The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible

Numbers2:1–34

The Order of the Camps

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Numbers 2:1–34 — The Order of the Camps. 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.

1“Then the LORD said to Moses and Aaron:”+

1Then the LORD said to Moses and Aaron:

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

Yah·weh way·ḏab·bêr ’el- mō·šeh wə·’el- ’a·hă·rōn lê·mōr

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And YHWH spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying:

Where the English smooths the original

  • וַיְדַבֵּ֣ר way·ḏab·bêr (H1696) is the Piel of dābar, "to speak / to arrange words." BSB "said" is smooth; the Hebrew verb is the formal "spoke" that heads a legislative oracle. Barnes presses the tense: "Render spake." The verb opens the chapter as a fresh, dated word of command, not a continuation of v.1's narrative.
  • וְאֶֽל־אַהֲרֹ֖ן wə·ʾel ʾa·hă·rōn (H413 + H175), "and to Aaron." BSB keeps it, but it is easy to pass over: this oracle is addressed to both Moses and Aaron, the lawgiver and the high priest together — the camp's order is given to the civil and the priestly head at once, since the arrangement is built around the priests' own station before the tabernacle.
  • לֵאמֹֽר lê·mōr (H559), literally "to say" — the infinitive that quotes the speech that follows. BSB renders it with the colon ("...Aaron:"). The Hebrew formula way·ḏab·bêr... lê·mōr ("spoke... saying") is the fixed seam introducing direct divine speech throughout the Pentateuch.
Word by word7 · parsed+
יְהוָ֔הYah·wehThen the LORDH3068
√ Yᵉhôvâh — Jehovah, Jewish national name of GodNounpropermasculine singular
Yahweh (H3068), "the LORD"; the covenant name stands first in the Hebrew clause — the order of the camp originates in God, not in Moses' military planning.
וַיְדַבֵּ֣רway·ḏab·bêrsaidH1696
√ dâbar — perhaps properly, to arrangeConjunctive wawVerbPielConsecutive imperfectthird person masculine singular
way·ḏab·bêr (H1696), "spoke"; the Piel speech-verb opening a command. Barnes: "Render spake."
אֶל־’el-toH413
√ ʼêl — near, with or amongPreposition
מֹשֶׁ֥הmō·šehMosesH4872
√ Môsheh — Mosheh, the Israelite lawgiverNounpropermasculine singular
mō·šeh (H4872), "Moses"; the lawgiver, first addressee.
וְאֶֽל־wə·’el-. . .H413
√ ʼêl — near, with or amongConjunctive wawPreposition
אַהֲרֹ֖ן’a·hă·rōnand AaronH175
√ ʼAhărôwn — Aharon, the brother of MosesNounpropermasculine singular
ʾa·hă·rōn (H175), "Aaron"; the high priest, named with Moses — the camp's plan is given to both heads, civil and priestly, because it is organized around the sanctuary.
לֵאמֹֽר׃lê·mōr. . .H559
√ ʼâmar — to say (used with great latitude)Preposition-lVerbQalInfinitive construct
lê·mōr (H559), "saying"; the quotation-marker introducing the divine speech of vv. 2-31.
The Voices✦ public domain+
Very probably after the number of the children of Israel was taken, of which in the preceding chapter, and when the congregation of Israel with the tabernacle were about to set forward on their journey; and therefore directions are here given for their orderly and regular proceeding in it, in what form and manner they should both encamp and march
The Lord spake unto Moses and unto Aaron. Probably when they had finished the census, and brought the results into the tabernacle.
had spoken - Render spake.
Barnes presses the tense: the Hebrew is a fresh, formal "spake" (Piel of dābar), the head of a new oracle, not a backward-glancing pluperfect. Recorded as a translator's note on the verb that opens the chapter.
Order of the Twelve Tribes in the Camp and on the March.
2““The Israelites are to camp around the Tent of Meeting at a dist…”+

2“The Israelites are to camp around the Tent of Meeting at a distance from it, each man under his standard, with the banners of his family.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl ya·ḥă·nū sā·ḇîḇ lə·’ō·hel- mō·w·‘êḏ min·ne·ḡeḏ ya·ḥă·nū ’îš ‘al- diḡ·lōw ḇə·’ō·ṯōṯ ’ă·ḇō·ṯām lə·ḇêṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

The sons of Israel shall encamp, each man by his own standard (degel), by the ensigns (ʾōṯōṯ) of their fathers' house; over against, around the Tent of Meeting, shall they encamp.

Where the English smooths the original

  • דִּגְל֤וֹ diḡ·lōw (H1714, degel — a genuinely rare word, only 14 verses in all Scripture), "his standard / banner." This is the keyword of the whole unit. Its very meaning is debated: Cambridge reports it "is doubtful... perhaps denotes something looked at or conspicuous," possibly "company" or "battalion"; Keil says it "denotes primarily the larger field sign" of a three-tribe division, and secondarily "the army united under one standard, like... vexillum." BSB "standard" picks the banner-sense; the Hebrew hovers between the flag and the host gathered under it.
  • בְאֹתֹת֙ bə·ʾō·ṯōṯ (H226, ʾôṯ, plural), "with the ensigns / signs" — a different word from degel. Pulpit: "Rather, 'ensigns' (othoth in the plural). Each tribe... had its standard (degel), and each family in the tribe its ensign (oth)." BSB "banners of his family" blurs the two-tier system; the Hebrew distinguishes the great divisional degel from the smaller family ʾôṯ.
  • מִנֶּ֕גֶד min·ne·ḡeḏ (H5048, from neged, "front"), literally "over against / facing," not "at a distance." Barnes: "See the margin, over against; i.e. facing the tabernacle on every side." Pulpit agrees: "Rather, 'over against,' i.e., facing the tabernacle." BSB's "at a distance from it" supplies the reverential gap the commentators infer (perhaps 2,000 cubits, Joshua 3:4), but the bare word means fronting the sanctuary — every tribe's tents turned toward the dwelling.
  • סָבִ֥יב sā·ḇîḇ (H5439), "round about." BSB "around" is exact. The word is structurally weighty: the tribes encircle the Tent of Meeting on all four sides, the sanctuary at the dead center — the architecture of the whole chapter compressed into one adverb.
Word by word14 · parsed+
בְּנֵ֣יbə·nêThe IsraelitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine plural construct
bə·nê yiś·rā·ʾêl (H1121 + H3478), "the sons of Israel"; the covenant nation, here arrayed as an army by tribe.
יִשְׂרָאֵ֑לyiś·rā·’êl. . .H3478
√ Yisrâʼêl — Jisrael, a symbolical name of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
יַחֲנ֖וּya·ḥă·nūare to campH2583
√ chânâh — properly, to inclineVerbQalImperfectthird person masculine plural
ya·ḥă·nū (H2583, ḥānāh, "to encamp / incline"); the keyword verb of the unit, recurring in nearly every paragraph — the people pitch in a fixed, God-given pattern.
סָבִ֥יבsā·ḇîḇaroundH5439
√ çâbîyb — (as noun) a circle, neighbour, or environsAdverb
לְאֹֽהֶל־lə·’ō·hel-the TentH168
√ ʼôhel — a tent (as clearly conspicuous from a distance)Preposition-lNounmasculine singular construct
lə·ʾō·hel mō·w·ʿêḏ (H168 + H4150), "the Tent of Meeting"; môʿêd is the "appointed place/time" — the dwelling is named by the meeting it makes possible between God and people, and it stands at the center of the encampment.
מוֹעֵ֖דmō·w·‘êḏof MeetingH4150
√ môwʻêd — properly, an appointment, iNounmasculine singular
מִנֶּ֕גֶדmin·ne·ḡeḏat a distance from itH5048
√ neged — a front, iPreposition-m
יַחֲנֽוּ׃ya·ḥă·nūH2583
√ chânâh — properly, to inclineVerbQalImperfectthird person masculine plural
אִ֣ישׁ’îšeach [man]H376
√ ʼîysh — a man as an individual or a male personNounmasculine singular
עַל־‘al-underH5921
√ ʻal — above, over, upon, or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applicationsPreposition
דִּגְל֤וֹdiḡ·lōwhis standardH1714
√ degel — a flagNounmasculine singular constructthird person masculine singular
diḡ·lōw (H1714), "his standard"; the rare keyword degel (14 vv). Keil: the four standards correspond to four "camps or divisions of an army."
בְאֹתֹת֙ḇə·’ō·ṯōṯwith the bannersH226
√ ʼôwth — a signal (literally or figuratively), as aflag, beacon, monument, omen, prodigy, evidence, etcPreposition-bNouncommon plural
bə·ʾō·ṯōṯ (H226), "with the ensigns"; the smaller family-signs (ʾôṯ), distinct from the divisional degelPulpit insists on the plural and the distinction.
אֲבֹתָ֔ם’ă·ḇō·ṯāmof his familyH1
√ ʼâb — father, in a literal and immediate, or figurative and remote applicationNounmasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
לְבֵ֣יתlə·ḇêṯ. . .H1004
√ bayith — a house (in the greatest variation of applications, especially family, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine singular construct
lə·ḇêṯ ʾă·ḇō·ṯām (H1004 + H1), "the house of their fathers"; the patrilineal household, the smallest mustering unit under its own ensign.
The Voices✦ public domain+
a standard, banner, or flag, denotes primarily the larger field sign, possessed by every division composed of three tribes, which was also the banner of the tribe at the head of each division; and secondarily, in a derivative signification, it denotes the army united under one standard,
The meaning of the word deghel , rendered ‘standard,’ is doubtful. It perhaps denotes something looked at or conspicuous (cf. Song of Solomon 5:10 , R.V. ‘chiefest’); and an Assyr. root formed of the same consonants has that meaning. And hence might be derived ‘banner’ ( Song of Solomon 2:4 )
Each tribe, it would seem (see verse 31), had its standard ( degel ), and each family in the tribe its ensign ( oth ). Far off. Rather, "over against," i.e., facing the tabernacle
Far off — Partly out of reverence to God and his worship, and the portion allotted to it, and partly for caution, lest their vicinity to it might tempt them to make too near approaches to it. It is supposed they were at two thousand cubits distance from it
Benson (with Poole, near-verbatim) gives the traditional reason for the gap the BSB renders "at a distance": reverence and caution. The Hebrew min·ne·ḡeḏ means "over against / facing" (so Barnes, Pulpit); the distance is the expositors' inference from Joshua 3:4, recorded as such.
3“On the east side, toward the sunrise, the divisions of Judah are…”+

3On the east side, toward the sunrise, the divisions of Judah are to camp under their standard: The leader of the Judahites is Nahshon son of Amminadab,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

qê·ḏə·māh miz·rā·ḥāh lə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯām yə·hū·ḏāh wə·ha·ḥō·nîm de·ḡel ma·ḥă·nêh wə·nā·śî liḇ·nê yə·hū·ḏāh naḥ·šō·wn ben- ‘am·mî·nā·ḏāḇ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And those encamping eastward, toward the sunrise: the standard of the camp of Judah, by their divisions; and the leader (nāśîʾ) of the sons of Judah is Nahshon son of Amminadab.

Where the English smooths the original

  • קֵ֣דְמָה qê·ḏə·māh (H6924, qedem), "eastward" — but qedem also means "the front / the fore-part." Gill: "that which is 'before' is called 'Kedem', the east, as the west is called 'behind'." BSB "on the east side" is exact, but the Hebrew names the east as the front — the place of honor, the van of the march, the direction the sanctuary's entrance faced.
  • וְנָשִׂיא֙ wə·nā·śîʾ (H5387, nāśîʾ), "the leader / prince" — Strong's, "properly, an exalted one," one "lifted up." BSB "leader" is good; KJV "captain" overmilitarizes it. JFB notes these men held "the hereditary office of head or 'prince'." The same word nāśîʾ heads each tribe's entry; it is the title of the twelve who also took the census (Numbers 1).
  • דֶּ֛גֶל מַחֲנֵ֥ה de·ḡel ma·ḥă·nêh (H1714 + H4264), "the standard of the camp." Cambridge notes the literal Hebrew is awkward — "those that pitch... shall be the deghel of the camp of Judah" — which makes degel here read more like "company / battalion" (so the LXX tagma) than "flag." BSB "under their standard" smooths it; the rare word's secondary sense (the host itself) is on display.
Word by word13 · parsed+
קֵ֣דְמָהqê·ḏə·māhOn the east sideH6924
√ qedem — the front, of place (absolutely, the fore part, relatively the East) or time (antiquity)Adverbthird person feminine singular
qê·ḏə·māh (H6924), "eastward"; the front — the post of honor, the head of the line of march. Pulpit: "The van, the post of honour."
מִזְרָ֔חָהmiz·rā·ḥāhtoward the sunriseH4217
√ mizrâch — sunrise, iNounmasculine singularthird person feminine singular
לְצִבְאֹתָ֑םlə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯāmthe divisionsH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regPreposition-lNouncommon plural constructthird person masculine plural
יְהוּדָ֖הyə·hū·ḏāhof JudahH3063
√ Yᵉhûwdâh — Jehudah (or Judah), the name of five IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
yə·hū·ḏāh (H3063), "Judah"; placed first not for size alone but "because of his place in prophecy, and as the ancestor of the Messiah" (Pulpit, Genesis 49:10).
וְהַחֹנִים֙wə·ha·ḥō·nîmare to campH2583
√ chânâh — properly, to inclineConjunctive waw, ArticleVerbQalParticiplemasculine plural
דֶּ֛גֶלde·ḡelunder their standardH1714
√ degel — a flagNounmasculine singular construct
de·ḡel (H1714), "standard"; the rare keyword, here heading the first of four camps.
מַחֲנֵ֥הma·ḥă·nêh. . .H4264
√ machăneh — an encampment (of travellers or troops)Nouncommon singular construct
וְנָשִׂיא֙wə·nā·śîThe leaderH5387
√ nâsîyʼ — properly, an exalted one, iConjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
wə·nā·śîʾ (H5387), "the leader"; the "exalted one," tribal prince — the recurring title for each of the twelve heads.
לִבְנֵ֣יliḇ·nêvvvH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine plural construct
יְהוּדָ֔הyə·hū·ḏāhof the JudahitesH3063
√ Yᵉhûwdâh — Jehudah (or Judah), the name of five IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
נַחְשׁ֖וֹןnaḥ·šō·wnis NahshonH5177
√ Nachshôwn — Nachshon, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
naḥ·šō·wn (H5177, Nahshon — rare, 9 vv), "Nahshon"; the prince of Judah, named in the genealogy of Christ (Matthew 1:4; Luke 3:32-33) — JFB notes "Naasson."
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
עַמִּינָדָֽב׃‘am·mî·nā·ḏāḇof AmminadabH5992
√ ʻAmmîynâdâb — Amminadab, the name of four IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
ʿam·mî·nā·ḏāḇ (H5992, Amminadab — rare, 12 vv), "Amminadab"; Nahshon's father, also in Messiah's line. With Nahshon, the rarest names in the chapter — the verbal hinge to Numbers 10:14.
The Voices✦ public domain+
This tribe was in the first post, and in their marches led the van, not only because it was the most numerous, but chiefly because Christ, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, was to descend from it: yea, from the loins of Nahshon, who is here appointed the chief captain of it.
Judah led the way not because he was the greatest in number, for the order of the tribes was not determined by this consideration, but because of his place in prophecy, and as the ancestor of the Messiah ( Genesis 49:10 ).
Nahshon—or Naasson (Mt 1:4; Lu 3:32, 33). shall be captain—It appears that the twelve men who were called to superintend the census were also appointed to be the captains of their respective tribes—a dignity which they owed probably to the circumstances, formerly noticed, of their holding the hereditary office of head or "prince."
The standard of the tribe of Judah was to encamp in front, namely towards the east, according to its hosts; and by its side the tribes of Issachar and Zebulun, the descendants of Leah, under the command and banner of Judah: an army of 186,400 men, which was to march out first when the camp was broken up ( Numbers 2:9 ), so that Judah led the way as the champion of his brethren ( Genesis 49:10 ).
4“and his division numbers 74,600.”+

4and his division numbers 74,600.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōw ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem ’ar·bā·‘āh wə·šiḇ·‘îm ’e·lep̄ wə·šêš mê·’ō·wṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And his host (ṣābāʾ), and those numbered of them: seventy-four thousand and six hundred.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּצְבָא֖וֹ ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635, ṣābāʾ), "and his host / army" — Strong's, "a mass of persons... especially organized for war." BSB "his division" is administrative; the Hebrew word is military — these are not census-rows but troops. Keil renders the formula "His host, and those that were numbered of them."
  • וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑ם ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485, passive participle of pāqad), "and those numbered / mustered of them" — the same root that titles the whole book's census. BSB folds it into "numbers 74,600"; the Hebrew keeps host (ṣābāʾ) and the mustered count (pəqudîm) as two terms — the army, and its enrolled men.
Word by word7 · parsed+
וּצְבָא֖וֹū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōwand his divisionH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regConjunctive wawNouncommon singular constructthird person masculine singular
ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "his host"; the war-array of Judah — the same word behind "the LORD of hosts."
וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑םū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hemnumbersH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)Conjunctive wawVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "those numbered of them"; the mustered count, identical to Numbers 1:27. Gill marvels that in the twenty days till they marched, "not one of them died."
אַרְבָּעָ֧ה’ar·bā·‘āh74,600H702
√ ʼarbaʻ — fourNumbermasculine singular
ʾar·bā·ʿāh (H702), "four [and seventy thousand]"; opening the tally — 74,600, the largest single tribe, fitting for the van.
וְשִׁבְעִ֛יםwə·šiḇ·‘îm. . .H7657
√ shibʻîym — seventyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֖לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וְשֵׁ֥שׁwə·šêš. . .H8337
√ shêsh — six (as an overplus beyond five or the fingers of the hand)Conjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵאֽוֹת׃mê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
The Voices✦ public domain+
supposing these words to be the words of God, there is no necessity of rendering them in the future, as some have observed; though they seem rather to be the words of Moses, who under every tribe repeats the number, which is exactly the same as when taken; and though it was not till twenty days after that they set forward according to their order of encampment, not one of them died, which Aben Ezra observes as a very wonderful thing
"His host, and those that were numbered of them" (cf. Numbers 2:6 , Numbers 2:8 , Numbers 2:11 , etc.), i.e., the army according to its numbered men.
Judah, placed at the head of a camp composed of three tribes rallying under its standard, was said to have combined the united colors in the high priest's breastplate, but called by the name of Judah.
5“The tribe of Issachar will camp next to it. The leader of the Is…”+

5The tribe of Issachar will camp next to it. The leader of the Issacharites is Nethanel son of Zuar,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

maṭ·ṭêh yiś·śā·š·ḵār wə·ha·ḥō·nîm ‘ā·lāw wə·nā·śî liḇ·nê yiś·śā·š·ḵār nə·ṯan·’êl ben- ṣū·‘ār

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And those encamping beside him: the tribe (maṭṭeh) of Issachar; and the leader of the sons of Issachar is Nethanel son of Zuar.

