The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
The Cloud above the Tabernacle
Numbers 9:15–23 — The Cloud above the Tabernacle. 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.
15On the day that the tabernacle, the Tent of the Testimony, was set up, the cloud covered it and appeared like fire above the tabernacle from evening until morning.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·ḇə·yō·wm ham·miš·kān lə·’ō·hel hā·‘ê·ḏuṯ hā·qîm ’eṯ- he·‘ā·nān ’eṯ- kis·sāh ham·miš·kān kə·mar·’êh- ’êš ‘al- ham·miš·kān ū·ḇā·‘e·reḇ yih·yeh ‘aḏ- bō·qer
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-on-the-day was-set-up the-dwelling — the-tent of-the-Testimony — covered the-cloud the-dwelling; and-in-the-evening it-would-be over the-dwelling like-the-appearance-of fire until morning.
Where the English smooths the original
העדת לאהל משׁכּן, "the dwelling of the tent of witness" (ל used for the genitive to avoid a double construct state: Ewald, 292, a). In the place of ohel mod, "tent of the meeting of Jehovah with His people," we have here "tent of witness" (or "testimony"), i.e., of the tables with the decalogue which were laid up in the ark of the covenantK&D resolve the load-bearing grammatical crux of the unit: the awkward lamedh is a genitive-substitute, naming "the Dwelling of the Tent of Testimony."
The cloud was a visible token of God's special presence and guardian care of the Israelites (Ex 14:20; Ps 105:39). It was easily distinguishable from all other clouds by its peculiar form and its fixed position; for from the day of the completion of the tabernacle it rested by day as a dark, by night as a fiery, column on that part of the sanctuary which contained the ark of the testimony
the cloud covered the Tent of Meeting, and that the glory of the Lord filled the Tabernacle. There is, therefore, no sufficient ground for the supposition that the cloud rested on that part of the Tabernacle exclusively in which the two tables of the testimony were keptEllicott argues against limiting the cloud to the holy of holies — it covered the whole.
This cloud was appointed to be the visible sign and symbol of God's presence with Israel. Thus we are taught to see God always near us, both night and day.
The phenomenon first appeared at the Exodus itself, Exodus 13:21-22 . The cloud did not cover the whole structure, but the "tent of the testimony," i. e. the enclosure which contained the "ark of the testimony"Barnes dates the cloud's first appearance to the Exodus (Exodus 13:21-22) and, against Ellicott, restricts its covering to the Testimony-tent — a genuine disagreement among the sources over the cloud's extent.
16It remained that way continually; the cloud would cover the tabernacle by day, and at night it would appear like fire.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
yih·yeh kên ṯā·mîḏ he·‘ā·nān yə·ḵas·sen·nū lā·yə·lāh ū·mar·’êh- ’êš
Literal — word-for-word from the original
So it-would-be continually: the-cloud would-cover-it, and-the-appearance-of fire by-night.
Where the English smooths the original
The fire was the centre, the cloud was wrapped around it. The former was the symbol, making visible to a generation who had to be taught through their senses, the inaccessible holiness and flashing brightness and purity of the divine nature; the latter tempered and veiled the too great brightness for feeble eyes.Maclaren's whole sermon turns on the doubleness of the pillar — fire within, cloud around — as the pattern of all divine revelation.
The covering of the dwelling, with the cloud which shone by night as a fiery look, was constant, and not merely a phenomenon which appeared when the tabernacle was first erected, and then vanished away again.
It was the same cloud which was “alway” over the Tabernacle during the continuance of the journeyings through the wilderness.
This supernatural phenomenon was not transitory, like the glory-cloud within the tabernacle ( Exodus 40:35 ; cf. 1 Kings 8:10 ), but permanent, as long at least as the Israelites were in the wilderness.The Pulpit distinguishes the abiding outer cloud from the transient glory that once filled the inner sanctuary.
