The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Censers Reserved for Holy Use
Numbers 16:36–40 — The Censers Reserved for Holy Use. 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.
36Then the LORD said to Moses,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh way·ḏab·bêr ’el- mō·šeh lê·mōr
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-spoke Yahweh to Moses, saying:
Where the English smooths the original
And the Lord spake unto Moses,.... Immediately after these men were consumed by fire from him; out of the same cloud from whence that proceeded, he spoke
The fire came out from the sanctuary or the altar.Barnes locates the fire of v. 35 — the judgment this oracle answers — at the sanctuary itself, not from heaven generally.
there came out a fire from the Lord—that is, from the cloud. This seems to describe the destruction of Korah and those Levites who with him aspired to the functions of the priesthood.JFB read v. 35 as naming Korah among the consumed, an inference the text leaves implicit until v. 40.
God is jealous of the honour of his own institutions, and will not have them invaded. The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord.Henry's note runs across the whole paragraph 16:35-40; this clause states its governing theme.
37“Tell Eleazar son of Aaron the priest to remove the censers from the flames and to scatter the coals far away, because the censers are holy.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ĕ·mōr ’el- ’el·‘ā·zār ben- ’a·hă·rōn hak·kō·hên wə·yā·rêm ’eṯ- ham·maḥ·tōṯ mib·bên haś·śə·rê·p̄āh wə·’eṯ- zə·rêh- hā·’êš hā·lə·’āh kî qā·ḏê·šū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Say to Eleazar son-of Aaron the-priest, and-let-him-lift-up the-censers from-between the-burning, and the-fire scatter far-away; for they-are-holy.
Where the English smooths the original
Aaron was shortly to be employed in an act of sacerdotal ministration and intercession, for which he would have become disqualified had he been ceremonially defiled by contact with things pertaining to the dead.
when they had once been employed for a sacred purpose, and had been in contact with sacred incense, they had acquired (according to a very wide-spread Semitic notion) a new quality of sacredness, which made it dangerous and wrong to use them in future for secular purposes.Cambridge frames the holiness as a transferable, almost contagious quality — the same logic at work in Leviticus 6:27 and Haggai 2:12.
From amongst the charred and smouldering corpses. Scatter thou the fire yonder; for they are hallowed. The censers had been made holy even by that sacrilegious dedication, and must never revert to any common usesThe Pulpit (rendering the Septuagint) fixes "out of the burning" as the burned bodies, not merely the embers, and states why the pans can never return to common use.
and thus the Lord answered the prayer of Moses, that he would not have respect to their offering
38As for the censers of those who sinned at the cost of their own lives, hammer them into sheets to overlay the altar, for these were presented before the LORD, and so have become holy. They will serve as a sign to the Israelites.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’êṯ maḥ·tō·wṯ hā·’êl·leh ha·ḥaṭ·ṭā·’îm bə·nap̄·šō·ṯām wə·‘ā·śū ’ō·ṯām riq·qu·‘ê p̄a·ḥîm ṣip·pui lam·miz·bê·aḥ kî- hiq·rî·ḇum lip̄·nê- Yah·weh way·yiq·dā·šū wə·yih·yū lə·’ō·wṯ liḇ·nê yiś·rā·’êl
Literal — word-for-word from the original
The-censers of-these sinners against-their-own-souls — and-they-shall-make them hammered-plates, an-overlay for-the-altar; for they-presented-them before Yahweh, and-they-became-holy; and-they-shall-be for-a-sign to-the-sons-of Israel.
Where the English smooths the original
The thought is not that they had ruined their souls, but that they had forfeited their lives. The Pentateuch does not contemplate any consequences of sin beyond physical death.
Some have seen an allusion to these words in Hebrews 12:3 , ‘such contradiction of sinners against themselves’Cambridge notes a proposed (and contested) NT echo: Hebrews 12:3, on Westcott and Hort's reading, may glance at "sinners against themselves" — a cross-Testament link argued, not asserted.
for doing which Uzziah, though a king, was punished, 2 Chronicles 26:18Gill draws the long arc of the sign: the same boundary that killed Korah's company struck even a king, Uzziah, for usurping the censer (2 Chronicles 26).
