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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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Words and Actions as Mr. Selden observes Lib. III. de Synedr Cap. XIII n. 1. and Cap. XV. n. 3. And so among the Latins the word inchoare when applied to Sacred things signifies to perfect or consummate as Servius observes upon the VI Aenead And both Civil and Sacred Initiations were accompanied with great Joy and Gladness But this is not to be understood as if the Dedication of the Altar was the setting of it apart and sanctifying it for the Service of God which had been done before and VII days spent therein XXIX Exod. 27. VIII Lev. 11. but as the word properly signifies the beginning to use it after it had been so sanctified In the day that it was anointed At the time that it was set apart and all other things ordered for the Safe-guard of the Tabernacle See v. 1. Even the Princes offered their Offering Presented their Gifts as the LXX translate it which they desired God would accept upon this great occasion Before the Altar At the Door of the Tabernacle near unto which the Altar stood XL Exod. 6. for he speaks of the Altar of Burnt-offerings Verse 11 Ver. 11. And the LORD said unto Moses they shall offer their Offering Here again Rasi observes that Moses would not receive their Offering till he knew the Mind of God Who directed in what manner and order their Gifts should be offered to him Each Prince on his day for the dedication of the Altar This made the Dedication a very long Solemnity which continued twelve days When these XII days began it is not easie to determine but it seems to me a very reasonable Computation which Fortunatus Scacchus hath made of this whole business Myrothec Sacr. Elaeochrism Lib. 2. Cap. LXXIV Where he supposes that the Tabernacle being erected the first Day of the first Month of the second Year after they came out of Egypt seven days were spent in the Consecration of it and of the Altar c. And on the eighth day Moses began to consecrate Aaron and his Sons which lasted VII days longer Then the fifteenth day of that Month was the first day of Unleavened Bread Which God commanded as we read here Chap. IX to be observed in the first Month and lasted till the Two and twentieth The rest of the Month we may well suppose was spent in giving receiving and delivering the Laws mentioned in the Book of Leviticus After which on the first day of the second Month he began to number the People according to the Command in the beginning of this Book Which may be supposed to have lasted three days And then on the fourth the Levites were numbred On the next day we may suppose they were offered to God and given unto the Priests on the sixth Day they were expiated and consecrated as we read in the next Chapter And on the seventh Day their several Charges were parted among them of which we read Chapter IV. After which the Princes he supposes began to offer upon the eighth Day of the second Month for the Dedication of the Altar which lasted till the nineteenth Day inclusively and on the twentieth Day of this Month they removed as we read X. 11 12. from Sinai to the Wilderness of Paran Ver. 12. And he that offered his Offering the first Verse 12 day By God's order no doubt Was Nahshon the Son of Amminadab of the Tribe of Judah He held the principal place among the Israelites being the NASI the Prince or Captain as we translate it II Numb 3. of the Children of Judah who had the first Standard And yet he alone of all the Twelve great Men here mentioned is not called NASI Prince of Judah as all the rest are called Princes of their Tribe v. 18 24 30 c. but simply Nahshon of the Tribe of Judah The Jews give several reasons of it but perhaps it was because he offered first which was honour enough and there needed no more to be said of him Ver. 13. And his Offering was one silver Charger Verse 13 the weight thereof was an hundred and thirty Shekels and one silver Bowl c. It appears by the Metal that this Charger and Bowl were of that they were for the use of the Altar of Burnt-offerings in the outward Court for all the Vessels of the Sanctuary were of Gold And I take this Charger or broad Dish or Platter to have been offered for receiving the Flesh which was offered at the Altar or the fine Flour for the Meat-offerings And the Bowl received the Blood or was used for pouring out Wine Both of them were full of fine Flour mingled with Oyl for a Meat-offering Which was to attend upon the Burnt-offering and the Peace-offering mentioned v. 15 17. See IV. 7. where I observed it was not difficult to procure this fine Flour in the Wilderness Verse 14 Ver. 14. One Spoon of ten Shekels of Gold full of Incense Both the Metal of which it was made and that which was in it shows this Spoon was for the use of the Golden Altar in the Sanctuary Which may incline one to think that both Altars were now dedicated that is first began to be used for the Service of the whole Congregation See v. 88. Verse 15 Ver. 15. One young Bullock one Ram one Lamb of the first Year There are so many Sacrifices mentioned here and in the two following Verses no less than XXI in all that together with the silver and gold Plate they look like too great a Present to be made out of one Man's private estate And therefore some have thought that the rest of the great Men of the Tribe of Judah joyned with Nahshon in their Contributions towards it and that it was offered in his own and their Names For a Burnt-offering This is first mentioned as being the most ancient sort of Sacrifice long before we read of any other and being an Acknowledgment of God's Soveraign Dominion over all Verse 16 Ver. 16. One Kid of the Goats for a Sin-offering This in all likelyhood was first offered though the other be first mentioned For in the next Chapter we find the Burnt-offering enjoyned in the first place but the Sin-offering offered before it VIII 8 12. The like I observed before VI. 16. See there Ver. 17. And for a Sacrifice of Peace-offerings two Oxen five Rams five He-goats five Lambs of the first year These Sacrifices were more numerous than the Burnt-offering or the Sin-offering because the Verse 17 Priests and the Princes and as many of the People as they invited had their share of them and feasted before the LORD upon them with great rejoycing Which Custom as Mr. Selden observes flowed from hence to the Gentiles who dedicated their Altars and Temples and Statues c. with much ceremony and the ancient Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with more sumptuous Sacrifices See L. III. de Synedriis cap. 14. num 111. Where he also shows how they were dedicated among the Romans with Plays
would have been to have given them more than a tenth part but they were to give the Priests as good as they left for themselves For that was the Rule XXVII Lev. 32 33. And it was but reason the Priests should have this honourable provision made for them above the Levites their Vocations being more honourable and their Service more noble in the very Sanctuary it self For which cause this tenth of the Tythe of the Land was assigned them which they being but few in comparison with the Levites made the allowance to every one of them much greater than to any of the Levites And yet as an augmentation to it they had the First-fruits and their Fees as I said before out of the Sacrifices and other things wholly to their own use Even the hallowed part thereof out of it The sacred part was the tenth part which they might not use it being taken by God for his part XXVII Lev. 30. By which all the rest was sanctified to the use of the owner when this part was taken out of it which may possibly be here also intended Ver. 30. Therefore thou shalt say unto them Tell them the reason why this tenth part must be separated from the rest When ye have heaved the best thereof from it Taken Verse 30 out the tenth part as an Offering to the LORD Then it shall be counted to the Levites as the increase of the Threshing-floor and as the increase of the Wine-press Then the remainder may be as freely used by them as the Corn or the Wine of any Man's Land in Israel when he had paid his Tythe But till then it was unlawful for him to enjoy it because God was first to be served This is made more plain in the next verse Ver. 31. And ye shall eat it After the hallowed Verse 31 part was taken out v. 29. all the rest was theirs to be enjoyed as Men do that which is their own In every place This seems to be said to distinguish these from the holy things given by God to the Priests Which being offered at the Altar were to be eaten only in the Holy Place but the Tythes though they were a kind of Offering to the LORD yet not being presented at the Altar might be eaten any where after the tenth part was given to the Priests And your housholds All their Family Servants as well as others might eat of them whether they were clean or no. And more than this they might sell them to Strangers to buy other Necessaries with the Money they yielded or exchange them for other Commodities For it is your reward for your Service in the Tabernacle of the Congregation See v. 21. Ver. 32. And ye shall bear no sin Suffer no punishment By reason of it For eating it with your Housholds When ye have heaved from it the best of it When they had taken out the tenth part as sacred to God's uses v. 28. they might safely use the rest themselves as they pleased For God had given it to them for their support and therefore would not punish them for eating it as he did those that did eat holy Things which did not belong to them Neither shall ye pollute the holy things of the Children of Israel Nor would there be any danger of polluting the holy Things which God had reserved to himself by turning them to a common use as there would have been if they had eaten the Tythes or other Gifts before the tenth part which was God's was taken out of them Lest ye die In the Hebrew it is Nor shall ye die as those did who meddled with the holy Things which God reserved for his Ministers alone CHAP. XIX Chapter XIX Verse 1 Ver. 1. AND the LORD spake unto Moses and unto Aaron saying They were both concerned in what follows Moses to deliver the Command and Aaron to see it executed Verse 2 Ver. 2. This is the Ordinance Or the Constitution Of the Law which the LORD hath commanded Which is now passed into a Law by God's command who had ordered this Water of Purification to be made some time before as appears from VIII 7. But now sets down a Rule for all Posterity to observe in the making of it It is the rather mentioned now after the foregoing History to free the People from that great fear they were in of perishing in their Uncleanness XVII 12 13. by showing them a way how to be purified from the greatest Pollution before they approached to the Tabernacle Speak unto the Children of Israel that they bring thee At the common Charge of the People because it was for their common benefit A red Heifer The Hebrew word Parah which we translate Heifer signifies a young Cow as Par signifies a young Bullock not above two or three years old at most as Kimchi and others observe Without spot This the Jews refer to the word red which goes before and take it to signifie perfectly red without the mixture of any other colour for as to any other Imperfections they are provided against in the next words without blemish Insomuch that Maimonides in his Treatise on this Subject saith That if this Cow had two Hairs black or white it was unfit for this use From whence other Nations particularly the Egyptians derived the custom of sacrificing red Oxen as Plutarch tells us in his Book de Iside Osiride 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. And he saith they searcht them so very narrowly that if they found one hair black or white they counted it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unfit to be sacrificed See Bochartus P. I. Hierozoic Lib. II. cap. 39. where he shows this was the most common colour among that sort of Creatures in some Countries Wherein is no blemish See XXII Lev. 20 21 22. And upon which never came yoke Had never been imployed in ploughing the Ground or any other Work for according to the common sense of all Mankind those Creatures which had been made to serve other uses became unfit to be offered to God Whence Diomedes promises Pallas a Cow of a year old 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which no Man hitherto had brought under the yoke Iliad K. And so doth Nestor Odyss T. and the like Bochartus observes out of Virgil Ovid and others in his Hierozoicon P. I. Lib. II. cap. 33. All this is very plain but why a young Cow rather then a Bullock which is commonly appointed in Sacrifices and why one perfectly red is not so easie to understand If we had any reason to believe that those Superstitions were among the Egyptians in the days of Moses which were when Plutarch or Herodotus lived we might very probably say as some Men of Learning have that this Precept was given to preserve the Israelites from their Religion For they abhorred to offer a Cow whom they honoured as sacred to Isis So Herodotus they sacrificed Males both old and young 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but it is not lawful for them to
