The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Second Passover
Numbers 9:1–14 — The Second Passover. 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.
1In the first month of the second year after Israel had come out of the land of Egypt, the LORD spoke to Moses in the Wilderness of Sinai:
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
hā·ri·šō·wn lê·mōr ba·ḥō·ḏeš haš·šê·nîṯ baš·šā·nāh lə·ṣê·ṯām mê·’e·reṣ miṣ·ra·yim Yah·weh ’el- way·ḏab·bêr mō·šeh ḇə·miḏ·bar- sî·nay
Literal — word-for-word from the original
In the first — saying — in the new-moon month, the second, in the year of their going-out from the land of Egypt, Yahweh spoke unto Moses in the wilderness of Sinai.
Where the English smooths the original
Passover at Sinai. This, as being kept in the first month, was prior in time to the numbering of Numbers 1:1 ff, and to the other events narrated in this book. It is, however, recorded here as introductory to the ordinance of Numbers 9:6-14 in this chapter respecting the supplementary Passover
In the first month; and therefore before the numbering of the people, which was not till the second month, Numbers 1:1 ,2 . But it is placed after it, because of a special case relating to the passover, which happened after it
In the first month of the second year after the exodus, that is to say, immediately after the erection of the tabernacle ( Exodus 40:2 , Exodus 40:17 ), this command was renewed, and the people were commanded "to keep the Passover in its appointed season, according to all its statutes and rights;" not to postpone itK&D rightly tie the renewed command to the just-erected tabernacle; the ⚙ layer adds that this anchors the supplementary Passover law to a working sanctuary and altar.
God gave particular orders for the keeping of this passover, and, for aught that appears, after this, they kept no passover till they came to Canaan, Jos 5:10. It early showed that the ceremonial institutions were not to continue always, as so soon after they were appointed, some were suffered to sleep for many years. But the ordinance of the Lord's Supper was not thus set aside in the first days of the Christian churchHenry notes the long silence — no recorded Passover from Sinai until Gilgal (Joshua 5:10) — and contrasts the lapsed ceremony with the unbroken keeping of the Lord's Supper; the ⚙ layer carries the Joshua 5:10 gap into the Threads section.
2“The Israelites are to observe the Passover at its appointed time.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ḇə·nê- yiś·rā·’êl ’eṯ- wə·ya·‘ă·śū hap·pā·saḥ bə·mō·w·‘ă·ḏōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And let the sons of Israel make the Passover in its appointed time.
Where the English smooths the original
The first order for the observation of it being, that they should keep this service when they came to the promised land, ( Exodus 12:25 ,) they might have concluded there was no obligation upon them to keep it in the wilderness, had it not been for this special precept.
yet without a fresh precept, or an explanation of the former, they seemed not to be obliged, or might not be sensible that they were obliged to keep it, until they came into the land of Canaan, Exodus 12:25 ; and therefore a new order is given them to observe it: at his appointed season
3You are to observe it at the appointed time, at twilight on the fourteenth day of this month, in accordance with its statutes and ordinances.”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ta·‘ă·śū ’ō·ṯōw bə·mō·w·‘ă·ḏōw bên hå̄·ʿăr·ba·yim bə·’ar·bā·‘āh ‘ā·śār- yō·wm haz·zeh ba·ḥō·ḏeš ta·‘ă·śū ’ō·ṯōw kə·ḵāl- ḥuq·qō·ṯāw ū·ḵə·ḵāl- miš·pā·ṭāw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
On the fourteenth day of this month, between the two evenings, you shall make it — according to all its statutes and according to all its ordinances you shall make it.
Where the English smooths the original
At even. —Hebrew, between the two evenings. (See Note on Exodus 12:6 .) According to all the rites of it, and according to all the ceremonies thereof. —Better, according to all the statutes and ordinances thereof. It is obvious that some of the directions concerning the Egyptian Passover could not be observed in the wilderness.
Nothing perhaps better illustrates the mingled rigidity and elasticity of the Divine ordinances than the observance of the passover, in which so much of changed detail was united with so real and so unvarying a uniformity.
all the statutes of it ] These were laid down in Exodus 12:1-20 ; Exodus 12:43-49 (P ), Exo 12:21–23 (J ). The feast is referred to as a type in 1 Corinthians 5:7 f.The Cambridge editors flag the NT typology (1 Cor 5:7) on the strength of the "statutes" clause; the ⚙ layer carries that link into the Christ section below.
