
Text -- Numbers 11:31-35 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Num 11:31 - -- An extraordinary and miraculous wind both for its vehemency and for its effects.
An extraordinary and miraculous wind both for its vehemency and for its effects.

Wesley: Num 11:31 - -- God gave them quails once before, Exo 16:13, but neither in the same quantity, nor with the same design and effect as now.
God gave them quails once before, Exo 16:13, but neither in the same quantity, nor with the same design and effect as now.

Wesley: Num 11:31 - -- Principally from the Red - sea, and both sides of it where, by the reports of ancient Heathen writers, they were then in great numbers, and, no doubt,...
Principally from the Red - sea, and both sides of it where, by the reports of ancient Heathen writers, they were then in great numbers, and, no doubt, were wonderfully increased by God's special providence for this very occasion.

Wesley: Num 11:31 - -- Not as if the quails did cover all the ground two cubits high for a day's journey on each side of the camp, for then there had been no place left wher...
Not as if the quails did cover all the ground two cubits high for a day's journey on each side of the camp, for then there had been no place left where they could spread them all abroad round about the camp; but the meaning is, that the quails came and fell down round about the camp for a whole day's journey on each side of it, and that in all that space they lay here and there in great heaps, which were often two cubits high.

Wesley: Num 11:32 - -- Or rather rose up, which word is often used for beginning to do any business.
Or rather rose up, which word is often used for beginning to do any business.

Wesley: Num 11:32 - -- Some at one time, and some at the other, and some, through greediness or diffidence, at both times.
Some at one time, and some at the other, and some, through greediness or diffidence, at both times.

Wesley: Num 11:32 - -- That is, ten ass loads: which if it seem incredible, you must consider, That the gatherers here were not all the people, which could not be without gr...
That is, ten ass loads: which if it seem incredible, you must consider, That the gatherers here were not all the people, which could not be without great inconveniences, but some on the behalf of all, while the rest were exercised about other necessary things. So the meaning is not, that every Israelite had so much for his share, but that every collector gathered so much for the family, or others by whom he was intrusted. That the people did not gather for their present use only, but for a good while to come, and being greedy and distrustful of God's goodness, it is not strange if they gathered much more than they needed. That the word, rendered homers, may signify heaps, as it doth, Exo 8:14; Jdg 15:16; Hab 3:15, and ten, is often put for many, and so the sense is, that every one gathered several heaps. If yet the number seems incredible, it must be farther known, That Heathen and other authors affirm, in those eastern and southern countries quails are innumerable, so that in one part of Italy, within the compass of five miles, there were taken about an hundred thousand of them every day for a month together. And Atheneus relates, that in Egypt, a country prodigiously populous, they were in such plenty, that all those vast numbers of people could not consume them, but were forced to salt and keep them for future use.

Wesley: Num 11:32 - -- That so they might dry, salt and preserve them for future use, according to what they had seen in Egypt.
That so they might dry, salt and preserve them for future use, according to what they had seen in Egypt.

Heb. cut off, namely from their mouths.

Wesley: Num 11:33 - -- Probably the pestilence. But the sense is, before they had done eating their quails, which lasted for a month. Why did God so sorely punish the people...
Probably the pestilence. But the sense is, before they had done eating their quails, which lasted for a month. Why did God so sorely punish the peoples murmuring for flesh here, when he spared them after the same sin, Exo 16:12. Because this was a far greater sin, and aggravated with worse circumstances; proceeding not from necessity, as that did, when as yet they had no food, but from mere wantonness, when they had Manna constantly given them; committed after large experience of God's care and kindness, after God had pardoned their former sins, and after God had in a solemn and terrible manner made known his laws to them.

Wesley: Num 11:34 - -- hattaavah - Heb. the graves of lust, that is, of the men that lusted, as it here follows. And it notes that the plague did not seize upon all that eat...
hattaavah - Heb. the graves of lust, that is, of the men that lusted, as it here follows. And it notes that the plague did not seize upon all that eat of the quails, for then all had been destroyed, but only upon those who were inordinate both in the desire and use of them.
JFB -> Num 11:31-35; Num 11:31-35; Num 11:31-35; Num 11:32; Num 11:32; Num 11:32; Num 11:33; Num 11:34; Num 11:35
JFB: Num 11:31-35 - -- These migratory birds (see on Exo 16:13) were on their journey from Egypt, when "the wind from the Lord," an east wind (Psa 78:26) forcing them to cha...

JFB: Num 11:31-35 - -- If the journey of an individual is meant, this space might be thirty miles; if the inspired historian referred to the whole host, ten miles would be a...
If the journey of an individual is meant, this space might be thirty miles; if the inspired historian referred to the whole host, ten miles would be as far as they could march in one day in the sandy desert under a vertical sun. Assuming it to be twenty miles this immense cloud of quails (Psa 78:27) covered a space of forty miles in diameter. Others reduce it to sixteen. But it is doubtful whether the measurement be from the center or the extremities of the camp. It is evident, however, that the language describes the countless number of these quails.

