The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Zebulun’s Inheritance
Joshua 19:10–16 — Zebulun’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.
10The third lot came up for the clans of the tribe of Zebulun: The border of their inheritance stretched as far as Sarid.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
haš·šə·lî·šî hag·gō·w·rāl way·ya·‘al lə·miš·pə·ḥō·ṯām liḇ·nê zə·ḇū·lun gə·ḇūl na·ḥă·lā·ṯām way·hî ‘aḏ- śā·rîḏ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-came-up the-lot the-third for-the-clans of-the-sons-of Zebulun; and-the-border of-their-inheritance was as-far-as Sarid.
Where the English smooths the original
In the division to each tribe of Israel, the prophetic blessings of Jacob were fulfilled. They chose for themselves, or it was divided to them by lot, in the manner and places that he foresaw. So sure a rule to go by is the word of prophecy: we see by it what to believe, and it proves beyond all dispute the things that are of God.
Zebulun is here put before Issachar, his elder brother, as he is also Genesis 49:13 ,14 Deu 33:18 .Poole notes the deliberate inversion of birth-order, matched to the patriarchal oracles.
The Inheritance of Zebulun fell above the plain of Jezreel, between this plain and the mountains of Naphtali, so that it was bounded by Asher on the west and north-west ( Joshua 19:27 ), by Naphtali on the north and north-east ( Joshua 19:34 ), and by Issachar on the south-east and south, and touched neither the Mediterranean Sea nor the Jordan.
11It went up westward to Maralah, reached Dabbesheth, and met the brook east of Jokneam.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ḡə·ḇū·lām wə·‘ā·lāh lay·yām·māh ū·mar·‘ă·lāh ū·p̄ā·ḡa‘ bə·ḏab·bā·šeṯ ū·p̄ā·ḡa‘ ’el- han·na·ḥal ’ă·šer ‘al- pə·nê yā·qə·nə·‘ām
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-went-up their-border to-the-sea westward and-Maralah, and-it-touched Dabbesheth, and-it-touched the-brook that-is before Jokneam.
Where the English smooths the original
The lot of this tribe was washed by the midland sea on the west, and by the sea of Tiberias on the east, answering Jacob’s prophecy, Zebulun shall be a haven of ships; trading ships on the great sea, and fishing ships on the sea of Galilee.
Toward the sea. Rather, westward. The original is touched or skirted ( פגע ). River that is before Jokneam. This, with the assistance of Joshua 12:22 , which mentions Jokneam as near to Mount Carmel, enables us to identify this river (or rather, winter torrent ), as "that ancient river, the river Kishon."The Pulpit editors press the verb פָּגַע and the wadi against Joshua 12:22 to identify the Kishon.
“The stream,” therefore, is in all probability the Kishon (= “ twisted ” or “ winding ”), famous ( a ) in the history of Deborah and Barak ( Jdg 4:7 ; Jdg 4:13 ; Jdg 5:21 ), and ( b ) in that of Elijah and the prophets of Baal ( 1 Kings 18:40 ).
12From Sarid it turned eastward along the border of Chisloth-tabor and went on to Daberath and up to Japhia.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
miś·śā·rîḏ wə·šāḇ qê·ḏə·māh miz·raḥ haš·še·meš ‘al- gə·ḇūl kis·lōṯ tā·ḇōr wə·yā·ṣā ’el- had·dā·ḇə·raṯ wə·‘ā·lāh yā·p̄î·a‘
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-it-turned-back from-Sarid eastward, toward-the-rising-of the-sun, unto the-border of-Chisloth-tabor; and-it-went-out to-Daberath, and-it-went-up to-Japhia.
Where the English smooths the original
Chisloth-Tabor. The loins or flanks of Tabor. Tabor (the name signifies either quarry - see note on Shebarim, probably a kindred word, Joshua 7:5 - or navel), is one of the most conspicuous mountains of Palestine.
