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Numbers14:36–39

The Plague on the Ten Spies

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Numbers 14:36–39 — The Plague on the Ten Spies. 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.

36“So the men Moses had sent to spy out the land, who had returned …”+

36So the men Moses had sent to spy out the land, who had returned and made the whole congregation grumble against him by bringing out a bad report about the land—

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

wə·hā·’ă·nā·šîm mō·šeh šā·laḥ lā·ṯūr ’eṯ- hā·’ā·reṣ ’ă·šer- way·yā·šu·ḇū kāl- hā·‘ê·ḏāh way·yil·lō·nū ‘ā·lāw ’eṯ- lə·hō·w·ṣî ḏib·bāh ‘al- hā·’ā·reṣ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And-the-men whom Moses had-sent to-spy-out the-land, who returned and-made-the-whole congregation grumble against-him by-bringing-out a-slander upon the-land —

Where the English smooths the original

  • דִבָּ֖ה BSB "a bad report" softens ḏib·bāh (dibbâh, H1681), a rare word — only nine occurrences in the whole Hebrew Bible — that means slander, defamation, evil whispering, not a neutral "report." Gill renders it exactly: "a slander upon the land." The crime is not pessimism but defamation: they did not merely misjudge Canaan, they libeled God's gift.
  • לְהוֹצִ֥יא "by bringing out" flattens the Hifil infinitive lə·hō·w·ṣî (yâtsâʼ, H3318, "to cause-to-go-out"). The slander is something they actively brought forth, produced, published — the same causative root that names what they "brought up" (v.37). The wording frames the report as a manufactured product, not an honest finding.
  • וַיִּלּוֹנוּ "made... grumble" renders way·yil·lō·nū as Hifil (causative) of lûwn (H3885) — "and-they-caused-to-murmur." The spies are not merely reporters but instigators: their tongues set the whole congregation murmuring. English "made... grumble" catches the causation but loses that lûwn literally means "to lodge / stay the night" — murmuring as a settling-in of discontent.
  • הָ֣עֵדָ֔ה "the whole congregation" is kāl-hā·‘ê·ḏāh (ʻêdâh, H5712), the formal cultic-civic assembly of Israel, not a mere crowd. The damage is total and corporate: ten tongues turned the entire covenant community against its mediator.
Word by word17 · parsed+
וְהָ֣אֲנָשִׁ֔יםwə·hā·’ă·nā·šîmSo the menH582
√ ʼĕnôwsh — a man in general (singly or collectively)Conjunctive waw, ArticleNounmasculine plural
וְהָ֣אֲנָשִׁ֔ים (wə·hā·’ă·nā·šîm, from ʼĕnôwsh H582) — "and the men": the conjunctive waw resumes the narrative after God's sentence (vv.20-35) and turns the camera onto the ten spies named in chapter 13.
מֹשֶׁ֖הmō·šehMosesH4872
√ Môsheh — Mosheh, the Israelite lawgiverNounpropermasculine singular
שָׁלַ֥חšā·laḥhad sentH7971
√ shâlach — to send away, for, or out (in a great variety of applications)VerbQalPerfectthird person masculine singular
šā·laḥ (Qal perfect of shâlach H7971), "had sent" — pluperfect in force: the sending lies back in 13:2-3, at the LORD's own command, which deepens the irony that the commissioned men became the chief slanderers.
לָת֣וּרlā·ṯūrto spy outH8446
√ tûwr — to meander (causatively, guide) about, especially fortrade or reconnoitringPreposition-lVerbQalInfinitive construct
