The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Duties of Priests and Levites
Numbers 18:1–7 — Duties of Priests and Levites. 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.
1So the LORD said to Aaron, “You and your sons and your father’s house must bear the iniquity involving the sanctuary. And you and your sons alone must bear the iniquity involving your priesthood.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh way·yō·mer ’el- ’a·hă·rōn ’at·tāh ū·ḇā·ne·ḵā ’ā·ḇî·ḵā ’it·tāḵ ū·ḇêṯ- tiś·’ū ’eṯ- ‘ă·wōn ham·miq·dāš wə·’at·tāh ū·ḇā·ne·ḵā ’it·tāḵ tiś·’ū ’eṯ- ‘ă·wōn kə·hun·naṯ·ḵem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-said Yahweh to Aaron: you and-your-sons and-house-of your-father with-you shall-bear the-iniquity of-the-sanctuary; and-you and-your-sons with-you shall-bear the-iniquity of-your-priesthood.
Where the English smooths the original
The word "bear" has, in the Old Testament, this double sense of "enduring" and "removing;" but in the person of Christ, who atoned by His own endurance, the two axe in effect one.“axe” is a scanning artifact for “are” in the public-domain text; quoted verbatim as printed.
Aaron would see reason not to be proud of his preferment, when he considered the great care and charge upon him. Be not high-minded, but fear. The greater the trust of work and power that is committed to us, the greater danger there is of betraying that trust.
the priests were to bear, i.e., to take upon themselves and expunge, by virtue of the holiness and sanctifying power communicated to their office
This double sense is exactly reflected in the Greek word αἴρειν , as applied to our Lord ( John 1:29 ). The priests, therefore (and the Kohathites, so far as they had anything to do with the sanctuary), were responsible for all the unholiness attaching or accruing to it
2But bring with you also your brothers from the tribe of Levi, the tribe of your father, that they may join you and assist you and your sons before the Tent of the Testimony.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
haq·rêḇ ’it·tāḵ wə·ḡam ’eṯ- ’a·ḥe·ḵā maṭ·ṭêh lê·wî šê·ḇeṭ ’ā·ḇî·ḵā wə·yil·lā·wū ‘ā·le·ḵā wî·šā·rə·ṯū·ḵā wə·’at·tāh ū·ḇā·ne·ḵā ’it·tāḵ lip̄·nê ’ō·hel hā·‘ê·ḏuṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-also — your-brothers tribe-of Levi, tribe-of your-father, bring-near with-you, that-they-may-be-joined to-you and-they-may-minister-to-you; and-you and-your-sons with-you before the-tent of-the-testimony.
Where the English smooths the original
That they may be joined unto thee.— There is an allusion here to the meaning of the name Levi, which was given to Leah’s third son. (See Genesis 29:34 .) The Hebrew verb is the same as that which occurs in the speech of Leah.
This is a play on words, similar to that in Genesis 29:34 , the verb lâwâh ( לוה ) being employed to explain the word Lçwî ‘Levite,’ so that the latter is understood to denote ‘one who is joined to the priests as a servant.’
The Levites are said to minister to Aaron here, to the church, Numbers 16:9 , and to God, Deu 10:8 . They shall not contend with thee for superiority, as they have done, but they shall be subordinate and servants to thee.
The Levites were to attend the priests as servants—bestowed on them as "gifts" to aid in the service of the tabernacle—while the high and dignified office of the priesthood was a "service of gift."JFB compresses the whole unit's two-tier logic — Levites as 'gifts' to the priests, the priesthood itself a 'service of gift' — anticipating vv. 6–7.
3And they shall attend to your duties and to all the duties of the Tent; but they must not come near to the furnishings of the sanctuary or the altar, or both they and you will die.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·šā·mə·rū miš·mar·tə·ḵā ū·miš·me·reṯ kāl- hā·’ō·hel ’aḵ ’el- lō yiq·rā·ḇū kə·lê haq·qō·ḏeš wə·’el- ham·miz·bê·aḥ wə·lō- ḡam- hêm gam- ’at·tem yā·mu·ṯū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-they-shall-keep your-charge and-the-charge-of all the-tent; only to the-vessels of-the-holy-place and to the-altar they-shall-not come-near, that-not both they and-you shall-die.
