The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Reuben’s Inheritance
Joshua 13:15–23 — Reuben’s Inheritance. 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.
15This is what Moses had given to the clans of the tribe of Reuben:
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mō·šeh way·yit·tên lə·miš·pə·ḥō·ṯām lə·maṭ·ṭêh ḇə·nê- rə·’ū·ḇên
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-gave Moses to-the-tribe-of the-sons-of Reuben [an inheritance] by-their-clans.”
Where the English smooths the original
DESCRIPTION OF THE TERRITORY DISTRIBUTED BY MOSES ON THE EAST OF JORDAN ( Joshua 13:15-33 ). (15) Reuben. —See also Numbers 32:33-42 and Deuteronomy 3:16 , &c.
According to their families — Dividing the inheritance into as many parts as they had families. But this is only spoken of the greater families; for the lesser distributions to the several small families were made by inferior officers, according to the rules which Moses had given them.
It is the will of God that every man should know his own, and not take that which is another's. The world must be governed, not by force, but right. Wherever our habitation is placed, and in whatever honest way our portion is assigned, we should consider them as allotted of God; we should be thankful for, and use them as suchMatthew Henry’s note runs on the whole section (13:7–33); this excerpt is its general principle, applied here to Reuben’s grant.
The historian now gives us, on the faith of the ancient registers, the several boundaries of the tribes east of the Jordan. Reuben ] Reuben naturally comes first. His boundaries are more briefly given, Numbers 32:33-42 .
16The territory from Aroer on the rim of the Arnon Valley, along with the city in the middle of the valley, to the whole plateau beyond Medeba,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·hî lā·hem hag·gə·ḇūl mê·‘ă·rō·w·‘êr ’ă·šer ‘al- śə·p̄aṯ- ’ar·nō·wn na·ḥal wə·hā·‘îr ’ă·šer bə·ṯō·wḵ- han·na·ḥal wə·ḵāl ham·mî·šōr ‘al- mê·ḏə·ḇā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-was for-them the-territory from-Aroer that [is] on the-rim-of the-Arnon Valley, and-the-city that [is] in-the-midst-of the-valley, and-all the-tableland by Medeba.”
Where the English smooths the original
This territory was the most southerly of the trans-Jordanic possessions of Israel, and adjoined Moab, which lay only on the other side of the Arnon. Hence, the Reubenites became in after times much intermixed with the Moabites, who in fact eventually acquired much of the land, and several, if not all, of the cities here named as belonging to Reuben.
The portion of country this tribe selected, under its modern name of the Belka , is still esteemed beyond all others by the Arab sheepmasters. It was the southernmost and smallest portion of the district east of the Jordan.
The tribe of Reuben received its inheritance in the south-namely, the territory from Aror in the Arnon valley, and from Ar in that valley, onwards, and the plain (table-land) by Medeba (see Joshua 13:9 ), with Heshbon the capital and her towns, i.e., the towns dependent upon it, in the plain.
And their coast was from Aroer that is on the bank of the river Arnon,.... As the country of Sihon is described, Joshua 13:9 ; from whence it appears that it was his country which was given to Reuben, though not all of it
17to Heshbon and all its cities on the plateau, including Dibon, Bamoth-baal, Beth-baal-meon,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ḥeš·bō·wn wə·ḵāl ‘ā·re·hā ’ă·šer bam·mî·šōr dî·ḇō·wn ū·ḇā·mō·wṯ ba·‘al ū·ḇêṯ ba·‘al mə·‘ō·wn
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“Heshbon and-all her-cities that [are] on the-tableland, Dibon and-Bamoth-baal and-Beth-baal-meon.”
Where the English smooths the original
Heshbon: this city and Dibon and Ataroth were upon the borders of Reuben and Gad, and therefore sometimes are ascribed to Reuben, as here, and Numbers 32:37 , sometimes to Gad, as Numbers 32:34 1 Chronicles 6:80 ,81 , by whom Heshbon, is said to be given to the Levites, Joshua 21:39 . Possibly it and the rest were jointly inhabited by both tribes, as Jerusalem was by Jews and Benjamites.