לָת֣וּר (lā·ṯūr, tûwr H8446) — "to spy out / reconnoiter"; a rare verb (23 verses) that becomes a thread-word binding this passage to 13:16-32 and 14:6-7. To "tour" the land was a privilege; they abused the commission.
אֶת־’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Direct object marker
הָאָ֑רֶץhā·’ā·reṣthe landH776
√ ʼerets — the earth (at large, or partitively a land)ArticleNounfeminine singular
אֲשֶׁר־’ă·šer-whoH834
√ ʼăsher — who, which, what, thatPronounrelative
וַיָּשֻׁ֗בוּway·yā·šu·ḇūhad returnedH7725
√ shûwb — to turn back (hence, away) transitively or intransitively, literally or figuratively (not necessarily with the idea of return to the starting point)Conjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person masculine plural
כָּל־kāl-and made the wholeH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular construct
הָ֣עֵדָ֔הhā·‘ê·ḏāhcongregationH5712
√ ʻêdâh — a stated assemblage (specifically, a concourse, or generally, a family or crowd)ArticleNounfeminine singular
hā·‘ê·ḏāh — the congregation as a constituted assembly; the same body God has just condemned to die in the wilderness (v.35).
וַיִּלּוֹנוּway·yil·lō·nūgrumbleH3885
√ lûwn — to stop (usually over night)Conjunctive wawVerbHifilConsecutive imperfectthird person masculine plural
The Hifil way·yil·lō·nū marks deliberate agitation; murmuring against Moses is, throughout the wilderness narrative, murmuring against the LORD who sent him (Exodus 16:8).
עָלָיו֙‘ā·lāwagainst himH5921
√ ʻal — above, over, upon, or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applicationsPrepositionthird person masculine singular
אֶת־’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Direct object marker
לְהוֹצִ֥יאlə·hō·w·ṣîby bringing outH3318
√ yâtsâʼ — to go (causatively, bring) out, in a great variety of applications, literally and figuratively, direct and proximPreposition-lVerbHifilInfinitive construct
דִבָּ֖הḏib·bāha bad reportH1681
√ dibbâh — slanderNounfeminine singular
דִבָּ֖ה (ḏib·bāh H1681) — the load-bearing word of the unit: slander. Its rarity (9 occurrences) makes its reappearances elsewhere genuine verbal echoes, not coincidence.
עַל־‘al-aboutH5921
√ ʻal — above, over, upon, or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applicationsPreposition
הָאָֽרֶץ׃hā·’ā·reṣthe landH776
√ ʼerets — the earth (at large, or partitively a land)ArticleNounfeminine singular
The Voices✦ public domain+
made all the congregation to murmur against him; against, Moses that sent them; they murmured themselves, and made others murmur: by bringing up a slander upon the land
Gill's "slander" is the precise English of the rare Hebrew dibbâh (H1681), against the softer "bad report."
They sinned in bringing a slander upon the land of promise. Those greatly provoke God, who misrepresent religion, raise dislike in men's minds toward it, or give opportunity to those to do so, who seek occasion.
the spies who had induced the congregation to revolt, through their evil report concerning the inhabitants of Canaan, were smitten by a "stroke before Jehovah," i.e., by a sudden death, which proceeded in a visible manner from Jehovah Himself, whilst Joshua and Caleb remained alive.
37“those men who had brought out the bad report about the land—were…”+

