to begin our abode
here again when we thought we had been at the end of our Travels At this rate we shall never get out Whereupon he presently smote the Rock twice in a fume whereas God bad him only speak to it v. 8. To sanctifie me in the Eyes of the Children of Israel i. e. Openly to assert me to be the holy One of Israel faithful to my Promises as well as infinite in Power of which they had given the Israelites occasion to doubt by declaring some distrust of what God said to them v. 8. For these words plainly show that their Sin did not consist only in an inward Diffidence but in such outward Expressions of it in their Anger and Impatience as might be apt to breed Unbelief in the Israelites who were already too prone thereunto And it is no improbable Conjecture of a Jewish Doctor in his Book of the Death of Moses that the Divine Glory not appearing now upon this Rock as it did at Horeb XVII Exod. 6. which perhaps they expected it gave some occasion to their Unbelief Which he thinks was not so great a Sin in it self as to have deserved the following Punishment had not God in passing this Sentence had a respect to the Excellency and Dignity of their Persons in whom a Fault of this Nature was far more grievous than in an ordinary Man Therefore ye shall not bring this Congregation into the Land which I have given them They brought them into the Land of Sihon and of Og but not into Canaan which was properly the Land promised to them Verse 13 Ver. 13. This is the Water of Meribah Called Meribah-kadesh XXXII Deut. 51. to distinguish it from that Meribah mentioned XVII Exod. 7. where the Israelites were guilty of the same Crime Because the Children of Israel strove with the LORD Expostulated with him most undutifully and accused him of unkindness to them v. 3 4. And he was sanctified in them The Hebrew Doctors differ very much in their Opinions about this also Whether he was sanctified in the Waters or in the People of Israel or in Moses and Aaron Some fancy it is meant of the Waters viz. that God did himself great honour in bringing Waters again out of a Rock and therefore the Name of the place was called Kadesh from his being sanctified there Thus Chaskuni But it seems to have been called so before this being a place well known to the Edomites v. 16. The common Opinion is that he speaks of Moses and Aaron for God's Name saith R. Solomon is much revered when he doth not spare even his holy Ones X Lev. 3. But Nachmanides expounds it of the Israelites before whose face as he expounds sanctified in them God's Power and Faithfulness and Goodness appeared and who alone are mentioned in this verse not Moses and Aaron But all three Opinions in the Issue concur in this one that God made his Power c. appear in the Eyes of all the Israelites by bringing Water out of a Rock and at the same time demonstrated his Holiness and impartial Justice in punishing his greatest Friends for their Unbelief Ver. 14. And Moses sent Messengers By God's Verse 14 order as his words seem to import in II Deut. 2 3 4. From Kadesh On the Confines of the King of Edom's Country Vnto the King of Edom. When the Israelites came out of Egypt Moses speaks of Edom as governed by Dukes XV Exod. 17. for the Sons of Esau at first had no higher Title XXXVI Gen. 15 c. Not long after it seems their Posterity became Kings and now Nine and thirty Years after the Israelites coming out of Egypt they were still under Kingly Government And this King to whom Moses now sends Messengers the great Primate of Ireland takes to have been Hadar the last of those that Moses mentions XXXVI Gen. 39. who for his Inhumanity to the Children of Israel was shortly after punished with Death and the Kingdom turned again into the Government by Dukes For Moses as he thinks writing the Book of Genesis in the latter end of his Life or then adding what was necessary to what he had written before reckons immediately after Hadar several Dukes reigning all at one time in several parts of the Country which they had shared among them See Vsser Chronolog Sacra cap. 11. Thus saith thy Brother Israel In the Language of those times all that were near of Kin called one another Brethren and these two Nations descended from two twin Brothers Thou knowest For they could not but have received Intelligence before this time of such publick things All the Travel that hath befaln us How we and our Fathers before us have travelled from place to place without any certain Habitation See CV Psalm 13. Verse 15 Ver. 15. How our Fathers After several Removals from one part of Canaan to another Went down into Egypt Which was so publick a thing they being invited by Pharaoh who sent Carriages for them that the Edomites could not be ignorant of it And we have dwelt in Egypt a long time See XII Exod. 40 41. and what I have observed there And the Egyptians vexed us and our Fathers See I Exod. 11 12 13 c. Verse 16 Ver. 16. And when we cried unto the LORD he heard our voice II Exod. 23 24 25. III. 7 8. And sent an Angel See III Exod. 2 c. Maimonides here by Angel understands Moses himself for the Prophets are sometimes called Angels i. e. Messengers sent from God II Judg. 1. This he asserts in the first part and more than once in the second part of More Nevochim but it is very unreasonable to think that Moses would thus magnifie himself to the King of Edom who understood not such Language and could not but be more moved to hearken to his Embassy if he believed the Israelites were under the Conduct of a heavenly Minister who as other Jews think was Michael the Prince of the heavenly Host whom they commonly understand by the Angel here mentioned But many great Men particularly Masius think this is short of the Truth unless we understand by Michael the Eternal Son of God who was as he speaks the perpetual Prince and Director of the People of God For though he was then properly made the Messenger of the Father when he took on him our Flesh and dwelt here among us yet from the beginning it was his constant care to reconcile Men to God and preserve Religion among them So that he might be called the Angel of God before he became a Man because God the Father by him communicated with Men about all things necessary for their Good And the Jews seem to have had some obscure Notion of this For what else could Moses Gerundensis mean when he saith the Angel whom Moses saw in the Bush was the same whom Jacob calls the God of Bethel and whom he calls the Angel Redeemer of whom Moses he saith speaks in this place and in VI Deut. 21.
eat moist Grapes or dried Which might have stirred up their Appetite after Wine or heated their Blood and indisposed them for the Service of God to which they had devoted themselves Verse 4 Ver. 4. All the days of his Separation Or Nazariteship as it is in the Margin Which sort of Vow either was for all their life or only for a time Samson and John Baptist were made perpetual Nazarites by the direction of God from their Mothers Womb. But here Moses speaks of such as were made Nazarites by themselves for a time only Which the Jews say was at least for XXX days But it appears by St. Paul it might be for a Week only Unto which he limited the time of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is called in XXII Acts 26 27. For every one might vow for what time he pleased Shall he eat nothing that is made of the Vine-tree No Paste nor Sauce that had any of the Juyce or Infusion of the Grapes in it From the Kernel even to the Husk Which might give the smallest Tincture to any thing into which they were put All this caution seems to be intended to instruct those who give themselves wholly unto God's Service to be very sober and abstemious in the use of Wine and strong Drink the excess of which is the bane of true Piety For Amat Spiritus Sanctus sicca corda as Grotius admirably observes upon I St. Luke 15. The Holy Ghost delights in dry Souls Verse 5 Ver. 5. There shall no Rasor come upon his Head Nor was his Hair to be cut with Scissers or any other Instrument but he was to let the Locks of his Hair grow as it is in the Conclusion of this Verse This made such Persons look Majestically and venerably without any expence For as Agesilaus speaks in Stobaens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to let ones Hair grow long is the cheapest Ornament Besides neglect of the Hair was proper to those who renounced for the present all manner of Pleasure as the Nazarites did and betook themselves to a severer sort of life Such Persons not only let their Beards and their Hair grow but wore an hairy Garment which the Hebrews called Addareth Such an one John Baptist wore as Elijah did before him whose Mantle is called by this name 1 Kings XIX 19. and who is said himself to have been an hairy Man 2 Kings I. 8. from whence Grotius concludes that either he was a Nazarite or the Habit of a Prophet and a Nazarite was the same See him on III Matth. 4. But Moses himself seems in the next words to give the plainest reason of this matter Vntil the days be fulfilled in the which he separateth himself unto the LORD he shall be holy It was a Token he had kept himself pure from all legal Defilements For if he had not he must have shaved his Head v. 9. as they did who were cleansed from their Leprosie XIV Levit. 