Bamoth Baal. The high places or altars of Baal. The frequent mention of Baal in this passage shows how common the worship of Baal was in Palestine. The Moabites worshipped him under the name of Chemosh, to whom Mesha, on the Moabite stone, attributes all his victories
Bamothbaal signifies the high places of Baal; see Numbers 22:41 ; perhaps this is the same with Bamoth in the valley, Numbers 21:20 ; and Bethbaalmeon is the same with Baalmeon in Numbers 32:38 ; where it is highly probable was a temple of Baal, since both "beth" signifies an house, and "meon" an habitation.
Beth-baal-meon ] At the first approach of the Israelites to this part of Palestine ( Numbers 32:38 ) it is called Baal-Meon , or in its contracted form Beon ( Numbers 32:3 ). The Beth is probably a Hebrew addition, and the word denotes “ the House of Baal of the den .”
18Jahaz, Kedemoth, Mephaath,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·yah·ṣāh ū·qə·ḏê·mōṯ ū·mê·p̄ā·‘aṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-Jahaz and-Kedemoth and-Mephaath.”
Where the English smooths the original
And Jahazah,.... Called Jahaz, Numbers 21:23 , where the battle was fought between Sihon and Israel: and Kedemoth; near to which was a wilderness, which took its name from it, from whence Moses sent messengers with words of peace to Sihon, Deuteronomy 2:26 , and Mephaath; thought to be the Maipha of Ptolemy
and Jahazah ] Also called Jahaz and Jahaza and Jahzah , in the Hebrew Yahats and Yahtsah . Here the decisive battle was fought between the Israelites and Sihon king of the Amorites ( Numbers 21:23 ). and Kedemoth ] Given to the Merarite Levites ( Joshua 21:37 ). Mephaath ] Lying in the district of the Mishor (see Jeremiah 48:21 ).
Mephaath, where there was a garrison stationed (according to the Onom.) as a defence against the inhabitants of the desert, is to be sought for in the neighbourhood of Jahza, with which it is always associated ( Jeremiah 48:21 ). Kedemoth and Mephaath were given up to the Levites ( Joshua 21:37 ; 1 Chronicles 6:64 ).
See the marginal references for some of these names. Heshbon, Kedemoth, and Mephaath became eventually Levitical cities.
19Kiriathaim, Sibmah, Zereth-shahar on the hill in the valley,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·qir·yā·ṯa·yim wə·śiḇ·māh wə·ṣe·reṯ haš·ša·ḥar bə·har hā·‘ê·meq
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-Kiriathaim and-Sibmah and-Zereth-shahar on the-hill-of the-valley.”
Where the English smooths the original
In the mount of the valley — In the mount which overlooked the great plain before mentioned, or which bordered upon the valley, a mount which, it seems, was then famous among the Israelites; whether that where Moses was buried, which was near to Beth-peor, or some other.
Sibmah (see Numbers 32:38 ). The vine of Sibmah forms a feature in the lament of Isaiah ( Isaiah 16:8 ) and Jeremiah ( Jeremiah 48:32 ) over Moab. It was close by Heshbon, on the borders of Reuben and Gad
Zereth-hashachar, i.e., splendor aurorae, which is only mentioned here, was situated "upon a mountain of the valley." According to Joshua 13:27 , the valley was the Jordan valley, or rather (according to Genesis 14:3 , Genesis 14:8 ) the vale of Siddim, a valley running down on the eastern side of the Dead Sea.
and Zareth-shahar ] = “the Splendour of the Dawn,” in Mount Ira-Emak = “the Mountain of the Valley.” Menke places it west of Mount Pisgah, towards the Dead Sea.Cambridge quotes Tristram’s Land of Moab at length on Zara/Zareth-shahar; this excerpt is the entry’s own gloss on the name and site.
20Beth-peor, the slopes of Pisgah, and Beth-jeshimoth—
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·ḇêṯ pə·‘ō·wr wə·’aš·dō·wṯ hap·pis·gāh ū·ḇêṯ hay·ši·mō·wṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-Beth-peor and-the-slopes-of Pisgah and-Beth-jeshimoth.”