17Whenever the cloud was lifted from above the Tent, the Israelites would set out, and wherever the cloud settled, there the Israelites would camp.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ū·lə·p̄î he·‘ā·nān hê·‘ā·lōṯ mê·‘al hā·’ō·hel wə·’a·ḥă·rê- ḵên bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl yis·‘ū ū·ḇim·qō·wm ’ă·šer he·‘ā·nān šām yiš·kān- šām bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl ya·ḥă·nū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-according-to the-mouth-of the-cloud being-lifted from-over the-Tent, then-afterward the-sons-of Israel would-set-out; and-in-the-place where the-cloud would-settle — there the-sons-of Israel would-camp.
Where the English smooths the original
the cloud visibly descended from the height at which it ordinarily soared above the ark of the covenant, as it was carried in front of the army, for a signal that the tabernacle was to be set up there; and then this had been done, it settled down upon it.
It was a visible token of the presence of God; and from it, as a glorious throne, He gave the order. So that its motion regulated the commencement and termination of all the journeys of the Israelites.
It was necessary that the hosts of Israel should be always in a watchful state, and ready to obey at once the intimations given to them of the Divine will, thus affording a striking type and pattern to the Christian Church
Was taken up, or, ascended on high, above its ordinary place, by which it became more visible to all the camp.
18At the LORD’s command the Israelites set out, and at the LORD’s command they camped. As long as the cloud remained over the tabernacle, they remained encamped.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
‘al- Yah·weh pî bə·nê yiś·rā·’êl yis·‘ū wə·‘al- Yah·weh pî ya·ḥă·nū kāl- yə·mê ’ă·šer he·‘ā·nān yiš·kōn ‘al- ham·miš·kān ya·ḥă·nū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
By the-mouth-of Yahweh the-sons-of Israel would-set-out, and-by the-mouth-of Yahweh they-would-camp; all the-days that the-cloud dwelt over the-dwelling they-would-camp.
Where the English smooths the original
at the commandment ] lit. ‘mouth.’ Not only was a sign given by the cloud, but Jehovah used to give an oral command to Moses when the march was to begin and end.Cambridge recovers the literal "mouth" and adds that a spoken command to Moses accompanied the visible sign.
As Jehovah was with His people in the cloud, the rising and falling of the cloud was "the command of the Lord" to the Israelites to break up or to pitch the camp.
The motion or stay of the cloud is fitly called the command of God, because it was a signification of God’s will and their duty, which a command properly is.
not that there was any command in form given, or any audible voice heard, directing when to march; but the removal of the cloud was interpretatively the order and command of GodGill stands deliberately against the Cambridge reading — for him the cloud's motion was itself the only "command," no audible voice required.
19Even when the cloud lingered over the tabernacle for many days, the Israelites kept the LORD’s charge and did not set out.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
he·‘ā·nān ū·ḇə·ha·’ă·rîḵ ‘al- ham·miš·kān rab·bîm yā·mîm ḇə·nê- yiś·rā·’êl ’eṯ- wə·šā·mə·rū Yah·weh miš·me·reṯ wə·lō yis·sā·‘ū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-when prolonged the-cloud over the-dwelling for-many days, then-the-sons-of Israel kept the-charge-of Yahweh and-did-not set-out.
Where the English smooths the original
The same expression is used of Aaron and his sons in Leviticus 8:35 , and also in respect to the office of the Levites in Numbers 3:7 , as keeping the charge of Aaron and of the congregation.Ellicott locates "kept the charge of the LORD" in the cultic vocabulary of priestly and Levitical duty.
though it were long in one place, which was tedious to them, who desired to change places, and to make haste to Canaan, yet they obeyed God herein against their own inclinations
A desert life has its attractions, and constant movements create a passionate love of change. Many incidents show that the Israelites had strongly imbibed this nomad habit and were desirous of hastening to Canaan.
to awaken the consciousness not only of the absolute dependence of Israel upon the guidance of Jehovah, but also of the gracious care of their God, which was thereby displayed to the Israelites throughout all their journeyings.K&D names the purpose of the chapter's repetitiveness: to impress both Israel's dependence and God's care.
