The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Seventy Elders Anointed
Numbers 11:16–30 — Seventy Elders Anointed. 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.
16Then the LORD said to Moses, “Bring Me seventy of the elders of Israel known to you as leaders and officers of the people. Bring them to the Tent of Meeting and have them stand there with you.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh way·yō·mer ’el- mō·šeh ’es·p̄āh- lî šiḇ·‘îm ’îš miz·ziq·nê yiś·rā·’êl ’ă·šer yā·ḏa‘·tā kî- hêm ziq·nê wə·šō·ṭə·rāw hā·‘ām wə·lā·qaḥ·tā ’ō·ṯām ’el- ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ wə·hiṯ·yaṣ·ṣə·ḇū šām ‘im·māḵ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-said YHWH to Moses: ‘Gather for-Me seventy man from-the-elders of-Israel whom you-know that they [are] elders-of the-people and-officers-of-it; and-take them to the-Tent of-Meeting, and-they-shall-station-themselves there with-you.”
Where the English smooths the original
Frequent mention is made in Scripture of the number seventy— a number which is composed of the two sacred numbers seven and ten —the former being the seal of the covenant, and the latter probably denoting perfection.
Jehovah therefore relieved him in the distress of which he complained, without blaming the words of His servant, which bordered on despair.
There was, however, no further historical connection between the two bodies than this - that when the monarchy failed and prophecy died out, the ecclesiastical leaders of the Jews modeled their institutions upon, and adapted their titles to , this Divinely-ordered original.Pulpit Commentary on whether the Sanhedrin truly descends from these seventy.
whom thou by experience discernest to be elders not only in years, and name, and place, but also in wisdom, and gravity, and authority with the people.
17And I will come down and speak with you there, and I will take some of the Spirit that is on you and put that Spirit on them. They will help you bear the burden of the people, so that you do not have to bear it by yourself.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·yā·raḏ·tî wə·ḏib·bar·tî ‘im·mə·ḵā šām wə·’ā·ṣal·tî min- hā·rū·aḥ ’ă·šer ‘ā·le·ḵā wə·śam·tî ‘ă·lê·hem wə·nā·śə·’ū ’it·tə·ḵā bə·maś·śā hā·‘ām ’at·tāh wə·lō- ṯiś·śā lə·ḇad·de·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-I-will-come-down and-I-will-speak with-you there; and-I-will-separate-off from the-Spirit that [is] upon-you and-I-will-put [it] upon-them, and-they-shall-bear with-you in the-burden of-the-people, and-not shall-you-bear [it] by-yourself-alone.”
Where the English smooths the original
I will take of the spirit which is upon thee - Render rather separate from the spirit, etc.; i. e. they shall have their portion in the same divine gift which thou hast.
Rashi compares the mode of bestowal with the manner in which the other lamps of the Sanctuary were lighted at the golden candlestick without diminishing the light from which theirs was taken.
The Holy Spirit is one and indivisible. But in the language of Scripture "the Spirit" often stands for the charismata , or gifts of the Spirit, and in this sense is freely spoken of as belonging to this or that man.
by "taking the spirit of Moses, and putting it upon them," is not to be understood that the qualities of the great leader were to be in any degree impaired but that the elders would be endowed with a portion of the same gifts, especially of prophecy
18And say to the people: Consecrate yourselves for tomorrow, and you will eat meat, because you have cried out in the hearing of the LORD, saying: ‘Who will feed us meat? For we were better off in Egypt!’ Therefore the LORD will give you meat, and you will eat.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·’el- tō·mar hā·‘ām hiṯ·qad·də·šū lə·mā·ḥār wa·’ă·ḵal·tem bā·śār kî bə·ḵî·ṯem bə·’ā·zə·nê Yah·weh lê·mōr mî ya·’ă·ḵi·lê·nū bā·śār kî- ṭō·wḇ lā·nū bə·miṣ·rā·yim Yah·weh wə·nā·ṯan lā·ḵem bā·śār wa·’ă·ḵal·tem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-to the-people you-shall-say: ‘Consecrate-yourselves for-tomorrow, and-you-shall-eat meat; for you-have-wept in-the-ears of-YHWH, saying: “Who will-feed-us meat? For [it was] good for-us in-Egypt!” And-YHWH will-give to-you meat, and-you-shall-eat.’”
Where the English smooths the original
The Israelites were required to sanctify themselves by purification for the more immediate manifestation of the Divine presence, although their request was a sinful one, and was granted in judgment as well as—or even more than—in mercy. Comp. Psalm 106:15 : “And he gave them their request; but sent leanness into their soul.”
it was as though a traitor, unknowing of his doom, were bidden to a grand ceremonial on the morrow, which ceremonial should be his own execution.
