The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Moses Requests a Successor
Numbers 27:12–17 — Moses Requests a Successor. 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.
12Then the LORD said to Moses, “Go up this mountain of the Abarim range and see the land that I have given the Israelites.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh way·yō·mer ’el- mō·šeh ‘ă·lêh ’el- haz·zeh har hā·‘ă·ḇā·rîm ū·rə·’êh ’eṯ- hā·’ā·reṣ ’ă·šer nā·ṯat·tî liḇ·nê yiś·rā·’êl
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-said YHWH to Moses, “Ascend to this mountain of-the-Abarim, and-see the-land which I-have-given to-the-sons-of Israel.
Where the English smooths the original
The position of this command, in immediate connection with the answer returned to the request of the daughters of Zelophehad, is very remarkable. They were to enter into the land of promise, and their descendants were to inherit it. The great lawgiver himself was to be excluded on account of his transgression. He does not, however, shrink from recording the sentence of exclusion in immediate connection with an incident which brings out that exclusion into greater prominence.
Moses must die, but he shall have the satisfaction of seeing the land of promise. This sight of Canaan signified his believing prospect of the better country, that is, the heavenly.
this may be an emblem of that sight by faith, which believers have at times of the heavenly Canaan, and sometimes are favoured with an enlarged one of it before their death.Gill reads the mountain-view as a type of the dying believer's glimpse of glory.
while the pious leader submitted with meek acquiescence to the divine decree, he evinced the spirit of genuine patriotism in his fervent prayers for the appointment of a worthy and competent successorJFB frames the whole unit: the sentence accepted without protest, then turned outward into intercession.
The mountains of Abarim (cf. Numbers 33:47 ) are the mountain range forming the Moabitish table-land, which slope off into the steppes of Moab. It is upon this range, the northern portion of which opposite to Jericho bore the name of Pisgah, that we are to look for Mount Nebo, which is sometimes described as one of the mountains of Abarim ( Deuteronomy 32:49 ), and at other times as the top of Pisgah ( Deuteronomy 3:27 ; Deuteronomy 34:1
13After you have seen it, you too will be gathered to your people, as your brother Aaron was;
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·rā·’î·ṯāh ’ō·ṯāh ’āt·tāh gam- wə·ne·’ĕ·sap̄·tā ’el- ‘am·me·ḵā ka·’ă·šer ’ā·ḥî·ḵā ’a·hă·rōn ne·’ĕ·sap̄
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-you-shall-see it, you also, and-you-shall-be-gathered to your-peoples, as was-gathered Aaron your-brother.
Where the English smooths the original
Moses must die; but death does not cut him off; it only gathers him to his people, brings him to rest with the holy patriarchs that were gone before him. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob were his people, the people of his choice, and to them death gathered him.
In the case of Moses, as in that of Abraham, the expression cannot be understood in reference to the place of his burial.A philological guard: 'gathered to his people' is not interment but reunion.
thou shalt be gathered unto thy people, as Aaron thy brother was gathered; die as he did, in the same sudden, easy, quiet, and cheerful manner
14for when the congregation contended in the Wilderness of Zin, both of you rebelled against My command to show My holiness in their sight regarding the waters.” Those were the waters of Meribah in Kadesh, in the Wilderness of Zin.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ka·’ă·šer hā·‘ê·ḏāh bim·rî·ḇaṯ bə·miḏ·bar- ṣin mə·rî·ṯem pî lə·haq·dî·šê·nî lə·‘ê·nê·hem ḇam·ma·yim hêm mê- mə·rî·ḇaṯ qā·ḏêš miḏ·bar- ṣin
Literal — word-for-word from the original
As you-rebelled-against my-mouth in-the-wilderness of-Zin, in-the-strife of-the-congregation, to-sanctify-me at-the-waters before-their-eyes. — Those are the-waters-of-Meribah of-Kadesh, the-wilderness of-Zin.