the whole number of Males descended from Kohath compare this with III. 28. there was a fourth part and better that were fit for Service Ver. 37. These were they that were numbred of the Families of the Kohathites all that might do Service in the Tabernacle Such Service as is particularly mentioned from v. 4. to v. 16. Verse 37 Ver. 38. And these are they that were numbred of the Verse 38 Sons of Gershon c. He proceeds in the same order to number them which he observed in giving them their Charge beginning with the Children of the second Son of Levi and then going back to the eldest Ver. 39. From thirty years old and upward c. Verse 39 This Verse is the very same with 35. Ver. 40. Two thousand and six hundred and thirty Verse 40 A third part and little more of their Males were fit for Service Compare this with III. 22. Ver. 41. These are they that were numbred of the Families Verse 41 of the Sons of Gershon of all that might do Service in the Tabernacle c. Such Service as is described from v. 24. to v. 29. Ver. 42 43. These two Verses are the same with Verse 42. 43. v. 38 39. Ver. 44. Even those that were numbred of them after Verse 44 their Families were three thousand and two hundred It is very remarkable the Descendants from the youngest Son of Levi III. 17. which had the fewest Males in it of a Month old and upward had the most robust Men fit for Service For here are above half compare this with III. 34. of the whole number of Males grown up to Thirty Years of Age. Which was a singular Providence the heaviest Burden lying upon them who were to carry the Boards c. of the Tabernacle Not indeed upon their shoulders but in Waggons which they were to load after they had taken them down and unload when they were to set them up again and for that reason had more Waggons allowed them than their Brethren the Gershonites VII 7 8. Verse 45 Ver. 45. These are those c. whom Moses and Aaron numbred Who were principally employed in this business According to the Word of the LORD by the hand of Moses To whom the Command is expresly directed v. 21. Verse 46 Ver. 46. All those that were numbred of the Levites whom Moses and Aaron and the Chief of Israel numbred For they took in others to their assistance v. 34. which is here repeated to show that there was no fraud in the business there being Witnesses of every Tribe that they proceeded impartially and did not favour the Levites who were their Brethren Verse 47 Ver. 47. Every one that came to do the Service of the Ministry and the Service of the Burden in the Tabernacle c. The first of these the Service of the Ministry one would think related to their serving the Priest when the Tabernacle was standing and the later the Service of the Burden to their carrying the Tabernacle when it was taken down and removed and so I expounded those words v. 24. But he mentioning here only those that were numbred from Thirty Years old I think upon further consideration that there is no regard in these Expressions to the Service they did to the Priests in the Tabernacle unto which they were admitted at Twenty five Years old See v. 3. but only to the Service mentioned here in this Chapter which relates altogether to the taking down and carrying the Tabernacle And therefore these must be lookt upon as two Phrases for the same thing the former of which is not exactly translated for there is nothing of Ministry in the Hebrew but the words are Every one that cometh to serve the Service of the Service and the Service of the Burden or Carriage For it is the same word which being joyned with work we translate servile XXIII Lev. 7. and other places Ver. 48. Eight thousand and five hundred and fourscore Verse 48 If the three Sums mentioned v. 36 40 44. be put together they amount exactly to this Sum in the whole Ver. 49. According to the Commandment of the Verse 49 LORD they were numbred by the hand of Moses By the assistance of Aaron and others v. I 34 46. Every one according to his Service and according to his Burden I observed before v. 47. that Service and Burden are two Expressions of the same thing For though the Sons of Kohath had the noblest part of the Work yet their Employment is called both a Service and a Burden v. 19. as that of the Gershonites is v. 24. For which Service all the Tithes of the Country of Canaan were given to them and continued to be theirs when this kind of Service ceased as it did when the Temple was built For then there were no Burdens to be carried on their shoulders as Josiah speaks 2 Chron. XXXV 3. but their Duty was changed even by David before the Building of the Temple who made them Singers and Keepers of the Treasury as well as Porters at the Gates of God's House and likewise Judges and other Officers in the Country as we read in 1 Chron. XXVI But the alteration in their Service made no alteration in the Wages allotted to them for they still enjoyed all the Tithes Thus were they numbred of him as the LORD commanded Moses This is so often repeated v. 37 41 45. that all Posterity might reverence these Ordinances as Divine Institutions and not merely Humane Appointments And so we are to look upon all these Laws as wise Orders made by the Soveraign of the World for the better Government of that People whom he had taken for his own peculiar And it argues a very profane Spirit in those as Conr. Pellicanus here observes who can admire and praise Ovid de Fastis and such like Books and have no regard at all if they do not ridicule them to these Sacred Writings which are of such venerable Antiquity CHAP. V. Chapter V Verse 1 Ver. 1. AND the LORD spake unto Moses saying It is not said when this was spoken which here follows but it 's likely immediately after the foregoing Commandments upon which it hath some dependance Verse 2 Ver. 2. Command the Children of Israel that they put out of the Camp every Leper and every one that hath an Issue and whosoever is defiled by the dead There were three Camps as Maimonides and a great many other mentioned by Mr. Selden observes L. II. de Synedr cap. I. n. 5. the Camp of the SCHECHINAH or of the LORD viz. the Sanctuary with its Courts which are called the Tents of the LORD 1 Chron. XXXI 2. And next the Camp of the Levites who with Aaron and his Sons made a Camp about the Tabernacle Chapter III. of this Book and then the Camp of Israel Chapter II. which incompassed them all Answerable to these when the Temple was built they reckoned the Temple it self from the East-Gate to be the Camp of
Causes brought before Moses in two of them he made haste to determine but in the other two he was slow Those of the first sort were this and that of the Daughters of Zelophehad Chap. XX. these he judged presently because they were pecuniary Matters but the other two viz. about him that blasphemed XXIV Levit. and him that gathered Sticks on the Sabbath-day XV Numb being capital Causes he took longer time to judge for he put them in Ward till the Mind of the LORD was known To teach those that succeeded him in the Office of Judges to make quick dispatch in Money Matters but to proceed slowly in Capital Causes But as this was no pecuniary Cause so it doth not appear but he took as much time to understand the Mind of God in it as in the other two about Blasphemy and Sabbath-breaking For he went in to consult with him as he did also in the case of Zelophehad's Daughters whose Cause he brought before the LORD XXVII 5. I will hear what the LORD will command concerning you These words seem to signifie that Moses might go into the Holy Place when he pleased to enquire of God where God spake with him in an audible Voice VII 89. whensoever he desired Satisfaction about any Doubt So Abarbinel who in this forsakes the Talmudists For they fancy that because God called to Moses and then spake to him out of the Tabernacle I Levit. 1. he could never go into the Holy Place but when he was called Which was true only at that time when the Glory of the LORD had newly filled the Tabernacle so that he durst not come into it till he was invited But was not a general Rule to be observed in all his Colloquies with the Divine Majesty that he should wait till he had a singular Call to come to him for it is plain by this place that he went in to speak with him whensoever he had occasion Verse 9 Ver. 9. And the LORD spake unto Moses saying He brought this Case before the LORD as his manner was in such Doubts and the LORD gave him the following Answer Which was to be a Rule not only to these present Enquirers but to all Posterity Verse 10 Ver. 10. If any Man of you or of your Posterity shall be unclean From hence the Jews observe that this is a Law concerning particular Persons only not concerning all the People or the major part of them For as the Mischna saith in the Title Pesachim Cap. 7. if all the People or the greater part or the Priests had contracted any Defilement they ought notwithstanding to keep the Passover even in that Defilement But if the lesser part only were defiled then they that were clean ought to keep it in the first Month and they that were defiled in the second This they ground upon the very first words of this Law v. 6. There were certain Men and upon these if any Man of you c. From whence saith Maimonides this Doctrine follows out of ancient Tradition that there were some private Persons who were adjourned to the second Passover but if the generality should be defiled by the dead they were not to be so adjourned but to sacrifice in that Vncleanness A great deal more to the same purpose may be seen in the fore-named Mr. Selden Lib. 2. de Synedr Cap. I. n. 3. By reason of a dead body This Case is mentioned instead of all other of like nature For there was the same reason for those who were unclean by a Leprosie for Women in Child-bed or that were menstruous or those that had a Running-issue or had touched a dead Carcass And this some of them ground upon v. 13. Where speaking of those who should keep the Passoever it is said in general the Man that is clean c. therefore he that was any way unclean might not keep it Or be in a Journey afar off Out of his own Country for it could not be kept any where but in Judaea XVI Deut. 2. or at such a distance that he could not reach the Tabernacle upon the Day appointed In the Mischna indeed this dereck rechokah as it is in the Hebrew a long way off is defined to be fifteen Miles from Jerusalem or the place where the Tabernacle was Whence Maimonides saith If any Man on the fourteenth Day of the Month Nisan at Sun rising was fifteen Mile or more from Jerusalem this was a remote way but if he was not so far from it he was not comprehended in this remote way for he might be at Jerusalem time enough in the Afternoon to keep the Passover that Evening though he went but a slow pace and that on foot But I do not take this to be a reasonable Explication Philo hath determined the distance a great deal better according to the Interpretation I mentioned at first L. III. de Vita Mosis Where he saith the second Passover was permitted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. To such who were hindred by their Travels into Countries a great way off from sacrificing with the rest of their Nation For it was not their fault that they were deprived of this honour especially considering that so small a Country as Judaea could not contain such a populous Nation but sent out Colonies into many places As for those who were only XV Mile from Jerusalem they might easily have come to the Feast if not on the Fourteenth day yet the day before and if this distance had been a good reason to excuse their absence most of the Nation might have staid away without any danger Yet he shall keep the Passover unto the LORD When that Uncleanness is gone and he is returned to his own Country again Verse 11 Ver. 11. The fourteenth day of the second Month at Even they shall keep it They had a whole Month's time given them to dispose themselves and their Affairs so that they might be able to keep it And eat it with unleavened Bread and bitter Herbs Those Jews who are called Karaites as Mr. Selden observes in the place before-named n. 7. expresly say that they were not bound in the second Month Passover unto more than this to eat the Lamb with unleavened Bread and bitter Herbs but they were not obliged to keep the Feast of Unleavened Bread seven days because they might do that in the Passover of the first Month. For the Unclean are only prohibited to eat the Passover but not to keep the Feast of Unleavened Bread If the same Persons that could keep it in the first Month hapned again to be unclean in the second they could not keep it in the third or the fourth Months For this had been to confound one Feast with another and there is no order for it Ver. 12. They shall leave none of it till the morning nor break any bone of it This belongs to the eating of the Paschal Lamb XII Exod. 10 46. According to all the Ordinances of the Passover they Verse
