
Text -- Numbers 12:14 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Num 12:14 - -- That is, expressed some eminent token of indignation and contempt, which was this, Job 30:10; Isa 50:6.

Wesley: Num 12:14 - -- And withdraw herself, from her father's presence, as Jonathan did upon a like occasion, 1Sa 20:34. So though God healed her according to Moses's reque...
And withdraw herself, from her father's presence, as Jonathan did upon a like occasion, 1Sa 20:34. So though God healed her according to Moses's request, yet he would have her publickly bear the shame of her sin, and be a warning to others to keep them from the same transgression.
JFB -> Num 12:14
JFB: Num 12:14 - -- The Jews, in common with all people in the East, seem to have had an intense abhorrence of spitting, and for a parent to express his displeasure by do...
The Jews, in common with all people in the East, seem to have had an intense abhorrence of spitting, and for a parent to express his displeasure by doing so on the person of one of his children, or even on the ground in his presence, separated that child as unclean from society for seven days.
Clarke -> Num 12:14
Clarke: Num 12:14 - -- If her father had but spit in her face - This appears to have been done only in cases of great provocation on the part of the child, and strong irri...
If her father had but spit in her face - This appears to have been done only in cases of great provocation on the part of the child, and strong irritation on the side of the parent. Spitting in the face was a sign of the deepest contempt. See Job 30:10; Isa 50:6; Mar 14:65. In a case where a parent was obliged by the disobedient conduct of his child to treat him in this way, it appears he was banished from the father’ s presence for seven days. If then this was an allowed and judged case in matters of high provocation on the part of a child, should not the punishment be equally severe where the creature has rebelled against the Creator? Therefore Miriam was shut out of the camp for seven days, and thus debarred from coming into the presence of God her father, who is represented as dwelling among the people. To a soul who knows the value and inexpressible blessedness of communion with God, how intolerable must seven days of spiritual darkness be! But how indescribably wretched must their case be who are cast out into outer darkness, where the light of God no more shines, and where his approbation can no more be felt for ever! Reader, God save thee from so great a curse
Several of the fathers suppose there is a great mystery hidden in the quarrel of Miriam and Aaron with Moses and Zipporah. Origen (and after him several others) speaks of it in the following manner: -
"1. Zipporah, a Cushite espoused by Moses, evidently points out the choice which Jesus Christ has made of the Gentiles for his spouse and Church
2. The jealousy of Aaron and Miriam against Moses and Zipporah signifies the hatred and envy of the Jews against Christ and the apostles, when they saw that the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven had been opened to the Gentiles, of which they had rendered themselves unworthy
3. The leprosy with which Miriam was smitten shows the gross ignorance of the Jews, and the ruinous, disordered state of their religion, in which there is neither a head, a temple, nor a sacrifice
4. Of none but Jesus Christ can it be said that he was the most meek and patient of men; that he saw God face to face; that he had every thing clearly revealed without enigmatical representations; and that he was faithful in all the house of God."This, and much more, Origen states in the sixth and seventh homilies on the book of Numbers, and yet all this he considers as little in comparison of the vast mysteries that lie hidden in these accounts; for the shortness of the time, and the magnitude of the mysteries, only permit him "to pluck a few flowers from those vast fields - not as many as the exuberance of those fields afford, but only such as by their odour he was led to select from the rest." Licebat tamen ex ingentibus campis paucos flosculos legere, et non quantum ager exuberet, sed quantum ordoratui supiciat, carpere .
Defender -> Num 12:14
Defender: Num 12:14 - -- This is not a command for a father to do this, but simply a recognition that this was a common practice in the Middle East as an expression of sharp r...
This is not a command for a father to do this, but simply a recognition that this was a common practice in the Middle East as an expression of sharp rebuke and contempt for the actions of a grossly disobedient child."
TSK -> Num 12:14
TSK: Num 12:14 - -- spit : Deu 25:9; Job 30:10; Isa 50:6; Mat 26:67; Heb 12:9
let her be : Num 5:2, Num 5:3; Lev 13:45, Lev 13:46, Lev 14:8; 2Ch 26:20, 2Ch 26:21

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Num 12:1-15
Barnes: Num 12:1-15 - -- Miriam, as a prophetess (compare Exo 15:20-21) no less than as the sister of Moses and Aaron, took the first rank among the women of Israel; and Aar...