Where the English smooths the original
only they shall not come nigh the vessels of the sanctuary; as the ark and mercy seat in the holy of holies, the shewbread table, and candlestick in the holy place; wherefore when these were removed from place to place in journeying, they were covered, that they might not touch them as they carried them
The Heb. word is capable of wider use than the Engl. ‘vessel’; it includes all the sacred utensils and furniture. For the prohibition to come into contact with the sacred things cf. Numbers 4:15 . neither they, nor ye ] they , for breaking the law, and ye for permitting it.
the further warning, "nor ye also," is added because if the carelessness or profanity of the priest led to sacrilege and death in the case of the Levite, it would be laid to his charge
The vessels, which therefore were to be covered by the priests before the Levites might meddle with them. They, nor ye, they for presuming to touch them, and you for your negligence in not covering them wellPoole pins the mutual liability of v. 3 to a concrete mechanism: the priests were to veil the sacred vessels (Num 4:15) before the Levites lifted them.
4They are to join you and attend to the duties of the Tent of Meeting, doing all the work at the Tent; but no outsider may come near you.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·nil·wū ‘ā·le·ḵā wə·šā·mə·rū ’eṯ- miš·me·reṯ ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ lə·ḵōl ‘ă·ḇō·ḏaṯ hā·’ō·hel lō- wə·zār yiq·raḇ ’ă·lê·ḵem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-they-shall-be-joined to-you and-they-shall-keep — the-charge-of tent-of meeting, for-all the-service of-the-tent; and-a-stranger shall-not come-near to-you.
Where the English smooths the original
A stranger - i. e. every one not a Levite. So in Numbers 18:7 , it denotes each one who was not a priest: compare Numbers 3:10 ; Numbers 16:40 .
and a stranger shall not come nigh unto you; not any of the other tribes, only such as were of the tribe of Levi; they only were to be brought with them, and joined unto them, and assist them, and minister to them
Only they were not to come near to the holy vessels and the altar, for that would bring death both upon them and the priests (see at Numbers 4:15 ).
5And you shall attend to the duties of the sanctuary and of the altar, so that wrath may not fall on the Israelites again.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·šə·mar·tem ’êṯ miš·me·reṯ haq·qō·ḏeš wə·’êṯ miš·me·reṯ ham·miz·bê·aḥ qe·ṣep̄ wə·lō- yih·yeh ‘al- bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl ‘ō·wḏ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-keep — the-charge-of the-holy-place and — the-charge-of the-altar, so-that-not it-shall-be wrath upon the-sons-of Israel again.
Where the English smooths the original
that there be no wrath any more upon the children of Israel: as had been upon Korah and his company, Numbers 16:32 , and as afterwards came on Uzziah, 2 Chronicles 26:19 .
for any other miscarriage which they may be guilty of through your carelessness or remissness, in which case they shall perish for their error, but their blood will I require at your hands, who should have advised them better
The charge of the sanctuary (i.e., the dwelling) and the altar (of burnt-offering) devolved upon Aaron and his sons, that the wrath of God might not come again upon the children of Israel (see Numbers 8:19 ), - namely, through such illegal acts as Nadab and Abihu ( Leviticus 10:2 ), and the company of Korah ( Numbers 16:35 ), had committed.
6Behold, I Myself have selected your fellow Levites from the Israelites as a gift to you, dedicated to the LORD to perform the service for the Tent of Meeting.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
hin·nêh wa·’ă·nî lā·qaḥ·tî ’eṯ- ’ă·ḥê·ḵem hal·wî·yim mit·tō·wḵ bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl mat·tā·nāh lā·ḵem nə·ṯu·nîm Yah·weh la·‘ă·ḇōḏ ’eṯ- ‘ă·ḇō·ḏaṯ ’ō·hel mō·w·‘êḏ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-I, behold, I have-taken — your-brothers the-Levites from-the-midst-of the-sons-of Israel; a-gift to-you, given to-Yahweh, to-do — the-service-of tent-of meeting.
Where the English smooths the original
To you they are given as a gift — We are to value it as a great gift of the divine bounty, to have those joined to us that will be helpful and serviceable to us in the service of God.
The Lord instructs here the priests that the office which they fill, and the help which they enjoy, are gifts from Him, and are to be viewed as such.
a gift, given unto Jehovah ] See on Numbers 3:9 .