20Sometimes the cloud remained over the tabernacle for only a few days, and they would camp at the LORD’s command and set out at the LORD’s command.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·yêš ’ă·šer he·‘ā·nān yih·yeh ‘al- ham·miš·kān mis·pār yā·mîm ya·ḥă·nū ‘al- Yah·weh pî yis·sā·‘ū wə·‘al- Yah·weh pî
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-sometimes-it-was that the-cloud would-be over the-dwelling a-number-of days; by the-mouth-of Yahweh they-would-camp, and-by the-mouth-of Yahweh they-would-set-out.
Where the English smooths the original
Better, And sometimes, &c., i.e., there were times or occasions in which, &c. So in Numbers 9:21 .Ellicott corrects the AV's "And so it was" to "And sometimes," recovering the casuistic force.
hypothetical clause introducing several other cases which actually occurred, and by which their perfect obedience was proved.The Pulpit reads vv.20-22 as a chain of conditional cases proving the obedience exceptionless.
Or "days of number", which were so few that they might be easily numbered
21Sometimes the cloud remained only from evening until morning, and when it lifted in the morning, they would set out. Whether it was by day or by night, when the cloud was taken up, they would set out.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
wə·yêš ’ă·šer- he·‘ā·nān yih·yeh mê·‘e·reḇ ‘aḏ- bō·qer he·‘ā·nān wə·na·‘ă·lāh bab·bō·qer wə·nā·sā·‘ū ’ōw yō·w·mām wā·lay·lāh he·‘ā·nān wə·na·‘ă·lāh wə·nā·sā·‘ū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-sometimes-it-was that the-cloud would-be from-evening until-morning, and-the-cloud was-lifted in-the-morning, then-they-would-set-out; whether by-day or-by-night, when-the-cloud was-taken-up, then-they-would-set-out.
Where the English smooths the original
This is repeated again and again, because it was a constant miracle, and because it is a matter we should take particular notice of, as highly significant and instructive. It is mentioned long after by David, Psalm 105:39Benson reads the repetition as deliberate emphasis and traces its echo into the Psalms.
It is obvious from this verse that there must have been sentinels constantly watching by night as well as by day, whose office it was to give notice when the cloud was removed. (Comp. Psalm 134:1 .)
it is evident, that the appearance by day and night was the same body called the cloud, though beheld in a different view, in the daytime as a cloud, in the nighttime as fire.
22Whether the cloud lingered for two days, a month, or longer, the Israelites camped and did not set out as long as the cloud remained over the tabernacle; but when it was lifted, they would set out.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’ōw- ’ōw- yā·mîm bə·ha·’ă·rîḵ yō·ma·yim ḥō·ḏeš ’ōw- ḇə·nê- yiś·rā·’êl ya·ḥă·nū wə·lō yis·sā·‘ū he·‘ā·nān liš·kōn ‘ā·lāw ‘al- ham·miš·kān ū·ḇə·hê·‘ā·lō·ṯōw yis·sā·‘ū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Whether two-days, or a-month, or days, in-the-cloud's-prolonging over the-dwelling, dwelling upon-it — the-sons-of Israel would-camp and-would-not set-out; but-in-its-being-lifted they-would-set-out.