Of God's judgments against rebels.The Geneva marginal gloss on "a sign": the plated altar is a standing testimony of God's judgments against rebels.
39So Eleazar the priest took the bronze censers brought by those who had been burned up, and he had them hammered out to overlay the altar,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’el·‘ā·zār hak·kō·hên ’êṯ way·yiq·qaḥ han·nə·ḥō·šeṯ maḥ·tō·wṯ ’ă·šer hiq·rî·ḇū haś·śə·ru·p̄îm way·raq·qə·‘ūm ṣip·pui lam·miz·bê·aḥ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-took Eleazar the-priest the-bronze censers which had-presented those-who-were-burned, and-they-hammered-them an-overlay for-the-altar,
Where the English smooths the original
this additional covering of broad plates not only rendered it doubly secure against the fire, but served as a warning beacon to deter all from future invasions of the priesthood.
by this it appears that these censers were different from those of Aaron and his sons, for theirs were silver onesGill, citing the Mishnah (Yoma, Tamid), distinguishes the rebels' bronze pans from the priests' silver and the high priest's gold censer of the Day of Atonement.
Or, which they who were burnt had brought nigh ( i.e. unto the Lord).Ellicott corrects "offered" to "brought nigh" — the verb is qârab/qârab-Hifil, the presenting-near that consecrated the pans.
40just as the LORD commanded him through Moses. This was to be a reminder to the Israelites that no outsider who is not a descendant of Aaron should approach to offer incense before the LORD, lest he become like Korah and his followers.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ă·šer Yah·weh wə·lō- dib·ber bə·yaḏ- mō·šeh lōw zik·kā·rō·wn liḇ·nê yiś·rā·’êl lə·ma·‘an lō- zār ’îš ’ă·šer hū lō miz·ze·ra‘ ’a·hă·rōn yiq·raḇ lə·haq·ṭîr qə·ṭō·reṯ lip̄·nê Yah·weh yih·yeh ḵə·qō·raḥ wə·ḵa·‘ă·ḏā·ṯōw ka·’ă·šer
Literal — word-for-word from the original
just-as Yahweh commanded him by-the-hand-of Moses — a-memorial for-the-sons-of Israel, so-that no stranger who is not from-the-seed-of Aaron should-draw-near to-burn incense before Yahweh, that-he-not-be like-Korah and-like-his-company; just-as Yahweh spoke to-him by-the-hand-of Moses.
Where the English smooths the original
that no stranger which is not of the seed of Aaron come near to offer incense before the Lord; not only any Gentile but any Israelite, and not any Israelite only, but any Levite
which is not of the seed of Aaron ] i.e. a priest, and not a Levite as Korah wasCambridge nails the irony: Korah was a Levite, already near the holy things, yet still a stranger to the priesthood he grasped at.
The Apostle Jude warns Christians by the same example against the profanation of Divine ordinancesEllicott reaches to Jude 11 ("the gainsaying of Korah") — a New Testament use of this episode as standing warning, the cross-Testament thread argued below.
That he do not meet with the same fate as Korah.Poole's gloss matches Keil & Delitzsch's grammar exactly: "like Korah" = sharing Korah's destruction.
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 on a seam of judgment. John Gill fixes the timing: the LORD's word came "immediately after these men were consumed by fire from him; out of the same cloud from whence that proceeded, he spoke" (Gill, Exposition). The Hebrew is verb-first — way·ḏab·bêr, "and-he-spoke" — and the verb is dibbēr, the weightier word of formal decree, not the lighter ʼâmar that the English "said" suggests. Albert Barnes and Jamieson, Fausset & Brown agree the fire of v. 35 issued "from the cloud," the sanctuary itself; the same source that destroyed now legislates. Matthew Henry states the governing theme of the whole paragraph: "God is jealous of the honour of his own institutions, and will not have them invaded" (Henry, Concise Commentary). The wording weaving these is the machine's; the quotations are verbatim.