37those men who had brought out the bad report about the land—were struck down by a plague before the LORD.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

hā·’ă·nā·šîm mō·w·ṣi·’ê rā·‘āh ḏib·baṯ- hā·’ā·reṣ way·yā·mu·ṯū bam·mag·gê·p̄āh lip̄·nê Yah·weh

Literal — word-for-word from the original

the-men who-had-brought-out the-evil report of-the-land — they-died by-the-plague before Yahweh.

Where the English smooths the original

  • בַּמַּגֵּפָ֖ה BSB "by a plague" narrows bam·mag·gê·p̄āh (maggêphâh H4046), which means literally a smiting, a stroke, a blow — not necessarily pestilence. Ellicott traces the same word through the ten blows on Egypt (Exod 9:14) and the sword (1 Sam 4:17). The Pulpit Commentary insists: "'Plague' has here its older signification of 'stroke.'" The text does not say how they died, only that God struck.
  • מוֹצִאֵ֥י "who had brought out" renders the Hifil participle mō·w·ṣi·’ê (yâtsâʼ H3318) in construct — "the bringers-out-of." Their defining identity is fixed by what they produced: they are, permanently, "the slander-bringers." The participle makes the verdict their very name.
  • לִפְנֵ֥י יְהוָֽה "before the LORD" is lip̄·nê Yah·weh — literally "to/at the face of Yahweh" (pânîym H6440). This is not a vague "in the LORD's sight" but a spatial, cultic claim: they fell at the tabernacle where the glory had just appeared (v.10). Poole, Benson, and Gill all locate the death in the presence of God, by His immediate hand.
  • רָעָ֑ה "the bad" / "evil" is rā·‘āh (raʻ H7451), here qualifying dibbâh: not just slander but evil slander — a doubling. The Berean places it as "the bad report"; the Hebrew piles the moral weight on, the report being both dibbâh (slander by nature) and rā‘āh (evil in kind).
Word by word9 · parsed+
הָֽאֲנָשִׁ֔יםhā·’ă·nā·šîmthose menH582
√ ʼĕnôwsh — a man in general (singly or collectively)ArticleNounmasculine plural
הָֽאֲנָשִׁ֔ים (hā·’ă·nā·šîm) — "the men," now with the article, picking up precisely the ten of v.36; the definite article narrows the judgment to them alone, exempting Joshua and Caleb (v.38).
מוֹצִאֵ֥יmō·w·ṣi·’êwho had brought outH3318
√ yâtsâʼ — to go (causatively, bring) out, in a great variety of applications, literally and figuratively, direct and proximVerbHifilParticiplemasculine plural construct
רָעָ֑הrā·‘āhthe badH7451
√ raʻ — bad or (as noun) evil (natural or moral)Adjectivefeminine singular
דִבַּת־ḏib·baṯ-reportH1681
√ dibbâh — slanderNounfeminine singular construct
ḏib·baṯ- — the construct form of dibbâh (H1681) again; "the slander of the land," the rare word repeated within two verses to seal the indictment.
הָאָ֖רֶץhā·’ā·reṣabout the landH776
√ ʼerets — the earth (at large, or partitively a land)ArticleNounfeminine singular
וַיָּמֻ֙תוּ֙way·yā·mu·ṯūwere struck downH4191
√ mûwth — to die (literally or figuratively)Conjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person masculine plural
וַיָּמֻ֙תוּ֙ (way·yā·mu·ṯū, mûwth H4191) — "and-they-died"; the consecutive imperfect drives the narrative blow home. Benson: "Death never misses his mark, nor takes any by oversight who were designed for life."
בַּמַּגֵּפָ֖הbam·mag·gê·p̄āhby a plagueH4046
√ maggêphâh — a pestilencePreposition-b, ArticleNounfeminine singular
בַּמַּגֵּפָ֖ה (maggêphâh H4046) — "the stroke"; the definite article ("the plague") is, as Cambridge notes, a Hebrew idiom rendered "a plague" in English. The Septuagint reads πληγή — a blow.
לִפְנֵ֥יlip̄·nêbeforeH6440
√ pânîym — the face (as the part that turns)Preposition-lNouncommon plural construct
יְהוָֽה׃Yah·wehthe LORDH3068
√ Yᵉhôvâh — Jehovah, Jewish national name of GodNounpropermasculine singular
יְהוָֽה (Yahweh, H3068) — the covenant name closes the verse: the death is attributed not to chance or disease but to the LORD Himself, lipnê — at His face.
The Voices✦ public domain+
The word maggephah, which is here rendered plague, denotes a stroke. In Exodus 9:14 it is used of the ten plagues of Egypt.
Ellicott's word-study fixes maggêphâh (H4046) as "stroke," not necessarily pestilence — the single most contested gloss in the verse. He goes on to conclude it denotes "sudden death, inflicted by the immediate visitation of the Lord."
"Plague" has here its older signification of "stroke," or visitation of God. We are not told what death they died, but it was sudden and exceptional enough to mark it as the direct consequence of their sinful conduct.
But Joshua and Caleb lived still — Death never misses his mark, nor takes any by oversight who were designed for life, though in the midst of those that are to die.
Benson anticipates v.38 — the discriminating precision of the stroke is itself the point.
died by a plague ] This is the meaning of the Heb. idiom, although the definite article is used. The Heb. maggçphâh denotes lit. ‘a smiting,’ as also do πληγή and plaga . It is used of any sudden catastrophe inflicted by Jehovah.
by some other sudden and extraordinary judgment, sent from the cloud in which God dwelt, and from whence he spake to Moses, and wherein his glory at this time appeared before all the people
Poole grounds "before the LORD" (lipnê Yahweh) concretely: the stroke issued from the glory-cloud at the tabernacle (cf. v.10), public and unmistakable.
38“Of those men who had gone to spy out the land, only Joshua son o…”+

38Of those men who had gone to spy out the land, only Joshua son of Nun and Caleb son of Jephunneh remained alive.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

min- hā·hêm hā·’ă·nā·šîm ha·hō·lə·ḵîm lā·ṯūr ’eṯ- hā·’ā·reṣ wî·hō·wō·šu·a‘ bin- nūn wə·ḵā·lêḇ ben- yə·p̄un·neh ḥā·yū

Literal — word-for-word from the original

But-Joshua son-of-Nun and-Caleb son-of-Jephunneh, of those men who-had-gone to-spy-out the-land, lived.