8.9 And shall let the Locks of the Hair of his Head grow This Law in which consists the second part of their Nazariteship some fancy to have been translated from the Egyptians into the Religion of the Hebrews Which was the Opinion of S. Cyril of Alexandria Lib. XVI de Adorat Where he saith that Moses knowing how hard it would be to bring the Israelites from the ill Customs they had learnt in Egypt most wisely instituted the like Rites to those that were in use there to the intent they might not perform such Worship any longer to Daemons but to the LORD of all Procopius Gazaeus upon this place hath the same Notion Graecorum liberi si in Nymphas vel montanas vel aquentiles incidissent comas nutriebant Lex itaque mala daemonum consuetudine dempta ad Deum hoc ipsum transfert The sense of which is that the Greeks let their Hair grow in honour of the Nymphs and therefore the Law to abolish that wicked Custom transferred that to God which was done to Daemons To which I should readily subscribe if there were any proof that this Rite of consecrating their Hair to Daemons was so old among the Egyptians and Greeks as the times of Moses It is far more probable that the Original of this Custom among the Gentiles was from this Law of the Nazarites So Hen. Lindenbrogius very well observes upon those words of Censorinus de Die Natali Cap. I. Crinem Deo sacrum pascebant that they let their Hair grow in honour of their Gods Particularly of Apollo who thence was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Bacchus Minerva and others yea this Superstion grew so much that they consecrated it to Rivers in which they thought there was some Divinity But hujus moris origo saith that Learned Annotator upon him videtur fluxisse à Naziraeis Judaeorum The Original of this Custom seems to have slowed Verse 6 from the Jewish Nazirites See more upon v. 18. Ver. 6. All the days that he separateth himself unto the LORD he shall come at no dead body This was a third part of this Religion not to touch a dead body nor be in the House where a dead body was nor accompany it to the Grave see XIX 11 12 13. For such Defilements by the dead made Men unclean seven days so that he might not approach to the House of God And therefore that the Nazarites might always be fit to attend upon his Service he would have them avoid this Defiement Ver. 7. He shall not make himself unclean for his Verse 7 Father or for his Mother c. In this he was superiour to the ordinary Priests who might be defiled for such near kindred XXI Levit. 2 c. and was equalled to the High-Priest as I observed before v. 2. out of Maimonides who might not XXI Levit. 11. Because the Consecration of his God is upon his Head His Hair upon his Head which was unshorn showed him to be separated as the word is in the Hebrew unto God Which Hair also was consecrated to him when the days of his Separation were fulfilled For in this unshorn Hair seems to have consisted the principal part of Nazariteship Ver. 8. All the days of his Separation he is holy to the Verse 8 LORD By a peculiar Vow and therefore was not to come near a dead Body Ver. 9. And if any Man die very suddenly by him Verse 9 Either by Violence or an Apoplex or any other way And the case was the same if he chanced to light upon a dead Body unawares And he hath defiled the Head of his Consecration The Consecration of his Head that is his Hair For though he could not help his being so suddenly surprized yet he was defiled by being where a dead Body was And consequently the Hair of his Head which had been consecrated to God was defiled also and therefore could not be offered to him and burnt in his Honour Then he shall shave his Head in the day of his cleansing His Nazariteship
17. And he shall offer the Ram for a Sacrifice of Peace-offerings unto the LORD with the basket of unleavened Bread And the Cakes and Wafers which accompanied the Peace-offering that nothing might be wanting to compleat the Feast which was to be made upon them The Priest shall offer also his Meat-offering and his Drink-offering By this it appears that these were distinct from the Basket of Unleavened Bread c. as I observed v. 15. Verse 18 Ver. 18. And the Nazarite shall shave the Head of his Separation i. e. The Hair of his Head which was consecrated to God shall be shaved off that it may be presented unto him For having now fulfilled his Vow this Hair was holy it not having been defiled as that Hair was which he shaved off before v. 9. At the Door of the Tabernacle of the Congregation That it might be publickly known he had ended his Vow And shall take the Hair of the Head of his Separation His Hair which was consecrated to the LORD And put it in the fire Where it was burnt Which is under the Sacrifice of the Peace-offerings In the Court of the Women as they tell us in Middoth cap. 2. sect 5. where there were four Rooms and that in the North-east corner was the Room of the Nazarites In which they boiled their Peace-offerings and having polled their Hair put it under the Pot where the Sacrifice was boiling which as L'Empereur there observes out of Abarbinel was offered out of Joy that their Vow was fulfilled and therefore they put their Hair to be there burnt as a Testimony that their Nazariteship was at an end and that they had no further Obligation to let their Hair grow in observance of this Law And according to this account that Question is resolved which many have made Whether the Nazarites Hair was to be burnt with holy Fire viz. that on the Altar or with common For it was burnt with that which was under the Pot or Cauldron in which the Peace-offerings were boiled which was common Fire And indeed it had been unseemly to burn Hair upon the Altar it being God's Table where his Meat was set before him for it would not have been grateful at one of our Feasts Yet the Fire under the Peace-offerings may in some sort be called holy as it was imployed to boil holy Meat and in that regard more Sacred than other Vulgar Fire There are those who think no account can be given of such Ordinances as these but only this that it was so general a Custom and so very ancient among Mankind to let their Hair grow on purpose and to plait it in Locks that they might at a certain time cut it off and devote it to some of their Gods that in all likelyhood the Israelites would have followed their Superstition if God to prevent it had not instituted a way of doing what the rest of the World did without their Idolatry For the Directions which God here gives about it are manifestly opposite to the way of the Gentiles For the Nazarites are here directed to cut their Hair when the time of their Separation was compleated at the Door of the Tabernacle where it was also to be burnt whereas the Gentiles hung their Hair when they had cut it upon Trees or Consecrated it to Rivers as I observed v. 5. or laid it up in their Temples there to be preserved The Hebrew Nazarites also are required to offer various sorts of Sacrifices when they cut their Hair of which we rarely read any thing among the Gentiles And all the time of their Separation were to drink no Wine nor eat Grapes c. which was not known among the Heathen From whence it is one may think that they are so often put in mind of the LORD in this Law of the Nazarites Who are said to be Separated unto the LORD v. 1 5 6. and the Consecration of his God is said to be upon his Head v. 7. and all the days of his Separation he was holy to the LORD v. 8. unto whom he consecrated the days of his Separation v. 12. To put them in mind that though they used this Rite which was common to other Nations yet it was in honour of the LORD only whom they acknowledged to be the Author of Health and Strength and Growth For the Devil also had his Nazarites as appears from IX Hosea 10. All this is said and much more with a specious show of Truth by a most ingenious and learned Friend of mine now with God in his excellent Book de Legibus Hebraeorum Ritualibus c. Lib. III. Dissert 1. cap. 6. But there are two things wanting to make this Opinion probable First None can tell how the World came by such a Custom of letting their Hair grow for Sacred uses unless they had it from Moses Who tells us whence he derived it viz. from God who appointed this Rite for such Reasons as then were plain but now perhaps do not appear to us Besides Secondly there is not the least Evidence that this Custom was so old as Moses his time which to me seems not likely but rather that it was derived among the Gentiles from an imperfect Knowledge of what is here ordained by Moses For the chief part of this Nazariteship consisting in letting their Hair grow and consecrating it unto God the Gentiles took it to be a piece of great Devotion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. as Theodoret speaks Quaest. XXVIII in Levit. not to cut off their Childrens Hair but let it grow and after a certain time dedicate it to their Daemons Many Authors have written much of this Custom for which there was a certain day appointed at Athens viz. the third day of the Feast called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which day was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because then the Hair of their grown Children was shorn off and sacrificed to Diana See Petr. Castellanus in his Syntagma de Festis Graecorum Where he quotes a passage out of Hesychius p. 28. who says That before they cut off their Hair they brought a Measure of Wine which they offered to Hercules and then all that were present drunk of it Which is some imitation of the Drink-offering here mentioned by Moses which was offered at the Completion of their Nazariteship And Grotius and Huetius have made it so plain that the Attick Laws were derived from Moses that I cannot doubt but this Custom also flowed from the same Fountain And if we must give an account of the reason of this Institution among the Hebrews I think that of Maimonides is better then this against which I have excepted viz. that this Law about their Hair was made in opposition to the opinion of the ancient Idolaters called Zabij who held all things which were separated from the Body to be impure as the Hair the Nails and the Blood From whence all Barbers among them were accounted impure Persons because they cut Men's Hair