Where the English smooths the original
A year - literally, "days," idiomatically a year Leviticus 25:29 , an expression equivalent to "a full period," though not necessarily the period of a year.
a year ] Heb. ‘days.’ This sometimes means ‘a year’ (e.g. 1 Samuel 27:7 ); but here it perhaps denotes only an indefinite period longer than a month.Cambridge tempers Barnes: "days" need not mean a year, only an indefinite long span.
it is evident that this passage must have been written after the wanderings were over, because it is a kind of retrospect of the whole period as regards one important feature of it.The Pulpit reads the summarizing tone as a retrospective composed at or after the end of the wilderness years.
but when it was taken up they journeyed; though they had continued ever so long, and their situation ever so agreeable
23They camped at the LORD’s command, and they set out at the LORD’s command; they carried out the LORD’s charge according to His command through Moses.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
ya·ḥă·nū ‘al- Yah·weh pî yis·sā·‘ū ’eṯ- wə·‘al- Yah·weh pî šā·mā·rū Yah·weh miš·me·reṯ ‘al- Yah·weh pî bə·yaḏ- mō·šeh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
By the-mouth-of Yahweh they-would-camp, and-by the-mouth-of Yahweh they-would-set-out; the-charge-of Yahweh they-kept, by the-mouth-of Yahweh by-the-hand-of Moses.
Where the English smooths the original
It was the visible counterpart outside the sanctuary of the ‘Glory,’ the manifestation of the divine presence within.Cambridge sums the cloud's theology: the outer cloud is the public face of the inner Glory.
they kept the charge of the Lord, at the commandment of the Lord by the hand of Moses; observed the rest or motion of the cloud, the order and command of God signified thereby, as it was made known unto them by the ministry and means of Moses.
The record of his mercy will conduct us with unerring truth, through Christ, to everlasting peace. Follow the pillar of the cloud and of fire.
they kept the charge of the LORD, at the commandment of the LORD by the {k} hand of Moses. (k) Under the charge and government of Moses.The Geneva marginal gloss reads "by the hand of Moses" as the people living "under the charge and government of Moses" — the divine word mediated through, and administered by, the appointed leader.
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
The unit opens on the founding day, the day hā·qîm, "the setting-up" of the mishkān — the Dwelling. The Pulpit Commentary rightly says "we are sent back again to the great day of Israel's sojourn at Sinai, when God took visible possession of his dwelling in the midst of them." The first words name a real grammatical knot: miškān lə·’ōhel hā·‘ēḏuṯ, "the Dwelling to/for the Tent of the Testimony." Keil & Delitzsch resolve it — the lamedh is "used for the genitive to avoid a double construct state" — and they explain why the tent bears that name: "tent of witness... i.e., of the tables with the decalogue which were laid up in the ark of the covenant... because the decalogue formed the basis of the covenant." The covenant-word at the centre is the reason the glory-cloud crowns the whole. The cloud's nature is not in doubt to the commentators: Jamieson, Fausset & Brown call it "a visible token of God's special presence," distinguishable "by its peculiar form and its fixed position; for from the day of the completion of the tabernacle it rested by day as a dark, by night as a fiery, column." Ellicott presses, against any narrowing of the cloud to the inner room, that "the cloud covered the Tent of Meeting, and that the glory of the Lord filled the Tabernacle" — covering and filling, outer sign and inner glory, the two halves of one indwelling. The Hebrew seals the link to that day with the verb kis·sāh, "covered," the same root the Verifier records in Exodus 40:34.
Verse 16 says it kept being so tāmîḏ — "continually," the sanctuary's own word for the perpetual. Keil & Delitzsch: the covering "was constant, and not merely a phenomenon which appeared when the tabernacle was first erected, and then vanished away." Upon this single verse Alexander Maclaren builds the unit's great meditation on the doubleness of the sign: "The fire was the centre, the cloud was wrapped around it... the latter tempered and veiled the too great brightness for feeble eyes." From this he draws his governing principle — "God hides to make better known the glories of His character" — and the thankful paradox, "We have to be thankful that in the cloud is the fire, and that round the fire is the cloud." This is Maclaren's own homiletical reading, not a lexical claim; but it grows honestly out of the Hebrew, which names only ‘ānān (cloud) by day and ’ēš (fire) by night — one body, two faces. Ellicott keeps the philology in view: "It was the same cloud which was ‘alway’ over the Tabernacle," and the Pulpit Commentary draws the needed distinction — this outer cloud was "not transitory, like the glory-cloud within the tabernacle (Exodus 40:35)... but permanent."