Where the English smooths the original
And Bethpeor,.... So called from Peor, the idol of the Moabites, and where very likely there had been a temple built to the honour of it; over against this place was a valley, where Israel abode some time, Deuteronomy 3:29 , and Ashdodpisgah; of which see Deuteronomy 3:17 , and Bethjeshimoth; of which see Numbers 33:49 .
and Beth-peor ] A place dedicated to the god Baal-peor, on the east of the Jordan opposite Jericho, about six miles above Libias or Beth-haran. Comp. Deuteronomy 3:29 ; Deuteronomy 4:46 . and Ashdoth-pisgah ] See ch. Joshua 12:3 .
Beth-peor, opposite to Jericho, six Roman miles higher than (to the east of) Libias: see at Numbers 23:28 . The "slopes of Pisgah" ( Joshua 12:3 ; Deuteronomy 3:17 ): to the south of the former, on the north-eastern shore of the Dead Sea
21all the cities of the plateau and all the kingdom of Sihon king of the Amorites, who reigned in Heshbon until Moses killed him and the chiefs of Midian (Evi, Rekem, Zur, Hur, and Reba), the princes of Sihon who lived in the land.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·ḵōl ‘ā·rê ham·mî·šōr wə·ḵāl mam·lə·ḵūṯ sî·ḥō·wn me·leḵ hā·’ĕ·mō·rî ’ă·šer mā·laḵ bə·ḥeš·bō·wn ’ă·šer mō·šeh ’ō·ṯōw wə·’eṯ- hik·kāh nə·śî·’ê miḏ·yān ’eṯ- ’ĕ·wî wə·’eṯ- re·qem wə·’eṯ- ṣūr wə·’eṯ- ḥūr wə·’eṯ- re·ḇa‘ nə·sî·ḵê sî·ḥō·wn yō·šə·ḇê hā·’ā·reṣ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-all the-cities-of the-tableland, and-all the-kingdom-of Sihon king-of the-Amorites who reigned in-Heshbon, whom Moses struck with the-chiefs-of Midian — Evi and-Rekem and-Zur and-Hur and-Reba — princes-of Sihon dwelling-in the-land.”
Where the English smooths the original
The Midianites were “dukes of Sihon,” and a part of his government. Through them he appears to have exercised his dominion over the conquered territory which he had taken from Moab. This land Israel had now, in turn, taken from him. But in order to its complete subjugation, the removal of Sihon’s dukes, the princes or kings of Midian, was also necessary.
All the kingdom of Sihon — A great part of it; in which sense we read of all Judea, and all the region round about Jordan, Matthew 3:5 ; and all Galilee, Matthew 4:23 . Whom Moses smote — Not in the same time or battle, as appears by comparing Numbers 21:23-24 , with Numbers 31:8 , but in the same manner.
Dukes of Sihon - Rather "vassals of Sihon," probably those "dedicated" or "appointed" with a libation.
"Dukes of Sihon," properly vassals of Sihon; נסיכים does not signify anointed, however, but means literally poured out, i.e., cast, moulded, enfeoffed. The word points to the "creation of a prince by the communication or pouring in of power" (Gusset, s. v.).
22The Israelites also killed the diviner Balaam son of Beor along with the others they put to the sword.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ben- ḇə·nê- yiś·rā·’êl wə·’eṯ- haq·qō·w·sêm bil·‘ām bə·‘ō·wr hā·rə·ḡū ba·ḥe·reḇ ’el- ḥal·lê·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-Balaam son-of-Beor the-diviner the-sons-of Israel slew with-the-sword among their-slain.”
Where the English smooths the original
Were slain by them — This was recorded before, ( Numbers 31:8 ,) and is here repeated, because the defeating of Balaam’s purpose to curse Israel, and the turning that curse into a blessing, was such an instance of the power and goodness of God, as was fit to be had in everlasting rememberance.Benson prints “rememberance”; quoted verbatim as in the public-domain source.
The soothsayer; so he was in truth, though a prophet { 2 Peter 2:16 } in title and profession. See Numbers 24:25 .
So that both they who obeyed wicked counsel and the wicked counsellor perished by the just judgment of God.
The mention of these “vassals of Sihon” leads the historian to record also at this point the death of Balaam, which took place at the same time as that of these vassals ( Numbers 31:8 ). He is here called a “soothsayer” ( kosem ); “the fals divynor” (Wyclif); like ( a ) the diviners of the Philistines ( 1 Samuel 6:2 ), and ( b ) the necromancers ( 1 Samuel 28:8-9 ) whom Saul had “cut off.”