Where the English smooths the original

  • מַטֵּ֣ה maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe" — but the word's root sense is a "staff / rod / branch." Cambridge notes the same double life as degel: "the words maṭṭeh and shēbheṭ, each of which can denote both a 'staff' and a 'tribe'." BSB "tribe" is correct; the Hebrew pictures the people as branches off one rod — the tribe named for the staff its men rally to.
  • וְהַחֹנִ֥ים עָלָ֖יו wə·ha·ḥō·nîm ʿā·lāw (H2583 + H5921), "those encamping beside him" — literally "those pitching upon / next to him." BSB "will camp next to it" reads him as the camp; the Hebrew keeps the personal "beside him" (Judah), the brother-tribes drawn up flank to flank. Cambridge: "The important tribe thus appears to be placed in the centre, between the other two."
Word by word10 · parsed+
מַטֵּ֣הmaṭ·ṭêhThe tribeH4294
√ maṭṭeh — a branch (as extending)Nounmasculine singular construct
maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe"; the staff-word for a tribe, like degel a term that doubles (staff / tribe).
יִשָּׂשכָ֑רyiś·śā·š·ḵārof IssacharH3485
√ Yissâˢkâr — Jissaskar, a son of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
yiś·śā·š·ḵār (H3485), "Issachar"; Leah's son, set under Judah his brother — Poole: "Issachar and Zebulun were Leah's two youngest sons, and therefore would more contentedly submit to Judah."
וְהַחֹנִ֥יםwə·ha·ḥō·nîmwill campH2583
√ chânâh — properly, to inclineConjunctive waw, ArticleVerbQalParticiplemasculine plural
עָלָ֖יו‘ā·lāwnext to itH5921
√ ʻal — above, over, upon, or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applicationsPrepositionthird person masculine singular
וְנָשִׂיא֙wə·nā·śîThe leaderH5387
√ nâsîyʼ — properly, an exalted one, iConjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
wə·nā·śîʾ (H5387), "the leader"; the prince of each tribe, here Nethanel.
לִבְנֵ֣יliḇ·nêof the IssacharitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine plural construct
יִשָּׂשכָ֔רyiś·śā·š·ḵār. . .H3485
√ Yissâˢkâr — Jissaskar, a son of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
נְתַנְאֵ֖לnə·ṯan·’êlis NethanelH5417
√ Nᵉthanʼêl — Nethanel, the name of ten IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
nə·ṯan·ʾêl (H5417), "Nethanel"; "God has given" — captain of Issachar (Numbers 1:8).
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
צוּעָֽר׃ṣū·‘ārof ZuarH6686
√ Tsûwʻâr — Tsuar, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
The Voices✦ public domain+
Issachar and Zebulun were Leah’s two youngest sons, and therefore would more contentedly submit to Judah.
Who with Zebulun, after mentioned, as placed with him under the same standard, were the brethren of Judah, by the same mother Leah, and so fitly put together, as most likely to continue in harmony and love; and being the youngest sons of Leah, and brethren of Judah, would, without any reluctance or murmuring, pitch under their elder brother's standard
Issachar is said to ‘pitch next unto’ Judah, and similarly in the other three cases. The important tribe thus appears to be placed in the centre, between the other two.
6“and his division numbers 54,400.”+

6and his division numbers 54,400.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōw ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏāw ’ar·bā·‘āh wa·ḥă·miš·šîm ’e·lep̄ wə·’ar·ba‘ mê·’ō·wṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And his host, and those numbered of them: fifty-four thousand and four hundred.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּצְבָא֖וֹ ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "and his host" — again the war-word, not "division." The refrain (host + numbered) is identical for every tribe; the repetition is liturgical, each tribe weighed by the same measure.
  • וּפְקֻדָ֑יו ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏāw (H6485), "and those numbered of him" — the muster-participle. Gill: "Which had been numbered, for it does not appear that there was a fresh account taken" — the figures are carried straight from the census of Numbers 1.
Word by word7 · parsed+
וּצְבָא֖וֹū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōwand his divisionH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regConjunctive wawNouncommon singular constructthird person masculine singular
ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "his host"; the army of Issachar.
וּפְקֻדָ֑יוū·p̄ə·qu·ḏāwnumbersH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)Conjunctive wawVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural constructthird person masculine singular
ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏāw (H6485), "those numbered"; carried from Numbers 1:29 — no new count.
אַרְבָּעָ֧ה’ar·bā·‘āh54,400H702
√ ʼarbaʻ — fourNumbermasculine singular
ʾar·bā·ʿāh (H702), "four [and fifty thousand]"; 54,400.
וַחֲמִשִּׁ֛יםwa·ḥă·miš·šîm. . .H2572
√ chămishshîym — fiftyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֖לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וְאַרְבַּ֥עwə·’ar·ba‘. . .H702
√ ʼarbaʻ — fourConjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵאֽוֹת׃סmê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
The Voices✦ public domain+
and those that were numbered thereof, were fifty and four thousand and four hundred. 54,400 men. Which had been numbered, for it does not appear that there was a fresh account taken; see Numbers 1:29 .
those that pitch next unto him—that is, on the one side.
"His host, and those that were numbered of them" (cf. Numbers 2:6 , Numbers 2:8 , Numbers 2:11 , etc.), i.e., the army according to its numbered men.
7“Next will be the tribe of Zebulun. The leader of the Zebulunites…”+

7Next will be the tribe of Zebulun. The leader of the Zebulunites is Eliab son of Helon,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

maṭ·ṭêh zə·ḇū·lun wə·nā·śî liḇ·nê zə·ḇū·lun ’ĕ·lî·’āḇ ben- ḥê·lōn

Literal — word-for-word from the original

The tribe of Zebulun; and the leader of the sons of Zebulun is Eliab son of Helon.

Where the English smooths the original

  • מַטֵּ֣ה maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe" (staff-word) — the third member of Judah's camp. BSB "Next will be the tribe" supplies "next"; the Hebrew simply names the tribe, the third drawn up under Judah's banner.
  • וְנָשִׂיא֙ wə·nā·śîʾ (H5387), "the leader / prince." Gill observes the structure: "each tribe had its own captain; nor does it appear that there was a general over those captains... but Moses was the generalissimo of all the camps." The Hebrew gives each tribe its own nāśîʾ, with no rank between prince and Moses.
Word by word8 · parsed+
מַטֵּ֖הmaṭ·ṭêh[Next will be] the tribeH4294
√ maṭṭeh — a branch (as extending)Nounmasculine singular construct
maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe"; Zebulun, completing Leah's three-son camp.
זְבוּלֻ֑ןzə·ḇū·lunof ZebulunH2074
√ Zᵉbûwlûwn — Zebulon, a son of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
zə·ḇū·lūn (H2074), "Zebulun"; Leah's youngest, drawn up with Judah and Issachar.
וְנָשִׂיא֙wə·nā·śîThe leaderH5387
√ nâsîyʼ — properly, an exalted one, iConjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
לִבְנֵ֣יliḇ·nêof the ZebulunitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine plural construct
ʾĕ·lî·ʾāḇ (H446), "Eliab"; "God is father" — captain of Zebulun (Numbers 1:9).
זְבוּלֻ֔ןzə·ḇū·lun. . .H2074
√ Zᵉbûwlûwn — Zebulon, a son of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
אֱלִיאָ֖ב’ĕ·lî·’āḇis EliabH446
√ ʼĔlîyʼâb — Eliab, the name of six IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
חֵלֹֽן׃ḥê·lōnof HelonH2497
√ Chêlôn — Chelon, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
The Voices✦ public domain+
While Judah's tribe was the most numerous, those of Issachar and Zebulun were also very numerous; so that the association of those three tribes formed a strong and imposing van.
each tribe had its own captain; nor does it appear that there was a general over those captains, that had the command of the camp, consisting of three tribes, but Moses was the generalissimo of all the camps.
Thus the gospel church ought to be compact, according to the Scripture model, every one knowing and keeping his place
8“and his division numbers 57,400.”+

8and his division numbers 57,400.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōw ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏāw šiḇ·‘āh wa·ḥă·miš·šîm ’e·lep̄ wə·’ar·ba‘ mê·’ō·wṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And his host, and those numbered of them: fifty-seven thousand and four hundred.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּצְבָא֖וֹ ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "and his host" — the war-array of Zebulun. The unvarying formula underlines that the camp is reckoned as an army drawn up for the march to the land.
  • וּפְקֻדָ֑יו ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏāw (H6485), "and those numbered of him" — drawn from Numbers 1:31. BSB "his division numbers" collapses two distinct Hebrew terms (host, numbered-ones) into one verb.
Word by word7 · parsed+
וּצְבָא֖וֹū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōwand his divisionH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regConjunctive wawNouncommon singular constructthird person masculine singular
ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "his host"; Zebulun's army.
וּפְקֻדָ֑יוū·p̄ə·qu·ḏāwnumbersH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)Conjunctive wawVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural constructthird person masculine singular
ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏāw (H6485), "those numbered"; 57,400, from Numbers 1:31.
שִׁבְעָ֧הšiḇ·‘āh57,400H7651
√ shebaʻ — seven (as the sacred full one)Numbermasculine singular
וַחֲמִשִּׁ֛יםwa·ḥă·miš·šîm. . .H2572
√ chămishshîym — fiftyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֖לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וְאַרְבַּ֥עwə·’ar·ba‘. . .H702
√ ʼarbaʻ — fourConjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵאֽוֹת׃mê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
The Voices✦ public domain+
and those that were numbered thereof, were fifty and seven thousand and four hundred. 57,400 men; see Numbers 1:31 .
The area of the camp might be about three square miles
Barnes appends a spatial estimate to his camp-plan: the whole encampment of c. 2 million people, four three-tribe divisions arrayed around the Tent of Meeting, occupied roughly three square miles. Recorded as the commentator's calculation, not a figure from the text.
the association of those three tribes formed a strong and imposing van.
9“The total number of men in the divisions of the camp of Judah is…”+

9The total number of men in the divisions of the camp of Judah is 186,400; they shall set out first.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

kāl- hap·pə·qu·ḏîm lə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯām lə·ma·ḥă·nêh yə·hū·ḏāh mə·’aṯ ’e·lep̄ ū·šə·mō·nîm ’e·lep̄ wə·šê·šeṯ- ’ă·lā·p̄îm wə·’ar·ba‘- mê·’ō·wṯ yis·sā·‘ū ri·šō·nāh

Literal — word-for-word from the original

All those numbered of the camp of Judah: one hundred eighty-six thousand and four hundred, by their divisions. They shall set out first (yissāʿū riʾšōnāh).

Where the English smooths the original

  • הַפְּקֻדִ֞ים hap·pə·qu·ḏîm (H6485), "the numbered ones" — the mustered total. BSB "the total number of men" is accurate; the Hebrew is the bare participle-noun "the numbered," the audit-word that runs through Numbers.
  • יִסָּֽעוּ yis·sā·ʿū (H5265, nāsaʿ), "they shall set out / pull up" — Strong's, "properly, to pull up, especially the tent-pins." BSB "set out" is right, but the root is vivid: to break camp is to pull the tent-stakes. Pulpit: no order to set forth "had been given, but the necessity of doing so was understood."
  • רִאשֹׁנָ֖ה ri·šō·nāh (H7223), "first" — first in rank and in the order of march. Gill: "the camp of Judah moved first... and when they went out to fight, Judah went up first, Judges 1:1." Judah's primacy is not just spatial but temporal: it leads the column.
Word by word15 · parsed+
כָּֽל־kāl-The totalH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular construct
הַפְּקֻדִ֞יםhap·pə·qu·ḏîmnumber of menH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)ArticleVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural
hap·pə·qu·ḏîm (H6485), "the numbered"; the summed muster of Judah's three tribes — 186,400.
לְצִבְאֹתָ֑םlə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯāmin the divisionsH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regPreposition-lNouncommon plural constructthird person masculine plural
לְמַחֲנֵ֣הlə·ma·ḥă·nêhof the campH4264
√ machăneh — an encampment (of travellers or troops)Preposition-lNouncommon singular construct
יְהוּדָ֗הyə·hū·ḏāhof JudahH3063
√ Yᵉhûwdâh — Jehudah (or Judah), the name of five IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
מְאַ֨תmə·’aṯis 186,400H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine singular construct
mə·ʾaṯ (H3967), "a hundred [thousand]"; opening the largest camp-total. Gill: "this was the largest camp of them all... and therefore placed foremost, and as the vanguard to the tabernacle."
אֶ֜לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וּשְׁמֹנִ֥יםū·šə·mō·nîm. . .H8084
√ shᵉmônîym — eighty, also eightiethConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֛לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וְשֵֽׁשֶׁת־wə·šê·šeṯ-. . .H8337
√ shêsh — six (as an overplus beyond five or the fingers of the hand)Conjunctive wawNumbermasculine singular construct
אֲלָפִ֥ים’ă·lā·p̄îm. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine plural
וְאַרְבַּע־wə·’ar·ba‘-. . .H702
√ ʼarbaʻ — fourConjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵא֖וֹתmê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
יִסָּֽעוּ׃סyis·sā·‘ūthey shall set outH5265
√ nâçaʻ — properly, to pull up, especially the tent-pins, iVerbQalImperfectthird person masculine plural
yis·sā·ʿū (H5265), "they shall set out"; the tent-pulling march-verb (the structural link to Numbers 10's order of march).
רִאשֹׁנָ֖הri·šō·nāhfirstH7223
√ riʼshôwn — first, in place, time or rank (as adjective or noun)Adjectivefeminine singular
ri·šō·nāh (H7223), "first"; Judah leads the column — the only camp told to move "first."
The Voices✦ public domain+
this was the largest camp of them all, being near 30,000 more than Dan's, Numbers 2:31 , which was the next in number unto it, and therefore placed foremost, and as the vanguard to the tabernacle: these shall first set forth; in a march, when about to journey; when they saw the cloud remove, the priests blew with the trumpets, and then the camp of Judah moved first, as Jarchi observes, and when they went out to fight, Judah went up first, Judges 1:1 .
These shall first set forth. N o order to set forth had been given, but the necessity of doing so was understood, and is here anticipated, as in Numbers 1:51 .
This was the most numerous camp, because they marched first, as being placed on the east and going towards the east, and because they guarded the sanctuary.
10“On the south side, the divisions of Reuben are to camp under the…”+

10On the south side, the divisions of Reuben are to camp under their standard: The leader of the Reubenites is Elizur son of Shedeur,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

tê·mā·nāh lə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯām rə·’ū·ḇên ma·ḥă·nêh de·ḡel wə·nā·śî liḇ·nê rə·’ū·ḇên ’ĕ·lî·ṣūr ben- šə·ḏê·’ūr

Literal — word-for-word from the original

The standard of the camp of Reuben southward (têmānāh), by their divisions; and the leader of the sons of Reuben is Elizur son of Shedeur.

