Verse 1
Numbers 30:1. Moses spake unto
the heads of the tribes — The
chief rulers of each tribe, who
were to communicate it to the
rest. This is the thing the Lord
hath commanded — With relation
to vows, concerning which, it is
probable, some case had been
proposed to him to be
determined.
Verse 2
Numbers 30:2. If a man vow a vow
— Concerning something lawful,
and in his power to perform.
Unto the Lord — To the honour
and service of God. Or swear an
oath — Confirm his vow by an
oath. To bind his soul with a
bond — To restrain himself from
something otherwise lawful; as,
suppose, from such a sort of
meat or drink; or to oblige
himself to the performance of
something otherwise not
necessary, as to observe a
private day of fasting. He shall
not break (Hebrew, he shall not
profane) his word — Not render
his word, and consequently
himself, profane, or
contemptible in the eyes of
others. He shall do according to
all that proceedeth out of his
mouth — Punctually and
conscientiously. His vow shall
be performed in the manner,
time, and kind which was at
first proposed, in reverence to
the great God to whom it was
made. But in case a man vows, or
takes an oath, to do any thing
that is in itself unlawful, as
those Jews did, mentioned Acts
23:14, nothing can be plainer
than that such vow or oath must
be void in the very nature of
the thing. For promises and
resolutions, enforced by the
strongest oaths, or most solemn
vows, are but secondary
obligations, and therefore can
never absolve us from our
primary and immutable obligation
to obey the laws of God and
nature; for this would be to
say, that we could, by an oath,
oblige ourselves to do what God
had before obliged us not to do.
“He who perpetrates any act of
injustice,” says Philo Judĉus,
de specialibus legibus, “upon
account of his oath, adds one
crime to another; first by
taking an unlawful oath, and
then by doing an unlawful
action. Therefore such a one
ought to abstain from the unjust
action, and pray God to pardon
him for his rash oath.” Thus
Herod ought to have done;
instead of performing the rash
promise which he had sealed with
an oath, he ought to have
punished that wicked woman, who
instigated him to commit murder,
under pretence of fulfilling his
oath, Matthew 14:9. Grotius
observes further, that though
the thing promised be not
absolutely unlawful, yet, if it
obstruct some greater moral
good, such a promise, even
sealed with an oath, is not
binding.
Verse 4
Numbers 30:4. And her father
hear her vow — Either when she
spake the words, or by her
acquainting him therewith, as
she was bound to do. If it be
asked why sons are not mentioned
as well as daughters, since
both, in their younger years,
are under the power of their
parents; the answer is, that the
cases are quite different; for
the sons may soon have it in
their power, when become masters
of families, to perform the vows
which they had made in their
minority; but daughters, who
pass from the father’s
jurisdiction into the power of a
husband, are perpetually
dependant, either upon their
fathers or husbands, and so have
no right to make vows without
the consent either of the one or
the other, except in the case of
widowhood or divorce, which is
specified, Numbers 30:9.
Verse 5
Numbers 30:5. In the day that he
heareth — Speedily, or without
delay, allowing only convenient
time for deliberation. And it is
hereby intimated, that the day
or time he had for disallowing
her vow was not to be reckoned
from her vowing, but from his
knowledge of her vow. The Lord
shall forgive — Or, will forgive
her not performing it. But this
should be understood only of
vows which could not be
performed without invading the
father’s right; for if one
should vow to forbear such or
such a sin, and all occasions or
means leading to it, and to
perform such or such duties,
when he had opportunity, no
father can discharge him from
such vows. If this law does not
extend to children’s marrying
without the parent’s consent, so
far as to put it in the power of
the parent to disannul the
marriage, (which some think it
does,) yet certainly it proves
the sinfulness of such
marriages, and obliges those
children to repent and humble
themselves before God and their
parents.
Verse 9
Numbers 30:9. Widow or divorced
— Though she be in her father’s
house, whither such persons
often returned.
Verse 10
Numbers 30:10. If she vowed — If
she that now is a widow, or
divorced, made that vow while
her husband lived with her; as,
suppose, she then vowed that if
she was a widow she would give
such a proportion of her estate
to pious or charitable uses, of
which vow she might repent when
she came to be a widow, and
might believe or pretend she was
free from it, because that vow
was made in her husband’s
lifetime: this is granted, in
case her husband then disallowed
it; but denied, in case, by
silence, or otherwise, he
consented to it.
Verse 13
Numbers 30:13. To afflict the
soul — Herself, by fasting, by
watching, or the like. And these
words are added to show that the
husband had this power not only
in those vows which concerned
himself or his estate, but also
in those which might seem only
to concern her own person and
body; and the reason is, because
the wife’s person or body being
the husband’s right, she might
not do any thing to the injury
of her body without his consent.
Verse 15
Numbers 30:15. After he hath
heard — And approved them by his
silence from day to day; if
after that time he shall hinder
them, which he ought not to do,
her non-performance of her vow
shall be imputed to him, not to
her. |