And turned from Sarid eastward,.... This describes the southern border, going on from west to east: towards the sunrising, unto the border of Chislothtabor; this Jerom places in the tribe of Issachar, it bordered on both tribes
Dabrath, a place in the tribe of Issachar that was given up to the Levites ( Joshua 21:28 ; 1 Chronicles 6:57 ), called Dabaritta in Josephus (Bell. Jud. ii. 21, 3) and Dabira in the Onom. (villula in monte Thabor), the present Deburieh, an insignificant village which stands in a very picturesque manner upon a stratum of rock at the western foot of Tabor
13From there it crossed eastward to Gath-hepher and to Eth-kazin; it extended to Rimmon and curved around toward Neah.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·miš·šām ‘ā·ḇar qê·ḏə·māh miz·rā·ḥāh git·tāh ḥê·p̄er ‘it·tāh qā·ṣîn wə·yā·ṣā rim·mō·wn ham·mə·ṯō·’ār han·nê·‘āh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-from-there it-crossed-over eastward, toward-the-sunrise, to-Gath-hepher, to-Eth-kazin; and-it-went-out to-Rimmon, the-one-marked-off to-Neah.
Where the English smooths the original
Gittah (or Gath)- hepher, the birthplace of the prophet Jonah 2 Kings Jonah 14:25 , is probably the modern village of El-Meshhad, where the tomb of the prophet is still shown, a short way from Nazareth, on the road to Tiberias.
Ham-methoar is not a proper name, but the participle of תּאר, with the article in the place of the relative pronoun, "bounded off," or pricked off. Neah is unknown; it is possibly the same place as Neiel in the tribe of Asher ( Joshua 19:27 ), as Knobel supposes.Keil corrects the older versions: the alleged town "Methoar" is a verb, not a name.
Remmon-methoar to Neah. —Better, Remmon that stretcheth to Neah. Remmon is identified as Rummâneh, due north of Gittah-hepher (sheet 6).Ellicott, like Keil, reads ham-methoar as the verb "stretcheth" rather than part of a town-name, and locates Rimmon at Rummâneh north of Gath-hepher.
14Then the border circled around the north side of Neah to Hannathon and ended at the Valley of Iphtah-el.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
hag·gə·ḇūl wə·nā·saḇ miṣ·ṣə·p̄ō·wn ’ō·ṯōw ḥan·nā·ṯōn wə·hā·yū tō·ṣə·’ō·ṯāw gê yip̄·taḥ- ’êl
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-the-border circled-around it on-the-north to-Hannathon; and-its-outgoings were the-Valley-of Iphtah-el.
Where the English smooths the original
Hannathon ( Kefr-’Andn, sheet 9) is the northeast corner of the boundary. The valley (ravine) of Jiphthah-el (God’s opening) seems to be the gorge running south-west from the north of Hannathon towards the plain.Ellicott glosses the valley's name as "God's opening."
Compasseth it . The verb נסב is here used transitively. The meaning is that the border makes a curve round the city of Neah. Neah seems to have been the extreme eastern border.
is probably Cana of Galilee, the home of Nathanael ( John 2:1 , John 2:11 ; John 4:46 ; John 21:2 ), the present Kana el Jelil, between Rummaneh and Yeft, on the northern edge of the plain of ButtaufExcerpt resumes after Keil's Septuagint parenthetical; on his reading the wedding-town Cana sat on Zebulun's northern rim.
15It also included Kattath, Nahalal, Shimron, Idalah, and Bethlehem. There were twelve cities, along with their villages.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·qaṭ·ṭāṯ wə·na·hă·lāl wə·šim·rō·wn wə·yiḏ·’ă·lāh ū·ḇêṯ lā·ḥem šə·têm- ‘eś·rêh ‘ā·rîm wə·ḥaṣ·rê·hen
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-Kattath, and-Nahalal, and-Shimron, and-Idalah, and-Beth-lehem: cities twelve and-their-villages.
Where the English smooths the original
Beth-lehem — Not that where Christ was born, which was in Judah, but another. Twelve cities — They are more numerous here, but the rest either were not cities, properly so called, or were not within this tribe, but only bordering upon it, and belonging to other tribes.