JFB: Num 11:31-35 - -- Some have supposed that they fell on the ground above each other to that height--a supposition which would leave a vast quantity useless as food to th...
Some have supposed that they fell on the ground above each other to that height--a supposition which would leave a vast quantity useless as food to the Israelites, who were forbidden to eat any animal that died of itself or from which the blood was not poured out. Others think that, being exhausted with a long flight, they could not fly more than three feet above the earth, and so were easily felled or caught. A more recent explanation applies the phrase, "two cubits high," not to the accumulation of the mass, but to the size of the individual birds. Flocks of large red-legged cranes, three feet high, measuring seven feet from tip to tip, have been frequently seen on the western shores of the Gulf of Akaba, or eastern arm of the Red Sea [STANLEY; SHUBERT].

JFB: Num 11:32 - -- Rose up in eager haste--some at one time, others at another; some, perhaps through avidity, both day and night.
Rose up in eager haste--some at one time, others at another; some, perhaps through avidity, both day and night.

JFB: Num 11:32 - -- Ten asses' loads; or, "homers" may be used indefinitely (as in Exo 8:14; Jdg 15:16); and "ten" for many: so that the phrase "ten homers" is equivalent...
Ten asses' loads; or, "homers" may be used indefinitely (as in Exo 8:14; Jdg 15:16); and "ten" for many: so that the phrase "ten homers" is equivalent to "great heaps." The collectors were probably one or two from each family; and, being distrustful of God's goodness, they gathered not for immediate consumption only, but for future use. In eastern and southern seas, innumerable quails are often seen, which, when weary, fall down, covering every spot on the deck and rigging of vessels; and in Egypt they come in such myriads that the people knock them down with sticks.

JFB: Num 11:32 - -- Salted and dried them for future use, by the simple process to which they had been accustomed in Egypt.
Salted and dried them for future use, by the simple process to which they had been accustomed in Egypt.

JFB: Num 11:33 - -- Literally, "cut off"; that is, before the supply of quails, which lasted a month (Num 11:20), was exhausted. The probability is, that their stomachs, ...
Literally, "cut off"; that is, before the supply of quails, which lasted a month (Num 11:20), was exhausted. The probability is, that their stomachs, having been long inured to manna (a light food), were not prepared for so sudden a change of regimen--a heavy, solid diet of animal food, of which they seem to have partaken to so intemperate a degree as to produce a general surfeit, and fatal consequences. On a former occasion their murmurings for flesh were raised (Exo 16:1-8) because they were in want of food. Here they proceeded, not from necessity, but wanton, lustful desire; and their sin, in the righteous judgment of God, was made to carry its own punishment.

JFB: Num 11:34 - -- Literally, "The graves of lust," or "Those that lusted"; so that the name of the place proves that the mortality was confined to those who had indulge...
Literally, "The graves of lust," or "Those that lusted"; so that the name of the place proves that the mortality was confined to those who had indulged inordinately.

JFB: Num 11:35 - -- The extreme southern station of this route was a watering-place in a spacious plain, now Ain-Haderah.
The extreme southern station of this route was a watering-place in a spacious plain, now Ain-Haderah.
Clarke: Num 11:31 - -- A wind from the Lord - An extraordinary one, not the effect of a natural cause. And brought quails, a bird which in great companies visits Egypt abo...
A wind from the Lord - An extraordinary one, not the effect of a natural cause. And brought quails, a bird which in great companies visits Egypt about the time of the year, March or April, at which the circumstance marked here took place. Mr. Hasselquist, the friend and pupil of the famous Linnaeus, saw many of them about this time of the year, when he was in Egypt. See his Travels, p. 209

Clarke: Num 11:31 - -- Two cubits high upon the face of the earth - We may consider the quails as flying within two cubits of the ground; so that the Israelites could easi...
Two cubits high upon the face of the earth - We may consider the quails as flying within two cubits of the ground; so that the Israelites could easily take as many of them as they wished, while flying within the reach of their hands or their clubs. The common notion is, that the quails were brought round about the camp, and fell there in such multitudes as to lie two feet thick upon the ground; but the Hebrew will not bear this version. The Vulgate has expressed the sense, Volabantque in aere duobus cubitis altitudine super terram . "And they flew in the air, two cubits high above the ground."

