Verse 1
Numbers 11:1. The people
complained — Hebrew, as it were,
complained; that is, they began
to mutter some complaints, and
for a while, it seems, kept
their discontent from coming to
Moses’s ear. The chief cause of
their murmuring is represented
(Numbers 11:5) to be their
growing weary of the manna, upon
which they had now lived for a
year. But, besides this, it is
probable that their last three
days’ journey in that vast
howling wilderness, the
remembrance of their long abode
in it, and the fear of many more
tedious journeys, and much delay
before they should arrive at the
land of milk and honey, which
they longed for, had greatly
contributed to their
dissatisfaction. It displeased
the Lord — Though their
discontent did not at first
break forth into open murmurings
against Moses, yet God saw the
mutinous and rebellious
disposition of their minds, and
testified his displeasure on
account of it. The fire of the
Lord — A fire sent from God in
an extraordinary manner, perhaps
from the pillar of cloud and
fire, or lightning from heaven,
which is called the fire of God,
2 Kings 1:12; Job 1:16. Le Clerc
thinks it might be one of those
fiery blasting winds which are
incident to those countries, See
Ezekiel 17:10; Ezekiel 19:12. It
was, however, sent in a
supernatural and miraculous way.
The uttermost part of the camp —
Either because the sin began
there among the mixed multitude,
or in mercy to the people, whom
he would rather awaken to
repentance than destroy; and
therefore he sent it into the
skirts, and not the midst of the
camp.
Verse 2
Numbers 11:2. The people cried
unto Moses — This calamity threw
them into such consternation,
that they immediately applied to
Moses to deprecate the divine
displeasure.
Verse 3
Numbers 11:3. He called the
place Taberah — That is,
burning, because of this fire;
and it was called
Kibroth-hattaavah on another
account. It is no unusual thing
in Scripture for persons and
places to have two or more
names. Both these names were
imposed as monuments of the
people’s sin, and of God’s just
displeasure. This passage is
well improved by St. Paul, (1
Corinthians 10:10-12,) to
caution us against discontent
and murmuring.
Verse 4
Numbers 11:4. The children of
Israel also wept again — That
is, they again complained and
murmured, that God had so lately
visited them with such awful
marks of his displeasure; though
their special relation and
obligation to God should have
restrained them from any such
carriage. Bishop Kidder justly
observes, that “their sin was
much aggravated on the following
accounts: 1st, They declared
their distrust of God’s power
and providence, of which they
had had so great experience. 2d,
They despised God and his former
mercies. 3d, They covetously
desired flesh, when they had
much cattle of their own, Exodus
12:32; Exodus 12:38, and Numbers
32:4.”
Verse 5-6
Numbers 11:5-6. The fish which
we did eat freely — Either
without price, for fish was very
plentiful, and fishing there
free, or at a very small price.
Our soul — Either our life, as
the term signifies, Genesis 9:5,
or our body, which is often
intended by the word soul.
Dried-away — Is withered, and
pines away, which possibly might
be true, through their envy,
discontent, and inordinate
appetite. The expression seems
to be of the same purport with
that of the psalmist,
<19A204>Psalms 102:4, My heart
is withered like grass.
Verse 7-8
Numbers 11:7-8. As
coriander-seed — Not for colour,
for that is black, but for shape
and figure. Bdellium — Is either
the gum of a tree, of a white
and bright colour, or rather a
gem or precious stone, as the
Hebrew doctors take it; and
particularly a pearl, wherewith
the manna manifestly agrees both
in its colour, which is white,
(Exodus 16:14,) and in its
figure, which is round. Fresh
oil — Or, of the most excellent
oil; or, of cakes made with the
best oil, the word cakes being
easily supplied out of the
foregoing member of the verse;
or, which is not much different,
like wafers made with honey, as
it is said, Exodus 16:31. The
nature and use of manna are here
thus particularly described, to
show the greatness of their sin
in despising such excellent
food.
Verses 10-14
Numbers 11:10-14. Every man in
the door of his tent — To denote
they were not ashamed of their
sin. Have I not found favour —
Why didst thou not hear my
prayer when I desired thou
wouldst excuse me, and commit
the care of this unruly people
to some other person? Have I
begotten them? —
Are they my children, that I
should be obliged to provide
food and all things for their
necessity and desire? To bear —
The burden of providing for and
satisfying them. Alone — Others
were only assistant to him in
smaller matters; but the harder
and greater affairs, such as
this unquestionably was, were
brought to Moses and determined
by him alone.
