The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Murmuring and Plague
Numbers 16:41–50 — Murmuring and Plague. 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.
41The next day the whole congregation of Israel grumbled against Moses and Aaron, saying, “You have killed the LORD’s people!”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mim·mā·ḥo·rāṯ kāl- ‘ă·ḏaṯ bə·nê- yiś·rā·’êl way·yil·lō·nū ‘al- mō·šeh wə·‘al- ’a·hă·rōn lê·mōr ’at·tem hă·mit·tem ’eṯ- Yah·weh ‘am
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And on the morrow all the congregation of the sons of Israel murmured against Moses and against Aaron, saying, "You — you have put to death the people of YHWH."
Where the English smooths the original
It is difficult to conceive of a more striking illustration of the depravity of the human heart than is afforded by this outbreak of the same spirit of rebellion which had been so signally punished on the preceding day.On the astonishing speed of relapse — the same rebellion, one day after its signal punishment.
Ye have killed; you, who should have preserved them, and interceded for them, have pulled down God’s wrath upon them, for the maintenance of your own authority and interest. The people of the Lord; so they call those wicked wretches, and rebels against God; which shows the power of passion and prejudice to corrupt men’s judgment.On the inverted charge and the renaming of rebels as "the people of the Lord" — passion corrupting judgment.
The judgment upon the company of Korah had filled the people round about with terror and dismay, but it had produced no change of heart in the congregation that had risen up against its leaders. The next morning the whole congregation began to murmur against Moses and Aaron, and to charge them with having slain the people of Jehovah.On terror without repentance: the judgment dismayed but did not change the heart of the congregation.
They had in truth forfeited their own lives, and Moses and Aaron had no more part in their death than St. Peter had in the death of Ananias and Sapphira. But it was easy to represent the matter as a personal conflict between two parties, in which the one had triumphed by destroying the other.On the false framing of a divine judgment as a partisan victory — with the Ananias-and-Sapphira parallel (Acts 5).
What a strange exhibition of popular prejudice and passion—to blame the leaders for saving the rebels! Yet Moses and Aaron interceded for the people—the high priest perilling his own life in doing good to that perverse race.On the perversity of blaming the very mediators who saved them — the high priest risking his life for a perverse race (anticipating Aaron's run into the plague in v.47).
42But when the congregation gathered against them, Moses and Aaron turned toward the Tent of Meeting, and suddenly the cloud covered it and the glory of the LORD appeared.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·hî hā·‘ê·ḏāh bə·hiq·qā·hêl ‘al- mō·šeh wə·‘al- ’a·hă·rōn way·yip̄·nū ’el- ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ wə·hin·nêh he·‘ā·nān ḵis·sā·hū kə·ḇō·wḏ Yah·weh way·yê·rā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And it came to pass, when the congregation was gathered against Moses and against Aaron, that they turned toward the Tent of Meeting, and behold, the cloud covered it, and the glory of YHWH appeared.
Where the English smooths the original
And, behold, the cloud covered it.— The cloud had probably been removed on the preceding day when the rebels were consumed, and was now again restored in order to encourage Moses and Aaron.On the cloud's return as a token of encouragement to the threatened mediators.
when the congregation was gathered against Moses and against Aaron,.... To kill them, as the Targum of Jonathan adds; who, perhaps, upon uttering their murmurs, made up to them, and by their gestures showed an intention to murder them: that they looked toward the tabernacle of the congregation; either the people did, to see whether they could observe any appearance of the displeasure of God against them; or rather Moses and Aaron looked that way for help and deliverance in this extreme danger, knowing there was no salvation for them but of the LordOn the murderous intent of the mob and Moses and Aaron turning to the tabernacle for the only deliverance.
The cloud covered it. N ot soaring above it, as usual, but lying close down upon it, to signify that the presence of the Lord had passed in some special sense into the tabernacle (see on Numbers 12:5, 10).On the cloud lying close down, not soaring — a special, intensified manifestation of the Presence.
we must suppose that at this time the cloud covered it in a fuller and much more conspicuous sense, just as it had done when the tabernacle was first erected ( Numbers 9:15 ; Exodus 40:34 ), and that at the same time the glory of God burst forth from the dark cloud in a miraculous splendour.On the inauguration-grade theophany: the cloud and glory as at the tabernacle's first rearing (Exodus 40:34).
43Then Moses and Aaron went to the front of the Tent of Meeting,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mō·šeh wə·’a·hă·rōn way·yā·ḇō ’el- pə·nê ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And Moses and Aaron came to the front of the Tent of Meeting.
Where the English smooths the original
To hear what God, who now appeared, would say to him.On the purpose of the approach: to receive the word of the God who has just appeared.
And Moses and Aaron came before the tabernacle of the congregation. Whose tent was not far from it, about which the people of Israel were gathered; and from whence they came to the tabernacle, both for shelter and safety, and for advice and instruction how to behave in this crisis; they did not go into it, but stood before it; the Lord being in the cloud over it, they stood in the door of itOn the men standing before, not within, the tent — for shelter and for instruction in the crisis.
Thereupon they both went into the court of (פּני אל, as in Leviticus 9:5 ) the tabernacle, and God commanded them to rise up (הרמּוּ, Niphal of רמם equals רוּם; see Ges. 65, Anm. 5) out of this congregation, which He would immediately destroy.On the men entering the court and the grammar of the command that follows (the Nifal of rāmam).