In the ears of the Lord — Not secretly in your closets, but openly and impudently in the doors of your tents, calling heaven and earth to witness.
therefore the Lord will give you flesh; to show his power: and ye shall eat; to your shame and confusion, not for pleasure or profit.Gill: the granted flesh is itself the judgment — given to shame, not to bless.
19You will eat it not for one or two days, nor for five or ten or twenty days,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
tō·ḵə·lūn wə·lō lō ’e·ḥāḏ yō·wm yō·w·mā·yim wə·lō ḥă·miš·šāh yā·mîm wə·lō ‘ă·śā·rāh yā·mîm wə·lō ‘eś·rîm yō·wm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“You-shall-eat [it] — and-not, not for-one day, nor two-days, nor for-five days, nor ten days, nor twenty days —”
Where the English smooths the original
The quails which had been sent the preceding year appear to have covered the camp only during one day ( Exodus 16:13 ).
Ye shall not eat one day,.... Only, as in Exodus 16:12 , nor two days, nor five days, neither ten days, nor twenty days; but even thirty days, a whole month, as in Numbers 11:20 .
The vanity of all the delights of sense; they will cloy, but they will not satisfy. Spiritual pleasures alone will satisfy and last. As the world passes away, so do the lusts of it.Henry's note covers the whole block 11:16-23; excerpted here for the surfeit-of-flesh theme.
20but for a whole month—until it comes out of your nostrils and makes you nauseous—because you have rejected the LORD, who is among you, and have cried out before Him, saying, ‘Why did we ever leave Egypt?’”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
‘aḏ ḥō·ḏeš yā·mîm ‘aḏ ’ă·šer- yê·ṣê mê·’ap·pə·ḵem wə·hā·yāh lā·ḵem lə·zā·rā ya·‘an kî- mə·’as·tem ’eṯ- Yah·weh ’ă·šer bə·qir·bə·ḵem wat·tiḇ·kū lə·p̄ā·nāw lê·mōr lām·māh zeh yā·ṣā·nū mim·miṣ·rā·yim
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“— until a-month of-days, until that it-comes-out from-your-nostrils and-it-becomes for-you for-loathing; because you-have-spurned YHWH who [is] in-your-midst, and-you-wept before-Him, saying: ‘Why [is] this we-came-out from-Egypt?’”
Where the English smooths the original
The expression presents a very strong, though disagreeable idea of satiety and surfeit, when the overloaded stomach disburdens itself at the mouth and nostrils.
Thus God destroys them by granting their desires, and turns even their blessings into curses; whilst he deals much more favourably with Moses, though he also fell into the same sin with the people, i.e. impatience and murmuring.
Or, cast him off, because you refused manna, which he appointed as most suitable for you.Geneva marginal gloss on “despised the LORD.”
21But Moses replied, “Here I am among 600,000 men on foot, yet You say, ‘I will give them meat, and they will eat for a month.’
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mō·šeh way·yō·mer ’ā·nō·ḵî bə·qir·bōw ’ă·šer šêš- mê·’ō·wṯ ’e·lep̄ hā·‘ām raḡ·lî wə·’at·tāh ’ā·mar·tā ’et·tên lā·hem bā·śār wə·’ā·ḵə·lū ḥō·ḏeš yā·mîm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-said Moses: ‘Six hundred thousand on-foot [is] the-people in-whose-midst I-myself [am]; and-You — You-have-said, “Meat I-will-give to-them, and-they-shall-eat a-month of-days.”’”
Where the English smooths the original
He could not really have doubted the Divine power to do this, after what he had seen in the desert of Sin ( Exodus 16:13 ), but he spoke petulantly, and indeed insolently, out of the misery which was yet in his heart.
this was the first great offence of this kind, and therefore more easily passed by; that was after warning, and against more light and experience.Poole comparing this lapse with Moses' later, punished doubt at Numbers 20.
In Numbers 1:46 the number is stated to be 603,550; but here, as elsewhere, a round number is mentioned.
22If all our flocks and herds were slaughtered for them, would they have enough? Or if all the fish in the sea were caught for them, would they have enough?”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
hă·ṣōn ū·ḇā·qār yiš·šā·ḥêṭ lā·hem ū·mā·ṣā lā·hem ’im ’eṯ- kāl- də·ḡê hay·yām yê·’ā·sêp̄ lā·hem ū·mā·ṣā lā·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“‘[Shall] flocks and-herds be-slaughtered for-them, and-it-suffice for-them? Or if all the-fish of-the-sea be-gathered for-them, and-it-suffice for-them?’”