4So Moses told the Israelites to observe the Passover,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
mō·šeh ’el- way·ḏab·bêr bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl la·‘ă·śōṯ hap·pā·saḥ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And Moses spoke unto the sons of Israel to make the Passover.
Where the English smooths the original
And Moses spake unto the children of Israel, that they should keep the passover. The time now drawing nigh for the observation of it, it being now almost a year since their coming out of Egypt.
This was the first observance of the passover since the exodus; and without a positive injunction, the Israelites were under no obligation to keep it till their settlement in the land of Canaan (Ex 12:25). The anniversary was kept on the exact day of the year on which they, twelve months before, had departed from Egypt
5and they did so in the Wilderness of Sinai, at twilight on the fourteenth day of the first month. The Israelites did everything just as the LORD had commanded Moses.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·ya·‘ă·śū ’eṯ- hap·pe·saḥ bə·miḏ·bar sî·nāy bên hā·‘ar·ba·yim bə·’ar·bā·‘āh ‘ā·śār yō·wm bā·ri·šō·wn la·ḥō·ḏeš bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl ‘ā·śū kə·ḵōl ’ă·šer Yah·weh ’eṯ- ṣiw·wāh mō·šeh kên
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And they made the Passover in the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month, between the two evenings, in the wilderness of Sinai; according to all that Yahweh commanded Moses, so did the sons of Israel.
Where the English smooths the original
In some details, the present Passover differed both from that kept at the Exodus itself and from all subsequent Passovers. For example, the direction of Exodus 12:22 could not be carried out in the letter while the people were dwelling in tents
They kept the passover — in the wilderness — Where they rested almost a whole year; but after they removed from thence, they were in so unsettled a condition that they did not even circumcise their children, ( Joshua 5:5 ,) who consequently could not eat the passover, Exodus 12:48 .
There are but two alternative conclusions, from one or other of which there is no honest escape: either (a) the numbers of the people are greatly exaggerated, or (b) the ritual of after days was not observed on this occasion.The Pulpit Commentary's logistical "two alternatives" is a candid admission of difficulty; the ⚙ layer records it as honest counter-evidence, not concealed.
6But there were some men who were unclean due to a dead body, so they could not observe the Passover on that day. And they came before Moses and Aaron that same day
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·hî ’ă·nā·šîm ’ă·šer hā·yū ṭə·mê·’îm ’ā·ḏām lə·ne·p̄eš yā·ḵə·lū wə·lō- la·‘ă·śōṯ- hap·pe·saḥ ha·hū bay·yō·wm way·yiq·rə·ḇū lip̄·nê mō·šeh wə·lip̄·nê ’a·hă·rōn ha·hū bay·yō·wm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And it came to pass — there were men who were unclean by the nephesh of a man — and they could not make the Passover on that day; and they drew near before Moses and before Aaron on that day.
Where the English smooths the original
The exclusion of persons defiled from offering the Passover followed from the law, that only clean persons were to participate in a sacrificial meal ( Leviticus 7:21 ), and that no one could offer any sacrifice in an unclean state.
Dead body. Hebrew, nephesh , as in Numbers 5:2 ; Numbers 6:11 , and other places. It is inexplicable how this word, which properly means "soul," should have come to be used of a corpse
The legal uncleanness which disqualified the Israelites for participation in the Passover may be regarded as typical of the moral and spiritual disqualifications which render men unfit for participation in the Lord’s Supper.
By touching a corpse, or being at the burial.The 1599 Geneva gloss specifies how the defilement was incurred — by handling a body or attending a burial — underscoring that these men were barred not by sin but by an act often of piety; the ⚙ layer reads this as sharpening the mercy of the supplementary feast.
7and said to Moses, “We are unclean because of a dead body, but why should we be excluded from presenting the LORD’s offering with the other Israelites at the appointed time?”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
way·yō·mə·rū hā·’ă·nā·šîm hā·hêm·māh ’ê·lāw ’ă·naḥ·nū ṭə·mê·’îm ’ā·ḏām lə·ne·p̄eš lām·māh nig·gā·ra‘ lə·ḇil·tî haq·riḇ ’eṯ- Yah·weh qā·rə·ban bə·ṯō·wḵ bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl bə·mō·‘ă·ḏōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And those men said unto him, "We are unclean by the nephesh of a man; why should we be diminished, so as not to bring near the offering of Yahweh in its appointed time among the sons of Israel?"
