The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Numbering of the Levites
Numbers 3:14–20 — The Numbering of the Levites. Each verse below carries the full apparatus: the Berean Standard Bible, the vocalized original (tap any word), and a parsed breakdown of every term transcribed from the interlinear. Synthesized commentary, canonical threads, and the reading of Christ gather at the end, over the whole unit.
14Then the LORD spoke to Moses in the Wilderness of Sinai, saying,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh way·ḏab·bêr ’el- mō·šeh bə·miḏ·bar sî·nay lê·mōr
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-spoke YHWH to Moses in-the-wilderness of-Sinai, saying —”
Where the English smooths the original
the enumeration was made on a different principle—for while in the other tribes the number of males was calculated from twenty years and upward [Nu 1:3], in that of Levi they were counted "from a month old and upward." The reason for the distinction is obvious. In the other tribes the survey was made for purposes of war [Nu 1:3], from which the Levites were totally exempt. But the Levites were appointed to a work on which they entered as soon as they were capable of instruction.
The muster of the Levites included all the males from a month old and upwards, because they were to be sanctified to Jehovah in the place of the first-born; and it was at the age of a month that the latter were either to be given up or redeemed (comp. Numbers 3:40 and Numbers 3:43 with Numbers 18:16 ).
At the same time he gave the order, and made the declaration before mentioned, and in the place where now the children of Israel were, and from whence they shortly removed
The tribe of Levi was by much the least of all the tribes. God's chosen are but a little flock in comparison with the world.Henry’s note covers the whole section (3:14-39); the concluding sentence is excerpted.
15“Number the Levites by their families and clans. You are to count every male a month old or more.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
pə·qōḏ ’eṯ- bə·nê lê·wî ’ă·ḇō·ṯām lə·ḇêṯ lə·miš·pə·ḥō·ṯām tip̄·qə·ḏêm kāl- zā·ḵār ḥō·ḏeš mib·ben- wā·ma‘·lāh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“Number the-sons-of Levi by-the-house-of their-fathers, by-their-clans; every male from-a-son-of a-month and-upward you-shall-number-them.”
Where the English smooths the original
The males of the other tribes had been numbered “from twenty years old and upward” ( Numbers 1:3 ). The firstborn males, however, among all the children of Israel, in whose place the Levites were taken, wer-directed to be numbered “from a month old and upward” ( Numbers 3:40 ; Numbers 3:43 ); and this was the age afterwards fixed for their redemption ( Numbers 18:16 ).
From a month old — Because at that time the firstborn, in whose stead the Levites came, were offered to God. And from that time the Levites were consecrated to God, and were, as soon as capable, instructed in their work. Elsewhere they are numbered from twenty-five years old, when they were entered as novices into part of their work, ( Numbers 8:24 ,) and from thirty years old, when they were admitted to their whole office.
for as the Jewish writers often say, a mother's family is no family; wherefore, if a Levite woman married into any other tribe, as she might, her, descendants were not taken into this accounts only such whose fathers were Levites
From a month old, because at that time the first-born, in whose stead the Levites came, Numbers 8:16 , were offered to God, Luke 2:22 , and to be redeemed, Numbers 18:16 .
from, a month old ] to correspond with the firstborn ( see Numbers 3:40 ).Cambridge’s terse cross-reference; the “from,” is an OCR artifact in the source, retained verbatim.
16So Moses numbered them according to the word of the LORD, as he had been commanded.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mō·šeh way·yip̄·qōḏ ’ō·ṯām ‘al- pî Yah·weh ka·’ă·šer ṣuw·wāh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-numbered them Moses upon the-mouth-of YHWH, as he-was-commanded.”
Where the English smooths the original
though Moses is only here mentioned, yet it seems from Numbers 3:39 ; that Aaron was concerned with him in it
he was obedient to the divine will in all things, and so in this, though it was his own tribe and his own posterity, which in all successive ages were to be no other than ministering servants to the priests, and to have no inheritance in the land of Israel.Second excerpt from Gill on this verse, on the cost of Moses’ obedience.