kindled greatly Which brake forth shortly after in a great plague upon them v. 34. And Moses also was displeased The same Phrase with that v. 1. It was evil in the Eyes of Moses i. e. Grieved him so that it made him wish himself rid of the burden of their Government Ver. 11. And Moses said unto the LORD I suppose Verse 11 he went into the Sanctuary to bewail himself and pray God to relieve him See v. 24. Wherefore hast thou afflicted thy Servant By committing this People to his charge And wherefore have I not sound favour in thy sight By granting the Prayer which he made at his first Call to this Office III Exod. 2. IV. 10. That thou layest the burden of this People upon me i. e. The principal Care of such an untractable Multitude upon one Man to whom they resorted in all difficulties XVIII Exod. 22 26. Ver. 12. Have I conceived all this People have I begotten Verse 12 them Are they my Children that I should make provision for the Satisfaction of all their desires That thou hast said unto me carry them in thy Bosom as a nursing Father beareth the sucking Child unto the Land c. Take a tender Care of them as a Parent doth of a little Infant and conduct them into Canaan c. Nothing can more lively express the Affection that Princes ought to have for their People if they have any regard to the Will of God than this Divine Command to Moses Verse 13 Ver. 13. Whence should I have Flesh to give unto all this People It is impossible for me to do what they desire For they weep unto me saying Give us Flesh that we may eat And yet they will not be satisfied without it He seems to be affected with their weeping as the most loving Parents are with the Tears of a sucking Child when it cries for that which they have not for it Verse 14 Ver. 14. I am not able to bear all this People alone because it is too heavy for me Let me have some joined to me to take part of this trouble with me and help to manage them in such Mutinies For it is beyond my strength to undergo the toil of hearing all their Complaints and appeasing their Tumults Some may imagine there was no reason for this request he having several Persons already appointed to assist him by the advice of Jethro XVIII Exod. But Rasi thinks those Men were burnt in the late fire because they did not suppress the beginning of this Mutiny v. 1. but perhaps join in it And so Bechai But the true account is rather this that they were set only to hear and judge smaller Causes all the weighty and difficult Causes being still brought before Moses to whom also the last Appeal was made in every Cause Which was so great a burden that he complained for want of help in those great things which lay wholly upon him See XVIII Exod. 22. Ver. 15. And if thou deal thus with me If thou leavest me still alone in this Office Kill me I pray thee out of hand if I have found favour in thy sight I shall take it for the greatest Verse 15 kindness to be taken immediately out of the World And let me not see my wretchedness Live to be a most miserable Creature For to see wretchedness is to be wretched as to see death is to dye LXXXIX Psal 48. And what could make such a tender Parent as he was more miserable than their perpetual untowardness together with the intolerable trouble it would give him to see heavy Punishments continually befal them for their Wickedness and the Enemies of God rejoyce in their Ruin Ver. 16. And the LORD said unto Moses Here Verse 16 is not the least sign of God's dislike of this Expostulation of Moses with God which seems not very dutiful because the Vexation this stubborn People gave him was really so great that he had reason to desire to be eased of it Which though he begged with much earnestness yet no doubt with no less submission to God's holy Will and Pleasure Gather unto me These words are interpreted by the Talmudists as if the meaning was that they may be a Sanhedrim to my Land i. e. a holy perpetual standing Council to endure throughout all Generations For wheresoever we meet with this word li unto me they think it signifies a thing to be established by God to all Generations The Examples they alledge of it are these of Aaron and his Sons he saith they shall Minister unto me in the Priests Office XXVIII Exod. 41. and of the Levites he saith III Numb 12. they shall be mine or unto me and of the Israelites XXV Lev. 55. unto me the Children of Israel are Servants The like is said of the First-born III Numb 13. of the Sanctuary XXV Exod. 18. of the Altar XX Exod. 24. of the holy Oyntment XXX Exod. 31. of the Kingdom of David 1 Sam. XVI 1. and of the Sacrifices XXVIII Numb 2. See Mr. Selden Lib. II. de Synedr cap. 4. n. 2. Seventy Men of the Elders of Israel This Number is generally thought both by the Jewish and Christian Writers to be derived from the number of Persons that came down into Egypt with Jacob XLVI Gen. 27. Who saith R. Bechai were a kind of Prototype of this Number in future Ages For hence they were governed by so many Elders when they were in Egypt III Exod. 16. where there is no mention indeed made of Seventy but he gathers it from what followed and those were the Seventy whom we find at the giving of the Law a little after they came out of Egypt XXIV Exod. 1 9. who are called Nobles or Great Men v. 11. So that this number was not now first constituted but rather continued and confirmed Whom thou knowest to be the Elders of the People For there were many Elders out of whom Seventy were chosen See XXIV Exod. 1. And Officers over them That is saith R. Bechai whom thou knowest to be of the number of those who when they were Officers in Egypt over the People were beaten by Pharaoh's Task-masters V Exod. 14. Which word Officers doth not signifie Men that had any Judicial Authority but only such as had an inspection over others to see they did their Work and to give an account of them But it is very likely they were Persons of note who had more than ordinary Understanding and Breeding which advanced them to be Inspectors of others And therefore the Talmudists rightly observe that the Elders and Officers here mentioned were no doubt Men of Wisdom and Judgment who knew how to use the Authority that was committed to them And it is not improbable as some of them affirm that they were chosen out of those lesser Courts which were erected by the Advice of Jethro See Selden in the same place sect 5. who at large confutes Baronius and others who say that the number of the great Sanhedrim which
derived its Original from hence was Seventy two and makes it appear they were only Seventy and with Moses their Head Seventy one sect 8. And it is not unworthy our notice that about the same time as he observes sect 12. that this number of Seventy Judges was here constituted in the Wilderness the great Judicature in Areopagus was constituted among the Greeks viz. in the Reign of Cecrops the first King of Athens after the Ogygian Flood when according to Eusebius the People of Israel were brought out of Egypt The Marmora Arundeliana indeed say this Court was erected in the time of Cranaus but that makes no great difference for he was the Successor of Cecrops We do not find of what number it consisted but it is certain it was the highest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of all the Courts among the Greeks And it is no less observable that as that Court began about the same time with the Constitution of this among the Hebrews so they both ended in the Reign of the Emperor Vespasian as the said Mr. Selden shows in that Book cap. 16. sect 10. And bring them unto the Tabernacle of the Congregation That there they might be as it were consecrated unto God and that the People might know they received their Authority from him That they may stand there with thee As those Men who were to be sharers with him in his Authority and were like to him in Wisdom Piety and Descent So Maimonides glosses upon these words in Hilk Sanhedr cap. 2. where he saith none were made Members of the Sanhedrim but Priests and Levites and such of the Israelites as were descended from the noblest Families and quotes these words to prove it Verse 17 Ver. 17. And I will come down In a visible manner verse 25. And talk with thee there To declare perhaps in their Audience that he appointed them to the Office of being the Assistants of Moses in the Government And I will take of the Spirit which is upon thee and put it upon them He did not take away from Moses any of the Gifts which he had bestowed upon him nor did he diminish them but conferred upon these Men some of the Gifts which are here meant by Spirit viz. of Wisdom and Judgment and Courage with all others that were needful in a Governor This R. Solomon Jarchi illustrates by the comparison of a great Lamp set up in a room at which many others are lighted without the least diminution of its Light See further verse 25. And they shall bear the burden of the People with thee By this it appears it was the Spirit of Government which God intended to give them that they might ease Moses by assisting him with the same Authority that he had to hinder or to appease such Mutinies as now the People were faln into That thou bear it not thy self alone That all the Murmurings of the People might not be only against him but some of their Complaints might be diverted unto others Who might also help him in the judging of such Causes as had hitherto been reserved to him alone For it is plain that these Seventy Persons made an higher Court than any of those constituted by the advice of Jethro Cornelius Bertram indeed fansies that these Rulers of Thousands Hundreds Fifties and Tens not being sufficient for the business committed to them though he likewise conceives they had some of their several Families joyned with them God appointed these Seventy for their assistance to whom they were to bring all Causes which they could not determine before they troubled Moses with them Lib. de Repub. Jud. cap. 6. But our learned Mr. Thorndike in his Rights of the Church chap. 2. hath well observed that those Captains were to be in place only during the Pilgrimage of the Wilderness For when they came to the Land of Promise the Law provided that Judges and Ministers should be ordained in every City XVI Deut. 18. who if there fell any difference about the Law were to repair to the place where God dwelt to the Successors of Moses and these Seventy for Resolution in it XVII Deut. 11 12. For as he judiciously notes in his Review p. 69. sutable to what is here delivered they were assumed to assist Moses in his great Office of judging the hardest Causes and by that Law XVII Deut. 8 c. were afterwards made a standing Court resident at the Place of the Tabernacle to judge the last Result of all Causes concerning the Law and to determine all Matter of Right not determined by the Letter of the same Ver. 18. And say thou unto the People All that he said hitherto concerned Moses himself in answer to his Request Now he tells him what he should Verse 18 say to the People in answer to their Complaint Sanctifie your selves Here the word Sanctifie seems to signifie no more but to prepare and make themselves ready to receive what they desired So the Chaldee expounds it and so the word is translated by us several times in the Book of Jeremiah VI. 4. XII 3. LI. 28. Against to morrow He seems at the same time to gratifie Moses and satisfie them for his setting the Seventy Elders before the LORD and their eating Flesh succeed one another Or else he immediately gathered the Elders and the next day the Quails came for their Food And ye shall eat Flesh for ye have wept in the Ears of the LORD c. You shall have what you long for with such vehemence that it hath made you utter Complaints against the LORD Verse 19 Ver. 19. Ye shall eat not one day As they did about a Year ago XVI Exod. 12 13. Nor two days nor five days c. Not for a short time only Verse 20 Ver. 20. But even a whole Month. So long the Hebrews gather from hence they staid in this part of the Wilderness of Paran Or rather a little longer For they came hither on the twenty third Day of the second Month in the Even on which if we suppose the Fire to have burnt among them v. 1. and that the next Morning which is scarce credible they lusted after Flesh and in a tumultuous manner demanded it of Moses who promised they should have it we must allow a little time for the constituting of the Seventy Elders And suppose it was done on the twenty fifth Day and that the next Day the Quails came as we translate it they were two Days in gathering them From whence if we begin this Month it will appear they stayed here longer than that space Vntil it come out at your Nostrils Till you be glutted with it and vomit it up so violently that it come not only out at your Mouth but at your Nostrils And it be loathsom to you Which was both the Cause and the Effect of Vomiting Because that ye have despised the LORD Forgetting all that he had done for them as if it had been nothing and slighting his Servant