Where the English smooths the original
The same play on the words Meribah (‘strife’) and Kadesh (‘sacred’) as in Numbers 20:3 ; Numbers 20:13 . The words ‘to sanctify me’ (cf. Numbers 20:12 ) are connected with ‘my word,’ i.e. my commandment. Ye rebelled against the command which I gave you to vindicate my holiness by speaking to the rock.
they did not sanctify the Lord by believing in him; but expressed some degree of diffidence before the congregation about fetching water out of the rock, or questioning whether the Lord would give it to such a rebellious people, though they had his order for it
In Kadesh: this is added to distinguish this miscarriage of Moses from that of the people in Rephidim, Exodus 17:7 .
That is the water of Meribah in Kadesh in the wilderness of Zin. These words have all the appearance of an explanatory gloss intended to make the reference more plain to the reader or hearer.Pulpit flags the closing clause as a likely editorial gloss — a candor worth recording.
15So Moses appealed to the LORD,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mō·šeh way·ḏab·bêr ’el- Yah·weh lê·mōr
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-spoke Moses to YHWH, saying:
Where the English smooths the original
For himself not even a word of complaint at his punishment, which must have seemed, thus close at hand, more inexplicably severe than ever; all his thoughts and his prayers for the people - that one might take his place, and reap for himself and Israel the reward of all his toil and patience.Pulpit reads Moses' silence about his own sentence as touching disinterest.
We should concern ourselves both in our prayers and in our endeavours for the rising generation, that God’s kingdom may be advanced among men, when we are in our graves.
perceiving he must quickly die, and being a man of a public spirit, and concerned for the welfare of the people of Israel, prays that a successor might be nominated and appointed
Envious spirits do not love their successors; but Moses was not one of these.Henry sharpens the magnanimity: the dying leader prays for the very man who will replace him.
16“May the LORD, the God of the spirits of all flesh, appoint a man over the congregation
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh ’ĕ·lō·hê hā·rū·ḥōṯ lə·ḵāl bā·śār yip̄·qōḏ ’îš ‘al- hā·‘ê·ḏāh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“Let-YHWH, God of-the-spirits of-all flesh, appoint a-man over the-congregation,
Where the English smooths the original
instead of appointing one of his own family, or the man of his own choice, as his successor, he commits the matter to God, and prays that He will appoint one who would be a true shepherd to the flock.
God of all men; the Searcher of spirits, that knowest who is fit for this great employment; the Father, and Giver, and Governor of spirits, who canst raise and suit the spirits of men to the highest and hardest works.
An acknowledgment that man, who is but flesh (compare Genesis 6:3 ), is of himself helpless; and "lives and moves and has his being" in God Acts 17:28 .
The request was most suitably made to God in this character, as the Author of all the intellectual gifts and moral graces with which men are endowed, and who can raise up qualified persons for the most arduous duties and the most difficult situations.
Who as he has created, so he governs the hearts of all men.The Geneva gloss on 'spirits of all flesh.'
17who will go out and come in before them, and who will lead them out and bring them in, so that the congregation of the LORD will not be like sheep without a shepherd.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ă·šer- yê·ṣê lip̄·nê·hem yā·ḇō lip̄·nê·hem wa·’ă·šer wa·’ă·šer yō·w·ṣî·’êm wa·’ă·šer yə·ḇî·’êm ‘ă·ḏaṯ Yah·weh wə·lō ṯih·yeh kaṣ·ṣōn ’ă·šer ’ên- lā·hem rō·‘eh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“who will-go-out before-them and-will-come-in before-them, and-who will-lead-them-out and-who will-bring-them-in, that the-congregation of-YHWH be-not like-sheep that have no shepherd.”
Where the English smooths the original
Leading out and bringing in (literally, causing to go out and to come in ) , as a shepherd in respect of his flock ( John 10:3-9 ), denotes the direction of the conduct of others.
A metaphor from shepherds, who in those places used not to go behind their sheep, as ours now do, but before them, and to lead them forth to their pasture, and, in due time, to lead them home again.
that the congregation of the Lord be not as sheep which have no shepherd; and so wander about, having none to guide them into proper pastures, or to protect them from beasts of prey; which is to be in a most forlorn and distressed condition; see Matthew 9:36 .
