The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Moses Appoints Leaders
Deuteronomy 1:9–18 — Moses Appoints Leaders. Each verse below carries the full apparatus: the Berean Standard Bible, the vocalized original (tap any word), and a parsed breakdown of every term transcribed from the interlinear. Synthesized commentary, canonical threads, and the reading of Christ gather at the end, over the whole unit.
9At that time I said to you, “I cannot carry the burden for you alone.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ha·hi·w lê·mōr bā·‘êṯ wā·’ō·mar ’ă·lê·ḵem lō- ’ū·ḵal śə·’êṯ ’eṯ·ḵem lə·ḇad·dî
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And I said to you, at that time, saying: not am I able to bear you by myself alone.
Where the English smooths the original
I am not able to bear you myself alone. —Repeated almost exactly from Numbers 11:14 .
The imperfect ואמר with vav rel., expresses the order of thought and not of time. For Moses did not intend to recall the different circumstances to the recollection of the people in their chronological order, but arranged them according to their relative importance in connection with the main object of his address.
I am not able to bear you myself alone; to rule and govern them, judge and determine matters between them. Jethro suggested this to Moses, and he took the hint, and was conscious to himself that it was too much for him, and so declared it to the people, though it is not before recorded; see Exodus 18:18 .
The formula, at that time , is curiously enough found only in Pl. passages Deuteronomy 1:9 ; Deuteronomy 1:16 ; Deuteronomy 1:18 ; Deuteronomy 2:34 ; Deuteronomy 3:4Cambridge's text reads “Pl.” for the Deuteronomic first-person-plural review-passages; the abbreviation is the commentator's, kept verbatim.
10The LORD your God has multiplied you, so that today you are as numerous as the stars in the sky.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·hê·ḵem hir·bāh ’eṯ·ḵem hay·yō·wm wə·hin·nə·ḵem lā·rōḇ kə·ḵō·wḵ·ḇê haš·šā·ma·yim
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Yahweh your God has multiplied you, and behold you are this day as the stars of the heavens for multitude.
Where the English smooths the original
ye are this day as the stars of heaven for multitude—This was neither an Oriental hyperbole nor a mere empty boast. Abraham was told (Ge 15:5, 6) to look to the stars, and though they "appear" innumerable, yet those seen by the naked eye amount, in reality, to no more than three thousand ten in both hemispheres. The Israelites already far exceeded that number
Not so much by the course of nature, as miraculously.
as the stars in heaven ] So Deuteronomy 10:22 ; Deuteronomy 28:62 ; and Genesis 22:17 ; Genesis 26:4 ; Exodus 32:13 , in contexts that otherwise betray the editorial hand. It is one of the many hyperboles in D and is not found in the parallel E, Exodus 18.
you are this day as the stars of heaven for multitude; whereby it appeared that the promise to Abraham was fulfilled, Genesis 15:5 , they were now 600,000 men fit for war, besides women and children, and those under age, which must make the number of them very large.
11May the LORD, the God of your fathers, increase you a thousand times over and bless you as He has promised.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·hê ’ă·ḇō·w·ṯê·ḵem yō·sêp̄ ‘ă·lê·ḵem kā·ḵem ’e·lep̄ pə·‘ā·mîm wî·ḇā·rêḵ ’eṯ·ḵem ka·’ă·šer dib·ber lā·ḵem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Yahweh the God of your fathers, may He add to you, as you are, a thousand times, and may He bless you, just as He has spoken to you.
Where the English smooths the original
The Lord God of your fathers . . . bless you. —This appears to belong distinctly to the Book of Deuteronomy. It can hardly be a record of what was spoken long before. It brings the living speaker before us in a way that precludes imitation.
The "blessing" after "multiplying" points back to Genesis 12:2 . Consequently, it is not to be restricted to "strengthening, rendering fruitful, and multiplying," but must be understood as including the spiritual blessing promised to Abraham.
This prayer he made, or this blessing he pronounced on them, to show that he did not envy their increase, nor was any ways uneasy at it, but rejoiced in it, though he gave it as a reason of his not being able to govern them alone
This verse is even more characteristic of the deuteronomic style. The Lord, the God of your fathers occurs indeed twice in JE; but either thus or with variants seven times in D. As he promised , Heb. spake, to you occurs in D 14 or 15 times.
