![](images/minus.gif)
Text -- Numbers 13:32 (NET)
![](images/arrow_open.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
![](images/arrow_open.gif)
![](images/information.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Num 13:32
Wesley: Num 13:32 - -- Not so much by civil wars, for that was likely to make their conquest more easy; but rather by the unwholesomeness of the air and place, which they gu...
Not so much by civil wars, for that was likely to make their conquest more easy; but rather by the unwholesomeness of the air and place, which they guessed from the many funerals, which, as some Hebrew writers, not without probability affirm, they observed in their travels through it: though that came to pass from another cause, even from the singular providence of God, which, to facilitate the Israelites conquest, cut off vast numbers of the Canaanites either by a plague, or by the hornet sent before them, as is expressed, Jos 24:12.
JFB: Num 13:32 - -- That is, an unhealthy climate and country. Jewish writers say that in the course of their travels they saw a great many funerals, vast numbers of the ...
That is, an unhealthy climate and country. Jewish writers say that in the course of their travels they saw a great many funerals, vast numbers of the Canaanites being cut off at that time, in the providence of God, by a plague or the hornet (Jos 24:12).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Num 13:32 - -- This was evidently a false and exaggerated report, representing, from timidity or malicious artifice, what was true of a few as descriptive of the peo...
This was evidently a false and exaggerated report, representing, from timidity or malicious artifice, what was true of a few as descriptive of the people generally.
Clarke -> Num 13:32
Clarke: Num 13:32 - -- Men of a great stature - אנשי מדות anshey middoth , men of measures - two men’ s height; i. e., exceedingly tall men.
Men of a great stature -
Calvin -> Num 13:32
Calvin: Num 13:32 - -- 32.But the men that went up with him said We here see, as in a mirror, how impiety gradually gathers audaciousness in evil. At the outset, the author...
32.But the men that went up with him said We here see, as in a mirror, how impiety gradually gathers audaciousness in evil. At the outset, the authors of the rebellion were ambiguous in their expressions, and contented themselves with obscure insinuations; they now throw aside all shame, and openly and acrimoniously oppose the address of Caleb, which was certainly nothing less than casting discredit on God’s words, and setting at naught His power. God had promised to give the land to the Israelites; they deny that He will do so. He had afforded them many proofs that nothing is difficult to Him: they deny that His aid will suffice against the forces of their enemies. Moreover, they at length break out into such impudence, that in their falsehood they contradict themselves. They had confessed that the land was rich; they now declare that it consumes or devours its inhabitants, which is entirely the reverse. For this is equivalent to saying, that the wretched men, who cultivated it, wore themselves out with their assiduous labors; or, at ally rate, that it was pestilential from the inclemency of its climate; either of which statements was utterly false. The mode in which some understand it, viz., that the giants 52 in their violence committed indiscriminate slaughter, is without foundation; for this evil was by no means to be feared by the people, after the extermination of the inhabitants. I do not doubt, then, but that it means that the cultivation of the land was difficult, and full of much inconvenience.
At the end of the last verse, where it is said, “as grasshoppers,” etc., I think the words are inverted, and ought to be thus connected; “As grasshoppers are despised in our eyes, so we were looked down upon by these giants on account of our lowness of stature.”
TSK -> Num 13:32
TSK: Num 13:32 - -- brought : Num 14:36, Num 14:37; Deu 1:28; Mat 23:13
a land : Num 13:28; Eze 36:13; Amo 2:9
men of a great stature : Heb. men of statures, 2Sa 21:20 *H...
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Num 13:32
Barnes: Num 13:32 - -- A land that eateth up ... - i. e. it is a land which from its position is exposed to incessant attacks from one quarter and another, and so its...
A land that eateth up ... - i. e. it is a land which from its position is exposed to incessant attacks from one quarter and another, and so its occupants must be always armed and watchful.
Poole -> Num 13:32
Poole: Num 13:32 - -- They brought up Heb. brought forth , to wit, out of their mouths; they uttered a reproach, or reproachful words.
Of the land i.e. against it, or c...