The underlying image is that of a shepherd and his flock, which suggests itself so naturally to all that have the care and governance of men (cf. John 10:3, 4, 16 ). As sheep which have no shepherd. And are, therefore, helpless, bewildered, scattered, lost, and devoured.
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 where the man of the crossings will himself not cross. YHWH commands Moses to ascend (עֲלֵה, H5927) הָעֲבָרִים — the rare name ‘Abarim,’ occurring in only five verses (the Verifier confirms the lexeme links Numbers 33:47 and Deuteronomy 32:49). Keil & Delitzsch locate it as the Moabite table-land whose summit is Nebo, ‘upon which he also died.’ Ellicott marks the position of the command as ‘very remarkable’: God sets the sentence of exclusion immediately beside the inheritance promised to Zelophehad’s daughters, so that ‘the great lawgiver himself was to be excluded on account of his transgression.’ Yet the verb of the grant is a perfect — נָתַתִּי, ‘I have given’ — the land is deeded before it is trodden. Matthew Henry reads the panorama as grace: ‘This sight of Canaan signified his believing prospect of the better country, that is, the heavenly,’ and Gill calls it ‘an emblem of that sight by faith, which believers have at times of the heavenly Canaan.’
Death is named with a harvest word: וְנֶאֱסַפְתָּ (H622), ‘you shall be gathered’ — and the same Nifal closes the verse on Aaron (נֶאֱסַף). Benson: ‘death does not cut him off; it only gathers him to his people, brings him to rest with the holy patriarchs.’ Ellicott guards the idiom — ‘the expression cannot be understood in reference to the place of his burial.’ Verse 14 supplies the cause in the LORD’s own mouth: מְרִיתֶם פִּי, ‘you rebelled against my mouth’ (peh, H6310) at the strife-waters. Cambridge hears the wordplay between Meribah (‘strife’) and Kadesh (‘sacred’) and ties ‘to sanctify me’ to ‘my word’: ‘Ye rebelled against the command which I gave you to vindicate my holiness by speaking to the rock.’ Gill diagnoses the heart of it — ‘they did not sanctify the Lord by believing in him; but expressed some degree of diffidence.’ The Verifier rates the bond to Deuteronomy 32:51 a verbal link on the rare cluster Tsin / Meribah / Kadesh: the indictment is restated, word for word, where Moses dies.
The sentenced man’s next act is intercession. The Pulpit Commentary calls his conduct ‘singularly and touchingly disinterested. For himself not even a word of complaint … all his thoughts and his prayers for the people.’ He invokes a name fit for the request — אֱלֹהֵי הָרוּחֹת לְכָל־בָּשָׂר, ‘God of the spirits of all flesh.’ Benson: ‘the Searcher of spirits, that knowest who is fit for this great employment.’ Barnes hears in ‘all flesh’ the confession that man ‘is of himself helpless.’ The petition is for one אִישׁ who will go out and come in before them and lead them out and bring them in (the Qal of daily life answered by the Hifil of governance, H3318/H935) — Keil: the causatives ‘signify the superintendence of the affairs of the nation, and is founded upon the figure of a shepherd.’ The whole closes on the proverb of dread: lest the congregation be כַּצֹּאן אֲשֶׁר אֵין־לָהֶם רֹעֶה, ‘like sheep that have no shepherd’ — which Gill and Pulpit both carry straight to Matthew 9:36.
Read under Sola Scriptura, the text is doing something starker than it first appears: the very chapter that secures an inheritance for daughters who had no standing (vv. 1–11) is the chapter that disinherits the lawgiver of the land itself. The Spirit places mercy to the powerless next to judgment on the mighty, and lets the contrast preach. And note what Moses does with the sentence — he does not argue it. The man told he will die for failing to sanctify God at the water turns at once to sanctify God in his asking, handing the choice of his successor wholly to ‘the God of the spirits of all flesh.’ The deepest note is the unanswered ache of v. 17: a flock needs a shepherd who can both see the land and bring them in — and the man who can see (v. 12) cannot bring them in, while the man who will bring them in (Joshua, vv. 18–23) is the one named for the salvation. The law shows the land from the mountain; it cannot carry the flock across the river. That gap is not a defect in the text; it is the text’s own confession of need — fallibly read, and offered to be tested against the whole of Scripture.