Where the English smooths the original

  • חָיוּ֙ BSB "remained alive" expands the bare verb ḥā·yū (châyâh H2421) — simply "they lived." The Hebrew sets a single word of life against the preceding way·yā·mu·ṯū ("they died," v.37): death and life in stark juxtaposition. Gill: "these remained alive, and continued many years after, and entered the good land."
  • וִיהוֹשֻׁ֣עַ "only Joshua" adds an interpretive "only" not in the consonants; the Hebrew is just wî·hō·wō·šu·a‘, "and-Joshua" (Yᵉhôwshûwaʻ H3091, "Yahweh-saves"). The exclusivity is real but supplied — the contrast structure (death for all the rest, life for these two) carries the "only," the grammar does not.
  • מִן־ הָהֵ֔ם הָאֲנָשִׁ֣ים "of those men" renders min-hā·hêm hā·’ă·nā·šîm — and here ʼă·nā·šîm is from ʼîysh (H376), a different word for "man" than the ʼĕnôwsh (H582) of v.36-37. The shift may be stylistic, but the Berean's flat "men" hides that the two survivors are reckoned individually (ʼîysh, man-as-person) out of the doomed collective.
Word by word14 · parsed+
מִן־min-OfH4480
√ min — properly, a part ofPreposition
הָהֵ֔םhā·hêmthoseH1992
√ hêm — they (only used when emphatic)ArticlePronounthird person masculine plural
הָאֲנָשִׁ֣יםhā·’ă·nā·šîmmenH376
√ ʼîysh — a man as an individual or a male personArticleNounmasculine plural
הַֽהֹלְכִ֖יםha·hō·lə·ḵîmwho had goneH1980
√ hâlak — to walk (in a great variety of applications, literally and figuratively)ArticleVerbQalParticiplemasculine plural
ha·hō·lə·ḵîm (hâlak H1980, participle), "who had gone" — Joshua and Caleb went on the very same reconnaissance; their faithfulness was not the absence of risk but the presence of faith on the same road.
לָת֥וּרlā·ṯūrto spy outH8446
√ tûwr — to meander (causatively, guide) about, especially fortrade or reconnoitringPreposition-lVerbQalInfinitive construct
אֶת־’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Direct object marker
הָאָֽרֶץ׃hā·’ā·reṣthe landH776
√ ʼerets — the earth (at large, or partitively a land)ArticleNounfeminine singular
וִיהוֹשֻׁ֣עַwî·hō·wō·šu·a‘only JoshuaH3091
√ Yᵉhôwshûwaʻ — Jehoshua (iConjunctive wawNounpropermasculine singular
וִיהוֹשֻׁ֣עַ (Joshua, H3091) — listed first; Gill notes that Joshua leads here while Caleb led in v.30 (and 13:30), "which shows that they were equal in dignity." The name itself, "Yahweh saves," stands as a quiet sign amid a chapter of judgment.
בִּן־bin-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
נ֔וּןnūnof NunH5126
√ Nûwn — Nun or Non, the father of JoshuaNounpropermasculine singular
nūn (Nun, H5126) — the patronymic fixes Joshua's identity and binds this verse verbally to the survival-rosters of Num 26:65 and 32:12.
וְכָלֵ֖בwə·ḵā·lêḇand CalebH3612
√ Kâlêb — Caleb, the name of three IsraelitesConjunctive wawNounpropermasculine singular
וְכָלֵ֖ב (Caleb, H3612), "and Caleb" — the Kâlêb/Yᵉphunneh/Yᵉhôwshûwaʻ triad is a recurring fixed formula across Numbers and Joshua, a verbal signature of the two faithful spies.
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
יְפֻנֶּ֑הyə·p̄un·nehof JephunnehH3312
√ Yᵉphunneh — Jephunneh, the name of two IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
חָיוּ֙ḥā·yūremained aliveH2421
√ châyâh — to live, whether literally or figurativelyVerbQalPerfectthird person common plural
חָיוּ֙ (ḥā·yū H2421) — "they lived"; the Qal perfect, common plural, closes the verse on life. One word answers the whole catalogue of death: the wilderness generation falls, but faith survives to inherit.
The Voices✦ public domain+
lived still; were not stricken with death, when the other spies were; though perhaps upon the very spot, and in the same place, and among them, when they were struck dead; but these remained alive, and continued many years after, and entered the good land, and possessed it.
Gill also notes that Joshua is here set first while Caleb leads in 14:30, "which shows that they were equal in dignity."
smitten by a "stroke before Jehovah," i.e., by a sudden death, which proceeded in a visible manner from Jehovah Himself, whilst Joshua and Caleb remained alive.
K&D frames v.38 as the deliberate exception that proves the judgment was discriminating, not indiscriminate.
those men that did bring up the evil report upon the land, died by the plague before the Lord—Ten of the spies struck dead on the spot—either by the pestilence or some other judgment. This great and appalling mortality clearly betokened the hand of the Lord.
JFB's "ten of the spies" supplies the count: of the twelve, ten fall and two — Joshua and Caleb — are spared.
39“And when Moses relayed these words to all the Israelites, the pe…”+