Verse 15
Numbers 11:15. If thou deal thus
with me, kill me — He begs that
God would be pleased either to
ease him of the burdensome
charge, or take him out of the
world, and rid him of a life so
troublesome and insupportable.
See my wretchedness — Hebrew, my
evil, my torment, arising from
the difficulty of my office, and
work of ruling this people, and
from the dread of their utter
extirpation, and the dishonour
which will thence accrue to thee
and religion; as if not only I,
but thou also wast a deceiver.
He speaks like an affectionate
father of a people who makes
their sufferings his own. And,
indeed, what could make a ruler
of such paternal tenderness more
distressed than to see the
people he was appointed to
govern so untoward, not only
toward himself, but God? and to
see them, by their perverseness,
drawing down upon themselves
such dire calamities, and the
enemies of God rejoicing in
their ruin?
Verse 16
Numbers 11:16. To be elders —
Whom thou by experience
discernest to be elders, not
only in years and name, but also
in wisdom and authority with the
people. And according to this
constitution, the sanhedrim, or
great council of the Jews, which
in after ages sat at Jerusalem,
and was the highest court of
judgment among them, consisted
of seventy men.
Verse 17
Numbers 11:17. I will come down
— By my powerful presence and
operation. I will put it on them
— That is, I will give the same
spirit to them which I have
given to thee. The spirit is
here put for the gifts of the
Spirit, and particularly for the
spirit of prophecy, whereby they
were enabled, as Moses had been
and still was, to discern hidden
and future things, and resolve
doubtful and difficult cases,
which made them fit for
government. It is observable
that God would not, and
therefore men should not, call
any persons to any office for
which they were not sufficiently
qualified.
Verse 18
Numbers 11:18. Sanctify
yourselves — Prepare to meet thy
God, O Israel, in the way of his
judgments. Prepare yourselves by
true repentance, that you may
either obtain some mitigation of
the plague, or, while your
bodies are destroyed by the
flesh you desire and eat, your
souls may be saved from the
wrath of God. Sanctifying is
often used for preparing, as
Jeremiah 6:4; Jeremiah 12:3. In
the ears of the Lord — Not
secretly in your closets, but
openly and impudently in the
doors of your tents, calling
heaven and earth to witness.
Verse 20
Numbers 11:20. Until it come out
at your nostrils — That is, till
your impatient appetites be
glutted; and by another instance
of divine power, you be
convinced to your shame how
irreligiously, distrustfully,
and ungratefully you have acted
toward God amidst all his
merciful providences toward you.
The expression presents a very
strong, though disagreeable idea
of satiety and surfeit, when the
overloaded stomach disburdens
itself at the mouth and
nostrils. Ye have despised the
Lord — You have lightly esteemed
his bounty and manifold
blessings; you have slighted and
distrusted his promises and
providence after so long and
large experience of it. The Lord
who is among you — Who is
present and resident with you,
to observe all your carriage,
and to punish your offences.
This is added as a great
aggravation of the crime, to sin
in the presence of the judge.
Why came we forth out of Egypt?
— Why did God do us such an
injury? Why did we so foolishly
obey him in coming forth?
Verse 21
Numbers 11:21. Six hundred
thousand footmen — Fit for war,
besides women and children. That
Moses speaks this as distrusting
God’s word, is evident; and that
Moses was not remarkably
punished for this as he was
afterward for the same sin,
(Numbers 20.,) may be imputed to
the different circumstances of
this and that sin; this was the
first offence of the kind, and
therefore more easily passed by;
that was after warning, and
against more light and
experience. This seems to have
been spoken secretly; that
openly, before the people; and
therefore it was fit to be
openly and severely punished, to
prevent the contagion of that
example.
Verse 23
Numbers 11:23. Is the Lord’s
hand waxed short? — Is the
divine power diminished? Isaiah
50:2; Isaiah 59:1. What has not
God done to convince mankind
that his power is always
unlimited? And yet man is still
ready to fall into the weakness
of thinking that there are
circumstances in which the power
of God cannot afford relief or
deliverance, but must, as it
were, remain inactive.