He owns the fulfilment of God's promise to Abraham, and prays for the further accomplishment of it. We are not straitened in the power and goodness of God; why should we be straitened in our own faith and hope?Henry's note runs over the whole pericope (1:9–18); the excerpt is the line that bears directly on v. 11's thousandfold blessing-prayer.
12But how can I bear your troubles, burdens, and disputes all by myself?
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ê·ḵāh ’eś·śā ṭā·rə·ḥă·ḵem ū·maś·śa·’ă·ḵem wə·rî·ḇə·ḵem lə·ḇad·dî
Literal — word-for-word from the original
How can I bear, by myself alone, your cumbrance, and your burden, and your strife?
Where the English smooths the original
Your cumbrance. —The original word is found only here and in Isaiah 1:14 : “They are a trouble unto me, I am weary to bear them.”
Your strife; either your quarrellings with God; or rather your contentions among yourselves, for the determination whereof the elders were appointed.
The burden and cumbrance of the nation are the nation itself, with all its affairs and transactions, which pressed upon the shoulders of Moses.
13Choose for yourselves wise, understanding, and respected men from each of your tribes, and I will appoint them as your leaders.”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
hā·ḇū lā·ḵem ḥă·ḵā·mîm ū·nə·ḇō·nîm wî·ḏu·‘îm ’ă·nā·šîm lə·šiḇ·ṭê·ḵem wa·’ă·śî·mêm bə·rā·šê·ḵem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Give for yourselves men wise and understanding and known, by your tribes, and I will set them as heads over you.
Where the English smooths the original
Take you ] Heb. Give yourselves : Joshua 18:4 . The people themselves are to elect as in Deuteronomy 16:18 , consistently with the emphasis, so frequent in D, on the judicial responsibilities of the whole people.
the people were allowed to choose their own officers, whom they were to bring to Moses, and present before him, to be invested with their office. A like method was taken in the choice and constitution of deacons in the Christian church, when the secular affairs of it lay too heavy upon the apostles, Acts 6:3 .
they were to be wise (which, indeed, may be regarded as comprehending all good moral qualities); understanding men, men of discernment and sagacity, as well as intelligence; and known among their tribes, men of good repute in the community
give here, provide for yourselves. The congregation was to nominate, according to its tribes, wise, intelligent, and well-known men, whom Moses would appoint as heads, i.e., as judges, over the nation.
14And you answered me and said, “What you propose to do is good.”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wat·ta·‘ă·nū ’ō·ṯî wat·tō·mə·rū ’ă·šer- dib·bar·tā la·‘ă·śō·wṯ ṭō·wḇ- had·dā·ḇār
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And you answered me and said: good is the thing that you have spoken, to do.
Where the English smooths the original
As the speech of Moses to the people is not expressed before, so neither this answer of theirs to him: the thing which thou hast spoken is good for us to do; to look out for and present persons to him as before described; this they saw was for their own good and profit, as well as for the ease of Moses, and therefore readily agreed to it.
The people approved of the proposal, and acted upon it; and Moses accordingly appointed the persons selected to be chiefs over thousands, and over hundreds, and over fifties, and ever tens ( Exodus 18:21 )The Pulpit text reads “ever tens”; the typographical slip for “over tens” is the source's own and is preserved verbatim.
15So I took the leaders of your tribes, wise and respected men, and appointed them as leaders over you—as commanders of thousands, of hundreds, of fifties, and of tens, and as officers for your tribes.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wā·’eq·qaḥ ’eṯ- rā·šê šiḇ·ṭê·ḵem ḥă·ḵā·mîm wî·ḏu·‘îm ’ă·nā·šîm wā·’et·tên ’ō·ṯām rā·šîm ‘ă·lê·ḵem śā·rê ’ă·lā·p̄îm wə·śā·rê mê·’ō·wṯ wə·śā·rê ḥă·miš·šîm wə·śā·rê ‘ă·śā·rōṯ wə·šō·ṭə·rîm lə·šiḇ·ṭê·ḵem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
So I took the heads of your tribes, men wise and known, and I gave them as heads over you — commanders of thousands and commanders of hundreds and commanders of fifties and commanders of tens, and officers, for your tribes.
Where the English smooths the original
So I took the chief — Not in authority, but in endowments for governing. And officers — Inferior officers, that were to attend upon the superior magistrates, and to execute their decrees.
and officers among your tribes; which Jarchi interprets of such that bind malefactors and scourge them, according to the decree of the judges, even the executioners of justice; and so the Jews commonly understand them to be, though some have thought they were judges also.
