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Text -- Numbers 31:3 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Num 31:3
Wesley: Num 31:3 - -- For the affront which they offered to God, by their own idolatry and lewdness, and by seducing God's people into rebellion against him. God's great ca...
For the affront which they offered to God, by their own idolatry and lewdness, and by seducing God's people into rebellion against him. God's great care was to avenge the Israelites, Num 31:2, and Moses's chief desire was to avenge God rather than himself or the people.
JFB -> Num 31:3
JFB: Num 31:3 - -- This order was issued but a short time before the death of Moses. The announcement to him of that approaching event [Num 31:2] seems to have accelerat...
This order was issued but a short time before the death of Moses. The announcement to him of that approaching event [Num 31:2] seems to have accelerated, rather than retarded, his warlike preparations.
Clarke -> Num 31:3
Clarke: Num 31:3 - -- Avenge the Lord of Midian - It was God’ s quarrel, not their own, that they were now to take up. These people were idolaters; idolatry is an of...
Avenge the Lord of Midian - It was God’ s quarrel, not their own, that they were now to take up. These people were idolaters; idolatry is an offense against God; the civil power has no authority to meddle with what belongs to Him, without especial directions, certified in the most unequivocal way. Private revenge, extension of territory, love of plunder, were to have no place in this business; the Lord is to be avenged; and through Him the children of Israel, (Num 31:2), because their souls as well as their bodies had been well nigh ruined by their idolatry.
Calvin -> Num 31:3
Calvin: Num 31:3 - -- 3.And Moses spake unto the people There is no doubt but that Moses delivered the commands which he had received from God; although, therefore, it is ...
3.And Moses spake unto the people There is no doubt but that Moses delivered the commands which he had received from God; although, therefore, it is stated 205 that only ten thousand went forth to the war, yet the facts themselves demonstrate that the number, as well as the mode of warfare, was prescribed by God. And assuredly it would have been inconsiderate of Moses to attack so great a people with so small a band; and thus he would have deservedly incurred the penalty of his rashness, if he had attempted it of his own accord; still, when God’s command had preceded, he happily concluded the matter, which had been properly and rightly undertaken. Nor can it be questioned but that God desired by this test to prove the faith of His people. For, according to human apprehension, it was folly to endanger themselves without cause; and the objection was obvious that it was by no means advisable, when six hundred thousand men were at hand, to restrict to so few the office of waging such a perilous war. Just, therefore, as God afterwards destroyed the great army of the Midianites by only four hundred men under the guidance of Gideon, so also under the hand of Moses He sent forth only a single thousand from every tribe for the destruction of that nation. The tribe of Zebulon alone could have furnished five times as many soldiers as God took from the whole people. Thus, then, they proved their faith, when in reliance on the aid of God alone, they did not hesitate boldly to rush forward against their enemies. And the event itself more fully illustrated God’s grace than as if they had fought with all their forces, for then it would have been believed that the Midianites were overwhelmed by the infinite multitude of men. As, therefore, the people testified their obedience by prompt compliance, so they experienced in the result that there is nothing better than to submit ourselves to God, and to leave the prospect of success so completely in His hand, as that our confidence may depend solely upon him.
Lest either of the tribes should boast itself against the others, they were each of them commanded to give the same number of soldiers. Moreover, Phinehas was sent with them, not so much that he might engage personally with the enemy, or be their General, as that he might rule and control their minds as God’s messenger and interpreter. They were to be kept in the fear of God, and to be elevated to the expectation of victory, and therefore God’s priest was their leader, so that the war might be a holy one; and the same was the object of the silver trumpets, with which, in obedience to the Lw, as we have elsewhere seen, 206 the Levites were accustomed to sound, that it might be manifest that their battles were not fought without the will and authority of heaven. Amongst “the holy instruments,” some commentators, in my opinion rightly, include the Ark of the Covenant.
TSK -> Num 31:3
TSK: Num 31:3 - -- Arm some : Exo 17:9-13
avenge the Lord : It was God’ s quarrel, not their own, that they were now to take up. These people were idolaters, and h...