7But only you and your sons shall attend to your priesthood for everything concerning the altar and what is inside the veil, and you are to perform that service. I am giving you the work of the priesthood as a gift, but any outsider who comes near the sanctuary must be put to death.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·’at·tāh ū·ḇā·ne·ḵā ’it·tə·ḵā tiš·mə·rū ’eṯ- kə·hun·naṯ·ḵem lə·ḵāl də·ḇar ham·miz·bê·aḥ ū·lə·mib·bêṯ lap·pā·rō·ḵeṯ wa·‘ă·ḇaḏ·tem ’et·tên ’eṯ- ‘ă·ḇō·ḏaṯ kə·hun·naṯ·ḵem mat·tā·nāh wə·haz·zār haq·qā·rêḇ yū·māṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
But-you and-your-sons with-you shall-keep — your-priesthood for-every matter-of the-altar and-for-what-is-inside the-veil; and-you-shall-serve. A-service of-gift I-give — your-priesthood; and-the-stranger who-comes-near shall-be-put-to-death.
Where the English smooths the original
All Christians are priests-to offer sacrifices, alms, especially prayers; to make God known to men. I. Our priesthood is a gift of God’s love. We are apt to think of our duties as burdensome. They are an honour and a mark of God’s grace.
And within the vail.— i.e., the vail which separated the holy place from the most holy. The word which is employed in this place ( parocheth ) is used only of the second vail.
I have given your priest's office unto you as a service of gift; it was not what they had taken to themselves of their own will, or had thrust themselves into, but what the Lord had called them to, and had freely invested them with, see Hebrews 5:4
The expression (if the text be correct) emphasizes the fact that the priests had done nothing to deserve these privileges; they were a free gift.
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 oracle opens, unusually, addressed straight to Aaron — a thing the Pulpit Commentary calls “unusual, and indeed unexampled.” It comes on the heels of terror: the people had just cried, “We are perishing… anyone who approaches the tabernacle of the LORD will die!” (17:12–13). God's answer is not to lower the danger but to locate it — on the priesthood. Aaron's house shall “bear the iniquity” (tiśʼû ʻăwōn) of the sanctuary. The verb נָשָׂא (nāśāʼ, H5375) is the hinge, and the older commentators all heard its two notes at once. Barnes: “The word ‘bear’ has, in the Old Testament, this double sense of ‘enduring’ and ‘removing.’” Keil & Delitzsch: the priests were “to take upon themselves and expunge” the guilt “by virtue of the holiness… communicated to their office.” The crown is a yoke. Matthew Henry draws the pastoral edge: “Aaron would see reason not to be proud of his preferment, when he considered the great care and charge upon him. Be not high-minded, but fear.” The honor and the hazard are the same office.
Then the supporting cast is named, and named by a pun. The Levites are to “be joined” to Aaron — וְיִלָּווּ (wĕyillāwû), from lāwāh, the very verb Leah spoke when she bore Levi (Genesis 29:34). Ellicott: “The Hebrew verb is the same as that which occurs in the speech of Leah.” Cambridge spells out the freight: the Levite is “one who is joined to the priests as a servant.” The wordplay is theology — the tribe's identity is attachment. Their task is stated with a guarding-verb, šāmar (“to hedge about as with thorns”): they keep the charge, ring the holy with a living perimeter. But the perimeter has a wall they may not cross — the vessels and the altar — “that neither they, nor ye also, die.” Cambridge: “they, for breaking the law, and ye for permitting it.” Poole supplies the menial register the English softens: the Levites do “the servile and troublesome parts” of the service. Even the “stranger” (zār) is defined not by blood but by boundary — Barnes: “every one not a Levite.”
Now the verb turns inward and the audience changes: “you (priests) shall guard the charge of the holy place and of the altar.” The stated purpose is stark — קֶצֶף (qeṣep̄), “wrath,” a word whose root is a splinter chipped off, a sudden breaking-out — “so that there be no wrath upon the sons of Israel again.” That little ʻôḏ, “again,” is the whole law's shadow: it is written over fresh graves. Gill names them: “as had been upon Korah and his company… and as afterwards came on Uzziah.” Keil & Delitzsch widen it to “Nadab and Abihu… and the company of Korah.” The priesthood is a firebreak. And the accountability runs upward: Poole hears God say of any layman who perishes through priestly “carelessness or remissness” — “their blood will I require at your hands.” To guard the holy is to guard the people from the holiness that would consume them unguarded.