Clarke: Num 11:32 - -- The people stood up, etc. - While these immense flocks were flying at this short distance from the ground, fatigued with the strong wind and the dis...
The people stood up, etc. - While these immense flocks were flying at this short distance from the ground, fatigued with the strong wind and the distance they had come, they were easily taken by the people; and as various flocks continued to succeed each other for two days and a night, enough for a month’ s provision might be collected in that time. If the quails had fallen about the tents, there was no need to have stood up two days and a night in gathering them; but if they were on the wing, as the text seems to suppose, it was necessary for them to use dispatch, and avail themselves of the passing of these birds whilst it continued. See Harmer, and see the note on Exo 16:13

Clarke: Num 11:32 - -- And they spread them all abroad - Maillet observes that birds of all kinds come to Egypt for refuge from the cold of a northern winter; and that the...
And they spread them all abroad - Maillet observes that birds of all kinds come to Egypt for refuge from the cold of a northern winter; and that the people catch them, pluck, and bury them in the burning sand for a few minutes, and thus prepare them for use. This is probably what is meant by spreading them all abroad round the camp. Some authors think that the word

Clarke: Num 11:33 - -- The wrath of the Lord was kindled - In what way, and with what effects, we cannot precisely determine. Some heavy judgment fell upon those murmurers...
The wrath of the Lord was kindled - In what way, and with what effects, we cannot precisely determine. Some heavy judgment fell upon those murmurers and complainers, but of what kind the sacred writer says nothing.

Clarke: Num 11:34 - -- Kibroth-hattaavah - The graves of lust; and thus their scandalous crime was perpetuated by the name of the place
1. St. Jude speaks of persons who w...
Kibroth-hattaavah - The graves of lust; and thus their scandalous crime was perpetuated by the name of the place
1. St. Jude speaks of persons who were murmurers and complainers, walking after their own lusts, Jud 1:16, and seems to have this people particularly in view, whom the sacred text calls
2. In no case has God at any time withheld from his meanest followers any of the spiritual or temporal mercies they needed. Were he to call us to travel through a wilderness, he would send us bread from heaven, or cause the wilderness to smile and blossom as the rose. How strange is it that we will neither believe that God has worked, or will work, unless we see him working!
Calvin: Num 11:33 - -- 33.And while the flesh was yet between their teeth Moses does not specify any particular day; but only that God did not wait till satiety had produce...
33.And while the flesh was yet between their teeth Moses does not specify any particular day; but only that God did not wait till satiety had produced disgust, but inflicted the punishment in the midst of their greediness. We may, however, conjecture from what precedes, that time was given them to gorge themselves. From whence their insatiable voracity may be gathered, which prevailed for so many continuous days, and could not be appeased by any quantity of food. God, therefore, allowed them time abundantly sufficient for them to gorge themselves, unless their gluttony was prodigious: and yet punished their intemperance, while the meat was yet in their mouths. They were, then, suddenly surprised in the midst of their guttling; and hence it is said in the Psalm, (Psa 78:30,) “they were not yet estranged from their lust;” just as any glutton might choke himself, by devouring more than his throat could hold. Nor is that at variance with their repletion, of which mention was lately made; for, however the belly may swell with the quantity of its contents, the furious lust of eating is never appeased. But, in order that their punishment might be more manifest, God inflicted it in the very act; nor could any better opportunity have been chosen.

Calvin: Num 11:34 - -- 34.And he called the name of that place Kibroth-hattaavah It was requisite that some memorial of so great a sin should exist, that the sons might not...
34.And he called the name of that place Kibroth-hattaavah It was requisite that some memorial of so great a sin should exist, that the sons might not imitate their fathers. Heretofore God had sustained them with a food both agreeable and wholesome: by longing for unlawful nourishment they were their own poisoners and murderers. Now, such ingratitude was deservedly to be detested by their posterity; and therefore the name was given to the place, not without the inspiration of the Spirit of God. So Paul reminds us, that in this narrative God’s judgment against corrupt and vicious lusts was portrayed, that we might ourselves learn not to lust. (1Co 10:6.) I have already briefly explained how far our appetites are to be restrained, and what intemperance, properly speaking, is.
Defender: Num 11:31 - -- Critics contend this miracle of the quail, sent in response to the complaint of the people's desire for flesh to eat (Num 11:4), is physically absurd....
Critics contend this miracle of the quail, sent in response to the complaint of the people's desire for flesh to eat (Num 11:4), is physically absurd. The picture, however, is not what it seems at first: quail stacked three feet high for miles all around. The language permits the more understandable rendering that the quail were easily accessible, flying two cubits above the ground. This was the second time God had providentially directed quail to the camp in great numbers (Exo 16:13)."