Twelve cities - Only five have been mentioned, and the names in the verses preceding are apparently not names of Zebulonite cities, but merely of points in or near the boundary line. It would therefore appear that seven names have disappeared from the text, and perhaps also the definition of the western frontier.Barnes infers a lost portion of the text to account for the twelve.
And Kattath, and Nahallal, and Shimron, and Idalah, and {d} Bethlehem: twelve cities with their villages. (d) There was another Bethlehem in the tribe of Judah.
16This was the inheritance of the clans of the tribe of Zebulun, including these cities and their villages.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
zōṯ na·ḥă·laṯ lə·miš·pə·ḥō·w·ṯām bə·nê- zə·ḇū·lun hā·’êl·leh he·‘ā·rîm wə·ḥaṣ·rê·hen
Literal — word-for-word from the original
This was the-inheritance of-the-clans of-the-sons-of Zebulun: these the-cities and-their-villages.
Where the English smooths the original
It enclosed one of the fairest portions of Palestine. Besides the fertile plain near the fisheries of the lake of Gennesareth, and the rich mountain-valleys, the tribe possessed the goings out , the outlet, of the plain of Akka ( Deuteronomy 33:18 ), where he could “dwell at the shore,” and “suck of the abundance of the seas” ( Genesis 49:13 ; Deuteronomy 33:19 ).
It is strange that the beautiful and fertile land occupied by the tribe of Zebulun does not appear to have brought prosperity with it. Possibly the fact that the "lines" of this tribe had "fallen in pleasant places," had tended to induce sloth. Certain it is that we hear but little of this tribe in the after history of Israel.
This is the inheritance of the children of Zebulun, according to their families,.... Which was allotted to it and divided, according to the number of its families
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 unit is a surveyor's document — "the third lot came up... and the border (גְּבוּל, a twisted cord) of their inheritance was as far as Sarid" (v. 10). Yet Matthew Henry reads the dry map theologically: "In the division to each tribe of Israel, the prophetic blessings of Jacob were fulfilled... in the manner and places that he foresaw. So sure a rule to go by is the word of prophecy." Matthew Poole notices the proof in the very sequence — "Zebulun is here put before Issachar, his elder brother, as he is also Genesis 49:13,14, Deu 33:18" — the younger set ahead of the elder, exactly as the oracles had ordered. The keyword naḥălāh ("inheritance," H5159) brackets the whole passage at v. 10 and v. 16: a portion received, not seized.
"Their border went up to the sea westward" (v. 11). The Hebrew says simply yām, "the sea," and the old expositors hear Genesis 49:13 echoing in it. Joseph Benson: "The lot of this tribe was washed by the midland sea on the west, and by the sea of Tiberias on the east, answering Jacob's prophecy, Zebulun shall be a haven of ships; trading ships on the great sea, and fishing ships on the sea of Galilee." Cambridge adds that Zebulun "possessed the goings out, the outlet, of the plain of Akka (Deuteronomy 33:18), where he could 'dwell at the shore,' and 'suck of the abundance of the seas.'" Whether the border literally reached the Mediterranean was disputed already in antiquity (Keil, JFB, Gill) — but the prophetic shape is unmistakable.
The synthesis must not paper over what the commentators see plainly. The boundary-marks include words the older versions mistook for towns: Keil & Delitzsch corrects that ham-methoar (v. 13) "is not a proper name, but the participle of תּאר... 'bounded off,' or pricked off" — what the KJV printed as "Remmon-methoar." And the count will not balance: Albert Barnes on v. 15 — "Only five have been mentioned... It would therefore appear that seven names have disappeared from the text." Keil concurs, positing "a gap in the text here, just as in Joshua 15:59 and Joshua 21:36." A fallible apparatus should say so: the inspired record here is terse and, in our received form, arithmetically incomplete.