44and 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 YHWH spoke to Moses, saying,
Where the English smooths the original
And the Lord spake unto Moses,.... Out of the cloud: saying; as follows.On the source of the word: the LORD speaking out of the cloud just manifested.
And the LORD spake unto Moses, saying, EXEGETICAL (ORIGINAL LANGUAGES) Numbers 16:44The Geneva marginal note retains the verse as the hinge into the command of judgment; verbatim as printed.
God commanded them to rise up (הרמּוּ, Niphal of רמם equals רוּם; see Ges. 65, Anm. 5) out of this congregation, which He would immediately destroy. But they fell upon their faces in prayer, as in Numbers 16:21-22 .On the content of the divine speech here introduced: the command to withdraw before an immediate destruction (carried in vv.45).
45“Get away from this congregation so that I may consume them in an instant.” And Moses and Aaron fell facedown.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
hê·rōm·mū mit·tō·wḵ haz·zōṯ hā·‘ê·ḏāh wa·’ă·ḵal·leh ’ō·ṯām kə·rā·ḡa‘ way·yip·pə·lū ‘al- pə·nê·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
"Get yourselves up from the midst of this congregation, that I may consume them as in a moment." And they fell upon their faces.
Where the English smooths the original
They fell upon their faces - In intercession for the people; compare Numbers 16:22 ; Numbers 14:5 .On the prostration as intercessory, in the chain of mediatorial pleas (16:22; 14:5).
To beg pardon and mercy for the people, as they oft did; thus rendering good to them for evil, which the people requited with evil for their kindness.On the moral of the prostration: good rendered for evil, repaid with evil.
and they fell upon their faces; in prayer, as the Targums of Jonathan and Jerusalem; and so Aben Ezra observes, it was to pray to deprecate the wrath of God, and to implore his pardoning mercy for this sinful people; which shows what an excellent temper and disposition these men were of, to pray for them that had so despitefully used them as to charge them with murder, and were about to commit it on them; see Matthew 5:44 .On the men praying for those who would murder them — with the Sermon-on-the-Mount echo (Matthew 5:44).
Get you up. הֵרֹמּוּ , from רָמַם . The command is substantially the same as that in verse 21. Since it was not obeyed, we must conclude (as before) that it was not intended to be obeyed. They fell on their faces. In horror and dismay. No doubt they would have interceded (as in verse 22), but that Moses perceived through some Divine intimation that wrath had gone forth, and that some more prevailing form of mediation than mere words must be sought.On the rare verb rāmam, the un-obeyed command, and Moses' turn from word-prayer to a more prevailing mediation.
46Moses said to Aaron, “Take your censer, place fire from the altar in it, and add incense. Go quickly to the congregation and make atonement for them, because wrath has come out from the LORD; the plague has begun.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mō·šeh way·yō·mer ’el- ’a·hă·rōn qaḥ ’eṯ- ham·maḥ·tāh wə·ṯen- ’êš ‘ā·le·hā ham·miz·bê·aḥ wə·śîm mê·‘al qə·ṭō·reṯ wə·hō·w·lêḵ mə·hê·rāh ’el- hā·‘ê·ḏāh wə·ḵap·pêr ‘ă·lê·hem kî- haq·qe·ṣep̄ yā·ṣā mil·lip̄·nê Yah·weh han·nā·ḡep̄ hê·ḥêl
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And Moses said to Aaron, "Take the censer and put fire on it from the altar, and lay incense, and go quickly to the congregation and make atonement for them, for the wrath has gone out from before YHWH; the plague has begun."
Where the English smooths the original
Take a censer.— Better, the censer. The reference appears to be to the golden censer of the high priest. Incense was an emblem of prayer, and a figure of the intercession and mediation of Christ. (See Psalm 141:2 ; Revelation 8:3-4 .)On the high priest's censer and incense as the figure of Christ's intercession (Psalm 141:2; Revelation 8).
A censer - Rather, the censer. i. e. that of the high priest which was used by him on the great Day of Atonement: compare Leviticus 16:12 ; Hebrews 9:4 .On the definite article: the high priest's own Day-of-Atonement censer (Leviticus 16:12; Hebrews 9:4).
make atonement for them ] The offering of incense was an unusual way of making atonement; the shedding of blood was generally required. But since the sin had been the burning of incense, the means for its atonement was similar. Cf. the bronze serpent ( Numbers 21:6-9 ). A converse application of the same principle is seen in the laws of retaliation—‘an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.’ there is wrath gone out ] lit. the wrath has gone out . The divine wrath is thought of almost as an emanation; it has, so to speak, an existence independent of Jehovah, as soon as it proceeds from Him.On incense as an irregular atonement matched to the sin, and on the wrath conceived as a dispatched emanation.
There was no precedent for making an incense offering alter this fashion, but it was on the analogy of the rite performed within the tabernacle on the day of atonement ( Leviticus 16 ). Whether Moses received any intimation that the wroth might be thus averted, or whether it was the daring thought of a devoted heart when all else failed, it is impossible to say. As it had no precedent, so it never serous to have been repeated; nor is the name or idea of atonement anywhere else connected with the offering of incense apart from the shedding of blood.On the unprecedented and unrepeated character of this incense-atonement — "the daring thought of a devoted heart when all else failed."