Did such military sarîm already exist in the time of Israel’s wanderings, and is it meant, here and in Exodus 18, that the popularly elected heads took such military titles on their appointment? Or were these military ranks first instituted under the monarchy
This appointment of the "captains" (compare Exodus 18:21 ff) must not be confounded with that of the elders in Numbers 11:16 ff. The former would number 78,600; the latter were 70 only.Barnes' arithmetic: captains over thousands, hundreds, fifties, and tens for some 600,000 men would total roughly 78,600 officers — a body wholly distinct from the seventy elders of Numbers 11.
16At that time I charged your judges: “Hear the disputes between your brothers, and judge fairly between a man and his brother or a foreign resident.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ha·hi·w lê·mōr bā·‘êṯ wā·’ă·ṣaw·weh ’eṯ- šō·p̄ə·ṭê·ḵem šā·mō·a‘ bên- ’ă·ḥê·ḵem ū·šə·p̄aṭ·tem ṣe·ḏeq bên- ’îš ū·ḇên- ’ā·ḥîw ū·ḇên gê·rōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And I charged your judges, at that time, saying: hear between your brothers, and judge righteously between a man and his brother and his sojourner.
Where the English smooths the original
These instructions given by Moses are an admirable expansion, but only an expansion, of those of Jethro( Exodus 18:21 ), that the judges must be “able men, such as fear God, men of truth, hating covetousness ”—a sentence older than the Decalogue itself.
The stranger — That converseth or dealeth with him. To such God would have justice equally administered as to his own people, partly for the honour of religion, and partly for the interest which every man hath in matters of common right.
Hear … and judge righteously ] The two indispensables: patient, equal hearing, and impartial decision.
hear the causes between your brethren; hear both sides, and all that each of them have to say; not suffer one to say all he has to say, and oblige the other to cut his words short
17Show no partiality in judging; hear both small and great alike. Do not be intimidated by anyone, for judgment belongs to God. And bring to me any case too difficult for you, and I will hear it.”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
lō- ṯak·kî·rū p̄ā·nîm bam·miš·pāṭ tiš·mā·‘ūn kaq·qā·ṭōn kag·gā·ḏōl lō ṯā·ḡū·rū mip·pə·nê- ’îš kî ham·miš·pāṭ lê·lō·hîm hū taq·ri·ḇūn ’ê·lay wə·had·dā·ḇār ’ă·šer yiq·šeh mik·kem ū·šə·ma‘·tîw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
You shall not recognize faces in judgment; the small as the great you shall hear; you shall not be afraid before the face of a man, for the judgment — to God it belongs; and the case that is too hard for you, you shall bring near to me, and I will hear it.
Where the English smooths the original
Not respect persons, Heb. not know or acknowledge faces, i.e. not give sentence according to the outward qualities of the person as he is poor or rich, your friend or enemy, but purely according to the merits of the cause. For which reason some of the Grecian lawgivers ordered that the judges should give sentence in the dark, where they could not see men’s faces.
The judgment is God’s. —Comp. St. Paul in Romans 13:1-4 , which is, again, only an expansion of this sentence. For the latter part of this verse comp. Exodus 18:22-26 .
for the judgment is {m} God's: and the cause that is too hard for you, bring it unto me, and I will hear it. (m) You are his Lieutenants.
But Moses would have the lower judges feel that they also are God’s representatives: at every stage judgement is His. This emphasis is not given in E except in connection with the decrees of Moses himself, Exodus 18:15 f. The expression of it here is an instance of the more thorough penetration of religion in D to every department of the national life.
18And at that time I commanded you all the things you were to do.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ha·hi·w ’êṯ bā·‘êṯ wā·’ă·ṣaw·weh ’eṯ·ḵem kāl- had·də·ḇā·rîm ’ă·šer ta·‘ă·śūn
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And I commanded you, at that time, all the things that you were to do.
Where the English smooths the original
“At that time,” i.e., after your departure from Horeb. This is as much as to say that the exhortations given in Deuteronomy had already been given on the way from Sinai to Kadesh-barnea.
I delivered unto you, and especially unto your judges, all the laws, statues, and judgments revealed unto me by the Lord in Horeb.Poole's “statues” is the source's archaic spelling of “statutes,” kept verbatim.
I instructed you in your duty, by delivering to you, and especially to your judges, the laws, statutes, and judgments revealed unto me by the Lord in Horeb.