common Food of the Egyptians Who were noted anciently for the Meanness of their Diet as Casaubon observes in Lib. IX Athenaei Deipnos Cap. XI p. 674. Some fancy these things were the cheaper there because the Egyptians durst not eat either Fish or Leeks or Onions as is said by Juvenal Sat. XV. Pliny Lib. XIX Cap. 6. and Herodotus Lib. II. C. 37. where he saith it was not lawful for the Egyptians to taste of Fish But in my opinion these words of the People demonstrate rather that they were not so superstitious in the days of Moses for they were not the words merely of the Israelites but of the mixt multitude who were the Beginners of this Mutiny and of this sort of undutiful Language Which one would think they put into the Mouths of the Israelites who could not otherwise have had the Impudence to magnifie their Condition in Egypt where they groaned under the sorest Slavery It is a strange fancy of one of the Doctors in the Tulmud in the Title Jona who by Fishes understands Harlots whom these Crew of mixed People lusted after The Onions The Hebrew word Chatzir properly signifies Grass Which being no part of Humane Food the LXX here render the word Onions as agreeable to the other words that accompany it But the learned Ludolphus thinks they had no other reason for it and therefore out of the Arabian Language rather interprets it Lettice or Sellets in general which were most excellent in Egypt Dissert de Locustis P. II. Cap. 14. Ver. 6. But now our Soul is dried away They speak Verse 6 as if they were starved and as we speak had neither Life nor Soul left in them Such is the vile Nature of discontented Ingratitude which makes Men that are advanced from a poor to a plentiful Condition contemn their present Enjoyments and praise their former wretched state There is nothing at all besides this Manna before our Eyes They were angry that they were come to a place where they found nothing but that of which they were now grown weary and therefore speak of it with disdain Verse 7 Ver. 7. And the Manna Upon this occasion he describes more fully what kind of thing it was which they despised That it might appear how justly God was displeased with them for their Ingratitude Was as Coriander-seed Not in Colour for that was like Bdellium as it here follows but in its Shape and Form being round XVI Exod. 14. And the Colour of it as the Colour of Bdellium Of a pure White Colour and bright like Pearl So that it was very grateful to the Eye as well as pleasant to the Taste See XVI Exod. 31. Verse 8 Ver. 8. And the People went about Round their Camp XVI Exod. 13. And gathered it Fresh every Morning which made it still more acceptable XVI Exod. 18 19. And ground it in Mills Into Flour with an Hand-mill Or beat it in a Mortar Bruised it with a Pestle in a wooden or stone Mortar And baked it in Pans Or else boiled it as R. Bechai expounds it in a Pot. And made Cakes of it Or made Cakes of it in an Oven or in a Pan. That is saith the same R. Bechai it was of such an excellent Composition that it might be dressed divers ways or eaten as it fell For if they would they might use it saith he for Food immediately as they gathered it or they might grind it or bruise it and then either boil it or bake it and it was agreeable in what way soever it was prepared Which Moses mentions to show how ungrateful they were to God who by one thing entertained them with great variety And the taste of it was as the taste of fresh Oil. When it was newly faln it tasted like Honey but when it was prepared by Boiling or Baking it tasted like fresh Oil See XVI Exod. 31. Or to some it had the taste of Honey to others of fresh Oil. The Jews indeed say it had all sorts of Tastes according to every Man's desire So the Author of the Book of Wisdom speaks XVI 20 21. from the ancient Tradition of the Hebrews Whereby I suppose they meant no more but that it pleased every Man's Palate and had in it all that could be desired in any Meat being grateful to the taste of young and old and refreshed the Spirits and kept up the Flesh of their Bodies in good plight For it is not unreasonably observed by the aforesaid R. Bechai that it is compared by Moses to fresh Oil which is fat as well as sweet to show how unjust their Complaint was that they had no Moisture left in them but were dried away v. 6. Ver. 9. And when the dew fell upon the Camp in the Verse 9 Night There was a great Providence of God in this saith the same Bechai which sent it in the Night while they slept quietly in their Beds that when they rose in the Morning they might find their Food ready for them And thus saith he it was when they came to Canaan the Rains were wont to fall in the Night-season and not in the Day-time that they might not be hindred from their work in the Fields and in their Plantations The Manna fell upon it That is upon the Dew for it did not fall upon the Camp but round about it See XVI Exod. 14. This is a further Aggravation of their Ingratitude that they despised this rare Food which came not out of the Earth or the Waters but from above out of the Air And therefore was more pure and spiritous than Cucumbers and Leeks c. Which crude and gross sort of Food their depraved Minds preferred before this Celestial Nourishment Which by Falling on the Dew was kept clean and pure for their use Huetius observes that several Authors both ancient and modern mention Manna as a thing which sometimes falls in those Countries particularly in Arabia and upon Libanus which they call aerial Honey or dewy Honey and Syrian Dew which was fit for Food But it never fell in such quantity nor so constantly every day for the space of XL years and so delicious and hearty All this was miraculous as was also its melting when the Sun shone upon it and that it putrified before the next day except on the Sabbath and yet kept in an Urn many years See Alnetanae Quaest L. II. Cap. XII N. XVII Verse 10 Ver. 10. And Moses heard the People weep throughout their Families Or for their Families or about the State and Condition of their Families as some of the Jews understand it though to a foolish sense See Selden L. II. de Synedr Cap. IV. p. 203. who they pretended could not live any longer upon Manna Every Man in the door of his Tent. It may be understood of Moses his Tent about which the heads of the several Families were gathered as mutinous Souldiers are wont to be about the Door of their Chief Commander And the Anger of the LORD was
the word may be understood with God's whole Family that is with all the Children of Israel and faithfully discharged the Trust reposed in him by acquainting them with all God's Will and executing all his Commands and doing nothing of himself as now he was fasly accused but only what God required This is a high Testimony to him and the Jews when they are in the humour of exalting Moses say he was more faithful than the Angels of the Ministry They are the words of R. Jose in Siphri and if he had said As faithful as the Angels of the Ministry it might have passed for a good Explication Ver. 8. With him will I speak mouth to mouth Verse 8 In a most familiar manner as one Friend discourses with another So it is explained XXXIII Exod. 11. From whence Abarbinel in his Rosch Amana gathers That Moses his Prophecy differed from others in these four things First That God spake to others by a Mediator that is as he explains it by some Angel but to him by himself without the intervention of any other Secondly That they never prophesied but their Senses were all bound up either in Visions or in Dreams whereas he was as perfectly awake as we are when we discourse one with another Thirdly That after the Vision was over they were often left so weak and feeble that they could scarce stand upon their feet as appears from X Dan. 8 11. but Moses spake with the Divine Majesty without any consternation or alteration his conversation with him being like that of one Friend with another And lastly No Prophet but he could understand the Mind of God when they pleased for he communicated himself to them only when he thought good whereas Moses might at any time resort to God to enquire of him and receive an answer See IX 8. To the same purpose also Maimonides writes in his Book de Fundamentis Legis cap. 7. Even apparently Plainly clearly and distinctly so that there was no difficulty to apprehend his meaning nor need of an Explication Thus he proclaimed his Name to Moses XXXIV Exod. 6 7. And not in dark Speeches Or in Parables and Enigmatical Representations Such as the Ladder which Jacob saw in a Dream the Boiling-pot which was shown to Jeremiah the Wall the Plumb-line and the Basket of Summer-fruits which Amos saw the Beasts which were represented to Daniel the Lamps Mountain Horses and Chariots to Zachariah the Roll of the Book which Ezekiel was to eat By all which the Prophet as Maimonides observes whose Illustrations these are of these words was given to understand some other thing which was intended to be made known to him by these Figures More Nevoch P. II. c. 43. who in his Book concerning the Foundations of the Law further observes that some of these Prophets had both the Parable as he calls it and its Interpretation represented to them others the Parable only without any Exposition and to some was only delivered the Explication And the Similitude of the LORD shall he behold I am apt to think the word not should be here again repeated as it must be in some places to make out the Sense as XXV Prov. 27. which will make the meaning plainly this he shall not behold the LORD in Similitudes and Resemblances as other Prophets did For the Hebrew word Temunah signifies the Shape of a thing represented either to the outward Senses or to the Imagination not the thing it self Therefore it would be to equal Moses with the rest of the Prophets to say he should see the Similitude of the LORD for so did