Read under Sola Scriptura, this catalog of unknown villages is not filler — it is the seriousness of God about place. The same God who measures heaven with a span condescends to draw a cord around Sarid and Dabbesheth, to name the open hamlets (ḥăṣērîm) no atlas can now locate, and to keep faith with a deathbed blessing spoken to Jacob centuries before. The border that "crosses over" (עָבַר, v. 13, the Exodus-verb) and "goes out" to its appointed marks is the geography of a promise being paid in full. And two names on this otherwise-forgotten line will outrun it: Gath-hepher, which will send out Jonah (2 Kings 14:25) — the prophet whose three days in the deep the Lord made His own sign (Matthew 12:40) — and this whole region of Zebulun, on which the great Light will dawn (Isaiah 9:1–2; Matthew 4:13–16). The map is a quiet promissory note; the Gospel is its payment.
Even the villages no atlas can find were named by God before they were given — the map is a promise being paid in full. [⚙ synthesis, not Scripture]
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The boundary touches "Gath-hepher" (v. 13), a name occurring in only two verses of all Scripture. The other is 2 Kings 14:25, which fixes it as the home of "Jonah son of Amittai... the prophet, who was from Gath-hepher." The rare shared lexeme makes this a verbal, not merely thematic, link: the prophet of Nineveh came from a town on Zebulun's edge — and so the rabbinic boast that "no prophet arises from Galilee" (John 7:52) was already false at the founding of the tribes.
2 Kings 14:25
basis: rare shared lexeme H1662 Gath-ha-Chêpher, attested in only 2 verses of the canon (Verifier)
Daberath (v. 12) recurs at Joshua 21:28 (and 1 Chronicles 6:72) as one of the towns Issachar gave to the Gershonite Levites. The rare lexeme (three occurrences total) ties the verses verbally. A priestly city stood on the very seam where Zebulun met Issachar — the worship of God planted at the boundary, not buried in the interior.
Joshua 21:28 · 1 Chronicles 6:72
basis: rare shared lexeme H1705 Dăbrath, attested in only 3 verses (Verifier)
Nahalal (v. 15) reappears in Joshua 21:35 as a Levitical city of Zebulun, and again in Judges 1:30: "Neither did Zebulun drive out the inhabitants of Kitron, nor the inhabitants of Nahalol; but the Canaanites dwelt among them." The shared rare lexeme (three occurrences) makes the link verbal. The fair inheritance recorded here in Joshua is, a generation later, the scene of incomplete obedience — the gift fully given, only partly possessed.
Judges 1:30 · Joshua 21:35
basis: rare shared lexeme H5096 Nahălâl, attested in only 3 verses (Verifier)
"The brook... before Jokneam" (v. 11) lets the otherwise-uncertain southern line be located, because Jokneam (three occurrences) is fixed elsewhere: Joshua 12:22 lists "the king of Jokneam in Carmel" among Joshua's conquered kings. The verbal link to a defeated royal city near the Kishon anchors the boundary that scholars cannot otherwise trace with confidence.
Joshua 12:22
basis: rare shared lexeme H3362 Yoqnᵉʻâm, attested in only 3 verses (Verifier)
Among the twelve towns is Shimron (v. 15), the rare proper-name lexeme occurring in only five verses. One of them is Joshua 11:1, where "Jabin king of Hazor" sends to "the king of Shimron" to muster the great northern coalition crushed at the Waters of Merom — and v. 12 of that chapter records Joshua "struck them with the sword" and "took all the cities of those kings." The shared rare lexeme makes the link verbal, not thematic: a Canaanite crown-city that headed the resistance to the conquest now sits, disarmed, as a quiet entry in Zebulun's town-roll. The Verifier ranks Shimron's other occurrences (Genesis 46:13; Numbers 26:24) as the personal name of Issachar's son, a homonym, not this place — so the thread rests only on the place-name attestations.
Joshua 11:1
basis: rare shared lexeme H8110 Shimrôwn, attested in only 5 verses; Joshua 11:1 names the royal city of Shimron in the northern coalition (Verifier)
The Valley of Iphtah-el and "Neah" on the eastern line (vv. 13–14) recur in the description of Asher's lot at Joshua 19:27, where Asher's boundary likewise reaches "the valley of Iphtah-el" — the seam where the two tribes touched (so Keil, on Neah/Neiel). The shared lexemes here are common boundary-words (mizrâch, "east"; yâtsâ, "go out"; the name Zebulun), so the link is structural — adjacent surveys meeting at one ridge — not a quotation.