Now the cloud moves, and the Hebrew gives it a mouth. The march is ū·lə·p̄î he·‘ā·nān (v.17), "according to the mouth of the cloud," and then plainly ‘al-pî Yahweh (v.18), "by the mouth of the LORD" — the same noun peh. Cambridge insists on the literal: "lit. ‘mouth.’ Not only was a sign given by the cloud, but Jehovah used to give an oral command to Moses." Keil & Delitzsch ground the idiom: "As Jehovah was with His people in the cloud, the rising and falling of the cloud was ‘the command of the Lord.’" Here the commentators divide, instructively. Cambridge hears an audible word alongside the visible sign; John Gill denies it — "not that there was any command in form given, or any audible voice heard... but the removal of the cloud was interpretatively the order and command of God." The text itself is silent on the point, and the disagreement is honest. What is not in dispute is the throne-image: JFB — "from it, as a glorious throne, He gave the order." The verb of settling, yiš·kōn (v.17), is the Dwelling-root shâkan: where the cloud tabernacles, the Tabernacle is pitched.
The chapter now turns from spectacle to discipline, and its repetitiveness becomes its argument. Keil & Delitzsch name the purpose: the elaboration "is intended to bring out the importance of the fact, and to awaken the consciousness not only of the absolute dependence of Israel upon the guidance of Jehovah, but also of the gracious care of their God." The hardest case comes first — the cloud ’ârak, "prolongs" its stay yā·mîm rab·bîm, "many days" (v.19) — and the people's stillness is reckoned a sacred duty: wə·šā·mə·rū... miš·me·reṯ Yahweh, "they kept the charge of the LORD." Ellicott notes this is priestly vocabulary — "the same expression is used of Aaron and his sons in Leviticus 8:35." Poole feels the cost: "though it were long in one place, which was tedious to them, who desired to change places, and to make haste to Canaan, yet they obeyed God herein against their own inclinations." JFB diagnoses the temptation precisely — "A desert life has its attractions, and constant movements create a passionate love of change." Then the casuistry: wə·yêš ’ă·šer, "and sometimes it was that" (vv.20-21) — a few days, a single night, then "two days, a month, or days" (v.22). Ellicott recovers the sense — "And sometimes... there were times or occasions in which" — and infers from the night-marches that "there must have been sentinels constantly watching by night as well as by day." The span yā·mîm in v.22 is left deliberately open: Barnes reads "idiomatically a year," Cambridge only "an indefinite period longer than a month." Duration is God's to fix; readiness is Israel's to keep.
The final verse gathers the refrain and seals it. Three times pî Yahweh sounds — "by the mouth of the LORD" they camped, set out, kept charge — and then the one verb that breaks the chapter's frequentative pattern: šā·mā·rū, a completed perfect. Cambridge caught the grammar at v.15: "the verbs throughout the rest of the chapter are frequentative, with the exception of ‘they kept’ in Numbers 9:23." After verse on verse of habitual action, the single perfect renders a finished verdict — the charge was kept. The closing idiom pairs pî (mouth) with bə·yaḏ Mōšeh ("by the hand of Moses"): the cloud is Yahweh's mouth, Moses His hand. Gill joins them — "they kept the charge of the Lord, at the commandment of the Lord by the hand of Moses... as it was made known unto them by the ministry and means of Moses." Cambridge states the whole unit's theology in a line: the cloud "was the visible counterpart outside the sanctuary of the ‘Glory,’ the manifestation of the divine presence within."
