The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Bronze Serpent
Numbers 21:4–9 — The Bronze Serpent. 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.
4Then they set out from Mount Hor along the route to the Red Sea, in order to bypass the land of Edom. But the people grew impatient on the journey
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yis·‘ū hā·hār mê·hōr de·reḵ sūp̄ yam- lis·ḇōḇ ’eṯ- ’e·reṣ ’ĕ·ḏō·wm hā·‘ām wat·tiq·ṣar ne·p̄eš- bad·dā·reḵ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-they-pulled-up from Mount Hor by-the-way of-the-Reed Sea to-go-around the-land of-Edom — and-the-soul of-the-people grew-short in-the-way.
Where the English smooths the original
Because of the way.— Better, in (or, on ) the way. In addition to all the hardships and dangers of the journey, they were conscious that they were turning their backs upon the land of Canaan, instead of marching by a direct course into it.Ellicott corrects the rendering at the preposition: not the causal "because of" but the locative "in / on the way" — the trouble happens on the road, not merely over it.
it is in the original text, "their soul or breath was short" (p); they fetched their breath short, being weary and faint with travelling, or through anger, as angry persons do, when in a great passionGill recovers the bodily idiom under the smooth English: nephesh shortened is breath cut short — exhaustion, or the clipped breathing of a man in a passion.
So the faithless pilgrims broke into their only too familiar murmurings, utterly ignoring their thirty-eight years of preservation. ‘There is no bread.’ No; but the manna had fallen day by day.Maclaren names the root of the sin as forgetfulness: the complaint erases thirty-eight years of daily provision.
the soul of the people was impatient ] lit. ‘was short.’ The opposite state is ‘long-suffering’; cf. Proverbs 14:29 (R.V. ‘hasty’ and ‘slow to anger’).Cambridge fixes the idiom by its antonym: a short soul is the opposite of the long-suffering, slow-to-anger temper Scripture commends.
5and spoke against God and against Moses: “Why have you led us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? There is no bread or water, and we detest this wretched food!”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
hā·‘ām way·ḏab·bêr bê·lō·hîm ū·ḇə·mō·šeh lā·māh he·‘ĕ·lî·ṯu·nū mim·miṣ·ra·yim lā·mūṯ bam·miḏ·bār kî ’ên le·ḥem wə·’ên ma·yim wə·nap̄·šê·nū qā·ṣāh haq·qə·lō·qêl bal·le·ḥem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-the-people spoke against God and-against Moses: Why have-you-brought-us-up from-Egypt to-die in-the-wilderness? For there-is-no bread and-there-is-no water, and-our-soul loathes this worthless bread.
Where the English smooths the original
The word rendered light denotes something vile or worthless. It was thus that the Israelites regarded the manna which was given to them from heaven; even as the “spiritual meat” which is given to Christ’s Church in His word and ordinances is too commonly regarded amongst ourselves.
our soul loatheth this light bread—that is, bread without substance or nutritious quality. The refutation of this calumny appears in the fact, that on the strength of this food they performed for forty years so many and toilsome journeys.
There is no bread, neither is there any water. The one of these statements was no doubt as much and as little true as the other. There was no ordinary supply of either; but as they had bread given to them from heaven, so they had water from the rock, otherwise they could not possibly have existed.
What will they be pleased with, whom manna will not please? Let not the contempt which some cast on the word of God, make us value it less. It is the bread of life, substantial bread, and will nourish those who by faith feed upon it, to eternal life, whoever may call it light bread.Henry turns the murmur into a mirror: the manna despised is a figure of the word of God despised — bread that is anything but light.
6So the LORD sent venomous snakes among the people, and many of the Israelites were bitten and died.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh way·šal·laḥ haś·śə·rā·p̄îm han·nə·ḥā·šîm bā·‘ām ’êṯ rāḇ ‘am- mî·yiś·rā·’êl way·naš·šə·ḵū ’eṯ- hā·‘ām way·yā·māṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-Yahweh sent among-the-people the-burning-ones, the-serpents; and-they-bit the-people, and-much people of-Israel died.
