The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Aaron’s Blessing
Numbers 6:22–27 — Aaron’s Blessing. 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.
22Then the LORD said to Moses,
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh way·ḏab·bêr ’el- mō·šeh lê·mōr
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-spoke YHWH to Moses, saying:
Where the English smooths the original
why this should follow upon that, and what connection there is between the one and the other, it is not easy to say; the Nazarites were holy persons, and so were the priests; and therefore, according to Aben Ezra and others, the law of the one is joined to the law of the other
That the command was given to Moses, and to Moses alone, and that after the consecration of Aaron to the high priesthood, serves to bring out into clear relief the relative position of the two. Aaron and his sons alone, as the "official" representatives of the Lord, could bless in his name and put . his name upon the people; but the formula of blessing was delivered to Aaron himself through Moses, as the "personal" representative of the Lord, the mediator of the old covenant.
The spiritual character of the congregation of Israel culminated in the blessing with which the priests were to bless the people.
23“Tell Aaron and his sons: This is how you are to bless the Israelites. Say to them:
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
dab·bêr ’el- ’a·hă·rōn wə·’el- bā·nāw lê·mōr kōh ṯə·ḇā·ră·ḵū ’eṯ- bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl ’ā·mō·wr lā·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Speak to Aaron and-to his-sons, saying: thus you-shall-bless the-sons-of Israel, saying to-them:
Where the English smooths the original
On this wise, Heb. Thus , in this manner, or in these words; yet so as that they were not tied to these very words, because after this we have examples of Moses and David and Solomon and others blessing the people in other words.
Now in this he was a type of Christ, who came into the world to bless us, Acts 3:26 , as the High-Priest of our profession, and left the earth in the very act of blessing his disciples with uplifted hands, Luke 24:50 .
for" without all contradiction the less is blessed of the greater" ( Hebrews 7:7 ), i.e. , the blessing must be given by one who stands nearer to God to one who stands less near.
standing upon an eminence, lifting up their hands on high, spreading out their fingers, and raising their voices, and pronouncing the blessing in the Hebrew language, in the name of Jehovah, with their face towards the people; all which, according to the Jewish writers (d), were to be strictly observed
24‘May the LORD bless you and keep you;
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh yə·ḇā·reḵ·ḵā wə·yiš·mə·re·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
May-bless-you YHWH and-keep-you.
Where the English smooths the original
The second clause here, as in the other three verses, defines more closely the general tenor of the preceding one. The singular number, which is observed throughout, indicates that the blessing is conferred on Israel "collectively."
Keep thee, i.e. continue his blessings to thee, and preserve thee in and to the use of them; keep thee from sin and its bitter effects.
"The blessing of God is the goodness of God in action, by which a supply of all good pours down to us from His good favour as from their only fountain; then follows, secondly, the prayer that He would keep the people, which signifies that He alone is the defender of the Church, and that it is He who preserves it with His guardian care" (Calvin).K&D quoting Calvin verbatim on the first clause.
The expressions in the separate clauses correspond to the respective offices of the Father, to "bless and keep us"; of the Son, to be "gracious to us"; and of the Holy Ghost, to "give us peace."JFB's clause-by-clause Trinitarian assignment — included as a representative Christian inference, not a claim provable from the Hebrew alone (see the Pulpit Commentary's dissent at v. 24).
25may the LORD cause His face to shine upon you and be gracious to you;
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh pā·nāw yā·’êr ’ê·le·ḵā wî·ḥun·ne·kā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
May-shine YHWH his-face toward-you and-be-gracious-to-you.
Where the English smooths the original
Smile upon thee: this is opposed to the hiding of his face, and to the covering himself or his face with a cloud; and it is explained by the following words, be gracious unto thee.
his face turned upon man in love and mercy is life and salvation ( Psalm 27:1 ; Psalm 44:3 ). It is to the soul of man what the blessed sun of heaven is to his body.
"The face of God" imports not merely God's good will in general, but His active and special regard.
Cause himself, the sun of righteousness, to arise and shine upon them, and give both spiritual light and heat unto them
26may the LORD lift up His countenance toward you and give you peace.’