23And the border of the Reubenites was the bank of the Jordan. This was the inheritance of the clans of the Reubenites, including the cities and villages.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
gə·ḇūl bə·nê rə·’ū·ḇên way·hî ū·ḡə·ḇūl hay·yar·dên zōṯ na·ḥă·laṯ lə·miš·pə·ḥō·ṯām bə·nê- rə·’ū·ḇên he·‘ā·rîm wə·ḥaṣ·rê·hen
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-the-border of-the-sons-of Reuben was the-Jordan and-[its-]border. This [was] the-inheritance of-the-sons-of Reuben by-their-clans, the-cities and-their-villages.”
Where the English smooths the original
Jordan ... - i. e. the Jordan and its territory (compare similar expressions in Numbers 34:6 ; Deuteronomy 3:16 ). The portion of the tribe of Reuben at its northern extremity touched the Jordan; the main part of his inheritance lay on the east of the Dead Sea.
Here the tribe settled, “preferring pasturage to agriculture.” His subsequent history fulfils the prophecy of Jacob. “Unstable (or swelling) as water” ( Genesis 49:4 ), he vanishes away into a mere Arabian tribe; “his men are few” ( Deuteronomy 33:6 ); it is all he can do “to live and not die.”
"And (this) was the boundary of the sons of Reuben, the Jordan and its territory," i.e., the Jordan, or rather land adjoining it. The meaning is, that the territory of Reuben, viz., with the places mentioned last ( Joshua 13:20 ), reached to the territory of the Jordan
And happy are those who have the Lord God of Israel for their inheritance, though little of this world falls to their lot. His providences will supply their wants, his consolations will support their souls, till they gain heavenly joy and everlasting pleasures.Henry’s note covers the whole section (13:7–33); this closing sentence is applied to Reuben’s inheritance-formula in v. 23.
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.
The trans-Jordan division opens with Reuben, and the opening word is a verb: “and Moses gave” (וַיִּתֵּן, nāthan). Ellicott heads the whole section as the “DESCRIPTION OF THE TERRITORY DISTRIBUTED BY MOSES ON THE EAST OF JORDAN,” and Cambridge notes the historian works “on the faith of the ancient registers” — these are deeds, not conquest-trophies. Reuben “naturally comes first” (Cambridge), the dignity of the firstborn surviving even Jacob’s demotion of him (Genesis 49:4). The land itself is fixed by a gəbûl (גְּבוּל), a “twisted cord” become a boundary, running from Aroer on the “lip” (שְׂפַת) of the Arnon across the Moabite Mishor by Medeba. Barnes already hears the tragedy coming: this is “the most southerly of the trans-Jordanic possessions… adjoined Moab,” so that the Reubenites “became in after times much intermixed with the Moabites,” who reclaimed the towns one by one.
The town-list is no neutral gazetteer. The Pulpit Commentary presses what the English flattens: where BSB writes “plain,” the Hebrew distinguishes Mishor, Arabah, Shephelah, Bik‘ah, Ciccar — “almost of a necessity lost in a translation.” And the names confess what was worshipped on this ground. Bamoth-baal is, Gill notes, “the high places of Baal”; Beth-baal-meon the “House of Baal of the den” (Cambridge); Beth-peor “So called from Peor, the idol of the Moabites” (Gill) — the very scene of Israel’s plague-bringing apostasy (Numbers 25). Even the lovely names carry weight: Zereth-shahar is “the splendour of the dawn” (Keil & Delitzsch; Cambridge), Kiriathaim a dual “twin-cities,” and the list runs up to Pisgah, the ridge where Moses — the very giver of this inheritance — was shown the land and died (Deuteronomy 34). The plateau Reuben receives is haunted ground: a gift inside the territory of the gods Israel was told to tear down.