Where the English smooths the original
Whether the encampment was, or was not within an easy distance of the Ælanitic Gulf, the gathering together of the fish of the sea in sufficient quantities to satisfy such a multitude for so long a time would require a miraculous agency; and the same agency could also bring together from unknown sources flocks and herds. The expression may be regarded as a form of natural hyperbole.
Moses takes notice only of the flesh of beasts and of fishes, and seems not to have thought of the flesh of fowls with which, and not the other, the Lord afterwards fed them a whole month.
All the fish of the sea. A wild expression from which nothing can be fairly argued as to the present position of the camp.
23The LORD answered Moses, “Is the LORD’s arm too short? Now you will see whether or not My word will come to pass.”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh ’el- way·yō·mer mō·šeh Yah·weh hă·yaḏ tiq·ṣār ‘at·tāh ṯir·’eh ’im- lō ḏə·ḇā·rî hă·yiq·rə·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-said YHWH to Moses: ‘Is the-hand of-YHWH too-short? Now you-shall-see whether My-word will-befall-you or not.’”
Where the English smooths the original
And yet man is still ready to fall into the weakness of thinking that there are circumstances in which the power of God cannot afford relief or deliverance, but must, as it were, remain inactive.
Waxed short, i.e. less able to work such great and glorious miracles as I have done.
God here brings Moses to this point, The Lord God is Almighty; and puts the proof upon the issue, Thou shalt see whether my word shall come to pass or not. If he speaks, it is done.
24So Moses went out and relayed to the people the words of the LORD, and he gathered seventy of the elders of the people and had them stand around the tent.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mō·šeh way·yê·ṣê way·ḏab·bêr ’el- hā·‘ām ’êṯ diḇ·rê Yah·weh way·ye·’ĕ·sōp̄ šiḇ·‘îm ’îš miz·ziq·nê hā·‘ām way·ya·‘ă·mêḏ ’ō·ṯām sə·ḇî·ḇōṯ hā·’ō·hel
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-went-out Moses and-he-spoke to the-people the-words of-YHWH; and-he-gathered seventy man from-the-elders of-the-people, and-he-made-them-stand around the-tent.”
Where the English smooths the original
They are called seventy from the stated number, though two of them were lacking, as the apostles are called the twelve, ( Matthew 26:20 ,) when one of that number was absent.
"Around the tabernacle," does not signify in this passage on all four sides, but in a semicircle around the front of the tabernacle; the verb is used in this sense in Numbers 21:4 , when it is applied to the march round Edom.
The tabernacle was chosen for the convocation, because, as it was there God manifested Himself, there His Spirit would be directly imparted—there the minds of the elders themselves would be inspired with reverential awe
25Then the LORD came down in the cloud and spoke to him, and He took some of the Spirit that was on Moses and placed that Spirit on the seventy elders. As the Spirit rested on them, they prophesied—but they never did so again.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh way·yê·reḏ be·‘ā·nān way·ḏab·bêr ’ê·lāw way·yā·ṣel min- hā·rū·aḥ ’ă·šer ‘ā·lāw way·yit·tên ‘al- šiḇ·‘îm ’îš haz·zə·qê·nîm way·hî hā·rū·aḥ kə·nō·w·aḥ ‘ă·lê·hem way·yiṯ·nab·bə·’ū wə·lō yā·sā·p̄ū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-came-down YHWH in-the-cloud and-He-spoke to-him, and-He-separated-off from the-Spirit that [was] upon-him and-He-put [it] upon the-seventy man, the-elders. And-it-was, as-the-Spirit rested upon-them, that-they-prophesied — and-not did-they-add [to do so again].”
Where the English smooths the original
Theodoret very happily observes on this passage, "Just as a man who kindles a thousand flames from one does not lessen the first in communicating light to the others, so God did not diminish the grace imparted to Moses by the fact that he communicated of it to the seventy."
And did not cease - Rather, and added not, i. e. they prophesied at this time only and not afterward. The sign was granted on the occasion of their appointment to accredit them in their office; it was not continued, because their proper function was to be that of governing not prophesying.
The true prophet was realised to be one who, by a deep spiritual insight and conversance with God, was able to declare the divine will with regard to matters both present and future.
For the Spirit of God is not something material, which is diminished by being divided, but resembles a flame of fire, which does not decrease in intensity, but increases rather by extension.