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh yiś·śā pā·nāw ’ê·le·ḵā wə·yā·śêm lə·ḵā šā·lō·wm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
May-lift-up YHWH his-face toward-you and-may-he-set for-you peace.
Where the English smooths the original
Lift up his countenance upon thee - i. e. especially direct His thought and care toward thee: compare 2 Kings 9:32 , and similar phrases in Genesis 43:29 ; Genesis 44:21 . Through such loving providence alone could the peace of God in which the blessing closes be given.
To lift up the eyes or the face upon any one is to look upon that one with peculiar and tender interest. And give thee peace ( shalom ). This peace, being the perfect fruit in experience of the grace which comes from God, forms the climax and conclusion of the benediction.
all outward needful prosperity, internal peace of mind, through the blood and righteousness of Christ, the peacemaker, and peace giver, and eternal peace in the world to come.
these things form the substance of this blessing, and the sum total of all blessings. In so rich a list of mercies worldly joys are not worthy to be mentioned.Henry's note runs across the whole pericope (6:22-27); this excerpt lands on the climactic verse, where shalom totals the blessing.
27So they shall put My name on the Israelites, and I will bless them.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·śā·mū ’eṯ- šə·mî ‘al- bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl wa·’ă·nî ’ă·ḇā·ră·ḵêm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-they-shall-put my-name upon the-sons-of Israel, and-I — I-will-bless-them.
Where the English smooths the original
Shall call them by my name, shall recommend them to me as my own people, and bless them, and pray unto me for them as such; which is a powerful argument to prevail with God for them.
It is in some sense an extension outwards, into the sphere of the created and sensible, of the ineffable virtues of the Godhead itself. It stands in a real, though un-assignable, relation to infinite goodness and power, and therefore it comes fraught with untold blessing (or perchance cursing) to those on whom it lights.
unless the Lord blesses, in vain do the priests bless, or any of his ministers pronounce a blessing; theirs lies in words and wishes, his in real facts; they can only pray and wish for the blessing, it is he only that can give it
pronounce My Sacred Name over them in blessing them. God will give effect to the benediction pronounced by the priests.
Shall call them by my name, shall recommend them to me as my own people, and bless them and pray unto me for them as such; which is a powerful argument to prevail with God for them, and therefore hath been oft used by the prophets interceding for them, as Jeremiah 14:9 Daniel 9:18 ,19 : compare 1 Samuel 12:22 .Poole links the laid-on Name to later prophetic intercession — Jeremiah and Daniel plead it back to God as Israel's claim on Him.
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 blessing does not begin with the priest. It begins with God. The verb that opens the unit is way·ḏab·bêr — the intensive Piel of dâbar, the formal verb of an ordinance — and what God dictates He hands down a deliberate ladder: to Moses, who is to speak (dab·bêr, the same root, now imperative) to Aaron and his sons, who will in turn say it to Israel. The Pulpit Commentary catches the architecture: the formula “was delivered to Aaron himself through Moses, as the ‘personal’ representative of the Lord, the mediator of the old covenant,” while Aaron and his sons stand as the “official” representatives who alone “could bless in his name and put… his name upon the people.” The words are fixed — kōh, “thus, in exactly this manner” — yet Poole carefully notes they were “not tied to these very words,” pointing to Moses, David, and Solomon blessing in other words. The act itself, Gill records from the Jewish writers, was hedged with rubric: hands lifted, fingers spread, voice raised, face toward the people, the Name pronounced in Hebrew. What stands behind all the ceremony, Hebrews 7:7 (cited by the Pulpit Commentary) supplies: “the less is blessed of the greater” — the blessing must descend from one who stands nearer to God.
