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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Num 10:36
Wesley: Num 10:36 - -- Or, give rest, that is, a safe and quiet place, free from enemies and dangers.
Or, give rest, that is, a safe and quiet place, free from enemies and dangers.
JFB -> Num 10:35-36
JFB: Num 10:35-36 - -- Moses, as the organ of the people, uttered an appropriate prayer both at the commencement and the end of each journey. Thus all the journeys were sanc...
Moses, as the organ of the people, uttered an appropriate prayer both at the commencement and the end of each journey. Thus all the journeys were sanctified by devotion; and so should our prayer be, "If thy presence go not with us, carry us not hence" [Exo 33:15].
Clarke: Num 10:35 - -- Rise up, Lord, and let thine enemies be scattered - If God did not arise in this way and scatter his enemies, there could be no hope that Israel cou...
Rise up, Lord, and let thine enemies be scattered - If God did not arise in this way and scatter his enemies, there could be no hope that Israel could get safely through the wilderness. God must go first, if Israel would wish to follow in safety.

Clarke: Num 10:36 - -- Return, O Lord, unto the many thousands of Israel - These were the words spoken by Moses, at the moment the divisions halted in order to pitch their...
Return, O Lord, unto the many thousands of Israel - These were the words spoken by Moses, at the moment the divisions halted in order to pitch their tents. In reference to this subject, and the history with which it is connected, the 68th Psalm seems to have been composed, though applied by David to the bringing the ark from Kirjath-jearim to Jerusalem. See the notes on Psalm 68 (note). Many thousands, literally the ten thousand thousands. Unless the ark went with them, and the cloud of the Divine glory with it, they could have neither direction nor safety; unless the ark rested with them, and the cloud of glory with it, they could have neither rest nor comfort. How necessary are the word of God and the Spirit of God for the direction, comfort, and defense of every genuine follower of Christ! Reader, pray to God that thou mayest have both with thee through all the wilderness, through all the changes and chances of this mortal life: if thou be guided by his counsel, thou shalt be at last received into his glory.
Calvin: Num 10:35 - -- 35.And it came to pass, when the ark set forward Since their journey was by no means a peaceful one, but the attack of enemies was constantly to be d...
35.And it came to pass, when the ark set forward Since their journey was by no means a peaceful one, but the attack of enemies was constantly to be dreaded, it was needful to beseech God that He would go forth as if prepared for battle. Thus, too, did Moses support their courage, lest any more immediate cause for terror should render them sluggish and inert. It is, then, as if he had prayed thus: O Lord, not only show us the way, but open it to us also by the power of thy hand in the destruction of the enemies. He calls them not the enemies of the people but of God, in order that the Israelites might be assured that they fought under His auspices; for thus might both a more certain victory be expected, since the righteous God, who avenges iniquity, was defending His own cause; and also, it was no slight matter of consolation and rejoicing, when the people heard, that whosoever should arise to harass them unjustly were also the enemies of God, since He will protect his people as the apple of His eye. Therefore has the Prophet borrowed this passage, in order to arm the Church with confidence, and to maintain it in cheerfulness under the violent assaults of its enemies. (Psa 68:1.) Further, the analogy and similitude between the visible sign, and the thing signified, must be observed; for Moses was not so foolish as to address the Ark in these words; he only asked God to prove effectually that the Ark was a lively image of His power and glory.

Calvin: Num 10:36 - -- 36.And when it rested, he said, Return, O Lord By thus praying he also exhorts the people to be patient, lest the weariness which arose from the dela...
36.And when it rested, he said, Return, O Lord By thus praying he also exhorts the people to be patient, lest the weariness which arose from the delay should beget indignation. Otherwise it would have been annoying that the time of their journeying should be protracted, so that they would arrive the later at their rest. And we see, indeed, how their minds were exasperated, as if a slower progress was a kind of disappointment. In order, therefore, to correct this impatience, Moses reminds them that their halts were advantageous to them, so that God, dwelling at home like the father of a family, might manifest His care of them; for the allusion is to men who Lake advantage of a time of repose and release from other business, to occupy themselves more un-restrainedly in paying attention to their own family.

TSK: Num 10:36 - -- O Lord : Psa 90:13-17
many thousands of Israel : Heb. ten thousand thousands, Gen 24:60; Deu 1:10
O Lord : Psa 90:13-17
many thousands of Israel : Heb. ten thousand thousands, Gen 24:60; Deu 1:10