Read under Sola Scriptura and tested by the rest of the canon, this passage is the Old Testament's most patient portrait of guidance as the daily surrender of one's own timetable. It is striking how little it asks Israel to do: the whole chapter records no battle, no work, no journey of their own devising — only watching, breaking camp, pitching camp, and waiting. And yet the text calls this keeping the charge of the LORD (mišmeret Yahweh, vv.19, 23), the same phrase used of priests at their posts. The Hebrew presses two images that interpret each other: the cloud has a mouth (vv.17-18, 20, 23), and Moses has a hand (v.23). God speaks by a silent sign and administers by a human mediator; obedience means trusting both the visible providence and the ordained word together. The hardest demand is not the marching but the staying — when the cloud prolonged its rest "many days" (v.19), the people who "desired to make haste to Canaan" (Poole) had to hold. My fallible reading: this chapter teaches that the deepest test of faith is not whether we will move when God says move, but whether we will wait when God says wait — that there is, as Matthew Henry put it, "no time lost, while we are waiting God's time." The duration is hidden on purpose (the open-ended yāmîm of v.22); we are kept, as Henry says, "at uncertainty" so that we may be "always ready to remove at the command of the Lord." Whether the cloud's guidance is fulfilled in the Spirit who leads the children of God (a step the commentators take, but one the Hebrew text cannot itself prove), this much the passage establishes on its own ground: the people of God are a people who go and stop at the mouth of God, and reckon the waiting itself as worship.
The cloud's harder lesson was never "march" but "wait" — to count the standing-still itself as kept charge. (a reader's line, not Scripture)
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
Numbers 9:15 is the explicit resumption of Exodus 40:34-38, the day the cloud first "covered the Tent of Meeting, and the glory of the LORD filled the tabernacle." Keil & Delitzsch say so outright: "This cloud had come down upon the dwelling when the tabernacle was erected... In Numbers 9:15 the historian refers to this fact." The Verifier records the shared lexemes for the closest verse, Exodus 40:34: ‘ānān (cloud, 80 vv), mishkān (dwelling, 129 vv), kâsâh (to cover, 149 vv), and ’ōhel (tent, 315 vv) — the covering-verb kâsâh being the load-bearing echo. The continuation in Exodus 40:36-38 (cloud taken up = journey; cloud resting = halt) is the very rule Numbers 9 expands; Cambridge calls our unit "an expansion of Exodus 40:36-38." The frequencies are moderate, so the link is structural/thematic — a deliberate reuse of a settled formula — not a rare-word quotation.
Exodus 40:34 · Exodus 40:35 · Exodus 40:36 · Exodus 40:37 · Exodus 40:38
basis: Verifier (Numbers 9:15 ↔ Exodus 40:34): shared lexemes H6051 ʻânân (80 vv), H4908 mishkân (129 vv), H3680 kâçâh (149 vv), H168 ʼôhel (315 vv); the covering-verb kâçâh and the explicit cross-reference in K&D ground the link, but the moderate frequencies make it a shared formula rather than a rare-word quotation
The two-faced cloud is not new in Numbers 9; it first appeared at the departure from Egypt. Albert Barnes: "The phenomenon first appeared at the Exodus itself, Exodus 13:21-22." The Verifier records the shared lexemes between Numbers 9:15 and Exodus 13:21 / 13:22 — ‘ānān (cloud, 80 vv) and ’ēš (fire, 346 vv) — the same cloud-and-fire pairing. The motif recurs across the canon with the identical word-pair: Nehemiah 9:12 ("a pillar of cloud... a pillar of fire"), Isaiah 4:5 ("a cloud and smoke by day, and the shining of a flaming fire by night"), both cited by Ellicott at v.15, and Exodus 14:19-20. Because ’ēš is a very common word (346 vv) and the link is a shared image rather than a unique phrase, this is structural/thematic, not verbal.