Miriam, as a prophetess (compare Exo 15:20-21) no less than as the sister of Moses and Aaron, took the first rank among the women of Israel; and Aaron may be regarded as the ecclesiastical head of the whole nation. But instead of being grateful for these high dignities they challenged the special vocation of Moses and the exclusive authority which God had assigned to him. Miriam was the instigator, from the fact that her name stands conspicuously first Num 12:1, and that the punishment Num 12:10 fell on her alone. She probably considered herself as supplanted, and that too by a foreigner. Aaron was misled this time by the urgency of his sister, as once before Exo. 32 by that of the people.
The Ethiopian woman whom he had married - (Hebrew, "Cushite,"compare Gen 2:13; Gen 10:6) It is likely that Zipporah Exo 2:21 was dead, and that Miriam in consequence expected to have greater influence than ever with Moses. Her disappointment at his second marriage would consequently be very great.
The marriage of Moses with a woman descended from Ham was not prohibited, so long as she was not of the stock of Canaan (compare Exo 34:11-16); but it would at any time have been offensive to that intense nationality which characterized the Jews. The Christian fathers note in the successive marriage of Moses with a Midianite and an Ethiopian a foreshadowing of the future extension to the Gentiles of God’ s covenant and its promises (compare Psa 45:9 ff; Son 1:4 ff); and in the complaining of Miriam and Aaron a type of the discontent of the Jews because of such extension: compare Luk 15:29-30.
Hath the Lord ... - i. e. Is it merely, after all, by Moses that the Lord hath spoken?
The man Moses was very meek - In this and in other passages in which Moses no less unequivocally records his own faults (compare Num 20:12 ff; Exo 4:24 ff; Deu 1:37), there is the simplicity of one who bare witness of himself, but not to himself (compare Mat 11:28-29). The words are inserted to explain how it was that Moses took no steps to vindicate himself, and why consequently the Lord so promptly intervened.
Mouth to mouth - i. e. without the intervention of any third person or thing: compare the marginal references.
Even apparently - Moses received the word of God direct from Him and plainly, not through the medium of dream, vision, parable, dark saying, or such like; compare the marginal references.
The similitude of the Lord shall he behold - But, "No man hath seen God at any time,"says John (Joh 1:18 : compare 1Ti 6:16, and especially Exo 33:20 ff). It was not therefore the Beatific Vision, the unveiled essence of the Deity, which Moses saw on the one hand. Nor was it, on the other hand, a mere emblematic representation (as in Eze 1:26 ff, Dan 7:9), or an Angel sent as a messenger. It was the Deity Himself manifesting Himself so as to be cognizable to mortal eye. The special footing on which Moses stood as regards God is here laid down in detail, because it at once demonstrates that the supremacy of Moses rested on the distinct appointment of God, and also that Miriam in contravening that supremacy had incurred the penalty proper to sins against the theocracy.
As one dead - leprosy was nothing short of a living death, a poisoning of the springs, a corrupting of all the humors, of life; a dissolution little by little of the whole body, so that one limb after another actually decayed and fell away. Compare the notes at Lev. 13.
Heal her now, O God, I beseech thee - Others render these words: "Oh not so; heal her now, I beseech Thee."
If her father ... - i. e. If her earthly parent had treated her with contumely (compare Deu 25:9) she would feel for a time humiliated, how much more when God has visited her thus?
Poole -> Num 12:14
Poole: Num 12:14 - -- Spit in her face i.e. expressed some eminent token of indignation and contempt, which this was, Job 30:10 Isa 1:6 .
Should she not be ashamed and w...
Spit in her face i.e. expressed some eminent token of indignation and contempt, which this was, Job 30:10 Isa 1:6 .
Should she not be ashamed and withdraw herself from her father’ s presence? as Jonathan did upon a like occasion, 1Sa 20:34 . So though God healed her according to Moses’ s request, yet he would have her publicly bear the shame of her sin, and be a warning to others to keep them firm the same transgression.
Seven days the time appointed for cleansing the unclean. See Num 6:9 31:19 .