Moses Which is among you By a visible Token of his glorious Presence in the Sanctuary where he dwelt among them XXV Exod. v. 8. And have wept before him saying Why came we forth out of Egypt As if he had undone them by their Deliverance from thence Both Onkelos and Jonathan translate this verse in such a manner that one cannot but think they had a Notion in their Days of more Persons than one in the Godhead For these are the words of the latter of them Because you have despised or rejected as Onkelos the WORD of the LORD for glorious is his Majesty which dwelleth among us For I cannot see how the word MEMRA can signifie any thing in this place whatsoever it may do in some others but a Person equal to JEHOVAH And yet the Anonymus Writer against the Trinity confuted by de Voisin hath the strange unaccountable boldness to pass it by with this silly gloss Proprie de Lege accipi potest c. it may be properly understood of the Law which may be contemned or transgressed as if this could be called the glorious Majesty of the LORD which dwelt among them What will not Men say or do to serve a Cause Verse 21 Ver. 21. And Moses said the People among whom I am Over whom I preside as their Governor Are six hundred thousand Footmen Who were able to carry Arms besides Women and Children and Slaves and the mixt Multitude who in all may well be supposed to have made Thirty hundred thousand And thou hast said I will give them Flesh that they may eat an whole month i. e. How can this be Which is a down-right distrust of God's Promise if we regard merely the words and do not consider that they were spoken hastily and something inconsiderately while his Mind was very much disturbed by the Tumult which the People made For which reason a severe notice is not taken of it but he only put in mind of God's Eternal Power v. 23. Which may make it probable that they were only words of Admiration how such a Provision should be made for such a vast number and those uttered on a sudden Verse 22 Ver. 22. Shall the Flocks and the Herds be slain for them to suffice them In the Hebrew the words are If the Flocks and the Herds be slain for them will they be sufficient for them That is there will not be enough for a whole Month. And so the next Passage is to be translated If all the Fish of the Sea be gathered for them will they be sufficient for them Ver. 23. And the LORD said unto Moses is the LORD's Hand waxed short i. e. I need not tell thee that my Power is as great as ever Thou shalt see now whether my Word shall come to pass Verse 23 unto thee or not For thou shalt be convinced of it by the speedy performance of my Promise Ver. 24. And Moses went out I supposed v. 11. Verse 24 that Moses went into the Sanctuary to make his Addresses to God for relief and if that be true then that is the place from whence he now went out But there is this Objection against it That if he had gone to consult God in the Sanctuary as he did on some occasions VII 89. it would not have been said that he went out but that he came out For that is the usual Expression in this matter Therefore we may rather think he now went out of his own Tent where the People stood murmuring v. 10. And told the People the Words of the LORD Both concerning them and concerning himself And gathered the seventy Men of the Elders of the People That is sent out his Summons to them to attend him though two of them it appears afterwards did not come v. 26. And set them round about the Tabernacle That is required them to come thither and there place themselves that the People might understand they received their Authority from God and that from thence he might send his Holy Spirit upon them For God alone who was their King could appoint who should bear Rule among them There also were the great Assemblies held See XXVII 2. Ver. 25. And the LORD came down in a Cloud The SCHECHINAH or Divine Majesty appeared from Heaven in a Cloud or in the Pillar of the Verse 25 Cloud as it is in XII 5. And spake unto him As he had promised v. 17. declaring it is likely the Reason and Intention of his appearing on this occasion And took of the Spirit that was upon him and gave it unto the seventy Elders See there v. 17. And it came to pass that when the Spirit rested upon them i. e. As soon as they received it They prophesied Either by setting forth the Promises of God in such a strain as none else could imitate or giving such admirable Instructions to the People as manifested they were raised above themselves or perhaps by declaring things to come particularly that they should have Quails as we render the word in great abundance very shortly as some of the Jews take it though that could not gain them just credit as the other Gifts till their Predictions were fulfilled And these the Jews call the second degree of Prophecy Concerning which Maimonides speaks in his Preface to his More Nevochim but more fully in his second Part of it Cap. XLV Where he saith the first degree was that which moved and enabled Men to some heroick Undertaking with assurance they were put upon it from God as to deliver Men from Tyranny and Oppression Which was the Spirit of the LORD that came upon GIDEON and SAMSON and the rest of the Judges of Israel who were carried by an extraordinary Power to perform such things as otherwise they thought not themselves fit to undertake And the second degree was when a Man found a Power upon him exciting him to speak either Psalms or Hymns or wholesome Precepts of living or about Political Affairs and Civil Government far beyond his Natural Capacities and all this waking and in the full vigour of his Senses This is also called the Holy Spirit and in this number he places these LXX Elders Who were endued with the Spirit of Moses for the Government of the People with him in such measure that they attained to be Prophets Just as in the New Testament the Prophets are placed next to the Apostles so these Men were next to Moses And ceased not In which Translation we follow the Chaldee Paraphrasts as several others do But the LXX translate it and they added no further which the Hebrew words will well bear taking the meaning to be that they prophesied that day but not after And this is the sense of the Talmudists particularly of Jarchi Who in his Gloss upon this place saith All these Elders prophesied only this first time that the Spirit rested on them as they stood about the Tabernable but they did not prophesie after that The like say several others
Sence is plainer without it as the Vulgar hath translated these words from the day he began to command And hence forward Or rather thence forward until now or until he made an end of commanding So this Phrase is used in XXII Lev. 27. From the eighth day and thence forth Creatures were clean to be offered See XXXIX Ezek. 22. Among your Generations In the Hebrew to your Generations And so LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be observed throughout all Generations Verse 24 Ver. 24. Then it shall be that if ought be committed by ignorance without the knowledge of the Congregation It is commonly said that Moses here speaks concerning Sins of Omission as we call them as in IV Lev. 13. he doth of Sins of Commission or doing that which ought not to be done as here not doing that which ought to be done for which different sorts of Sacrifices are appointed But others think that he speaks in both places of the same Errors only in that Law IV Lev. 14. concerning those committed by the whole Congregation here of such as were committed by some lesser number of them called the Congregation suppose the LXX Elders or the Rulers of Thousands and Hundreds c. who are some times called by this Name XXV 7. XXXII 12. XXIV Josh 4. But the Jews generally think Moses here speaks of strange Worship which was to be expiated by this Sacrifice of a Goat for a Sin-offering And therefore an excellent Person of our own after long consideration of this matter comes to this conclusion That in Leviticus he requires a young Bullock to be slain for a Sin-offering when the whole Congregation though adhering to the true Worship of God in every thing were led ignorantly to do something against some Negative Precept as they call it to practise that is what God had forbidden so those words seem to import IV Lev. 13 14. but this Kid of the Goats here mentioned for a Sin-offering together with a young Bullock for a Burnt-offering was to be sacrificed when all the People forgetting the holy Rites prescribed by Moses which often hapned under bad Kings fell by a common Error into Idolatrous Worship which agrees very well with what is said in the two verses before-going where he speaks as I noted of not observing these holy Rites about Sacrifices See Dr. Owtram Lib. I. de Sacrificiis cap. 14. sect 2. Then all the Congregation shall offer one young Bullock for a Burnt-offering Having neglected these Laws ordained by Moses and worshipped God in a wrong manner according to the Rites used in other Countries or at least mistaking the proper Sacrifices and Rites belonging to them which they ought to have offered this Burnt-offering I suppose is commanded to be offered when they saw their Error in token that they returned to God's true Religion and that way of Worship which he had prescribed With his Meat-offering and his Drink-offering prescribed above v. 8 9 10. Which perhaps they had neglected to offer formerly with the Burnt-offering It is well observed by Mr. Thorndike out of Maimonides That all the Congregation if we understand thereby the whole Body of the People could not possibly offer these Sacrifices but the great Consistory offered them as often as they occasioned the Breach of the Law by interpreting it erroniously Rights of the Church in a Christian State p. 159. And one Kid of the Goats for a Sin-offering To expiate for what had been done after the manner of the Heathen contrary to the Laws of God's Worship here delivered by Moses or otherwise then he directed From whence it was which adds much probability to this that when Hezekiah restored the true Worship of God after the Temple had been shut up and the daily Sacrifice omitted and many Idolatrous Rites there used by the Ignorance of the People in the days of his Father 2 Chron. XXVIII 24. XXIX 3. he caused seven Bullocks to be offered for a Burnt-offering and as many Goats for a Sin-offering And so Ezra did at the Restoration of the Divine Service after they came out of Babylon VIII Ezra 35. And it makes no difference that Moses here requires only one of a sort to be offered whereas Hezekiah offered seven and Ezra twelve for this only proves that one was absolutely necessary but more than one was acceptable especially when exceeding great Errors had been committed in God's Worship Verse 25 Ver. 25. And the Priest shall make an atonement for all the Congregation Who had thus committed an Error in the Worship of God out of Ignorance being misled by the great Interpreters of the Law who therefore were to bring this Sacrifice in the name of them all For it is apparent by this as well as the former verse that all the Congregation were concerned in this Sacrifice as much as in that IV Lev. 13. And the same appears from the next verse where he saith All the People were in ignorance And it shall be forgiven them for it is ignorance Proceeding from an erronious Interpretation of the Law or some other mistake not from contempt of God and of his Laws for then they were to be utterly cut off v. 30 31. And they shall bring their Offering a Sacrifice made by fire unto the LORD That is a Burnt-offering which is not prescribed in Leviticus as I observed before and therefore was a different sort of Offering for a different Offence And their Sin-offering before the LORD Prescribed in the fore-going verse For their ignorance Which made them capable of a Pardon though not without these Sacrifices Ver. 26. And it shall be forgiven all the Congregation Verse 26 of the Children of Israel He repeats it again that they might not doubt of Reconciliation to him when they repented as soon as they understood their Error and acknowledg'd it and beg'd his pardon by these Sacrifices And the Stranger that sojourneth among them Who were obliged to the same Laws with the Israelites and had the same priviledges v. 14 15 16. Seeing all the People were in ignorance It was a common Error and therefore no wonder Strangers were carried away with it Ver. 27. And if any Soul i. e. Any particular Person Verse 27 Sin through ignorance Offend in Matters of Religion by not observing the Rites here prescribed or by doing contrary to them through mere ignorance To this I think these words are to be limited wherein they differ from that Law IV Lev. 27. which speaks of all manner of Offences through ignorance Then he shall bring a She-goat of the first year for a Sin-offering This Sin-offering differs from that in Leviticus IV. 28. which was only a Female Kid of the Goats Verse 28 Ver. 28. And the Priest shall make an Atonement for the Soul that sinneth ignorantly As he was to do for the whole Congregation v. 25. When he sinneth by ignorance before the LORD These words before the LORD seem to me to import that he speaks of Sins