The unit closes where weight becomes grace. Twice the rare noun מַתָּנָה (mattānāh, H4979, found in only seventeen verses) lands: the Levites are a “gift” to the priests (v. 6), and the priesthood itself is given as a “service of gift” (v. 7). The Levites are nĕṯunîm, “given ones” — the participle behind the later temple Nethinim — handed to the priests yet given “unto Jehovah” (Cambridge). Benson: a Levite is “a great gift of the divine bounty.” Barnes: the office and the help “are gifts from Him, and are to be viewed as such.” The priest's sphere is bounded by the altar without and the pārōḵeṯ, the inner veil, within — Ellicott notes that veil is “used only of the second vail,” the screen of the Most Holy Place. And the closing sanction sharpens from v. 3's bare “they shall die” to a judicial yûmāṯ, “shall be put to death.” Gill anchors the whole gift-logic in Hebrews 5:4: the office “was not what they had taken to themselves… but what the Lord had called them to.” The chapter that opened on a burden ends on a present.
Held against the rule that Scripture alone is the final authority, three things stand out — offered as a reading to be tested, not a verdict to be trusted. The office is mediation, and mediation is sin-bearing. Before the priest ever offers a sacrifice, he is one: he “bears the iniquity” of sanctuary and people. The double sense Barnes and the Pulpit Commentary heard in nāśāʼ / airein — endure and remove — is the architecture of atonement long before Calvary, and the New Testament will say the two became one in the Christ who “atoned by His own endurance.” Access is gift, never grasp. The unit frames the whole priesthood between two uses of mattānāh, and Gill ties it to Hebrews 5:4: no one takes this honor to himself. Where Korah grasped, Aaron received. Holiness guards as well as welcomes. The same word, qāraḇ (“draw near”), is the commanded approach of the Levite and the lethal approach of the stranger; the difference is authorization. The fence around the altar is not God's reluctance but God's mercy — a firebreak set so that “there be no wrath… again.”
Held against the rule that Scripture alone is the final authority, three things stand out — offered as a reading to be tested, not a verdict to be trusted. The office is mediation, and mediation is sin-bearing. Before the priest ever offers a sacrifice, he is one: he “bears the iniquity” of sanctuary and people — the double sense of nāśāʼ (endure / remove) is the architecture of atonement long before Calvary. Access is gift, never grasp. The priesthood is framed between two uses of the rare word mattānāh, “gift”; Gill ties it to Hebrews 5:4 — no one takes this honor to himself. Holiness guards as well as welcomes. One verb, qāraḇ (“draw near”), is both the Levite's sanctioned approach and the stranger's fatal one; the fence around the altar is mercy, a firebreak set “so that there be no wrath again.”
The priest who bears the iniquity is a shadow cast backward by the One who would bear it away — and the veil he guards is the veil that one day tears.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The priestly office is defined by a sin-bearing verb, nāśāʼ ʻăwōn. The same pairing crowns Aaron's golden plate in Exodus 28:38 — the high priest “bears the iniquity of the holy things” — and animates the Day of Atonement, where the live goat “bears all their iniquities” into the wilderness (Leviticus 16:22). Barnes and the Pulpit Commentary both hear in the Hebrew the double note of enduring and removing that the Greek airein carries when John 1:29 says the Lamb “takes away” sin. The link to Exodus 28:38 is a genuine shared-vocabulary connection, but the words are common (Aaron, iniquity, bear all occur in hundreds of verses), so it is a pattern, not a quotation.
Numbers 18:1 · Exodus 28:38 · Leviticus 16:21-22
basis: Verifier (Num 18:1 ↔ Exod 28:38): shared lexemes H5771 ʻâvôn (215 vv), H175 ʼAhărôwn (328 vv), H5375 nāśāʼ (612 vv) — all high-frequency, so a thematic pattern of priestly sin-bearing, not a verbal quotation.
Verse 7's closing law — “the stranger that cometh nigh shall be put to death,” the priesthood held by Aaron's sons “alone” — is the near-verbatim twin of Numbers 3:10. Barnes points the cross-reference himself. The connection is unusually firm because it rides on two rare lexemes: kĕhunnāh, “priesthood” (only 12 verses in all of Scripture), and qārēḇ, “one drawing near” (only 11 verses). When words this scarce co-occur across two verses, the verbal link is real, not coincidental.
Numbers 18:7 · Numbers 3:10 · Numbers 16:40
basis: Verifier (Num 18:7 ↔ Num 3:10): shared rare lexemes H7131 qârêb (11 vv) and H3550 kᵉhunnâh (12 vv), plus H2114 zûwr (76 vv) and H4191 mûwth — the low frequency of kĕhunnāh and qārēḇ confirms a verbal/legal-formula link.