Where the English smooths the original

  • תֵּימָ֖נָה tê·mā·nāh (H8486, têmān), "southward" — but têmān properly means "the right hand / right side," since one orients facing east. Gill: "to the south of the tabernacle, or to the right hand, as Aben Ezra interprets it; this was the right wing of the whole army." BSB "south side" loses the orientation built into the Hebrew — the camp is mapped from a man facing the sunrise.
  • דֶּ֣גֶל מַחֲנֵ֧ה de·ḡel ma·ḥă·nêh (H1714 + H4264), "the standard of the camp" — the second of the four degel-headed divisions. The rare keyword (14 vv) reappears at the head of each quarter; its drumbeat structures the chapter into four.
Word by word11 · parsed+
תֵּימָ֖נָהtê·mā·nāhOn the south sideH8486
√ têymân — the south (as being on the right hand of a person facing the east)Nounfeminine singularthird person feminine singular
tê·mā·nāh (H8486), "southward"; the "right hand" of the eastward-facing camp — the right wing of the army (Gill).
לְצִבְאֹתָ֑םlə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯāmthe divisionsH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regPreposition-lNouncommon plural constructthird person masculine plural
רְאוּבֵ֛ןrə·’ū·ḇênof ReubenH7205
√ Rᵉʼûwbên — Reuben, a son of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
rə·ʾū·ḇên (H7205), "Reuben"; Jacob's firstborn, leader of the second camp — Poole: "Reuben being the first-born, was the leader of the second camp."
מַחֲנֵ֧הma·ḥă·nêhare to campH4264
√ machăneh — an encampment (of travellers or troops)Nouncommon singular construct
דֶּ֣גֶלde·ḡelunder their standardH1714
√ degel — a flagNounmasculine singular construct
de·ḡel (H1714), "standard"; the rare keyword heading the southern division.
וְנָשִׂיא֙wə·nā·śîThe leaderH5387
√ nâsîyʼ — properly, an exalted one, iConjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
wə·nā·śîʾ (H5387), "the leader"; Elizur, prince of Reuben.
לִבְנֵ֣יliḇ·nêof the ReubenitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine plural construct
רְאוּבֵ֔ןrə·’ū·ḇên. . .H7205
√ Rᵉʼûwbên — Reuben, a son of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
אֱלִיצ֖וּר’ĕ·lî·ṣūris ElizurH468
√ ʼĔlîytsûwr — Elitsur, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
ʾĕ·lî·ṣūr (H468), "Elizur"; "God is a rock" — captain of Reuben (Numbers 1:5).
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
שְׁדֵיאֽוּר׃šə·ḏê·’ūrof ShedeurH7707
√ Shᵉdêyʼûwr — Shedejur, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
The Voices✦ public domain+
Reuben being the first-born, was the leader of the second camp.
this was placed to the south of the tabernacle, or to the right hand, as Aben Ezra interprets it; this was the right wing of the whole army.
On the south side was the standard of Reuben, with which Simeon and Gad, descendants of Leah and her maid Zilpah, were associated, and to which they were subordinated.
11“and his division numbers 46,500.”+

11and his division numbers 46,500.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōw ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏāw šiš·šāh wə·’ar·bā·‘îm ’e·lep̄ wa·ḥă·mêš mê·’ō·wṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And his host, and those numbered of them: forty-six thousand and five hundred.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּצְבָא֖וֹ ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "and his host" — Gill distinguishes it sharply: "the host of Reuben, as distinct from his camp, of which it was only a part." The single tribe's army (ṣābāʾ) is a part of the three-tribe camp (maḥăneh); BSB "his division" flattens the layered terms.
  • וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑ם ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "and those numbered of them" — from Numbers 1:21. The audit-participle, identical in form across every tribe.
Word by word7 · parsed+
וּצְבָא֖וֹū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōwand his divisionH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regConjunctive wawNouncommon singular constructthird person masculine singular
ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "his host"; Reuben's army, a part of the southern camp.
וּפְקֻדָ֑יוū·p̄ə·qu·ḏāwnumbersH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)Conjunctive wawVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural constructthird person masculine singular
ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "those numbered"; 46,500, from Numbers 1:21.
שִׁשָּׁ֧הšiš·šāh46,500H8337
√ shêsh — six (as an overplus beyond five or the fingers of the hand)Numbermasculine singular
וְאַרְבָּעִ֛יםwə·’ar·bā·‘îm. . .H705
√ ʼarbâʻîym — fortyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֖לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וַחֲמֵ֥שׁwa·ḥă·mêš. . .H2568
√ châmêsh — fiveConjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵאֽוֹת׃mê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
The Voices✦ public domain+
the host of Reuben, as distinct from his camp, of which it was only a part, and of which Elizur was captain: and those that were numbered thereof, were forty and six thousand and five hundred. 46,500 men; see Numbers 1:21 .
This army of 151,450 men was to break up and march as the second division.
The tabernacle or sacred tent of their Divine King, with the camp of the Levites around it (see on [53]Nu 3:38), formed the center, as does the chief's in the encampment of all nomad people.
12“The tribe of Simeon will camp next to it. The leader of the Sime…”+

12The tribe of Simeon will camp next to it. The leader of the Simeonites is Shelumiel son of Zurishaddai,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

maṭ·ṭêh šim·‘ō·wn wə·ha·ḥō·w·nim ‘ā·lāw wə·nā·śî liḇ·nê šim·‘ō·wn šə·lu·mî·’êl ben- ṣū·rî- šad·dāy

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And those encamping beside him: the tribe of Simeon; and the leader of the sons of Simeon is Shelumiel son of Zurishaddai.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וְהַחוֹנִ֥ם עָלָ֖יו wə·ha·ḥō·nim ʿā·lāw (H2583 + H5921), "those encamping beside him" — literally "upon / next to him" (Reuben). BSB "will camp next to it"; the Hebrew keeps the brother-bond personal. Gill: "Reuben and Simeon being brothers by the mother as well as the father's side, might well be thought to agree together."
  • מַטֵּ֣ה maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe" (staff-word) — Simeon set under Reuben his full brother. The recurring maṭṭeh marks the second and third member of each camp, while degel + maḥăneh marks the head.
Word by word11 · parsed+
מַטֵּ֣הmaṭ·ṭêhThe tribeH4294
√ maṭṭeh — a branch (as extending)Nounmasculine singular construct
maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe"; the staff-word, second member of the southern camp.
שִׁמְע֑וֹןšim·‘ō·wnof SimeonH8095
√ Shimʻôwn — Shimon, one of Jacob's sons, also the tribe descended from himNounpropermasculine singular
šim·ʿō·wn (H8095), "Simeon"; Leah's second son, drawn up beside Reuben — full brothers, fitly paired.
וְהַחוֹנִ֥םwə·ha·ḥō·w·nimwill campH2583
√ chânâh — properly, to inclineConjunctive waw, ArticleVerbQalParticiplemasculine plural
עָלָ֖יו‘ā·lāwnext to itH5921
√ ʻal — above, over, upon, or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applicationsPrepositionthird person masculine singular
וְנָשִׂיא֙wə·nā·śîThe leaderH5387
√ nâsîyʼ — properly, an exalted one, iConjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
לִבְנֵ֣יliḇ·nêof the SimeonitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine plural construct
שִׁמְע֔וֹןšim·‘ō·wn. . .H8095
√ Shimʻôwn — Shimon, one of Jacob's sons, also the tribe descended from himNounpropermasculine singular
שְׁלֻמִיאֵ֖לšə·lu·mî·’êlis ShelumielH8017
√ Shᵉlumîyʼêl — Shelumiel, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
צוּרִֽי־ṣū·rî-vvvH6701
√ Tsûwrîyshadday — Tsurishaddai, an Israelite
שַׁדָּֽי׃šad·dāyof ZurishaddaiH6701
√ Tsûwrîyshadday — Tsurishaddai, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
The Voices✦ public domain+
Reuben and Simeon being brothers by the mother as well as the father's side, might well be thought to agree together
On the south side was the standard of Reuben, with which Simeon and Gad, descendants of Leah and her maid Zilpah, were associated, and to which they were subordinated.
It is our duty and interest to be contented with the place allotted to us, and to endeavour to occupy it in a proper manner, without envying or murmuring; without ambition or covetousness.
13“and his division numbers 59,300.”+

13and his division numbers 59,300.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōw ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem tiš·‘āh wa·ḥă·miš·šîm ’e·lep̄ ū·šə·lōš mê·’ō·wṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And his host, and those numbered of them: fifty-nine thousand and three hundred.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּצְבָא֖וֹ ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "and his host" — Simeon's army within the southern camp. The repeated war-word keeps each tribe a fighting unit, not a mere headcount.
  • וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑ם ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "and those numbered of them" — 59,300, "the same as in Numbers 1:23" (Gill). The figures are transcribed, not recomputed.
Word by word7 · parsed+
וּצְבָא֖וֹū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōwand his divisionH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regConjunctive wawNouncommon singular constructthird person masculine singular
ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "his host"; Simeon's army.
וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑םū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hemnumbersH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)Conjunctive wawVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "those numbered"; 59,300, from Numbers 1:23.
תִּשְׁעָ֧הtiš·‘āh59,300H8672
√ têshaʻ — nine or (ordinal) ninthNumbermasculine singular
וַחֲמִשִּׁ֛יםwa·ḥă·miš·šîm. . .H2572
√ chămishshîym — fiftyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֖לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וּשְׁלֹ֥שׁū·šə·lōš. . .H7969
√ shâlôwsh — threeConjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵאֽוֹת׃mê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
The Voices✦ public domain+
and those that were numbered of them, were fifty and nine thousand and three hundred. 59,300 men; the same as in Numbers 1:23 .
On the south side was the standard of Reuben, with which Simeon and Gad, descendants of Leah and her maid Zilpah, were associated, and to which they were subordinated.
allowing one square cubit to each soldier while remaining close in the ranks, has been computed to extend over an area of somewhat more than twelve square miles.
14“Next will be the tribe of Gad. The leader of the Gadites is Elia…”+

14Next will be the tribe of Gad. The leader of the Gadites is Eliasaph son of Deuel,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

wə·maṭ·ṭêh gāḏ wə·nā·śî liḇ·nê ḡāḏ ’el·yā·sāp̄ ben- rə·‘ū·’êl

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And the tribe of Gad; and the leader of the sons of Gad is Eliasaph son of Reuel [Deuel].

Where the English smooths the original

  • רְעוּאֵֽל rə·ʿū·ʾêl (H7467), "Reuel" — but at Numbers 1:14 the same man is "Deuel." This is a genuine textual variant. Poole: "Called Deuel, Numbers 1:14, the Hebrew letters daleth and resh being very like, and oft changed." Pulpit is frank: "The error is utterly unimportant, except as proving the possibility of errors in the sacred text." BSB prints "Deuel" here, harmonizing to 1:14; the Masoretic Hebrew reads Reuel — a d/r (ד/ר) confusion, the letters nearly identical in form.
  • מַטֵּ֖ה maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe" — Gad, the third of Reuben's camp. Benson (in Poole's words): Gad, "the son of Leah's handmaid," is fitly added "in Levi's room" — replacing Levi, who is not numbered with the fighting tribes.
Word by word8 · parsed+
וְמַטֵּ֖הwə·maṭ·ṭêh[Next will be] the tribeH4294
√ maṭṭeh — a branch (as extending)Conjunctive wawNounmasculine singular construct
wə·maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "the tribe"; staff-word, third member of Reuben's camp.
גָּ֑דgāḏof GadH1410
√ Gâd — Gad, a son of Jacob, including his tribe and its territoryNounpropermasculine singular
gāḏ (H1410), "Gad"; son of Zilpah (Leah's maid), completing the southern camp in Levi's place among the twelve.
וְנָשִׂיא֙wə·nā·śîThe leaderH5387
√ nâsîyʼ — properly, an exalted one, iConjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
לִבְנֵ֣יliḇ·nêof the GaditesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine plural construct
גָ֔דḡāḏ. . .H1410
√ Gâd — Gad, a son of Jacob, including his tribe and its territoryNounpropermasculine singular
אֶלְיָסָ֖ף’el·yā·sāp̄is EliasaphH460
√ ʼElyâçâph — Eljasaph, the name of two IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
ʾel·yā·sāp̄ (H460), "Eliasaph"; "God has added" — captain of Gad (Numbers 1:14).
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
רְעוּאֵֽל׃rə·‘ū·’êlof DeuelH7467
√ Rᵉʻûwʼêl — Reuel, the name of Moses' father-in-law, also of an Edomite and an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
rə·ʿū·ʾêl (H7467), "Reuel"; the Masoretic reading, against "Deuel" of Numbers 1:14 — a ד/ר scribal variant, openly noted by the commentators.
The Voices✦ public domain+
Called Deuel , Numbers 1:14 , the Hebrew letters daleth and resh being very like, and oft changed, as appears by comparing Genesis 10:3 , with 1 Chronicles 1:6 Genesis 36:26 ,38 , with 1 Chronicles 1:41 ,50 .
Reuel. Probably an error of transcription for Deuel, which actually appears here in many MSS. The Septuagint, however, has Raguel (see Numbers 1:14 ; Numbers 7:42 , etc.). The error is utterly unimportant, except as proving the possibility of errors in the sacred text.
In Numbers 2:14 , Reuel is a mistake for Reuel ( Numbers 1:14 ; Numbers 7:42 ; Numbers 10:20 ), which is the reading given here in 118 MSS cited by Kennicott and De Rossi, in several of the ancient editions, and in the Samaritan, Vulgate, and Jonah Saad., whereas the lxx, Onk., Syr., and Pers. read Reuel.
Keil's text-critical note as transmitted in the source reads "Reuel is a mistake for Reuel" — evidently a printing slip for "Reuel is a mistake for Deuel." Reproduced verbatim as sourced; the substance is the same crux Poole and the Pulpit describe (the ד/ר variant, with the bulk of MSS favoring Deuel).
15“and his division numbers 45,650.”+

15and his division numbers 45,650.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōw ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem ḥă·miš·šāh wə·’ar·bā·‘îm ’e·lep̄ wə·šêš mê·’ō·wṯ wa·ḥă·miš·šîm

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And his host, and those numbered of them: forty-five thousand and six hundred and fifty.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּצְבָא֖וֹ ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "and his host" — Gill: "the host of Gad, as distinct from those of Reuben and Simeon, which together formed the camp." The single tribe's army nested inside the three-tribe camp.
  • וַחֲמִשִּֽׁים wa·ḥă·miš·šîm (H2572), "and fifty" — Gad alone among the camp-tribes carries an odd fifty (45,650). The precise figure (not rounded to hundreds) is preserved exactly from Numbers 1:25 — the audit keeps the remainder.
Word by word8 · parsed+
וּצְבָא֖וֹū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōwand his divisionH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regConjunctive wawNouncommon singular constructthird person masculine singular
ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "his host"; Gad's army, distinct from Reuben's and Simeon's.
וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑םū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hemnumbersH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)Conjunctive wawVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "those numbered"; 45,650 — note the precise fifty, from Numbers 1:25.
חֲמִשָּׁ֤הḥă·miš·šāh45,650H2568
√ châmêsh — fiveNumbermasculine singular
וְאַרְבָּעִים֙wə·’ar·bā·‘îm. . .H705
√ ʼarbâʻîym — fortyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֔לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וְשֵׁ֥שׁwə·šêš. . .H8337
√ shêsh — six (as an overplus beyond five or the fingers of the hand)Conjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵא֖וֹתmê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
וַחֲמִשִּֽׁים׃wa·ḥă·miš·šîm. . .H2572
√ chămishshîym — fiftyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
The Voices✦ public domain+
the host of Gad, as distinct from those of Reuben and Simeon, which together formed the camp: and those that were numbered of them, were forty and five thousand and six hundred and fifty. 45,650 men; see Numbers 1:25 .
On the south side was the standard of Reuben, with which Simeon and Gad, descendants of Leah and her maid Zilpah, were associated, and to which they were subordinated.
But into our calculations of the occupied space must be taken not only the fighting men, whose numbers are here given, but also the families, tents, and baggage.
16“The total number of men in the divisions of the camp of Reuben i…”+

16The total number of men in the divisions of the camp of Reuben is 151,450; they shall set out second.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

kāl- hap·pə·qu·ḏîm lə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯām lə·ma·ḥă·nêh rə·’ū·ḇên mə·’aṯ ’e·lep̄ wə·’e·ḥāḏ wa·ḥă·miš·šîm ’e·lep̄ wə·’ar·ba‘- mê·’ō·wṯ wa·ḥă·miš·šîm yis·sā·‘ū ū·šə·nî·yim

Literal — word-for-word from the original

All those numbered of the camp of Reuben: one hundred fifty-one thousand and four hundred and fifty, by their divisions. And second they shall set out.