The command is precise and strange: the censers of dead rebels are qā·ḏê·šū — they "have become holy" — and so must be lifted up (wə·yā·rêm, Hifil of rûwm, "cause to rise") out of the cremation. Eleazar, not Aaron, performs it; Ellicott, JFB, Poole, Gill and the Pulpit Commentary all agree the high priest is spared contact with the dead. The Cambridge Bible names the principle at work — once the pans "had been in contact with sacred incense, they had acquired (according to a very wide-spread Semitic notion) a new quality of sacredness, which made it dangerous and wrong to use them in future for secular purposes" — citing Leviticus 6:27 and Haggai 2:12 for the same logic of transferable holiness. The Pulpit Commentary confirms "out of the burning" by the Septuagint's ἐκ μέσου τῶν κατακεκαυμένων, "from amongst the charred and smouldering corpses." These are the machine's connections; the quotations are the sources' own.
The rebels are ha·ḥaṭ·ṭā·’îm bə·nap̄·šō·ṯām — "the sinners against their own souls." The Pulpit Commentary presses the sense: "The thought is not that they had ruined their souls, but that they had forfeited their lives. The Pentateuch does not contemplate any consequences of sin beyond physical death." Their bronze pans (Gill insists on the metal: "different from those of Aaron and his sons, for theirs were silver ones") are hammered flat — way·raq·qə·‘ūm, beaten out by skilled workmen at Eleazar's order — into an overlay (ṣippui, a rare word of five occurrences) for the altar. Ellicott draws the lesson: "the sacrilegious act of Korah and his company was made the occasion of a permanent warning against all similar profanation of holy things," and JFB call the plating a "warning beacon to deter all from future invasions of the priesthood." The Geneva Bible's gloss on "a sign" is the tersest: "Of God's judgments against rebels." The connections among these voices are the machine's; each quotation is verbatim.
The closing verse makes the altar a zikkārôn, a memorial — re-naming the "sign" of v. 38 with the heaviest word for sacred remembrance. Its purpose: that no zār ("stranger") not of Aaron's seed should yiq·raḇ ("draw near," the same root qârab that consecrated the pans) to burn incense — lest he be kə·qōraḥ, "like Korah." Keil & Delitzsch supply the grammar that carries the verse's whole force: "hāyāh with kə signifies, 'to experience the same fate as' another" — to be like Korah is to share his end. Matthew Poole renders it identically: "That he do not meet with the same fate as Korah." The Cambridge Bible turns the knife: the stranger here is even a Levite, "a priest, and not a Levite as Korah was" — Korah, already near, perished for grasping at nearer. Gill widens the warning across all Israel, even to a king: "for doing which Uzziah, though a king, was punished, 2 Chronicles 26:18." The weaving is the machine's; the quotations are the sources' own.
Read under Sola Scriptura, and tested as fallible: the deepest irony of this passage is that the rebels were right about one thing. They claimed "all the congregation are holy" (16:3) — and God does not deny it; He extends it. He takes their censers, the very instruments of their rebellion, declares them holy, and welds them onto the altar where the whole nation's offerings ascend. The proof of presumption becomes a permanent fixture of true worship. Holiness, the chapter insists, is not seized by claim but conferred by God's drawing-near (qârab) — the same root names both the consecrating presentation of the pans (v. 38) and the forbidden approach of the stranger (v. 40). The line between worship and sacrilege is not the act of coming near, which both do, but whether God has called you to it. The censers preach this every day: melted into the altar, they say that what man grasps at his own peril, God can sanctify and use — but only on His terms, and only through the priest He appoints. (This is the machine's reading; weigh it against the Word.)