Verse 24
Numbers 11:24. Moses went out —
Either from the sanctuary, into
which he had entered to receive
God’s answers from the
mercy-seat, or he went out from
his tent to the people. And
gathered the seventy men — They
are called seventy from the
stated number, though two of
them were lacking, as the
apostles are called the twelve,
(Matthew 26:20,) when one of
that number was absent. Round
the tabernacle — Partly that the
awe of God might be imprinted
upon their hearts, that they
might more seriously undertake,
and more faithfully manage their
high employment; but
principally, because that was
the place where God manifested
himself, and therefore there he
would bestow his Spirit upon
them.
Verse 25
Numbers 11:25. Rested on them —
Not only moved them for a time,
but took up his settled abode
with them, because the use and
end of this gift were perpetual.
They prophesied — Discoursed of
the word and works of God in a
marvellous manner, as the
prophets did. So this word is
used, 1 Samuel 10:5-6; Joel
2:28; 1 Corinthians 14:3. Yet
were they not hereby constituted
teachers, but civil magistrates,
who, together with the spirit of
government, received also the
spirit of prophecy, as a sign
and seal, both to themselves and
to the people, that God had
called them to that employment.
They did not cease — Either for
that day, continuing in that
exercise all that day, and, it
may be, all the night too, as it
is said of Saul, 1 Samuel 19:24;
or, afterward also. For this was
a continued gift, conferred upon
them to enable them the better
to discharge their magistracy;
which was more expedient for
them than for the rulers of
other people, because the Jews
were under a theocracy, or the
government of God, and even
their civil controversies were
decided out of that word of God
which the prophets expounded.
Verse 26
Numbers 11:26. In the camp — Not
going to the tabernacle, as the
rest did, either not having
seasonable notice to repair
thither, or, being detained in
the camp by sickness, or some
urgent occasion, not without
God’s special providence, that
so the miracle might be more
evident. They were of them that
were written — In a book or
paper by Moses, who, by God’s
direction, nominated the fittest
persons.
Verse 27-28
Numbers 11:27-28. There ran a
young man and told Moses —
Fearing lest his authority
should be diminished by their
prophesying, and thereby taking
power to themselves without his
consent. Joshua, the servant of
Moses — Who ministered to him as
his constant attendant. One of
his young men — Hebrew, מבחריו,
mibechuraiv, one of his chosen
ones; which may be emphatically
added to signify that even great
and good men may mistake about
the works of God. My lord Moses,
forbid them — It would seem that
he thought their prophesying or
teaching in the camp tended to
make those gifts common, and to
disparage Moses in the eyes of
the people; or, perhaps, he
thought it tended to breed a
schism, by calling the people
away from the tabernacle, the
appointed place of public
worship, where the rest of the
seventy elders were regularly
assembled. Thus the disciples
forbade one who cast out devils
in Christ’s name, because he
followed not with them, Luke
9:49-50.
Verse 29
Numbers 11:29. Enviest thou for
my sake? — Art thou grieved
because the gifts and graces of
God’s Spirit are imparted to
others besides me? Or rather,
Art thou jealous for my sake?
Art thou afraid that their
exercising these prophetic gifts
will be a diminution of my
honour? Would God that all the
Lord’s people were prophets —
That they were all so inspired
by his Spirit as to be enabled
to speak to his praise, and to
the edification of others! He
saith prophets, not rulers, for
that, he knew, could not be.
Thus we see, though Joshua was
Moses’s particular friend and
confidant, and though he said
this out of respect for Moses,
whose honour he was very
unwilling to see lessened by the
call of those elders, yet Moses
reproves him, as Christ did the
disciples on the occasion just
mentioned, and, in him, all who
are of such a spirit. “We must
take care,” says Henry, “that we
do not secretly grieve at the
gifts, graces, or usefulness of
others, and that we be not
forward to condemn and silence
those that differ from us, as if
they did not follow Christ,
because they do not follow him
with us. Shall we reject those
whom Christ has owned? or
restrain any from doing good
because they are not in every
thing of our mind? Moses was of
another spirit; so far from
silencing these two, and
quenching the spirit in them, he
wishes that all the Lord’s
people were prophets, and that
he would put his Spirit upon
them. Not that he would have had
any to set up for prophets who
were not duly qualified; or that
he expected the spirit of
prophecy to be made thus common;
but he thus expresseth the love
and esteem he had for all the
Lord’s people, the complacency
he took in the gifts of others,
and how far he was from being
displeased at Eldad and Medad’s
prophesying from under his eye.