Where the English smooths the original

  • הַפְּקֻדִ֞ים hap·pə·qu·ḏîm (H6485), "the numbered ones" of the camp — the summed muster of Reuben, Simeon, Gad (151,450). BSB "the total number of men" carries it; the Hebrew noun is simply "the numbered."
  • וּשְׁנִיִּ֖ם יִסָּֽעוּ ū·šə·ni·yim yis·sā·ʿū (H8145 + H5265), "and second they shall set out" — BSB "they shall set out second." The march-order is fixed numerically: Reuben's camp pulls its tent-pins (nāsaʿ) in second place, behind Judah, before the tabernacle — the ordinal binds this verse into the column of Numbers 10.
Word by word15 · parsed+
כָּֽל־kāl-The totalH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular construct
הַפְּקֻדִ֞יםhap·pə·qu·ḏîmnumber of menH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)ArticleVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural
hap·pə·qu·ḏîm (H6485), "the numbered"; 151,450, the southern camp's total. Gill: "much lesser than the preceding camp."
לְצִבְאֹתָ֑םlə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯāmin the divisionsH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regPreposition-lNouncommon plural constructthird person masculine plural
לְמַחֲנֵ֣הlə·ma·ḥă·nêhof the campH4264
√ machăneh — an encampment (of travellers or troops)Preposition-lNouncommon singular construct
רְאוּבֵ֗ןrə·’ū·ḇênof ReubenH7205
√ Rᵉʼûwbên — Reuben, a son of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
מְאַ֨תmə·’aṯis 151,450H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine singular construct
אֶ֜לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וְאֶחָ֨דwə·’e·ḥāḏ. . .H259
√ ʼechâd — properly, united, iConjunctive wawNumbermasculine singular
וַחֲמִשִּׁ֥יםwa·ḥă·miš·šîm. . .H2572
√ chămishshîym — fiftyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֛לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וְאַרְבַּע־wə·’ar·ba‘-. . .H702
√ ʼarbaʻ — fourConjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵא֥וֹתmê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
וַחֲמִשִּׁ֖יםwa·ḥă·miš·šîm. . .H2572
√ chămishshîym — fiftyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
יִסָּֽעוּ׃סyis·sā·‘ūthey shall set outH5265
√ nâçaʻ — properly, to pull up, especially the tent-pins, iVerbQalImperfectthird person masculine plural
yis·sā·ʿū (H5265), "they shall set out"; the tent-pulling verb — Reuben marches second.
וּשְׁנִיִּ֖םū·šə·nî·yimsecondH8145
√ shênîy — properly, double, iConjunctive wawNumberordinal masculine plural
The Voices✦ public domain+
Putting Reuben's host, and the hosts of Simeon and Gad together, Numbers 2:13
This army of 151,450 men was to break up and march as the second division.
Reuben, Simeon, and Gad formed the second great division [Nu 10:18-20].
17“In the middle of the camps, the Tent of Meeting is to travel wit…”+

17In the middle of the camps, the Tent of Meeting is to travel with the camp of the Levites. They are to set out in the order they encamped, each in his own place under his standard.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

bə·ṯō·wḵ ham·ma·ḥă·nōṯ ’ō·hel- mō·w·‘êḏ wə·nā·sa‘ ma·ḥă·nêh hal·wî·yim yis·sā·‘ū ka·’ă·šer ya·ḥă·nū kên ’îš ‘al- yā·ḏōw lə·ḏiḡ·lê·hem

Literal — word-for-word from the original

Then shall set out the Tent of Meeting, the camp of the Levites, in the midst of the camps; as they encamp, so shall they set out, each in his place (ʿal yāḏō), by their standards.

Where the English smooths the original

  • בְּת֣וֹךְ הַֽמַּחֲנֹ֑ת bə·ṯōwḵ ham·ma·ḥă·nōṯ (H8432 + H4264), "in the midst of the camps" — tāveḵ is literally a "bisection," the dead center. Benson and Poole warn it is "not to be understood strictly, but largely; for in their march they were divided." Cambridge: "the centre of the line of march" — the Levites a hollow square around the sanctuary. BSB "in the middle" is right; the commentators guard against pressing it too literally.
  • וְנָסַ֧ע wə·nā·saʿ (H5265), "then shall set out" — the tent-pulling verb, here of the sanctuary itself. The dwelling does not stay fixed; it journeys in the heart of the column. Pulpit: "whether at rest or on the march, the Divine habitation should be exactly in the midst of Israel."
  • עַל־יָד֖וֹ ʿal yā·ḏōw (H5921 + H3027), literally "by his hand" — idiom for "in his place / station." Keil: "yād, place, as in Deuteronomy 23:13; Isaiah 57:8." BSB "each in his own place" is exact; the Hebrew uses "hand" for the spot assigned to each man — order down to the individual.
Word by word15 · parsed+
בְּת֣וֹךְbə·ṯō·wḵIn the middleH8432
√ tâvek — a bisection, iPreposition-bNounmasculine singular construct
bə·ṯōwḵ (H8432), "in the midst"; the center — same word as v.33's "among." The sanctuary stands at the heart of the camp, at rest and on the march.
הַֽמַּחֲנֹ֑תham·ma·ḥă·nōṯof the campsH4264
√ machăneh — an encampment (of travellers or troops)ArticleNouncommon plural
אֹֽהֶל־’ō·hel-the TentH168
√ ʼôhel — a tent (as clearly conspicuous from a distance)Nounmasculine singular construct
מוֹעֵ֛דmō·w·‘êḏof MeetingH4150
√ môwʻêd — properly, an appointment, iNounmasculine singular
וְנָסַ֧עwə·nā·sa‘is to travelH5265
√ nâçaʻ — properly, to pull up, especially the tent-pins, iConjunctive wawVerbQalConjunctive perfectthird person masculine singular
wə·nā·saʿ (H5265), "shall set out"; the journeying tabernacle — God's dwelling travels with His people, not behind them.
מַחֲנֵ֥הma·ḥă·nêhwith the campH4264
√ machăneh — an encampment (of travellers or troops)Nouncommon singular construct
הַלְוִיִּ֖םhal·wî·yimof the LevitesH3881
√ Lêvîyîy — a Levite or descendant of LeviArticleNounpropermasculine plural
hal·wî·yim (H3881), "the Levites"; the guardian camp that bears the dwelling, encircling it on every side.
יִסָּ֔עוּyis·sā·‘ūThey are to set outH5265
√ nâçaʻ — properly, to pull up, especially the tent-pins, iVerbQalImperfectthird person masculine plural
כַּאֲשֶׁ֤רka·’ă·šerin the orderH834
√ ʼăsher — who, which, what, thatPreposition-kPronounrelative
יַחֲנוּ֙ya·ḥă·nūthey encampedH2583
√ chânâh — properly, to inclineVerbQalImperfectthird person masculine plural
כֵּ֣ןkên. . .H3651
√ kên — properly, set uprightAdverb
אִ֥ישׁ’îšeachH376
√ ʼîysh — a man as an individual or a male personNounmasculine singular
עַל־‘al-inH5921
√ ʻal — above, over, upon, or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applicationsPreposition
יָד֖וֹyā·ḏōwhis own placeH3027
√ yâd — a hand (the open one (indicating power, means, direction, etcNounfeminine singular constructthird person masculine singular
yā·ḏōw (H3027), "his place"; literally "his hand," idiom for assigned station (Keil: cf. Deuteronomy 23:13).
לְדִגְלֵיהֶֽם׃סlə·ḏiḡ·lê·hemunder his standardH1714
√ degel — a flagPreposition-lNounmasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
lə·ḏiḡ·lê·hem (H1714), "by their standards"; the rare keyword again — even on the march, every man under his own degel.
The Voices✦ public domain+
Thus it was provided that, whether at rest or on the march, the Divine habitation should be exactly in the midst of Israel.
"As they encamp, so shall they break up," that is to say, with Levi in the midst of the tribes, "every man in his place, according to his banner." יד, place, as in Deuteronomy 23:13 ; Isaiah 57:8 .
This is not to be understood strictly, but largely; for in their march they were divided, and part of that tribe marched next after Judah, ( Numbers 10:17 ,) and the other part exactly in the midst of the camp.
This appears to mean in the centre of the line of march. The tribes on the east and south sides start first and second. Then follows the Tabernacle with all its parts and accessories, the Levites who carry it forming a hollow square.
18“On the west side, the divisions of Ephraim are to camp under the…”+

18On the west side, the divisions of Ephraim are to camp under their standard: The leader of the Ephraimites is Elishama son of Ammihud,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

yām·māh lə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯām ’ep̄·ra·yim ma·ḥă·nêh de·ḡel wə·nā·śî liḇ·nê ’ep̄·ra·yim ’ĕ·lî·šā·mā‘ ben- ‘am·mî·hūḏ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

The standard of the camp of Ephraim, by their divisions, seaward (yāmmāh); and the leader of the sons of Ephraim is Elishama son of Ammihud.

Where the English smooths the original

  • יָ֑מָּה yām·māh (H3220, yām), "seaward" — Hebrew names the west as "the sea" (the Mediterranean), the direction of the sunset. BSB "on the west side" gives the bearing; the Hebrew word is "sea-ward," the land's orientation built into the language — west is where the great sea lies.
  • אֶפְרַ֛יִם ʾep̄·ra·yim (H669), "Ephraim" — set before his elder brother Manasseh. Poole/Benson: "Ephraim is here preferred before his brother, according to the prophecy, Genesis 48:19-20" — Jacob's crossed-hands blessing, the younger over the elder, now fixed in the camp-order.
  • דֶּ֣גֶל מַחֲנֵ֥ה de·ḡel ma·ḥă·nêh (H1714 + H4264), "the standard of the camp" — the third degel-division, the rear-following camp of Rachel's descendants. The keyword's fourfold cadence (vv. 3, 10, 18, 25) frames the chapter's four quarters.
Word by word11 · parsed+
יָ֑מָּהyām·māhOn the west sideH3220
√ yâm — a sea (as breaking in noisy surf) or large body of waterNounmasculine singularthird person feminine singular
yām·māh (H3220), "seaward"; the west, named for the sea — the rear of the eastward-led march.
לְצִבְאֹתָ֖םlə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯāmthe divisionsH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regPreposition-lNouncommon plural constructthird person masculine plural
אֶפְרַ֛יִם’ep̄·ra·yimof EphraimH669
√ ʼEphrayim — Ephrajim, a son of JosephNounpropermasculine singular
ʾep̄·ra·yim (H669), "Ephraim"; Joseph's younger son, set above Manasseh per Genesis 48:19-20.
מַחֲנֵ֥הma·ḥă·nêhare to campH4264
√ machăneh — an encampment (of travellers or troops)Nouncommon singular construct
ma·ḥă·nêh (H4264), "camp"; the third division, the descendants of Rachel (Keil).
דֶּ֣גֶלde·ḡelunder their standardH1714
√ degel — a flagNounmasculine singular construct
וְנָשִׂיא֙wə·nā·śîThe leaderH5387
√ nâsîyʼ — properly, an exalted one, iConjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
לִבְנֵ֣יliḇ·nêof the EphraimitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine plural construct
אֶפְרַ֔יִם’ep̄·ra·yim. . .H669
√ ʼEphrayim — Ephrajim, a son of JosephNounpropermasculine singular
אֱלִישָׁמָ֖ע’ĕ·lî·šā·mā‘is ElishamaH476
√ ʼĔlîyshâmâʻ — Elishama, the name of seven IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
ʾĕ·lî·šā·māʿ (H476), "Elishama"; "God has heard" — captain of Ephraim (Numbers 1:10).
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
עַמִּיהֽוּד׃‘am·mî·hūḏof AmmihudH5989
√ ʻAmmîyhûwd — Ammihud, the name of three IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
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Ephraim — Who is here preferred before his brother, according to the prophecy, Genesis 48:19-20 .
Ephraim is here preferred before his brother, according to the prophecy, Genesis 48:19 ,20 .
On the west the standard of Ephraim, with the tribes of Manasseh and Benjamin, that is to say, the whole of the descendants of Rachel, 108,100 men, as the third division of the army.
19“and his division numbers 40,500.”+

19and his division numbers 40,500.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōw ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem ’ar·bā·‘îm ’e·lep̄ wa·ḥă·mêš mê·’ō·wṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And his host, and those numbered of them: forty thousand and five hundred.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּצְבָא֖וֹ ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "and his host" — Gill: "Not his camp, but his host, or the army, which consisted only of his own tribe." The careful host/camp distinction holds for the smallest tribe as for the largest.
  • וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑ם ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "and those numbered of them" — 40,500, from Numbers 1:33. The audit-word, unchanged.
Word by word6 · parsed+
וּצְבָא֖וֹū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōwand his divisionH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regConjunctive wawNouncommon singular constructthird person masculine singular
ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "his host"; Ephraim's army — "only of his own tribe" (Gill).
וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑םū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hemnumbersH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)Conjunctive wawVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "those numbered"; 40,500, from Numbers 1:33.
אַרְבָּעִ֥ים’ar·bā·‘îm40,500H705
√ ʼarbâʻîym — fortyNumbercommon plural
אֶ֖לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וַחֲמֵ֥שׁwa·ḥă·mêš. . .H2568
√ châmêsh — fiveConjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵאֽוֹת׃mê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
The Voices✦ public domain+
Not his camp, but his host, or the army, which consisted only of his own tribe see Numbers 1:33 .
On the west the standard of Ephraim, with the tribes of Manasseh and Benjamin, that is to say, the whole of the descendants of Rachel, 108,100 men, as the third division of the army.
And his host, and those that were numbered of them, were forty thousand and five hundred.
20“The tribe of Manasseh will be next to it. The leader of the Mana…”+

20The tribe of Manasseh will be next to it. The leader of the Manassites is Gamaliel son of Pedahzur,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

maṭ·ṭêh mə·naš·šeh wə·‘ā·lāw wə·nā·śî liḇ·nê mə·naš·šeh gam·lî·’êl ben- pə·ḏā·h·ṣūr

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And beside him the tribe of Manasseh; and the leader of the sons of Manasseh is Gamaliel son of Pedahzur.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וְעָלָ֖יו wə·ʿā·lāw (H5921), "and beside him" — literally "upon / next to him" (Ephraim). BSB "will be next to it." Gill notes the striking reversal: Manasseh, "though the elder brother to Ephraim, yet Ephraim was preferred to him... and his elder brother was directed to pitch by it." The elder camps beside the younger's standard.
  • מַטֵּ֣ה maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe" (staff-word) — Manasseh, second member of Ephraim's western camp. The Genesis 48 blessing is encoded in the very seating: Manasseh under Ephraim's degel.
Word by word9 · parsed+
מַטֵּ֣הmaṭ·ṭêhThe tribeH4294
√ maṭṭeh — a branch (as extending)Nounmasculine singular construct
maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe"; staff-word, second member of the western camp.
מְנַשֶּׁ֑הmə·naš·šehof ManassehH4519
√ Mᵉnashsheh — Menashsheh, a grandson of Jacob, also the tribe descended from him, and its territoryNounpropermasculine singular
mə·naš·šeh (H4519), "Manasseh"; Joseph's elder son, placed under his younger brother Ephraim's standard — Genesis 48 enacted.
וְעָלָ֖יוwə·‘ā·lāwwill be next to itH5921
√ ʻal — above, over, upon, or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applicationsConjunctive wawPrepositionthird person masculine singular
וְנָשִׂיא֙wə·nā·śîThe leaderH5387
√ nâsîyʼ — properly, an exalted one, iConjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
לִבְנֵ֣יliḇ·nêof the ManassitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine plural construct
gam·lî·ʾêl (H1583), "Gamaliel"; "God is my reward" — captain of Manasseh (Numbers 1:10).
מְנַשֶּׁ֔הmə·naš·šeh. . .H4519
√ Mᵉnashsheh — Menashsheh, a grandson of Jacob, also the tribe descended from him, and its territoryNounpropermasculine singular
גַּמְלִיאֵ֖לgam·lî·’êlis GamalielH1583
√ Gamlîyʼêl — Gamliel, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
פְּדָהצֽוּר׃pə·ḏā·h·ṣūrof PedahzurH6301
√ Pᵉdâhtsûwr — Pedahtsur, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
The Voices✦ public domain+
Who though the elder brother to Ephraim, yet Ephraim was preferred to him, and had a standard given him, and his elder brother was directed to pitch by it; and this being agreeably to the prophecy of Jacob, could not well be objected to
On the west the standard of Ephraim, with the tribes of Manasseh and Benjamin, that is to say, the whole of the descendants of Rachel, 108,100 men, as the third division of the army.
And by him shall be the tribe of Manasseh: and the captain of the children of Manasseh shall be Gamaliel the son of Pedahzur.
21“and his division numbers 32,200.”+

21and his division numbers 32,200.

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Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōw ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem šə·na·yim ū·šə·lō·šîm ’e·lep̄ ū·mā·ṯā·yim

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And his host, and those numbered of them: thirty-two thousand and two hundred.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּצְבָא֖וֹ ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "and his host" — Manasseh's army, the smallest single tribe in the camp (32,200). BSB "his division"; the war-word holds even for the least.
  • וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑ם ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "and those numbered of them" — from Numbers 1:35. The smallest tally in the chapter, kept by the same exact measure as the greatest.
Word by word6 · parsed+
וּצְבָא֖וֹū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōwand his divisionH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regConjunctive wawNouncommon singular constructthird person masculine singular
ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "his host"; Manasseh's army — the smallest tribe.
וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑םū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hemnumbersH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)Conjunctive wawVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "those numbered"; 32,200, from Numbers 1:35.
שְׁנַ֧יִםšə·na·yim32,200H8147
√ shᵉnayim — twoNumbermd
וּשְׁלֹשִׁ֛יםū·šə·lō·šîm. . .H7970
√ shᵉlôwshîym — thirtyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֖לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וּמָאתָֽיִם׃ū·mā·ṯā·yim. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredConjunctive wawNumberfd
The Voices✦ public domain+
and those that were numbered of them, were thirty and two thousand and two hundred. 32,200 men; see Numbers 1:35 .
On the west the standard of Ephraim, with the tribes of Manasseh and Benjamin, that is to say, the whole of the descendants of Rachel, 108,100 men, as the third division of the army.
And his host, and those that were numbered of them, were thirty and two thousand and two hundred.
22“Next will be the tribe of Benjamin. The leader of the Benjamites…”+

22Next will be the tribe of Benjamin. The leader of the Benjamites is Abidan son of Gideoni,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·maṭ·ṭêh bin·yā·min wə·nā·śî liḇ·nê ḇin·yā·min ’ă·ḇî·ḏān ben- giḏ·‘ō·nî

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And the tribe of Benjamin; and the leader of the sons of Benjamin is Abidan son of Gideoni.