Exodus 13:21 · Exodus 13:22 · Exodus 14:19 · Nehemiah 9:12 · Isaiah 4:5
basis: Verifier (Numbers 9:15 ↔ Exodus 13:21, Nehemiah 9:12, Isaiah 4:5): shared lexemes H6051 ʻânân (80 vv) + H784 ʼêsh (346 vv); ʼêsh is high-frequency and the connection is the shared cloud-by-day / fire-by-night image, so thematic rather than verbal
The rule stated in Numbers 9:17-23 is enacted in the very next chapter, when "in the second year, in the second month, on the twentieth day... the cloud was taken up from over the tabernacle of the testimony" (Numbers 10:11) and Israel set out for the first time. The Verifier records the shared lexemes between Numbers 9:15 and Numbers 10:11 — ‘ânân (cloud, 80 vv), mishkān (dwelling, 129 vv), and the comparatively rare ‘êḏûth (testimony, 59 vv) — the testimony-word being the tightest link, since "tabernacle of the testimony" is the distinctive name shared by both verses. Numbers 10:12, 34 carry the same cloud-vocabulary onward into the first march. The link is structural — the same institution, the same names — confirmed by the Verifier but not a rare-word quotation.
Numbers 10:11 · Numbers 10:12 · Numbers 10:34
basis: Verifier (Numbers 9:15 ↔ Numbers 10:11): shared lexemes H5715 ʻêdûwth (59 vv), H6051 ʻânân (80 vv), H4908 mishkân (129 vv); the shared distinctive name 'tabernacle/tent of the testimony' (ʻêdûwth, the least common of the three) ties chapter 9's rule to its first enactment in chapter 10 — structural continuity of one institution
The wilderness cloud became a fixed memory of Israel's worship, and the commentators of this unit reach for the same two Psalms. Ellicott cites Psalm 78:14 ("In the day-time also He led them with a cloud, and all the night with a light of fire") and the JFB/Poole note cites Psalm 105:39 ("He spread a cloud for a covering; and fire to give light in the night"). Benson adds that the wonder "is mentioned long after by David, Psalm 105:39." These are not verses within this Hebrew unit, so no Verifier lexeme-basis is computed for them; the connection is the commentators' own canonical cross-citation, the wilderness cloud recalled as the paradigm of God's guidance and covering. Tiered structural/thematic on that ground, and flagged as commentator-sourced rather than tool-confirmed.
Psalm 78:14 · Psalm 105:39
basis: Commentator cross-citation (Ellicott, JFB, Poole, Benson at vv.15, 21): the cloud-and-fire guidance recalled in Psalm 78:14 and Psalm 105:39; these verses lie outside the unit so no Verifier shared-Strong's basis is computed — the link is the recorded canonical citation of the commentators, hence thematic, not a tool-confirmed verbal link
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
The New Testament reads the wilderness cloud christologically. Paul writes that the fathers "were all under the cloud, and all passed through the sea... and were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea" (1 Corinthians 10:1-2), and concludes "that Rock was Christ" (10:4) — the guiding, covering presence identified with the pre-incarnate Son. Ellicott, commenting on v.17, already reads the cloud as "a striking type and pattern to the Christian Church, and teaching it both collectively and individually to seek and to follow the guidance of its Divine Head." This is the widely-held reading of the cloud as a figure of Christ's leading presence. Because it crosses Testaments — a Hebrew text read through a Greek one — it cannot rest on a shared Strong's number; it is offered as a typological/figural reading argued by Paul and the commentators, not a verbal link.