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
Moses opens his retrospect not with a law but with a confession of limit: lō ’ū·ḵal śə·’êṯ ’eṯ·ḵem lə·ḇad·dî — “I am not able to bear you by myself alone.” Ellicott hears in it a line “repeated almost exactly from Numbers 11:14,” and the same root nâsâʼ (to lift, H5375) frames the whole movement — the verb in v. 9 and v. 12 brackets the section. The thing he cannot lift he then names in v. 12 with a startlingly rare word: ṭā·rə·ḥă·ḵem (cumbrance, H2960). Ellicott flags it precisely — ⚙ “The original word is found only here and in Isaiah 1:14,” and Cambridge confirms the noun “is not found elsewhere in the O. T.” The Verifier reads that scarcity at face value: at a frequency of only two verses in the entire canon, the link to Isaiah 1:14 is no common motif but a genuine verbal rarity. Between the confession and the cumbrance stands a surprising hinge (vv. 10–11): the reason Moses is overwhelmed is itself a fulfilled promise. Yahweh ’ĕ·lō·hê·ḵem hir·bāh ’eṯ·ḵem — God has caused them to be many, “as the stars of the heavens.” Keil presses that Moses describes the increase “in such a way that his hearers should be involuntarily reminded of the covenant promise in Genesis 15:5,” and then, lest the complaint sound like resentment, Moses turns it into a blessing-prayer (v. 11): “may the Lord… add to you a thousand times.” Gill catches the pastoral move — ⚙ the prayer shows Moses “did not envy their increase… but rejoiced in it.” The leader's weakness and the people's blessing are, in the Hebrew, the same fact seen from two sides.
The remedy is shared government, and the grammar carries the sharing. Moses' charge in v. 13 is hā·ḇū lā·ḵem — literally “give for yourselves” — and Cambridge marks the deuteronomic difference from the older Exodus account: ⚙ “Heb. Give yourselves… The people themselves are to elect,” where in Exodus 18:25 Moses chose. The men sought are ḥă·ḵā·mîm (wise), nə·ḇō·nîm (understanding), and yə·ḏu·‘îm (known); the Pulpit Commentary reads the first as “comprehending all good moral qualities,” and Cambridge notes that in Deuteronomy the intellectual gifts “always include the moral.” Then the give-verb reverses: in v. 15 Moses took (lâqach) what the people gave and gave them back — wā·’et·tên, nâthan, the giving-verb (H5414) — now “as heads over you.” But the synthesis must be honest where the text is rough: v. 15 carries a real textual snag. Cambridge observes it is “unlikely that Moses would say, that he took heads of tribes to make them heads over you,” and that the LXX reads “from you” instead. And the grading into śā·rê of thousands, hundreds, fifties, and tens raises a historical question the commentary does not pretend to settle: ⚙ Cambridge openly asks whether “these military ranks first instituted under the monarchy” have been “reflected… back on the period of the wandering.” The text gives a structure; it does not date it for us.
The final movement turns from who judges to how, and it is bracketed by one Hebrew verb: wā·’ă·ṣaw·weh (I charged, v. 16) and wā·’ă·ṣaw·weh (I commanded, v. 18) — the same Piel tsâvâh (H6680), which the BSB renders with two different English words, masking the bracket. Within it, Moses lays down impartial justice in a bodily Hebrew idiom: lō ṯak·kî·rū p̄ā·nîm — “you shall not recognize faces” — which Keil glosses as acting partially, and Poole illustrates with the memory that some Greek lawgivers made “judges give sentence in the dark, where they could not see men's faces.” The gêr (sojourner, H1616) is held under the same justice as the brother (v. 16), and the small under the same hearing as the great (v. 17). The theological keystone is ham·miš·pāṭ lê·lō·hîm — “the judgment is God's.” Cambridge reads it as the mark of Deuteronomy's reach: ⚙ “at every stage judgement is His,” an “instance of the more thorough penetration of religion in D to every department of the national life.” The Geneva margin states the judges' standing in three words — “You are his Lieutenants” — and Ellicott hears the sentence carried forward to Paul: “Comp. St. Paul in Romans 13:1-4, which is, again, only an expansion of this sentence.” What the people called good to do (v. 14) the chapter ends by commanding them to do (v. 18), the verb ‘âsâh closing the frame it opened.