Defender: Num 11:33 - -- In Exo 16:11-13, the Lord had graciously supplied quail when the people complained, and He did not rebuke them for questioning Him. Now, however, ther...
In Exo 16:11-13, the Lord had graciously supplied quail when the people complained, and He did not rebuke them for questioning Him. Now, however, there was no excuse for their lack of faith. He had also given them the law since that first experience, and they had covenanted to obey it. Thus discipline was doubly justified at this point."
TSK: Num 11:31 - -- a wind : Exo 10:13, Exo 10:19, Exo 15:10; Psa 135:7
and brought : Exo 16:13; Psa 78:26-29, Psa 105:40
quails : That the word selav means the quail,...
a wind : Exo 10:13, Exo 10:19, Exo 15:10; Psa 135:7
and brought : Exo 16:13; Psa 78:26-29, Psa 105:40
quails : That the word
a day’ s journey : Heb. the way of a day
and as it were two cubits : That is, as the Vulgate renders, Volabantque in aere duobus cubitis altitudine super terram , ""and they flew in the air, at the height of two cubits above the ground.""

TSK: Num 11:33 - -- And while : Psa 78:30, Psa 78:31, Psa 106:14, Psa 106:15
smote : Num 16:49, Num 25:9; Deu 28:27
And while : Psa 78:30, Psa 78:31, Psa 106:14, Psa 106:15


collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Num 11:4-35
Barnes: Num 11:4-35 - -- Occurrences at Kibroth-hattavah. Num 11:4 The mixt multitude - The word in the original resembles our "riff-raff,"and denotes a mob of pe...
Occurrences at Kibroth-hattavah.
The mixt multitude - The word in the original resembles our "riff-raff,"and denotes a mob of people scraped together. It refers here to the multitude of strangers (see Exo 12:38) who had followed the Israelites from Egypt.
The natural dainties of Egypt are set forth in this passage with the fullness and relish which bespeak personal experience.
There is nothing at all ... - literally, "Nought at all have we except that our eyes are unto this manna;"i. e. "Nought else have we to expect beside this manna."On the manna see Exo 16:15 note; on bdellium see Gen 2:12 note.
The weeping was general; every family wept (compare Zec 12:12), and in a manner public and unconcealed.
The complaint and remonstrance of Moses may be compared with that in 1Ki 19:4 ff; Jon 4:1-3, and contrasted with the language of Abraham (Gen 18:23 ff) The meekness of Moses (compare Num 12:3) sank under vexation into despair. His language shows us how imperfect and prone to degeneracy are the best saints on earth.
Seventy men of the elders of Israel - Seventy elders had also gone up with Moses to the Lord in the mount Exo 24:1, Exo 24:9. Seventy is accordingly the number of colleagues assigned to Moses to share his burden with him. To it, the Jews trace the origin of the Sanhedrim. Subsequent notices Num 16:25; Jos 7:6; Jos 8:10, Jos 8:33; Jos 9:11; Jos 23:2; Jos 24:1, Jos 24:31 so connect the elders with the government of Israel as to point to the fact that the appointment now made was not a merely temporary one, though it would seem to have soon fallen into desuetude. We find no traces of it in the days of the Judges and the Kings.
Elders of the people, and officers over them - In English idiom, "elders and officers of the people."Both elders and officers appear in Egypt (Exo 3:16; Exo 5:6 ff): the former had headed the nation in its efforts after freedom; the latter were the subordinate, though unwilling, agents of Egyptian tyranny. The two classes no doubt were working together; and from those who belonged to either, perhaps from those who were both eiders and officers, the council of Seventy was to be selected.
I will take of the spirit which is upon thee - Render rather separate from the spirit, etc.; i. e. they shall have their portion in the same divine gift which thou hast.
They prophesied - i. e. under the extraordinary impulse of the Holy Spirit they uttered forth the praises of God, or declared His will. Compare the marginal references.
And did not cease - Rather, and added not, i. e. they prophesied at this time only and not afterward. The sign was granted on the occasion of their appointment to accredit them in their office; it was not continued, because their proper function was to be that of governing not prophesying.
Of them that were written - i. e. enrolled among the Seventy. The expression points to a regular appointment duly recorded and permanent.
Enviest thou for my sake? - (Compare Mar 9:38 ff) The other members of the Seventy had been with Moses (compare Num 6:16, Num 6:24-25) when the gift of prophecy was bestowed on them. They received "of the spirit that was upon him,"and exercised their office visibly through and for him. Eldad and Medad prophesying in the camp seemed to Joshua to be acting independently, and so establishing a separate center of authority.
The southeast wind, which blew from the neighboring Elanitic gulf of the Red Sea, brought the quails Exo 16:13.
Two cubits high - Better, "two cubits above the face of the ground:"i. e. the quails, wearied with their long flight, flew about breast high, and were easily secured by the people, who spread them all abroad for themselves Num 11:32, in order to salt and dry them. The quail habitually flies with the wind, and low.
Ten homers - About 55 bushels. Compare Lev 27:16.
Ere it was chewed - Better, ere it was consumed. See Num 11:19-20. The surfeit in which the people indulged, as described in Num 11:32, disposed them to sickness. God’ s wrath, visiting the gluttonous through their gluttony, aggravated natural consequences into a supernatural visitation.
(Kibroth-hattaavah has been identified by Palmer with the extensive remains, graves, etc., at Erweis El Ebeirig, and Hazeroth "enclosures"with Ain Hadherah.)
Poole: Num 11:31 - -- A wind from the Lord i.e. an extraordinary and miraculous wind, both for its vehemency and for its effect
Quails a delicious and very nourishing fo...
A wind from the Lord i.e. an extraordinary and miraculous wind, both for its vehemency and for its effect
Quails a delicious and very nourishing food, which, considering their greedy appetite, and the newness and plenty of it, disposed them to surfeits and other distemper of body, and prepared the way for the following plague. God gave them quails once before, Exo 16:13 , but neither in the same quantity, nor with the same design and effect as now.
From the sea principally from the Red Sea, and both sides of it; where, by the report of ancient heathen writers, they were then in great numbers, and, no doubt, were wonderfully increased by God’ s special providence for this very occasion.
Two cubits high not as if the quails did cover all the ground two cubits high for a day’ s journey on each side of the camp, for then there had been no place left where they could spread them all abroad round about the camp , as it is said they did, Num 11:32 ; but the meaning is, that the quails came and fell down round about the camp for a whole day’ s journey on each side of it, and that in all that space they lay here and there in great heaps, which were ofttimes two cubits high.