39And when Moses relayed these words to all the Israelites, the people mourned bitterly.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

mō·šeh ’eṯ- way·ḏab·bêr hā·’êl·leh had·də·ḇā·rîm ’el- kāl- bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl hā·‘ām way·yiṯ·’ab·bə·lū mə·’ōḏ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And-Moses spoke these words to all the-sons-of Israel, and-the-people mourned greatly.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וַיִּֽתְאַבְּל֥וּ "mourned" renders way·yiṯ·’ab·bə·lū — the Hitpael (reflexive-intensive) of ʼâbal (H56), "to bewail oneself, to put oneself into mourning." The reflexive stem stresses self-generated grief: they worked themselves into lamentation. Ellicott and Gill both press that this is sorrow for punishment, not the godly sorrow that repents of sin.
  • מְאֹֽד BSB "greatly" / "bitterly" translates mə·’ōḏ (mᵉʼôd H3966), whose root sense is vehemence, muchness, force. The mourning was violent and extreme — yet, the commentators note, extremity of feeling is not the same as truth of repentance. Loud grief, Henry warns, can be hell's own mourning.
  • וַיְדַבֵּ֤ר "relayed" / "told" is the Piel way·ḏab·bêr (dâbar H1696) — the intensive verb of authoritative speech, the same stem used of God's own oracles. Moses does not merely "tell"; he delivers the verdict. Cambridge identifies "these words" as the sentence of Num 14:27-35 — the doom of the wilderness generation.
  • הַדְּבָרִ֣ים "sayings" / "words" is had·də·ḇā·rîm (dâbâr H1697), "the words/matters." Paired with the verb dâbar it forms a tight figura etymologica ("Moses worded these words"). The repetition underscores that what crushes the people is not a rumor but the settled, spoken sentence of God.
Word by word12 · parsed+
מֹשֶׁה֙mō·šehAnd when MosesH4872
√ Môsheh — Mosheh, the Israelite lawgiverNounpropermasculine singular
אֶת־’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Direct object marker
וַיְדַבֵּ֤רway·ḏab·bêrrelayedH1696
√ dâbar — perhaps properly, to arrangeConjunctive wawVerbPielConsecutive imperfectthird person masculine singular
וַיְדַבֵּ֤ר (way·ḏab·bêr, Piel of dâbar H1696) — "and-he-spoke"; the verb of formal pronouncement. Moses transmits to the whole nation the sentence he received.
הָאֵ֔לֶּהhā·’êl·lehtheseH428
√ ʼêl-leh — these or thoseArticlePronouncommon plural
הַדְּבָרִ֣יםhad·də·ḇā·rîmwordsH1697
√ dâbâr — a wordArticleNounmasculine plural
had·də·ḇā·rîm (dâbâr H1697), "the words" — Cambridge: "i.e. those contained in Numbers 14:27-35," the forty-year sentence.
אֶֽל־’el-toH413
√ ʼêl — near, with or amongPreposition
כָּל־kāl-allH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular construct
בְּנֵ֖יbə·nêthe IsraelitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine plural construct
יִשְׂרָאֵ֑לyiś·rā·’êl. . .H3478
√ Yisrâʼêl — Jisrael, a symbolical name of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
הָעָ֖םhā·‘āmthe peopleH5971
√ ʻam — a people (as a congregated unit)ArticleNounmasculine singular
hā·‘ām (ʻam H5971), "the people" — the term shifts from the cultic ʻêdâh (v.36) to the plain ʻam, the people as a mass; the assembly that murmured now becomes the people that mourns.
וַיִּֽתְאַבְּל֥וּway·yiṯ·’ab·bə·lūmournedH56
√ ʼâbal — to bewailConjunctive wawVerbHitpaelConsecutive imperfectthird person masculine plural
וַיִּֽתְאַבְּל֥וּ (way·yiṯ·’ab·bə·lū, Hitpael of ʼâbal H56) — "and-they-mourned-themselves"; the reflexive stem marks grief turned inward, occasioned by loss, not by conviction. Henry: "Justly are murmurers made mourners."
מְאֹֽד׃mə·’ōḏbitterlyH3966
√ mᵉʼôd — properly, vehemence, iAdverb
מְאֹֽד (mᵉʼôd H3966), "greatly / vehemently" — the adverb measures intensity, not sincerity. Benson: "it was now too late. There was now no place for repentance."
The Voices✦ public domain+
And the people mourned greatly.— It appears from what follows that the sorrow which the Israelites felt was sorrow for the punishment which their sin had entailed, not godly sorrow for the sin itself.
The hinge of the verse: the kind of mourning, not its volume, is what Scripture weighs.
their sorrow seems to have been not a godly sorrow, or true repentance for sin committed, but a worldly sorrow that works death; it was not on account of the evil of sin, the pardon of which they did not seem to seek after, but on account of the evil that was likely to come to them by it.
Gill names the New-Testament category (2 Cor 7:10): worldly sorrow that works death, not the sorrow that works repentance.
And the people mourned greatly — But it was now too late. There was now no place for repentance. Such mourning as this there is in hell; but the tears will not quench the flames.
The announcement of the sentence plunged the people into deep mourning. But instead of bending penitentially under the judgment of God, they resolved to atone for their error, by preparing the next morning to go to the top of the mountain and press forward into Canaan.
K&D reads v.39 forward into the presumptuous assault of vv.40-45 — the mourning curdles into a second unbelief.