47So Aaron took the censer as Moses had ordered and ran into the midst of the assembly. And seeing that the plague had begun among the people, he offered the incense and made atonement for the people.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’a·hă·rōn way·yiq·qaḥ ka·’ă·šer mō·šeh dib·ber way·yā·rāṣ ’el- tōḵ haq·qā·hāl wə·hin·nêh han·ne·ḡep̄ hê·ḥêl bā·‘ām way·yit·tên ’eṯ- haq·qə·ṭō·reṯ way·ḵap·pêr ‘al- hā·‘ām
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And Aaron took as Moses had spoken and ran into the midst of the assembly; and behold, the plague had begun among the people; and he laid on the incense and made atonement for the people.
Where the English smooths the original
And ran into the midst of the congregation. —The whole occasion was an extraordinary one. On ordinary occasions incense might only be offered on the golden altar within the holy place in which the priests ministered.On the extraordinary location of the rite — incense carried out of the holy place into the camp.
A striking proof of the efficacy of that very Aaronic priesthood which the rebels had presumed to reject. The incense offering which had brought down destruction when presented by unauthorised hands, now in the hand of the true priest is the medium of instant salvation to the whole people. Aaron by his acceptable ministration and his personal self-devotion foreshadows emphatically in this transaction the perfect mediation and sacrifice of Himself made by Christ.On the vindication of the Aaronic priesthood and Aaron foreshadowing Christ's mediation and self-devotion.
Ran into the midst of the congregation; hazarding his own life to obey God, and to do this wicked people good.On the self-risking obedience of the high priest, doing good to those who hated him.
though a man in years and in so high an office, and had been so ill used by the people; yet was not only so ready to obey the divine command, but so eager to serve this ungrateful people, and save them from utter destruction, that he ran from the tabernacle into the midst of themOn the aged and ill-used high priest running, eager, into the midst of the people who had wronged him.
48He stood between the living and the dead, and the plague was halted.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘ă·mōḏ bên- ū·ḇên ha·ḥay·yîm ham·mê·ṯîm ham·mag·gê·p̄āh wat·tê·‘ā·ṣar
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And he stood between the dead and the living, and the plague was restrained.
Where the English smooths the original
Between the dead and the living — Whereby it may seem that this plague, like that fire, ( Numbers 11:1 ,) began in the uttermost parts of the congregation, and so proceeded destroying one after another in an orderly manner, which gave Aaron occasion and direction so to place himself as a mediator with God on their behalf. In this action Aaron was a most eminent type of Christ, and the effect of Aaron’s oblation of incense an expressive emblem of the efficacy and happy fruits of the interposition of our great High-Priest.On the ordered advance of the plague and Aaron, as mediator, a most eminent type of Christ our High Priest.
And he stood between the dead and the living . . . — Aaron was, in this respect, a striking type of Christ, who “hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling savour” ( Ephesians 5:2 ).On Aaron standing-between as a type of Christ's self-offering (Ephesians 5:2).
the Targum of Jonathan is,"he stood in prayer in the middle, and made a partition, with his censer, between the dead and living;''in this he was a type of Christ, the Mediator between God and man, the living God and dead sinnersOn the Targum's image of a partition made by the censer, and Aaron as type of Christ the Mediator.
And the plague was stayed. Thus was given to the people the most striking and public proof of the saving efficacy of that mediatorial and intercessory office which they had been ready to invade and to reject. Thus also was it shown that what in profane hands was a savour of death unto death, became when rightly and lawfully used a savour of life unto life.On the public proof of the priestly office: the same incense a savour of death in profane hands, of life in lawful ones (cf. 2 Corinthians 2:16).
49But those who died from the plague numbered 14,700, in addition to those who had died on account of Korah.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yih·yū ham·mê·ṯîm bam·mag·gê·p̄āh ’ar·bā·‘āh ‘ā·śār ’e·lep̄ ū·šə·ḇa‘ mê·’ō·wṯ mil·lə·ḇaḏ ham·mê·ṯîm ‘al- də·ḇar- qō·raḥ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Now those who died in the plague were fourteen thousand and seven hundred, besides those who died on account of the matter of Korah.
Where the English smooths the original
Now they that died in the plague were fourteen thousand and seven hundred,.... 14,700. Thus what they were threatened with, that their carcasses should fall in the wilderness, Numbers 14:29 , was more and more fulfilled: beside them that died about the matter of Korah; these are not taken into the number here, even the two hundred fifty men of Korah's company, and the families of Dathan and AbiramOn the toll as a fulfilment of the wilderness sentence (Numbers 14:29), counted apart from Korah's company.
Fourteen thousand and seven hundred. A very large number to have died in the course of a few minutes, as the narrative seems to imply. The plague was undoubtedly of a supernatural character, and cannot be considered as a pestilence or other natural visitation.On the scale and speed of the toll as marks of a supernatural, not natural, visitation.
them that died about the matter of Korah ] i.e. the 250 princes. It should be noticed that the death of Korah himself is nowhere related in the chapter, Numbers 16:24 ; Numbers 16:27 a might seem to imply that Korah was about to be swallowed up in the earth with Dathan and Abiram; and this supposition is adopted by the writer of Numbers 26:10 . But apart from the critical reasons for distinguishing the narratives, and for reading ‘the tabernacle of Jehovah ’ in Numbers 16:24 ; Numbers 16:27 , it would be very strange that Korah should have been separated from his adherents in their punishment. In the fusing of the two stories by the compiler, a statement of the personal fate of Korah fell out of the chapter.The source-critical voice: a documentary fusion read into the chapter's silence on Korah's own fate — reported here, not adjudicated; weigh against Numbers 26:10.