Poole: Num 11:32 - -- Stood up or rather rose up , which word is oft used for attempting or beginning to do any business.
All night some at one time, and some at the ot...
Stood up or rather rose up , which word is oft used for attempting or beginning to do any business.
All night some at one time, and some at the other, and some, through their greediness or diffidence, at both times.
Ten homers i.e. ten ass loads; which if it seem incredible, you must consider,
1. That the gatherers here were not all the people, which could not be without great confusion and other inconveniences; but some on the behalf of all, possibly one for each family, or the like, while the rest were exercised about other necessary things. So the meaning is not that every Israelite had so much for his share, but that every collector gathered so much for the family or others by whom he was intrusted.
2. That the people did not gather for their present use only, but for a good while to come, as we shall see; and being greedy and distrustful of God’ s goodness, it is not strange if they gathered much more than they needed.
3. That the word rendered homers may signify heaps , as it doth Exo 8:14 Jud 15:16 Hab 3:15 , and ten is oft put for many ; and so the sense is, that every one gathered several heaps. If yet the number seems incredible, it must be further known,
4. That heathen and other authors affirm, that in those eastern and southern countries quails are innumerable, so that in one part of Italy, within the compass of five miles, there were taken about a hundred thousand of them every day for a month together; and that sometimes they fly so thick over the sea, that being weary they fall into ships, sometimes in such numbers that they sink them with their weight, as Varro and Solinus affirm. And Athenaeus relates, that in Egypt, a country prodigiously populous, as all agree, they were in such plenty, that all those vast numbers of people could not consume them, but were forced to salt and keep them for their future use. So that there is no need at all that God should create innumerable quails for this purpose; which yet if it were affirmed he did, atheists and antiscripturists have no occasion of triumph, since they must either own the creation of the world, which is a far greater miracle, or ascribe the production of the world to a casual jumble of atoms, which is more senseless and ridiculous than all the fables of the poets.
Spread them all abroad , that so they may dry them, and salt them, and preserve them for their future use, according to what they had seen and learned in Egypt.

Poole: Num 11:33 - -- Chewed Heb. cut off , to wit, from their mouths, which is here understood, and expressed Joe 1:5 , i.e. ere it was taken away, as the flocks are sai...
Chewed Heb. cut off , to wit, from their mouths, which is here understood, and expressed Joe 1:5 , i.e. ere it was taken away, as the flocks are said to be cut off from the fold , Hab 3:17 , when they are lost and perished. The sense is, before they had done eating their quails, which lasted for a month, as appears from Num 11:20 .
A very great plague whether it was leanness sent into them, Psa 106:15 , whereby the food was deprived of its nourishing power, which it hath only from God’ s blessing; or surfeit, a punishment most suitable to their sin, and most likely to follow their intemperate desire and use of this food; or the pestilence; it is not much material: but a great and sore plague unquestionably it was.
Quest. Why did God so sorely punish the people’ s murmuring and complaining for lack of flesh here, when he spared them after the same sin, Ex 16 ?
Answ Because this sin was a far greater sin than that, and aggravated with worse circumstances; as proceeding not from necessity, as that did, when as yet they had no food, but from mere lust and wantonness, when they had manna constantly given them; as committed after large experience of God’ s care and kindness, after God had pardoned their former sins, and after God had in a solemn and terrible manner made known his laws and duty to them.