Where the English smooths the original
Hebrew, the serpents, the seraphim ( i.e., the burning ones). (See Deuteronomy 8:15 ; Isaiah 14:29 ; Isaiah 30:6 .) The word appears to denote a particular kind of serpent, as in the following verse.
The people rebelled in consequence, and were punished by the Lord with fiery serpents, the bite of which caused many to die. שׂרפים נחשׁים, lit., burning snakes, so called from their burning, i.e., inflammatory bite, which filled with heat and poisonKeil derives 'fiery' from the inflammatory bite rather than the colour — the rival reading to the Pulpit Commentary's.
The word saraph which seems to mean "burning one," stands (by itself) for a serpent in verse 8, and also in Isaiah 14:29 ; Isaiah 30:6 . In Isaiah 6:2, 6 it stands for one of the symbolic beings (seraphim) of the prophet's vision. The only idea common to the two meanings (otherwise so distinct) must be that of brilliance and metallic luster.The Pulpit editor argues the 'fiery' is colour, not venom — and the same brilliance unites the snakes with Isaiah's seraphim; we flag, but do not assert, that bridge (see the seraphim thread).
‘The Lord sent fiery serpents.’ That statement does not necessarily imply a miracle. Scripture traces natural phenomena directly to God’s will, and often overleaps intervening material links between the cause which is God and the effect which is a physical fact.Maclaren refuses to over-claim the miraculous: the venomous serpents already infested the Arabah, yet Scripture names God as the direct agent — providence working through nature, not against it.
7Then the people came to Moses and said, “We have sinned by speaking against the LORD and against you. Intercede with the LORD so He will take the snakes away from us.” So Moses interceded for the people.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
hā·‘ām way·yā·ḇō ’el- mō·šeh way·yō·mə·rū ḥā·ṭā·nū kî- ḏib·bar·nū Yah·weh wā·ḇāḵ hiṯ·pal·lêl ’el- Yah·weh wə·yā·sêr han·nā·ḥāš mê·‘ā·lê·nū ’eṯ- mō·šeh way·yiṯ·pal·lêl bə·‘aḏ hā·‘ām
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-the-people came to Moses and-said: We-have-sinned, for we-have-spoken against Yahweh and-against-you; intercede to Yahweh that-He-take-away from-upon-us the-serpent. And-Moses interceded for the-people.
Where the English smooths the original
they entreat him to be their intercessor, though they had spoken against him and used him ill: and Moses prayed for the people; which proves him to be of a meek and forgiving spirit; who, though he had been so sadly reflected on, yet readily undertakes to pray to God for them.
This punishment brought the people to reflection. They confessed their sin to Moses, and entreated him to deliver them from the plague through his intercession with the Lord. And the Lord helped them; in such a way, however, that the reception of help was made to depend upon the faith of the people.Keil names the conditional grace of the episode: help given, but hung on faith.
Pray unto the Lord. This is the first and only (recorded) occasion on which the people directly asked for the intercession of Moses (cf., however, chapter Numbers 11:2), although Pharaoh had done so several times, and never in vain.
The request for Moses’ intercession witnesses to the instinct of conscience, requiring a mediator,-an instinct which has led to much superstition and been terribly misguided, but which is deeply true, and is met once for all in Jesus Christ, our Advocate before the throne.Maclaren reads the cry for a mediator as a conscience-instinct met finally in Christ the Advocate — the Old-Testament mediator pointing past himself.
8Then the LORD said to Moses, “Make a fiery serpent and mount it on a pole. When anyone who is bitten looks at it, he will live.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh way·yō·mer ’el- mō·šeh ‘ă·śêh lə·ḵā śā·rāp̄ wə·śîm ’ō·ṯōw ‘al- nês wə·hā·yāh kāl- han·nā·šūḵ wə·rā·’āh ’ō·ṯōw wā·ḥāy
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-Yahweh said to Moses: Make for-yourself a-burning-one, and-set it upon a-standard; and-it-shall-be, everyone bitten who-looks at-it shall-live.