Where the English smooths the original
they speak very honourably of the ordinance of the passover, they call it "an offering of the Lord", the passover lamb being a slain sacrifice; and this offered to the Lord, by way of thanksgiving, for, and in commemoration of, their wonderful deliverance out of Egypt, and done in faith of Christ the passover, to be sacrificed for themGill explicitly reads the lamb as "done in faith of Christ the passover"; this 18th-century link feeds the Christ section's 1 Cor 5:7 reading.
That we may not offer an offering — Which if we neglect we must be cut off, and if we keep it in these circumstances, we must also be cut off. What shall we do?
These men came to Moses, and asked, "Why are we diminished (prevented) from offering the sacrificial gift of Jehovah at its season in the midst of the children of Israel (i.e., in common with the rest of the Israelites)?"
The passover is called an offering of the Lord, because it was both killed and eaten in obedience to God’s command, and to God’s honour, and as a thank-offering to God for his great mercies.Poole grounds the men's own word qorban: the lamb is a true offering — killed, eaten, and given in thanksgiving for the exodus deliverance.
8“Wait here until I find out what the LORD commands concerning you,” Moses replied.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
‘im·ḏū wə·’eš·mə·‘āh mah- Yah·weh yə·ṣaw·weh lā·ḵem mō·šeh way·yō·mer ’ă·lê·hem
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And Moses said unto them, "Stand, and let me hear what Yahweh will command concerning you."
Where the English smooths the original
Moses said, I will hear what the Lord will command — It appears from hence that Moses went into the sanctuary to consult the oracle of God whenever he had occasion, and was answered by an audible voice from the mercy-seat
as it was a singular case, of which there had been no instance before, Moses would not determine anything about it himself, but would inquire of the Lord his mind and will concerning it
9Then the LORD said to Moses,
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
Yah·weh way·ḏab·bêr ’el- mō·šeh lê·mōr
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And Yahweh spoke unto Moses, saying:
Where the English smooths the original
And the Lord spake unto Moses,.... From between the cherubim, after he had laid the case before him, and he gave him an answer: saying; as follows.
And if, in difficult cases, time is taken to spread the matter before God by humble, believing prayer, the Holy Spirit assuredly will direct in the good and right way.
10“Tell the Israelites: ‘When any one of you or your descendants is unclean because of a dead body, or is away on a journey, he may still observe the Passover to the LORD.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
dab·bêr ’el- bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl lê·mōr kî- ’îš ’îš ’ōw lə·ḏō·rō·ṯê·ḵem yih·yeh- ṭā·mê lā·ne·p̄eš ’ōw rə·ḥō·qå̄h lā·ḵem ḇə·ḏe·reḵ wə·‘ā·śāh p̄e·saḥ Yah·weh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
"Speak unto the sons of Israel, saying: When any man, a man of you or of your generations, becomes unclean by a nephesh, or is on a far road, yet he shall make the Passover unto Yahweh.
Where the English smooths the original
This is one of the ten passages in the Pentateuch in which one or more words are marked with certain dots, known as puncta extraordinaria. In this case these dots stand over the word rehokah, distant.
Provision is made both for accidental uncleanness, and also for absence on a journey. This is evidently intended to be exhaustive, and was understood in later days to include all good reasons which might prevent anyone from keeping the festival.
Under these two instances the Hebrews think that other hinderances of like nature are comprehended; as if one be hindered by a disease, or by any other such kind of uncleanness
11Such people are to observe it at twilight on the fourteenth day of the second month. They are to eat the lamb, together with unleavened bread and bitter herbs;
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ya·‘ă·śū ’ō·ṯōw bên hā·‘ar·ba·yim bə·’ar·bā·‘āh ‘ā·śār yō·wm haš·šê·nî ba·ḥō·ḏeš yō·ḵə·lu·hū ‘al- maṣ·ṣō·wṯ ū·mə·rō·rîm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
In the second month, on the fourteenth day, between the two evenings, they shall make it; with unleavened bread and bitter herbs they shall eat it.
Where the English smooths the original
And possibly it was in the spirit of this command that our Lord acted when he ate the passover by anticipation with his disciples twenty-four hours before the proper time - at which time he was himself to be the Lamb slain.A bold typological reading by the Pulpit editors; offered as their own inference ("possibly"), and so received here as suggestive, not certain.