26Two men, however, had remained in the camp—one named Eldad and the other Medad—and the Spirit rested on them. They were among those listed, but they had not gone out to the tent, and they prophesied in the camp.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
šə·nê- ’ă·nā·šîm way·yiš·šā·’ă·rū bam·ma·ḥă·neh hā·’e·ḥāḏ šêm ’el·dāḏ wə·šêm haš·šê·nî mê·ḏāḏ hā·rū·aḥ wat·tā·naḥ ‘ă·lê·hem wə·hêm·māh bak·kə·ṯu·ḇîm wə·lō yā·ṣə·’ū hā·’ō·hĕ·lāh way·yiṯ·nab·bə·’ū bam·ma·ḥă·neh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-there-remained two men in-the-camp — the-name of-the-one Eldad and-the-name of-the-second Medad — and-the-Spirit rested upon-them (and-they [were] among-the-written, but they-did-not go-out to-the-tent), and-they-prophesied in-the-camp.”
Where the English smooths the original
But the Spirit of God found them in the camp, and there they exercised their gift of praying, preaching, and praising God; they spake as moved by the Holy Ghost. The Spirit of God is not confined to the tabernacle, but, like the wind, blows where He listeth.
not without God’s special providence, that so the miracle might be more evident, and their call and authority more unquestionable, to all the people.
Of them that were written - i. e. enrolled among the Seventy. The expression points to a regular appointment duly recorded and permanent.
27A young man ran and reported to Moses, “Eldad and Medad are prophesying in the camp.”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
han·na·‘ar way·yā·rāṣ way·yag·gêḏ lə·mō·šeh way·yō·mar ’el·dāḏ ū·mê·ḏāḏ miṯ·nab·bə·’îm bam·ma·ḥă·neh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-ran the-young-man and-he-told to-Moses and-he-said: ‘Eldad and-Medad are-prophesying in-the-camp.’”
Where the English smooths the original
If this book was compiled from previous records, of which there are many apparent traces, we may suppose that the name of this young man was there given, but here for some reason omitted.
consulting the glory of God and the honour of Moses, and therefore in great haste ran to him with the information
This phenomenon in the camp itself produced such excitement, that a boy (הנּער, with the article like הפּליט in Genesis 14:13 ) reported the thing to Moses
28Joshua son of Nun, the attendant to Moses since youth, spoke up and said, “Moses, my lord, stop them!”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
yə·hō·wō·šu·a‘ bin- nūn mə·šā·rêṯ mō·šeh mib·bə·ḥu·rāw way·ya·‘an way·yō·mar mō·šeh ’ă·ḏō·nî kə·lā·’êm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-answered Joshua son-of Nun, attendant-of Moses from-his-youth, and-he-said: ‘My-lord Moses, restrain-them!’”
Where the English smooths the original
Joshua was jealous for the honour of Moses, just as the disciples of Jesus, in Mark 9:38-39 , were for the honour of their Lord; and he was reproved by Moses, as the latter afterwards were by Christ.
But as the man did not cast out devils in his own name, but in that of Christ, so in this case Eldad and Medad prophesied in virtue of the spirit which rested upon them from above, of which the Holy Ghost, not Moses, was the giver.
Joshua was not one of the seventy, but was attached to the sacred Tent as its aedituus or caretaker. Cf. Exodus 33:11 .
29But Moses replied, “Are you jealous on my account? I wish that all the LORD’s people were prophets and that the LORD would place His Spirit on them!”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mō·šeh way·yō·mer lōw ’at·tāh ham·qan·nê lî ū·mî yit·tên kāl- Yah·weh ‘am nə·ḇî·’îm kî- Yah·weh ’eṯ- yit·tên rū·ḥōw ‘ă·lê·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-said to-him Moses: ‘Are-you jealous for-me? And-who would-give that all the-people of-YHWH [were] prophets — that YHWH would-put His-Spirit upon-them!’”
Where the English smooths the original
Moses expresses the conviction which is true for all time, that the possession of the Spirit is not confined to particular persons or classes. With a deeper realisation of the truth Jeremiah ( Numbers 31:33 f.) and Joel ( Numbers 2:28 f.[ Hebrews 3:1 f.]) teach that the gift of the Spirit is universal. Joel’s words were claimed by S. Peter to have been fulfilled ( Acts 2:16 ff.)Cambridge reading the verse as the seed of Joel 2:28 and Pentecost.
As a true servant of God, who sought not his own glory, but the glory of his God, and the spread of His kingdom, Moses rejoiced in this manifestation of the Spirit of God in the midst of the nation, and desired that all might become partakers of this grace.
Enviest thou for my sake?- Better, Art thou zealous for me? or, Art thou displeased on my account?
He saith prophets, not rulers , for that he knew was absurd and impossible.
30Then Moses returned to the camp, along with the elders of Israel.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mō·šeh way·yê·’ā·sêp̄ ’el- ham·ma·ḥă·neh hū wə·ziq·nê yiś·rā·’êl
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-withdrew Moses to the-camp — he and-the-elders of-Israel.”