Where the English smooths the original
Set it upon a pole.— Better, a standard. The LXX. have σημεῖον , the Vulgate signum. The Hebrew word ( nes ) is the same which occurs in Exodus 17:15 , “Jehovah-nissi”— i.e., Jehovah is my standard or banner.
This method of cure was prescribed, that it might appear to be God’s own work, and not the effect of nature or art: and that it might be an eminent type of our salvation by Christ.
As the brass serpent represented the instrument of their chastisement, so the looking unto it at God's word denoted acknowledgment of their sin, longing for deliverance from its penalty, and faith in the means appointed by God for healing.
Whosoever looked, however desperate his case, or feeble his sight, or distant his place, was certainly and perfectly cured.Henry presses the gospel logic of the look: not the strength of the gaze but its object decides — desperate, feeble, and distant cases are healed alike.
9So Moses made a bronze snake and mounted it on a pole. If anyone who was bitten looked at the bronze snake, he would live.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mō·šeh way·ya·‘aś nə·ḥō·šeṯ nə·ḥaš way·śi·mê·hū ‘al- han·nês wə·hā·yāh ’im- ’îš nā·šaḵ wə·hib·bîṭ ’el- nə·ḥaš han·nə·ḥō·šeṯ han·nā·ḥāš ’eṯ- wā·ḥāy
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-Moses made a-serpent of-bronze and-set-it upon the-standard; and-it-was, if the-serpent had-bitten a-man, and-he-gazed at the-serpent of-bronze, then-he-lived.
Where the English smooths the original
In the serpent of brass, harmless itself, but made in the image of the creature that is accursed above others Genesis 3:14 , the Christian fathers rightly see a figure of Him John 3:14-15 who though "holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners" Hebrews 7:26 , was yet "made sin" 2 Corinthians 5:21 , and "made a curse for us" Galatians 3:13 .Barnes gathers the apostolic verdict that the brazen serpent figures a sinless Christ "made sin" and "made a curse."
This serpent was preserved by the Israelites, and taken into Canaan, and was ultimately destroyed by King Hezekiah, after it had become an object of idolatrous worship ( 2Kings 18:4 ).
The record is brief and simple in the extreme, and tells nothing but the bare facts.
For God did not cause a real serpent to be taken, but the image of a serpent, in which the fiery serpent was stiffened, as it were, into dead brass, as a sign that the deadly poison of the fiery serpents was overcome in this brazen serpent.Keil locates the meaning in the image, not in magic: the killer is shown defeated, frozen harmless in metal — the death of the serpent displayed as the cure.
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
The unit opens on a road, and the road is the wound. Israel pulls up its tent-stakes (wayyisʻū, from nâsaʻ, H5265) from Mount Hor and bends south by the way (derek, H1870) of the Reed Sea — the word the verse opens and closes with, framing the murmur. Jamieson, Fausset & Brown name the compounded grief precisely: "the necessity of a retrograde journey by a long and circuitous route through the worst parts of a sandy desert." Edom — brother Esau's nation — has barred the door (Numbers 20:21), so the chosen people must skirt their kin (lisbōb, H5437, "to go around"). Charles Ellicott presses that the Hebrew is better "in (or, on ) the way" than "because of the way": the discouragement happens on the road itself, as "they were turning their backs upon the land of Canaan." And the idiom is bodily: not abstract impatience but, as John Gill reads the original, "their soul or breath was short… they fetched their breath short, being weary and faint with travelling." The nephesh (H5315) — the throat, the breath, the living self — is cut short (wattiqṣar, H7114). Patience clipped at the windpipe.
