Verse 1
Numbers 32:1. The land of Jazer
— A city and country of the
Amorites. Gilead — A mountainous
country, famous for pasturage.
These countries were lately
taken from the two Amorite
princes, Sihon and Og, (Numbers
21:24,) and were, by divine
appointment, allowed to be
inhabited by the Israelites, as
well as the land of Canaan
itself.
Verse 4
Numbers 32:4. Which the Lord
smote — That is, whose
inhabitants we, by God’s
peculiar aid, routed and
destroyed: Deuteronomy 2:33,
compared with the history of
this victory, Numbers 21.
Verses 5-7
Numbers 32:5-7. Bring us not
over Jordan — To give us our
possession there; but let this
land, on this side Jordan, be
our whole possession. Shall ye
sit here? — In ease and peace,
while your brethren are engaged
in war. Wherefore discourage ye
the heart of Israel — Their
words were ambiguous, and Moses
suspected that mere cowardice,
and a love of ease, made them
desire to stay where they were;
which ill example might have
disheartened the rest of their
brethren.
Verses 12-14
Numbers 32:12-14. Caleb the
Kenezite — So called from Kenaz,
one of his eminent ancestors. An
increase of sinful men —
Succeeding your fathers, as in
their places, so also in their
sins; imitating the unbelieving
spies, and distrusting God’s
power and veracity to make good
his promise of settling Israel
in the land of Canaan.
Verse 15
Numbers 32:15. Ye shall destroy
all this people — Who, being
moved by your counsel and
example, will refuse to go over
Jordan and possess the land of
Canaan. Thus all who rest
satisfied with visible and
temporal things, and evidently
show by their conduct that they
prefer earth to heaven, not only
stop short themselves of the
rest that remaineth for the
people of God, but greatly
discourage others in their
journey thither, and lay
stumbling-blocks in their way.
Reader! Arise, depart, this is
not thy rest, because it is
polluted; it will destroy thee
with a sore destruction.
Verse 17
Numbers 32:17. We ourselves will
go — Either all, or as many of
us as shall be thought
necessary, leaving only so many
as may be requisite to provide
for the support and defence of
our wives and children. Because
of the inhabitants of the land —
The Moabites and Edomites, or
other neighbouring people,
together with such of the
Amorites as had saved themselves
by flight, and would watch all
opportunities of seeking to
reinstate themselves in their
lost possessions. Accordingly we
find that forty thousand of the
Reubenites and Gadites went over
with their brethren, ready armed
for war, to the plains of
Jericho, Deuteronomy 3:18;
Joshua 4:12.
Verse 18
Numbers 32:18. We will not
return to our houses, &c. —
Herein they showed both faith in
God and love to their brethren,
thus to go in the front of the
battle, and generously risk
their lives against such
powerful enemies, without any
further benefit to themselves,
leaving their weak families
behind them to the divine
protection.
Verse 20
Numbers 32:20. Before the Lord —
Before the ark, which was the
token of God’s presence. He
alludes either to the order of
the tribes in their march,
whereby Reuben and Gad marched
immediately before the ark, or
to the manner of their passage
over Jordan, wherein the ark
went first into Jordan, and
stood there while all the tribes
marched over Jordan by and
before it, and these among the
rest, as is expressly noted in
these very words, that they
passed over before the Lord,
Joshua 4:13.
Verse 23
Numbers 32:23. Your sin will
find you out — The punishment of
your sin. Sin will certainly
find out the sinner, sooner or
later. It concerns us therefore
to find our sins out, that we
may repent of them, lest our
sins find us out to our
confusion and destruction.
Verse 30-31
Numbers 32:30-31. They shall
have possessions — They shall
forfeit their possessions in
Gilead, and be constrained to go
over Jordan, and to seek
possessions there among their
brethren. As the Lord hath said
— Either at this time, by thy
mouth; or formerly, where he
commanded us, as well as our
brethren, to go into Canaan and
possess it.
Verse 34
Numbers 32:34. Built — Repaired
and fortified. For they neither
had need nor leisure as yet to
do more, the old cities not
being burned and ruined, as
divers in Canaan were.
Verse 38
Numbers 32:38. Their names being
changed — Conquerors of places
have been wont to change their
names. But as the Israelites
were forbidden to mention the
names of other gods, and as
these places, it seems had their
names from the false gods
worshipped in them, (which was
unquestionably the case with
Nebo and Baal-meon,) the
Israelites might judge it proper
to change the names of these
places, in order to abolish all
footsteps of idolatry.
Verses 40-42
Numbers 32:40; Numbers 32:42.
Moses gave Gilead unto Machir —
Not to Machir himself, who
doubtless was long since dead,
but the family or posterity of
Machir. Nobah — Who, though not
elsewhere named, was doubtless
an eminent person of the tribe
of Manasseh. It is observable,
that these tribes, as they were
placed before the other tribes,
so they were displaced before
them. They were carried captive
by the king of Assyria, some
years before the other tribes.
Such a proportion does
Providence frequently observe in
balancing prosperity and
adversity. |