Such an excellent spirit as this
blessed Paul was of; rejoicing
that Christ was preached, though
it were by those who therein
intended to add affliction to
his bonds, Philippians 1:16. We
ought to be pleased that God is
served and glorified, and good
done, though to the lessening of
our credit and the credit of our
way.”
Verse 30
Numbers 11:30. Moses gat him
into the camp — Among the
people; he and the elders of
Israel — To exercise the gifts
and authority they had now
received.
Verse 31
Numbers 11:31. There went forth
a wind from the Lord — An
extraordinary and miraculous
wind, both for its vehemency and
for its effects. And brought
quails — So the Hebrew word,
שׂלוים, salvim, is interpreted
by Josephus, and all the ancient
versions; nor does there appear
to be any sufficient authority
for translating it locusts;
notwithstanding what Ludolphus,
in his History of Ethiopia,
50:1, c. 13; and after him
Bishop Patrick, and the late
bishop of Clogher, have said on
the subject. This is the second
time that God gave them these
quails. He sent them the former
year, and much about the same
season, Exodus 16:13; but
neither in the same quantity nor
with the same design as now.
From the sea — Principally from
the Arabian gulf, or Red sea,
and both sides of it, where,
according to ancient heathen
writers, they were then in great
numbers, and no doubt were
wonderfully increased by God’s
special providence for this very
occasion. This sea lies south of
that part of Arabia where the
Israelites were now encamped. It
was therefore a south wind that
brought these quails, and is
said to have come forth from the
Lord, because it was ordered and
directed by his special power
and providence. Two cubits high
— Not as if the quails did cover
all the ground two cubits high
for a day’s journey on each side
of the camp, for then there had
been no place left where they
could spread them all abroad
round about the camp; but the
meaning is, that the quails came
and fell down round about the
camp for a whole day’s journey
on each side of it, and that in
all that space they lay here and
there in great heaps, which were
often two cubits high.
Verse 32
Numbers 11:32. All that night
and all next day — Some at the
one time, and some at the other,
and some, through greediness or
diffidence, at both times. Ten
homers — That is, ten ass-loads:
which, if it seem incredible,
consider, 1st, That the
gatherers here were not all the
people, which could not be
without great inconvenience, but
some on the behalf of all, while
the rest were exercised about
other necessary things.
Therefore, the meaning is not,
that every Israelite had so much
for his share, but that every
collector gathered so much for
the family or others by whom he
was appointed. 2d, That the
people did not gather for their
present use only, but for a good
while to come; and being
distrustful of God’s goodness,
it is not strange if they
gathered much more than they
needed. 3d, That the word
rendered homers, may signify
heaps, as it doth Exodus 8:14;
15:16;
Habakkuk 3:15; and ten is often
put for many, and so the sense
is, that every one gathered
several heaps. If yet the number
seem incredible, it must be
further known, 4th, That heathen
and other authors affirm, in
those eastern and southern
countries, quails are
innumerable, so that in one part
of Italy, within the compass of
five miles, there were taken
about a hundred thousand of them
every day for a month together.
And Athenĉus relates, that in
Egypt, a country prodigiously
populous, they were in such
plenty, that all those vast
numbers of people could not
consume them, but were forced to
salt and keep them for future
use. They spread them — That so
they might dry, salt, and
preserve them for future use,
according to what they had seen
in Egypt.
Verse 33
Numbers 11:33. The Lord smote
the people with a very great
plague — With a pestilence, say
some, with a consumption, say
others. But it seems more
probable that it was by some
untimely death, which was the
effect of their own gluttony and
intemperance. This seems to
agree best with the threatening,
Numbers 11:20. God was pleased,
in a great measure, to overlook
their first murmuring, about a
year before, when he sent them
the manna, because they were
then under great necessity,
being really pinched with
hunger; whereas now that they
were fed with bread from heaven,
they cried for meat, not from
need, but mere wantonness, and
that after much experience of
God’s care and kindness, after
he had pardoned their former
sins, and after he had made
known his laws to them in a most
solemn and terrible manner.
Besides, the longer God
exercises forbearance, the more
is the offender’s guilt
aggravated, if he remain
impenitent. Reader, remember,
“the goodness of God leads thee
to repentance,” and take heed
that thou do not, “after thy
hardness and impenitent heart,
treasure up to thyself wrath
against the day of wrath!” |