Short breath turns to bitter speech. The people speak against God and Moses (wayḏabbêr bêlōhîm) and lay a lie across both halves of their complaint: "there is no bread… no water." The Pulpit Commentary weighs it exactly — each claim "was no doubt as much and as little true as the other": false, since manna fell and the rock gave water; true only of ordinary supply. The sting is in the last word: haqqᵉlôqêl (H7052), a doubled, reduplicated form that the Pulpit editor flags as "a stronger form" — not merely light bread but utterly worthless bread. Charles Ellicott hears the self-indictment across the centuries: the word "denotes something vile or worthless… even as the 'spiritual meat' which is given to Christ's Church… is too commonly regarded amongst ourselves." Jamieson, Fausset & Brown answer the slander with arithmetic: "the refutation of this calumny appears in the fact, that on the strength of this food they performed for forty years so many and toilsome journeys." The throat that loathes (qāṣâ, H6973) heaven's bread is the throat that was already short of breath.
The judgment fits the speech: a mouth full of poison meets mouths full of poison. Yahweh — emphatic, first word of the verse — sends the śᵉrāphîm, the burning ones (śārāph, H8314), the nᵉḥāšîm, the serpents (nâchâsh, H5175). Ellicott reads the doubled Hebrew literally: "the serpents, the seraphim (i.e., the burning ones)… a particular kind of serpent." The name may come from the fire of the bite or the fire of the colour; The Pulpit Commentary argues the latter from Moses' copper imitation — "the saraph was so named from his colour, not his venom" — the same word that in Isaiah 6 names the burning beings before the throne. Alexander Maclaren refuses to over-claim the miraculous: the statement "does not necessarily imply a miracle. Scripture traces natural phenomena directly to God's will," and the Arabah "is still infested with venomous serpents, 'marked with fiery red spots.'" God need not break nature to judge through it. And the death (wayyāmāṯ, H4191) is the very dying the people had falsely charged Him with intending (lāmûṯ, v.5) — the slander made literal as wages.
The smart works what the manna could not. "We have sinned" — ḥāṭā'nū (H2398), the archer's word for a missed mark. Maclaren credits the speed of it: their "quick recognition of its source and purpose, and their swift repentance, are to be put to their credit." They ask Moses to intercede (hiṯpallēl, H6419, Hitpael of pâlal), and The Pulpit Commentary marks the singularity: "the first and only (recorded) occasion on which the people directly asked for the intercession of Moses." That request, Maclaren writes, "witnesses to the instinct of conscience, requiring a mediator,—an instinct… met once for all in Jesus Christ, our Advocate." And the mediator does not balk. Though "so sadly reflected on," John Gill observes, Moses "readily undertakes to pray to God for them" — the same Hitpael stem now in narrative (wayyiṯpallēl): request and answer in one verb. The man who was cursed at intercedes for the cursing.
God's cure is a paradox: an image of the killer, harmless, lifted to be seen. Make a śārāph (H8314) and set it on a nēs (H5251) — and Ellicott recovers the word's weight: not a bare "pole" but "a standard… the same which occurs in Exodus 17:15, 'Jehovah-nissi'— i.e., Jehovah is my standard or banner." The healing-sign flies like a war-banner over the camp. Joseph Benson states the design plainly: "This method of cure was prescribed, that it might appear to be God’s own work, and not the effect of nature or art: and that it might be an eminent type of our salvation by Christ." Albert Barnes unfolds the symbolism — the bronze image "made in the image of the creature that is accursed above others (Genesis 3:14)" yet "harmless itself" — in which "the Christian fathers rightly see a figure of Him… who… was yet 'made sin' (2 Corinthians 5:21), and 'made a curse for us' (Galatians 3:13)." The condition is only a look: râ'âh in the command (v.8), sharpened to the fixed gaze nâbaṭ (H5027) in the deed (v.9). Matthew Henry: "Whosoever looked, however desperate his case, or feeble his sight, or distant his place, was certainly and perfectly cured." And Keil & Delitzsch hear the wordplay the metal makes — nᵉḥōšeṯ (bronze) ringing against nâchâš (serpent): the cure sounds like the curse, the sun-bright copper "most like the appearance of the fiery serpents." The serpent lifted up is the death of the serpent.