they Amos for instance saith he saw the LORD standing upon the Altar IX 1. that is some Angelical Appearance in a glorious shape And Eliphaz saith That a Spirit passed before him the form or aspect whereof he could not discern only the Temunah we render it an Image was before his Eyes IV Job 15 16. But God did not thus reveal himself to Moses by Images and Similitudes of Things but spake to him himself as it goes before mouth to mouth Which led Maimonides into the opinion which he often repeats that when God is said to speak to any other Man it was by an Angel and that he never spake to any one himself but only to Moses Nor did any Man before him say that God spake to him or that he sent him on a Message unto others but Moses was the first that had this honour More Nevoch P. I. c. 63. and P. II. cap. 39. But if we follow our Translation which should run thus But the Similitude of the LORD shall he behold it relates to that wonderful Apparition of God to him in the Bush III Exod. 6. as Maimonides thinks More Nevochim P. I. cap. 5. where he saith God poured upon him as much as he could contain but especially to that Revelation which God made of himself to him when he told him that he could not see his Face but should behold his back Parts XXXIII Exod. 20 23. Which was a Priviledge granted to none but him And thus the Similitude of the LORD or his Likeness signifies the LORD himself XVII Psal ult When thy Likeness shall awake that is thou thy self appear for me I shall be satisfied Wherefore then were ye not afraid to speak against my Servant Moses Who is my prime Minister employed by me in the highest Services Ver. 9. And the Anger of the LORD was kindled against them As appeared by what follows And he departed He withdrew his Presence from Verse 9 the Door of the Tabernacle immediately before they could make any answer Which was a token of exceeding great Displeasure as it is in us when we will not so much as hear what Men say for themselves when they have highly and notoriously offended us and we reprove them for it but turn away from them Verse 10 Ver. 10. And the Cloud departed from the Tabernacle It was not merely taken up from it as it was wont to be when they were to remove their Camp but quite disappeared for a time or stood at a great distance from them till Miriam was removed from the Tabernacle and carried out of the Camp For that was one reason of its departure the Divine Majesty not designing to stay where so impure a Creature was And this was also a manifest token of God's high Displeasure against them which moved him to forsake them And behold Miriam became leprous Or was become leprous A proper Punishment for pride and evil speaking Which was not inflicted upon Aaron because he was to judge of Leprosie and was not the first in the Transgression And besides it is likely God would not have one that was but newly made his High-Priest become vile and contemptible White as Snow Which was a mark of an incurable Leprosie when all the Body was over-spread with it IV Exod. 6. 2 Kings V. 27. And Aaron looked upon Miriam As the Priest was bound to do whose Office
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
the LORD create a Creature i. e. do something that was never seen nor heard of in the World before The Jews in several of their Books particularly in Pirke Avoth say there are ten things which God created after the World was perfected and they mention the mouth of the Earth for one of them that is the gaping of the Ground to swallow up these wicked People Which is said to be created as Aben-Ezra well observes because by this Miracle God altered the Course of Nature and did a thing extraordinary And the Earth open her mouth and swallow them up with all that appertain unto them i. e. On a sudden when there is no Earthquake but all is calm and still and it swallow up none but them alone And they go down quick into the Pit Be buried alive when they are in perfect health By this place it is apparent that the Hebrew word Sheol doth often signifie the Grave which Bellermine and others most earnestly contend never signifies so but Hell which from hence he asserts to be in the Center of the Earth Lib. IV. de Christo cap. 10. not observing that if it signifie Hell in this verse and v. 33. then the Houses of these Men and their Houshold-stuff and all that appertained to them went down thither which is very absurd It is hard also to think that all their little Children went down into Hell for their Father's sin though they did into the Grave Then ye shall understand that these Men have provoked the LORD You shall be sufficiently convinced that they have unjustly accused me and brought this destruction upon themselves Verse 31 Ver. 31. And it came to pass that as he had made an end of speaking all the words that the Ground clave asunder that was under them He had no sooner done speaking but immediately what he said was verified which made it the more remarkable Ver. 32. And the Earth opened her mouth and swallowed them up Viz. Dathan and Abiram before-mentioned Verse 32 v. 27. who stood in the Door of their Tents outfacing Moses And their Houses i. e. All their Family or as Moses himself hath explained it XI Deut. 6. Their Housholds and their Tents and all the Substance that was in their possession And all the Men that appertained unto Korah We are not told what became of Korah himself for it is not said he was swallowed up but all that appertained to him i. e. all that were at that time in his Tent His whole Family except his Sons who escaped XXVI 11. taking warning I suppose from what Moses said v. 26. Which hath made some think that Korah was at the Head of his Two hundred and fifty Men who were the great Abetters of his Faction who if he had forsaken them at this Trial that was made who were in the right we may well think would have withdrawn themselves also and not have stood to it without their Chieftain as we find they did v. 35. Yet he is not mentioned there as perishing with them by Fire from the LORD and Moses seems to say XXVI 10. that Dathan and Abiram were swallowed up together with Korah who had as much reason or more perhaps to think it necessary to be with that other Company which he had gathered against Moses v. 19. and to incourage them to persist in their Resolution than to be with the Two hundred and fifty Men who were Men of such Authority v. 2. that they may be thought to have needed none to support them It may be added also that the word appertaineth is not here in the Hebrew which makes these words sound as if the meaning were only those that were of Korah's Family but simply all the Men that were to Korah i. e. were gathered to him and were at that time with him Which seems to be an Indication that they and he were swallowed up together How many there were that staid with him there is not certain but the generality left him v. 27. where it is expresly said they gat up from the Tabernacle of Korah Dathan and Abiram as Moses had commanded v. 24. Which may be taken for a further Indication that he was swallowed up in the Tabernacle where he was or in his own Tent after he came out of that Tabernacle But those places I observed before may be otherwise understood that place also which is the main foundation of this Opinion XXVI 10. may likewise receive another Interpretation as I shall show when I come thither And they that are of the other Opinion think his Tabernacle and his Family and all his Houshold-stuff might be swallowed up though he himself was not with them but was burnt by Fire with the Two hundred and fifty Men that offered Incense for Moses bad him take his Censer as well as they v. 17. Which since they did and put Fire and Incense therein why should it be thought he did not do the same It seems to me highly probable that he did otherwise he would have seemed to distrust his Cause but it must be confessed that it is obscure which way he perished and therefore it is not fit to contend about it And all their Goods All their Houshold-stuff and Cattle and whatsoever was in or about their Tents Ver. 33. They and all that appertained to them See XI Deut. 6. Went down alive into the Pit As Moses had foretold v. 30. Verse 33 And the Earth closed upon them This made it the more wonderful that the Earth having swallowed them all up had no Cleft remaining in it but closed up again and was as firm as before And they perished from among the Congregation Were never more seen Ver. 34. And all Israel that were round about them Verse 34 fled at the cry of them Though they were at a distance from their Tents whence they had removed on all sides v. 27. yet they heard them shriek so loudly as they sunk down into the Ground that it put them into a great fright and made them fly still further off For they said lest the Earth swallow us up also Some of them were conscious to themselves that they had favoured this wicked Faction and all of them knew how highly they had lately offended God by their unbelief and murmuring Chapt. XIV which might make them justly fear the same Fate with their Brethren Ver. 35. And there came out a Fire from the LORD Verse 35 From the Glory of the LORD which appeared unto all the Congregation v. 19. as ready to decide the Controversie This fell out either at the same time the Earth swallowed up Dathan and Abiram or immediately after it And consumed the two hundred and fifty Men that offered Incense Which was a plain declaration that they usurped the Office of Priests and therefore were thus punished by God himself for their presumption It is not certain whether they were devoured by the Fire or only struck dead as Men are sometimes on a sudden by