The blessing itself is one of the most tightly engineered sentences in Scripture: three clauses, each opening with the covenant name YHWH, each built of two members, the second unfolding the first, and the three mounting by stages to a single summit. Keil & Delitzsch trace the gradation precisely — the first verse (“bless… and keep”) gives the blessing “in the most general form,” quoting Calvin that it is “the goodness of God in action”; the second (“make His face shine… and be gracious”) defines it “as the manifestation of the favour and grace of God”; the third (“lift up His face… and give peace”) “set forth the blessing of God as a manifestation of power… the end of which is peace (shalom).” The Hebrew rewards the slow reader: yā·’êr is the causative of ’ôwr, “make luminous” — God making His face radiate; chânan is grace as a high God “stooping in kindness to an inferior”; nâsâʼ pānîm, to lift the face toward someone, “is equivalent to looking at him… When God looks at a man, He saves him out of his distresses” (K&D). And it is all addressed to thee — Barnes notes “the singular number, which is observed throughout,” so the nation is blessed as one man and each man is blessed as the nation. On the triple Name nearly every voice pauses. Keil reports that “most of the fathers and earlier theologians saw an allusion to the mystery of the Trinity,” though he judges the older grounds “faulty” while affirming the substance; Jamieson, Fausset & Brown go further, assigning the clauses “to the respective offices of the Father, to ‘bless and keep us’; of the Son, to be ‘gracious to us’; and of the Holy Ghost, to ‘give us peace.’” The Pulpit Commentary is the honest dissenter, granting it “cannot be proved, and… would not even have suggested any such idea to the priest who gave, or to the people who received, the benediction.”
The unit closes by reaching back and binding itself shut. The verb wə·śā·mū, “they shall put,” is the very sûwm that, one verse earlier, set shalom on the people — the priests now do to Israel what God did to peace: they lay something on them. What they lay is šə·mî, “My name.” The Pulpit Commentary refuses to reduce it to letters or sound: the Name “stands in a real, though un-assignable, relation to infinite goodness and power, and therefore it comes fraught with untold blessing… to those on whom it lights.” Benson reads the laying-on as adoption: “Shall call them by my name, shall recommend them to me as my own people.” But the last word is God’s own, and the grammar shouts it — the emphatic wa·’ă·nî, “and I,” redundant beside the verb, throws the whole weight onto the divine speaker. Gill draws the line as sharply as it can be drawn: “theirs lies in words and wishes, his in real facts; they can only pray and wish for the blessing, it is he only that can give it.” The unit that opened with God speaking ends with God Himself as the blessing’s guarantor — the same verb bârak that began the formula in v. 23, now in His own first-person mouth: ’ă·ḇā·ră·ḵêm, “I will bless them.”
Tested against the rule that Scripture alone is the final authority, three things in this passage ask to be weighed — offered as a reading, not a verdict. First, the blessing is God’s gift, not the priest’s power. The text takes pains to fence this: the Name is His, the form is His, the efficacy is His (“and I — I will bless them”). The priest is a conduit, never a source — which is exactly why Gill can say “unless the Lord blesses, in vain do the priests bless.” Any reading that locates spiritual power in the office rather than in God has read the verse backward. Second, the Trinitarian reading is a legitimate Christian inference, but it must be held at the right altitude. The threefold YHWH and the threefold structure genuinely invite it, and the New Testament’s own threefold benediction (2 Corinthians 13:14) makes the resonance hard to unhear. Yet the Pulpit Commentary is right that it “cannot be proved” from the text alone and would not have struck the original hearers so — the doctrine is sound, but it is grounded in the whole canon, not extracted from this verse in isolation. Honesty keeps the inference and labels it an inference. Third, the deepest blessing is the Presence behind the Face. Strip the three clauses to their grammar and what God promises is His own face — shining, lifted, turned toward the worshiper — and the peace that face produces. The blessing is finally not a list of goods but God Himself attending to His people. Test each claim against the text; keep what the Word supports.
The blessing is not a list of goods God hands over; it is God turning His face toward you — and the peace that follows is only the weather of His presence.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The Aaronic blessing was not buried in Numbers; Israel sang it back. Psalm 67 opens by deliberately re-voicing v. 25 — “God be merciful unto us, and bless us; and cause his face to shine upon us” — turning the priest’s benediction over the people into the congregation’s prayer to God, and then outward to “all nations.” The Verifier records the verbal overlap as three shared lexemes — H215 ’ôwr (“shine,” rare, in only 42 verses), H2603 chânan (“be gracious,” in 73 verses), and H6440 pânîym (“face,” common) — the tightest such cluster in the unit. Because the link rests on shared pattern and motif rather than a quotation claim, it is tiered structural, not verbal; but the convergence of two relatively rare words plus “face” makes the dependence about as visible as a structural link can be.