committed about the Worship of God and confirms what I have said upon v. 24. For in IV Levit. both v. 13. and v. 27. he speaks in general of Sins committed either by the Congregation or by particular Persons against any of the Commandments of the LORD not before the LORD i. e. as I understand it in his Worship and Service To make an atonement for him c. He repeats it again to show them that he would no more have a particular Person suffer for his Error than the whole Body of the People Verse 29 Ver. 29. You shall have one Law for him that sinneth through ignorance both for him that is among the Children of Israel and for the Stranger that sojourneth among them See v. 15. This must necessarily be meant of a Proselyte of Justice as they called him that was Circumcised and undertook to keep the whole Law for he speaks of such whether Natives or others as erred in not observing all his Commandments v. 22 23. Ver. 30. But the Soul that doth ought presumptuously Not merely knowingly but wilfully and audaciously in contempt of the Divine Majesty and his Authority For so the Hebrew Phrase with an high hand Verse 30 signifies as Maimonides observes in his More Nevoch P. III. cap. 41. where he saith it imports a Sin not only publickly and openly committed but with Pride and Insolence it proceeding not merely from an ill custom a Man hath got of doing amiss but from an express intention to contradict the Law of God and to set himself in defiance of it Which is the reason of what follows the same reproacheth the LORD Whether he be born in the Land or a Stranger Here the word Stranger is simply used without the addition of that sojourneth among them as in the preceding verse and therefore Mr. Selden well concludes that even the Proselytes of the Gate were concerned in this Law as it related to Idolatry and Blasphemy though not in the foregoing and that they were liable to be cut off by the Hand of Heaven but whether to be punished by the Judges or no it doth not appear Lib. II. de Jure Nat. Gent. cap. 11. The same reproacheth the LORD No Man sinned thus saith Maimonides in the place fore-named but he who had a settled Opinion in his Mind contrary to the Law of God in which he dissented from it And the common received Exposition of this place is that it speaks of an Idolater because he opposed the chief and principal Foundation of the Law For no Man worshipped a Star or a Planet but he that believed its Eternity which is the most repugnant of all other things to the Law of God which in the very first words of it declares that all the World had a beginning and was made by him whom the Jews worshipped Thus he But doing any thing with an high hand doth not signifie any one certain kind of Sin as the Jews generally fancy who think he speaks here only of an Idolater or Blasphemer See Selden Lib. I. de Synedr cap. 6. p. 101. but a certain manner of sinning with despight to the Commands of God and Contempt of his Authority in any kind of Sin whatsoever And this Maimonides himself afterward acknowledges in the words following There seems to me to be the same reason in all other Transgressions which are committed contemptuously against any Law of God as if an Israelite seethed a Kid in its Mother's Milk or wore heterogeneous Garments or rounded the Corners of his Head or his Beard in contempt of the Law For the consequence of this is that he believes this Law not to be true which in my judgment saith he is the meaning of these words He reproacheth the LORD And that Soul shall be cut off from among his People No Sacrifice could make an Atonement for such a Man but he was to die either by the Hand of Heaven or of the Judges Sometimes God saith he will cut off Idolaters and such as consulted Familiar Spirits XX Lev. 5 6. Sometimes he only saith certain Offenders shall be cut off as here in this and many other places Of which Phrase I have given an account XVII Gen. 14. where the Reader may see the several Opinions that have been about it and that its meaning must be determined by the matter in hand Accordingly Maimonides hath judiciously resolved that in this place it signifies cutting off by the Hand of the Magistrates as in the Case of Apostasy to Idolatry XIII Deut. 13 c. Not that all their Goods were to be destroyed and nothing left to their Heirs as when they served other Gods but though a whole Tribe had with an high hand transgressed any Precept of the Law that is denied it to be God's Law he thinks they were only to be all killed Just as all the People thought in the Case of the Reubenites Gadites and half Tribe of Manasseh who only building an Altar on the other side of Jordan contrary to God's Law as was imagined all the rest of the Tribes of Israel gathered together to go up to War against them and cut them off XXII Josh 11 12 c. 22 23. where they acknowledge they deserved to perish if they had built an Altar for Worship as their Brethren thought they had done Ver. 31. Because he hath despised the Word of the Verse 31 LORD This shows the Nature of the offence which was setting at nought God's Laws and denying them to be of Divine Authority And hath broken his Commandment Not only by doing contrary to it but in effect disannulling it by rejecting its Authority and affirming he is not bound to observe that Precept That Soul shall be utterly cut off They shall have no Mercy upon him His Iniquity shall be upon him Not upon those who put him to death but upon himself Ver. 32. And while the Children of Israel were in the Verse 32 Wilderness In this part of the Wilderness at Kadesh-Barnea it is very probable See v. 1. They found a Man The Jews who would not be thought ignorant of any thing say this Man was one of those that presumed to go up to the Mountain when Moses forbad them XIV 44. And some of them say expresly his name was Zelophehad about the dividing of whose Estate a question afterward arose XXVII 1 c. So the Chaldee Paraphrase ascribed to Jonathan and others See Selden Lib. II. de Synedr cap. 1. n. 9. That gathered sticks Or was binding up sticks which he had gathered and pluckt up by the Roots out of the Earth as some of the Jews understand the Hebrew word Mr. Selden there observes from V Exod. 7. On the Sabbath-day This the Jewish Doctors would have to be the very next Sabbath after its first Institution in the Wilderness which is to make this History misplaced and the foregoing also without any necessity Verse 33 Ver. 33. And they that found him gathering sticks Admonished him as the
good Words to which they would no longer trust Or given us Inheritence of Fields and Vineyards But told us it shall be bestowed forty years hence when we are all dead This still shows they took him for a Deluder of them with deceitful Promises Wilt thou put out the Eyes of these Men Some of them spake this in the name of the rest who were now with Dathan and Abiram and the meaning is Dost thou think to blind us so that none of us shall discern this Imposture Or shall we suffer thee to lead us about like blind Men whither thou pleasest sometimes towards Canaan and now back again towards the Red Sea and Egypt We will not come up A peremptory Resolution not to own his Authority which they denied at the first v. 12. Ver. 15. And Moses was very wroth For such behaviour Verse 15 and Language was so provoking that it was no wonder it incensed the meekest Man upon Earth XII 3. Yet the LXX translate the words as if he only took it very heavily 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it made him exceeding sad And said unto the LORD respect not their Offering He calls the Incense which they were about to offer by the Name of Mincha which commonly signifies a Meat-offering but sometimes any inanimate thing that was consumed in honour of God as Incense was and must so signifie in this place for they offered nothing else And when Moses desires it may not be accepted he means a great deal more that God would give some Sign of his dislike to it Hence it seems plain to me That Dathan and Abiram as well as Korah quarrelled at the confining the Priestood unto Aaron's Family for Moses calls this their Offering by the Acceptance or Rejection of which this Controversie was to be decided I have not taken one Ass from them This seems to be an Appeal to God against their unjust Charge that he acted Arbitrarily and did with them what he list v. 13. From which he was so far that he declares before God he had not taken i. e. received by way of Gift or Reward So the LXX and the Vulgar understand it the smallest thing for such a single Ass was much less extorted any thing from them Nor have I hurt any one of them None can say that I have done any kind of Evil to them but contrarily all good Offices For that he did not seek himself appeared in this That he had not advanced his own Family to the Priestood but left them in the number of the other Levites upon the same level with Korah and his Company Ver. 16. And Moses said unto Korah be thou and all thy Company before the LORD c. He repeats what he had said to him before v. 6 7. only adding that he would have Aaron also there together with Verse 16 them So it follows Thou and they and Aaron to morrow Before the LORD i. e. In the Court of the Tabernacle See v. 7. where by an extraordinary Commission from the Divine Majesty this Trial was to be made And therefore Aaron himself did not now go into the Sanctuary to offer Incense which was the proper and only place allowed by the Law but stood with them without As in another great necessity he offered Incense in the midst of the Congregation v. 46 47. Both which was done by a Dispensation from him that made the Law Ver. 17. Take every Man his Censer and put Incense Verse 17 in them and bring ye before the LORD every Man his Censer Let every Man of them stand before the LORD at the Door of the Tabernacle to do the Office of Priests to which they pretended as good a right as Aaron and his Sons Two hundred and fifty Censers This shows that the Incense being offered by so great a number as it appears it was v. 35. they did not offer it in the Sanctuary which would not contain so many Persons Thou also and Aaron each of you his Censer This seems to signifie as if Korah was commanded to stand by Aaron since he pretended to be his equal which made the Hand of God the more remarkable upon him when he was struck with Lightning and no harm came to Aaron who stood by him But it may be doubted what way Korah perished Ver. 18. And they took every Man his Censer That is the Two hundred and fifty Men did as they were commanded but Korah went first to muster up as Verse 18 many as he could get together against Moses v. 19. and then seems to have gone to his Tent v. 24. Herein these Men submitted to the way of decision which Moses propounded though they had so boldly denied his Authority For they could not but think that God whom they owned to be among them v. 3. would approve of them if they were in the right and make good their Allegation That all the Congregation were holy by accepting their Incense as much as Aaron's To whom they did not deny an equality with themselves but only a Superiority And put fire in them From the Altar of Burnt-offering which stood in the Court at the Door of which they were placed I Lev. 5. for Aaron durst not take it from any other place his Sons having lost their Lives for offering with strange Fire The remembrance of which it is likely deterred these Men from doing other wise who did not as yet put in the Fire but only took their Censers and put Incense in them which is all that is ordered in the preceding Verse and put Fire in afterwards And stood in the door of the Tabernacle of the Congregation with Moses and Aaron As if they were nothing inferiour to them Verse 19 Ver. 19. And Korah gathered all the Congregation against them The LXX translates it Korah gathered all his Congregation i. e. all the Men of his Faction But the Hebrew words import that he gathered all the Congregation of Israel at least all the great Men who are sometimes called by the Name of all the Congregation XIV 1. whom he got together that they might be Witnesses at least of the issue of this Trial though their coming together with Korah and his Company rather than with Moses and Aaron is too plain an Indication that they were inclined if not to throw off yet to doubt of their Authority Vnto the door of the Tabernacle of the Congregation Where they themselves stood v. 18. And so did Moses and Aaron but the Israelites that Korah had gathered together stood on his side as appears from the foregoing words and from v. 24. And the Glory of the LORD The SCHECHINAH or Divine Majesty came forth out of the most Holy Place where it usually resided Appeared unto all the Congregation Openly shewed it self in the sight of all the People and it is likely in such an amazing manner as it had done before XIV 10. But where it appeared we are not told I suppose in the Cloud which was just