The man who can see the land cannot bring them in; the one who brings them in bears the name that means ‘the LORD saves.’
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
Numbers 27:14 charges Moses with rebelling at the strife-waters; Deuteronomy 32:51 repeats the charge almost verbatim as the command to climb Nebo is given a second time. Cambridge and Keil both note the Deuteronomy passage is an expanded recital of this one. The Verifier records the shared rare lexemes Tsin (H6790, 9 verses), Meribah (H4809, 11 verses), Kadesh (H6946, 18 verses), and the sanctify-verb qādash (H6942) — a genuinely verbal, not merely thematic, tie.
Numbers 27:14 · Deuteronomy 32:51
basis: shared lexemes H6790 Tsin (9 vv, rare), H4809 Mᵉrîybâh (11 vv, rare), H6946 Qâdêsh (18 vv), H6942 qâdash (152 vv) — Verifier-computed
Numbers 27:14 and Numbers 20:24 pair the deaths of Moses and Aaron on identical grounds — ‘you rebelled against my mouth.’ Keil observes the double ka’ăšer (‘as’) deliberately binds the two: ‘as they both sinned at Kadesh … so they were both of them to die without entering Canaan.’ The Verifier finds the rare Meribah (H4809) shared with the rebellion-verb mārâh (H4784, 44 verses) and the mouth/command word peh (H6310) — a tight verbal correspondence between the two verdicts.
Numbers 27:14 · Numbers 20:24
basis: shared lexemes H4809 Mᵉrîybâh (11 vv, rare), H4784 mârâh (44 vv), H6310 peh (459 vv), H4325 mayim (522 vv) — Verifier-computed
The rare proper name Abarim (H5682) occurs in only five verses; Numbers 27:12, Numbers 33:47, and Deuteronomy 32:49 use it of the one range from which Moses views and departs. Keil harmonizes them: Abarim is the range, Pisgah its northern shoulder, Nebo its summit. The shared rare lexeme makes this a verbal geographic link, not a guess.
Numbers 27:12 · Numbers 33:47 · Deuteronomy 32:49
basis: shared rare lexeme H5682 ʻĂbârîym (5 vv) with H2022 har (486 vv) — Verifier-computed across the three witnesses
The strife-waters that cost Moses the land are not forgotten by the later prophets: Ezekiel’s vision of the restored boundaries (47:19; 48:28) fixes the southern border at ‘the waters of Meribah-Kadesh’ (mê mərîḇôṯ qādêš), the very name minted in this verse. The place of Israel’s failure becomes a surveyor’s landmark in the renewed land — the geography of judgment repurposed as the geography of inheritance. The Verifier records the shared rare lexemes Meribah (H4809, 11 vv) and Kadesh (H6946, 18 vv) with mayim (H4325), making this a verbal toponymic tie, not a guess.
Numbers 27:14 · Ezekiel 47:19 · Ezekiel 48:28
basis: shared lexemes H4809 Mᵉrîybâh (11 vv, rare), H6946 Qâdêsh (18 vv), H4325 mayim (522 vv) — Verifier-computed; a shared proper-name toponym, not an interpretive claim
Moses’ dread of v. 17 — Israel ‘like sheep that have no shepherd’ — recurs in Micaiah’s vision of leaderless Israel at 1 Kings 22:17. Cambridge and Pulpit both cross-reference it. The Verifier confirms the shared motif-words: shepherd (rā‘âh, H7462), flock (tsôn, H6629), and the negation ‘no’ (’ayin, H369). There is no quotation claim — it is a shared image and idiom across the narrative books.
Numbers 27:17 · 1 Kings 22:17
basis: shared lexemes H7462 râʻâh (146 vv), H6629 tsôʼn (247 vv), H369 ʼayin (686 vv) — shared image, no quotation; Verifier-computed
The divine title in Numbers 27:16 appears elsewhere only at Numbers 16:22, where it likewise prefaces an intercession — there, that the many not perish for the few; here, that the many not be left leaderless. Barnes, Poole, and Cambridge all cross-reference 16:22. The Verifier finds shared spirit (rûaḥ, H7307), flesh (bāśār, H1320), and congregation (‘êdâh, H5712) — a structural pairing of two intercessions under one title.