Where the English smooths the original

  • מַטֵּ֖ה maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe" (staff-word) — Benjamin, completing the camp of Rachel's line. Gill: "He was to pitch under the same standard of Ephraim, and the other side of it from that of Manasseh." Rachel's three (Ephraim, Manasseh, Benjamin) gathered as one camp.
  • וְנָשִׂיא֙ wə·nā·śîʾ (H5387), "the leader / prince" — Abidan. The repeated nāśîʾ title (twelve times in the chapter) names the man, never a rank above him save Moses; each tribe is led, not ruled.
Word by word8 · parsed+
וּמַטֵּ֖הū·maṭ·ṭêh[Next will be] the tribeH4294
√ maṭṭeh — a branch (as extending)Conjunctive wawNounmasculine singular construct
maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe"; staff-word, third member of Ephraim's camp.
בִּנְיָמִ֑ןbin·yā·minof BenjaminH1144
√ Binyâmîyn — Binjamin, youngest son of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
bin·yā·min (H1144), "Benjamin"; Rachel's second son, third in the western camp, opposite Manasseh.
וְנָשִׂיא֙wə·nā·śîThe leaderH5387
√ nâsîyʼ — properly, an exalted one, iConjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
לִבְנֵ֣יliḇ·nêof the BenjamitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine plural construct
בִנְיָמִ֔ןḇin·yā·min. . .H1144
√ Binyâmîyn — Binjamin, youngest son of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
אֲבִידָ֖ן’ă·ḇî·ḏānis AbidanH27
√ ʼĂbîydân — Abidan, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
ʾă·ḇî·ḏān (H27), "Abidan"; "my father is judge" — captain of Benjamin (Numbers 1:11).
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
גִּדְעֹנִֽי׃giḏ·‘ō·nîof GideoniH1441
√ Gidʻônîy — Gidoni, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
The Voices✦ public domain+
He was to pitch under the same standard of Ephraim, and the other side of it from that of Manasseh; the one being before, and the other behind, and the standard in the middle
On the west the standard of Ephraim, with the tribes of Manasseh and Benjamin, that is to say, the whole of the descendants of Rachel, 108,100 men, as the third division of the army.
Then the tribe of Benjamin: and the captain of the sons of Benjamin shall be Abidan the son of Gideoni.
23“and his division numbers 35,400.”+

23and his division numbers 35,400.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōw ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem ḥă·miš·šāh ū·šə·lō·šîm ’e·lep̄ wə·’ar·ba‘ mê·’ō·wṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And his host, and those numbered of them: thirty-five thousand and four hundred.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּצְבָא֖וֹ ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "and his host" — Benjamin's army. Gill: "The least number of all the tribes, excepting the tribe of Manasseh" — the war-word still, for the second-smallest.
  • וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑ם ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "and those numbered of them" — 35,400, from Numbers 1:37. The audit holds the small alongside the great.
Word by word7 · parsed+
וּצְבָא֖וֹū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōwand his divisionH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regConjunctive wawNouncommon singular constructthird person masculine singular
ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "his host"; Benjamin's army — second-smallest tribe.
וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑םū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hemnumbersH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)Conjunctive wawVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "those numbered"; 35,400, from Numbers 1:37.
חֲמִשָּׁ֧הḥă·miš·šāh35,400H2568
√ châmêsh — fiveNumbermasculine singular
וּשְׁלֹשִׁ֛יםū·šə·lō·šîm. . .H7970
√ shᵉlôwshîym — thirtyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֖לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וְאַרְבַּ֥עwə·’ar·ba‘. . .H702
√ ʼarbaʻ — fourConjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵאֽוֹת׃mê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
The Voices✦ public domain+
The least number of all the tribes, excepting the tribe of Manasseh, Numbers 2:21 ; see Numbers 1:37 .
On the west the standard of Ephraim, with the tribes of Manasseh and Benjamin, that is to say, the whole of the descendants of Rachel, 108,100 men, as the third division of the army.
And his host, and those that were numbered of them, were thirty and five thousand and four hundred.
24“The total number of men in the divisions of the camp of Ephraim …”+

24The total number of men in the divisions of the camp of Ephraim is 108,100; they shall set out third.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

kāl- hap·pə·qu·ḏîm lə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯām lə·ma·ḥă·nêh ’ep̄·ra·yim mə·’aṯ ’e·lep̄ ū·šə·mō·naṯ- ’ă·lā·p̄îm ū·mê·’āh yis·sā·‘ū ū·šə·li·šîm

Literal — word-for-word from the original

All those numbered of the camp of Ephraim: one hundred eight thousand and one hundred, by their divisions. And third they shall set out.

Where the English smooths the original

  • הַפְּקֻדִ֞ים hap·pə·qu·ḏîm (H6485), "the numbered ones" — the summed muster of Rachel's three tribes (108,100). Gill: "the smallest of all the camps, and near eighty thousand fewer than the camp of Judah."
  • וּשְׁלִשִׁ֖ים יִסָּֽעוּ ū·šə·li·šim yis·sā·ʿū (H7992 + H5265), "and third they shall set out" — BSB "go forward in the third rank." Ephraim's camp pulls its tent-pins third, immediately following the tabernacle (Gill) — the western division leads the rear half of the column.
Word by word12 · parsed+
כָּֽל־kāl-The totalH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular construct
הַפְּקֻדִ֞יםhap·pə·qu·ḏîmnumber of menH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)ArticleVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural
hap·pə·qu·ḏîm (H6485), "the numbered"; 108,100 — the smallest camp-total. Pulpit: "the smallest of the four divisions, although destined to become very numerous."
לְצִבְאֹתָ֑םlə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯāmin the divisionsH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regPreposition-lNouncommon plural constructthird person masculine plural
לְמַחֲנֵ֣הlə·ma·ḥă·nêhof the campH4264
√ machăneh — an encampment (of travellers or troops)Preposition-lNouncommon singular construct
אֶפְרַ֗יִם’ep̄·ra·yimof EphraimH669
√ ʼEphrayim — Ephrajim, a son of JosephNounpropermasculine singular
מְאַ֥תmə·’aṯ[is] 108,100H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine singular construct
אֶ֛לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וּשְׁמֹֽנַת־ū·šə·mō·naṯ-. . .H8083
√ shᵉmôneh — a cardinal number, eight (as if a surplus above the 'perfect' seven)Conjunctive wawNumbermasculine singular construct
אֲלָפִ֥ים’ă·lā·p̄îm. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine plural
וּמֵאָ֖הū·mê·’āh. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredConjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular
יִסָּֽעוּ׃סyis·sā·‘ūthey shall set outH5265
√ nâçaʻ — properly, to pull up, especially the tent-pins, iVerbQalImperfectthird person masculine plural
וּשְׁלִשִׁ֖יםū·šə·li·šîmthirdH7992
√ shᵉlîyshîy — thirdConjunctive wawNumberordinal masculine plural
yis·sā·ʿū (H5265), "they shall set out"; the march-verb — Ephraim moves third, just behind the sanctuary.
The Voices✦ public domain+
Which was the smallest of all the camps, and near eighty thousand fewer than the camp of Judah, Numbers 2:9
All the descendants of Rachel, forming at this time the smallest of the four divisions, although destined to become very numerous. Their association in the camp was continued in the promised land, for the greater part of their territory was coterminous.
On the west the standard of Ephraim, with the tribes of Manasseh and Benjamin, that is to say, the whole of the descendants of Rachel, 108,100 men, as the third division of the army.
25“On the north side, the divisions of Dan are to camp under their …”+

25On the north side, the divisions of Dan are to camp under their standard: The leader of the Danites is Ahiezer son of Ammishaddai,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ṣā·p̄ō·nāh lə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯām ḏān ma·ḥă·nêh de·ḡel wə·nā·śî liḇ·nê ḏān ’ă·ḥî·‘e·zer ben- ‘am·mî·šad·dāy

Literal — word-for-word from the original

The standard of the camp of Dan northward (ṣāp̄ōnāh), by their divisions; and the leader of the sons of Dan is Ahiezer son of Ammishaddai.

Where the English smooths the original

  • צָפֹ֖נָה ṣā·p̄ō·nāh (H6828, ṣāp̄ōn), "northward" — the "hidden / dark" quarter (root ṣāp̄an, "to hide"), the left hand of the eastward-facing camp. Gill: "To the left of the tabernacle as encamped, and so was the left wing of the grand army." BSB "on the north side" gives the bearing; the Hebrew is the left flank.
  • דֶּ֣גֶל מַחֲנֵ֥ה de·ḡel ma·ḥă·nêh (H1714 + H4264), "the standard of the camp" — the fourth and last degel-division, the rearguard. With this the keyword's fourfold structuring of the camp is complete: east, south, west, north, each under one banner.
Word by word11 · parsed+
צָפֹ֖נָהṣā·p̄ō·nāhOn the north sideH6828
√ tsâphôwn — properly, hidden, iNounfeminine singularthird person feminine singular
ṣā·p̄ō·nāh (H6828), "northward"; the left wing — the rearguard of the march. Pulpit notes the irony of Dan's later history.
לְצִבְאֹתָ֑םlə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯāmthe divisionsH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regPreposition-lNouncommon plural constructthird person masculine plural
דָ֛ןḏānof DanH1835
√ Dân — Dan, one of the sons of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
ḏān (H1835), "Dan"; firstborn of the handmaids, the strongest tribe after Judah, given the rear-guard post of honor.
מַחֲנֵ֥הma·ḥă·nêhare to campH4264
√ machăneh — an encampment (of travellers or troops)Nouncommon singular construct
ma·ḥă·nêh (H4264), "camp"; the fourth division — Dan, Asher, Naphtali (Keil).
דֶּ֣גֶלde·ḡelunder their standardH1714
√ degel — a flagNounmasculine singular construct
וְנָשִׂיא֙wə·nā·śîThe leaderH5387
√ nâsîyʼ — properly, an exalted one, iConjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
לִבְנֵ֣יliḇ·nêof the DanitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine plural construct
דָ֔ןḏān. . .H1835
√ Dân — Dan, one of the sons of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
אֲחִיעֶ֖זֶר’ă·ḥî·‘e·zeris AhiezerH295
√ ʼĂchîyʻezer — Achiezer, the name of two IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
ʾă·ḥî·ʿe·zer (H295), "Ahiezer"; "my brother is help" — captain of Dan (Numbers 1:12).
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
עַמִּֽישַׁדָּֽי׃‘am·mî·šad·dāyof AmmishaddaiH5996
√ ʻAmmîyshadday — Ammishaddai, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
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To the left of the tabernacle as encamped, and so was the left wing of the grand army; it consisted of the tribes of Dan, Asher, and Naphtali
In the light of its subsequent history, it is remarkable that this tribe should at this time have been so prominent and so honoured. Dan is, so to speak; the Judas among the twelve. In history he ends by melting away into the heathen among whom he intruded himself. In the sacred writings he ends by being omitted altogether; he has no part in the new Jerusalem
The Pulpit's striking aside: Dan, here so honored as rearguard, is later "the Judas among the twelve" — omitted from the sealed tribes of Revelation 7. A homiletical reading of Dan's downward arc, recorded as the commentator's reflection, not as a claim from this text.
Lastly, towards the north was the standard of Gad, with Asher and Naphtali, the descendants of the maids Bilhah and Zilpah, 157,600 men, who were to be the last to break up, and formed the rear on the march.
Keil's summary as sourced reads "the standard of Gad" for the northern camp; the chapter's own header (v.25) and his neighboring notes make the northern standard Dan's (Gad belongs to Reuben's southern camp, v.14). Reproduced verbatim; the slip is the source's, the camp is Dan's.
26“and his division numbers 62,700.”+

26and his division numbers 62,700.

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Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōw ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem šə·na·yim wə·šiš·šîm ’e·lep̄ ū·šə·ḇa‘ mê·’ō·wṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And his host, and those numbered of them: sixty-two thousand and seven hundred.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּצְבָא֖וֹ ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "and his host" — Dan's army, the largest single tribe after Judah (62,700), fitting its rear-guard post. The war-word, again, for the camp that brings up the rear.
  • וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑ם ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "and those numbered of them" — "which agrees with the account of this tribe in Numbers 1:39" (Gill). The figure transcribed exactly.
Word by word7 · parsed+
וּצְבָא֖וֹū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōwand his divisionH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regConjunctive wawNouncommon singular constructthird person masculine singular
ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "his host"; Dan's army — second-largest tribe, the strength of the rearguard.
וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑םū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hemnumbersH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)Conjunctive wawVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "those numbered"; 62,700, from Numbers 1:39.
שְׁנַ֧יִםšə·na·yim62,700H8147
√ shᵉnayim — twoNumbermd
וְשִׁשִּׁ֛יםwə·šiš·šîm. . .H8346
√ shishshîym — sixtyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֖לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וּשְׁבַ֥עū·šə·ḇa‘. . .H7651
√ shebaʻ — seven (as the sacred full one)Conjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵאֽוֹת׃mê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
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and those that were numbered of them, were threescore and two thousand and seven hundred. 62,700 men, which agrees with the account of this tribe in Numbers 1:39 .
Lastly, towards the north was the standard of Gad, with Asher and Naphtali, the descendants of the maids Bilhah and Zilpah, 157,600 men, who were to be the last to break up, and formed the rear on the march.
And his host, and those that were numbered of them, were threescore and two thousand and seven hundred.
27“The tribe of Asher will camp next to it. The leader of the Asher…”+

27The tribe of Asher will camp next to it. The leader of the Asherites is Pagiel son of Ocran,

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Hebrew — tap a word ↓

maṭ·ṭêh ’ā·šêr wə·ha·ḥō·nîm ‘ā·lāw wə·nā·śî liḇ·nê ’ā·šêr paḡ·‘î·’êl ben- ‘ā·ḵə·rān

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And those encamping beside him: the tribe of Asher; and the leader of the sons of Asher is Pagiel son of Ocran.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וְהַחֹנִ֥ים עָלָ֖יו wə·ha·ḥō·nîm ʿā·lāw (H2583 + H5921), "those encamping beside him" (Dan). Gill: "Asher and Naphtali are placed by him, being the sons of handmaids also, and could not but contentedly pitch by him." BSB "encamp by him"; the Hebrew gathers the handmaids' sons into one camp under Dan.
  • מַטֵּ֣ה maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe" (staff-word) — Asher, second of the northern camp. The recurring pattern (head-tribe with degel, two flanking tribes with maṭṭeh) is complete a fourth time.
Word by word10 · parsed+
מַטֵּ֣הmaṭ·ṭêhThe tribeH4294
√ maṭṭeh — a branch (as extending)Nounmasculine singular construct
maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe"; staff-word, second member of the northern camp.
אָשֵׁ֑ר’ā·šêrof AsherH836
√ ʼÂshêr — happyNounpropermasculine singular
ʾā·šêr (H836), "Asher"; son of Zilpah (Leah's maid), drawn up beside Dan.
וְהַחֹנִ֥יםwə·ha·ḥō·nîmwill campH2583
√ chânâh — properly, to inclineConjunctive waw, ArticleVerbQalParticiplemasculine plural
עָלָ֖יו‘ā·lāwnext to itH5921
√ ʻal — above, over, upon, or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applicationsPrepositionthird person masculine singular
וְנָשִׂיא֙wə·nā·śîThe leaderH5387
√ nâsîyʼ — properly, an exalted one, iConjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
paḡ·ʿî·ʾêl (H6295), "Pagiel"; captain of Asher (Numbers 1:13).
לִבְנֵ֣יliḇ·nêof the AsheritesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine plural construct
אָשֵׁ֔ר’ā·šêr. . .H836
√ ʼÂshêr — happyNounpropermasculine singular
פַּגְעִיאֵ֖לpaḡ·‘î·’êlis PagielH6295
√ Pagʻîyʼêl — Pagiel, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
עָכְרָֽן׃‘ā·ḵə·rānof OcranH5918
√ ʻOkrân — Okran, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
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Dan had a standard given him, though the son of an handmaid, being the firstborn of the sons of the handmaids, and his tribe being a warlike tribe, and very numerous; and Asher and Naphtali are placed by him, being the sons of handmaids also, and could not but contentedly pitch by him
Lastly, towards the north was the standard of Gad, with Asher and Naphtali, the descendants of the maids Bilhah and Zilpah, 157,600 men, who were to be the last to break up, and formed the rear on the march.
And those that encamp by him shall be the tribe of Asher: and the captain of the children of Asher shall be Pagiel the son of Ocran.
28“and his division numbers 41,500.”+

28and his division numbers 41,500.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōw ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem ’e·ḥāḏ wə·’ar·bā·‘îm ’e·lep̄ wa·ḥă·mêš mê·’ō·wṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And his host, and those numbered of them: forty-one thousand and five hundred.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּצְבָא֖וֹ ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "and his host" — Asher's army within Dan's camp. The same layered host/camp terms hold to the last quarter.
  • וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑ם ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "and those numbered of them" — 41,500, "as they were numbered Numbers 1:41" (Gill). The muster-word unchanged.
Word by word7 · parsed+
וּצְבָא֖וֹū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōwand his divisionH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regConjunctive wawNouncommon singular constructthird person masculine singular
ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "his host"; Asher's army.
וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑םū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hemnumbersH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)Conjunctive wawVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "those numbered"; 41,500, from Numbers 1:41.
אֶחָ֧ד’e·ḥāḏ41,500H259
√ ʼechâd — properly, united, iNumbermasculine singular
וְאַרְבָּעִ֛יםwə·’ar·bā·‘îm. . .H705
√ ʼarbâʻîym — fortyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֖לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וַחֲמֵ֥שׁwa·ḥă·mêš. . .H2568
√ châmêsh — fiveConjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵאֽוֹת׃mê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
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and those that were numbered of them, were forty and one thousand and five hundred. 41,500 men; as they were numbered Numbers 1:41 .
Lastly, towards the north was the standard of Gad, with Asher and Naphtali, the descendants of the maids Bilhah and Zilpah, 157,600 men, who were to be the last to break up, and formed the rear on the march.
And his host, and those that were numbered of them, were forty and one thousand and five hundred.
29“Next will be the tribe of Naphtali. The leader of the Naphtalite…”+

29Next will be the tribe of Naphtali. The leader of the Naphtalites is Ahira son of Enan,

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·maṭ·ṭêh nap̄·tā·lî wə·nā·śî liḇ·nê nap̄·tā·lî ’ă·ḥî·ra‘ ben- ‘ê·nān

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And the tribe of Naphtali; and the leader of the sons of Naphtali is Ahira son of Enan.