Numbers 6:25 · Psalm 67:1
basis: shared lexemes H215 ʼôwr (in 42 vv), H2603 chânan (in 73 vv), H6440 pânîym (in 1892 vv) — the same three-word cluster of v. 25; pattern echo, no quotation claimed
The shining-face petition becomes a refrain across the Psalter. Psalm 80 repeats it three times as the hinge of a national lament (“cause thy face to shine; and we shall be saved,” vv. 3, 7, 19), and Psalm 31:16 prays it for the individual sufferer (“Make thy face to shine upon thy servant”). The Verifier confirms each as a structural/thematic link sharing H215 ’ôwr (“shine”) and H6440 pânîym (“face”). What the priest pronounced as gift, the Psalmists learned to plead as need — the same two words, now reaching up from the dark.
Numbers 6:25 · Psalm 80:7 · Psalm 31:16
basis: shared lexemes H215 ʼôwr (in 42 vv), H6440 pânîym (in 1892 vv) in both Psalm 80:7 and Psalm 31:16; shared petition-pattern, no quotation
The blessing’s second word, wə·yiš·mə·re·ḵā (“and keep you,” shâmar, root “to hedge about as with thorns”), unfolds into the great keeping-psalm. Psalm 121 rings the verb six times — “he that keepeth thee will not slumber… The LORD shall preserve [keep] thee from all evil; he shall preserve thy soul.” The Verifier records the link on shared H8104 shâmar (“keep,” in 440 verses). The single guarding verb of Aaron’s formula is expanded into an entire song of the God who never takes His eye off His own.
Numbers 6:24 · Psalm 121:7
basis: shared lexeme H8104 shâmar (in 440 vv); the keeping-motif of v. 24 developed, no quotation claimed
The climax-word šā·lō·wm (H7965) re-emerges as the last word of Psalm 29: “The LORD will give strength unto his people; the LORD will bless his people with peace.” The Verifier confirms the link on shared H7965 shâlôwm (“peace,” in 209 verses), and the parallel runs deeper than the one word — Psalm 29, like the blessing, pairs bless and peace as the terminal gift God sets upon His people. The benediction’s summit becomes the Psalter’s benediction-in-miniature.
Numbers 6:26 · Psalm 29:11
basis: shared lexeme H7965 shâlôwm (in 209 vv); both pair blessing with peace as the closing gift, no quotation
The verb that opens the formula in v. 23 and seals it in God's own mouth in v. 27 — bârak (H1288) — is the same verb God spoke over Abram: “I will bless thee… and thou shalt be a blessing” (Genesis 12:2). Poole's own note on v. 24 sends the reader straight there (“Compare Genesis 12:2”). The Aaronic blessing is not a fresh kindness invented at Sinai; it is the appointed channel through which the ancient promise to the patriarch is poured out, generation by generation, on his descendants. The Verifier records the link on shared H1288 bârak (in 289 verses) — a common verb, so the tie is structural/thematic, not verbal; but the conceptual line is direct: the God who promised to bless Abraham here puts the machinery of that blessing into the hands of Abraham's priestly sons, and the chapter on which it all finally rests is Genesis 12.
Numbers 6:24 · Genesis 12:2
basis: shared lexeme H1288 bârak (in 289 vv); the priestly blessing as the channel of the patriarchal blessing-promise, cross-referenced by Poole on v. 24; common verb, no quotation
Verse 27’s declaration — the priests will put My name on Israel — is taken up in the covenant-blessing chapter of Deuteronomy: “And all people of the earth shall see that thou art called by the name of the LORD.” The Verifier records the link on shared H8034 shêm (“name,” in 771 verses). The thread is conceptual as much as lexical: in both texts, bearing the divine Name is what marks Israel as God’s own and draws the nations’ gaze — the seed of the truth the New Testament will name as believers “called by his name” (cf. James 2:7).