The rare noun kĕhunnāh, “priesthood” (only 12 verses in all of Scripture), and the gift-verb nāṯan bind v. 7 to Joshua 18:7, where Levi receives no tribal land because “the priesthood of the LORD is his inheritance” (kî-kĕhunnaṯ YHWH naḥălāṯô). What Numbers calls a mattānāh given by God, Joshua calls the tribe's whole portion: the gift in the wilderness becomes the inheritance in the land. Because the link rides on the genuinely scarce kĕhunnāh, the verbal connection is firm — the same rare office-word, the same divine giving.
Numbers 18:7 · Joshua 18:7 · Numbers 18:20
basis: Verifier (Num 18:7 ↔ Josh 18:7): shared rare lexeme H3550 kᵉhunnâh (12 vv) plus H5414 nāṯan (1817 vv) — the low frequency of kĕhunnāh makes this a true verbal link; both texts cast the priesthood as the Levite's God-given portion.
Twice the unit grounds the Levites' role in a pun on their own name: they shall “be joined” (wĕyillāwû / wĕnilwû, vv. 2, 4) — the verb lāwāh that Leah spoke when she named Levi, “this time my husband will be joined to me” (Genesis 29:34). Ellicott, Cambridge, and the Pulpit Commentary all flag the etymological echo. The link is verbal and confirmed by a genuinely rare verb (lāwāh occurs in only 22 verses), shared with the name-giving scene; the Levite's whole vocation is folded into his name.
Numbers 18:2 · Numbers 18:4 · Genesis 29:34
basis: Verifier (Num 18:2 ↔ Gen 29:34): shared lexemes H3867 lâvâh (22 vv) and H3878 Lêvîy (57 vv) — the rare verb lāwāh, deliberately echoing the naming of Levi, makes this a true verbal wordplay.
The Levites are a mattānāh, a gift handed to the priests yet given “unto Jehovah” (v. 6; Cambridge cross-refers Numbers 3:9), and the same gift-language is repeated of the priesthood itself in v. 7. The shared idea — Levites given (nāṯan) out of Israel to do the sanctuary's service — runs back to Numbers 3:9 on common vocabulary (nāṯan, over 1,800 vv), so that strand is structural. But the gift-noun mattānāh is itself rare (17 vv), and it recurs within the chapter at Numbers 18:29, framing the whole unit's portion-language; that recurrence is the firmer thread, an inclusio of gift opening and closing the priestly grant.
Numbers 18:6 · Numbers 3:9 · Numbers 18:29
basis: Verifier (Num 18:6 ↔ Num 3:9): shared H3881 Lêvîyîy (263 vv) + H5414 nāṯan (1817 vv) — high-frequency, structural gift-of-the-Levites motif. The rare H4979 mattānâh (17 vv) recurring at Num 18:29 (verifier-confirmed) is the tighter intra-chapter link, but still a motif, not a quotation.
The priests' duty reaches “within the veil” (pārōḵeṯ, v. 7) — Ellicott notes this is the inner veil, “used only of the second vail,” the screen of the Most Holy Place. Hebrews 9:7 reads the very arrangement: into the second tent “the high priest goeth… once every year, not without blood.” Gill himself draws the line to Hebrews 9:7. Held honestly: this is a cross-Testament link (Greek ↔ Hebrew), so it cannot rest on shared Strong's numbers — the Verifier finds no shared original-language lexeme. The connection is the shared institution (the inner veil, the once-a-year blood) argued by Hebrews, not a verbal quotation; it is tiered structural for that reason.
Numbers 18:7 · Hebrews 9:7 · Leviticus 16:12
basis: Verifier (Num 18:7 ↔ Heb 9:7): no shared original-language lexeme (cross-Testament Greek↔Hebrew, so shared Strong's is impossible); the link is the shared cultic institution of the inner veil and once-a-year blood-access that Hebrews itself argues — structural, not verbal.
The priestly guard exists “so that wrath (qeṣep̄) may not fall on the Israelites again” (v. 5). The closest verbal twin is Numbers 1:53, where the Levites “keep the charge” (šāmar mišmereṯ) of the tabernacle “that there be no wrath (qeṣep̄) upon the congregation.” The same guard-against-wrath rationale recurs in Numbers 8:19, though that verse shares only common vocabulary. Keil & Delitzsch reads v. 5 against “Nadab and Abihu (Leviticus 10:2), and the company of Korah (Numbers 16:35),” and Gill names “Korah and his company… and… Uzziah.” The link to 1:53 is unusually firm because qeṣep̄ itself is uncommon (29 vv); but it is a shared cultic motif, not a quotation, so it is tiered structural.