And when this was done, and Aaron placed himself between the dead and the living, the plague, which had already destroyed 14,700 men, was stayed. The plague consisted apparently of a sudden death, as in the case of a pestilence raging with extreme violence, though we cannot regard it as an actual pestilence.On the 14,700 dead and the supernatural, non-natural character of the stroke that struck them down.
50Then Aaron returned to Moses at the entrance to the Tent of Meeting, since the plague had been halted.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’a·hă·rōn way·yā·šāḇ ’el- mō·šeh ’el- pe·ṯaḥ ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ wə·ham·mag·gê·p̄āh ne·‘ĕ·ṣā·rāh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And Aaron returned to Moses, to the entrance of the Tent of Meeting, for the plague had been restrained.
Where the English smooths the original
And Aaron returned unto Moses,.... After he had by his atonement and intercession put a stop to the wrath of God broken forth upon the people: unto the door of the tabernacle of the congregation; where Moses was waiting for his return, and to know the issue of this affair: and the plague was stayed: even before Aaron left the camp, and is here repeated for the certainty of it, and to intimate that it continued to cease, and broke not out again.On the completed mediatorial circuit and the emphatic, final repetition that the plague was stayed.
And the plague was stayed. Not only temporarily, while Aaron stood between the dead and the living, but finally and effectually.On the finality of the staying — not a pause but an effectual end.
Observe especially, that Aaron was a type of Christ. There is an infection of sin in the world, which only the cross and intercession of Jesus Christ can stay and remove. He enters the defiled and dying camp. He stands between the dead and the living; between the eternal Judge and the souls under condemnation. We must have redemption through His blood, even the remission of sins.On the type fulfilled: Christ entering the defiled camp, standing between Judge and condemned, staying the infection of sin by His cross.
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 single word of time and an outrage of memory: "on the morrow" (mim·mā·ḥo·rāṯ, H4283) — the day after the ground had opened on Dathan and Abiram and fire had eaten the 250. "All the congregation" now "murmured" (way·yil·lō·nū, H3885 lûwn, the desert sin-verb) against Moses and Aaron, charging, "you have put to death (hă·mit·tem, H4191 Hifil) the people of YHWH." The commentators are unanimous in their astonishment. Ellicott: "It is difficult to conceive of a more striking illustration of the depravity of the human heart than is afforded by this outbreak of the same spirit of rebellion which had been so signally punished on the preceding day." Keil diagnoses the failure precisely — the judgment "had filled the people round about with terror and dismay, but it had produced no change of heart." Benson: "Prodigious wickedness and madness, so soon to forget such a terrible instance of divine vengeance!" The deepest perversion is in the renaming: Poole notes that the dead rebels are called "the people of the Lord" — "so they call those wicked wretches, and rebels against God; which shows the power of passion and prejudice to corrupt men's judgment." Pulpit sees the false framing — a divine judgment recast as a partisan murder, "as though Moses and Aaron had no more part in their death than St. Peter had in the death of Ananias and Sapphira."
As the mob "gathered" (bə·hiq·qā·hêl, H6950) — "to kill them," Gill reports from the Targum — Moses and Aaron turned to the Tent, "and behold, the cloud covered it (he·‘ā·nān ḵis·sā·hū), and the glory of YHWH (kə·ḇō·wḏ Yah·weh, H3519) appeared." Ellicott reads the cloud's return as deliberate encouragement: it "was now again restored in order to encourage Moses and Aaron." Pulpit presses the verb kâsâh: the cloud was "not soaring above it, as usual, but lying close down upon it, to signify that the presence of the Lord had passed in some special sense into the tabernacle." Keil grades the theophany to the tabernacle's own inauguration: "the cloud covered it in a fuller and much more conspicuous sense, just as it had done when the tabernacle was first erected (Exodus 40:34)... and the glory of God burst forth from the dark cloud in a miraculous splendour." The men "came to the face of the Tent" (’el-pə·nê, v.43) — into the court, says Keil; to the door, says Gill — "to hear what God, who now appeared, would say" (Poole). And "YHWH spoke (way·ḏab·bêr, H1696) to Moses" from the cloud (Gill).
The word from the cloud is wrath: "Get yourselves up (hê·rōm·mū, H7426 râmam, a rare verb) from the midst of this congregation, that I may consume them as in a moment (wa·’ă·ḵal·leh ... kə·rā·ḡa‘, H3615 + H7281 regaʻ, 'a wink of the eye')." Pulpit marks the grammar and the paradox: "הֵרֹמּוּ, from רָמַם. The command is substantially the same as that in verse 21. Since it was not obeyed, we must conclude (as before) that it was not intended to be obeyed." For the men "fell upon their faces" (way·yip·pə·lū ‘al-pə·nê·hem) — Barnes: "In intercession for the people; compare Numbers 16:22; Numbers 14:5." Gill marvels at the disposition: they prayed "for them that had so despitefully used them as to charge them with murder, and were about to commit it on them; see Matthew 5:44." Yet Pulpit discerns a turning point: "No doubt they would have interceded (as in verse 22), but that Moses perceived through some Divine intimation that wrath had gone forth, and that some more prevailing form of mediation than mere words must be sought."