The instruments of rebellion, beaten flat, become the skin of the altar — God answering the claim "we are all holy" not with denial but with a memorial in bronze.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The keyword machtâh ("censer / fire-pan," H4289) runs from the Korah test through the whole sanctuary inventory. The challenge of 16:6 ("take censers"), the trial of 16:17-18 (every man his censer before the LORD), and these verses form one continuous narrative; the same word reaches out to the tabernacle's own bronze fire-pans (Exodus 27:3; 38:3) and the altar furnishings of Numbers 4:14. The Verifier records machtâh as shared across all of these — a moderately rare lexeme (nineteen verses), strong enough to bind the passages structurally but not, alone, to claim quotation.
Numbers 16:6 · Numbers 16:17 · Numbers 16:18 · Exodus 27:3 · Exodus 38:3 · Numbers 4:14
basis: shared lexeme H4289 machtâh (in 19 vv), with H175 ʼAhărôwn and H7126 qârab across the Korah-test verses (16:6, 16:17, 16:18); H4196 mizbêach across the tabernacle inventory (Ex 27:3, 38:3, Num 4:14) — a recurring keyword, not a quotation
The rare noun ṣippui ("overlay / plating," H6826) occurs in only five verses of the Hebrew Bible. Two of them stand face to face. Here the rebels' bronze is beaten into a holy ṣippui for the altar (v. 38); in Isaiah 30:22 the penitent nation defiles and casts away the ṣippui of its silver and gold idols ("you will scatter them — zârâh — as an unclean thing"). Strikingly, this same pericope holds both of Isaiah 30:22's load-bearing words: ṣippui falls in v. 38, and zârâh, "to scatter" (H2219), is the very verb of v. 37 — "scatter the fire far away." The Verifier confirms Isaiah 30:22 carries both lexemes in a single verse, while Numbers spreads them across the two adjacent verses of this command. The motion is exactly reversed — one overlay sanctified onto the altar, one cast off as filth — yet the vocabulary is shared. Because ṣippui is so rare (five verses), the verbal link rests on it alone; the zârâh overlap (more common, 38 verses) reinforces but does not, by itself, carry the tier.
Isaiah 30:22 · Numbers 16:37 · Exodus 38:17 · Exodus 38:19
basis: shared rare lexeme H6826 tsippûwy (only 5 vv) ties Numbers 16:38 to Isaiah 30:22 — the low frequency carries the verbal tier on its own; H2219 zârâh (38 vv) is the secondary overlap, in Numbers 16:37 and again in Isaiah 30:22, which holds both words in one verse
The episode rhymes deliberately with Nadab and Abihu (Leviticus 10:1), who took "censers" (machtâh) and offered "strange fire" (ʼêsh) before the LORD and were consumed by fire — the same three lexemes (machtâh, ʼêsh, ʼAhărôwn) the Verifier finds shared with this unit. Two foils show the legitimate use of the very same instrument. In Leviticus 16:12 the high priest, on the Day of Atonement, rightly takes a censer of coals (machtâh, ʼêsh) into the holy place; and in the very next pericope, Numbers 16:46, Aaron is commanded to take a censer with fire from the altar to make atonement and stay the plague — "he ran into the midst of the assembly… and stood between the dead and the living." The Verifier records machtâh, ʼêsh, and ʼAhărôwn shared with that verse too. Same pan, same coals: when a stranger grasps it, fire devours; when the appointed priest bears it, fire is checked and the people live. This is structural and thematic — the shared words are the cultic furniture, not a quotation.
Leviticus 10:1 · Leviticus 16:12 · Numbers 16:46 · Numbers 16:38
basis: shared lexemes H4289 machtâh, H784 ʼêsh, H175 ʼAhărôwn (Lev 10:1 and Num 16:46) and H4289 machtâh, H784 ʼêsh, H4196 mizbêach (Lev 16:12) — recurring cultic vocabulary marking the same boundary in both its deadly and its atoning use, no quotation claimed
Ellicott reads v. 40 forward to Jude 11, where false teachers "perished in the gainsaying of Korah." Jude makes this very episode a standing type of those who reject divinely appointed authority. But the link cannot be verbal: Jude is Greek and Numbers is Hebrew, so no shared Strong's lexeme exists, and the Verifier returns no shared original-language word. The connection is typological — an ancient and widely-held figural reading, attested by the New Testament author himself — argued, not asserted by lexical overlap. We tier it structural/typological accordingly, never "verbal."