⚙ Read under Sola Scriptura, this is the architecture of mediated authority, and its center of gravity is one clause: “the judgment is God's” (v. 17). Moses is the one mediator who deliberately multiplies himself — not from ambition relinquished but from finitude confessed (“I am not able… alone”). And the whole point of the delegation is that the delegated office is not a dilution of divine justice but an extension of it: the lowest judge of tens stands as much under “the judgment is God's” as Moses himself. Two things the text refuses to let us separate. First, the people's increase — the very thing that overwhelms the one leader — is named as covenant-fulfilment (the stars of Genesis 15), so that the administrative problem is a redemptive blessing wearing a problem's face. Second, the qualifications named are competence (wise, understanding, known), while the parallel in Exodus 18 named character (fearing God, hating gain); the canonical witness, read together rather than harmonized away, asks for both — a magistrate must be able and godly, because he sits in God's seat. This is a fallible reading, offered to be tested: that Deuteronomy 1 is less a charter of bureaucracy than a doctrine of derived authority, every honest verdict in Israel a small echo of the verdict that belongs to God alone.
Every judge of tens sits, unknowing, in the same seat as Moses — for the judgment was never theirs; it belongs to God. (an interpretive line, not Scripture)
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
Moses' word for the load of the nation in v. 12 — ṭôrach (cumbrance, H2960) — is among the rarest nouns in the Hebrew Bible. ⚙ The Verifier finds it shared between Deuteronomy 1:12 and Isaiah 1:14 and in no other verse: a frequency of two across the whole canon. Ellicott names the link unprompted: “The original word is found only here and in Isaiah 1:14.” Because the lexeme is this rare, the badge rises to verbal — this is not a common theme recurring but a single scarce word reappearing. And the echo is pointed: in Deuteronomy the people are a cumbrance too heavy for Moses to bear; in Isaiah the very same cumbrance — Israel's hollow worship — is too heavy for God: “they are a trouble unto me, I am weary to bear them.” The mediator's exhaustion in chapter 1 prefigures, in one word, the LORD's own. ⚙ One honest qualification: the direction of the echo is not settled — Cambridge asks the question outright, “Is the use of the word here an echo of Isaiah?” The shared rarity is a fact; which text leans on which (or whether both simply reach for the one scarce word) the texts do not decide.
Isaiah 1:14
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew; rare shared lexeme H2960 ṭôrach (freq 2 vv — only Deut 1:12 and Isa 1:14 in the canon), plus the common H5375 nâsâʼ (to bear). The verbal tier rests on the Verifier-confirmed rarity of ṭôrach, named by Ellicott; it is a scarce-word echo, not a quotation claim, and the direction of dependence is left open (Cambridge raises it as a question).
Verse 10's “as the stars of the heavens for multitude” (kə·ḵō·wḵ·ḇê haš·šā·ma·yim, H3556 + H8064) is not original to Moses' speech but a deliberate recall of the covenant pledged to Abraham in Genesis 15:5 and 22:17. ⚙ The Verifier confirms the shared lexemes kôwkâb (star) and shâmayim (heavens); since both are moderately common across the canon, the link is tiered structural / thematic, not verbal — the connection is the recurring covenant-formula, not a rare word. The commentators name the source verse independently: Gill (“the promise to Abraham was fulfilled, Genesis 15:5”), the Pulpit Commentary, JFB, and Keil, who holds Moses framed the increase so his hearers would be “involuntarily reminded of the covenant promise in Genesis 15:5.” Cambridge, more skeptically, calls the figure “one of the many hyperboles in D” absent from the Exodus 18 parallel — a Deuteronomic colouring of the older record, which the badge keeps in view.
Genesis 15:5 · Genesis 22:17
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew; shared lexemes H3556 kôwkâb (37 vv) + H8064 shâmayim (395 vv) — the recurring Abrahamic 'stars of heaven' covenant-formula. Moderate frequency, so tiered structural/thematic, not verbal; named explicitly by Gill, the Pulpit Commentary, and Keil.
Moses' command in v. 13, hā·ḇū lā·ḵem… ’ă·nā·šîm lə·šiḇ·ṭê·ḵem — “give for yourselves men, by your tribes” — uses the distinctive idiom yâhab (give, H3051) for popular election. ⚙ The Verifier finds the same yâhab + shêbeṭ (tribe) pairing at Joshua 18:4, where Joshua again tells the tribes to “give” men for a national task (the surveying of the land). Cambridge draws the line itself: “Heb. Give yourselves: Joshua 18:4.” Both yâhab (29 vv) and shêbeṭ (178 vv) are too common for a verbal-quotation claim, so the badge is structural / thematic: a shared institutional pattern — Israel furnishing representative men by tribe under a single leader — not a citation. The pattern binds Moses' delegation to Joshua's, the same constitution carried across the Jordan.