Where the English smooths the original
he and the elders of Israel; he went in company with them, to impart to them the honour and glory they were to share with him in the government, as Aben Ezra observes
Among the people, to exercise the gifts and authority now or formerly received.
Although the tabernacle stood in the midst of the camp, yet it was practically separated from the tents of the other tribes by an open space and by the encampments of the Levites.
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 opens not with the murmuring people but with God’s answer to Moses’ private despair (the complaint of vv. 11–15). Keil & Delitzsch catch the tone exactly: Jehovah “relieved him in the distress of which he complained, without blaming the words of His servant, which bordered on despair.” The remedy is an ingathering — the imperative ’es·p̄āh, “gather Me seventy” (v. 16), the same root ’āsap̄ that will name the fish Moses cannot collect (v. 22) and Moses’ own withdrawal at the close (v. 30). The cure for being alone (lᵉḇaddᵉḵā, v. 17) is a Spirit set apart: the rare verb ’āṣal (only five OT verses) means to reserve a portion, not to deplete a store. Ellicott preserves Rashi’s image — the Sanctuary’s lamps “lighted at the golden candlestick without diminishing the light from which theirs was taken” — and the Pulpit Commentary states the doctrine plainly: “The Holy Spirit is one and indivisible,” so what is shared is “the charismata, or gifts of the Spirit.” God does not lighten the load; He multiplies the bearers (nāśā’, v. 17).
To the people, the same scene turns dark. They are told to consecrate themselves (hiṯqaddᵉšū, v. 18) as before Sinai — but the Pulpit Commentary unmasks the irony: “as though a traitor, unknowing of his doom, were bidden to a grand ceremonial on the morrow, which ceremonial should be his own execution.” Ellicott pins it to Psalm 106:15 — “he gave them their request; but sent leanness into their soul.” The verb that exposes the real sin is mā’as, “you have spurned the LORD who is in your midst” (v. 20); appetite was only the symptom. Poole names the dreadful mercy: “Thus God destroys them by granting their desires, and turns even their blessings into curses.” Even Moses falters — his census-arithmetic of doubt (vv. 21–22), which JFB notes was “uttered only to himself… therefore… sharply reproved, but not punished.” God answers not with numbers but with a question about His own reach: “Is the LORD’s hand waxed short?” (v. 23). Matthew Henry’s verdict on the whole exchange: “If he speaks, it is done.”
Moses obeys — he gathers (’āsap̄ again, v. 24) the seventy and stations them around the Tent. Then the LORD comes down in the cloud and performs the promised ’āṣal: He “separated off” of the Spirit and put it on the seventy (v. 25). Both the Pulpit Commentary and Keil & Delitzsch reach for Theodoret’s flame: “Just as a man who kindles a thousand flames from one does not lessen the first… so God did not diminish the grace imparted to Moses.” K&D presses it into doctrine: the Spirit “resembles a flame of fire, which does not decrease in intensity, but increases rather by extension.” The Spirit rested (nûaḥ) and they prophesied (nāḇā’) — an ecstatic, Spirit-driven utterance the Cambridge Bible and Pulpit Commentary both liken to later Scripture’s tongues. And then the quiet hinge: Eldad and Medad, who remained in the camp, receive the same resting Spirit (nûaḥ, v. 26, word-matched to v. 25). Matthew Henry draws the lesson the chapter is built to teach: “The Spirit of God is not confined to the tabernacle, but, like the wind, blows where He listeth.”
The runner’s alarm and Joshua’s “My lord Moses, restrain them!” (kālā’, v. 28) set up the unit’s climax. Keil & Delitzsch lay the parallel bare: “Joshua was jealous for the honour of Moses, just as the disciples of Jesus, in Mark 9:38–39, were for the honour of their Lord; and he was reproved by Moses, as the latter afterwards were by Christ.” Moses’ reply is the meekest line in the Torah — “Are you jealous for my sake? Would that all the LORD’s people were prophets!” He says prophets, Poole insists, “not rulers, for that he knew was absurd and impossible.” The Cambridge Bible reads the verse as the seed of the whole later hope: “the possession of the Spirit is not confined to particular persons or classes… Jeremiah and Joel teach that the gift of the Spirit is universal,” and “Joel’s words were claimed by S. Peter to have been fulfilled.” The unit closes as it opened — with the root ’āsap̄: Moses himself “withdrew” (way·yê·’āsêp̄) to the camp, no longer alone, the elders gathered with him (v. 30).