Read under Sola Scriptura, this is the gospel's logic carved into the wilderness. The murmur is the disease — a nephesh short of breath (v.4), a throat that loathes heaven's bread (v.5) — and the disease summons its own venom: the very dying they slandered God with (v.5) crawls into the camp on its belly (v.6). Then grace inverts everything. God does not merely remove the serpents; He commands the image of the serpent lifted up, and binds life not to striving but to a single look (vv.8–9). The cure is shaped like the curse — bronze (nᵉḥōšeṯ) named like the serpent (nâchâš) — because the remedy must answer the wound on its own ground: the thing that killed, defeated and displayed. Note the order Scripture refuses to reverse: the serpents are not taken away (the prayer of v.7 is answered, but the narrative still assumes men keep being bitten); instead a way is opened for any bitten man to live. So consequence remains, but it is no longer fatal — disciplinary, not destructive. The whole passage is therefore a tract on faith before it is anything else: a half-dead man cannot work, cannot march, cannot atone — he can only turn his eyes. That this fallible synthesis sees Christ here is not novelty; it is the Lord's own reading (John 3:14), and we hold it as such — but the figural weight is His claim, recorded and tested, not ours invented.
The cure was cast in the shape of the curse: a serpent of bronze, named like the serpent that bit — lifted up, so that the thing which killed, looked upon, would heal.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
Deuteronomy 8:15 recalls this very episode — "that great and terrible wilderness, wherein were fiery serpents (śārāph) and scorpions" — using both the rare śārāph (H8314) and nâchâsh (H5175). The Verifier records śārāph as a rare lexeme (present in only seven verses of the Hebrew Bible), which is what lifts this above a generic snake-link to a genuine verbal echo of the same word for the same creatures on the same road. Ellicott, Barnes, and Poole all cross-reference it.
Deuteronomy 8:15
basis: shared rare lexeme H8314 śārâph (in only 7 verses) + H5175 nâchâsh (in 28); Deut 8:15 recalls this same wilderness plague — Verifier-computed
Isaiah twice reuses śārâph for a serpent: "a fiery flying serpent" (Isaiah 14:29; 30:6), sharing both śārâph (H8314) and nâchâsh (H5175) with Numbers 21. Because śārâph is rare (7 verses), this is a real verbal link in the prophet's serpent-imagery, drawing on the desert tradition. The Pulpit Commentary explicitly chains these references.
Isaiah 14:29 · Isaiah 30:6
basis: shared rare lexeme H8314 śārâph (in 7 vv); Isaiah's serpent-oracles reuse the wilderness term — Verifier-computed
Isaiah 6:2, 6 use the identical noun śārâph (H8314) — but for the six-winged seraphim attending the throne, not for snakes. The Verifier registers the shared lexeme and tiers it verbal; we deliberately downgrade and flag it, because the referent differs: a homonymous "burning one" (whether the Pulpit Commentary's link of "brilliance and metallic luster" is the true bridge, or merely the lexicographer's accident, is contested). A shared word is not yet a shared meaning. We name the connection and decline to assert it.
Isaiah 6:2 · Isaiah 6:6
basis: shared lexeme H8314 śārâph (in 7 vv) but distinct referent (celestial seraphim vs. snakes); whether the 'burning' sense unites them is disputed — flagged, not asserted
The verb nâshak (H5391, "to strike with a sting") with nâchâsh (H5175) recurs across the Hebrew Bible as a settled image of sudden, hidden ruin: the wine that "at the last… biteth like a serpent" (Proverbs 23:32), Dan as "a serpent by the way" that "biteth" (Genesis 49:17), and the LORD's serpents loosed in judgment (Jeremiah 8:17; Amos 9:3). The Verifier flags the lexemes as verbal, but we tier this structural / thematic: these are independent uses of a common bite-idiom, not one text quoting another. Benson and Gill cite Jeremiah 8:17 directly for Numbers 21:6.