Joshua 18:4
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew; shared lexemes H3051 yâhab (29 vv) + H7626 shêbeṭ (178 vv) — the 'give yourselves men by tribe' levy-formula. Both moderate frequency, so structural/thematic, not verbal; the Deut 1:13↔Josh 18:4 link is named explicitly by Cambridge.
The judicial vocabulary of vv. 15–17 — shôṭêr (officer, H7860), shâphaṭ (judge, H8199), tsedeq (righteousness, H6664) — recurs as a cluster in Deuteronomy's own later law of judges (Deuteronomy 16:18: “judges and officers… and they shall judge the people with righteous judgment”) and in Joshua's covenant assemblies, where “officers” and “judges” stand among the gathered tribes (Joshua 23:2; 24:1). ⚙ The Verifier confirms shôṭêr + shâphaṭ + tsedeq shared with Deuteronomy 16:18 and shôṭêr + shâphaṭ with the Joshua assemblies; shôṭêr is moderately rare (25 vv), but no single lexeme here is rare enough, and the connection is a recurring office-and-procedure pattern rather than a quotation — so the badge is structural / thematic. Cambridge itself cross-lists these very passages for the office of the shôṭêr. The thread shows Deuteronomy 1 as the seed of the standing judiciary the book will legislate in chapter 16 and Joshua will convene.
Deuteronomy 16:18 · Joshua 23:2 · Joshua 24:1
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew; across vv. 15–17 the cluster shares with Deut 16:18 the lexemes H7860 shôṭêr (25 vv, from v. 15) + H8199 shâphaṭ (182 vv) + H6664 tsedeq (112 vv, from v. 16) — all Verifier-confirmed — and H7860 shôṭêr + H8199 shâphaṭ with the Joshua assemblies (Josh 23:2; 24:1). A recurring judges-and-officers office pattern, not a rare-word quotation, so tiered structural/thematic; the passages are cross-listed by Cambridge.
Moses' charge in v. 16 binds the gêr (sojourner, H1616) under the same impartial hearing as the native brother: “judge righteously between a man and his brother and his sojourner.” ⚙ The Verifier finds the same lexeme gêr shared with Joshua 8:33, where, at the covenant-renewal between Ebal and Gerizim, “the stranger (gêr), as he that was born among them,” stands within the assembled congregation as the law is read — the very equality this verse commands is there enacted. Both verses also share shâphaṭ (judge) and the command-verb tsâvâh, but none of the three lexemes is rare (gêr 83 vv, shâphaṭ 182 vv, tsâvâh 474 vv), so the badge is structural / thematic: a recurring deuteronomic pattern — the resident alien holds equal rights at law — not a verbal quotation. Cambridge notes that in Deuteronomy the gêr's “equal rights at law are reiterated.” The thread shows the principle commanded at Horeb standing fulfilled when Israel crosses the Jordan.
Joshua 8:33
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew; shared lexemes H1616 gêr (83 vv), H8199 shâphaṭ (182 vv), H6680 tsâvâh (474 vv) — Verifier-confirmed. The recurring 'sojourner under the same law' pattern, all moderate-to-common frequency, so tiered structural/thematic, not verbal.
The keystone of v. 17 — ham·miš·pāṭ lê·lō·hîm, “the judgment belongs to God” — is the seed Paul develops in Romans 13:1–4, that the civil magistrate is “God's minister” bearing the sword by divine commission. ⚙ Ellicott makes the link explicitly: Paul's words are “only an expansion of this sentence.” But the synthesis must flag rather than overclaim: this is a cross-Testament link (Greek Romans ↔ Hebrew Deuteronomy), so it cannot rest on a shared Strong's lexeme, and the Verifier finds none. The connection is theological and argued by the commentator, not a verbal quotation. Whether Paul consciously expands Deuteronomy 1:17 specifically, or draws on the broader Old-Testament doctrine that authority derives from God, is a matter the text does not settle — hence the flag.