The mention of Sihon’s kingdom pulls the narrative back to the war that won it. The five Midianite chiefs — “Evi, Rekem, Zur, Hur, and Reba” — are called “vassals of Sihon” (נְסִיכֵי), a rare word Keil & Delitzsch read as “enfeoffed… the creation of a prince by the communication or pouring in of power,” and Barnes as those “‘dedicated’ or ‘appointed’ with a libation.” Ellicott calls this “another example of undesigned agreement between Joshua and the Pentateuch”: it is precisely because these kings were Sihon’s men that Israel’s war on Midian (Numbers 31) belongs to Sihon’s story. Then the historian lays Balaam down among their slain. Scripture brands him הַקּוֹסֵם, “the diviner” — Poole: “so he was in truth, though a prophet… in title and profession.” Geneva draws the moral with a level hand: “both they who obeyed wicked counsel and the wicked counsellor perished by the just judgment of God,” and Benson sees the repetition itself as a memorial of grace — “the defeating of Balaam’s purpose to curse Israel… was fit to be had in everlasting remembrance.”
The entry closes as it opened, on the word inheritance (נַחֲלַת, naḥălath) “by their clans,” bounded west by “the Jordan and its territory.” Keil & Delitzsch read the closing ḥaṣêr precisely — not romantic “villages” but “farm premises… places not enclosed by a wall,” and Cambridge turns the deed into elegy: here Reuben settled, “preferring pasturage to agriculture,” and “his subsequent history fulfils the prophecy of Jacob. ‘Unstable (or swelling) as water’… he vanishes away into a mere Arabian tribe… No judge, no prophet, no hero of the tribe is handed down to us.” Against that fading, Matthew Henry sets the only inheritance that does not erode: “happy are those who have the Lord God of Israel for their inheritance, though little of this world falls to their lot.”
Reading under Sola Scriptura — fallible, to be tested. A list of border-towns is the last place one expects a sermon, yet this one preaches by what it cannot hide. Every governing word in the passage is a word of gift: Moses gave (v. 15), and what he gave is a naḥălath, an inheritance (vv. 15, 23) — something received by lot, never earned. And the gift is given to the firstborn who had already forfeited his birthright (Genesis 49:4): Reuben is listed first, granted a bounded land, and treated with full dignity, though Scripture knows and Cambridge says plainly that the firstborn tribe “vanishes away into a mere Arabian tribe.” So the deed is grace, not reward. Yet the same towns whose names are written into Reuben’s charter are named for Baal and Peor — the inheritance is real land, but it is land thick with the idols that will, in time, draw the tribe back across the very border Sihon once held against them, so that the Moabites “reoccupied nearly the whole” (Barnes). The lesson is sober on both sides. A people can be given everything and still lose it by drifting toward the gods their own map is named after. To hold an inheritance is not the same as to keep it; only the One who is Himself the inheritance (Matthew Henry; Psalm 16:5) cannot be lost. Weigh this against the text itself.
To be given a land is not yet to keep it; the only inheritance that cannot be lost is the One who gives it.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The clearest cross-link in the unit. Verse 21 names Sihon’s vassal-kings — “Evi, Rekem, Zur, Hur, and Reba” — and Numbers 31:8 names the same five, in the same order, slain in Israel’s war on Midian. Benson and Poole both reconcile the two notices: Moses smote them “not in the same time or battle… but in the same manner.” The Verifier surfaces the rare personal names Evi (אֱוִי, only 2 vv), Reba (רֶבַע, only 2 vv), Zur (5 vv) and Rekem (6 vv) shared between the verses — low-frequency proper names that make this a genuine verbal/quotation tie, not a chance overlap.
Numbers 31:8
basis: Verifier (Joshua 13:21 ↔ Numbers 31:8): shared rare proper names H189 ʼĔvîy (2 vv), H7254 Rebaʻ (2 vv), H6698 Tsûwr (5 vv), H7552 Reqem (6 vv), plus H2354 Chûwr, H4080 Midyân — the same five chiefs in the same order; rare-lexeme verbal link, though not a literary citation.
Verse 22’s second notice of Balaam’s death answers to Numbers 31:8, where “Balaam also the son of Beor they slew with the sword.” Cambridge reads the placement as deliberate: “The mention of these ‘vassals of Sihon’ leads the historian to record also at this point the death of Balaam, which took place at the same time.” The Verifier finds the rare name-pair Bilʻâm (בִּלְעָם) + Bᵉʻôwr (בְּעוֹר, only 10 vv) shared with the killing-verbs hārag and ḥālāl — a verbal tie, the same event told twice.