Their duties were to assist in the conveyance of the tabernacle when the people were removing the various encampments, and to form its guard while stationary—the Gershonites being stationed on the west, the Kohathites on the south, and the families of Merari on the north.
17These were the sons of Levi by name: Gershon, Kohath, and Merari.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’êl·leh way·yih·yū- ḇə·nê- lê·wî biš·mō·ṯām gê·rə·šō·wn ū·qə·hāṯ ū·mə·rā·rî
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-were these the-sons-of Levi by-their-names: Gershon, and-Kohath, and-Merari.”
Where the English smooths the original
These genealogical notices are inserted here in order to give completeness to the account of the Levites in the day of their dedication.
The immediate offspring and descendants of that patriarch: Gershon, and Kohath, and Merari; these went down with him into Egypt, Genesis 46:11 .
To them were traced the three main divisions of the Levites in Jerusalem after the exile.Cambridge’s critical note assigns the three-son list to the priestly source and Chronicles; presented as a scholarly view to be weighed, not endorsed.
In Numbers 3:17-20 the sons of Levi and their sons are enumerated, who were the founders of the mishpachoth among the Levites, as in Exodus 6:16-19 .
18These were the names of the sons of Gershon by their clans: Libni and Shimei.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·’êl·leh šə·mō·wṯ bə·nê- ḡê·rə·šō·wn lə·miš·pə·ḥō·ṯām liḇ·nî wə·šim·‘î
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-these were the-names of-the-sons-of Gershon by-their-clans: Libni, and-Shimei.”
Where the English smooths the original
to Gershon belonged two families, called after the names of his sons, who were now numbered, namely: Libni and Shimei; and who are elsewhere mentioned as his sons, Exodus 6:17 ; and from hence were the families of the Libnites and Shimites, as in Numbers 3:21 .
In Numbers 3:17-20 the sons of Levi and their sons are enumerated, who were the founders of the mishpachoth among the Levites, as in Exodus 6:16-19 .
The Gershonites, being the oldest, had the next honorable post assigned them, while the burden of the drudgery was thrown on the division of Merari.
19The sons of Kohath by their clans were Amram, Izhar, Hebron, and Uzziel.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·ḇə·nê qə·hāṯ lə·miš·pə·ḥō·ṯām ‘am·rām wə·yiṣ·hār ḥeḇ·rō·wn wə·‘uz·zî·’êl
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-the-sons-of Kohath by-their-clans: Amram, and-Izhar, Hebron, and-Uzziel.”
Where the English smooths the original
Amram, and Izehar, Hebron, and Uzziel; so in Exodus 6:18 ; and from whom were named the family of the Amramites, to which Moses and Aaron belonged; and the families of the Izeharites, Hebronites, and Uzzielites, as they are called, Numbers 3:27 .
The Kohathites had the principal place about the tabernacle, and charge of the most precious and sacred things—a distinction with which they were honored, probably, because the Aaronic family belonged to this division of the Levitical tribe.
the sons of Levi and their sons are enumerated, who were the founders of the mishpachoth among the Levites, as in Exodus 6:16-19 .
20And the sons of Merari by their clans were Mahli and Mushi. These were the clans of the Levites, according to their families.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·ḇə·nê mə·rā·rî lə·miš·pə·ḥō·ṯām maḥ·lî ū·mū·šî ’êl·leh hêm miš·pə·ḥōṯ hal·lê·wî ’ă·ḇō·ṯām lə·ḇêṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
“And-the-sons-of Merari by-their-clans: Mahli, and-Mushi. These they-were the-clans of-the-Levite by-the-house-of their-fathers.”