The later Jews speak of this as the "little Passover." Coming, as it did, a month after the proper Passover, it afforded ample time for a man to purify himself from legal defilement, as also to return from any but a very distant journey.
and eat it with unleavened bread and bitter herbs; in the same manner as the first passover was eaten, Exodus 12:8 ; only no mention is made of keeping the feast of unleavened bread seven days
12they may not leave any of it until morning or break any of its bones. They must observe the Passover according to all its statutes.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
lō- yaš·’î·rū mim·men·nū ‘aḏ- bō·qer yiš·bə·rū- ḇōw wə·‘e·ṣem lō ya·‘ă·śū ’ō·ṯōw hap·pe·saḥ kə·ḵāl- ḥuq·qaṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
They shall leave none of it until morning, and a bone of it they shall not break; according to all the statute of the Passover they shall make it.
Where the English smooths the original
nor break a bone thereof ] Cf. John 19:36 .The Cambridge editors' bare cross-reference (Num 9:12 → John 19:36) is the documented basis for the typological Christ link; the connection is cross-Testament and so cannot rest on a shared Strong's number.
nor break any bone of it; the same was enjoined; see Gill on Exodus 12:46
According to all the ordinances. —The word rendered ordinances is in the singular number: according to all the ordinance (or statute ). The primary reference is probably to the law respecting the Paschal Lamb.
13But if a man who is ceremonially clean and is not on a journey still fails to observe the Passover, he must be cut off from his people, because he did not present the LORD’s offering at its appointed time. That man will bear the consequences of his sin.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·hā·’îš ’ă·šer- hū ṭā·hō·wr hā·yāh lō- ū·ḇə·ḏe·reḵ wə·ḥā·ḏal la·‘ă·śō·wṯ hap·pe·saḥ wə·niḵ·rə·ṯāh han·ne·p̄eš ha·hi·w mê·‘am·me·hā kî lō hiq·rîḇ Yah·weh qā·rə·ban bə·mō·‘ă·ḏōw ha·hū hā·’îš yiś·śā ḥeṭ·’ōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
But the man who is clean and is not on a road, and ceases to make the Passover — that soul shall be cut off from his people, because the offering of Yahweh he did not bring near in its appointed time; that man shall bear his sin.
Where the English smooths the original
But after the law of sacrifices had been elaborated, then the paschal lamb, though prior to them all, naturally took its place amongst them as the greatest of them all, and as uniting in itself the special beauties of all.
shall be cut off ] He shall suffer death by divine agency, not by punishment inflicted at the hands of the community. shall bear his sin ] Shall suffer the consequences of his sin
so those who, of choice, absent themselves, may expect God's wrath for their sin. Be not deceived: God is not mocked.
14If a foreigner dwelling among you wants to observe the Passover to the LORD, he is to do so according to the Passover statute and its ordinances. You are to apply the same statute to both the foreigner and the native of the land.’”
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·ḵî- gêr yā·ḡūr ’it·tə·ḵem wə·‘ā·śāh p̄e·saḥ Yah·weh ya·‘ă·śeh kên hap·pe·saḥ kə·ḥuq·qaṯ ū·ḵə·miš·pā·ṭōw yih·yeh lā·ḵem ’a·ḥaṯ ḥuq·qāh wə·lag·gêr ū·lə·’ez·raḥ hā·’ā·reṣ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And when a sojourner sojourns among you and would make the Passover unto Yahweh, according to the statute of the Passover and according to its ordinance, so shall he do; one statute shall be yours, both for the sojourner and for the native of the land."
Where the English smooths the original
Gentile converts, or proselytes, as they were afterwards called, were admitted, if circumcised, to the same privileges as native Israelites, and were liable to excommunication if they neglected the passover.
The Heb. gêr has no exact equivalent in English. He was one who was not an Israelite but who, permanently or for a considerable period, put himself under Israelite protection and became a member of the community.
Ye shall have one ordinance. This is repeated from Exodus 12:49 as a further warning not to tamper more than absolute necessity required with the unity, either in time or in circumstance, of the great national rite.