Numbers 31:8 · Numbers 31:16
basis: Verifier (Joshua 13:22 ↔ Numbers 31:8): shared H1160 Bᵉʻôwr (10 vv), H1109 Bilʻâm (57 vv), H2491 châlâl, H2026 hârag, H2719 chereb — the rare Beor/Balaam name-pair with the killing-vocabulary; the same death recorded in both books. (Numbers 31:16 added by the commentators as the counsel that occasioned it; no rare-lexeme claim there.)
Reuben’s description (vv. 16, 21) repeats verbatim the boundary-language of Joshua 13:9, the earlier summary of Sihon’s realm: Aroer on the Arnon, the city in the valley, and the whole Mishor by Medeba. Keil & Delitzsch and Gill both cross-reference v. 9 explicitly. The Verifier finds the toponyms ʻĂrôwʻêr, ʼArnôwn, Mêydᵉbâʼ and mîshôr shared — but since this is the same author re-using his own boundary-template within one chapter, the link is a structural recurrence of the surveying formula, not an independent quotation.
Joshua 13:9 · Numbers 21:30
basis: Verifier (Joshua 13:16 ↔ 13:9): shared H4311 Mêydᵉbâʼ, H6177 ʻĂrôwʻêr, H769 ʼArnôwn, H4334 mîyshôwr — the same boundary-template repeated by the same author within one chapter; structural recurrence of the survey formula, not a citation. (Numbers 21:30 shares Medeba/Heshbon/Dibon, the conquest these bounds record.)
The towns deeded to Reuben here resurface centuries later in the prophets’ oracles against Moab — proof that the Reubenites lost them. Jeremiah 48:23 and Isaiah 15:2 and Ezekiel 25:9 name Kiriathaim, Beth-baal-meon / Beth-meon, Dibon, Medeba; the Pulpit Commentary traces the whole reversal through the Moabite Stone, where Mesha records recapturing “Medeba, Dibon, Baalmeon, Kiriathaim… Aroer.” The Verifier confirms the rare toponyms Beth-baal-meon (בֵּית בַּעַל מְעוֹן, 2 vv) and Kiriathaim (7 vv) shared with Jeremiah 48:23 — the same place-names, a tribe’s charter turned into a dirge.
Jeremiah 48:23 · Isaiah 15:2 · Ezekiel 25:9
basis: Verifier (Joshua 13:17/19 ↔ Jeremiah 48:23): shared rare toponyms H1010 Bêyth Baʻal Mᵉʻôwn (2 vv) and H7156 Qiryâthayim (7 vv); with Ezekiel 25:9 also H1020 Bêyth ha-Yshîy-môwth. A verbal/lexical tie on rare place-names — the same towns named in Reuben’s grant and in the oracles against Moab — though geographical recurrence, not literary quotation.
Verse 18’s pair Kedemoth and Mephaath reappears in the Levitical-city lists of Joshua 21:37 and 1 Chronicles 6:79: Reuben’s towns given over to the sons of Merari. Barnes and Keil & Delitzsch both flag it — “Kedemoth and Mephaath were given up to the Levites.” The Verifier finds both rare toponyms (Qᵉdêmôwth and Môwphaʻath, each only 4 vv) shared across the three texts — a verbal/lexical tie on rare place-names, the same towns re-deeded to the Levites.
Joshua 21:37 · 1 Chronicles 6:79
basis: Verifier (Joshua 13:18 ↔ Joshua 21:37 / 1 Chronicles 6:79): shared rare toponyms H4158 Môwphaʻath (4 vv) and H6932 Qᵉdêmôwth (4 vv) — the same two Reubenite towns reassigned to the Levites; rare-lexeme verbal tie, geographical recurrence rather than quotation.
The closing register of Reuben (v. 23) invites the verdict every commentator reaches: the firstborn’s grant is real, but his story shrinks to nothing. Cambridge states it outright — “his subsequent history fulfils the prophecy of Jacob. ‘Unstable (or swelling) as water’ (Genesis 49:4)… No judge, no prophet, no hero of the tribe is handed down to us.” This is a thematic connection argued by the human voices, not a verbal one: the Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme between Joshua 13:23 and Genesis 49:4, so the link is the interpretive judgment of Jacob’s oracle laid over Reuben’s fading history — offered as the commentators’ reading, to be weighed, not asserted as a lexical tie.