The "more prevailing mediation" is an atonement of incense. "Take the censer (ham·maḥ·tāh, H4289, with the article)" — Barnes: "that of the high priest which was used by him on the great Day of Atonement: compare Leviticus 16:12; Hebrews 9:4" — "and make atonement (wə·ḵap·pêr, H3722 kâphar) for them, for the wrath has gone out from before YHWH; the plague (han·nā·ḡep̄, H5063 negeph) has begun." Cambridge notes the irregularity and its fitness: "The offering of incense was an unusual way of making atonement; the shedding of blood was generally required. But since the sin had been the burning of incense, the means for its atonement was similar." Cambridge also hears the wrath as almost a thing dispatched — "the divine wrath is thought of almost as an emanation; it has, so to speak, an existence independent of Jehovah, as soon as it proceeds from Him." And the priest ran (way·yā·rāṣ, H7323) — Poole: "hazarding his own life to obey God, and to do this wicked people good" — "into the midst (tōḵ, H8432) of the assembly," carrying the holy fire out of the sanctuary (Ellicott: "On ordinary occasions incense might only be offered on the golden altar within the holy place"). Barnes draws the great contrast: "The incense offering which had brought down destruction when presented by unauthorised hands, now in the hand of the true priest is the medium of instant salvation to the whole people."
The image at the unit's heart: "And he stood between the dead and the living (way·ya·‘ă·mōḏ bên ... ham·mê·ṯîm ... ha·ḥay·yîm), and the plague was restrained (wat·tê·‘ā·ṣar, H6113 ‘âtsâr)." Pulpit reads it literally: the plague "strictly local... striking down its victims in one quarter before passing on to another; only thus could it be arrested by the actual interposition of Aaron with the smoking censer." The toll was vast — "fourteen thousand and seven hundred... besides those who died on account of the matter of Korah" — and, Pulpit insists, supernatural: "A very large number to have died in the course of a few minutes... cannot be considered as a pestilence or other natural visitation." Then "Aaron returned to Moses" at the doorway, "for the plague had been restrained" — Pulpit: "Not only temporarily... but finally and effectually." The chapter that began with incense killing the usurpers ends with incense saving the people, the whole turning on the one authorised priest. Pulpit draws the lesson: "what in profane hands was a savour of death unto death, became when rightly and lawfully used a savour of life unto life." And the commentators turn with one voice to the type: Ellicott, "Aaron was, in this respect, a striking type of Christ"; Gill, "a type of Christ, the Mediator between God and man, the living God and dead sinners"; Matthew Henry, "He enters the defiled and dying camp. He stands between the dead and the living; between the eternal Judge and the souls under condemnation."
This paragraph is the tool's own reading under Sola Scriptura — fallible, ⚙-marked, offered to be tested, not believed. Read in the original, this passage is a study in one act with two faces. The same incense that, one chapter earlier, came out from before YHWH as fire and devoured the 250 who offered it without warrant (16:35) is, here, the very thing that turns the wrath aside — and the only variable is the man who holds the censer. The text refuses to make atonement a technique. It is not the smoke that saves but the standing: Aaron "stood between" (‘âmad bên), and his body became the frontier the plague could not cross. The Hebrew lays the dead first — "between the dead and the living" — so that the priest is planted with the casualties behind him and the unstruck before him, holding the line with nothing but the appointed offering and his own exposed life. Notice what Moses had learned by v.45: words were no longer enough. He had twice pleaded and twice prevailed (16:22), but "wrath has gone out," already running through the camp, and only a mediation that overtakes it — that runs (rûwts) into the middle of the dying — can arrest it. So the rescue is not a prayer offered at a safe distance but a priest sprinting toward the very plague, into the thing that is killing, to make atonement in the heart of it. And the deepest irony is the one Barnes names: the priesthood the people had risen up to reject is the priesthood that now saves them; the office they tried to murder is the office that keeps them alive. The wilderness generation could not be changed by terror — the open ground and the fire taught them nothing for even a day. They could only be covered. That is the word kâphar means: not improvement but covering, a standing-between that holds back what we have earned. Weigh this against the text; the named commentators are surer guides than the synthesizer.
⚙ A fallible line, not a verse of Scripture: the same incense that was a savour of death to the rebels was a savour of life to the people — atonement is never a technique, only a priest who will stand between the dead and the living.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The most pointed verbal seam in the unit. Moses' alarm in 16:46–47 names "the plague" with H5063 negeph ("a plague, a blow, a striking"), a genuinely rare noun at only 7 occurrences. The Verifier records this scarce lexeme shared with Exodus 12:13 — "the blood shall be to you for a token... and the plague (negeph) shall not be upon you to destroy you, when I smite the land of Egypt" — and with Exodus 30:12, where each man's atonement-money is given "that there be no plague (negeph) among them, when thou numberest them." The Verifier on 16:46→Numbers 8:19 even returns negeph together with kâphar ("atone") and Aaron's name — exactly the cluster of priestly atonement-against-plague. Held as confirmed verbal: the rarity (7 vv) crosses the threshold the rules set for a verbal link, and the shared word is not incidental — in every case negeph is the lethal stroke that atonement turns aside (the Passover blood, the census-ransom, Aaron's incense). The same scarce word also touches Isaiah 8:14 (the LORD as "a stone of stumbling" — a negeph), recorded by the Verifier on the bare lexeme; that one we hold more loosely, since the sense there is a stumbling-stone rather than a wrath-plague (see the apparatus).
Numbers 16:46 · Exodus 12:13 · Exodus 30:12 · Isaiah 8:14
basis: shared rare Strong's lexeme H5063 negeph (only 7 vv); Verifier-computed (16:46→Exodus 12:13, 16:46→Exodus 30:12, 16:46→Isaiah 8:14; and 16:46→Numbers 8:19 returns negeph + H3722 kâphar + H175 Aaron). Held verbal on the rare-lexeme ground the rules allow: 7 occurrences, and in the Exodus pairings the word names precisely the deadly stroke that atonement averts (Passover blood; census-ransom). The Isaiah 8:14 hit rests on the bare lexeme with an inverted sense (stumbling-stone, not wrath-plague) and is held more loosely.