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 with a deliberate dischronology. The command of v.1 falls "in the first month of the second year," yet the census of Numbers 1 was given "in the second month" — so this Passover precedes the book's own opening. Jamieson, Fausset & Brown state it plainly: "In the first month; and therefore before the numbering of the people, which was not till the second month… But it is placed after it, because of a special case relating to the passover, which happened after it" (1871). Albert Barnes agrees that the account is "recorded here as introductory to the ordinance of Numbers 9:6-14… respecting the supplementary Passover" (1834). Keil & Delitzsch anchor the timing to the sanctuary: the command was renewed "immediately after the erection of the tabernacle… not to postpone it… until they came to Canaan, but to keep it there at Sinai" (1860s) — a point that matters, because the Hebrew chodesh (v.1, H2320, "new moon") and the leading word ha-ri'shon ("the first") bind the feast to the lunar reckoning of the exodus itself. The keeping is then certified with the closing kēn of v.5 ("so did the sons of Israel"), the narrator's seal of exact obedience — though The Pulpit Commentary honestly registers the logistical strain: "There are but two alternative conclusions, from one or other of which there is no honest escape: either (a) the numbers of the people are greatly exaggerated, or (b) the ritual of after days was not observed on this occasion" (1880s).
Into this exact obedience breaks a genuine impasse. Certain men were tâmê' ("unclean," v.6) lə-nephesh — by a corpse the Hebrew startlingly calls a "soul." The Pulpit Commentary marvels at the idiom: "It is inexplicable how this word, which properly means 'soul,' should have come to be used of a corpse" (1880s). Keil & Delitzsch ground their exclusion in prior law: "only clean persons were to participate in a sacrificial meal (Leviticus 7:21)… no one could offer any sacrifice in an unclean state" (1860s). Their plea (v.7) is reverent, not rebellious — the verb niggâra' ("why should we be diminished") pictures men being scraped away from the congregation. John Gill hears their reverence and reads the lamb's meaning: they "call it 'an offering of the Lord'… and done in faith of Christ the passover, to be sacrificed for them" (1746–63). Moses' response is a model of restraint: 'imdū, "stand" (v.8), and let me hear what the LORD commands. John Gill notes the wisdom: "as it was a singular case… Moses would not determine anything about it himself, but would inquire of the Lord his mind and will concerning it" (1746–63).
The divine answer (vv.9–14) does not relax the feast; it extends it. A second keeping in the second month is granted to the defiled and the far-off — what Albert Barnes records the later Jews calling "the 'little Passover'… a month after the proper Passover" (1834). The grammar widens the grace: 'ish 'ish ("a man, a man," v.10) means every individual, and lə-dorotêkem ("to your generations") makes the mercy a standing statute. Charles Ellicott notes the scribal honesty embedded in the very letters — the word rechoqah ("far") bears the puncta extraordinaria, "certain dots, known as puncta extraordinaria… over the word rehokah, distant" (1878). Yet the same statute that opens a door bars the door of presumption: the man who is tâhôr ("clean," v.13) and merely châdal ("slack," forbearing) is to be nikrəṯah, "cut off." Matthew Henry draws the line: "those who, of choice, absent themselves, may expect God's wrath for their sin. Be not deceived: God is not mocked" (1706). The unit closes with radical inclusion: one statute ('achat, v.14) for the gēr and the 'ezrach alike — Jamieson, Fausset & Brown: proselytes "were admitted, if circumcised, to the same privileges as native Israelites" (1871). The chapter that began with exact obedience ends with the widest welcome: weakness excused, distance accommodated, the stranger embraced, only contempt condemned.
Under Sola Scriptura, and offered as the tool's own fallible reading to be tested: this chapter is the gospel's grammar of grace rehearsed in ceremonial law. The defiled men were barred not by sin but by the touch of death — and rather than say "too late, wait a year," God opens a second appointed time so that no willing worshiper is lost to a disqualification he could not help. The lamb whose bones are not broken (v.12), eaten with bitter herbs (v.11), offered that the destroyer might pass over, is the same Lamb the New Testament names: "Christ, our Passover, has been sacrificed" (1 Corinthians 5:7). The mercy of the second month answers the men's cry — do not be diminished — but it never softens into license: the clean man who slackens is cut off, while the unclean who longed to draw near is gathered in. Read this way, Numbers 9 says what the cross says: God moves heaven and law to make room for those who cannot reach Him, and warns only those who, able to come, will not. The single statute for sojourner and native (v.14) is the wilderness shadow of one table for Jew and Gentile in Christ — but this typological weight is the ⚙ layer's reading, to be weighed against the text, not asserted over it.