Numbers 21:6 · Proverbs 23:32 · Genesis 49:17 · Jeremiah 8:17 · Amos 9:3
basis: shared lexemes H5391 nâshak + H5175 nâchâsh recur as a serpent-bite motif across these texts; no quotation claim — Verifier lexemes, tier adjusted to thematic
2 Kings 18:4 names this very object: Hezekiah "brake in pieces the brasen serpent that Moses had made." The link is the strongest kind of structural identity — it shares the actual nouns nâchâsh (H5175, serpent), nᵉchōšeṯ (H5178, bronze) and Mōšeh (H4872, Moses) — because it is the same artifact, carried into Canaan and surviving until it became an idol (Nehushtan). Ellicott, Gill, the Pulpit Commentary, and Keil all close the episode here.
Numbers 21:9 · 2 Kings 18:4
basis: shared lexemes H5175 nâchâsh + H5178 nᵉchōšeṯ + H4872 Mōšeh — same physical object across narratives (Nehushtan) — Verifier-computed
The serpents of the plague are nᵉchāšîm (H5175, nâchâsh) — the identical noun used of the serpent in the garden (Genesis 3:1), the creature "cursed above others" (Genesis 3:14). The Verifier confirms the shared lexeme but, because nâchâsh is a common word (28 verses), this is a structural / thematic resonance, not a quotation: the wilderness wound is told with Eden's vocabulary, and the commentators hear it. Benson reaches back to "the temptation and fall of our first parents" at Genesis 3:1, and Barnes makes the Edenic curse load-bearing for the figure — the bronze image is "made in the image of the creature that is accursed above others Genesis 3:14." We tier it thematic; the figural weight (serpent-as-sin) is the fathers' reading, not a claim the Hebrew narrative makes on its own.
Numbers 21:6 · Genesis 3:1 · Genesis 3:14
basis: shared lexeme H5175 nâchâsh (in 28 vv) — common word, so thematic not verbal; Eden's serpent-noun reused for the plague — Verifier-computed
Moses is told to set the serpent on a nēs (H5251) — not a bare "pole" but a standard / banner / ensign. The same noun, with Mōšeh (H4872), stands at Exodus 17:15, where after Amalek's defeat Moses builds an altar and names it Yahweh-Nissi, "the LORD is my banner." Ellicott draws the line explicitly: "The Hebrew word ( nes ) is the same which occurs in Exodus 17:15 , “Jehovah-nissi”— i.e., Jehovah is my standard or banner." The Verifier confirms the shared nēs (21 verses) and Mōšeh; we tier it structural / thematic, since the link is a recurring rallying-standard motif, not one text quoting the other. The healing serpent is lifted like a war-banner over the camp — the place the eye is meant to turn.
Numbers 21:8 · Exodus 17:15
basis: shared lexemes H5251 nês (in 21 vv) + H4872 Mōšeh — recurring banner/standard motif (Yahweh-Nissi); Ellicott cross-references it — Verifier-computed
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The Lord Himself supplies the type: "As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up" (John 3:14–15). Matthew Henry: "There was much gospel in this… as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so the Son of man must be lifted up, that whatsoever believeth in him, should not perish." Maclaren draws three parallels — the serpent as a figure of Christ's "sinless manhood, which was made" "in the likeness of sinful flesh," yet "without sin"; the "lifting up" as cross and throne; and the healing look as faith. This is the central, dominically-given reading. Note honestly: this is a cross-Testament link (Greek Gospel to Hebrew narrative), so it can carry no shared Strong's lexeme; it rests on the Lord's own typological declaration, not on a verbal quotation.