Joshua 19:27
basis: shared lexemes H2074 Zᵉbûwlûwn, H4217 mizrâch, H3318 yâtsâʼ — common boundary vocabulary, no rare/quotation link (Verifier)
The whole allotment answers the oracles of Jacob and Moses over Zebulun: "Zebulun shall dwell at the haven of the sea" (Genesis 49:13) and "Rejoice, Zebulun, in your going out... they shall suck of the abundance of the seas" (Deuteronomy 33:18–19). The Verifier finds only the common tribal name Zebulun shared, so the tie is thematic, not a verbal quotation — but it is the explicit interpretive frame of Henry, Poole, Benson, and Cambridge.
Genesis 49:13 · Deuteronomy 33:18
basis: shared lexeme H2074 Zᵉbûwlûwn only (common tribal name) — thematic fulfillment, not verbal quotation (Verifier)
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
This is the inheritance of Zebulun — and Isaiah 9:1 names "the land of Zebulun and the land of Naphtali" as the very region where "the people walking in darkness have seen a great light." Matthew 4:13–16 records that Jesus, leaving Nazareth, "went and lived in Capernaum... in the region of Zebulun and Naphtali, to fulfill what was spoken through the prophet Isaiah." The towns mapped here — Japhia and Cana (if Hannathon, per Keil) on the rim, Nazareth in the highlands above Japhia — became the ground of the Lord's Galilean ministry. Because this link crosses Testaments (Greek Gospel citing Hebrew prophet) it cannot rest on a shared Strong's number; it rests on Matthew's own explicit citation formula, and is therefore typological-fulfillment of the strongest, ancient kind.
Joshua 19:10 · Isaiah 9:1 · Matthew 4:13
Jonah, who came from Gath-hepher on this boundary (v. 13; 2 Kings 14:25), became in Christ's own words the type of His burial and resurrection: "As Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish, so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth" (Matthew 12:40). A name on a forgotten survey-line is, by the Lord's exegesis, a pointer to the empty tomb. The connection from this Hebrew allotment to the Greek Gospel is figural, not lexical — a typology Jesus Himself authorizes.
Joshua 19:13 · 2 Kings 14:25 · Matthew 12:40
The keyword of the unit is naḥălāh, "inheritance" (vv. 10, 16) — a portion received by lot, partly possessed (Judges 1:30), and eventually lost in exile. The New Testament takes up the word for what it always pointed toward: an inheritance "imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven" (1 Peter 1:4), into which Christ, the true Israel, brings His people as joint-heirs (Romans 8:17). Zebulun's measured cord and unlocatable villages are an earnest of a portion that cannot be misnamed or lost.
Joshua 19:16 · 1 Peter 1:4 · Romans 8:17
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 a boundary-and-town list; the ⚙ literal renderings foreground the Hebrew surveyor's verbs — ‘ālāh (go up), pāḡa‘ (strike against), šûḇ (turn back), ‘āḇar (cross over), yāṣā (go out), sāḇaḇ (encircle) — which the BSB smooths into neutral motion-words. Two honesty flags carried from the sources, not invented here: (1) In v. 13 the old versions' place-name "Methoar" is, with Keil, a verb (ham-methoar, "that is marked off"), not a town. (2) In v. 15 only five of the stated "twelve cities" are named; Barnes and Keil both infer a textual gap (cf. Joshua 15:59; 21:36), and Zebulun's Levitical towns Kartah and Dimnah (21:34) are absent. The synthesis records these as the commentators state them and does not resolve them. Site identifications (Sarid, Neah, Eth-kazin, Kattath, Idalah) remain uncertain; the threads lean only on the rare place-name lexemes the Verifier confirmed (Gath-hepher, Daberath, Nahalal, Jokneam — each in 2–3 verses; Shimron in 5, of which the place-name occurrences include Joshua 11:1), and tier the cross-Testament Christ links (Isaiah→Matthew, Jonah→Matthew) as typological-fulfillment rather than verbal, since shared Strong's numbers cannot bridge Hebrew and Greek.
✦ = 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)