Verse 1
Numbers 19:1. The people had
complained of the strictness of
the law which forbade their near
approach to the tabernacle,
(Numbers 17:13,) and the sudden
death of so many by the late
plague had put such numbers of
their friends and relations into
a state of legal uncleanness,
which rendered them incapable of
approaching it, and filled them
with a fear of perishing in
their uncleanness; in answer,
therefore, to their complaints,
and to free them from this fear,
they are here shown how they
might be purified from the
greatest legal uncleanness, so
as to approach God in his
ordinances and among his people,
without either fear or danger.
Verse 2
Numbers 19:2. This is the law
which the Lord hath commanded —
Or rather, had commanded. For it
is probable that the water of
purification had been made
before, although the manner of
making it is here first
described. That they bring thee
a red heifer — Provided at the
expense of the congregation,
because they were all to have a
joint interest in it; as all
believers, the spiritual Israel,
have in Christ, typified by it.
Here a question arises, why this
sacrifice (if it may be so
called) must be a heifer, when
in other cases bullocks are
appointed, and, in general, the
male is preferred to the female.
According to St. Austin and
Theodoret, the weaker sex was to
signify that infirmity of the
flesh wherewith Christ was
clothed. But the reason which
Dr. Spencer assigns seems to be
more plausible, which is, that
it was in opposition to the
Egyptian superstition. For
though the Egyptians offered
bullocks in sacrifice, they had
cows in great veneration; as
Herodotus, Diodorus Siculus,
Ælian, Porphyry, and others,
unanimously declare. Porphyry
says they would rather have
eaten human flesh than that of
cows. In order, therefore, to
expose this folly of Egypt in
the eyes of the Israelites, God
directs Moses to appoint one
solemn institution wherein a
heifer was to be the victim. A
red heifer — A fit colour to
shadow forth the nature of sin,
and the blood of Christ, from
which this water and all other
rites had their purifying
virtue. The Jews say, that it
was necessary the heifer should
be entirely red, without the
least mixture of any other
colour, and that if but two
hairs were black or white it was
unfit for this sacrifice.
Without spot — Hebrew, תמימה,
temima, perfect; wherein is no
blemish — Thus typifying the
spotless purity and sinless
perfection of the Lord Jesus.
Upon which never came yoke —
This was not necessary in other
sacrifices; but may here be
considered as signifying the
perfect freedom of the Lord
Jesus from every obligation to
undertake our cause and die in
our stead, save that which love
laid him under. For when he
said, Lo, I come, he was bound
by no other cords than those of
his great love to us.
Verse 3
Numbers 19:3. Ye shall give her
unto Eleazar — Who was the
second priest, and in some cases
the deputy of the high-priest.
To him this service was
committed, and not to Aaron,
because it was not fit that
Aaron should be engaged in any
thing that would render him
ceremonially unclean, although
but till the evening, Numbers
19:8. Yet as it was an affair of
great moment, especially as
typifying the sufferings and
death of Christ, and
purification through his blood,
it was proper it should be
performed by him who was next to
Aaron in dignity. The chief
priests of our Lord’s time had
the principal hand in his death.
That he may bring her forth
without the camp — Partly
because this heifer was reputed
an unclean and accursed thing,
being laden with the sins of all
the people, and partly to
signify that Christ should
suffer without the gate,
(Hebrews 13:12,) in the place
where malefactors suffered.
Verse 4
Numbers 19:4. Sprinkle of her
blood directly before the
tabernacle — This made it in
some sort an expiation of sin;
for the sprinkling of the blood
before the Lord was the chief
solemnity in all the sacrifices
of atonement: therefore, though
this was not done at the altar,
yet, being done toward the
sanctuary, it was intimated
hereby that the virtue and
validity of it depended upon the
sanctuary, and were derived from
it. Thus, in the satisfaction
that was made to God by the
death of Christ, our great High-
Priest, who, by the eternal
Spirit, (called, Luke 12:20, the
finger of God,) offered himself
without spot to God; he did, as
it were, sprinkle his own blood
directly before the sanctuary,
when he said, “Father, into thy
hands I commit my spirit.” This
also signifies how necessary it
was, to the purifying our
hearts, that satisfaction should
be made to divine justice. This
sprinkling of the blood put
virtue into the ashes.