God reschedules the feast before He will lose a worshiper — yet will not be mocked by the man who simply could not be bothered.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The supplementary Passover is to be eaten "with unleavened bread and bitter herbs" (v.11), the identical triad first commanded in Egypt. The link is verbal, not merely thematic: the noun merorim ("bitter herbs," H4844) occurs in only three verses of the entire Hebrew Bible, and matstsah ("unleavened bread," H4682) here matches Exodus 12:8 word-for-word. John Gill sends the reader straight there: eaten "in the same manner as the first passover was eaten, Exodus 12:8." The rare shared lexeme is what raises this from echo to quotation.
Numbers 9:11 · Exodus 12:8
basis: rare shared lexeme H4844 mᵉrôr (bitter herbs, in only 3 verses) plus H4682 matstsâh and H398 ʼâkal (eat); Verifier-confirmed verbal link, Hebrew↔Hebrew
The same rare word merorim binds the Passover's "bitter herbs" (v.11) to Jeremiah's lament: "He has filled me with bitterness; He has sated me with wormwood" (Lamentations 3:15). The taste of the feast — bitterness eaten in remembrance of bondage — is the very word the prophet reaches for in his grief. The connection is lexical (the noun appears in only three verses total), though the contexts differ: ritual remembrance versus personal anguish. It is a verbal thread, but its theological weight is the reader's to argue, not the lexeme's to prove.
Numbers 9:11 · Lamentations 3:15
basis: rare shared lexeme H4844 mᵉrôr (in only 3 verses of the OT); Verifier-confirmed, Hebrew↔Hebrew — the rarity carries the verbal claim, while the thematic application is interpretive
The unit's closing law — "one statute… for the sojourner and for the native of the land" (v.14) — restates the Passover charter of Exodus 12:48–49. The link is verbal and cumulative: it shares gēr ("sojourner," H1616), gûwr ("to sojourn," H1481), 'ezrach ("native," H249, itself a relatively rare word in 17 verses), and pesach. Keil & Delitzsch make the cross-reference explicit: "cf. Exodus 12:48-49, according to which the stranger was required first of all to let himself be circumcised." Numbers does not innovate here; it re-promulgates the Exodus statute.
Numbers 9:14 · Exodus 12:48
basis: shared lexemes H249 ʼezrâch (native, rarer at 17 vv), H1616 gêr, H1481 gûwr, H6453 peçach; Verifier-confirmed verbal cluster, Hebrew↔Hebrew
The prohibition "a bone of it they shall not break" (v.12) repeats the Paschal law of Exodus 12:46. The shared terms are 'etsem ("bone," H6106) and shabar ("to break," H7665). This is a structural/legal repetition of a defining feature of the rite rather than a citation with a rare lexeme, so it is tiered structural rather than "verbal/quotation"; the two words are common, and it is the pattern (the unbroken lamb) that carries the link. John Gill simply points back: "the same was enjoined; see Gill on Exodus 12:46."
Numbers 9:12 · Exodus 12:46
basis: shared lexemes H6106 ʻetsem (bone) and H7665 shâbar (break), both common; the link is the repeated legal pattern (unbroken Paschal lamb), not a rare-word quotation — Hebrew↔Hebrew
Several commentators observe that after this Sinai Passover, Israel kept no recorded Passover until Joshua 5:10 at Gilgal — a gap of nearly forty years. Matthew Henry: "after this, they kept no passover till they came to Canaan, Jos 5:10." The Verifier links Numbers 9:5 to Joshua 5:10 by shared pesach (H6453), 'ereb ("evening," H6153), chodesh ("month," H2320), and 'arba' ("four/fourteenth," H702) — common cultic vocabulary describing the same feast at its two wilderness-era keepings. The connection is structural (the same rite, the same date-formula) rather than a rare-word quotation.
Numbers 9:5 · Joshua 5:10
basis: shared lexemes H6453 peçach, H6153 ʻereb, H2320 chôdesh, H702 ʼarbaʻ — common terms of the same date-formula; the thread is the shared institution and reckoning, not a rare lexeme — Hebrew↔Hebrew
Twice the unit insists the feast be kept "according to all its statutes" (v.3) and "according to all the statute of the Passover" (v.12) — the noun chuqqâh (H2708), the engraved, cut-in decree. This binds the wilderness keeping back to the Passover ordinance proper, "This is the statute of the Passover" (Exodus 12:43). The Verifier links the verses by the shared lexeme chuqqâh, a moderately common legal term (100 verses), so the thread is the repeated legal pattern (the feast governed by one fixed ordinance) rather than a rare-word quotation. The Pulpit Commentary captures the principle exactly: "the mingled rigidity and elasticity of the Divine ordinances… in which so much of changed detail was united with so real and so unvarying a uniformity."