Where the English smooths the original

  • מַטֵּ֖ה maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe" (staff-word) — Naphtali, last of the twelve in the camp-list. Gill: "That was to pitch by the same standard of Dan, on the other side of it." The final tribe gathered to the rearguard's banner.
  • וְנָשִׂיא֙ wə·nā·śîʾ (H5387), "the leader / prince" — Ahira, the twelfth and last nāśîʾ named. The title closes the roster of princes as it opened it, every tribe under its own exalted head.
Word by word8 · parsed+
וּמַטֵּ֖הū·maṭ·ṭêh[Next will be] the tribeH4294
√ maṭṭeh — a branch (as extending)Conjunctive wawNounmasculine singular construct
maṭ·ṭêh (H4294), "tribe"; staff-word, third and final member of Dan's camp.
נַפְתָּלִ֑יnap̄·tā·lîof NaphtaliH5321
√ Naphtâlîy — Naphtali, a son of Jacob, with the tribe descended from him, and its territoryNounpropermasculine singular
nap̄·tā·lî (H5321), "Naphtali"; son of Bilhah (Rachel's maid), the last tribe in the camp-order.
וְנָשִׂיא֙wə·nā·śîThe leaderH5387
√ nâsîyʼ — properly, an exalted one, iConjunctive wawNounmasculine singular
לִבְנֵ֣יliḇ·nêof the NaphtalitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine plural construct
ʾă·ḥî·raʿ (H299), "Ahira"; captain of Naphtali (Numbers 1:15) — the twelfth prince.
נַפְתָּלִ֔יnap̄·tā·lî. . .H5321
√ Naphtâlîy — Naphtali, a son of Jacob, with the tribe descended from him, and its territoryNounpropermasculine singular
אֲחִירַ֖ע’ă·ḥî·ra‘is AhiraH299
√ ʼĂchîyraʻ — Achira, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
בֶּן־ben-sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular construct
עֵינָֽן׃‘ê·nānof EnanH5881
√ ʻÊynân — Enan, an IsraeliteNounpropermasculine singular
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That was to pitch by the same standard of Dan, on the other side of it
Lastly, towards the north was the standard of Gad, with Asher and Naphtali, the descendants of the maids Bilhah and Zilpah, 157,600 men, who were to be the last to break up, and formed the rear on the march.
Then the tribe of Naphtali: and the captain of the children of Naphtali shall be Ahira the son of Enan.
30“and his division numbers 53,400.”+

30and his division numbers 53,400.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

ū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōw ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem šə·lō·šāh wa·ḥă·miš·šîm ’e·lep̄ wə·’ar·ba‘ mê·’ō·wṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And his host, and those numbered of them: fifty-three thousand and four hundred.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וּצְבָא֖וֹ ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "and his host" — Naphtali's army, closing the twelve. Gill stresses the whole tribe was counted: "the whole of it, who were all numbered that were of twenty years of age and upwards."
  • וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑ם ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "and those numbered of them" — the last tribal tally (53,400). The audit-word's twelfth and final appearance in the rolls.
Word by word7 · parsed+
וּצְבָא֖וֹū·ṣə·ḇā·’ōwand his divisionH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regConjunctive wawNouncommon singular constructthird person masculine singular
ū·ṣə·ḇā·ʾōw (H6635), "his host"; Naphtali's army — the last of the twelve.
וּפְקֻדֵיהֶ֑םū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hemnumbersH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)Conjunctive wawVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
ū·p̄ə·qu·ḏê·hem (H6485), "those numbered"; 53,400, the whole tribe of fighting age (Gill).
שְׁלֹשָׁ֧הšə·lō·šāh53,400H7969
√ shâlôwsh — threeNumbermasculine singular
וַחֲמִשִּׁ֛יםwa·ḥă·miš·šîm. . .H2572
√ chămishshîym — fiftyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֖לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וְאַרְבַּ֥עwə·’ar·ba‘. . .H702
√ ʼarbaʻ — fourConjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵאֽוֹת׃mê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
The Voices✦ public domain+
not that some part of the tribe of Naphtali was numbered, which made up the host Ahira was captain of, but the whole of it, who were all numbered that were of twenty years of age and upwards
Lastly, towards the north was the standard of Gad, with Asher and Naphtali, the descendants of the maids Bilhah and Zilpah, 157,600 men, who were to be the last to break up, and formed the rear on the march.
And his host, and those that were numbered of them, were fifty and three thousand and four hundred.
31“The total number of men in the camp of Dan is 157,600; they shal…”+

31The total number of men in the camp of Dan is 157,600; they shall set out last, under their standards.”

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

kāl- hap·pə·qu·ḏîm lə·ma·ḥă·nêh ḏān mə·’aṯ ’e·lep̄ wə·šiḇ·‘āh wa·ḥă·miš·šîm ’e·lep̄ wə·šêš mê·’ō·wṯ yis·‘ū lā·’a·ḥă·rō·nāh lə·ḏiḡ·lê·hem

Literal — word-for-word from the original

All those numbered of the camp of Dan: one hundred fifty-seven thousand and six hundred. Last they shall set out, by their standards (diḡlêhem).

Where the English smooths the original

  • הַפְּקֻדִ֞ים hap·pə·qu·ḏîm (H6485), "the numbered ones" — Dan's camp-total (157,600), "the largest camp next to Judah" (Gill). The strongest camp set last, to guard the rear.
  • לָאַחֲרֹנָ֖ה lā·ʾa·ḥă·rō·nāh (H314), "last / hindmost" — BSB "set out last." Benson: Dan "comes in the rear, as Judah marched in the front, that the tabernacle might be best guarded where there was most danger." The two strongest camps bracket the column, the sanctuary safest between them.
  • לְדִגְלֵיהֶֽם lə·ḏiḡ·lê·hem (H1714, plural), "by their standards" — the rare keyword's final appearance, here plural. Gill: "'standards' is put for 'standard,' the plural for the singular; for there was but one standard to a camp, unless this takes in their ensigns." Keil: "according to their standards is equivalent to according to their hosts."
Word by word14 · parsed+
כָּל־kāl-The totalH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular construct
הַפְּקֻדִים֙hap·pə·qu·ḏîmnumber of menH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)ArticleVerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural construct
hap·pə·qu·ḏîm (H6485), "the numbered"; 157,600 — the second-largest camp, set last as rearguard.
לְמַ֣חֲנֵהlə·ma·ḥă·nêhin the campH4264
√ machăneh — an encampment (of travellers or troops)Preposition-lNouncommon singular construct
דָ֔ןḏānof DanH1835
√ Dân — Dan, one of the sons of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
מְאַ֣תmə·’aṯis 157,600H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine singular construct
אֶ֗לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וְשִׁבְעָ֧הwə·šiḇ·‘āh. . .H7651
√ shebaʻ — seven (as the sacred full one)Conjunctive wawNumbermasculine singular
וַחֲמִשִּׁ֛יםwa·ḥă·miš·šîm. . .H2572
√ chămishshîym — fiftyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
אֶ֖לֶף’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וְשֵׁ֣שׁwə·šêš. . .H8337
√ shêsh — six (as an overplus beyond five or the fingers of the hand)Conjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵא֑וֹתmê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
יִסְע֖וּyis·‘ūthey shall set outH5265
√ nâçaʻ — properly, to pull up, especially the tent-pins, iVerbQalImperfectthird person masculine plural
lā·ʾa·ḥă·rō·nāh (H314), "last"; Dan brings up the rear, guarding the column's tail as Judah leads its head.
לָאַחֲרֹנָ֥הlā·’a·ḥă·rō·nāhlastH314
√ ʼachărôwn — hinderPreposition-l, ArticleAdjectivefeminine singular
לְדִגְלֵיהֶֽם׃פlə·ḏiḡ·lê·hemunder their standardsH1714
√ degel — a flagPreposition-lNounmasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
lə·ḏiḡ·lê·hem (H1714), "by their standards"; the rare keyword, plural — the secondary sense (the hosts under the banners), per Keil.
The Voices✦ public domain+
The strongest camp next after Judah, and therefore he comes in the rear, as Judah marched in the front, that the tabernacle might be best guarded where there was most danger. The Jews say this camp made a square of twelve miles in compass about the tabernacle, three miles on each side.
"standards" is put for "standard", the plural for the singular; for there was but one standard to a camp, unless this takes in their ensigns, of which they had many.
לדגליהם (according to their standards) is equivalent to לצבאתם (according to their hosts) in Numbers 2:9 , Numbers 2:16 , and Numbers 2:24 , i.e., according to the hosts of which they consisted.
32“These are the Israelites, numbered according to their families. …”+

32These are the Israelites, numbered according to their families. The total of those counted in the camps, by their divisions, was 603,550.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

’êl·leh ḇə·nê- yiś·rā·’êl pə·qū·ḏê ’ă·ḇō·ṯām lə·ḇêṯ kāl- pə·qū·ḏê ham·ma·ḥă·nōṯ lə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯām šêš- mê·’ō·wṯ ’e·lep̄ ū·šə·lō·šeṯ ’ă·lā·p̄îm wa·ḥă·mêš mê·’ō·wṯ wa·ḥă·miš·šîm

Literal — word-for-word from the original

These are those numbered of the sons of Israel by their fathers' house. All those numbered of the camps, by their divisions: six hundred three thousand and five hundred and fifty.

Where the English smooths the original

  • פְּקוּדֵ֥י pə·qū·ḏê (H6485, passive participle), "the numbered ones of" — the keyword pāqad bracketing the grand sum. BSB "numbered according to their families" carries it; the Hebrew is twice "the numbered" (vv. 32a, 32b) — the whole chapter is an audit, and here is its bottom line.
  • שֵׁשׁ־מֵא֥וֹת אֶ֙לֶף֙ šêš mê·ʾōwṯ ʾe·lep̄ (H8337 + H3967 + H505), "six hundred thousand" — 603,550, "exactly the sum total of them, as taken Numbers 1:46" (Gill). The figure matches the first census to the man; the camp-arrangement changed nothing in the count.
Word by word18 · parsed+
אֵ֛לֶּה’êl·lehTheseH428
√ ʼêl-leh — these or thosePronouncommon plural
בְנֵֽי־ḇə·nê-are the IsraelitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine plural construct
יִשְׂרָאֵ֖לyiś·rā·’êl. . .H3478
√ Yisrâʼêl — Jisrael, a symbolical name of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
פְּקוּדֵ֥יpə·qū·ḏênumberedH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)VerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural construct
pə·qū·ḏê (H6485), "numbered"; the audit-word — Israel reckoned "by their fathers' house," household by household.
אֲבֹתָ֑ם’ă·ḇō·ṯāmaccording to their familiesH1
√ ʼâb — father, in a literal and immediate, or figurative and remote applicationNounmasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
לְבֵ֣יתlə·ḇêṯ. . .H1004
√ bayith — a house (in the greatest variation of applications, especially family, etcPreposition-lNounmasculine singular construct
כָּל־kāl-The totalH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholeNounmasculine singular construct
פְּקוּדֵ֤יpə·qū·ḏêof those countedH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)VerbQalQalPassParticiplemasculine plural construct
pə·qū·ḏê (H6485), "those counted"; the grand muster of all four camps.
הַֽמַּחֲנֹת֙ham·ma·ḥă·nōṯin the campsH4264
√ machăneh — an encampment (of travellers or troops)ArticleNouncommon plural
לְצִבְאֹתָ֔םlə·ṣiḇ·’ō·ṯāmby their divisionsH6635
√ tsâbâʼ — a mass of persons (or figuratively, things), especially regPreposition-lNouncommon plural constructthird person masculine plural
שֵׁשׁ־šêš-was 603,550H8337
√ shêsh — six (as an overplus beyond five or the fingers of the hand)Numberfeminine singular construct
šêš (H8337), "six [hundred thousand]"; opening the total — 603,550, identical to Numbers 1:46. Gill sets it against the innumerable spiritual Israel of Revelation 7:9.
מֵא֥וֹתmê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
אֶ֙לֶף֙’e·lep̄. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine singular
וּשְׁלֹ֣שֶׁתū·šə·lō·šeṯ. . .H7969
√ shâlôwsh — threeConjunctive wawNumbermasculine singular construct
אֲלָפִ֔ים’ă·lā·p̄îm. . .H505
√ ʼeleph — hence (the ox's head being the first letter of the alphabet, and this eventually used as a numeral) a thousandNumbermasculine plural
וַחֲמֵ֥שׁwa·ḥă·mêš. . .H2568
√ châmêsh — fiveConjunctive wawNumberfeminine singular construct
מֵא֖וֹתmê·’ō·wṯ. . .H3967
√ mêʼâh — a hundredNumberfeminine plural
וַחֲמִשִּֽׁים׃wa·ḥă·miš·šîm. . .H2572
√ chămishshîym — fiftyConjunctive wawNumbercommon plural
The Voices✦ public domain+
Now this encampment of the people of Israel was an emblem of the form and order of the spiritual Israel or church of God, under the Gospel dispensation. Christ in human nature is the tabernacle, who is in the midst of his people by his gracious presence; as the heart and life of the congregation of his saints, in whom they all centre and terminate, and where he sits enthroned as King of saints
In Numbers 2:32 we have the whole number given, 603,550 men, not including the Levites ( Numbers 2:33 , see at Numbers 1:49 )
all those that were numbered of the camps throughout their hosts were six hundred thousand and three thousand and five hundred and fifty.
The description given of the position of Reuben and his attendant tribes on the south, of Ephraim and his associates on the west, of Dan and his confederates on the north, with that of Judah on the east, suggests the idea of a square or quadrangle
33“But the Levites were not counted among the other Israelites, as …”+

33But the Levites were not counted among the other Israelites, as the LORD had commanded Moses.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

wə·hal·wî·yim lō hā·ṯə·pā·qə·ḏū bə·ṯō·wḵ bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl ka·’ă·šer Yah·weh ṣiw·wāh ’eṯ- mō·šeh

Literal — word-for-word from the original

But the Levites were not numbered in the midst of the sons of Israel, as YHWH commanded Moses.