Poole: Num 11:34 - -- Kibroth-hattaavah Heb. The graves of lust , i.e. of the men that lusted, as it here follows. The abstract for the concrete, which is frequent; as p...
Kibroth-hattaavah Heb. The graves of lust , i.e. of the men that lusted, as it here follows. The abstract for the concrete, which is frequent; as poverty , 2Ki 24:14 , pride, Psa 36:11 , deceit, sins , Pro 13:6 , &c., dreams, Jer 27:9 , are put for men who are poor, or proud, or deceitful , or sinful , or dreamers . And it notes that this plague did not seize upon all that did eat of the quails, for then all had been destroyed, but only upon those who were inordinate both in the desire and use of them.
Haydock: Num 11:31 - -- Sea; the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. The wind blew from the south-west to the west with respect to Moses, or from the south with respect to Jer...
Sea; the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. The wind blew from the south-west to the west with respect to Moses, or from the south with respect to Jerusalem, Psalm lxxvii. 26. Many quails are found about Rinocorura, and some have imagined that these had continued during winter at the bottom of the waters, as they say swallows do. (Bochart, i. 15.) God had sent the Hebrews a similar provision for one day, about the same season of the year, Exodus xvi. 13. ---
Flew. The Hebrew says simply, "as it were two cubits upon the earth;" whether they were heaped one upon the other to that height, or, as it is more probable, (Calmet) they flew only so much above the ground, an might easily be killed. (Haydock) ---
The Septuagint call them ortygometra, the leader, or the largest sort of quails. Suppose twenty of them filled a bushel, or the thirtieth part of a corus, each person would have at least 6,000 quails; and if there were three million people, they must have had 18,000 million such birds. (Menochius) ---
Philo takes notice, that the Jews were very fond of this food; and Aristotle (Anim., viii. 12,) says, their flesh is as good as that of woodcocks. (Tirinus)

Haydock: Num 11:32 - -- Cores. Hebrew, "Chomarim," each of contained 100 gomers. One gomer was the daily allowance of manna for each person, and of course their must have ...
Cores. Hebrew, "Chomarim," each of contained 100 gomers. One gomer was the daily allowance of manna for each person, and of course their must have been sufficient quails for one hundred days. But Moses tells us that each one collected at least ten times that quantity, or as much has he could eat for 1,000 days. Bochart therefore supposes, that only each family, of ten people, gathered so much: or the Hebrew should be rendered heaps, as the core, or chomer, is not a proper measure for birds, but for corn and liquors. The Septuagint, Syriac, &c., have "heaps." We need not have recourse to a new creation of these birds, as their numbers are very surprising. (Pliny, [Natural History?] x. 23.) In Italy above 100,000 have been caught in one day, within the space of 5,000 paces. (Blond.) The Psalmist compares the number brought on this occasion, to the dust, or to the sand of the sea-shore, Psalm lxxvii. 27. ---
Dried them in the sun, having first salted them, as the Egyptians did. (Calmet) (Athenæus.) ---
Many quails are found in Egypt, and around the Arabian Gulf. (Josephus, [Antiquities?] iii.) (Du Hamel)

Haydock: Num 11:33 - -- Plague of fire, ver. 3, Psalm lxxvii. 21. (Cornelius a Lapide) ---
Failed, after the month was expired. (Menochius) ---
They had been accustomed...
Plague of fire, ver. 3, Psalm lxxvii. 21. (Cornelius a Lapide) ---
Failed, after the month was expired. (Menochius) ---
They had been accustomed to live upon manna, which was a light food, during the space of a year; and now eating greedily of this flesh, their stomachs were overcharged, and they died of an indigestion. (Calmet) ---
The Rabbins say, God punished their gluttony by death, and obliged the rest of the Hebrews to abstain from all flesh, except from that of the peace-offerings, till they entered the promised land. (Selden, Syn. 2, 4.)