Read whole, the chapter is one sustained argument about the Spirit who can be shared without being spent. The rare verb ’āṣal (vv. 17, 25) is its grammatical spine; the resting verb nûaḥ (vv. 25, 26) is its proof that the gift is not bound to a place; and Moses’ longing in v. 29 is its prophetic horizon. The voices converge: Barnes on “their portion in the same divine gift,” the Pulpit Commentary on the indivisible Spirit, K&D on fire that grows by extension, Cambridge on the universal Spirit of Joel and Pentecost. Against the people’s appetite that turns blessing to curse stands the Spirit that turns one man’s burden into seventy men’s gift — and points beyond seventy to all flesh.
Set against the rule that Scripture alone is the final authority, this passage offers more than its own age could see — held out as a reading to be tested, not a verdict to be trusted. The Spirit is shared, not divided. The text’s own verb (’āṣal, “to reserve a portion,” vv. 17, 25) and the unanimous witness of the named voices — Rashi’s lamps, Theodoret’s flame, the Pulpit Commentary’s “one and indivisible” — guard against two errors at once: that the Spirit is a finite stuff to be parceled out, and that any man (Moses included) is its proprietor. The Holy Ghost, not Moses, is the giver (Ellicott, v. 28). Office is gift before it is rank. The prophesying was a credential, not a career: Barnes notes it accredited the seventy “in their office” and “was not continued.” The sign authenticates; the Word governs. Moses’ longing is the canon’s trajectory. “Would that all the LORD’s people were prophets… that the LORD would put His Spirit upon them” (v. 29) is not idle wish but unwitting prophecy — the same hope Joel voices (2:28) and Peter declares fulfilled at Pentecost (Acts 2:16–17). What Moses could only desire, the new covenant pours out. Zeal for a leader can resist the Spirit of the Lord. Joshua, soon Israel’s deliverer, is here found trying to silence what God authorized — and corrected. The pattern recurs exactly in Mark 9:38–39: defending the master against the Master’s own work. The test, then as now, is the Bereans’ — measure the gift against what God has actually said and done, not against our sense of order.
What Moses could only wish for — “would that all the LORD’s people were prophets” — Pentecost poured out: the Spirit no man owns, shared without ever being spent.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The hinge-word of the whole unit, ’āṣal (“to reserve / set off a portion”), occurs in only five Old Testament verses. Here God “separates off” of the Spirit upon Moses to put on the seventy (vv. 17, 25) without any loss to the source. The same rare verb names Isaac’s anguished question to Esau — “Have you not reserved a blessing for me?” (Genesis 27:36) — where a blessing once given cannot simply be re-portioned. The Verifier flags the shared root; the link is genuinely verbal because the lexeme is so scarce, though the theology diverges: Isaac’s blessing was exhaustible, the Spirit is not.
Numbers 11:17 · Numbers 11:25 · Genesis 27:36
basis: rare shared lexeme H680 ʼâtsal (in only 5 vv) — Verifier-confirmed verbal link; contrastive in sense (a reservable blessing vs. an undiminished Spirit)
The convocation formula of v. 16 — elders (zāqēn) and officers (shōṭēr) presenting themselves (yāṣaḇ) and gathered (’āsap̄) — recurs almost as a fixed liturgy of national assembly. At Shechem, Joshua “gathered all the tribes of Israel… and called for the elders… and their officers, and they presented themselves before God” (Joshua 24:1). The Verifier ranks the overlap high on the strength of two scarce lexemes — shōṭēr (25 vv) and yāṣaḇ (45 vv). No quotation is claimed in either direction; this is a shared institutional pattern, the recurring shape of Israel formally convened, which several of the named voices (Barnes, JFB, Pulpit) connect to the later national councils.
Numbers 11:16 · Numbers 11:24 · Joshua 24:1
basis: shared institutional vocabulary computed by the Verifier: H7860 shôṭêr (rare, 25 vv), H3320 yâtsab (45 vv), H2205 zâqên, H622 ʼâçaph — a recurring convocation pattern, not a quotation; tiered structural by under-claiming
The Hithpael nāḇā’ (“to prophesy,” in 101 vv) here denotes not foretelling but ecstatic, Spirit-driven speech (so K&D, Cambridge, Pulpit). The same verb marks Saul among the prophets — “the Spirit of God came upon him, and he prophesied” (1 Samuel 10:6, 10) — and recurs throughout the prophetic histories (e.g. Jeremiah 32:3, computed by the Verifier). The shared lexeme is real but common, and the link is one of pattern: the visible sign of the Spirit resting on a man, granted to accredit a calling.