Numbers 9:3 · Exodus 12:43
basis: shared lexeme H2708 chuqqâh (engraved statute, in 100 vv) — Verifier-confirmed; a moderately common legal term, so the link rests on the repeated ordinance-pattern, not a rare quotation — Hebrew↔Hebrew
The principle of a second-month Passover for the unprepared is later appealed to by Hezekiah, who held the Passover in the second month because the priests had not sanctified themselves and the people had not gathered in time (2 Chronicles 30:2, 30:15). The Pulpit Commentary makes the connection precise: it was "in the spirit of this command, though not in the letter of it, that Hezekiah acted ( 2 Chronicles 30:2 )." The Verifier links Numbers 9:11 to 2 Chronicles 30:15 by shênî ("second," H8145), chodesh (H2320), and pesach (H6453) — shared institutional vocabulary, a structural/thematic re-use of the statute.
Numbers 9:11 · 2 Chronicles 30:15
basis: shared lexemes H8145 shênî (second), H2320 chôdesh, H6453 peçach — the later narrative enacts the same second-month statute; common terms, structural re-use, Hebrew↔Hebrew
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The Cambridge editors, commenting on the "statutes" of v.3, note that "The feast is referred to as a type in 1 Corinthians 5:7" — "For Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed." The New Testament reads the whole institution kept here in the wilderness as pointing forward to the Lamb of God. The link is cross-Testament (Greek NT reflecting on a Hebrew rite): it rests on Paul's own explicit typological claim, not on a shared Hebrew lexeme, since the languages differ. John Gill already heard this within the men's plea, the lamb "done in faith of Christ the passover, to be sacrificed for them" (Numbers 9:7).
Numbers 9:2 · Numbers 9:11 · 1 Corinthians 5:7
The command "a bone of it they shall not break" (v.12) is, on the testimony of John's Gospel, fulfilled in the crucified Christ: "these things happened so that the Scripture would be fulfilled: 'Not one of his bones will be broken'" (John 19:36, drawing on Exodus 12:46 / Numbers 9:12). The Cambridge Bible makes the very cross-reference at this verse: "nor break a bone thereof ] Cf. John 19:36." This is a typological, cross-Testament link: it cannot be carried by a shared Strong's number (Hebrew 'etsem/shabar versus Greek ostoun/syntribō), so it stands on the Evangelist's own fulfilment claim and the ancient reading of the Paschal lamb as a figure of Christ. Held widely since the early church, yet here marked as figural, not verbal.
Numbers 9:12 · John 19:36
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:
Honesty notes specific to this unit. (1) Languages: this unit is entirely Hebrew, so the Verifier's shared-Strong's bases are valid for the Numbers↔Old-Testament threads (Exodus, Lamentations, Joshua, 2 Chronicles). The two Christ links (1 Corinthians 5:7; John 19:36) are cross-Testament; they are tiered typological/structural and rest on explicit New-Testament fulfilment claims, never on shared lexemes, because Hebrew and Greek Strong's numbers cannot be equated. (2) Under-claiming where lexemes are common: the "unbroken bone" (Exodus 12:46), the "statute of the Passover" link to Exodus 12:43 (shared chuqqâh, H2708, 100 vv), and the Joshua 5:10 / 2 Chronicles 30 links share only common words ('etsem, shabar, pesach, chodesh, chuqqâh); they are tiered structural rather than "verbal/quotation," which is reserved here for the rare merorim (H4844, 3 verses) shared with Exodus 12:8 and Lamentations 3:15, and the 'ezrach-cluster shared with Exodus 12:48. (3) A flagged textual datum: the word rechoqah ("far," v.10) carries the puncta extraordinaria — scribal dots that the Masoretic tradition itself uses to mark the word as uncertain (Ellicott, K&D, Pulpit all note it). The ⚙ layer reports the dots as a preserved editorial question, not a settled reading. (4) The Pulpit Commentary's logistical objection at v.5 (how three priests could slay tens of thousands of lambs) is recorded as genuine counter-evidence; K&D answer it at length, but the difficulty is real and not concealed. (5) Typological restraint: the Pulpit Commentary's reading of v.11 (that the Lord "ate the passover by anticipation… at which time he was himself to be the Lamb slain") is the commentator's own inference, hedged with "possibly," and is received here as suggestive, not as established exegesis.
✦ = 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)