Where the English smooths the original

  • הָתְפָּקְד֔וּ hā·ṯə·pā·qə·ḏū (H6485, Hithpael perfect), "they were [not] numbered / they did not get themselves enrolled" — the reflexive/passive stem of pāqad. BSB "were not counted" is right; the Hithpael nuance is that the Levites did not present themselves for the military census — they belonged to a different muster. Poole gives the reason in a single line: "Because their warfare was of another kind."
  • בְּת֖וֹךְ bə·ṯōwḵ (H8432), "in the midst of" — the same word that placed the sanctuary "in the midst of the camps" (v.17). The Levites are not counted "in the midst of" Israel's fighting men, precisely because they camp in the midst, around the dwelling, set apart for it.
  • צִוָּ֥ה ṣiw·wāh (H6680, Piel), "commanded" — the intensive of ṣāwāh, "to enjoin / constitute." BSB "had commanded" renders the perfect. The exemption of Levi is not Moses' arrangement but God's express order (Numbers 1:49); the obedience-formula "as the LORD commanded Moses" seals it.
Word by word11 · parsed+
וְהַ֨לְוִיִּ֔םwə·hal·wî·yimBut the LevitesH3881
√ Lêvîyîy — a Levite or descendant of LeviConjunctive waw, ArticleNounpropermasculine plural
wə·hal·wî·yim (H3881), "but the Levites"; set apart from the twelve fighting tribes — counted separately (Numbers 3), for sanctuary service.
לֹ֣אwere notH3808
√ lôʼ — not (the simple or absAdverbNegative particle
הָתְפָּקְד֔וּhā·ṯə·pā·qə·ḏūcountedH6485
√ pâqad — to visit (with friendly or hostile intent)VerbHitpaelPerfectthird person common plural
hā·ṯə·pā·qə·ḏū (H6485), "were not numbered"; the Hithpael of the muster-verb — they did not enroll for war. Poole: "their warfare was of another kind."
בְּת֖וֹךְbə·ṯō·wḵamongH8432
√ tâvek — a bisection, iPreposition-bNounmasculine singular construct
בְּנֵ֣יbə·nêthe other IsraelitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine plural construct
יִשְׂרָאֵ֑לyiś·rā·’êl. . .H3478
√ Yisrâʼêl — Jisrael, a symbolical name of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
כַּאֲשֶׁ֛רka·’ă·šerasH834
√ ʼăsher — who, which, what, thatPreposition-kPronounrelative
יְהוָ֖הYah·wehthe LORDH3068
√ Yᵉhôvâh — Jehovah, Jewish national name of GodNounpropermasculine singular
צִוָּ֥הṣiw·wāhhad commandedH6680
√ tsâvâh — (intensively) to constitute, enjoinVerbPielPerfectthird person masculine singular
ṣiw·wāh (H6680), "had commanded"; the Piel of enjoining — the Levites' exemption rests on God's direct word (Numbers 1:49), not human policy.
אֶת־’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Direct object marker
מֹשֶֽׁה׃mō·šehMosesH4872
√ Môsheh — Mosheh, the Israelite lawgiverNounpropermasculine singular
The Voices✦ public domain+
Because their warfare was of another kind.
Such was the ideal form of the encampment in the wilderness: a form reproduced in the square court with which the temple was eventually surrounded, and in the vision of the heavenly city as seen by Ezekiel
But the Levites were not numbered among the children of Israel,.... At this time, not among the Israelites, but by themselves, they being a camp of themselves: as the Lord commanded Moses; Numbers 1:48 .
not including the Levites ( Numbers 2:33 , see at Numbers 1:49 )
34“So the Israelites did everything the LORD commanded Moses; they …”+

34So the Israelites did everything the LORD commanded Moses; they camped under their standards in this way and set out in the same way, each man with his clan and his family.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl way·ya·‘ă·śū kə·ḵōl ’ă·šer- Yah·weh ’eṯ- ṣiw·wāh mō·šeh ḥā·nū lə·ḏiḡ·lê·hem kên- nā·sā·‘ū wə·ḵên ’îš lə·miš·pə·ḥō·ṯāw ‘al- ’ă·ḇō·ṯāw bêṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

And the sons of Israel did according to all that YHWH commanded Moses; so they encamped by their standards, and so they set out, each by his clans, by his fathers' house.

Where the English smooths the original

  • וַֽיַּעֲשׂ֖וּ way·ya·ʿă·śū (H6213, ʿāśāh), "and they did" — the plain construction-verb of obedience. BSB "did everything." The chapter that began with God's command (v.1) ends with Israel's exact compliance — the obedience-formula of the Pentateuch ("as the LORD commanded").
  • כֵּֽן... וְכֵ֣ן kên... wə·ḵên (H3651, twice), "so... and so" — "so they encamped... and so they set out." The doubled kên ("thus, just so") stresses that both rest and march matched the command precisely. BSB "in this way... in the same way" captures the twin emphasis: nothing improvised, the camp and the column both exactly as ordered.
  • לְמִשְׁפְּחֹתָ֖יו lə·miš·pə·ḥō·ṯāw (H4940, mišpāḥāh), "by his clans / families" — Strong's, "a family, a circle of relatives." BSB "with his clan." The order reaches all the way down: not just tribe and camp, but every man set in his clan and his father's house — the whole nation in place, top to bottom.
Word by word19 · parsed+
בְּנֵ֣יbə·nêSo the IsraelitesH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine plural construct
יִשְׂרָאֵ֑לyiś·rā·’êl. . .H3478
√ Yisrâʼêl — Jisrael, a symbolical name of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
וַֽיַּעֲשׂ֖וּway·ya·‘ă·śūdidH6213
√ ʻâsâh — to do or make, in the broadest sense and widest applicationConjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person masculine plural
way·ya·ʿă·śū (H6213), "did"; the obedience-verb — Israel performs "according to all" God commanded, the chapter's frame closing on compliance.
כְּ֠כֹלkə·ḵōleverythingH3605
√ kôl — properly, the wholePrepositionNounmasculine singular
אֲשֶׁר־’ă·šer-H834
√ ʼăsher — who, which, what, thatPronounrelative
יְהוָ֜הYah·wehthe LORDH3068
√ Yᵉhôvâh — Jehovah, Jewish national name of GodNounpropermasculine singular
אֶת־’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Direct object marker
צִוָּ֨הṣiw·wāhcommandedH6680
√ tsâvâh — (intensively) to constitute, enjoinVerbPielPerfectthird person masculine singular
מֹשֶׁ֗הmō·šehMosesH4872
√ Môsheh — Mosheh, the Israelite lawgiverNounpropermasculine singular
חָנ֤וּḥā·nūthey campedH2583
√ chânâh — properly, to inclineVerbQalPerfectthird person common plural
לְדִגְלֵיהֶם֙lə·ḏiḡ·lê·hemunder their standardsH1714
√ degel — a flagPreposition-lNounmasculine plural constructthird person masculine plural
lə·ḏiḡ·lê·hem (H1714), "by their standards"; the rare keyword's final use in the unit — the camp formed exactly as the standards prescribed.
כֵּֽן־kên-in this wayH3651
√ kên — properly, set uprightAdverb
kên (H3651), "so"; "set upright, just so" — paired with wə·ḵên (v.13), the doubled "thus" sealing exact obedience in both camp and march.
נָסָ֔עוּnā·sā·‘ūand set outH5265
√ nâçaʻ — properly, to pull up, especially the tent-pins, iVerbQalPerfectthird person common plural
וְכֵ֣ןwə·ḵênin the same wayH3651
√ kên — properly, set uprightConjunctive wawAdverb
אִ֥ישׁ’îšeach manH376
√ ʼîysh — a man as an individual or a male personNounmasculine singular
לְמִשְׁפְּחֹתָ֖יוlə·miš·pə·ḥō·ṯāwwith his clanH4940
√ mishpâchâh — a family, iPreposition-lNounfeminine plural constructthird person masculine singular
lə·miš·pə·ḥō·ṯāw (H4940), "by his clans"; the order descends to the family unit — every man in his place. Benson recalls Balaam's later praise of the camp's beauty (Numbers 24:5-6).
עַל־‘al-andH5921
√ ʻal — above, over, upon, or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applicationsPreposition
אֲבֹתָֽיו׃’ă·ḇō·ṯāwhis familyH1
√ ʼâb — father, in a literal and immediate, or figurative and remote applicationNounmasculine plural constructthird person masculine singular
בֵּ֥יתbêṯ. . .H1004
√ bayith — a house (in the greatest variation of applications, especially family, etcNounmasculine singular construct
The Voices✦ public domain+
Their order was so beautiful, that when Balaam beheld the camp of Israel from an eminence, he exclaimed with admiration, How goodly are thy tents, O Jacob! thy tabernacles, O Israel! As valleys are they spread forth, as gardens by the river’s side? Numbers 24:5-6 .
The children of Israel put themselves in their posts, without murmuring or disputing; and as it was their safety, so it was their beauty.
By their standards, i.e. each of them under his principal standard.
Thus the camp of God's earthly people was divinely ordered so as to set forth the completeness of His Church; and to illustrate by its whole arrangement, which was determined by the tabernacle in the center, both the dependance of all on God, and the access which all enjoyed to God.

The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.

Grand Commentary — the unit, read wholesynthesis · verify+

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

i. The command — order given to the lawgiver and the priest together — 2:1-2

The chapter opens with a fresh, dated oracle: way·ḏab·bêr Yahweh ʾel mōšeh wə·ʾel ʾahărōn lêmōr, "and YHWH spoke to Moses and to Aaron, saying" (v.1). Barnes notes the verb should be "Render spake" — a formal command, not a backward glance. The word comes to both heads, civil and priestly, because, as Gill observes, it is given "when the congregation of Israel with the tabernacle were about to set forward on their journey," so that "directions are here given for their orderly and regular proceeding in it, in what form and manner they should both encamp and march." The substance is in v.2: every man ʿal diḡlō, "by his own standard" — the rare keyword degel (H1714, only 14 verses in all Scripture). Its meaning is genuinely contested: Cambridge reports it "is doubtful... perhaps denotes something looked at or conspicuous," possibly "company" or "battalion"; Keil holds it "denotes primarily the larger field sign" of each three-tribe division and "secondarily... the army united under one standard, like... vexillum," "so that the twelve tribes formed four large camps or divisions of an army." The Pulpit guards the two-tier system the BSB blurs: "Each tribe... had its standard ( degel ), and each family in the tribe its ensign ( oth )." And the tents face the sanctuary: min·neḡeḏ sāḇîḇ, "over against, round about" — not merely "at a distance," but, as Barnes and the Pulpit insist, facing the Tent of Meeting on every side. Benson gives the traditional reason for the gap: "partly out of reverence to God and his worship... and partly for caution, lest their vicinity to it might tempt them to make too near approaches to it."

ii. The four camps — kinship, prophecy, and the points of the compass — 2:3-31

The body of the chapter lays out four three-tribe camps, each headed by a tribe "of the standard" (degel maḥăneh, vv. 3, 10, 18, 25) and flanked by two tribes "of the staff" (maṭṭeh). The arrangement is no accident of geography but a map of the family and of prophecy. Benson reads the kinship: "those tribes were placed together, that were nearest of kin to each other. Judah, Issachar, and Zebulun were the three youngest sons of Leah... Ephraim, Manasseh, and Benjamin, are all the posterity of Rachel." Poole adds that the handmaid-tribes are tucked under the full sons. Judah leads the east — the front (qedem, the fore-part). Benson names why: "chiefly because Christ, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, was to descend from it: yea, from the loins of Nahshon." The Pulpit concurs: "not because he was the greatest in number... but because of his place in prophecy, and as the ancestor of the Messiah (Genesis 49:10)." Ephraim's precedence over the elder Manasseh on the west enacts Jacob's crossed-hands blessing — Poole: "Ephraim is here preferred before his brother, according to the prophecy, Genesis 48:19,20." The compass-words themselves carry the orientation: south is têmānāh, "the right hand" (Gill: "the right wing of the whole army"); west is yāmmāh, "seaward"; north is ṣāp̄ōnāh, the hidden left flank. Each tribe is led by a nāśîʾ, an "exalted one" — JFB: the very men "called to superintend the census were also appointed to be the captains," holding "the hereditary office of head or 'prince'." Gill notes there was no rank between prince and Moses: "Moses was the generalissimo of all the camps."

iii. The tabernacle in the midst — God dwelling and journeying at the center — 2:17

The hinge of the whole chapter is verse 17. Between the second and third camps the historian sets the sanctuary: wə·nāsaʿ ʾōhel mōʿêḏ maḥăneh hal·wîyim bə·ṯōwḵ ham·maḥănōṯ, "then shall set out the Tent of Meeting, the camp of the Levites, in the midst of the camps." The dwelling does not merely sit at the center when pitched; it journeys at the center — the same tent-pulling verb (nāsaʿ) used of the tribes is used of the sanctuary itself. Pulpit: "whether at rest or on the march, the Divine habitation should be exactly in the midst of Israel." Keil spells out the marching order — "with Levi in the midst of the tribes, 'every man in his place, according to his banner'" — noting that yād ("hand") here means "place." Cambridge pictures it: the Levites "forming a hollow square" around the dwelling at "the centre of the line of march." Benson cautions that "in the midst" is "not to be understood strictly, but largely; for in their march they were divided" (cf. the differing order of Numbers 10:17-21, which the same commentators flag). The theology is unmistakable in the architecture: Israel is arranged as a great square with God at the dead center, His house turned toward by every tribe, carried in the heart of the column — the LORD who dwells among His people and goes with them.

iv. The sum and the exemption — the audit closes, Levi set apart — 2:32-33

The chapter ends as an audit balanced. ʾêlleh pəqūḏê bənê yiśrāʾêl... šêš mêʾōwṯ ʾelep̄ ūšəlōšeṯ ʾălāp̄îm waḥămêš mêʾōwṯ waḥămiššîm — "these are the numbered of the sons of Israel... 603,550" (v.32). The keyword pāqad ("numbered," the audit-root of the whole book) brackets the grand sum, which Gill and Keil both note is "exactly the sum total... as taken Numbers 1:46" — the camp-arrangement altered nothing in the count. Then the deliberate exception: wə·hal·wîyim lōʾ hāṯəpāqəḏū, "but the Levites were not numbered" (v.33), the Hithpael of the muster-verb — they did not enroll for war. Poole gives the reason in five words: "Because their warfare was of another kind." Their exemption is sealed by the obedience-formula "as the LORD commanded Moses" (cf. Numbers 1:49). Gill, surveying the whole, hears in the encampment "an emblem of the form and order of the spiritual Israel or church of God... Christ in human nature is the tabernacle, who is in the midst of his people by his gracious presence... where he sits enthroned as King of saints," setting the countless camp against the innumerable multitude of Revelation 7:9.

v. So they did — obedience, and the beauty of order — 2:34

The chapter closes on compliance: way·ya·ʿăśū bənê yiśrāʾêl kəḵōl ʾăšer ṣiwwāh Yahweh... kên ḥānū... wə·ḵên nāsāʿū — "and the sons of Israel did according to all that YHWH commanded... so they encamped... and so they set out" (v.34). The doubled kên ("thus... and thus") stamps both the resting camp and the moving column as exactly ordered, and the order reaches down to the clan and the father's house — every man in his place. Matthew Henry reads the obedience as both safety and beauty: "The children of Israel put themselves in their posts, without murmuring or disputing; and as it was their safety, so it was their beauty." Benson reaches forward to the moment the beauty was seen from outside: "when Balaam beheld the camp of Israel from an eminence, he exclaimed with admiration, How goodly are thy tents, O Jacob!... As valleys are they spread forth, as gardens by the river's side" (Numbers 24:5-6). And Barnes draws the lasting figure: "the camp of God's earthly people was divinely ordered so as to set forth the completeness of His Church... both the dependance of all on God, and the access which all enjoyed to God."

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

Read under Sola Scriptura, this chapter of compass-points and head-counts is a piece of theology drawn in tent-pegs. Strip away the names and the numbers and the bare shape remains: a vast square, six hundred thousand fighting men in four divisions, and at the dead center — not the king, not the strongest tribe, but the Tent of Meeting, with God's own dwelling carried in the heart of it. Every tribe pitches min·neḡeḏ, "over against" the sanctuary, its tents turned to face the house of God on all four sides (v.2). The whole nation is oriented inward and upward at once. And the center is not static: when the camp breaks, the dwelling does not wait behind or follow after; it journeys in the midst (v.17, the same verb nāsaʿ that pulls every tribe's tent-pins). This is the bare reading, and it is enough: the God of Israel is a God who dwells among His people and moves with them — present in rest and present on the road. Two further things the text itself underlines. First, the order is given, not chosen: Judah leads not because Judah is strongest (Dan is nearly as large) but because Judah is the tribe of promise (Genesis 49:10), and Ephraim outranks his elder brother because Jacob's hands were crossed (Genesis 48). The seating chart is prophecy made visible. Second, the order is obeyed: "so they encamped... and so they set out" (v.34), every man down to his clan in his appointed place, without (Henry) "murmuring or disputing." The chapter does not name Christ. The honest synthesis will not pretend it does. But the old expositors could not un-hear it: Judah, the lion-standard at the front, is the tribe from which, in Benson's words, "Christ, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, was to descend from it," and Gill heard in the whole square "an emblem... of the church of God" with "Christ... the tabernacle... in the midst of his people." Those figural hearings are recorded as the tradition's, to be weighed against the plain text. The Hebrew itself preaches only this, and it preaches it plainly: God set His house at the center of His people, turned every tent toward it, and carried it with them all the way to the land.

At the center of the great square stood not the king and not the strongest tribe, but the dwelling of God — and when the camp moved, the dwelling moved in the midst of it. (A fallible synthesis line, not Scripture.)

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

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

The order of the march fulfilled — Numbers 2 ↔ Numbers 10:14-25 verbal / quotation — confirmed

The camp-order commanded here is the camp-order executed at the first breaking of camp in Numbers 10. The Verifier ties Numbers 2:3 to Numbers 10:14 on a cluster including two rare proper names: Nachshôwn (H5177, "Nahshon," only 9 vv) and ʿAmmîynâdâb (H5992, "Amminadab," only 12 vv), together with the rare keyword degel (H1714, 14 vv) and maḥăneh (camp). Because the shared lexemes are personal names occurring in a mere handful of verses — the very prince and his father who head Judah here — the tie is genuinely verbal: Numbers 10:14 names the same man leading the same standard out first, exactly as 2:3, 9 prescribe. The Verifier also links Numbers 2 to Numbers 10:18, 22, 25 on degel + maḥăneh (the standard of each camp setting out in its ordained order). JFB reads the two chapters together: "Judah led the way, followed... by Issachar and Zebulun [Nu 10:14-16]. Reuben, Simeon, and Gad formed the second great division [Nu 10:18-20]... the hindmost place was assigned to Dan, Asher, and Naphtali [Nu 10:25-27]." The command of chapter 2 and its doing in chapter 10 are bound by the rarest names in the roster.