Arm some : Exo 17:9-13
avenge the Lord : It was God’ s quarrel, not their own, that they were now to take up. These people were idolaters, and had seduced the Israelites to practise the same abominations. Idolatry is an offence against God; and the civil power has no authority to meddle with what belongs to Him, without especial directions, certified, as in this case, in the most unequivocal manner. Private revenge, ambition, or avarice were to have no place in this business: Jehovah is to be avenged; and through Him, the children of Israel (Num 31:2), because they were nearly ruined by their idolatries. If Jehovah, instead of punishing sinners by earthquakes, pestilence, or famine,is pleased expressly to command any person or people to avenge his cause, this commission justifies, nay sanctifies, war, massacre, or devastation. Though none at present shew such a commission, yet the Israelites could; and it is therefore absurd to censure Moses, Joshua, and Israel, for the dreadful slaughter made by them. God himself passed sentence of condemnation, and employed them merely as ministers of his vengeance; and unless it could be proved that the criminals did not deserve their doom, or that God had no right to punish his rebellious creatures, such objectors only shew their enmity to God by becoming the unsolicited advocates of his enemies. Num 25:11, Num 25:13; Exo 17:16; Lev 26:25; Jdg 5:2, Jdg 5:23; 2Ki 9:7, 2Ki 10:30; Jer 46:10; Jer 50:28

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Num 31:3
Barnes: Num 31:3 - -- Avenge the Lord of Midian - The war against the Midianites was no ordinary war. It was indeed less a war than the execution of a divine sentenc...
Avenge the Lord of Midian - The war against the Midianites was no ordinary war. It was indeed less a war than the execution of a divine sentence against a most guilty people.
Doubtless there were many among the Midianites who were personally guiltless as regards Israel. But the rulers deliberately adopted the counsel of Balaam against Israel, and their behests had been but too readily obeyed by their subjects. The sin therefore was national, and the retribution could be no less so.
But the commission of the Israelites in the text must not be conceived as a general license to slay. They had no discretion to kill or to spare. They were bidden to exterminate without mercy, and brought back to their task Num 31:14 when they showed signs of flinching from it. They had no alternarive in this and similar matters except to fulfill the commands of God; an awful but doubtless salutary manifestation, as was afterward the slaughter of the Canaanites, of God’ s wrath against sin; and a type of the future extermination of sin and sinners from His kingdom.
Poole -> Num 31:3
Poole: Num 31:3 - -- For the affront and injury which they offered to God, partly by their own idolatry and lewdness, and partly by seducing God’ s people into rebe...
For the affront and injury which they offered to God, partly by their own idolatry and lewdness, and partly by seducing God’ s people into rebellion against him. God’ s great care was to
avenge the Israelites Num 31:2 , and Moses’ s chief desire was to avenge God rather than himself or the people. Withal he doth hereby insinuate, that God and his people have the same cause, the same friends and enemies.
Gill -> Num 31:3
Gill: Num 31:3 - -- And Moses spake unto the people, saying,.... In obedience to the divine command; this must be supposed to be spoken to the heads or princes of the tri...
And Moses spake unto the people, saying,.... In obedience to the divine command; this must be supposed to be spoken to the heads or princes of the tribes:
arm some of yourselves unto the war: not the whole body of the militia, 600,000 men and upwards, only some of them, and these choice and select men; and, according to the Jewish writers, good men, who, detesting the sins of lewdness and idolatry, would more strictly and severely avenge themselves on the Midianites for drawing their brethren into those sins, whereby they fell; and so Jarchi calls them righteous men:
and let them go against the Midianites, and avenge the Lord of Midian: what the Lord calls the vengeance of the Israelites, Moses calls the vengeance of the Lord, because they were the Lord's people, and his cause and theirs the same: and because the sins they were drawn into by the Midianites were not only against themselves, and to their prejudice, but against the Lord and to the dishonour of his name.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Num 31:1-54
TSK Synopsis: Num 31:1-54 - --1 The Midianites are spoiled, and Balaam slain.13 Moses is wroth with the officers, for saving the women alive.19 How the soldiers, with their captive...
MHCC -> Num 31:1-6
MHCC: Num 31:1-6 - --All who, without commission from God, dare to execute private revenge, and who, from ambition, covetousness, or resentment, wage war and desolate king...
Matthew Henry -> Num 31:1-6
Matthew Henry: Num 31:1-6 - -- Here, I. The Lord of hosts gives orders to Moses to make war upon the Midianites, and his commission no doubt justified this war, though it will not...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Num 31:3-6
Keil-Delitzsch: Num 31:3-6 - --
To carry out this revenge, Moses had 1000 men of each tribe delivered ( ימּסרוּ , see at Num 31:16) from the families ( alaphim , see Num 1:16...
Constable: Num 26:1--36:13 - --II. Prospects of the younger generation in the land chs. 26--36
The focus of Numbers now changes from the older ...

Constable: Num 26:1--32:42 - --A. Preparations for entering the Promised Land from the east chs. 26-32
The first section of this second...