am thy part and thine inheritance among the Children of Israel For they were maintained in his House and lived upon his Altar and fed from his Table as it is explained in XIII Josh 14. The Sacrifices of the LORD God of Israel made by fire are their inheritance as he said unto them Which is given as the reason why Joshua gave them no Inheritance And see v. 33. of that Chapter where the LORD God of Israel is said to be their Inheritance Who it appears by the foregoing part of this Chapter and other places made such an ample Provision for them that if he had given them any part of the Land of Canaan together with it there had been too great an inequality between them and the rest of the Tribes of Israel For without any share in the Land their Portion was far richer than that of any other Persons whatsoever I have said enough to prove this already but it may not be amiss to set it before the Reader again a little more distinstly As they had yearly the First-fruits of the whole Country which was at least the sixtieth part of the Fruits it produced and the tenth part of the Tithe given to the Levites as it follows below v. 26. and all Free-will-offerings together with the Money which arose out of Persons and Things devoted unto God and all the Firstlings of Cows Sheep and Goats and the Redemption-Money for the Firstlings of such Creatures as were unclean So they had all the Meat-offerings Offerings for Sin and Trespass-offerings together with the Breast and Shoulder of all Peace-offerings and the Skins of all Burnt-offerings and the Loaves made of the first Dough and the Shew-bread and as Josephus and others expound XVIII Deut. 3. a considerable part of every beast that was killed for private use besides the Cities and Land about them which were assigned to the Levites Which if well weighed there will appear a vast difference between the Priests and the rest of the People For the First-fruits alone if they were not less than the sixtieth part of the product of the Country might seem sufficient especially if the Firstlings be added the Priests not being the sixtieth part of the People no nor the hundred part as learned Men have computed See Bonfrerius Ver. 21. And behold Now he gives the Levites Verse 21 notice of the Recompence he would make them for their Service as he had told the Priests what they should have for theirs And Aaron hath the delivery of this Grant made to them from God that they might see he did not mind himself and the Interest of his own Family only I have given the Children of Levi all the tenth in Israel See XXVII Lev. 30. and 2 Chron. XXXI 5 6. where they are distinctly mentioned Aben-Ezra thinks the tenth rather than any other part was assigned because it was a perfect Number Ten being in simple Numbers the highest to which we can arise without repeating the Numbers under it For it is as he speaks the beginning of the second Combination and the end of the first whereupon all Numbers do depend Which our Mr. Mede hath expressed in my judgment far better who looks upon it as God's favourable dealing with men in requiring but the Tenth which is in truth the least part of their Goods according to the first Division For when we proceed beyond Ten we begin to make a new Division as Eleven is ten and one c. But we need not have recourse to such Niceties See upon Genesis XXVIII 22. For an Inheritance Instead of a share in the Land of Canaan which other Tribes had divided among them And a larger Inheritance this was than any other Tribe possessed for this was the smallest Tribe of all as appears by comparing the account which is given of them in the beginning of this Book For all the Males of this Tribe from a Month old and upward were but Two and twenty thousand III. 29. Whereas in the Tribe of Judah alone there were above Threescore and fourteen thousand Men of War I. 26 27. And yet the Levites had a tenth part of the product of the whole Country and the twelve Tribes had only the other nine parts among them Such a care had God of those who were peculiarly devoted to his Service For the Service which they serve c. As a Reward of their Service of which see Chapter IV. Verse 22 Ver. 22. Neither must the Children of Israel henceforth come nigh the Tabernacle of the Congregation Or rather Therefore the Children of Israel must not come nigh so as to perform any of the Offices belonging to the Priests and Levites who were appointed to do every thing belonging to the Service of God there and had their Reward for it also appointed Lest they bear sin and die Be punished with Death which is often threatned to such Presumption Ver. 23. But the Levites shall do the Service of the Verse 23 Tabernacle of the Congregation It was their work and no Bodies else and therefore no other Persons were to meddle with it That is they alone guarded the Tabernacle and afterwards the Temple opened the Gates of it kept out all Strangers i. e. all but Priests and Levites carried the Tabernacle and its Vessels when they were to be removed c. And they shall bear their Iniquity They shall die for it if they permit any one else to come there and do their work See v. 1. It shall be a Statute for ever throughout their Generations that among the Children of Israel they have no Inheritance As all other Persons were excluded from serving in the Tabernacle so they who served there were shut out from having any Inheritance among their Brethren This was made an unalterable Law which provided another separate Maintenance for them by the Tythes of all the Land as here it again follows Ver. 24. But the Tythes of the Children of Israel which Verse 24 they offer as an Heave-offering unto the LORD That the People might not grudge to pay them the Tythes for their Service he represents them as an Heave-offering which they offered to God in Gratitude to him of whom as the Supreme Landlord they held that Land Not that they were heaved up or waved before the LORD but they were of the same Nature with those things that were so offered to him i. e. Holy Things separate to his uses all which are called by this Name of Terumah v. 8. And particularly all the Offerings which God required to be freely brought for the building him a Sanctuary are called by this Name of Terumah or Heave-offering XXV Exod 2. See there I have given to the Levites to inherit The Israelites gave them to God and he gave them to the Levites for their Inheritance who had as much right to them as the other Tribes had to their Land Which was the reason he ordered they should have no Portion of the Land of Canaan with the other
he spake these words I see him As Balak desired he might XXII 41. though for another purpose that he might curse them And from the Hills I behold him The same thing again in other words according to the manner of the Eastern People And both these may relate not only to the present view he had of the Camp of Israel but to their future Settlement in their own Land wherein they were represented to him as dwelling securely under the special Protection of the Almighty Lo the People shall dwell In the Land of Canaan Alone Not mingled with other Nations but separated from them by different Laws Religion and Manners It seems also to import their Security and Safety by the Situation of their Country and God's care of them And shall not be reckoned among the Nations Be a peculiar People by themselves and therefore not liable to the power of my Curses like other Nations All this came to pass partly by the natural situation of their Country which was surrounded with high Mountains and rocky Precipices so that the coming to it was very difficult but more especially by their Rites and Customs and particularly by their Diet which restrained them from common Conversation with other Nations because they could not eat of their Food Swines flesh for instance which was a delicate Dish among the Gentiles was an Abomination to the Israelites By which means they were the better secured from learning the Religion of the Gentiles having so little Communication with them that they were called by Diodorus Siculus and others an unsociable People and thought to have an Enmity to the rest of the World Ver. 10. Who can count the dust of Jacob This may refer either to their present or their future Increase which was so great that they might be compared to the Dust of the Earth or the Sand on the Verse 10 Sea-shore which is without number Hereby he confirmed the Promise made by God to Abraham XIII Gen. 16. and to Israel XXVIII 14. where he saith expresly Thy Seed shall be as the dust of the Earth And the number of the fourth part of Israel Any one of their Camps every one of which was grown to a vast number For the whole Host of Israel was divided into four Camps under the Standards of Judah Reuben Ephraim and Dan as we read in the second Chapter of this Book one of which Camps lay more plainly before him than the rest viz. that on the West under the Standard of Ephraim Let me die the death of the righteous By the Righteous he means Israel who were now a People free from Idolatry which was the great Crime of those days And he desires either to be as happy as they in the other World or that he might not die an immature and violent Death but enjoy such a long Life here as was promised to them The Author of Sephar Cosri takes it in the former sence alledging this place as a proof that a future state was believed in ancient Times though not so clearly expressed in the Prophetical Writings as other things are for there is a certain Prayer saith he of one that prophecied by the Holy Ghost who desired that he might die the death of the righteous Pars I. sect 115. And my last end be like his Or Let my Posterity for so the word we here translate last end often signifies CIX Psal 13. XI Dan. 4. or those that come after me be like unto his Descendants Ver. 11. And Balak said unto Balaam what hast thou done unto me This is very surprising I took thee to curse mine Enemies and behold thou Verse 11 hast blessed them altogether Thou hast not only frustrated my desires in not cursing them but quite contrary hast pronounced great Blessings upon them For so the Hebrew words signifie Blessed them with blessings Verse 12 Ver. 12. And he answered and said Must I not take heed to speak that which the LORD hath put in my mouth He had told him so before more than once XXII 23. XXIII 3. and now makes him Judge Whether it was safe for him to disobey the LORD to comply with his Desires Verse 13 Ver. 13. And Balak said unto him come I pray thee with me to another place He thought Balaam gave him a reasonable Answer and therefore gently intreats him to make a trial whether God would be pleased to be more favourable to his desires if he sought him in some other place For whatsoever Balaam thought of this matter Balak was possessed with a Superstitious Fancy that the very Place or Prospect had been a Cause concurrent to produce the contrary Effect to what he desired and therefore intreated he would come with him to another where he might not see too many of them at once From whence thou maist see them It seems this was thought necessary to make their Curses effectual that they should have a sight of those whom they cursed and that they should look upon them Thou shalt see but the utmost part of them The Skirts of their Camps And shalt not see them all He imagined perhaps that Balaam was affrighted at the sight of their Multitude and therefore durst not meddle with them And curse me them from thence He seems to desire him to curse only that small parcel of the Israelites whom he saw in the utmost part of the Camp hoping he might by degrees get them all in like manner destroyed Ver. 14. And he brought him unto the field of Zophim Verse 14 Or as some translate it unto Sed● Zophim a place by the very name apt to enchant a Superstitious Mind with expectation of Success as Dr. Jackson speaks It is thought by some to be so called from the Watchers that were placed here which the word Zophim imports To the top of Pisgah A very high Mountain in the Country of Moab from whence one might see a great way and take a view of all the Parts of Canaan III Deut. 27. XXXIV 1 2 c. but on that side of it whether Balak brought him Balaam could not see much of the Camp of Israel It is likely he thought by bringing him to a place so exceeding high he should be nearer Heaven and so procure a more favourable Audience than before And built seven Altars and offered a Bullock and a Ram on every Altar As he had done before at Balaam's desire in another High-place v. 1 2. for there only he imagined their Sacrifices would be acceptable From hence Conradus Pellicanus concludes Balaam to have been a Worshipper of the true God as Jethro was because he still continues to offer only such clean Creatures as were wont to be sacrificed to him by his own People Ver. 15. And he said unto Balak stand here by thy Burnt-offering The same Direction which he had given before v. 3. Verse 15 While I meet the LORD yonder In a place to which he pointed Balaam made a peradventure of it before whether the