They brought up Heb. brought forth , to wit, out of their mouths; they uttered a reproach, or reproachful words.
Of the land i.e. against it, or concerning the land. It is the genitive case of the object, as Mat 10:1 14:1 .
Eateth up the inhabitants not so much by civil wars, as most think, for that was likely to make their conquest more easy; nor by the barrenness of the soil, which consumed the people with the excessive pains it required to make it fruitful, as others think, for they confessed the excellency of the land, Num 13:27 ; but rather by the unwholesomeness of the air and place, which they guessed from the many funerals which, as some Hebrew writers, not without probability, affirm, they observed in their travels through it; though that came to pass from another cause, even from the singular providence of God, which, to facilitate the Israelites’ conquest, cut off vast numbers of the Canaanites, either by a plague, or by the hornet sent before them , as is expressed Jos 24:12 , or some other way.
Gill -> Num 13:32
Gill: Num 13:32 - -- And they brought up an evil report of the land which they had searched unto the children of Israel,.... Before, they gave a good report of the land it...
And they brought up an evil report of the land which they had searched unto the children of Israel,.... Before, they gave a good report of the land itself, as a very fruitful one, answering to their expectations and wishes; but now they change their language, and give a different account of it; which shows their want of integrity, and to what length an opposition carried them, to say things contrary to their real sentiments, and to what they themselves had said before:
saying, the land through which we have gone to search it, is a land that eateth up the inhabitants thereof; the meaning seems to be, that it was so barren and unfruitful that it did not produce food sufficient for the inhabitants of it, who were ready to starve, and many did starve through want, and so was the reverse of what they had before said; for which reason, Gussetius o thinks the sense is, that the land was the food and nourishment of its inhabitants, and that there was such plenty in it that it wanted not any foreign assistance in any respect whatever. Some think that it was continually embroiled in civil wars, in which they destroyed one another; but then this was no argument against, but for their going up against them, since through the divisions among themselves they might reasonably hope the better to succeed; or it ate them up with diseases, as the Targum of Jonathan adds, and so they would represent it, though a fruitful land, yet a very unhealthful one, in which the natives could not live, and much less strangers; and so Aben Ezra and Ben Gersom interpret it of the badness of the air of the country, as being very unwholesome and pernicious. Jarchi represents them as saying, that wherever they came they saw them burying their dead, as if there was a plague among them; and be it so that there was, which is not unlikely, since the Lord promised to send hornets before them, which some interpret of diseases sent, Exo 23:28; and which was in their favour, since hereby the number of their enemies would be lessened, and they would be weakened, and in a bad condition to oppose them:
and all the people that we saw in it are men of a great stature; or men of measures p, of a large measure, above the common measure of men; but it may be justly questioned whether they spoke truth; for though they might see some that exceeded in height men in common, yet it is not credible that all they saw were of such a size; since they were not only at Hebron and saw the giants there who were such, but they went through the land, as in the preceding clause, and all they met with cannot be supposed to be of such a measure.
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Num 13:1-33
TSK Synopsis: Num 13:1-33 - --1 The names of the men who were sent to search the land.17 Their instructions.21 Their acts.26 Their relation.
Maclaren -> Num 13:17-33
Maclaren: Num 13:17-33 - --Afraid Of Giants
And Moses sent them to spy out the land of Canaan, and said unto them, Get you up this way southward, and go up into the mountain : ...
MHCC -> Num 13:26-33
MHCC: Num 13:26-33 - --We may wonder that the people of Israel staid forty days for the return of their spies, when they were ready to enter Canaan, under all the assurances...
Matthew Henry -> Num 13:26-33
Matthew Henry: Num 13:26-33 - -- It is a wonder how the people of Israel had patience to stay forty days for the return of their spies, when they were just ready to enter Canaan, un...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Num 13:32-33
Keil-Delitzsch: Num 13:32-33 - --
Thus they spread an evil report of the land among the Israelites, by exaggerating the difficulties of the conquest in their unbelieving despair, and...
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...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: Num 13:1--14:45 - --The failure of the first generation chs. 13-14
The events recorded in chapters 13 and 14...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)