Numbers 6:27 · Deuteronomy 28:10
basis: shared lexeme H8034 shêm (in 771 vv); both texts on Israel bearing/being-called-by the divine Name, no quotation
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The office itself points forward. Aaron, lifting his hands to lay the Name on the people, is — in Benson’s words — “a type of Christ, who came into the world to bless us… as the High-Priest of our profession, and left the earth in the very act of blessing his disciples with uplifted hands.” Luke 24:50 is precise: “he lifted up his hands, and blessed them,” and was parted from them in that very gesture. The ascended Christ does permanently what Aaron did daily — the true and final blesser of His people. This figural reading is ancient and widely held; the Pulpit Commentary anchors it in Hebrews 7:7 (“the less is blessed of the greater”), the principle that the blesser must stand nearer to God than the blessed.
Numbers 6:23 · Luke 24:50 · Hebrews 7:7
The petition that God “make His face shine” reaches its fulfillment, the church has long read, in the One who is the radiance of that face. Gill already glosses v. 25 as the rising of “the sun of righteousness” (Malachi 4:2). The New Testament makes the move explicit: God “hath shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ” (2 Corinthians 4:6). The shining face Aaron could only invoke is, in the Gospel, beheld. This is a typological reading — figural, not a verbal quotation, and across the Testaments (Hebrew → Greek) so it cannot rest on shared Strong’s numbers; it is grounded in the shared image of God’s face/light shining to save.
Numbers 6:25 · 2 Corinthians 4:6 · Malachi 4:2
Almost every commentator on this unit reaches for 2 Corinthians 13:14 — “The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Ghost.” Matthew Henry sets the two benedictions side by side, observing of the threefold Name that “the New Testament having explained it… each of which Persons is Jehovah, and yet they are not three Lords, but one Lord.” The link is real but must be tiered honestly: it is structural/typological, not verbal — a Hebrew benediction and a Greek one cannot share Strong’s numbers, and the correspondence is of shape (three clauses, the Three Persons) rather than quotation. Held as a Christian inference from the whole canon, it is widely held; pressed as proof from the verse alone, the Pulpit Commentary rightly cautions it “cannot be proved.”
Numbers 6:24 · Numbers 6:25 · Numbers 6:26 · 2 Corinthians 13:14
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:
This unit is Hebrew throughout, so every recorded cross-reference basis is a shared Strong’s lexeme between Hebrew texts — a genuine verbal datum — yet none rises to verbal / quotation — confirmed, because none of the shared words is rare enough on its own (the rarest, ’ôwr H215, still appears in 42 verses) and there is no NT citation of this passage claiming direct quotation. All six threads are therefore tiered structural / thematic — confirmed, with the Psalm 67:1 link the strongest (three shared lexemes including two relatively rare ones — ’ôwr and chânan — confirmed by the Verifier for Numbers 6:25 ↔ Psalm 67:1). The Genesis 12:2 thread rests on the common verb bârak alone, so it is the weakest lexically and is carried mainly by the conceptual line (the priestly blessing channeling the patriarchal promise) that Poole himself cross-references; it is tiered structural and labeled as such, not over-claimed. The Christ-readings that cross into the Greek New Testament (2 Corinthians 4:6, Luke 24:50, 2 Corinthians 13:14) cannot use shared Strong’s numbers at all — Hebrew and Greek lexicons do not share them — so they are tiered typological/structural and labeled as inferences, never as verbal links. The Trinitarian reading is reported because the sources are nearly unanimous in raising it (Henry, Barnes, JFB, Ellicott, Keil, Benson, Gill), but it is flagged at every turn as a Christian inference from the whole canon, with the Pulpit Commentary’s honest dissent preserved verbatim: it “cannot be proved” from the verse in isolation. The mandatory Joshua 1:5 → Hebrews 13:5 flag does not apply to this unit (it contains no 1:5). Every voice excerpt is a contiguous, unaltered substring of the supplied PD commentary; trimmed at the ends only, never paraphrased or stitched.
✦ = 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)