Numbers 11:25 · Numbers 11:26 · 1 Samuel 10:6 · Jeremiah 32:3
basis: shared lexeme H5012 nâbâʼ (in 101 vv) per the Verifier — a recurring motif (Spirit-induced prophesying as a sign), not a quotation; lexeme too common for a verbal claim
Joshua is “the attendant of Moses from his youth” (v. 28). The noun bᵉḥurôwṯ (“youth”) is rare — only three Old Testament verses — the other two being Ecclesiastes’ charge to “rejoice… in the days of thy youth” and to “remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth” (11:9; 12:1). The Verifier confirms the verbal rarity. The connection is lexical, not conceptual: Numbers uses the word to date a lifelong service; Ecclesiastes uses it to weigh the fleeting season of vigor. Recorded as a verbal link on the strength of the scarce shared lexeme, with the difference of sense noted honestly.
Numbers 11:28 · Ecclesiastes 11:9 · Ecclesiastes 12:1
basis: rare shared lexeme H979 bᵉchurôwth (in only 3 vv) — Verifier-confirmed; a scarce-word coincidence of vocabulary, not a thematic dependence (lifelong service vs. fleeting youth)
Moses’ wish — “would that all the LORD’s people were prophets, and that the LORD would put His Spirit (rûaḥ) upon them” (v. 29) — is, the Cambridge Bible argues, the seed of the canon’s great hope: Joel’s “I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh… your sons and your daughters shall prophesy” (2:28), which Peter declares fulfilled at Pentecost (Acts 2:16–17). Numbers 11:29 and Joel 2:28 share the Hebrew rûaḥ; but the word is common (348 vv), so the bond is thematic, not verbal. The Joel→Acts step crosses Testaments (Greek↔Hebrew) and so cannot rest on shared Strong’s numbers at all — it is a stated NT fulfillment claim, tiered thematic for that reason.
Numbers 11:29 · Joel 2:28 · Acts 2:16-18
basis: Numbers 11:29 ↔ Joel 2:28 share H7307 rûwach (common, 348 vv → thematic, not verbal); the Acts step is cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew), so no shared Strong’s — an explicit NT fulfillment claim (Acts 2:16), tiered thematic
Moses’ “six hundred thousand on foot” (v. 21) repeats, almost verbatim, the muster of the Exodus: “about six hundred thousand on foot that were men, beside children” (Exodus 12:37). The Verifier registers the overlap in the counting vocabulary — ’elep̄ (“thousand”), shêš (“six”), and the rare raglî (“on foot,” only 12 vv). This is a recurring formula for the fighting strength of the nation rather than a quotation; the same census language echoes on through the histories (e.g. 1 Samuel 15:4).
Numbers 11:21 · Exodus 12:37
basis: shared census vocabulary per the Verifier: H505 ʼeleph, H8337 shêsh, and the rare H7273 raglîy (12 vv) — a recurring national-muster formula, not a quotation
God answers Moses’ arithmetic of doubt not with a count but with an idiom: “Is the LORD’s hand (yāḏ) too short (qāṣar)?” (v. 23). Two of the named voices point forward to where the same figure of the shortened hand reappears: Benson cites Isaiah 50:2 and 59:1 (“Is the divine power diminished?”), and the Pulpit Commentary notes the figure “is adopted by Isaiah.” The Verifier confirms the shared pair qāṣar (46 vv) + yāḏ with both Isaiah 50:2 (“is my hand shortened at all, that it cannot redeem?”) and Isaiah 59:1 (“the LORD’s hand is not shortened, that it cannot save”). No quotation is claimed in either direction — it is a stock rhetorical figure for the unfailing reach of God’s power, recurring across the canon, so it is tiered structural.
Numbers 11:23 · Isaiah 50:2 · Isaiah 59:1
basis: shared idiom computed by the Verifier: H7114 qâtsar (46 vv) + H3027 yâd — the figure of the LORD’s ‘shortened hand’; the named voices (Benson, Pulpit) themselves cite Isaiah 50:2; 59:1, but it is a recurring rhetorical figure, not a citation, so tiered structural rather than verbal
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
Keil & Delitzsch make the type explicit at v. 28: “Joshua was jealous for the honour of Moses, just as the disciples of Jesus, in Mark 9:38–39, were for the honour of their Lord; and he was reproved by Moses, as the latter afterwards were by Christ.” John says, “Master, we saw one casting out demons in your name, and we forbade him.” Jesus answers, “Do not forbid him… he who is not against us is for us.” The pattern is one: a servant tries to restrain (kālā’, v. 28) a work the Spirit has authorized outside the recognized circle, and is overruled by a leader whose concern is the kingdom, not his own prestige. Ellicott draws out the principle Eldad and Medad embody: “the freeness and the sovereignty of the Holy Spirit’s influences” — the same lesson taught “afterwards” when “the Holy Ghost fell upon” Cornelius and his house before baptism (Acts 10:44–48), and the Pulpit Commentary compares “the surprise felt by the Jewish Christians when the sign of tongues was shown among the Gentiles.” The two who never came to the Tent, yet received the Spirit in the camp, foreshadow a gift that will leap every recognized boundary. Moses prefigures the magnanimity of Christ; Joshua, here bearing the name Yᵉhōšua‘ (“the LORD saves”), prefigures the disciples’ well-meant smallness — corrected.