Men who are in the same Circumstances with those Women whom he here directs in their Vows Whom he considers in a threefold state before they are married and after marriage and in their widowhood And bind her self by a bond By an Oath wherewith she confirms her Vow as it seems to be interpreted v. 10 13. Being in her fathers house in her youth That is being a part of his Family and still under his government and not married For the Father's power lasts no longer as Grotius observes Lib. II. de Jure Belli Pacis cap. 5. n. 7. In which condition likewise are all Sons who remain in their Father's Family undisposed of in marriage And all Servants who are manifestly in subjection to their Masters and therefore could no more resolve to do what they pleased then the Women here mentioned Ver. 4. And her father heareth her vow and her bond wherewith she hath bound herself The first of these may relate to her simple Vow and the next to an Oath wherewith she binds it to make it firmer Verse 4 Which her Father is supposed to hear either when she spake the words or when she acquainted him with her Vow as in duty she was bound to do And her father shall hold his peace at her If he did not declare that he disallowed what she had promised it was supposed he consented to it Unless he said he would take time to consider and neither allow nor disallow for the present in which case in all reason she was to wait for his Resolution Then all her Vows shall stand c. It was not in his power afterward to disannul any of them if he did not contradict them when he was told of them or after the time he had taken for deliberation Ver. 5. But if her father disallow her in the day that he heareth As soon as he comes acquainted with it Not any of her vows or her bonds wherewith she hath Verse 5 bound her soul shall stand Though she had bound her Vows with an Oath they were not to be performed when her Father had declared his will to the contrary And the LORD shall forgive her The not performing her Vow shall not be imputed to her as a sin Because her father disallowed her Whose consent was supposed to be necessary before the Vow could be binding she being while a part of his Family under his power and not her own Some have fancied that when her Father was dead the Vow revived because then she was at her own disposal but it is plain her Father wholly disannulled the Vow when he did not approve it so that it could not recover a force it never had being made without his consent The same is to be said of a Guardian who was supposed to be in the place of a Father when he died and left his Children to his care And this power was fit to be reserved to Parents as a late learned Man Puffendorf observes not only least Women in their imprudent years should undo themselves by vowing more than their Fortunes could bear but also least the Paternal Estate should be burdened by such Vows or the necessary Affairs of the Family hindred So that this power did not flow from positive Laws but from natural Reason no Body that is subject to another having any right to dispose of those things which are under that power to which they are subject Verse 6 Ver. 6. And if she had at all an husband when she vowed Was a married Woman or espoused to an Husband though still in her Father's House as it appears from v. 10. this must be interpreted when she made this Vow then it was to be considered not what her Father but her Husband under whose power she now was should determine about it Or uttered ought out of her lips wherewith she bound her soul Said any thing which she confirmed by an Oath Verse 7 Ver. 7. And her husband heard it Either was present when she spake it or she told it him afterwards And he held his peace in the day that he heard it Said nothing to signifie his disallowance of it See v. 4. Then her vows shall stand c. As before v. 4. Ver. 8. But if her husband disallow her c. See v. 5. where there is the same Case of a Daughter under the power of her Father as here of a Wife under the power of his Husband Verse 8 Ver. 9. But every vow of a Widow or of her that is Verse 9 divorced wherewith she hath bound her soul shall stand against her The reason of this is so plain that one would think it needed not to have been mentioned because such Women were wholly in their own power being free from their Husbands Therefore it is very probable he speaks here of a Widow or divorced Woman returned to her Father's House as the manner frequently was XXII Lev. 13. who might be supposed to recover his ancient power over her to disannul her Vows as he might before she was married Which is here absolutely condemned for though she lived with him she was her own Woman as we now speak and might dispose of her self and her Goods as she pleased without his consent Ver. 10. And if she vowed in her husbands house or Verse 10 bound her soul by a bond with an oath i. e. Engaged herself in a Vow and perhaps confirmed it with an Oath while she and her Husband lived together or before she was divorced from him Ver. 11. And her husband heard it and held his peace Verse 11 and disallowed it not then all her vows shall stand c. She was bound in this case to make them good after he was dead or she was divorced from him Ver. 12. But if her husband hath utterly made them Verse 12 void on the day he heard them c. Then when she was in her own power by his death or by a divorce she was not bound to make them good because when she made them her Husband under whose power she then was had utterly made them void Ver. 13. Every vow and every binding oath to afflict the soul This shows what the matter of these Vows frequently was to abstain from such or such Meats though in themselves lawful or to fast and eat nothing at all on other days as well as on the great Day of Expiation which was the only Fast ordained by the Law of Moses Her husband may establish it or her husband may make it void There is an excellent Discourse of Maimonides in his More Nevochim P. III. cap. 48. to show that this is most reasonable where he observes that as the Law prohibited some Meats so pious People sometimes vowed to forbear such as were not prohibited that by this means they might learn Contentment with a little or Continence and give a check to an immoderate Appetite From whence the saying among the Doctors That Vows are the hedge of Separation i. e. a great guard
Command In the first Month on the fifteenth day of the first Month on the morrow after the Passover Which they had kept in Egypt on the Fourteenth XII Exod. 46. The Children of Israel went out of Egypt with an high hand XIV Exod. 8. In the sight of the Egyptians Who thrust them out XII Exod. 39. Ver. 4. For the Egyptians buried all their first-born Verse 4 They were so terrified with the sudden Death of all their First-born that they pressed them to be gone lest they should be slain also XII Exod. 33. And were so employed in Mourning for them and giving them decent Burial that they thought not of pursuing the Israelites till some days after Which the LORD had smitten among them At midnight between the fourteenth and fifteenth days XII Exod. 29. Vpon their Gods also the LORD executed Judgment Which still more astonished them XII Exod. 12. XVIII 11. 2 Sam. VII 23. just as he did with Babylon afterwards XXI Isa 9. Ver. 5. And the Children of Israel removed from Rameses Verse 5 and pitched in Succoth XII Exod. 37. Here they received the Command to set apart all the First-born unto the LORD in memory of God's sparing them when he slew all the First-born of the Egptians XIII Exod. 1 12 13 c. Verse 6 Ver. 6. And they departed from Suecoth and pitched in Etham c. See XIII Exod. 20. where it immediately follows That they were conducted hither by a miraculous Cloud which ever after led them in all their Journeys Verse 7 Ver. 7. And they removed from Etham and turned again unto Piha-hiroth So it is expresly recorded XIV Exod. 2. Hither they were led on purpose that they might see the wonderful Power and Goodness of God in a place where they had high Mountains on each side of them and the Army of Pharaoh behind them and the Red-Sea before them Through which God made them a passage rather than let them fall again under the Egyptian Tyranny Here is also the Singular Number for the Plural in the word turned again as was observed before in another word XXXII 25. but the observation of the Hebrew Doctors upon it seems to be frivolous That with one heart they did what Moses commanded Which is before Baal-Zephon and they pitched before Migdol This is explained in XIV Exod. 2. Verse 8 Ver. 8. And they departed from before Piha-hiroth and passed through the midst of the Sea XIV Exod. 23. Where Pharaoh and his Host were drowned as they could not but call to mind when they read this brief History Which it might be expected would also call to remembrance their own distrust of God notwithstanding which he most graciously delivered them XIV Exod. 11 12 c. Into the Wilderness and went three days journey in the Wilderness of Etham Called in XV Exod. 22. the Wilderness of Shur where they were very much distressed for want of Water And pitched in Marah Where God obliged them by a new Miracle in making the bitter Water sweet XV Exod. 23 25. Ver. 9. And they removed from Marah and came to Verse 9 Elim and in Elim were twelve Fountains of Water c. See XV Exod. ult Ver. 10. And they removed from Elim and encamped Verse 10 by the Red Sea Not by that part of it where they lately came out of it but by a more Southerly part of it where it bends towards Arabia For the Red Sea which Ptolomy calls the Arabian Gulph runs a long way like the Adriatick now called the Gulph of Venice or the Baltick Sea as David Chytraeus observes Who compares these three together as much of a length and all in some places broader and some narrower This Station is not mentioned in the Book of Exodus Ver. 11. And they removed from the Red Sea and Verse 11 encamped in the Wilderness of Sin XVI Exod. 1. where Manna first began to rain upon them with which God fed them forty years Ver. 12. And they took their journey out of the Wilderness Verse 12 of Sin and encamped in Dophkah This and the next Station Alush are not mentioned in Exodus because nothing remarkable it is supposed fell out in these two places as there did in the next And they made no long stay there Ver. 13. And they departed from Dophkah and encamped Verse 13 in Alush The Jewish Doctors find something remarkable here though Moses saith nothing of it For as the Sabbath was first commanded at Marah which was their fifth Station so it was first observed here at Alush as they fancy which was their Tenth And more than that this was the only Sabbath in their opinion which they exactly kept the very next being prophaned See Selden Lib. III. de Jure Nat. Gentium c. cap. 11. Lib. II. de Synedr cap. 1. The Author of Sepher Cosri saith the ancient Tradition is That at this place the Manna first descended P. II. sect 20. Verse 14 Ver. 14. And they removed from Alush and encamped at Rephidim XVII Exod. 1. Where was no Water for the People to drink And thereby an occasion given to the Almighty Goodness to shew his wonderful Power in bringing Water out of a Rock for them v. 5 6. And here also Amalek lay in wait for Israel in the way when they came out of Egypt 1 Sam. XV. 2. and smote some that lag'd behind XXV Deut. 16. but were vanquished by Joshua in a pitcht Battle XVII Exod. 8 9 c. And here Jethro also came to see Moses and gave him advice about the government of the People with more ease both to himself and them XVIII Exod. Verse 15 Ver. 15. And they departed from Rephidim and pitched in the Wilderness of Sinai XIX Exod. 1 2. This was forty seven days after they came from Rameses on the first day of the third Month. Three days after which viz. on the fiftieth day after they came out of Egypt God gave them his Law from Mount Sinai Where Moses was called up to him and staid with him twice forty days And was instructed there how to make the Tabernacle and to set it up when it was made with all the Furniture belonging to it All sorts of Sacrifices were ordered while they remained in this Place Priests consecrated Laws given about clean and unclean things and about Marriages and Feasts and the Year of Jubilee with several other things mentioned in the Book of Leviticus Here also the People were numbred their encampment ordered a second Passover kept Laws given about the Water of Jealousie and the Nazarites with several other Matters And then after they had lain here eleven Months and twenty days they are commanded to leave this famous Station the most remarkable of all other X Numb 11 12. Ver. 16. And they removed from the Desert of Sinai Verse 16 and pitched at Kibroth-hattaavah A place in the Wilderness of Paran three days Journey from Mount Sinai X Numb 23. XI 34. where there was a dreadful