Lightning and perhaps scorched as they likewise sometimes are The latter seems most probable from what follows v. 37. and from the like punishment by Fire from the LORD which is said to devour Nadab and Abihu and yet their Bodies remained intire X Lev. 2 4. This was the more astonishing because Moses and Aaron who stood with them at the Door of the Tabernacle v. 18. had no hurt Verse 36 Ver. 36. And the LORD spake unto Moses saying Immediately after the Death of those Men. Ver. 37. Speak unto Eleazar the Son of Aaron the Priest Who it is likely stood by them as next Successor to Aaron in the Office which was disputed And therefore perhaps imployed in what follows rather than Aaron that his Succession might be confirmed Though others will have it that it was below the Dignity of Aaron to perform such a mean Office and besides he might have been in danger to be polluted by the dead Bodies of the Men that were burnt That he take the Censers out of the Burning Out of the place where the Men were burnt as some understand it Or which differs not much from among the dead Bodies which were burnt Burning being put for Bodies burnt as Captivity XXI 1. for those that were carried Captive or made Prisoners as we there translate it But there is no need of either of these Additions burning signifying the Fire which burnt in them which he orders Eleazar to throw out that the Censers might be brought away And scatter thou the Fire yonder The Men were burnt as soon as ever they put fire to the Incense in their Censers v. 18. which flaming at the Door of the Tabernacle where they stood near the Altar from whence they took the Fire God commanded to be thrown away without the Camp into that place I suppose where they were wont to throw the Ashes VI Lev. 11. or rather into some unclean place where they threw the Dust scraped from the Walls of Leprous Houses XIV Lev. 41. For it was to show that God abhorred their Offering For they are hollowed Or had Fire from the Altar put into them which some think sanctified them But the plain reason is given in the next verse because they offered them before the LORD i. e. they had been employed to an holy use and that by God's command v. 6 17. and therefore God would not have them hereafter serve for any other Ver. 39. The Censers of these Sinners against their Verse 39 own Souls Who have brought destruction upon themselves by their Presumption Let them make of them Either Aaron or Eleazar were to cause them to be beaten into such Plates as here follow Broad Plates for a covering of the Altar Of Burnt-offering which was covered with Brass XXVII Exod 12. but these Plates were to be laid upon that Covering which it had already for the end mentioned in the Conclusion of this verse And hereby also the proper Covering of the Altar lasted the longer For they offered them before the LORD Presented them before the LORD when they offered Incense in them v. 35. Therefore they are hallowed Or holy That is I will have them separated for this reason to my use alone and no other It is a thing worthy to be taken special notice of that the Impiety of the Men that offered Incense did not discharge their Censers of the discriminative Respect as our famous Mr. Mede speaks due unto things sacred As these in some sort were by being presented to the LORD which made it unlawful to imploy them to common uses For as the LORD himself is that singular incommunicable and absolutely Holy One and his Service and Worship therefore incommunicable to any other so should that also which is consecrated to his Service be in some proportion incommunicably used and not promiscuously and commonly as other things are See Book I. Discourse 2. p. 18. And they shall be a Sign unto the Children of Israel That God accepts no Sacrifice which is not presented by the Hands of the Sons of Aaron This the Levites were to remember who attended upon the Priest when they saw these Plates laid upon the Altar of Burnt-offering every day Verse 39 Ver. 39. And Eleazar the Priest took the brazen Censers c. By this it appears these Censers were made of the same Metal though it was not said before that Aaron's Censer was of and wherewith the Altar was overlaid He took them up out of the burning no doubt immediately upon the foregoing Commands and as soon as the Mutiny was quite quelled they were employed as Moses had directed Ver. 40. To be a Memorial unto the Children of Israel This explains what is meant by a Sign v. 38. viz. to put them in mind or rather to keep in their memory That no Stranger Though he were an Israelite nay a Levite if he were not as it here follows of the Seed of Aaron he was reputed a Stranger to this Office Come near to offer Incense before the LORD Presume to execute the Office of a Priest in the Sanctuary That he be not as Korah and his Company Destroyed in a dreadful manner By this it appears that Korah perished as well as the Two hundred and fifty Men and it is likely as they did by Fire from the LORD As the LORD said unto him i. e. To Eleazar By the hand of Moses Ver. 36 37. Ver. 41. But on the morrow An astonishing Instance Verse 41 of the incurable hardness and insensibility of some Mens hearts which were not in the least altered by God's terrible Judgments and singular Mercies but instantly forgat both All the Congregation of the Children of Israel Not merely the Rulers of the People as this Phrase sometimes signifies but all the People in general v. 47. who were incited it is probable by that lewd Rout which Korah had gathered together against Moses and Aaron v. 19. Some of which were swallowed up but most of them remained still alive to do more Mischief Murmured against Moses and against Aaron In such a mutinous and threatning manner as demonstrated the contagious Nature of a Seditious Humour beyond all example For from a discontented Party who grumbled that they were not preferred suitably to the opinion they had of themselves it spread it self into the whole Body of the People And so infected them as to kindle a new Flame as soon as the former had been extinguished by such a terrible Vengeance as one would have expected should not have left the smallest Spark of this mutinous Humour in them Saying Ye have killed the People of the LORD So they impudently call those Men whom God himself had declared by a visible Token to be presumptuous Sinners against their own Souls Some imagine they quarrelled with Moses and Aaron because they had not prevailed with God to pardon them which they could as well have done as procured this Judgment upon them But the displeasure which God here expresses against this
they murmured any more they deserved to be all cut off as they should certainly be it moved them to make this doleful Complaint Wherein they seem to be convinced of their Guilt and to bewail their miserable state For the sence of these two verses is Some of us died before and now lately more have perished and we are all in the same danger surely we shall never have done dying till we be all consumed Behold we die This seems to relate to those Judgments which had passed upon them heretofore We perish And this to what had very lately hapned to Korah Dathan and Abiram with their Company and to those that murmured the next day after XVI 49. We all perish This will be the Fate of the whole Congregation Ver. 13. Whosoever cometh any thing near unto the Verse 13 Tabernacle of the LORD Who was not a Priest and yet approached nearer than God allowed Shall die So Moses had threatned and they now believed him And were afraid withal they should some time or other incur God's Displeasure by their Rashness Shall we be consumed with dying They seem to be afraid lest for their late Murmurings and Insurrection after such a heavy Punishment for that Sin XVI 41 42. God should further plague them as by this new Sign he convinced them they justly deserved And therefore beg of Moses to intreat God to spare them and not to go on utterly to destroy them CHAP. XVIII Chapter XVIII Verse 1 Ver. 1. AND the LORD said unto Aaron By the hand of Moses it is most likely unto whom God was wont to Communicate all that he would have delivered either to Aaron or to the People XVII 4. And having done more Miracles than one to establish Aaron in the Priesthood he now lets him know that the Honour he had done him was an Office of great Weight and Burden wherein he was to behave himself with great Care and Circumspection And withal he again declares what the Duty of the Levites was together with the Priests from v. 1. unto v. 8. And from thence he proceeds to tell them what Maintenance he had setled upon both for their encouragement in doing their Duty as I shall observe in the proper places Thou and thy Sons and thy Father's House with thee You and the Levites whom he calls his Father's House who had the Charge of the Sanctuary Shall bear the Iniquity of the Sanctuary If the Sanctuary were profaned through the Negligence of the Levites who were to keep Strangers and People in their Uncleanness from entring into it and if the Priests were remiss and did not take care to see the Levites do their Duty the Punishment of such Prophanation he tells them should fall upon them And thou and thy Sons with thee i. e. Aaron and the Priests alone Shall bear the Iniquity of the Priesthood Suffer the Punishment of it if they permitted any Person who was not of the Line of Aaron to offer Incense or perform any part of the Priest's Office or if they themselves should minister in their Uncleanness or having any Blemish or did any thing contrary to the Rules of their Office This was some comfort to the People who were afraid they should die for every Error committed in their Approaches to the Sanctuary XVII 12 13. for which he assures them he would punish the Priests and the Levites and not them And it also served to remove the Peoples Envy to the Priest whose Dignity they saw accompanined with such great Danger Ver. 2. And thy Brethren