Romans 13:1
basis: Cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew) — cannot use shared Strong's numbers; Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme. The link rests entirely on Ellicott's claim that Romans 13:1–4 is 'an expansion of this sentence.' Plausible and ancient as a theme, but the specific dependence on Deut 1:17 is asserted by the commentator, not demonstrated — flagged for verification.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
⚙ Moses' confession, “I am not able to bear you by myself alone” (v. 9, the root nâsâʼ, to lift/bear), is the structural opposite of the work of Christ, who alone bears what no man can. The same verb-idea of bearing a people's weight runs from Moses' breakdown to Isaiah's Servant who “hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows” (Isaiah 53:4) — and the New Testament reads that Servant as Christ. Where Moses multiplies himself into seventy heads and a thousand captains because the burden crushes one man, the gospel presents a single Mediator (1 Timothy 2:5) who does not delegate the load away but carries it to the cross. This is a typological reading by contrast: Moses' insufficiency throws the all-sufficiency of Christ into relief. Ellicott notes the line is “repeated almost exactly from Numbers 11:14,” underscoring how persistently Moses' aloneness is pressed in the text; the figural reading is the church's, drawn from the bearing-of-burdens motif, not from a shared lexeme across the Testaments.
Isaiah 53:4 · 1 Timothy 2:5 · Numbers 11:14
⚙ “The judgment is God's” (v. 17, ham·miš·pāṭ lê·lō·hîm) is the principle Israel's judges held in trust: they decide “in the name of God,” as Keil and the Geneva margin (“You are his Lieutenants”) both stress. The New Testament does not loosen that principle but locates its final form in Christ, to whom the Father “hath committed all judgment” (John 5:22), so that the judgment which belongs to God is exercised by the Son. The deuteronomic charge that no judge fear “the face of man,” for the verdict is God's, finds its consummation in the impartial Judge “who without respect of persons judgeth” (1 Peter 1:17) — the very impartiality Moses commanded the judges of Israel. This is a typological/structural reading, ancient in the church: the human magistracy of Deuteronomy 1 is a derived and shadowed form of the judgment-seat that is Christ's. The link is theological, not a shared Hebrew-Greek lexeme, and is offered as figure, not as proof.
John 5:22 · 1 Peter 1:17 · Romans 13:1
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.
Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:
This unit is Moses' first-person retrospect (Deuteronomy 1:9–18) on the delegation of judicial authority at Horeb. The synthesis is built up from the Hebrew, and every commentary excerpt is a verbatim, contiguous substring of the sourced voices_raw — trimmed at the ends to a pointed quotation, never altered, reordered, modernized, or stitched. A few honesty notes specific to this passage:
The chronology is genuinely contested. The text says Moses spoke “at that time” (vv. 9, 16, 18), but the parallel events sit at different points: Jethro's advice (Exodus 18) comes before Sinai, the seventy elders (Numbers 11) after. Keil resolves it by reading the consecutive imperfect as “the order of thought and not of time”; Cambridge attributes the difference to D's “more distant perspective” and even raises the possibility of “intentional omission.” The synthesis reports this tension rather than smoothing it over.
Two parallels, not one. Barnes, Ellicott, the Pulpit Commentary, and Keil all warn that the captains of this passage (compare Exodus 18:21) must “not be confounded with that of the elders in Numbers 11:16.” The notes keep the appointment of judges/captains distinct from the seventy elders.
The rare word is real, the cross-Testament link is flagged. The verbal-tier badge on Isaiah 1:14 rests on a Verifier-confirmed scarcity (ṭôrach, only two verses in the canon) and is named by Ellicott; the badge claims the rarity, not the direction of dependence, which Cambridge raises only as a question (“Is the use of the word here an echo of Isaiah?”). By contrast, the New Testament connections — Romans 13:1–4 (Ellicott), Acts 6:3 (Gill, on v. 13), Galatians 2:6 (Cambridge, on v. 17) — are cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew) and therefore cannot share a Strong's number; they are tiered thematic or flagged, and presented as commentators' arguments, not demonstrated quotations.
An unresolved textual snag. Verse 15 is awkward in the Masoretic Text (“I took the heads of your tribes… and made them heads over you”); Cambridge notes the LXX reads “from you,” and that “none of the explanations is satisfactory.” The synthesis surfaces the difficulty rather than choosing a reading silently. Likewise the dating of the military ranks (thousands/hundreds/fifties/tens) to the wilderness versus the monarchy is left open, as Cambridge leaves it.
✦ = human, public-domain source, quoted and named. ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. Flagged cross-references are left visible on purpose — the verifier working in the open. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)