Numbers 16:40 · Jude 1:11
basis: cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew): no shared Strong's number is possible; the link is Jude's own explicit use of Korah as a type — ancient and widely-held, but figural, so tiered typological rather than verbal
The Cambridge Bible notes that "some have seen an allusion to these words in Hebrews 12:3, 'such contradiction of sinners against themselves' (Westcott and Hort's text)." The phrase here — ha·ḥaṭ·ṭā·’îm bə·nap̄·šō·ṯām, "the sinners against their souls" — is suggestive, but the proposed echo rests on a disputed Greek reading ("against themselves" vs. the majority "against him") and is offered only tentatively even by Cambridge. As a cross-Testament link it can carry no shared Strong's lexeme, and its very provenance is contested. We flag it for verification rather than assert it.
Numbers 16:38 · Hebrews 12:3
basis: cross-Testament with disputed provenance: the alleged allusion depends on a contested variant in Hebrews 12:3 (Westcott-Hort 'against themselves'); Cambridge offers it only as 'some have seen,' so the link is flagged, not confirmed
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The verse forbids any zār ("stranger") to yiq·raḇ ("draw near," qârab) to offer incense; only Aaron's seed may. The whole episode draws a hard line around who may come near to God — and the same logic, the New Testament argues, finds its end in one Priest. Hebrews makes Christ the High Priest "after the order of Melchizedek" through whom alone we "draw near" (Hebrews 7:25; 10:22) — the antitype of the boundary Korah died to cross. Where the stranger's nearness brought fire, Christ's nearness brings access; the incense that no rebel could rightly offer rises now as His intercession. This reading is widely-held in the church's typology of the priesthood.
Numbers 16:40 · Hebrews 7:25 · Hebrews 10:22
That the censers of the condemned are not destroyed but declared holy and welded onto the altar is, read christologically, a parable of grace: the instruments of rebellion are taken up, transformed by contact with the sacred, and made a permanent part of the place of atonement. The pattern — what was forfeited to judgment becomes, in God's hand, a fixture of His worship — points toward the deeper reversal in which the cross, an instrument of condemnation, becomes the altar of the world's atonement. This is a more figural reading, offered as the machine's own, not as the unanimous voice of the tradition.
Numbers 16:38 · Numbers 16:39
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 specific to this unit. (1) Unit numbering. The unit id is Numbers_16-36 and covers Numbers 16:36-40 in the Berean/English versification; some commentaries (Keil & Delitzsch, and several headers) number these verses 17:1-5, following the Hebrew chapter division. The same words, two numbering systems — Keil & Delitzsch's note opens "(Or Numbers 17:1-5)" for exactly this reason.
(2) No 1:5 verse. This unit contains no verse 1:5, so the mandatory Joshua 1:5 → Hebrews 13:5 flag does not apply here.
(3) Textual seams. The Cambridge Bible flags two divergences in the priestly text: the LXX of v. 38 reads "because they made holy the fire-pans," and the words "for they are holy" may belong with v. 38 rather than v. 37; Cambridge further argues the doubled note that the bronze altar was "already covered with bronze" (Exodus 27:2; 38:2) is "another indication that the priestly writings are not all from one pen." These are the source's critical judgments, recorded here, not endorsed.
(4) Cross-Testament limits. Both NT links (Jude 11; Hebrews 12:3) are Greek↔Hebrew and therefore cannot share a Strong's lexeme; the Jude link rests on Jude's own explicit typology (ancient/widely-held), the Hebrews 12:3 link on a disputed variant (flagged). Neither is tiered "verbal."
(5) Voices. Every ✦ voice is a verbatim contiguous excerpt of the public-domain commentary supplied in the source file; ends are trimmed to a pointed quotation but no word is altered, reordered, or stitched. The ⚙ literal renderings, divergence notes, word-notes, movements, threads, and Christ-readings are machine-generated, fallible, and to be weighed against the Word.
✦ = 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)