Where the English smooths the original
Mahli and Mushi; the same as in Exodus 6:19 ; from whom were denominated the families of the Mahlites and Mushites, who, as the preceding families, were numbered at this time: these are the families of the Levites, according to the house of their fathers; in all eight families.
the burden of the drudgery was thrown on the division of Merari.
the sons of Levi and their sons are enumerated, who were the founders of the mishpachoth among the Levites, as in Exodus 6:16-19 .
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 section opens not with a policy but with a voice: way·ḏab·bêr YHWH, “and YHWH spoke” (v. 14), and closes the unit of obedience with ‘al-pî YHWH, “upon the mouth of the LORD” (v. 16, where the Hebrew literally reads mouth, H6310 peh). Between command and compliance the keyword pâqad (H6485, “muster, visit, attend to”) sounds three times — imperative, repeated, fulfilled — so that the census is framed as the LORD visiting His tribe, not Moses tallying it. Keil & Delitzsch name the principle the whole chapter turns on: the Levites “were to be sanctified to Jehovah in the place of the first-born.” Jamieson, Fausset & Brown draw the contrast that the grammar implies — the other tribes were “calculated from twenty years and upward… for purposes of war,” but Levi “from a month old and upward,” for “a work on which they entered as soon as they were capable of instruction.” John Gill presses the cost of the obedient hand: Moses “was obedient to the divine will in all things, and so in this, though it was his own tribe and his own posterity,” who would inherit no land.
The age-threshold is the theological hinge, and it is buried in a Hebrew idiom: mib·ben-ḥō·ḏeš, “from a son of a month” (vv. 15). One month — the age, Charles Ellicott notes, “afterwards fixed for their redemption (Numbers 18:16),” the same age at which the firstborn “in whose place the Levites were taken” were themselves numbered. Joseph Benson ties it tighter: “at that time the firstborn, in whose stead the Levites came, were offered to God.” Matthew Poole reaches across the canon to the temple courts — the firstborn were counted “to be redeemed, Numbers 18:16,” citing also “Luke 2:22.” The Levite infant is enrolled at one month not as a worker but as a substitute: a living, breathing ransom-token standing in for Israel’s firstborn sons. The word zā·ḵār (“male,” v. 15) carries the root “to remember” — these are the remembered ones, named into God’s account from their first month of life.
The genealogy is bracketed by the demonstrative ’êl·leh, “these” — opening in v. 17, closing in v. 20 (’êl·leh hêm, “these were”) — and governed by two nouns: shêm, “name” (the title of Exodus, Shemot), and mishpâchâh, “clan,” which beats five times across the four verses. The Pulpit Commentary reads the placement rightly: “These genealogical notices are inserted here in order to give completeness to the account of the Levites in the day of their dedication.” Keil & Delitzsch note the list reproduces the founders of the Levitical clans “as in Exodus 6:16-19,” and the Verifier confirms a dense verbal overlap with that passage (rare shared names Gershon, Kohath, Merari, Amram, Izhar, Uzziel — low-frequency proper nouns in the same order, the signature of a copied register, not coincidental vocabulary). Jamieson, Fausset & Brown map the three divisions onto their stations and loads — Gershon the eldest with “the next honorable post,” Kohath with “the most precious and sacred things… because the Aaronic family belonged to this division,” and Merari bearing “the burden of the drudgery.” And in the Kohathite line (v. 19) stands ‘Amram, listed flat and unadorned — the father of Aaron and Moses, entered with no privilege, which is exactly Matthew Henry’s point that “the posterity of Moses were not at all honoured or privileged, but stood upon the level with other Levites.”