The unit's defining action — a priest interposing so that "the plague was stayed" — recurs almost as a fixed formula. The Verifier ties 16:48 to Numbers 25:8 on the pair H4046 maggêphâh ("plague," 25 vv) + H6113 ‘âtsâr ("to restrain, stay," 45 vv): there Phinehas drives the spear through Zimri and Cozbi, "and the plague (maggêphâh) was stayed (‘âtsâr) from the children of Israel." The Verifier ties it likewise to Psalm 106:30 — adding the verb H5975 ‘âmad ("stood") that 16:48 also uses — "Then stood up (‘âmad) Phinehas, and executed judgment: and so the plague was stayed." The same two or three words name the same priestly act in three places: a stander-between, a wrath-plague, a staying. Held as confirmed structural/thematic: the shared lexemes are real and Verifier-computed, but maggêphâh (25 vv) and ‘âtsâr (45 vv) are uncommon rather than truly rare, and no verse cites another. What binds them is a tight, repeated pattern — the priest whose interposition arrests God's plague — held to the structural tier, not pressed as a quotation, though it sits at the strong end of structural.
Numbers 16:48 · Numbers 25:8 · Psalm 106:30
basis: shared Strong's lexemes H4046 maggêphâh (25 vv) + H6113 ‘âtsâr (45 vv), with H5975 ‘âmad (497 vv) added on Psalm 106:30; Verifier-computed (16:48→Numbers 25:8, 16:48→Psalm 106:30). Held structural, not verbal: the words are uncommon but not rare and no verse cites another — the link is the repeated pattern of a priest standing-between to stay a wrath-plague (Aaron; Phinehas).
The same plague-staying formula reaches forward into the monarchy. The Verifier records H4046 maggêphâh + H6113 ‘âtsâr — and H4196 mizbêach ("altar," the word of 16:46's "from the altar") — shared with 2 Samuel 24:25: David built an altar there and offered burnt offerings, "so the LORD was intreated for the land, and the plague (maggêphâh) was stayed (‘âtsâr) from Israel." The Verifier ties it likewise to the parallel 1 Chronicles 21:22, where David buys the threshing floor "that the plague may be stayed from the people." In each case a sanctioned offering at the altar arrests a wrath-plague that has begun to kill the people. Held as confirmed structural/thematic: the lexemes are Verifier-confirmed and the parallel is exact in pattern — wrath running through the people, an authorised priestly/royal offering, the plague stayed — but the words are uncommon rather than rare and the texts neither quote nor cite Numbers 16. We therefore hold this structural/thematic: a recurring biblical paradigm of atonement halting plague, lexically anchored, not a verbal citation.
Numbers 16:48 · 2 Samuel 24:25 · 1 Chronicles 21:22
basis: shared Strong's lexemes H4046 maggêphâh (25 vv), H6113 ‘âtsâr (45 vv), H4196 mizbêach (338 vv); Verifier-computed (16:48→2 Samuel 24:25, 16:48→1 Chronicles 21:22). Held structural, not verbal: uncommon-but-not-rare words and no citation — the shared paradigm of an altar-offering staying a wrath-plague among the people.
When the cloud "covered" the Tent and "the glory of the LORD appeared" (16:42), the language is the language of the tabernacle's first rearing. The Verifier records the full cluster H6051 ‘ânân ("cloud") + H3680 kâçâh ("cover") + H3519 kâbôwd ("glory") + H4150 môwʻêd ("meeting") shared with Exodus 40:34 — "Then a cloud (‘ânân) covered (kâsâh) the tent of the congregation, and the glory (kâbôwd) of the LORD filled the tabernacle." Keil, commenting on 16:42, himself cross-references Exodus 40:34, arguing the cloud covered the Tent here "in a fuller and much more conspicuous sense, just as it had done when the tabernacle was first erected." Held as confirmed structural/thematic: four shared lexemes is a strong cluster, but each word is common (80–213 vv) and no verse cites another; the seam is the deliberate re-staging of the inauguration glory to vindicate the threatened mediators — the same Presence that consecrated the Tent now defends the priesthood the people reject. Held structural rather than verbal, as the rules require for shared common words.
Numbers 16:42 · Exodus 40:34
basis: shared Strong's lexemes H6051 ‘ânân (80 vv), H3680 kâçâh (149 vv), H3519 kâbôwd (189 vv), H4150 môwʻêd (213 vv); Verifier-computed (16:42→Exodus 40:34). Held structural, not verbal: a strong cluster but all common words and no citation — the re-staging of the tabernacle's inauguration glory (Exodus 40:34), a link Keil himself draws.
The unit's corporate subject is the congregation — H5712 ‘êdâh ("the stated assembly," 140 vv) — and the whole episode is a plague that breaks out within it (16:46–49). Looking back across the wilderness, Joshua's eastern tribes name exactly this pattern: the Verifier ties 16:41 on ‘êdâh to Joshua 22:17, "Is the iniquity of Peor too little for us... although there was a plague in the congregation (‘êdâh) of the LORD" — the later generation remembering a wrath-plague that fell upon the assembled people, the same fusion of congregation and plague enacted here. The Verifier also returns Numbers 31:16, where Balaam's counsel brought "a plague among the congregation (‘êdâh) of the LORD" at Peor — the very plague Phinehas stayed (Numbers 25). Held as structural/thematic, leaning thin: ‘êdâh is a common word (140 vv) and no verse cites another, so this rests on the shared motif — a plague within the LORD's congregation, stayed (or earned) by the conduct of priests and people — rather than on any rare lexeme. Held deliberately at the lower edge of structural, a thematic resonance the reader should weigh, not a verbal seam.