Haydock -> Num 12:14
Haydock: Num 12:14 - -- Answered him. The force of this reply must be very obvious. If a father had been so irritated by his daughter, as to shew his indignation in the st...
Answered him. The force of this reply must be very obvious. If a father had been so irritated by his daughter, as to shew his indignation in the strongest manner, (see Job xxx. 10.; Mark xiv. 65,) she would surely keep out of sight for a time: and can she complain, if I, who have been more injured in the person of my minister, exclude her from society seven days, after having covered her with the leprosy as with spittle. (Calmet) ---
The excommunication, in the Christian Church, bears some resemblance with this exclusion. Mary did not undergo all the legal purifications, (Leviticus xxxiv.) as the miraculous cure dispensed her from them. (Menochius) ---
Origen (hom. vi. 7,) and other Fathers, explain the mystery of this historical event. Moses, taking to wife the Ethiopian, represents Christ calling the Gentiles, which excites the murmurs of the synagogue. Mary shews the deformity of the latter religion at the present day, without head or sacrifice. The encomiums bestowed upon the Jewish legislator, belong in a still stricter sense to Jesus Christ, the mildest of men, fully acquainted with all the secrets of God, and the most faithful in all his house. (St. Jerome, ep. ad Fab. mansion xiv.)
Gill -> Num 12:14
Gill: Num 12:14 - -- And the Lord said unto Moses,.... By a voice out of the cloud, though at a distance; unless it was by a secret impulse upon his spirit, darting such w...
And the Lord said unto Moses,.... By a voice out of the cloud, though at a distance; unless it was by a secret impulse upon his spirit, darting such words into his mind as if he heard an audible voice:
if her father had but spit in her face; or, "in spitting spitted" l; spit much, and continued spitting till he had covered her face with spittle; which, as it would have been a token of anger and displeasure in him, an earthly father, who is meant, and of shame and disgrace to her; so there is some likeness in spittle to leprosy, both being white, and in such a case to the abundance of it, her thee being covered with leprosy; and which came as it were from the mouth of the Lord, by his order and appointment, immediately, as spittle from a man, and like that, in a way of detestation and contempt, and to make abhorred and despised:
should she not be ashamed seven days? hide herself, and never appear in the family, and especially in her father's presence, because of the shame she was put unto, for the space of seven days; how much more ashamed then should she be, now her heavenly Father did spit in her face, and covered it with a white leprosy and for as long a time at least, or indeed longer? fourteen days, say the Targum of Jonathan, and Jarchi, but no more than seven are required, when more might have justly been, for her separation and shutting up from company and conversation:
let her be shut out from the camp seven days; for so long the leper was to be shut up at the trial of his leprosy, and so long he was to be out of his tent at the cleansing of him, Lev 13:5,
and after that let her be received again; into the camp and into society with her relations and friends.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Num 12:14
NET Notes: Num 12:14 The form is intensified by the infinitive absolute, but here the infinitive strengthens not simply the verbal idea but the conditional cause construct...
Geneva Bible -> Num 12:14
Geneva Bible: Num 12:14 And the LORD said unto Moses, If her father had but ( h ) spit in her face, should she not be ashamed seven days? let her be shut out from the camp se...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Num 12:1-16
TSK Synopsis: Num 12:1-16 - --1 God rebukes the sedition of Miriam and Aaron.11 Miriam's leprosy is healed at the prayer of Moses.14 God commands her to be shut out of the host.16 ...
MHCC -> Num 12:10-16
MHCC: Num 12:10-16 - --The cloud departed, and Miriam became leprous. When God goes, evil comes: expect no good when God departs. Her foul tongue, as Bishop Hall says, was j...
Matthew Henry -> Num 12:10-16
Matthew Henry: Num 12:10-16 - -- Here is, I. God's judgment upon Miriam (Num 12:10): The cloud departed from off that part of the tabernacle, in token of God's displeasure, and ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Num 12:14-15
Keil-Delitzsch: Num 12:14-15 - --
Jehovah hearkened to His servant's prayer, though not without inflicting deep humiliation upon Miriam. " If her father had but spit in her face, wou...
Constable -> Num 11:1--20:29; Num 12:1-16
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...