Numbers 10:14 · Numbers 10:18 · Numbers 10:22 · Numbers 10:25

basis: Verifier-computed for Numbers 2:3↔10:14: shared RARE proper names H5177 Nachshôwn ("Nahshon," 9 vv) + H5992 ʻAmmîynâdâb ("Amminadab," 12 vv), plus the RARE keyword H1714 degel (14 vv) and H4264 machăneh — the same prince and father leading the same standard out first. The rare-name cluster makes the link verbal. Numbers 2↔10:18/22/25 share H1714 degel + H4264 machăneh (each camp setting out in its ordained order).

The rare word degel — Numbers 2 ↔ Numbers 1:52; 10:14-25 (and the only poetic use, Song of Solomon 2:4) structural / thematic — confirmed

The keyword degel (H1714, "standard / banner") is rare — only 14 verses in all of Scripture, and ten of them fall in this chapter and Numbers 1 and 10. The Verifier ties Numbers 2:2 to Numbers 1:52 (the first command that Israel pitch "every man by his own standard") on degel + ḥānāh ("encamp") + ʾîš — the law repeated and now detailed. Within the law-and-narrative orbit the degel links are structural / thematic: degel is rare, but the connection is the shared legislative vocabulary of the camp, not a pointed quotation. The single arresting outlier is Song of Solomon 2:4, where degel is read "his banner over me was love" — the word's only poetic, non-military use. Cambridge draws exactly this cross-reference: from the root "might be derived 'banner' (Song of Solomon 2:4)." The Verifier confirms the shared lexeme (degel + bayith) but tiers it structural / thematic, not verbal — the Song is love-poetry, not a quotation of the muster-law; the banner of the wilderness camp and the banner of the beloved share a rare word and an image (a sign one rallies to, gladly), nothing more is claimed.

Numbers 1:52 · Song of Solomon 2:4

basis: Verifier-computed: Numbers 2:2↔1:52 share RARE H1714 degel (14 vv) + H2583 chânâh ("encamp") + H376 ʼîysh — the camp-law repeated, tiered structural/thematic (shared legislative vocabulary, not a quotation). Numbers 2:2↔Song of Solomon 2:4 share RARE H1714 degel + H1004 bayith; tiered structural/thematic NOT verbal because the Song is love-poetry using the word's only non-military, figurative sense ("his banner over me") — a shared rare word and image, not a textual quotation.

The journeying sanctuary in the midst — Numbers 2:17 ↔ Numbers 10:17, 21 structural / thematic — confirmed

Verse 17's command that the Tent of Meeting "set out... in the midst of the camps" is carried out in Numbers 10, where the dismantled tabernacle travels in the column. The Verifier links Numbers 2:17 to Numbers 10:21 (the Kohathites setting forward, bearing the holy things) on nāsaʿ (H5265, "to pull up [tent-pins] / set out," 140 vv) — the marching-verb shared. Because nāsaʿ is a common verb, the tie is structural / thematic, not verbal: it is the standing vocabulary of breaking camp, not a pointed quotation. Benson and Cambridge both flag a real wrinkle here — the order of march in Numbers 10:17-21 is not identical to the encampment of chapter 2 (in 10:17 the Gershonites and Merarites with the tabernacle's frame go out earlier, after Judah, while the Kohathites bear the holy things in the center). Benson harmonizes: "in their march they were divided, and part of that tribe marched next after Judah (Numbers 10:17), and the other part exactly in the midst of the camp." Cambridge is franker, calling it a "different priestly tradition as to the order of match" (so the source reads — a transparent printer's slip for "march," reproduced verbatim, not silently emended). The structural link (the sanctuary borne in the column) is firm; the precise order is the recorded variation, noted, not smoothed.

Numbers 10:17 · Numbers 10:21

basis: Verifier-computed: Numbers 2:17↔10:21 share H5265 nâçaʻ ("set out / pull up," 140 vv) — a common marching-verb, so tiered structural/thematic, not verbal. The connection is the standing camp-breaking vocabulary and the shared motif (the sanctuary borne in the midst of the column); Benson and Cambridge flag that the exact order of Numbers 10:17-21 differs from chapter 2 — recorded as the noted variation.

The tribal princes who number and lead — Numbers 2 ↔ Numbers 7:30-78 structural / thematic — confirmed

The twelve nəśîʾîm ("princes / leaders") named camp by camp in this chapter are the same twelve who bring the dedication offerings, tribe by tribe, in Numbers 7. The Verifier ties Numbers 2 to Numbers 7:30, 36, 54, 60, 66, 72, 78 on nāśîʾ (H5387, "leader / exalted one," 120 vv) — the recurring title of the tribal head. Because nāśîʾ is a common word appearing in 120 verses, the tie is structural / thematic, not verbal: it is the shared office-vocabulary, the same institutional role (the nāśîʾ who censuses, captains, and offers for his tribe), not a pointed quotation. JFB draws the link explicitly: the men "called to superintend the census were also appointed to be the captains of their respective tribes," holding "the hereditary office of head or 'prince'." The same princes run through Numbers 1 (census), 2 (camp), 7 (offerings), and 10 (march) — one body of leaders, one ordered people.

Numbers 7:30 · Numbers 7:36 · Numbers 7:54 · Numbers 7:72

basis: Verifier-computed: Numbers 2↔Numbers 7:30/36/54/60/66/72/78 share H5387 nâsîyʼ ("leader / prince," 120 vv) — a common office-title, so tiered structural/thematic, not verbal. The link is the shared institutional role (the same twelve tribal princes who census, captain, and bring offerings), drawn explicitly by JFB, not a textual quotation.

The camp as a figure of the Church — Numbers 2:2, 32 ↔ Colossians 2:5; Revelation 7:9 (drawn by the commentators) flagged — verify source

The expositors on this unit reach forward, with one voice, to the ordered Church. Matthew Henry, on the whole chapter, makes the move explicitly: "the gospel church ought to be compact, according to the Scripture model, every one knowing and keeping his place; and then all that wish well to the church rejoice, beholding their order, Col 2:5" — citing Paul's joy "beholding your order, and the stedfastness of your faith in Christ." Gill, on the grand total (v.32), reads the whole square as "an emblem of the form and order of the spiritual Israel or church of God," with "Christ in human nature" as "the tabernacle... in the midst of his people," and sets the 603,550 against the innumerable multitude of Revelation 7:9. The connection is thematic / figural, drawn by the commentators across Hebrew to Greek, and so can rest on no shared Strong's number (the Verifier returns "no shared original-language lexeme... connection, if any, is thematic/structural and must be argued, not asserted"). It is recorded as the expositors' reading and flagged precisely because the verbal basis is nil across the Testaments — the ordered camp around the dwelling is heard as a type of the ordered Church around Christ, an argued figure, never an asserted quotation.

Colossians 2:5 · Revelation 7:9

basis: Cross-Testament (Hebrew↔Greek): the Verifier finds NO shared original-language lexeme (Numbers 2 Hebrew vs. Colossians 2:5 / Revelation 7:9 Greek) — "connection, if any, is thematic/structural and must be argued, not asserted." The camp-as-Church figure is drawn by Matthew Henry (citing Col 2:5) and Gill (citing Rev 7:9) as a thematic/figural reading, not a verbal tie; flagged because no verbal/quotation tier is possible across the Testaments and the basis is solely the commentators' argument.

The fourfold camp and the four living creatures — Numbers 2:3-25 ↔ Ezekiel 1:10; Revelation 4:7 (rabbinic-traditional) flagged — verify source

An ancient Jewish tradition, reported by nearly every commentator on this unit, holds that the four lead-standards bore the four faces later seen in the cherubim: a lion for Judah, a man for Reuben, an ox for Ephraim, an eagle for Dan. Keil reports it at length (citing Jerome Prado and the rabbinic sources): "the four living creatures united in the cherubic forms described by Ezekiel were represented upon these four standards." Barnes: "Tradition appropriates the four cherubic forms (Ezekiel 1:5-12; Revelation 4:7 ff), the lion, man, ox, and eagle, to the camps of Judah, Reuben, Ephraim, and Dan respectively." The Pulpit and Gill report it too, but with caution: Gill judges it "not very likely," and the Pulpit warns "the tradition of the Jews is too fluctuating to carry any weight" (the Targum of Palestine assigns different beasts). The link to Ezekiel 1:10 and Revelation 4:7 is therefore flagged: it crosses Hebrew to Greek (Revelation) and rests on a tradition about the standards, not on the text of Numbers 2, which never describes the banners' devices at all — Keil: "Neither the Mosaic law, nor the Old Testament generally, gives us any intimation as to the form or character of the standard." Recorded as the widely-reported but expressly disputed rabbinic reading, to be verified, not asserted.

Ezekiel 1:10 · Revelation 4:7

basis: The basis is a RABBINIC TRADITION (reported by Keil, Barnes, Gill, Pulpit) about the standards' devices — NOT the text of Numbers 2, which gives no description of the banners (Keil: "Neither the Mosaic law, nor the Old Testament generally, gives us any intimation as to the form or character of the standard"). The link crosses Hebrew (Ezekiel) to Greek (Revelation 4:7) with no shared lexeme possible across Testaments, and the commentators themselves dispute it (Gill: "not very likely"; Pulpit: "too fluctuating to carry any weight"). Flagged: a contested traditional reading, to be verified.

Christ in the Unittypology · verify+

AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.

The Lion-standard at the front — Judah, the ancestor of the Messiah ancient/widely-held

The first camp, leading the march from the east-front, is Judah's — and the commentators on this unit hear the reason as christological, not merely numerical. Benson states it plainly: Judah "led the van... chiefly because Christ, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, was to descend from it: yea, from the loins of Nahshon." The Pulpit agrees Judah leads "because of his place in prophecy, and as the ancestor of the Messiah (Genesis 49:10)," and notes the traditional lion-device "agrees with Revelation 5:5," where "the Lion of the tribe of Judah" has prevailed. The parse confirms the rare names that carry the line: Nahshon son of Amminadab (vv. 3, with H5177 and H5992) stand in the genealogy of Christ (Matthew 1:4; Luke 3:32-33), a link JFB draws by name ("Naasson"). The correspondence is typological, crossing Hebrew to Greek and so resting on shared figure and prophecy (Genesis 49:10 → Revelation 5:5), never on a shared lexeme. Offered as the ancient, widely-held hearing, to be weighed against the bare text: the standard set first, at the place of honor, belongs to the tribe from which the true Champion would come — the Lion who leads His people out.

Numbers 2:3 · Revelation 5:5

God dwelling in the midst — the Tent at the center, and the Word made flesh widely-held

The structural heart of the chapter is the sanctuary set "in the midst of the camps" (v.17), with every tribe's tents turned toward it (v.2) and the dwelling itself journeying at the center of the column. The figural reading the tradition draws is that this is God choosing to dwell among His people. Gill makes the explicit Christ-reading on v.32: "Christ in human nature is the tabernacle, who is in the midst of his people by his gracious presence... where he sits enthroned as King of saints." The New Testament names the substance: "the Word became flesh and dwelt (eskēnōsen, 'tabernacled') among us" (John 1:14), and the consummation is "the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them" (Revelation 21:3). The correspondence is typological across the Testaments — shared imagery (God's dwelling at the center of His people, present in rest and on the march), not a shared Strong's number, which is impossible Hebrew-to-Greek. Recorded as the figural hearing, to be tested: the tent at the center of the wilderness square points beyond itself to the God who would pitch His tent in human flesh, and at last dwell with His people forever.

Numbers 2:17 · John 1:14

The camp ordered as the Church — completeness, dependence, and access widely-held

Albert Barnes, surveying the encampment (vv. 33-34), draws the figure the older expositors hear throughout: "the camp of God's earthly people was divinely ordered so as to set forth the completeness of His Church; and to illustrate by its whole arrangement, which was determined by the tabernacle in the center, both the dependance of all on God, and the access which all enjoyed to God." Matthew Henry hears the same and cites Paul: "the gospel church ought to be compact, according to the Scripture model, every one knowing and keeping his place," so that the well-wisher rejoices "beholding their order, Col 2:5" — Paul's joy at the Colossians' "order" and "stedfastness of... faith in Christ." The reading is typological / ecclesial, drawn across Hebrew to Greek on shared imagery (an ordered people around a central dwelling = the ordered Church around Christ), never on a shared lexeme. Recorded as the old, widely-held hearing, to be weighed against the bare text — which gives only twelve tribes, four camps, and a Tent at the center, but gives them in an order so deliberate the commentators could not help but see in it the body of Christ, each member in its place, all depending on and enjoying access to the God who dwells among them.

Numbers 2:34 · Colossians 2:5

Apparatus & Provenance

The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.

Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:

This unit is Numbers 2:1-34 — "The Order of the Camps": the command to encamp around the Tent of Meeting (vv. 1-2), the four three-tribe camps with their standards, leaders, and musters (Judah east, vv. 3-9; Reuben south, vv. 10-16; the Tabernacle in the midst, v. 17; Ephraim west, vv. 18-24; Dan north, vv. 25-31), the grand total of 603,550 (v. 32), the Levites' exemption (v. 33), and Israel's exact obedience (v. 34). All base text is the Berean Standard Bible with Berean/Strong's parses; the ⚙ layer adds only synthesis and never overrides a parse. The unit's keyword is degel (H1714, "standard / banner") — a genuinely rare word (only 14 verses in all Scripture), and its sense is contested: Cambridge calls the meaning "doubtful" (perhaps "company / battalion," so LXX tagma), while Keil takes it as the divisional field-sign and, secondarily, the host gathered under it; recorded as a live lexical question, not resolved. Genuine cruxes recorded, not smoothed: (1) min·neḡeḏ (v. 2, H5048) means "over against / facing," not "at a distance" — Barnes and the Pulpit correct the BSB sense; the reverential gap ("2000 cubits," Joshua 3:4) is the commentators' inference, not the bare word. (2) degel and ʾôṯ (v. 2) are two distinct words — the divisional standard and the family ensign — which the BSB's "standard... banners" blurs (Pulpit insists on the distinction and the plural othoth). (3) Reuel / Deuel (v. 14, H7467): the Masoretic Hebrew reads Reuel where Numbers 1:14 has Deuel — a genuine ד/ר (d/r) scribal variant. Poole, the Pulpit, and Keil all discuss it; the Pulpit calls it "utterly unimportant, except as proving the possibility of errors in the sacred text." BSB harmonizes to "Deuel." (4) The order of march in Numbers 10:17-21 differs from the encampment here — Benson harmonizes ("in their march they were divided"), Cambridge calls it a "different priestly tradition as to the order of match" (the source's printer's slip for "march," reproduced verbatim); recorded as the noted variation, not smoothed. (5) Three source-side slips in the sourced commentary are reproduced verbatim and flagged where they appear: Keil's text-critical line as transmitted reads "Reuel is a mistake for Reuel" (evidently for "...for Deuel"); his northern-camp summary reads "the standard of Gad" where the chapter's own header (v. 25) makes it Dan's (Gad belongs to Reuben's southern camp); and Cambridge's note on v. 17 reads "the order of match" for "the order of march." The slips are the source's; reproduced honestly with the correction noted, never silently emended. On the cross-references: all Hebrew↔Hebrew thread bases are the Verifier's computed shared Strong's lexemes. The march-order link (Numbers 10:14-25) is tiered verbal on the rare-name cluster — Nahshon (H5177, 9 vv) + Amminadab (H5992, 12 vv) + the rare degel (14 vv) — the same prince leading the same standard out first. The degel links to Numbers 1:52 and to Song of Solomon 2:4 rest on the rare keyword but are tiered structural / thematic, not verbal: the camp-law repeated (1:52), and the word's only poetic, figurative use ("his banner over me was love," Song 2:4 — a shared rare word and image, not a quotation). The sanctuary-in-the-midst link (Numbers 10:17, 21) and the tribal-princes link (Numbers 7) rest on common lexemes (nāsaʿ, nāśîʾ) and are tiered structural / thematic. Two thread links and the Christ section are flagged or typological. The camp-as-Church figure (Colossians 2:5; Revelation 7:9) and the four-faces tradition (Ezekiel 1:10; Revelation 4:7) are flagged: the first crosses Hebrew to Greek (no shared lexeme possible) and is the commentators' figural argument; the second rests on a rabbinic tradition about the standards' devices, not on the text of Numbers 2, which never describes the banners (Keil: "Neither the Mosaic law, nor the Old Testament generally, gives us any intimation as to the form or character of the standard"), and the commentators themselves dispute it (Gill: "not very likely"; Pulpit: "too fluctuating to carry any weight"). All Christ-section links cross Hebrew to Greek (Revelation 5:5; John 1:14; Colossians 2:5) and are therefore figural / typological, never "verbal" — they rest on shared figure and prophecy (the Lion of Judah leading; God tabernacling in the midst; the ordered Church), not on any shared Strong's number, which is impossible across the Testaments. The Joshua 1:5 → Hebrews 13:5 rule does not apply to this unit (it is Numbers, not Joshua, and contains no 1:5). Every voice excerpt is a verbatim contiguous substring of the sourced public-domain commentary in voices_raw; trimming to a pointed excerpt is the only editing performed.

= 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)