Numbers 16:41 · Joshua 22:17 · Numbers 31:16
basis: shared Strong's lexeme H5712 ‘êdâh (140 vv); Verifier-computed (16:41→Joshua 22:17, 16:41→Numbers 31:16). Held structural and thin, not verbal: ‘êdâh is common and no verse cites another — the link is the recurring motif of a wrath-plague within the LORD's congregation (Numbers 16; the Peor plague remembered in Joshua 22:17 and Numbers 31:16), a thematic resonance rather than a lexical seam.
The command "Get yourselves up" in 16:45 uses H7426 râmam ("to rise, be lifted up"), one of the rarest verbs in the unit (only 6 occurrences). Pulpit isolates the form: "הֵרֹמּוּ, from רָמַם." The Verifier records this scarce verb shared with the cherubim-vision of Ezekiel — Ezekiel 10:15, 17, 19, where the living creatures and wheels are "lifted up (râmam)" from the earth — and with Psalm 118:16, "the right hand of the LORD is exalted (râmam)." Held honestly — structural/thematic, leaning lexical: the verb is genuinely rare (6 vv), which by the rules can ground a verbal claim; but the senses diverge sharply — in Numbers 16 it is a command to withdraw from doomed company, in Ezekiel the mounting-up of the glory-chariot, in Psalm 118 the exaltation of God's hand. Because no verse quotes another and the meanings are unrelated beyond the shared root, we deliberately downgrade from verbal to structural: a rare-word coincidence worth noting for the reader, not a thematic or citational seam. The honest verdict is that the lexeme is shared but the thought is not — a caution flag against over-reading shared rare words.
Numbers 16:45 · Ezekiel 10:19 · Psalm 118:16
basis: shared rare Strong's lexeme H7426 râmam (only 6 vv); Verifier-computed (16:45→Ezekiel 10:15, 16:45→Ezekiel 10:17, 16:45→Ezekiel 10:19, 16:45→Psalm 118:16). Deliberately downgraded from verbal to structural: the verb is rare enough to permit a verbal claim, but the senses are unrelated (withdraw / chariot mounting up / God's hand exalted) and no verse cites another — recorded as a rare-word coincidence, not a true seam, to keep the reader from over-reading shared rare lexemes.
The commentators read Aaron's standing-between as the express type of Christ's priesthood, and the New Testament's own High-Priest theology is the natural reference. Barnes, on 16:47, draws it directly: Aaron "foreshadows emphatically in this transaction the perfect mediation and sacrifice of Himself made by Christ." Barnes on 16:46 even links the very censer to the New Testament: it is the high priest's censer "compare Leviticus 16:12; Hebrews 9:4," the book that interprets the whole Aaronic apparatus as shadow of Christ's once-for-all mediation. Hebrews 9 reads Aaron's annual entry with blood as the figure of Christ who "by his own blood entered in once into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for us" (Hebrews 9:12). Held honestly — flagged: this is a cross-Testament link (Greek↔Hebrew), so it cannot rest on a shared Strong's number — there is no lexical seam between the Hebrew of Numbers and the Greek of Hebrews. The connection is genuine, ancient, and invoked by Barnes himself; but because it is interpretive and cross-language rather than lexical, and because the precise correspondence (incense-atonement here vs. blood-atonement in Hebrews) is argued rather than asserted by the text, we flag it for the reader to weigh against the texts rather than present it as a confirmed verbal thread.
Numbers 16:47 · Numbers 16:48 · Hebrews 9:4
basis: cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew) — no shared Strong's number is possible and the Verifier returns no shared original-language lexeme; the link is thematic/interpretive (Aaron's mediating incense-atonement as type of Christ's high-priestly self-offering, Hebrews 9), invoked by Barnes on 16:46–47 (citing Hebrews 9:4). Flagged because it rests on argued canonical typology, not the index, and the incense-vs-blood correspondence is interpretive.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The unit's central image is the most explicit type-of-Christ in the chapter, and the commentators read it as one. Aaron "stood between the dead and the living" (16:48), his own body the frontier the plague could not cross, the appointed offering in his hand. Matthew Henry: "He enters the defiled and dying camp. He stands between the dead and the living; between the eternal Judge and the souls under condemnation. We must have redemption through His blood, even the remission of sins." Gill (with the Targum): "a type of Christ, the Mediator between God and man, the living God and dead sinners." Ellicott: "Aaron was, in this respect, a striking type of Christ, who 'hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling savour' (Ephesians 5:2)." The New Testament names the office Aaron pictures: "there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus" (1 Timothy 2:5), who "ever liveth to make intercession" (Hebrews 7:25). Held as figural reading, ancient/widely-held: the reading is unanimous among the named commentators and grounded in the New Testament's own High-Priest theology. Note honestly that the New Testament references are cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew) with no shared Strong's lexeme — offered as the historic typological reading, not as a verbal seam.