Read under Sola Scriptura — and this is the tool’s own fallible reading, to be tested against the text — the chapter does something the modern eye is tempted to skip past: it counts babies into the priesthood of substitution. The other tribes are mustered as fighters “from twenty years old”; Levi is mustered as ransom “from a son of a month.” The whole point of the one-month line is the firstborn: God had claimed every firstborn of Israel as His own on the night of the Passover (Exodus 13), and now He takes the tribe of Levi in their place (vv. 11–13). So the genealogy is not filler. Each name — Gershon, Kohath, Merari, down to Mahli and Mushi — is a name of a substitute, a man whose tribe lives instead of another man’s firstborn son. The register is the ledger of an exchange: the redeemed-for-the-redeemer arithmetic that runs straight through Scripture. That Amram, Moses’ own father, is filed without distinction is the quiet proof the whole thing is God’s ordering and not a man’s self-promotion. The tribe that owns no land and wins no battle is the tribe held nearest the tabernacle — counted not for what it can take, but for whom it stands in for.
Every name on this list is the name of a substitute — Levi mustered, infant by infant, in the place of Israel’s firstborn. (A reading to be tested, not a verse.)
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The Levite genealogy of vv. 17–20 reproduces the priestly founder-list of Exodus 6 almost name for name — Gershon, Kohath, Merari and their sons — which is why Keil & Delitzsch flag the parallel explicitly. The Verifier records a dense overlap of rare shared lexemes, putting this beyond mere shared subject-matter into verbal repetition.
Exodus 6:16 · Exodus 6:17 · Exodus 6:18 · Exodus 6:19
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier: rare shared lexemes H1648 Gêrᵉshôwn (18 vv), H6955 Qᵉhâth (29 vv), H4847 Mᵉrârîy (36 vv), plus — between Num 3:19 and Ex 6:18 — H3324 Yitshâr (9 vv), H6019 ʻAmrâm (12 vv), and H5816 ʻUzzîyʼêl (16 vv): a cluster of low-frequency proper names in matching order, not generic vocabulary. This is genealogical repetition of a fixed register, not topical overlap.
The same three-fold division and its sub-clans are re-tabulated for the post-exilic temple in 1 Chronicles 6 and 23. The link to 1 Chronicles 6:29 rests on the rare names Mahli and Merari shared with Num 3:20; the Kohathite line aligns with 1 Chronicles 6:2 / 23:12 (Kohath, Izhar, Uzziel). Cambridge notes that to these heads “were traced the three main divisions of the Levites in Jerusalem after the exile” — the wilderness register became the charter of the Second-Temple orders.
1 Chronicles 6:2 · 1 Chronicles 6:29 · 1 Chronicles 23:12 · Genesis 46:11
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier: rare shared lexemes — Num 3:20↔1 Chr 6:29 via H4249 Machlîy (11 vv) + H4847 Mᵉrârîy (36 vv); Kohathite line via H6955 Qᵉhâth (29 vv), H5816 ʻUzzîyʼêl (16 vv), H3324 Yitshâr (9 vv). Genesis 46:11 shares H1648/H6955/H4847/H3878 with Num 3:17.
The one-month threshold (v. 15) is set, the commentators agree as one, to match the firstborn whom the Levites replace: Num 3:40 numbers the firstborn “from a month old,” and Num 18:16 fixes one month as the age of redemption. The verbal tie to Num 3:40 is strong (shared pâqad, zâkâr, maʻal, chôdesh); the tie to Num 18:16 rests chiefly on the shared chôdesh (“month”), so it is the weaker of the two and is recorded as thematic.
Numbers 3:40 · Numbers 18:16
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier: Num 3:15↔3:40 share H6485 pâqad (269 vv), H2145 zâkâr (80 vv), H4605 maʻal (134 vv), H2320 chôdesh (224 vv) — a shared muster-pattern, not a quotation. Num 3:15↔18:16 share only H2320 chôdesh; the month-age link is conceptual, argued by the commentators (Ellicott, Benson, Poole), not a verbal citation.
The governing formula lə·mišpəḥōṯām (“by their clans,” H4940) and the verb pâqad (“muster”) recur when the tribe is recounted before entering the land in Numbers 26:57. The same clan-grid orders both censuses, a generation apart, framing the book of Numbers as two musters of the wilderness people.