Numbers 27:16 · Numbers 16:22
basis: shared lexemes H7307 rûwach (348 vv), H1320 bâsâr (241 vv), H5712 ʻêdâh (140 vv), H376 ʼîysh (1449 vv) — shared title and motif; Verifier-computed
The leader-idiom of v. 17 — to ‘go out and come in’ before the people — recurs in Moses’ own farewell at Deuteronomy 31:2 and in Caleb’s self-description at Joshua 14:11. Ellicott, Keil, and Pulpit all gather these as the standing phrase for active leadership and daily service. The shared verbs are common (yāṣâ, H3318; with the negation lô, H3808), so this is a structural idiom rather than a verbal quotation.
Numbers 27:17 · Deuteronomy 31:2 · Joshua 14:11
basis: shared lexemes H3318 yâtsâʼ (991 vv) with the negation H3808 lôʼ (3967 vv) — both high-frequency, so this is a shared leadership idiom (going-out/coming-in), not a verbal quotation; Verifier-computed
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The law brought Moses to the border and let him see the land from the mountain, but it could not carry him in; that was reserved for Joshua. Ellicott quotes Bishop Wordsworth: ‘The law … led men to “see the promises afar off, and to embrace them” … and it brought them to the borders of Canaan, but could not bring them into it: that was reserved for Joshua, the type of Jesus.’ The name Joshua (Yehoshua) and the name Jesus (Iēsous) are the same name — ‘the LORD saves.’ This is a cross-Testament, figural reading: it rests on the narrative pattern and the shared name, not on any shared Strong’s number (the New Testament is Greek, this text Hebrew), so it is offered as typology, not as a verbal link. Matthew Henry draws the same line: ‘the law was given by Moses, who by reason of our transgression could not bring us to heaven; but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ.’
Numbers 27:12 · Hebrews 11:13 · John 1:17
Moses prays that the congregation ‘be not as sheep which have no shepherd’ (v. 17, רֹעֶה). Gill and Pulpit carry the image straight to the Gospels: when Jesus ‘saw the multitudes, he was moved with compassion … because they fainted, and were scattered abroad, as sheep having no shepherd’ (Matthew 9:36), and declared himself the good shepherd who goes before his flock (John 10:3–9, cited by Ellicott). The prayer of the dying mediator for a shepherd is answered provisionally in Joshua and finally in Christ. Because the connection is Greek Gospel to Hebrew prayer, it is typological/thematic — a fulfilled image, not a shared lexeme — though the Septuagint of v. 17 (πρόβατα οἷς οὐκ ἔστι ποιμήν, noted by Pulpit) stands very close to the Gospel wording.
Numbers 27:17 · Matthew 9:36 · John 10:11
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 entirely Hebrew; every cross-Testament link (to Matthew, John, Hebrews) is therefore tiered structural or typological, never verbal — a Greek text and a Hebrew text cannot share a Strong's number, and we say so on each badge. The strongest internal ties (to Deuteronomy 32:51 and Numbers 20:24) rest on genuinely rare lexemes — Abarim (5 verses), Meribah (11), Tsin (9) — which is why they carry the verbal tier; the shepherd-flock and going-out/coming-in threads rest on common words and a shared image, so they are held to structural. One honesty flag from the human commentary itself: The Pulpit Commentary judges the closing clause of v. 14 ('That is the water of Meribah …') to be 'an explanatory gloss,' and even suspects Numbers 20:13 of the same — a textual-critical opinion we record without adjudicating, since the BSB prints the clause as Scripture and we do not emend the text. The Wordsworth/Joshua-as-type-of-Jesus reading is reported as widely-held patristic-through-Reformation typology, not as a novel claim of this tool. No NT-quotation provenance is disputed in this unit, so no thread is flagged 'verify source.'
✦ = 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)