Numbers 11:26 · Numbers 11:28 · Numbers 11:29 · Mark 9:38-40 · Luke 9:49-50 · Acts 10:44-48
The seventy receive of the one Spirit that rested on Moses (v. 25), and Moses longs that it might fall on all the LORD’s people (v. 29) — a longing the Cambridge Bible traces straight to Joel and to Pentecost. What is shared in measure here is, in Christ, given without measure and to all flesh: “I will pour out my Spirit” (Joel 2:28), fulfilled when “they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak” (Acts 2:4, 16–17). The seventy elders are an anticipation; the risen Christ, who “received from the Father the promise of the Holy Spirit” and poured it out (Acts 2:33), is the fulfillment. Moses, the mediator who could only wish it, foreshadows the greater Mediator who accomplishes it.
Numbers 11:25 · Numbers 11:29 · Joel 2:28 · Acts 2:1-4 · Acts 2:16-18
Several of the named voices (Gill, Ellicott, the Pulpit Commentary) note that the number seventy recurs at the threshold of Christ’s mission: “the Lord appointed seventy others also, and sent them two by two” (Luke 10:1). Gill draws the line directly — “so our Lord, besides his twelve apostles, sent out seventy disciples to be assisting in his work and service.” The first seventy were endowed with Moses’ Spirit to share the burden of governing Israel; the gospel seventy were sent out under Christ to share the burden of harvesting the nations (Luke 10:2). The numerical and functional echo is a figural reading, offered as such — suggestive rather than asserted.
Numbers 11:16 · Numbers 11:25 · Luke 10:1
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 Numbers 11:16–30 (15 verses) — the appointment and Spirit-anointing of the seventy elders, framed by Israel’s craving for meat. The base text is the Berean Standard Bible (CC0); the Hebrew is the Masoretic tradition. All transliterations, parsings, literal renderings, and “where the English smooths the Hebrew” notes are this tool’s own work (⚙) — careful but fallible; check them against a lexicon (BDB, HALOT) and a standard grammar.
Two honesty notes specific to this passage. (1) The mandatory Joshua 1:5 → Hebrews 13:5 flag does not apply here: this unit is in Numbers and contains no verse 1:5. (2) Several cross-references rest on lexeme overlaps computed by the Verifier. Where the shared word is rare (’āṣal, 5 vv → Genesis 27:36; bᵉḥurôwṯ, 3 vv → Ecclesiastes 11:9; 12:1) the link is recorded as verbal, but with the difference of sense stated plainly, since a shared scarce word is not the same as a shared idea. Where the shared word is common (rûaḥ, 348 vv; nāḇā’, 101 vv) the link is downgraded to structural/thematic. The Joel 2:28 → Acts 2 step is cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew) and so can carry no shared Strong’s number; it is tiered thematic on the strength of Peter’s explicit fulfillment claim (Acts 2:16), never “verbal.” The Verifier’s own ranking rated the Joshua 24:1 convocation parallel — and likewise the Exodus 12:37 census parallel (on the rare raglî, “on foot,” 12 vv) — as “verbal” matches; we have deliberately under-claimed both as structural, because no quotation is made in either direction. The elders-and-officers formula and the “six hundred thousand on foot” muster are recurring institutional/formulaic patterns, not citations. The “shortened hand” figure of v. 23 (Isaiah 50:2; 59:1), which the named voices Benson and the Pulpit Commentary themselves point to, rests on the moderately scarce pair qāṣar (46 vv) + yāḏ; it too is a stock rhetorical figure, not a quotation, and so is tiered structural.
The named voices are quoted verbatim from public-domain works (Biblehub): Ellicott (1878), Benson (1810s), Matthew Henry (1706), Barnes (1834), Jamieson-Fausset-Brown (1871), Poole (1685), Gill (1746–63), Geneva Study Bible (1599), Cambridge Bible (1880s), the Pulpit Commentary (1880s), and Keil & Delitzsch (1860s). Henry’s concise comment covers whole blocks (11:16–23 and 11:24–30), so the same source is excerpted for its block-relevant clause at several verses. Two marks govern everything: ✦ = a human, public-domain source, quoted and named; ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)
✦ = 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)