Numbers 16:48 · Numbers 16:47
The chapter turns on a single, terrible symmetry: the incense that consumed the 250 usurpers as a savour of death (16:35) is, in the authorised priest's hand, the savour of life that saves the nation (16:47–48). Barnes: "The incense offering which had brought down destruction when presented by unauthorised hands, now in the hand of the true priest is the medium of instant salvation to the whole people." Pulpit: "what in profane hands was a savour of death unto death, became when rightly and lawfully used a savour of life unto life." The New Testament uses precisely that double figure of Christ and His gospel: "we are unto God a sweet savour of Christ, in them that are saved, and in them that perish: to the one we are the savour of death unto death; and to the other the savour of life unto life" (2 Corinthians 2:15–16). Held as figural reading, ancient/widely-held: the savour-of-death-and-life pattern is drawn out by the named commentators and echoed by the apostolic language. The link to 2 Corinthians is cross-Testament with no shared Strong's lexeme — offered as the interpretive/typological figure the text itself invites, not a lexical seam.
Numbers 16:47 · Numbers 16:48
By 16:46 the wrath "has gone out from before YHWH" — already dispatched, already killing — and the only mediation that can answer it is one that runs (16:47, rûwts) into the very midst of the dying to make atonement in the heart of the plague. Poole: Aaron ran "hazarding his own life to obey God, and to do this wicked people good." The pattern is the gospel's own: not a prayer offered at a safe remove, but a priest who throws himself into the path of the judgment his people have earned. Held as figural reading, marked novel: where the commentators draw the standing-between and the savour-of-life as the settled type, this particular figure — the wrath already gone out and a priest sprinting to overtake it with his own exposed life — is offered as the synthesizer's own reading, to be tested. It is the analogical shape of Hebrews' claim that Christ "appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself" (Hebrews 9:26), entering not a safe sanctuary but the place where death reigns. The cross-Testament references carry no shared Strong's lexeme; this is argued typology, not a verbal link, and the reader should weigh it against the texts.
Numbers 16:46 · Numbers 16:47
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's strongest verbal seam rests on the rare striking-word negeph (H5063, only 7 vv) in 16:46–47: the Verifier ties it to the Passover "plague" averted by blood (Exodus 12:13) and the census "plague" averted by atonement-money (Exodus 30:12) — and, on the same verse, to Numbers 8:19 in a cluster with kâphar ("atone") and Aaron's name. Because the lexeme is genuinely rare and in the Exodus pairings names precisely the deadly stroke that atonement turns aside, we hold it verbal. The same word's hit on Isaiah 8:14 (the LORD as a stone of "stumbling," a negeph) is recorded but held loosely: it shares the bare lexeme with an inverted sense (a stumbling-stone, not a wrath-plague), so we note it without pressing it. The plague-staying threads — to Numbers 25:8 / Psalm 106:30 (Phinehas) and 2 Samuel 24:25 / 1 Chronicles 21:22 (David) — rest on the Verifier-computed pair maggêphâh (25 vv) + ‘âtsâr ("stay," 45 vv), with ‘âmad ("stood") and mizbêach ("altar") added; these are real and confirmed, but the words are uncommon rather than rare and no verse cites another, so all are held structural/thematic — the recurring paradigm of a priest interposing to stay God's plague. The glory-cloud thread to Exodus 40:34 is a strong four-lexeme cluster (‘ânân, kâçâh, kâbôwd, môwʻêd) but every word is common, so it too is held structural — the re-staging of the tabernacle's inauguration glory, a link Keil himself draws on 16:42. The ‘êdâh thread ("congregation," H5712, 140 vv) to Joshua 22:17 and Numbers 31:16 is held at the lower, thin edge of structural: the word is common and no verse cites another, so it rests only on the recurring motif of a wrath-plague within the LORD's congregation (the Peor plague remembered in both texts), offered as a thematic resonance, not a lexical seam. The râmam thread ("get up," H7426, 6 vv) to Ezekiel 10 and Psalm 118:16 is the unit's clearest case of a rare word that is not a seam: the verb is rare enough to permit a verbal claim, but its senses diverge entirely (withdraw / chariot mounting / God's hand exalted), so we deliberately downgraded it to structural and labeled it a coincidence — a caution against over-reading shared rare lexemes. Three cross-references are explicitly flagged or held as typology because they are cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew) and therefore cannot use a shared Strong's number: the thread to Hebrews 9 (Aaron's mediation as type of Christ's high-priestly self-offering, invoked by Barnes citing Hebrews 9:4), and in the Christ section the links to 1 Timothy 2:5 / Hebrews 7:25, Ephesians 5:2, 2 Corinthians 2:15–16, and Hebrews 9:26 — all offered as argued canonical/typological interpretation, never as lexical seams, exactly as the cross-Testament rule requires. The "running priest overtaking the wrath" Christ-figure is marked novel: it is the synthesizer's own reading, beyond the settled standing-between type the commentators draw. One interpretive division is reported but not adjudicated: at 16:49, Cambridge argues from the chapter's silence on Korah's personal death that two source-narratives were fused and "a statement of the personal fate of Korah fell out" — a source-critical claim the synthesizer records but does not endorse; it should be weighed against Numbers 26:10, which states the earth swallowed Korah's company, and against the chapter's own coherence. The parsing follows the received Masoretic text and the Berean/Strong's data; the per-word gloss table strings the spelled-out numeral of 16:49 across several entries ("14,700") and these are read here against the Hebrew numerals rather than the English column. "Test all things; hold fast to what is good." (1 Thessalonians 5:21)
✦ = 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)