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Num 10:35-36
Barnes: Num 10:35-36 - -- Each forward movement and each rest of the ark was made to bear a sacramental character. The one betokened the going forth of God against His enemie...
Each forward movement and each rest of the ark was made to bear a sacramental character. The one betokened the going forth of God against His enemies; the other, His gathering of His own people to Himself: the one was the pledge of victory, the other the earnest of repose.
Num 10:36 may be translated: "Restore"(i. e. to the land which their fathers sojourned in), "O Lord, the ten thousands of the thousands of Israel."(Compare Psa 85:4, where the verb in the Hebrew is the same.)
Poole -> Num 10:36
Or, give rest , i.e. a safe and quiet place, from enemies and dangers.
Haydock -> Num 10:36
Haydock: Num 10:36 - -- Host. Septuagint, "Bring, or turn back, (Haydock) O Lord, the thousands, the myriads in Israel." Some give the same sense to the Hebrew. (Calmet) ...
Host. Septuagint, "Bring, or turn back, (Haydock) O Lord, the thousands, the myriads in Israel." Some give the same sense to the Hebrew. (Calmet) ---
Prayers are composed, not only for the obtaining of good in general, but also for particular purposes. (Worthington)
Gill: Num 10:35 - -- And it came to pass, when the ark set forward,.... Carried by the Kohathites, Num 10:21,
that Moses said; in prayer, as both the Targums of Jonatha...
And it came to pass, when the ark set forward,.... Carried by the Kohathites, Num 10:21,
that Moses said; in prayer, as both the Targums of Jonathan and Jerusalem express it; and it was a prayer of faith, and prophetic of what would be done, and might serve greatly to encourage and animate the children of Israel in their journeys; for the following prayer was put up not only at this time, but at all times when the ark set forward; and so Ben Gersom says, it was the custom of Moses, at whatsoever time the ark was moved, to pray as follows:
rise up, Lord, and let thine enemies be scattered; the Jerusalem Targum is,"rise up now, O Word of the Lord;''and the Targum of Jonathan,"be revealed now, O Word of the Lord;''the essential Word of God, the Messiah, to whom these words may be applied; either to his incarnation and manifestation in the flesh, his end in, which was to destroy all his and his people's enemies, particularly the devil and his works, Heb 2:14; or to his resurrection from the dead, these words standing at the head of a prophecy of his ascension to heaven, which supposes his resurrection from the dead, Psa 68:1; at the death of Christ all the spiritual enemies of his people were defeated, scattered, confounded, and conquered; Satan and his principalities were spoiled, sin was made an end of, death was abolished, and the world overcome; at his resurrection the keepers of the sepulchre fled; and after his ascension wrath came upon the Jewish nation, those enemies of his, that would not have him to rule over them, and they were scattered about on the face of the whole earth, as they are to this day:
and let them that hate thee flee before thee; the same petition expressed in different words, but to the same sense; enemies, and those that hate the Lord, are the same, as their defeat, conclusion, and destruction, are signified by their flight and dispersion; and it may be observed, that those who were the enemies and haters of Israel were reckoned the enemies and haters of God himself; as the enemies of Christ's people, and those that hate them, are accounted Christ's enemies, and such that hate him. Perhaps Moses may have a special respect to the Canaanites, whose land was promised unto Israel, and they were going to dispossess them of it, in order to inherit it, and Moses might expect it would be quickly done, at the end of these three days; which brought them to the wilderness of Paran, so near the good land that they sent from thence spies into it, and in all probability they would have then entered the possession of it, had it not been for their complaints and murmurs, and the ill report brought on the good land, on which account they were stopped thirty eight years in the wilderness.

Gill: Num 10:36 - -- And when it passed,.... The ark, and the cloud over it:
he said; Moses stood and prayed, as before, according to the above Targums, in the followin...
And when it passed,.... The ark, and the cloud over it:
he said; Moses stood and prayed, as before, according to the above Targums, in the following manner:
return, O Lord, unto the many thousands of Israel; who were six hundred thousand footmen, besides women and children, Num 11:21; the import of this petition is, that upon the resting of the ark God would take up his abode with them, grant them his presence, and manifest his love, grace, mercy, and goodness unto them; or, as it may be rendered, that he would "return the many thousands of Israel"; that is, to the land which he had sworn to their fathers, as Ben Gersom interprets it; and who observes that the word "return" is used, because of the holy fathers who dwelt in the land of Israel; or else, as the same writer further observes, the sense of the petition is, that it might be the will of God to turn the thousands of Israel into myriads, or increase and multiply them ten times more than they were; and so the Targum of Jerusalem is,"bless the myriads, and multiply the thousands of the children of Israel.''Perhaps Moses, under a spirit of prophecy, might have a further view, even to the conversion of the Jews in the latter day, when they shall return and seek the true Messiah, and be turned to him, and when all Israel shall be saved.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Num 10:36
NET Notes: Num 10:36 These two formulaic prayers were offered by Moses at the beginning and at the end of the journeys. They prayed for the Lord to fight ahead of the nati...
Geneva Bible -> Num 10:35
Geneva Bible: Num 10:35 And it came to pass, when the ark set forward, that Moses said, ( o ) Rise up, LORD, and let thine enemies be scattered; and let them that hate thee f...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Num 10:1-36
TSK Synopsis: Num 10:1-36 - --1 The use of the silver trumpets.11 The Israelites remove from Sinai to Paran.14 The order of their march.29 Hobab is entreated by Moses not to leave ...
Maclaren -> Num 10:35-36
Maclaren: Num 10:35-36 - --The Hallowing Of Work And Of Rest
And it came to pass, when the ark set forward, that Moses said, Rise Up, Lord, and let Thine enemies be scattered; ...
MHCC -> Num 10:33-36
MHCC: Num 10:33-36 - --Their going out and coming in, gives an example to us to begin and end every day's journey and every day's work with prayer. Here is Moses's prayer wh...
Matthew Henry -> Num 10:29-36
Matthew Henry: Num 10:29-36 - -- Here is, I. An account of what passed between Moses and Hobab, now upon this advance which the camp of Israel made towards Canaan. Some think that H...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Num 10:35-36
Keil-Delitzsch: Num 10:35-36 - --
In Num 10:35 and Num 10:36, the words which Moses was in the habit of uttering, both when the ark removed and when it came to rest again, are given ...
Constable -> Num 1:1--10:36; Num 10:11-36
Constable: Num 1:1--10:36 - --A. Preparations for entering the Promised Land from the south chs. 1-10
The first 10 chapters in Numbers...