Genesis 49:3-4 · Deuteronomy 33:6
basis: Verifier (Joshua 13:23 ↔ Genesis 49:4): NO shared original-language lexeme — the connection is thematic/interpretive (Jacob’s ‘unstable as water’ read as fulfilled in Reuben’s insignificance, per Cambridge), argued by the commentators, not lexically demonstrable. Flagged so the reader weighs it as exposition.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The governing word of the whole division is naḥălath (נַחֲלַת, vv. 15, 23) — an inheritance received, not earned. Matthew Henry reads the land-grant typologically without strain: “Joshua must be herein a type of Christ, who has not only conquered the gates of hell for us, but has opened to us the gates of heaven, and having purchased the eternal inheritance for all believers, will put them in possession of it.” The Septuagint renders naḥălah with klēronomia, the very word the New Testament uses for the believer’s portion in Christ — “an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled, that does not fade away, reserved in heaven” (1 Peter 1:4; cf. Ephesians 1:11, 14; Colossians 3:24). Reuben’s bounded plot, given to a firstborn who forfeited his birthright, is a figure of the unforfeitable inheritance Christ secures for those who had no claim. This typological reading is the long-held Christian tradition; it is offered as figure, not as a verbal link.
Joshua 13:23 · 1 Peter 1:4 · Ephesians 1:11 · Colossians 3:24
Scripture lays Balaam down as “the diviner” (הַקּוֹסֵם, v. 22) among the slain — the prophet-for-pay whose blessing God forced from his mouth but whose heart sought gain. Poole already cross-references 2 Peter 2:16, and the New Testament makes him a fixed type of the false teacher: “the way of Balaam… who loved the wages of unrighteousness” (2 Peter 2:15), “the error of Balaam” (Jude 11), “the teaching of Balaam, who taught Balak to put a stumbling block before the sons of Israel” (Revelation 2:14). Against this stands the Good Shepherd who is no hireling (John 10:11–13) and the prophet who cannot be bought. This is a cross-Testament, figural reading — Greek text against Hebrew, with no shared original-language lexeme — so it is offered as the canon’s own typology to be tested, not as a confirmed verbal tie. Balaam’s body among Midian’s slain is the wages of his way; the Shepherd lays down His life rather than take wages for it.
Joshua 13:22 · 2 Peter 2:15-16 · Jude 1:11 · Revelation 2:14
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 (Joshua 13:15–23, the entry for Reuben) is a boundary-and-town register, so the public-domain commentary is heavily geographical and several sources repeat a single block across the verses: Matthew Henry carries one chapter-level note (13:7–33) on every verse — quoted only where its principle bears on the verse at hand and flagged as section-wide; Keil & Delitzsch’s long topographical note likewise runs across vv. 16–22; and Jamieson, Fausset & Brown’s page-text here is actually their comment on v. 8 (the antecedent of ‘with him’) repeated verbatim on every verse of the chapter, so it is not quoted for any verse in this unit because it does not bear on Reuben’s register. Two voices preserve printer’s artifacts verbatim from the source: Benson’s “rememberance” (for “remembrance”), noted at v. 22. The unit does not contain Joshua 1:5, so the standing Joshua 1:5 → Hebrews 13:5 flag does not apply here. On the cross-references: the Hebrew↔Hebrew links to Numbers 31:8 (the five chiefs and Balaam) rest on genuinely rare proper names and rise to a verbal/quotation tier; the toponym links (Kiriathaim/Beth-baal-meon to the Moab oracles; Kedemoth/Mephaath to the Levitical lists) are verbal in the lexical sense but are geographical recurrences of place-names, not literary citations, and the basis lines say so. The Joshua 13:9 border-formula is the same author re-using his own survey template within one chapter, so it is tiered structural, not verbal. The link to Jacob’s oracle (Genesis 49:4) and the New-Testament Balaam/inheritance readings share no original-language lexeme with this Hebrew unit; they are therefore flagged or offered as widely-held typology to be tested, never as confirmed verbal ties.
✦ = 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)