Haydock: Num 11:34 - -- The graves of lust; or the sepulchres of concupiscence: so called from their irregular desire of flesh. In Hebrew Kibroth Hattaavah. (Challoner) ...
The graves of lust; or the sepulchres of concupiscence: so called from their irregular desire of flesh. In Hebrew Kibroth Hattaavah. (Challoner) ---
Hence St. Augustine observes that, "it is not a matter of so much moment to be heard by God. For some he hears in his wrath, granting their requests, while he refuses to comply with some petitions of his friends." (Du Hamel)
Gill: Num 11:31 - -- And there went forth a wind from the Lord,.... Both an east wind and a south wind, according to Psa 78:26; either first one wind, and then another; on...
And there went forth a wind from the Lord,.... Both an east wind and a south wind, according to Psa 78:26; either first one wind, and then another; one to bring the quails, or whatever are meant, to a certain point, and then the other to bring them to the camp of Israel; or a southeast wind, as the Jewish writers interpret it: however, it was not a common wind, but what was immediately raised by the Lord for the following purpose:
and brought quails from the sea; the Red sea, from the coasts of it, not out of it. Josephus t says, there were great numbers of this sort of fowl about the gulf of Arabia; and Diodorus Siculus u says, near Rhinocalura, a place not far from those parts, quails in flocks were brought from the sea, which the people caught and lived upon. After Job Ludolphus, who has wrote a learned dissertation on locusts, many are of opinion with him, that locusts are intended here, and think that what is hereafter related best agrees with them; it is pretty difficult to determine which is most correct; there are learned advocates, and much to be said, for both w:
and let them fall by the camp: the camp of Israel, and round about it on all sides, as follows; which agrees well enough with locusts, which are usually brought by a wind, as the locusts of Egypt were by an east wind, which fall, rest, and settle on the earth, and sometimes in heaps, one upon another; and these, whatever they were, fell as thick as rain, and were as dust, and as the sand of the sea. The Jewish writers, who understand them of quails, interpret this not of their falling to the ground, but of their flying low, two cubits from the earth, about the breast of a man, so that they had no trouble in taking them; so the Targum of Jonathan, Jarchi, Ben Gersom, and Abendana; but this seems to be without any foundation:
as it were a day's journey on this side, and as it were a day's journey on the other side, round about the camp; on the north side, and on the south side, as the Targum of Jonathan explains it; but it doubtless means on all sides, since they fell round about the camp; and from thence they lay thick upon the ground, a day's journey every way; which some compute at sixteen, others at twenty miles on which space there must be a prodigious number of quails or locusts; and it is certain the latter do come in great numbers, so as to darken the air, and to cover a country, as they did Egypt; and the quails also, in some countries, have been taken in great numbers; in Italy, on the coast of Antium, within a month, in the space of five miles, 100,000 quails were taken every day x:
and as it were two cubits high upon the face of the earth; as they fell they lay one upon another, the height of two cubits; which it is thought better agrees with locusts than with quails, since the quails, by lying one upon another such a depth, must be suffocated; whereas the locusts, through the length of their feet, and the thinness of their wings, would not.

Gill: Num 11:32 - -- And the people stood up all that day,.... The day on which they fell in the morning:
and all that night; the night following:
and all the next ...
And the people stood up all that day,.... The day on which they fell in the morning:
and all that night; the night following:
and all the next day; after that, even the space of thirty six hours:
and they gathered the quails; not took them flying, as the Jewish writers suggest, before observed, but from the earth where they fell, in order to lay them up as a provision for time to come; or otherwise, had they taken them only for present use, they would not have been so long in gathering them; but they seemed greedy of them, and therefore took up all they could, or knew what to do with:
he that gathered least gathered ten homers; or so many ass loads, as some interpret it; the words for an ass and an homer being near the same: an homer in measure is the same with the "cor", and held ten ephahs; and, according to Bishop Cumberland y, contained seventy five wine gallons, seven pints, and somewhat more, which must hold a vast quantity of quails; though not the measure, but the number of fowls, is commonly given. Some render the word "heaps", as in Exo 8:14; and is supposed better to agree with locusts; but then it will be difficult to assign a reason why the number of them should be given, since heaps might be greater or lesser:
and they spread them all abroad for themselves round about the camp; according to some, they were taken alive, and put into cages, which were hung round the camp, so that all places were full of them, in which they were kept, and used as they wanted them; but they seem rather, be they what they will, to be dead, and to be spread about to be dried in the sun, being salted; and so the Vulgate Latin version renders the word, "and they dried them" z; and agrees both with quails, which, according to some writers a, used to be salted for food for time to come; and with locusts, on which the inhabitants of some parts of Ethiopia always lived, as Pliny b says, being hardened in smoke, and with salt, and was their food for the year round. And this custom was used in Arabia; for Leo Africanus c relates, that the people of Arabia Deserta, and of Lybia, reckon the coming of the locusts an happy omen; for either boiled, or dried with the sun, they beat them into meal (or powder) and eat them: and of the Nasamones, a people in Africa, it is said d, that they hunt locusts, and dry them in the sun, and grind them, and then, sprinkling milk upon them, sup them up.

Gill: Num 11:33 - -- And while the flesh was yet between their teeth,.... When they had just got it into their mouths, and were about to bite it:
ere it was chewed; or...
And while the flesh was yet between their teeth,.... When they had just got it into their mouths, and were about to bite it:
ere it was chewed; or "cut off"; or cut into pieces by the "incisores", or fore teeth, and then ground by the "molares", or grinders, and so became fit to be swallowed. Both quails and locusts were eaten as food; the former is a fat and delicious fowl, and the latter, some sorts of them, at least, were allowed clean food for the Jews, and were fed on by many people:
the wrath of the Lord was kindled against the people; for their lusting after flesh, and despising the manna:
and the Lord smote the people with a very great plague; the pestilence, as Aben Ezra; or with fire, as Bochart e, who gives the following reasons why the people were so severely punished now, and not before, when they murmured on a like account; because their sin's were greater, and more aggravated, they falling again into the same sin which had been forgiven them; and besides, they were before pressed with famine, now they had a plenty of manna every day; and also were better instructed, having received the law, which was not yet given when they were just come out of Egypt. Sulpitius f the historian says, 23,000 perished at this time.