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.

Grand Commentary — the unit, read wholesynthesis · verify+

AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.

i. The slander and its stroke (vv. 36-37)

The unit turns on a single rare word. The Berean's "a bad report" (v.36) and "the evil report" (v.37) both render Hebrew dibbâh (H1681) — a noun that occurs only nine times in the whole Hebrew Bible and never means a neutral assessment. It means slander. John Gill renders it precisely — "a slander upon the land" — and Matthew Henry presses the moral weight: "They sinned in bringing a slander upon the land of promise. Those greatly provoke God, who misrepresent religion." The ten spies did not simply doubt; they defamed God's gift, and the causative verb lə·hō·w·ṣî ("to bring out," Hifil of yâtsâʼ) frames their report as something manufactured and published abroad. The penalty answers the crime in kind. They die bam·mag·gê·p̄āh, "by the plague" — but the word maggêphâh (H4046) means a stroke, a smiting, not necessarily pestilence. Charles Ellicott traces it through Egypt's ten blows (Exod 9:14) and the sword (1 Sam 4:17) and concludes it "denote[s] in this place sudden death, inflicted by the immediate visitation of the Lord." The Pulpit Commentary agrees: "'Plague' has here its older signification of 'stroke,'" and "we are not told what death they died." The phrase lip̄·nê Yahweh — "before the face of the LORD" — locates the blow at the tabernacle where the glory had just appeared (v.10). The hand is unmistakably God's; the manner is left blank.

ii. The two who lived (v. 38)

Against the catalogue of death, verse 38 sets one word of life: ḥā·yū (H2421), "they lived." Joseph Benson had already seen it coming in v.37 — "Death never misses his mark, nor takes any by oversight who were designed for life, though in the midst of those that are to die." John Gill notes the same precision: Joshua and Caleb "were not stricken with death, when the other spies were; though perhaps upon the very spot, and in the same place, and among them, when they were struck dead." Gill also catches a grammatical courtesy — "Here Joshua is set first, as Caleb is in Numbers 14:30; which shows that they were equal in dignity." Keil & Delitzsch read the survival as the deliberate counter-sign of the stroke: the spies were smitten "whilst Joshua and Caleb remained alive," proving the judgment discriminating, not indiscriminate. The name Yᵉhôwshûwaʻ — "Yahweh saves" — standing alive amid a chapter of dying is itself a quiet word of hope.

iii. The mourning that did not repent (v. 39)

Moses "worded these words" (a tight figura etymologica, way·ḏab·bêr ... had·də·ḇā·rîm) — the sentence of vv.27-35, as Cambridge identifies it — and "the people mourned greatly." But the verb is the Hitpael way·yiṯ·’ab·bə·lū (H56), self-generated grief, and the commentators are unanimous that volume is not virtue. Charles Ellicott: the sorrow was "for the punishment which their sin had entailed, not godly sorrow for the sin itself." John Gill reaches for Paul's category: "not a godly sorrow... but a worldly sorrow that works death" (cf. 2 Cor 7:10). Matthew Henry, whose comment spans the whole unit, distills it: "Justly are murmurers made mourners. If they had mourned for the sin, when they were faithfully reproved, the sentence had been prevented; but as they mourned for the judgment only, it did them no service." And Benson: "it was now too late. There was now no place for repentance." Keil & Delitzsch reads the grief forward — it does not bend "penitentially under the judgment of God" but curdles, the very next morning, into the presumptuous assault on the hill country (vv.40-45). The chapter thus stages two unbeliefs back to back: first the unbelief that would not go up, then the unbelief that goes up without God.