also of the Tribe of Levi Verse 2 the Tribe of thy Father This also was a Comfort to the Levites and designed to make them more contented than they had been in their Inferior Offices that the Priests were to look upon them as their Brethren Bring thou with thee Into the Tabernacle That they may be joyned with thee As Assistants to thee there And minister unto thee In such things as I have mentioned See upon III. 6. But thou and thy Sons with thee shall minister before the Tabernacle of Witness The words shall minister not being in the Hebrew some think he still speaks of the Levites and translate the words thus Both to thee and to thy Sons with thee they shall minister as was said before before the Tabernacle of Witness But they that are of this Opinion do not consider what is meant by the Tabernacle of Witness which signifies the most Holy Place See IX 15. X. 11. before which the Levites did not minister but before the Tabernacle of the Congregation as Moses expresly speaks III. 7. See there where they attended upon the Priests in the Court of the Sanctuary in which the Priests only could minister as Aaron alone did upon one certain day only in the most Holy Place Verse 3 Ver. 3. And they shall keep thy Charge and the Charge of all the Tabernacle Of the outward part of it See III. 7 8. and carry the Vessels belonging to the inward part viz. the Sanctuary IV. 15. Only they shall not come nigh the Vessels of the Sanctuary They were not to touch them when they carried them IV. 15. nor to see when they were covered by the Priests IV. 19 20. And the Altar I take this to be meant not only of the Altar of Incense but also of the Burnt-offering unto which they were not to approach nor touch it while they attended upon the Priests who only could minister there This is justified from XXIX Exod. 37. where this Altar is said to be most holy and whosoever touched it is required to be holy That neither they nor you also die They for presuming to go beyond the Bounds of their Office and the Priest for permitting them Ver. 4. And they shall be joyned unto thee He would Verse 4 have the Priests look upon the Levites as part of that sacred Body of Men that waited upon God in the Tabernacle though in an inferiour Office And indeed the very Name of Levi imported as much and denoted them to be Adjuncts to some other Persons Accordingly we find in after times that as the Levites were a guard on the outside of the Temple so the Priests watched within it And keep the charge of the Tabernacle of the Congregation for all the Service of the Tabernacle See III. 7 8. The heaviest part of their Service which is called their Burden is mentioned particularly IV. 3 4. and the rest of that Chapter A Stranger shall not come nigh unto you This seems to relate both to the Priests and to the inferiour Ministers that none should presume to perform the Office of the former but only the Family of Aaron nor of the latter who were not of the Tribe of Levi But the Hebrew Doctors particularly Maimonides by Zar a Stranger understand in this place every one that was not of the Seed-male of Aaron So that the Sons of his Daughters should not minister For the Sons of Aaron saith he Riath
Brook Zered as it is in II Deut. 13 14. And then to the River Arnon v. 13. and thence to Beer where they digged a famous Well XXI 16 17 18. which perhaps they might have done before in other places if they had made Experiment for Kadesh where they now were was in the Border of a Country inhabited And they gathered themselves together against Moses and against Aaron Just as their Fathers had many times done particularly upon such an occasion as this XVII Exod. 2 3. Ver. 3. And the People chode with Moses Instead Verse 3 of condoling with him and comforting him for the Death of his Sister and their Prophetess as Abarbinel observes they came in a rude manner to scold at him And spake saying Would God that we had died when our Brethren died before the LORD By a sudden Death rather than linger away by Thirst They allude to the strokes of God upon their Brethren XI 1 33. XIV 37. XVI 32 35 46. Which one would have thought should have affrighted them from uttering such very discontented Language XIX 2. But nothing will alter those who will not lay to heart and preserve in mind God's Mercies and Judgments Verse 4 Ver. 4. And why have ye brought the Congregation of the LORD into this Wildernoss that we and our Cattle should die there The very words of their Fathers presently after they came out of Egypt XVII Exod 3. Verse 5 Ver. 5. And wherefore have ye made us to come up out of Egypt They speak as if it had not been their own desire but that they were perswaded to it by Moses to leave Egypt who was sent to tell them God heard their sighing groans and crys and would deliver them II Exod. 23 24. III. 17. But in a discontented fit nothing of this was remembred To bring us unto this evil place They do not speak of returning to Egypt as their Fathers did XIV 3 4. but they repented that they were come out of it So shamefully forgetful they were of all God's benefits who had in a wonderful manner redeemed them from the heaviest Slavery and hitherto provided for them miraculously in the Wilderness which was a better place than such an ungrateful People deserved It is no place of Seed i. e. of Corn. Or of Figs or of Vines or Pomegranates c. Now they complain for want of other things as well as Water wherein they still imitate their unbelieving Fathers XVI 14. Ver. 6. And Moses and Aaron went from the presence Verse 6 of the Assembly unto the Door of the Tabernacle of the Congregation To pray to God to pardon their Sin and to supply their Wants And they fell upon their Faces As they had often done before on other such like occasions particularly XIV 5. And the Glory of the LORD appeared unto them Unto all the People it is likely as it had done several times to silence their Murmurings See XIV 10. XVI 19 42. Ver. 7. And the LORD spake unto Moses From Verse 7 that Glory which appeared upon the Tabernacle Ver. 8. Take the Rod. That famous Rod wherewith Moses had wrought so many Miracles in Egypt and at the Red Sea c. And gather thou the Assembly together This word Edah signifying sometimes only the Assembly of the Elders not of the whole People it would be uncertain which of them he is bid to gather together for it is a different word from that which we translate Assembly v. 6. if the tenth verse had not determined that it was the Kahal or Congregation of the People as the word Edah also signifies just before v. 8. Thou and Aaron thy Brother For the People were gathered together against Aaron in a mutinous manner as well as against Moses v. 2. And speak ye unto the Rock before their eyes To the first Rock you meet withal saith Nachmanides and that is within their sight For this is not the same Verse 9 Rock out of which the former Water flowed as the Jews fancy but quite different Their very Names are different that being called Tzur this Selah That was in Rephidim this is Kadesh two very distant places Thus Chaskuni some think this the same with that in Exodus but it is not the same History For the former was in Horeb this in Kadesh which is in the Extremity of the Land of Edom. But whether God pointed him to a Rock which was then in their sight as he did at Horeb XVII Exod. 5 6. or left him to chuse any stony place is not certain But it is a mere fancy of some of the Jews that because God here bad them speak to the Rock Moses offended God in smiting it For to what purpose should he take the Rod if he was not to smite the Rock with it as he had done formerly Just such another conceit there is in Schalschelet Hakkabala where R. Gedaliah saith That he had given an account of this Sin in another Book which he gathered out of various Writers and found there were XXVIII different Opinions about it But he preferred this before any of them that whereas God bad Moses gather the Edah together that is the Assembly of the People v. 8. he gathered the Kahal i. e. the Congregation of the Princes and Elders as he will have it whose Faith needed no Confirmation See Hottinger in his Smegma Orientale cap. 8. p. 451. And it shall give forth his Water The Jews puzzle themselves about this Expression which sounds they think as if the Water was contained in the Rock and Moses only made a Gap for it to gush out But it seems to be spoken in opposition to the Waters issuing out of the former Rock which had supplyed them hitherto but now ceased to flow It being as much as if he had said This shall give forth Water as that did before now it shall be called the Water of this Rock not that of Horeb. And thou shalt bring forth to them Water out of the Rock Renew the former Miracle So thou shalt give the Congregation and their Beasts drink So that they and their Cattle which they fear will perish v. 4. shall be as plentifully provided for as ever Ver. 9. And Moses took the Rod from before the Verse 9 LORD as he commanded him From hence some conclude that this was the Rod of Aaron which blossomed because he is said to take it from before the LORD where Aaron's Rod was laid up XVII 10. But this Rod is so expresly called Moses his Rod V. 11. which was the Instrument of bringing the former Water out of the Rock in Horeb that I cannot but think this was the very same Rod. Which being there called the Rod of God XVII Exod. 9. as it is at the first mention of it IV Exod. 20. it is very probable that by God's order it was laid up somewhere before him in the Sanctuary though not before the Ark of the Testimony For having been imployed in doing