Gill: Num 11:34 - -- And he called the name of that place Kibrothhattaavah,.... That is, Moses called it so, or it was called by the children of Israel, and by others in l...
And he called the name of that place Kibrothhattaavah,.... That is, Moses called it so, or it was called by the children of Israel, and by others in later times, by this name, which signifies "the graves of lust"; dug by lust, or which lust was the cause and occasion of, and where those that indulged it were buried, as follows:
because there they buried the people that lusted; not all that lusted, for the lusting was pretty general; but all that died through their gluttony and intemperance, and the judgment of God on them; or who were the most inordinate in their lust, and encouraged others in it, and were the ringleaders in the murmur and mutiny.

Gill: Num 11:35 - -- And the people journeyed from Kibrothhattaavah unto Hazeroth,.... After having stayed there a month or more, as is gathered from Num 11:20,
and ab...
And the people journeyed from Kibrothhattaavah unto Hazeroth,.... After having stayed there a month or more, as is gathered from Num 11:20,
and abode at Hazeroth; at least seven days, as appears from Num 12:15; which, according to Bunting g, was eight miles from Kibrothhattaavah, or Taberah, which were the same place.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Num 11:31 Heb “two cubits.” The standard cubit in the OT is assumed by most authorities to be about eighteen inches (45 cm) in length.

NET Notes: Num 11:32 The verb (a preterite) is followed by the infinitive absolute of the same root, to emphasize the action of spreading out the quail. Although it is har...

NET Notes: Num 11:33 The verb is a prefixed conjugation, normally an imperfect tense. But coming after the adverb טֶּרֶם (terem) it is ...

NET Notes: Num 11:34 The words “different food” are implied, and are supplied in the translation for clarity.
Geneva Bible -> Num 11:32
Geneva Bible: Num 11:32 And the people stood up all that day, and all [that] night, and all the next day, and they gathered the quails: he that gathered least gathered ten ( ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Num 11:1-35
TSK Synopsis: Num 11:1-35 - --1 The burning at Taberah quenched by Moses' prayer.4 The people lust for flesh, and loathe manna.10 Moses complains of his charge.16 God promises to d...
MHCC -> Num 11:31-35
MHCC: Num 11:31-35 - --God performed his promise to the people, in giving them flesh. How much more diligent men are in collecting the meat that perishes, than in labouring ...
Matthew Henry -> Num 11:31-35
Matthew Henry: Num 11:31-35 - -- God, having performed his promise to Moses by giving him assessors in the government, thereby proving the power he has over the spirits of men by hi...
Keil-Delitzsch: Num 11:31-32 - --
As soon as Moses had returned with the elders into the camp, God fulfilled His second promise. " A wind arose from Jehovah, and brought quails ( sal...

Keil-Delitzsch: Num 11:33 - --
But while the flesh was still between their teeth, and before it was ground, i.e., masticated, the wrath of the Lord burned against them, and produc...

Keil-Delitzsch: Num 11:34 - --
From this judgment the place of encampment received the name Kibroth-hattaavah , i.e., graves of greediness, because there the people found their g...

Keil-Delitzsch: Num 11:35 - --
From the graves of greediness the people removed to Hazeroth , and there they remained ( היה as in Exo 24:12). The situation of these two places...
Constable -> Num 11:1--20:29; Num 11:4-35
Constable: Num 11:1--20:29 - --1. The cycle of rebellion, atonement, and death chs. 11-20
The end of chapter 10 is the high poi...

Constable: Num 11:4-35 - --God's provision of manna and His Spirit 11:4-35
The "rabble" (v. 4) were the non...
Guzik -> Num 11:1-35
Guzik: Num 11:1-35 - --Numbers 11 - The People Complain
A. The complaints of Israel and of Moses.
1. (1-3) The complaining heart of Israel.
Now when the people complaine...

expand allCommentary -- Other
Critics Ask: Num 11:31 NUMBERS 11:31-34 —How could God bring judgment on the people for eating the quail that He provided? PROBLEM: God miraculously provided quail fo...

Critics Ask: Num 11:32 NUMBERS 11:31-34 —How could God bring judgment on the people for eating the quail that He provided? PROBLEM: God miraculously provided quail fo...

Critics Ask: Num 11:33 NUMBERS 11:31-34 —How could God bring judgment on the people for eating the quail that He provided? PROBLEM: God miraculously provided quail fo...