1 Corinthians 10:1 · 1 Corinthians 10:2 · 1 Corinthians 10:4
Alexander Maclaren draws the unit's most explicit Christ-figure from the doubleness of the pillar. The fire within and the cloud around, he says, "reappears in both elements in Christ, but combined in new proportions, so as that ‘the veil, that is to say, His flesh,’ is thinned to transparency and all aglow with the indwelling lustre of manifest Deity" — echoing Hebrews 10:20 ("the veil, that is to say, his flesh") and John 1:14 (the Word "tabernacled" — eskēnōsen — among us). He hears Christ Himself laying hold of the symbol: "‘I am the Light of the world. He that followeth Me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life’" (John 8:12), and gathers it into "‘He that hath seen Christ hath seen the Father’" (cf. John 14:9). The reading is a figural synthesis — the visible-cloud-veiling-invisible-fire as a type of incarnate glory veiled in flesh; as a cross-Testament link it shares no Strong's lexeme and is presented as typology, not quotation. There is, however, a real conceptual bridge in the unit's own wordplay: the cloud "dwells" (yiš·kōn, shâkan, vv.17-18, 22) over the "Dwelling" (mishkān, same root), and John 1:14 says the Word "tabernacled" (eskēnōsen) among us — the Greek verb rendering the very tent-pitching idea that shâkan / mishkān carry. This is a translational/conceptual resonance, not a Strong's-number link (Hebrew and Greek lexicons cannot share a number), so it stays typological. The application of "following the pillar" to following Christ is widely held; Maclaren's precise mapping of cloud-and-fire onto flesh-and-Deity is his own, more novel, contribution.
John 1:14 · John 8:12 · Hebrews 10:20 · John 14:9
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 is a Hebrew-only unit, so every inter-verse and intra-Testament thread basis rests on shared Strong's lexemes computed by the Verifier. The key lexemes recur so heavily within the unit (‘ānān, cloud, in 80 vv; mishkān, dwelling, in 129 vv) that none of them is rare enough to license a "verbal / quotation" tier; the strongest single link, to Exodus 40:34, rides on the covering-verb kâsâh and the explicit cross-reference in Keil & Delitzsch, but I have deliberately kept it structural/thematic and under-claimed throughout. The tightest lexical tie within the candidate set is the testimony-word ‘êḏûth (59 vv) shared with Numbers 10:11, which still falls short of a rare-word quotation.
The two Psalm references (78:14, 105:39) are not verses within this unit, so the Verifier computed no shared-Strong's basis for them; that thread is therefore grounded in the commentators' own canonical cross-citation (Ellicott, JFB, Poole, Benson) and flagged as such, not as a tool-confirmed link. The Joshua 1:5 → Hebrews 13:5 rule does not apply here — this unit is Numbers 9:15-23 and contains no such verse.
Both Christ readings are cross-Testament (Hebrew↔Greek) and so cannot share a Strong's number; neither is tiered "verbal" and neither is a quotation claim. The first (the cloud as Christ the guide, from 1 Corinthians 10) is the long-standing, widely-held reading, anticipated by Ellicott's own "type and pattern to the Christian Church." The second is Maclaren's figural mapping of fire-veiled-in-cloud onto deity-veiled-in-flesh; the broad type (following the pillar = following Christ) is widely held, but the precise correspondence is Maclaren's, and I have marked it novel and to be tested.
On the voices: Matthew Henry's single block comment on 9:15-23 necessarily recurs across the verse range, so I have featured different sentences of it at v.15 ("visible sign and symbol") and v.23 ("through Christ, to everlasting peace") and otherwise prioritized verse-specific authors. Alexander Maclaren's long sermon attaches to v.16; I have drawn distinct, non-overlapping excerpts from it for the v.16 voice and for the second Christ reading. Where a commentator's note quotes Hebrew or Greek (the Pulpit's וְיֵשׁ אֲשֶׁר at v.20, K&D's העדת לאהל משׁכּן at v.15), those characters are reproduced verbatim as supplied, including BibleHub's transliteration conventions. To broaden the chorus I have now also featured Albert Barnes at v.15 (the Exodus-13 dating and his narrower view of the cloud's extent, against Ellicott) and the Geneva Study Bible's marginal gloss at v.23 ("by the hand of Moses" = "under the charge and government of Moses"); Geneva's other notes in this unit are bare AV-text repetition and so were not featured. Every featured voice is a contiguous, unaltered substring of the raw commentary provided for that verse.
✦ = 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)