right of Marriage So shall their Inheritance be taken away from the Inheritance of the Tribe of our Fathers So will their Estate go out of our Tribe without remedy because the Jubilee it self will give us no Relief Verse 5 Ver. 5. And Moses commanded the Children of Israel according to the Word of the LORD Whom I suppose he consulted about this matter as he did when the first doubt was moved about the Inheritance of these Women XXVII 5. and received the answer by which he here commanded the Israelites to govern themselves The Tribe of Joseph In whose name the chief Fathers of their several Families made this representation to Moses as became Men who took care of the concerns of the whole Tribe Hath said well In desiring the Inheritance of these Women might not go out of their Tribe which was prevented by the following Law Ver. 6. This is the thing which the LORD doth Verse 6 command concerning the Daughters of Zelophehad saying Let them marry to whom they think best They were not confined to any particular Persons but might have their choice among those who were descended from the same Stock as it immediately follows Only to the Family of the Tribe of their Father shall they marry Only with these two limitations that they might not marry a Man of another Tribe nor a Man of another Family in their own Tribe For it is very manifest that they are tied to marry into the Family of their Father and accordingly they did actually marry their Cosin-Germans as we now speak v. 11. For this Law was made for the preservation of Families as well as of Tribes as the Law for the Redemption of Lands was And therefore these words the Family of the Tribe of their Father is well translated by Grotius upon I St. Matthew 16. familia stirpis paternae the Family of the Sto●k of their Father which was that they desired might not perish XXVII 4. and was the ground of the Law which commanded a Man to marry the Wife of his Brother who left no Issue XXV Deut. 16. Therefore there being several Families in the Tribe of Manasseh XXVI 29 30 31 32. these Women could marry only into the Family of the Hepherites Verse 7 Ver. 7. So shall not the Inheritance of the Children of Israel remove from Tribe to Tribe For by preserving it in the Family to which it was given it was necessarily preserved in the Tribe For every one of the Children of Israel shall keep himself to the Inheritance of the Tribe of his Fathers And not endeavour to get any part of the Inheritance of another Tribe by marrying an Heiress in it Plato himself took care of this that when a Man left only a Daughter his Estate should not be carried by her to a Stranger but she should be bound to marry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one that was nearest of kin to her And if there was a want of near Kindred 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. it should descend to the Children of her Father's Brother or the Children of the Grandfather some of which he ordains should marry her Lib. XI de Legibus p. 924 925. Edit Serrani Verse 8 Ver. 8. And every Daughter that possesseth an Inheritance in any Tribe of the Children of Israel Here this Law is made general that all Women who were Heiresses as the Daughters of Zelophehad were should do as they are here commanded And this was one of the Attick Laws which as Grotius observes were plainly borrowed from the Law of Moses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. That an Heiress should not marry out of her Kindred but dispose of her self and Estate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to one nearest of kin to her which was one of the Laws of Solon as Sam. Petitus observes out of Isaeus Pollux and others in his Comment in Leges Atticas Lib. VI. Tit. 1. p. 441. Shall be Wife to one of the Family of the Tribe of her Father Here she is confined to her Family and not merely to her Tribe But this concerned only such as were Heiresses all other Women might marry into what Tribe they pleased as appears by these very Books wherein we read that Aaron himself married the Sister of the Prince of Judah VI Exod. 22. And if any object that this was before the giving of the Law it is evident that Jehoiada a Priest and consequently of the Tribe of Levi married King Jehoram's Sister who was of the Tribe of Judah 2 Chron. XXII 11. And long before this all the Tribes of Israel being in great solicitude how to find Wives for their Brethren of Benjamin did not scruple their having them out of any Tribe if it had not been for their Oath XXI Judg. 18. And to add no more David himself of the Tribe of Judah married Michael the Daughter of Saul who was of the Tribe of Benjamin The Talmudists add that even these Heiresses might marry into what Tribe they pleased after the first Division of the Land by Joshua to which they imagine this Law was restrained it being a common saying among them That it did not belong to any Age but that in which it was made In the following Ages they pretend a Man might purchase Land in any Tribe and possess it alway or have the Inheritance of it by Marriage though he were of another Tribe as Selden shows their Opinion to be Lib. de Successionibus ad Leges Hebr. cap. 18. and Lib. III. de Synedr c. 4. n. 1. and Buxtorf de Sponsal Divortiis sect 44. But this is well confuted by Grotius in his Annotations upon I St. Matthew v. 16. Ver. 9. Neither shall the Inheritance remove from one Tribe to another Tribe This establishes in general what he had said before v. 7. with particular respect Verse 9 to the Daughters of Zelophehad But Moses ben Nachman upon these very words asserts the Talmudick Opinion before-mentioned that this concerns only the present Time not future Ages And puts this Case which is the strongest that can be thought of if a Woman were married into another Tribe after which Marriage her Father and all her Brethren dying without Children the Inheritance fell to her and consequently saith he the Possession must devolve from one Tribe to another into which she had married But according to the Letter of these words the Inheritance was rather to descend to the next of her Kindred than by her be carried out of the Tribe to which it belonged But every one of the Tribes of the Children of Israel shall keep himself to his own Inheritance Shall cleave or stick close to his own Inheritance as the Hebrew word signifies and as the Greek and Latin expresses it The reason of the Command was as Procopius Gazaeus observes to prevent the Confusion of Tribes How the Vulgar Latin came to deviate so much from the Hebrew Text and from the Intention of this Law as it hath done in this and the
two preceding verses I shall not here examine It is sufficient to note that Onkelos hath expressed the Hebrew Text word for word and the LXX do not depart from the sence of it Verse 10 Ver. 10. Even as the LORD commanded Moses so did the Daughters of Zelophehad Accordingly they followed this direction when they came into the Land of Canaan and had received their Portion there Now there being no such words added here as there are in other Cases this shall be unto the Children of Israel a Statute of Judgment XXVII 11. much less a Statute of Judgment throughout your Generations XXXV 29. it led I conjecture the Talmudick Doctors into the fore-mentioned Opinion that this Law concerned only the present Generation Ver. 11. For Mahlah Tizzah and Hoglah and Verse 11 Milkah and Noah the Daughters of Zelophehad Thus they are called both in XXVI 33. XXVII 1. though they are not there mentioned in the same order for Tirzah is there named last who here is named in the second place Perhaps they are set down here in the order wherein they were disposed in Marriage and Tirzah who was the younger was married in the second place Were married unto their Fathers Brothers Sons For Hepher no doubt had other Sons besides Zelophehad who had Issue-male though Zelophehad had not What their Names were or how many of them we do not know but some suppose them to have been six one of which died in the Wilderness without Issue See Selden de Successionibus cap. 23. where he discourses at large of the Portion which fell to them in the Land of Canaan Ver. 12. And they were married into the Families Verse 12 c. In the Margin more exactly out of the Hebrew to some that were of the Families i. e. to one of the Families of Manasseh from whom several Families descended XXVI 29 c. And their Inheritance remained in the Tribe of the Family of their Father The word for Tribe signifies sometimes merely a Family in a Tribe And so the LXX as Grotius observes in the place before-named in this very business uses sometimes the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the former of which signifies a part of a whole Tribe And thus Josephus also uses the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to signifie a Family Mr. Selden hath the same Observation in his Book de Successionibus cap. 18. that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is sometimes translated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and then it signifies not a Tribe but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 familiam cognationem seu genus sanguine proximum a Family a Kindred or those that are next in Blood But there is no need of these Observations if the words be translated as they may rightly and their Inheritance remained in the Tribe and the Family of their Father See v. 6. Verse 13 Ver. 13. These are the Commandments and the Judgments which the LORD commanded by the hand of Moses to the Children of Israel in the plains of Moab by Jordan near Jericho He began to deliver the Precepts here intended at the XXVIth Chapter See v. 3. and continues them to this place By Commandments seem to be meant the Precepts about the Worship of God Chapt. XXVIII XXIX XXX and by Judgments the Civil Laws about dividing their Inheritances and regulating their Descent to their Posterity and establishing Cities of Refuge for Man-slayers which are expresly called a Statute of Judgment XXVII 11. XXXV 29. Some other things are interspersed as God's Commandment to number the People which was in order to the assigning them their Inheritances proportionable to their Families to execute Judgment on the Midianites and to set down in Writing their Travels in the Wilderness of which I have given an account in their proper places FINIS By reason of the Distance of the Author these ERRATA have hapned which the Reader is desired to Correct Page 5. Line 7. read are reckoned Page 73. Line 29. r. See Levit. II. 15. Page 74. Line 22. r. were signs Page 82. Line 12. r. Rabboth Page 96. Line 4. r. aquatiles Line ult r. so that they might not Page 107. Line 13. r. other shoulder Page 110. Line 2. r. Chaskuni Page 123. Line 31. r. XL. Exod. Page 140. Line 30. r. may teach Page 152. Line 5. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Page 158. Line 31. r. Acropolis Page 163. Line 10. r. Choten Page 166. Line 31. r. the following story Page 167. Line 3. r. Rise up Page 171. Line 22. r. it is likely Page 190. Line 12. r. Setting forth the Praises Line 20. r. such credit Page 191. Line penult r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Page 195. Line 21. r. whose Presence Page 198. Line 1. r. kadim Page 201. Line 11. r. but besides that there is Line 12. r. and it is Page 210. Line 28. r. as were never bred Page 216. Line 18. r. not deigning to stay Page 221. Line 21. after July begin a new line Page 227. Line 2. r. Torquatus Page 228. Line 3 4. r. a stony place Page 241. Line 1. dele and that Page 251. Line 7. r. Bitter Line 31. r. Spirit with him Page 282. Line 1. r. The Man shall be Page 284. Line 31. r. And the Garment the Jews say in the Selvedge c. Page 284. Line 33. r. Talith Page 316. Line 19. r. it being broke out Page 332. Line 3. r. where as Page 333. Line 21. r. within the veil Page 335. Line 11. r. Zeback Page 358. Line 7. r. more fit to treat Page 367. Line 7. r. as we may call it Page 387. Line 26. r. Successors of Esau Page 402. Line 19. r. by way of apposition Page 404. Line 24. r. the words are Page 406. Line 30. r. Bootius Page 420. Line 6. r. from Arnon Page 426. Line 1. r. whence Hesychius Line 22. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Page 433. Line 18. r. Kosem Page 446. Line 9. r. proffer'd him Page 468. Line 9. r. per juga Page 469. Line 7. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Page 470. Line 15. r. Sepher Cosri Page 482. Line 2. r. Dei nutu Page 501. Line 4. r. Baal-Peor Line 26. r. were called Baalim Page 519. Line 30. r. are reckoned Page 523. Line 14. r. Zelophehad Page 532. Line penult r. who was born Page 539. Line 21. r. being but reason Page 555. Line ult r. pouring out upon Page 556. Line 4. r. Heliogabalus Page 564. Line 18. r. and so doth Page 598. Line 19. r. and what I have Page 618. Line 22. r. Jogbehah Page 634. Line 22. r. to have been places Page 635. Line 9. r. anciently called Abel-shittim Page 673. Line 14. r. XXXI XXXII 2. Books written by Symon Patrick D. D. now Lord Bishop of Ely and Printed for Richard Chiswell THe Parable of the Pilgrim written to a Friend The Sixth Edit 4 to 1681. Mensa Mystica Or a Discourse concerning the Sacrament of the Lords Supper In which