dried up in Summer they were called Chersydrus because then they lived in dry places and in the hot Season had a most sharp stinging Poison Which as Nicander saith made such Inflamations as brought upon him that was stung by them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 innumerable griefs See Hierozoicon P. II. Lib. III. cap. 13. where he shows also they were flying Serpents of which the Prophet Isaiah speaks XIX 29. XXX 6. and that now was a hot Season wherein they were wont to be most venomous For Aaron dying the first day of the fifth Month which answers to the nineteenth of our July and they mourning for him thirty days after which followed their encounter with the Canaanites and then this murmuring and this punishment it must fall out in the latter end of August when the Dog-days were going out See Vossius de Orig. Progressu Idolol Lib. IV. cap. 56. And they bit the People This Aben-Ezra and others think was a Punishment suitable to their Sin which was evil speaking against the LORD by calumniating his Providence For Solomon compares a Calumniator to a Serpent which bites if it be not charmed X Eccles 11. It is a strange fancy of Fortunatus Licetus that Moses here speaks of a Disease bred in the Body which in Children is called Dracunculus and not of the biting of Serpents from without Lib. de Ortu Spontaneo Viventium cap. 51. For which there is no ground at all and on the contrary nothing more certain than that in Arabia and Egypt and other Countries of Africa there are such Serpents as are here described Yet Bartholinus seems to think that his Opinion may be defended against Ezekiel de Castro who confuted it See Epistol Medic. Centur. I. Epist 32. And much People of Israel died The whole Wilderness through which the Israelites marched so many years was full of fiery Serpents and Scorpions as Moses his words import VIII Deut. 15. which makes it the more wonderful that we never hear of their being bitten and killed by them until now But it is to be considered that they were protected by the Cloud from this and from all other dangers as the Hebrews well observe which now withdrew its shadow from them and let in the Serpents upon them Or rather as Moses here expresly saith God who had hitherto kept them off now sent them and perhaps brought them from remote parts of the Wilderness to infest the whole Congregation Verse 7 Ver. 7. Wherefore the People came to Moses and said we have sinned It doth not appear whether they were immediately sensible of their Sin and confessed it upon the biting of the Serpents and the direful effects of it or staid till there 〈…〉 ●reat Mortality among them It is likely they 〈…〉 made their Addresses to him but before a Remedy was found out by erecting the brazen Serpent many of them perished For we have sinned against the LORD and against thee They make a particular Acknowledgment of their Guilt as a Token of the Sincerity of their Repentance Pray unto the LORD that he take away the Serpents from us In the Hebrew the words take away the Serpent in the singular Number about which the Jews make a great many curious Observations as if there was one evil Angel that governed them all And if there be any truth in this Observation we Christians cannot but think these words point to the old Serpent the Devil who lost Sting by the lifting up Christ on the Cross as the brazen Serpent it here follows was lifted up for the Cure of the biting of those Serpents But the simple truth is that in this Language the Singular Number is often used collectively for the Plural As in VIII Exod. 6. The Frog came up and covered the Land i. e. a vast multitude of Frogs And so Moses speaks in the place just now named VIII Deut. 15. where he calls this Wilderness wherein they travelled a place of a fiery Serpent and Scorpion i. e. saith Jonathan full of such Creatures And Moses prayed for the People Here R. Becai and others observe the great Meekness and Charity of M ses and thence draw this Instruction That he of whom any one asks pardon for an Offence ought not to be hard-hearted but ready to forgive Thus Abraham prayed for Abimelech XX Gen. 17. Job for his Friends XLII 10. It would be a sin to do otherwise 1 Sam. XII 19 20 23. Ver. 8. And the LORD said unto Moses In answer to his Prayer Make thee a fiery Serpent The Figure of one of those Serpents which bite the People Abarbinel thinks that upon Moses his Prayer the Serpents were removed but still there remained many among the People sorely afflicted by the venomous effects of their biting for whose Cure God graciously gave this direction It is something strange that any learned Christian should so much admire the Egyptian Learning as not to forbear the mention of their incantations of Serpents when they speak of this relation which Moses makes concerning the brazen Serpent which God ordered him to set up Yet Sir John Marsham in his Chronicon sect 9. when he comes to treat of this Station of the Israelites at Tsalmona hath a long discourse to show how famous the Egyptians and other Nations were in this sort of Magick and thus concludes it that Moses putting this brazen Serpent upon a Perch non tam Serpentes igneos incantabat ne nocerent quàm eorum venenum extinguebant did not so much charm these Serpents that they should not hurt as extinguish their Venom This seems to me a Scurvy intimation that Moses had their Practises in his Mind but went beyond them He should have said Moses abominated their wicked Arts if they had any such in those days and directed the Israelites to look up to God for healing So the Jews themselves particularly Aben-Ezra who takes notice that some Superstitious People fancied that this Serpent was a Talisman made to receive I know not what Influence from the Stars But God forbid saith he God forbid we should have any such thought This was made by the Divine order the reason of which let us not scrupulously search They thought that is there was something extraordinary in it as Jonathan plainly declares in his Paraphrase of the last words of this verse he shall be healed if he direct his heart to the Name of the WORD of the LORD Where no Christian can forbear to think of our Blessed Saviour the Eternal WORD who was prefigured as I shall show in the following verse by the erecting of this Serpent here mentioned upon a Pole that all might look upon him and live And set it upon a Pole So high that every one in the Camp might see it For the word signifies such a Pole as made their Ensign or Banner to which all the Army was to resort Concerning this word Nes See Booetius Lib. II. cap. 4. And it shall come to pass that every one
XXXIIId Chapter of this Book See v. 41 42. And pitched in Oboth Where it is probable they found Water of the want of which they complained See XX. 2. Ver. 11. And they journeyed from Oboth and pitched Verse 11 in Jie-Abarim Not that Mount Abarim where Moses died XXVII 12. but another place in the Confines of Moab as it here follows See what I have observed XX. 2. In the Wilderness which is before Moab Called the Wilderness of Moab II Deut. 8. Towards the Sun-rising On the East part of it as Jephthah observes a great many Years after this That they came by the East side of the Land of Moab XI Judges 18. Ver. 12. And from thence they removed As they Verse 12 were about to remove from this last place they received a Command from God not to meddle with the Country of Moab II Deut. 9. Which is the reason as Abarbinel observes that Moses here sets down briefly whence and whether they went and where they pitched that it might appear they did not transgress that Command And pitched in the Valley of Zared Or as some translate it in Nachal-Zared which is called Dibon-Gad XXXIII 45. For this place had two Names as the same Author observes and it was just eight and thirty Years since the Spies went up to Survey the Country from Kadesh-barnea till their passing this Brook as we translate it II Deut. 14. But I take Dibon-Gad rather to have been a place which lay upon the Brook Zered Ver. 13. And from thence they removed and pitched Verse 13 on the other side of Arnon The Hebrew word meheber may be translated on this side or on the other side And some think they were now on this side of the River and not yet gone over it Nor did they immediately come hither from their former Station but first to Almon-Diblathaim XXXIII 46. which is also called Beth-Diblathaim in the Wilderness of Moab XLVIII Jerem. 22. and Diblah VI Ezek. 13. And then passing by Ar in the Confines of Moab and approaching to the Country of the Children of Ammon God commanded them not to invade the Ammonites being Descendants from Lot as well as the Moabites II Deut. 18 19 37. but to pass over the River Arnon II Deut. 24. to that side of it which belonged to the Amorites For this River at that time divided the Moabites from the Amorites as it here follows Which is in the Wilderness that cometh out of the Coasts of the Amorites Runs by the Wilderness of Kedemoth unto which the Amorites extended their Dominion II Deut. 26. For Arnon is the Border of Moab between Moab and the Amorites This River flowed from the Mountains of Arabia where it had its rise and fell into the Dead Sea as Josephus saith Lib. IV. Antiq. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bounding the Country of the Moabites and of the Amorites the Country of Moab lying on one side of it and that of the Amorites on the other For though the Moabites formerly possessed the Country on both sides of Arnon as far as Heshbon yet the Amorites had driven them out of that part of it which lay next to them and made the River the Boundary of their two Kingdoms v. 26 27. This Moses recites the more exactly that it might appear the Israelites invaded none of the Moabites Possessions but what was now possessed by the Amorites By which Jephthah defended the Right of the Children of Israel in future times against the Ammonites who pretended this Country belonged to them XI Judges 13 14 15 c. Ver. 14. Wherefore it is said in the Book of the Wars Verse 14 of the LORD A proof of this Moses thought good to alledge out of an Authentick Record in those Countries containing the History of all the Wars that had been in those Parts which are here called the Wars of the LORD because he is the great Governour of the World as Abarbinel interprets it from whom and by whom are all things who putteth down one and setteth up another as the Psalmist speaks at his good pleasure This Book he thinks was written by some of the Wise men of those Naons and so thinks Nachmanides who looking upon this Conquest made by Sihon as a very memorable thing put it down in their Annals which after the way of those Countries were written he thinks in a Poetical manner There are those who are of opinion that this Book was written by Moses himself who left in it directions to Joshua how to proceed in the Wars of the LORD when he conquered Canaan So Dr. Lightfoot conjectures and Bonfrerius doth not much differ from him But I take the former account to be the more probable that Moses justifies what he writes concerning this Conquest out of their own Books which he quotes just as St. Paul in the New Testament doth one of the Greek Poets What he did in the Red Sea These are the words of the Book out of which he quotes a small Fragment And the Marginal Translation of them is most proper Vaheb in Supheh only the word eth is omitted which makes the Sence to be this against Vaheb in Supheh That is he came some such word must be understood against Vaheb a King of the Moabites and overthrew him in Suphah a place in the Frontiers of Moab See I Deut. 1. Others understand by Vaheb the place where Sihon gave the Moabites this blow which he did by falling upon them on a sudden with a terrible Fury So Nachmanides understands these words besuphah he stormed the City and made a furious Assault when they thought not of it For Suphah signifies a Whirlwind or stormy Tempest V Isai 28. And in the Brooks of Arnon The same Nachmanides takes the word veeth which we translate and in to signifie rather and with and these being still the words of the Book before-mentioned the sence is this In the same manner he smote the Brooks or Torrents of Arnon upon which he fell like a Tempest and carried all before him Verse 15 Ver. 15. And at the Streams of the Brook None I think hath given a better account of these words than the same Nachman who by Esched hannechalim which we translate the Streams of the Brooks understands either a Cliff from whence the Torrents flowed as Aschdod and Happisgah III Deut. 17. are the Hills from whence the Springs gushed or the Valley through which the Torrents ran where they made a great broad Water which is here called an Effusion of Torrents as R. Levi ben Gershom interprets the Hebrew words Esched hannechabim That goeth down to the dwelling of Ar. Which extends it self as far as Ar a City of Moab v. 28. R. Levi ben Gersom takes the word Schebet which we translate dwelling to signifie a Place as well as Ar towards which these Torrents bent their Course And lyeth upon the Borders of Moab Which leaneth or belongeth unto Moab being in the Border of that Country Thus far are
Princes of the Congregation went forth to meet them without the Camp Hearing they were returned victorious they went to congratulate them before they came at the Camp for which there was also another reason mentioned v. 19. This shows that Eleazar was not so infirm as some suppose and affords an argument to strengthen their Opinion who think Joshua was now General of the Host otherwise he would have been mentioned together with Moses and Eleazar as going to meet them being chosen his Co-adjutor and therefore Superiour to all the Princes that are here joyned with them Ver. 14. And Moses was wroth with the Officers of Verse 14 the Host with the Captains over Thousands and Captains over Hundreds which came from the Battle Who were more to blame than the Soldiers whose duty it was to obey not to give orders which they received no doubt from the Officers to kill only the Men. Here now is an Argument to the contrary that Joshua did not Command in chief but this being only a Detachment as they now speak from the Host of Israel was led by some inferiour Officer The first Captain of Thousands perhaps for if Joshua had been there Moses would have expostulated with him or rather there would have been no cause for this Rebuke he being a Man in whom was the Spirit XXVII 18. Ver. 15. And Moses said unto them have ye saved all the Women alive Unless he had commanded them to be killed one cannot see that they deserved to be Verse 15 chidden because they proceeded according to the Rules of all worthy Warriours who killed only those who could bear Arms against them But either he had given some Directions who should be killed or he expected they should have considered that the Women had killed more by their Blandishments than their Husbands could do by their Arms for they had not killed one Man v. 49. and therefore should have been destroyed as the most mischievous for so it follows in the next verse Verse 16 Ver. 16. Behold Reflect upon what is lately past and consider These caused the Children of Israel through the counsel of Balaam to commit Trespass against the LORD in the matter of Peor and there was a Plague among the Congregation of the LORD By these they had been inveigled into an heinous Sin and made obnoxious to a very heavy Punishment which God inflicted upon them on that account For though the Moabitish Women had a great hand in it XXV 1. yet those of Midian seem to have been the chief Seducers v. 6 17 18. and perhaps he feared might be so again Verse 17 Ver. 17. Now therefore kill every Male among the little ones That the Nation might be extirpated as far as lay in their power And kill every Woman that hath known Man by lying with him For these it is to be supposed had been the most instrumental in the Crime before-mentioned either by prostituting themselves or their Daughters to the Lust of the Israelites and thereby drawing them to Idolatry In which Sin they were so settled that there was no hope of reclaiming them but they might rather if they had been saved alive have inticed the Israelites to commit the same again Ver. 18. But all the Women-children that have not Verse 18 known a Man by lying with him keep alive Being young there was some hope they might be brought off from Idolatry and become Proselytes to the true Religion For your selves To be sold as Slaves to any other Nation or to be kept as Servants or taken to be their Wives after such preparation as the Law required XXI Deut. 16 17 c. This was a peculiar Case wherein a middle course was held between those that were of the Seven Nations of Canaan and those that were not If they were not of those Seven Nations the Israelites might take the Women and little Ones unto themselves XX Deut. 14 15. If they were every thing that breathed was to be destroyed v. 16 17. But here the Midianites being guilty of a very great Crime against the LORD and against his People are punished more heavily than other Nations though not so heavily as those of Canaan were to be For they killed all the Women that were not Virgins as well as all the Males both little and great but spared the rest together with the Cattle c. Such an Execution was made in after times upon one of the Cities of Israel upon an high Contempt of Publick Authority in a very great Exigency XXI Judges 11. There is a Rule in XX Deut. 10. that when they came to fight against any City they should proclaim Peace to it and if they would accept it they should only make the Inhabitants Tributaries to them From whence a Question arising whether this extended to the Seven Nations of Canaan it is resolved by Maimonides that it did which he proves from XI Josh 19 20. But so great was the Sin of this People that they neither sent offers of Peace to them now nor were they to make any Peace with them hereafter XXIII Deut. 6. And the reason is there given because they hired Balaam to curse them which is as true of the Midianites as of the Moabites Notwithstanding which Maimonides determines that though the Israelites did not send Messengers of Peace to them yet if they of their own accord sent to desire Peace of the Israelites they were not to reject them See Cunaeus de Repub. Hebr. Lib. II. cap. 20. Verse 39 Ver. 19. And do ye abide without the Camp seven days As unclean Persons For though it was lawful to kill Men in a just War against them yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Philo speaks because of the most ancient and common Kindred between all Mankind if was fit Men should use some Purification to cleanse themselves from that which looks like a Crime though it was none Whosoever hath killed any Person and whosoever hath touched any slain purifie both your selves The whole Army that went to the War were to stay without the Camp seven days and such of them as had had their Hands in Blood or had touched a dead Body though killed by another were to use a special Purification which was made by the Water of Separation mentioned XIX 9 c. And your Captives Or the Prey that they had taken of Garments and other things mentioned in the next verse and so the word is translated v. 26. For we cannot think that the Persons they had taken being Gentiles were to be purified with that Water which was peculiar to the Jews On the third day and on the seventh day So the Law was XIX 11 12. And such Purifications were common among the Gentiles especially the Greeks upon the like occasions as Mr. Selden observes L. IV. de Jure Nat. Gent. cap. ult Grotius L. II. de Jure Belli Pacis cap. 24. n. 10. To whom add our late learned Dr. Spencer L. III. Dissert 3. sect 1. where
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