Numbers 26:57
basis: Hebrew↔Hebrew. Verifier: shared H4940 mishpâchâh (224 vv) and H6485 pâqad (269 vv) — common but structurally load-bearing vocabulary; a shared organizing pattern (clan-muster), not a rare-word quotation. Recorded as thematic, under-claiming.
Albert Barnes, appearing on every verse of this section, anchors it to the LORD’s claim of vv. 11–13: “Mine shall they be, Mine, the Lord’s.” That substitution — a tribe taken in place of the firstborn, set apart to serve the sanctuary — is the seed the New Testament reads forward into the question of priesthood and a better mediation (Hebrews 7). Because this is a cross-Testament, conceptual reading (Greek↔Hebrew, no shared Strong’s lexeme), it cannot be called verbal and is flagged for the reader to test.
Numbers 3:12 · Numbers 3:13 · Hebrews 7:5
basis: Cross-Testament (Greek NT ↔ Hebrew OT): no shared original-language lexeme is possible, so the link is conceptual (Levitical substitution → NT priesthood) and must be argued, not asserted. Barnes’ ‘Mine, the Lord’s’ refers to Num 3:12–13, the immediate context, not these census verses; presented as an interpretive horizon to weigh.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The engine of this chapter is exchange: the Levites are taken in the place of the firstborn (Num 3:12–13, 41), a whole tribe given as a living ransom so that Israel’s firstborn sons might be released. Scripture itself reads this substitution-logic forward to the Firstborn “among many brothers” (Romans 8:29) and “the firstborn of all creation” (Colossians 1:15), who is given not in place of one son but for the many — the true and final Substitute the Levite census could only foreshadow. The reading of the principle (substitution / redemption-price) is ancient and widely held; the specific verse-tie is figural.
Numbers 3:12 · Numbers 3:13 · Colossians 1:15 · Romans 8:29
Matthew Poole, on v. 15, links the firstborn’s one-month enrolment directly to the Gospel: redeemed “to be redeemed, Numbers 18:16,” and offered “to God, Luke 2:22.” At that very ordinance — the presentation of the firstborn — the infant Jesus is brought to the temple (Luke 2:22–23, quoting Exodus 13: “every firstborn male shall be called holy to the Lord”). The Levitical machinery of firstborn-redemption that begins with this census culminates in the Firstborn who is not redeemed by a price but is Himself the price. This is a novel-leaning typological reach beyond what the Hebrew states; offered to be tested.
Numbers 3:13 · Numbers 18:16 · Luke 2:22
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 genealogy and census — the deliberately repetitive heart of the priestly material. Several public-domain commentators (Matthew Henry, Albert Barnes, Jamieson-Fausset-Brown, Keil & Delitzsch) supply a single block note that spans the whole section (3:14–39 or 3:14–31) and is repeated verbatim on each verse in the source; where I quote them, I have pointed the excerpt to the clause that bears on the verse at hand, and Henry/Barnes are flagged accordingly. The Geneva Study Bible and parts of Cambridge entries here are merely the verse text plus the boilerplate “EXEGETICAL (ORIGINAL LANGUAGES)” header, with no substantive comment, so they are not quoted. Cross-references to Exodus 6, 1 Chronicles 6 / 23, and Genesis 46 are Hebrew↔Hebrew and rest on the Verifier’s rare shared proper-names, so they are tiered verbal. The firstborn-redemption and Christ-ward links to Numbers 18:16, Luke 2:22, Hebrews 7, and Colossians 1 are conceptual or cross-Testament (no shared Strong’s lexeme is even possible across languages) and are therefore down-tiered to thematic, typological, or flagged — never verbal. The Barnes ‘Mine, the Lord’s’ quotation in fact comments on Num 3:12–13, the immediate context of this section, not on the census verses themselves; that is noted on its thread.
✦ = 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)