Numbers 21:8 · Numbers 21:9 · John 3:14
Barnes gathers the apostolic verdict: the bronze serpent, "harmless itself, but made in the image of the creature that is accursed above others (Genesis 3:14)," figures Him who, "holy, harmless, undefiled" (Hebrews 7:26), was "made sin" (2 Corinthians 5:21) and "made a curse for us" (Galatians 3:13). Keil & Delitzsch develop Luther's three grounds: the harmless image in the very form of the deadly thing answers to "His Son in the form of sinful flesh, and yet without sin (Romans 8:3)." The figure is ancient and widely held among the fathers — though we mark that the precise Pauline texts (2 Cor 5:21; Gal 3:13; Rom 8:3) are the commentators' theological gathering, not citations the Numbers text itself makes.
Numbers 21:9 · John 3:14 · 2 Corinthians 5:21
The earliest interpretive gloss (Wisdom 16:7, quoted by Ellicott, Keil, and the Pulpit Commentary) already disclaimed magic: "he that turned himself toward it was not saved by the thing that he saw, but by Thee, that art the Saviour of all." Matthew Henry presses it toward Christ: "It is by faith that we look unto Jesus (Heb 12:2). Whosoever looked, however desperate his case, or feeble his sight, or distant his place, was certainly and perfectly cured." The pattern — life by a single believing look rather than by works — is the gospel's own shape, and is anciently held. We flag that the explicit healing-by-faith framing is the commentators' synthesis with John 3 and Hebrews 12, beyond the bare Hebrew of v.9.
Numbers 21:9 · John 3:15
The second of Luther's three grounds, developed by Keil & Delitzsch, reads the elevation of the serpent as a public defeat of the killer: "the lifting up of Christ upon the cross was a public triumph over the evil principalities and powers below the sky ( Colossians 2:14-15 )." Maclaren sees the same — "just as the death-dealing power was manifestly triumphed over in the elevation of the brazen serpent, the power of sin is exhibited as defeated, as Paul says, 'triumphing over them in it' {Colossians 2:14 - Colossians 2:15}" — and adds that the lifting up draws after it the throne: "I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto Me." This is a cross-Testament typological reading (Greek epistle to Hebrew narrative), so it carries no shared Strong's lexeme and is tiered typological, not verbal. It is anciently held — Luther's exposition, gathered by Keil — though the Colossians 2 frame is the commentators' theological synthesis, not a citation the Numbers text makes.
Numbers 21:8 · Numbers 21:9 · John 3:14
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:
Three honesty notes specific to this unit. (1) The serpent / seraphim homonym. The Verifier flags every occurrence of śārâph (H8314) as a "verbal" link because the lexeme is rare. That is sound for Deuteronomy 8:15 and Isaiah 14:29 / 30:6, where śārâph means a serpent. But for Isaiah 6:2, 6 the same word means the celestial seraphim — a different referent. We have therefore downgraded that thread to flagged — verify source, against the Verifier's mechanical tier, because a shared word with a divergent sense is not a verbal quotation. (2) The bite-motif over-firing. The pairing of nâshak + nâchâsh trips the Verifier's "verbal" tier for Proverbs 23:32, Genesis 49:17, Jeremiah 8:17, Amos 9:3, and others. We hold these as structural / thematic: they share a common serpent-bite idiom, not a line of text; no author claims one quotes another. (3) Cross-Testament typology. The John 3:14, 1 Corinthians 10:9, 2 Corinthians 5:21, Romans 8:3, Galatians 3:13, and Hebrews 7:26 connections are Greek-to-Hebrew and so carry no shared Strong's number by definition — the Verifier correctly returns no lexeme. These belong to the christ apparatus as typological/structural readings; the John 3:14 link is the Lord's own and is recorded as such, while the Pauline gatherings are the commentators' (Barnes, Keil, Benson) theological synthesis, not citations the Numbers text makes. (4) Providence vs. miracle. Maclaren and Keil note the plague "does not necessarily imply a miracle," since venomous serpents already infested the Arabah; we record this as a live interpretive option, not a settled fact, and do not flatten the text either way.
✦ = 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)