Read under Sola Scriptura — this tool’s own fallible reading (⚙)

Reading these four verses under Sola Scriptura, and offering this as my own fallible synthesis to be tested: the unit is a study in the two sorrows. The same word that condemns the spies — dibbâh, slander — and the same stroke that fells them are met, in the survivors, by a single verb, ḥā·yū, "they lived"; faith and slander receive wages exactly opposite. But the sharpest edge is verse 39. The people do grieve, and grieve mᵉʼôd, vehemently — yet Scripture's own narrative, by what it shows next (the doomed charge up the hill), exposes the grief as worldly. The text does not condemn strong feeling; it condemns sorrow aimed at consequences rather than at sin. Here is the warning the commentators, from Henry to Gill, all hear: tears over the judgment are not the same as repentance from the offense, and only the latter ever "prevents the sentence." The remedy this passage cries out for — a sorrow that turns from sin and a Savior who keeps the faithful alive in the midst of the dying — is named, in shadow, by the one whose very name stands surviving in verse 38.

The plague killed the slander; the slander had already killed the men — and the loudest mourning in the camp was not repentance, but regret. (an interpretive line, not Scripture)

Canonical Threads — out to the whole of Scripturecross-refs · verify+

AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.

The slander-word: dibbâh across the canon verbal / quotation — confirmed

The unit's defining noun, dibbâh (H1681, "slander, evil report"), is genuinely rare — nine occurrences in the whole Hebrew Bible — so its recurrences are real verbal links, not chance. It first names Joseph's report of his brothers (Gen 37:2), recoils on the spies in our verses (Num 13:32; 14:36-37), and becomes the watchword of the slandered righteous: "For I have heard the whispering of many" (Ps 31:13), "the whispering of many" against Jeremiah (Jer 20:10), the same word for the land made "an object of slander and gossip among the peoples" in the oracle of restoration (Ezek 36:3), and twice in Proverbs as the mark of a fool who utters or spreads it (Prov 10:18; 25:10). The same tongue-sin God strikes here is tracked, by this one rare word, from Genesis through the Psalms and Prophets to the Wisdom books — slander always slays, but here it is slander against God's own gift, and so it draws the stroke directly.

Numbers 14:36 · Numbers 13:32 · Genesis 37:2 · Psalm 31:13 · Jeremiah 20:10 · Ezekiel 36:3 · Proverbs 10:18 · Proverbs 25:10

basis: shared rare lexeme H1681 dibbâh (in only 9 vv canon-wide), confirmed by the Verifier across Gen 37:2, Num 13:32, Ps 31:13, Jer 20:10, Ezek 36:3, Prov 10:18, Prov 25:10 — that is, every other occurrence of the word; the low frequency (9) makes the verbal link secure rather than coincidental.

Numbers 13:32 — the slander the LORD remembers verbal / quotation — confirmed

Verse 36-37's indictment quotes the original crime verbatim in vocabulary: in Num 13:32 the spies "brought out" (yâtsâʼ) a "slander" (dibbâh) of the land they had "spied out" (tûwr). Our unit re-uses all three load-bearing words — dibbâh (H1681), yâtsâʼ (H3318), tûwr (H8446) — to fix the death-sentence to the precise sin. The judgment is not generic; it is the exact echo of the offense.

Numbers 14:36 · Numbers 14:37 · Numbers 13:32

basis: Verifier: shared lexemes H1681 dibbâh (9 vv), H8446 tûwr (23 vv), H3318 yâtsâʼ, H582 ʼĕnôwsh; the rare dibbâh + tûwr pairing is a tight verbal tie to the original report.

Joshua and Caleb: the survivors' roster structural / thematic — confirmed

Verse 38's naming of Yᵉhôwshûwaʻ son of Nûwn and Kâlêb son of Yᵉphunneh is a fixed formula that recurs whenever the wilderness sentence is rehearsed: Num 14:6 (their faithful witness), Num 14:30 and 26:65 (the only two of the old generation to enter), Num 32:12 (the men who "wholly followed the LORD"), and the Joshua inheritance-records (Josh 14:6, 13; 15:13). The shared proper names — Joshua (H3091), Caleb (H3612), Nun (H5126), Jephunneh (H3312) — are the verbal thread; but because the link is a repeated name-roster and not a quotation of speech, it is tiered structural, not verbal: the connection is the narrative pattern of "the two who lived," not a citation.

Numbers 14:38 · Numbers 14:6 · Numbers 14:30 · Numbers 26:65 · Numbers 32:12 · Joshua 14:6 · Joshua 14:13 · Joshua 15:13

basis: Verifier reports shared proper-name lexemes H3091 Yᵉhôwshûwaʻ, H3612 Kâlêb, H5126 Nûwn, H3312 Yᵉphunneh; proper-name repetition is a recurring narrative roster (the two faithful spies who inherit), not a verbal quotation — deliberately downgraded from the Verifier's auto-'verbal' tag.