Numbers 18:5 · Numbers 1:53 · Numbers 8:19
basis: Verifier (Num 18:5 ↔ Num 1:53): shared lexemes H7110 qetseph (29 vv), H4931 mishmereṯ (69 vv), H8104 šāmar (440 vv) — the guard-against-wrath formula, anchored on the relatively uncommon qetseph; structural motif, not a rare-lexeme quotation. (Num 8:19, K&D's cross-reference, shares only high-frequency qôdesh/lôʼ.)
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The unit defines priesthood by a verb: Aaron's house must “bear the iniquity” (nāśāʼ ʻăwōn) of the sanctuary and the people. Barnes saw the trajectory plainly: the word holds the double sense of “enduring” and “removing,” “but in the person of Christ, who atoned by His own endurance, the two are in effect one.” The Pulpit Commentary names the same arc through the Greek airein of John 1:29 — “the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world.” Every priest who carried Israel's guilt was a shadow cast backward by the One who would carry it away, “bearing the sin of many” (Isaiah 53:12; 1 Peter 2:24; Hebrews 9:28). This typology is ancient and widely held.
Numbers 18:1 · John 1:29 · Hebrews 9:28 · Isaiah 53:12
The Aaronic priest's reach ended “within the veil” (v. 7), and even there access was rationed — Hebrews 9:7, “once every year, not without blood.” The whole arrangement testified, says Hebrews, “that the way into the holiest of all was not yet made manifest” (Hebrews 9:8). What this priesthood could only guard, Christ opened: by His own blood He entered “through the greater and more perfect tabernacle” (Hebrews 9:11–12), and at His death “the veil of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom” (Matthew 27:51). The pārōḵeṯ the priests stood before is the curtain the cross removed. This reading is ancient and widely held.
Numbers 18:7 · Hebrews 9:7-12 · Matthew 27:51 · Hebrews 10:19-20
Twice the unit calls the office a mattānāh, a “gift,” and a “service of gift”; Gill grounds it in Hebrews 5:4 — “no man taketh this honour unto himself, but he that is called of God, as was Aaron.” Hebrews applies the very principle to Christ: “Christ glorified not himself to be made an high priest” (Hebrews 5:5). Maclaren, preaching on v. 7, reads the gift forward to the Church: “All Christians are priests… Our priesthood is a gift of God's love.” The office given to Aaron's sons alone, with death for the intruding stranger, opens in Christ into a kingdom of priests (1 Peter 2:9; Revelation 1:6) — admitted not by grasping but by gift. Held honestly: the direct Numbers 18 typology (Aaron → Christ the High Priest) is ancient; the extension to the believer-priesthood is Maclaren's own homiletical application, drawn from the New Testament but read into this text.
Numbers 18:7 · Hebrews 5:4-5 · 1 Peter 2:9 · Revelation 1:6
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:
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). The named ✦ voices are quoted verbatim from public-domain commentaries on biblehub.com — Ellicott, Benson, Matthew Henry, Barnes, Jamieson-Fausset-Brown, Matthew Poole, John Gill, the Geneva Study Bible, the Cambridge Bible, the Pulpit Commentary, Keil & Delitzsch, and Alexander Maclaren. Two artifacts are preserved as printed: Barnes' “the two axe in effect one” (a scan error for “are”), noted in place. The Hebrew is the Masoretic tradition; transliterations, literal renderings, parse-notes, and the “where the English smooths the Hebrew” divergences are this tool's own ⚙ work — careful but fallible; verify against BDB/HALOT.
Two cross-references deserve open honesty. Numbers 18:7 → Hebrews 9:7 is a cross-Testament link: there can be no shared Strong's number between Hebrew and Greek, so it is tiered structural, resting on the shared cultic institution (the inner veil, once-a-year blood) that Hebrews itself argues — not on verbal identity. Exodus 28:38 and the gift threads rest on high-frequency vocabulary; they are real patterns, deliberately under-claimed as thematic. The wrath/firebreak thread is anchored on the closest verbal twin, Numbers 1:53 (shared qeṣep̄, mišmereṯ, šāmar), and is tiered structural; Keil & Delitzsch's cross-reference to Numbers 8:19 shares only common words and is named as the looser link. Three threads ride on genuinely rare lexemes and are tiered verbal: the priesthood/stranger link (Num 3:10, shared kĕhunnāh and qārēḇ), the Levi wordplay (Gen 29:34, shared lāwāh), and priesthood-as-inheritance (Josh 18:7, shared kĕhunnāh). “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)