Verse 5-6
Numbers 19:5-6. One shall burn
the heifer in his sight — This
typified the extreme sufferings
of our Lord, both in soul and
body, as a sacrifice made by
fire. Cedar-wood, hyssop, and
scarlet — These were used in the
cleansing of lepers, (Leviticus
14:6-7,) and were all here
burned, and, as it were, offered
to God, that they might be
sanctified to this holy use in
future.
Verse 7
Numbers 19:7. The priest shall
be unclean — Partly to teach us
the imperfection of the
Levitical priesthood, in which
the priest himself was defiled
by some parts of his work, and
partly to show that Christ
himself, though he had no sin of
his own, yet was reputed by men,
and judged by God, as a sinful
person, by reason of our sins,
which were laid upon him.
Verse 9
Numbers 19:9. A man shall gather
up the ashes — The ashes of the
heifer were separated as well as
they could be from the ashes of
the wood wherewith it was
burned, were pounded and sifted,
and laid up for the use of the
congregation as there was
occasion, not only for that
generation, but for posterity;
for the ashes of this one
heifer, the Jews tell us, were
sufficient to season as many
vessels of water as the people
of Israel would need for many
ages. Nay, they say this one
served till the captivity, near
one thousand years, and that
there never was another heifer
burned fill the time of Ezra.
But to this tradition of theirs,
grounded probably on the silence
of ancient records, there seems
to be no good reason to give
credit, since, in the latter
ages of their church, when they
had more full records, they find
an account of eight burned
between Ezra’s time and the
destruction of the second
temple, which was only a space
of about five hundred years. In
the sacrifice of the body and
blood of Christ, however,
offered only once for all, we
have an inexhaustible fund of
merit, to which, by faith, his
church may have recourse from
generation to generation, for
the purification of their
consciences from dead works.
Verse 12
Numbers 19:12. He shall purify
himself with it — With the water
of separation. On the third day
— To typify Christ’s
resurrection on that day, by
which we are cleansed or
sanctified.
Verse 13
Numbers 19:13. Whosoever
toucheth — If this transgression
be done presumptuously; for if
it was done ignorantly, he was
only to offer a sacrifice.
Defileth the tabernacle — By
approaching to it in his
uncleanness: for holy things or
places were ceremonially defiled
with the touch of any unclean
person or thing. Is upon him —
He continues in his guilt, not
now to be washed away by this
water, but to be punished by
cutting off.
Verse 16-17
Numbers 19:16-17. With a sword —
Or by any other violent way.
Running water — Waters flowing
from a spring or river, which
are the purest. These manifestly
signify God’s Spirit, which is
oft compared to water, and by
which alone, through the
sacrifice of Christ, true
purification is obtained. Those
who promise themselves benefit
by the righteousness of Christ,
while they submit not to the
influence of his Spirit, do but
deceive themselves, for they
cannot be purified by the ashes,
otherwise than in the running
water.
Verse 18
Numbers 19:18. A clean person
shall take hyssop — In allusion
to this David prays, Purge me
with hyssop. Faith is the bunch
of hyssop, wherewith the
conscience is sprinkled and the
heart purified. And the blood of
Christ, being applied by faith,
is termed, (Hebrews 12:24,) the
blood of sprinkling, and with it
we are said to be sprinkled from
an evil conscience, (Hebrews
10:22,) that is, we are freed
from the burden of distress,
which arises from a sense of our
guilt. And it is foretold that
Christ should sprinkle many
nations, Isaiah 52:15.
Verse 20-21
Numbers 19:20-21. That shall not
purify himself — Shall
contemptuously refuse to submit
to this way of purification.
Shall wash his clothes — Because
he is unclean. It is strange,
that the same water should
cleanse one person, and defile
another. But God would have it
so, to teach us that it did not
cleanse by any virtue in itself,
or in the work done, but only by
virtue of God’s appointment; and
to show that the efficacy of
God’s ordinances doth not depend
upon the person or quality of
his ministers, because the same
person who was polluted himself
could and did, in the use of
God’s appointed means, cleanse
others. He that toucheth the
water — Either by sprinkling of
it, or by being sprinkled with
it; for even he that was
cleansed by it was not fully
cleansed as soon as he was
sprinkled, but only at the even
of that day. |