Worldly grief versus godly sorrow structural / thematic — confirmed

The mourning of v.39 — vehement (mᵉʼôd) yet fruitless — is the Old Testament instance of the distinction Paul will draw: "Godly sorrow brings repentance that leads to salvation... but worldly sorrow brings death" (2 Cor 7:10). John Gill makes the link explicit in his comment, naming Israel's grief "a worldly sorrow that works death." The connection is thematic, not verbal: it crosses Testaments (Hebrew ʼâbal H56 cannot share a Strong's number with Greek λύπη), so it is tiered thematic and argued from the shared category of two sorrows, one barren.

Numbers 14:39 · 2 Corinthians 7:10

basis: cross-Testament (Hebrew↔Greek): no shared Strong's number is possible; the link is the shared theological motif of repentance-grief versus regret-grief, named explicitly by Gill on this verse and stated by Paul in 2 Cor 7:10.

Christ in the Unittypology · verify+

AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.

The name that lived: Joshua (Yᵉhôwshûwaʻ) amid the dying widely-held

Of the twelve spies only two survive, and the one set first is Yᵉhôwshûwaʻ (H3091) — "Yahweh saves" — the Hebrew name behind the Greek Ἰησοῦς, Jesus. Hebrews 4:8 makes the typology explicit: "For if Joshua had given them rest, God would not have spoken later about another day." The Joshua who alone (with Caleb) lives through the stroke of judgment to lead Israel into the inheritance is, in ancient and Reformation reading, a figure of the greater Joshua who passes through judgment unscathed and brings His people into the true rest. The shadow is in the surviving name itself; the substance is in the One it points to.

Numbers 14:38 · Hebrews 4:8

The two sorrows and the Cross novel

Verse 39 stages a mourning that grieves the penalty but never turns from the sin — what Gill calls "a worldly sorrow that works death." The gospel answer is the godly sorrow that "leads to salvation without regret" (2 Cor 7:10), made possible only because Another bore the stroke (maggêphâh) the slanderers and murmurers deserved. "He was pierced for our transgressions... and by His stripes we are healed" (Isa 53:5). Where Israel's tears could not "quench the flames" (Henry, Benson), the blood of Christ secures the repentance that the wilderness generation could not produce. This is a typological-thematic reading, offered as such: the text does not name Christ, but the pattern of a deserved stroke and a sorrow that cannot save points beyond itself.

Numbers 14:37 · Numbers 14:39 · Isaiah 53:5 · 2 Corinthians 7:10

Apparatus & Provenance

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:

Honesty notes for this unit. (1) Several biblehub voices attached to vv.36-39 are misplaced fragments: the Albert Barnes entry repeated under every verse ("My breach of promise... found elsewhere only in Job 30:10") is his note on Numbers 14:34, not on these verses, and the Geneva and JFB entries are largely re-printed verse-lemmas; the JFB sentence ("Ten of the spies struck dead on the spot") was used only for its one substantive datum, the count of ten; none of the lemma-fragments were used as voices, since doing so would misrepresent their object. (2) The Berean text field in the source input.json was empty for all four verses; the literal renderings here are built directly from the Hebrew word-parse (surface/translit/Strong's/parse), not from a stored English line. (3) The cause of the spies' death is genuinely undetermined by the text: maggêphâh (H4046) means "stroke," and Ellicott, the Pulpit Commentary, and Cambridge all decline to specify pestilence; Gill records (and does not endorse) later rabbinic legends of worms — these are recorded as folklore, not as the verse's claim. (4) The Joshua/Caleb roster link is downgraded from the Verifier's automatic "verbal" tag to "structural," because shared proper names constitute a recurring narrative pattern, not a quotation. (5) The 2 Cor 7:10 and Hebrews 4:8 / Isaiah 53:5 connections are cross-Testament and so cannot rest on shared Strong's numbers; they are tiered thematic/typological and argued, not asserted. (6) The dibbâh (H1681) canon thread lists all eight other occurrences of this nine-occurrence word (Gen 37:2; Num 13:32; Ps 31:13; Jer 20:10; Ezek 36:3; Prov 10:18, 25:10), each Verifier-confirmed; the Ezek 36:3 sense is the land/people made an object of slander, glossed accordingly rather than forced into the spies' exact direction. Per the standing rule, no Joshua 1:5 → Hebrews 13:5 flag applies, as this unit is in Numbers and contains no 1:5.

= 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)