Text -- Numbers 27:3 (NET)
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Num 27:3
Wesley: Num 27:3 - -- For his own personal sins. It was a truth, and that believed by the Jews that death was a punishment for mens own sins.
For his own personal sins. It was a truth, and that believed by the Jews that death was a punishment for mens own sins.
JFB: Num 27:3 - -- This declaration might be necessary because his death might have occurred about the time of that rebellion; and especially because, as the children of...
This declaration might be necessary because his death might have occurred about the time of that rebellion; and especially because, as the children of these conspirators were involved along with their fathers in the awful punishment, their plea appeared the more proper and forcible that their father did not die for any cause that doomed his family to lose their lives or their inheritance.
That is, by the common law of mortality to which men, through sin, are subject.
Calvin -> Num 27:3
Calvin: Num 27:3 - -- 3.Our father died in the wilderness The plea they allege is no contemptible one, i.e., that their father died after God had called His people to th...
3.Our father died in the wilderness The plea they allege is no contemptible one, i.e., that their father died after God had called His people to the immediate possession of the promised land; for, if the question had been carried back to an earlier period, it might have originated many quarrels. This restriction with respect to time, therefore, aided their cause. In the second place, they plead that their father had committed no crime whereby he might have been excepted from the general allotment of the land; for in the conspiracy of Dathan and Abiram, they include by synecdoche, in my opinion, the other sins, whose punishment affected the posterity of the criminals. His private sin is, therefore, contrasted with public ignominy; for so I interpret what they say of his having “died in his own sin.” And surely it is mere childish nonsense which the Jews 199 affirm of his having been the man who gathered sticks on the Sabbath-day, or one of the number of those who were slain by the bite of the serpents; and it is unnatural, too, to refer it to the curse under which the whole human race is laid. They distinguish, then, his private sin from any public crime, which would have caused him to deserve to be disinherited, lest the condition of their father should be worse than that of any other person. At the same time, they hold fast to the principle which is dictated to us by the common feelings of religion, that death, as being the curse of God, is the wages of sin.
TSK -> Num 27:3
TSK: Num 27:3 - -- Rosenmuller translates this verse as follows: ""Our father died in the wilderness, leaving no sons; nor was he among those who rebelled against the L...
Rosenmuller translates this verse as follows: ""Our father died in the wilderness, leaving no sons; nor was he among those who rebelled against the Lord with Korah, who died on account of his own sin.""Professor Dathe, however, understands by ""his own sin,""that sin which was common to all the Israelites, who died on account of their unbelief.
died in the : Num 14:35, Num 26:64, Num 26:65
in the company : Num 16:1-3, Num 16:19, Num 16:32-35, Num 16:49, Num 26:9, Num 26:10
died in his : Eze 18:4; Joh 8:21, Joh 8:24; Rom 5:12, Rom 5:21, Rom 6:23
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Num 27:3
Barnes: Num 27:3 - -- But died in his own sin - i. e., perished under the general sentence of exclusion from the land of promise passed on all the older generation, ...
But died in his own sin - i. e., perished under the general sentence of exclusion from the land of promise passed on all the older generation, but limited to that generation alone. By virtue of the declaration in Num 14:31 the daughters of Zelophehad claim that their father’ s sin should not be visited upon them.
Poole -> Num 27:3
Poole: Num 27:3 - -- He was not in the company of Korah nor in any other rebellion of the people, which must be understood, because all of them are opposed to
his own si...
He was not in the company of Korah nor in any other rebellion of the people, which must be understood, because all of them are opposed to
his own sin in which alone he is said to die. But they mention this only either,
1. Because he might possibly be accused to be guilty of this. Or,
2. Because he, being an eminent person, might be thought guilty of that rather than of any other, because the great and famous men were more concerned in that rebellion than others. Or,
3. To gain the favour of Moses, against whom that rebellion was more particularly directed, and more desperately prosecuted than any other. Or,
4. Because peradventure he died about that time, and therefore might be presumed guilty of that crime. Or rather,
5. Because that sin, and, as it may seem, that only of all the sins committed in the wilderness, was of such a flagitious nature, that God thought fit to extend the punishment not only to the persons of those rebels, but also to their children and families, Num 16:27,32 , as was usual in like cases, as Deu 13:15 Jos 7:24 ; whence it is noted as a singular privilege granted to the children of Korah , that they died not , Num 26:11 , whereas the children of their confederates died with them. And this makes their argument here more proper and powerful, that he did not die in that sin for which his posterity were to be cut off, and to lose either their lives or their inheritances, and therefore their claim was more just.
In his own sin either,
1. For that sin mentioned Nu 14 , which they call his own sin , in opposition not to the rest of the people, for it was a common sin, but to his children, i.e. the sin for which he alone was to suffer in his person and not in his posterity, as God had appointed, Num 14:33 . Or rather,
2. For his own personal sins; for,
1. These were more properly his own sins .
2. It was a truth, and that believed by the Jews, that death was a punishment for men’ s own sins.
3. The punishment of that common sin was not directly and properly death, but exclusion from the land of Canaan, and death only by way of consequence upon that.
Haydock -> Num 27:3
Haydock: Num 27:3 - -- Father, the portion which would have been assigned him; that so those whom we may marry, may take the inheritance, under the name of Salphaad, which ...
Father, the portion which would have been assigned him; that so those whom we may marry, may take the inheritance, under the name of Salphaad, which some of the children may also bear. (Menochius)
Gill -> Num 27:3
Gill: Num 27:3 - -- Our father died in the wilderness,.... As all the generation of the children of Israel did, that came out of Egypt, who were twenty years old and upwa...
Our father died in the wilderness,.... As all the generation of the children of Israel did, that came out of Egypt, who were twenty years old and upwards, excepting Joshua and Caleb:
and he was not in the company of them that gathered themselves together against the Lord in the company of Korah; which is observed, not so much to obtain the favour and good will of Moses as to clear the memory of their father from any reproach upon it, he dying in the wilderness; and chiefly to show that the claim of his posterity to a share in the land was not forfeited, he not being in that rebellion, nor in any other; so that he and his were never under any attainder:
but died in his own sin; which though common to all men, every man has his own peculiar way of sinning, and is himself only answerable for it, Isa 53:6 he sinned alone, had no partner or confederate, whom he had drawn into any notorious and public sin, as mutiny, &c. to the prejudice of the state, and the rulers in it; so the Targum of Jonathan adds,"and he did not cause others to sin,''so Jarchi; some take him to be the sabbath breaker, Num 15:32, others that he was one of those that went up the hill, Num 14:44, most likely his sin was that of unbelief, disbelieving the spies that brought the good report of the land, and giving credit to those that brought an ill report of it; and so with the rest of the people murmured, for which his carcass, with others, fell in the wilderness, and entered not into the good land, through unbelief: a sin not punished in their children:
and had no sons. which was the reason of this application.