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Text -- Numbers 14:21 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Num 14:21
Wesley: Num 14:21 - -- With the report of the glorious and righteous acts of God in punishing this rebellious people.
With the report of the glorious and righteous acts of God in punishing this rebellious people.
JFB -> Num 14:21
JFB: Num 14:21 - -- This promise, in its full acceptation, remains to be verified by the eventual and universal prevalence of Christianity in the world. But the terms wer...
This promise, in its full acceptation, remains to be verified by the eventual and universal prevalence of Christianity in the world. But the terms were used restrictively in respect to the occasion, to the report which would spread over all the land of the "terrible things in righteousness" [Psa 65:5] which God would do in the infliction of the doom described, to which that rebellious race was now consigned.
Clarke -> Num 14:21
Clarke: Num 14:21 - -- All the earth shall be filled, etc. - כל הארץ kol haarets , all This land, i. e., the land of Canaan which was only fulfilled to the letter w...
All the earth shall be filled, etc. -
Calvin -> Num 14:21
Calvin: Num 14:21 - -- 21.But as truly as I live, all the earth It is, indeed, plain that God here swears by His life and glory: the meaning is only ambiguous in this respe...
21.But as truly as I live, all the earth It is, indeed, plain that God here swears by His life and glory: the meaning is only ambiguous in this respect, that some translate it in the past tense, that the earth had been filled with His glory, which had already been displayed in so many miracles. And this seems to accord well with what follows, “Those, who have seen my glory — shall not see the land;” still the future tense suits the context better, viz., that God should call to witness His glory, which He will hereafter assert. Moses feared lest the destruction of the people should be turned into a reproach and contumely against God; God now declares with an oath that He would so vindicate His glory, as that those, who were guilty of so great a crime, should not escape punishment. He proclaims that those should not see the land, who had shut their eyes against the miracles, of which they had been spectators and eye-witnesses, and in their blindness had endeavored to set them at naught. For, inasmuch as they had not been taught to fear God by so many signs, they were worse than unworthy of beholding the land, the possession of which ought to have been assured to them by those very signs, if God’s truth had not been utterly rejected by their ingratitude.
God complains that He had been “tempted” by them “ten times;” because they had not ceased constantly to provoke Him by their frowardness; for it is no fixed or definite number, which is intended, but God would merely indicate that they had done so without measure or end. We have elsewhere 60 shown what it is to tempt God, viz., to subject His power to the narrow rule of our own senses, and to prescribe to Him the mode in which He is to act, according to our own desires: so as to defer to Him no further than our carnal reason dictates. The source and cause of this tempting of God is subjoined, i.e., when men refuse to listen to His voice; since nothing but obedience, which is the mistress of humility, can restrain our insolence.
TSK -> Num 14:21

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Num 14:21-23
Barnes: Num 14:21-23 - -- Render: But as truly as I live, and as all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord; Num 14:22 all those men, etc.; Num 14:23 shall not ...
Render: But as truly as I live, and as all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord; Num 14:22 all those men, etc.; Num 14:23 shall not see, etc.
These ten times - Ten is the number which imports completeness. Compare Gen 31:7. The sense is that the measure of their provocation was now full: the day of grace was at last over. However, some enumerate 10 different occasions on which the people had tempted God since the exodus.
Ps. 90, which is entitled "a Prayer of Moses,"has been most appropriately regarded as a kind of dirge upon those sentenced thus awfully by God to waste away in the wilderness.
Poole -> Num 14:21
Poole: Num 14:21 - -- i.e. With the report of the glorious and righteous acts of God in punishing this rebellious people in manner following. That this is the true sense,...
i.e. With the report of the glorious and righteous acts of God in punishing this rebellious people in manner following. That this is the true sense, appears both from the particle of opposition, and the solemn introduction of them.
But truly as I live and from the following verses, because all these men , &c, which come in without any note of opposition, and have a manifest relation to and connexion with this verse.
Haydock -> Num 14:21
Haydock: Num 14:21 - -- Lord. I will surely punish the guilty; and all the earth shall know that their own crimes, and not my imbecility, prevented their taking possession ...
Lord. I will surely punish the guilty; and all the earth shall know that their own crimes, and not my imbecility, prevented their taking possession of Chanaan. My glory shall shine both in my long-suffering, and in the effects of my justice. Let me pass for a dead god, like the idols, if I do not perform what I say.
Gill -> Num 14:21
Gill: Num 14:21 - -- But as truly as I live,.... Which is the form of an oath, as the Targum; the Lord swears by his life, or by himself, because he could swear by no gre...
But as truly as I live,.... Which is the form of an oath, as the Targum; the Lord swears by his life, or by himself, because he could swear by no greater:
all the earth shall be filled with the glory of the Lord; this is not the thing sworn unto or confirmed, but that by which the oath is made and confirmed; and the sense is, that as sure as the earth "had been" filled with the glory of the Lord, as it may be rendered, as it had been with the fame of what he had done in Egypt, and at the Red sea; or as it "should be" filled with it in later times, especially in the kingdom of the Messiah in the latter day; see Isa 6:3; so sure the men that had provoked him should not see the land of Canaan.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Num 14:1-45
TSK Synopsis: Num 14:1-45 - --1 The people murmur at the news.6 Joshua and Caleb labour to still them.11 God threatens them.13 Moses intercedes with God, and obtains pardon.26 The ...
MHCC -> Num 14:20-35
MHCC: Num 14:20-35 - --The Lord granted the prayer of Moses so far as not at once to destroy the congregation. But disbelief of the promise forbids the benefit. Those who de...
Matthew Henry -> Num 14:20-35
Matthew Henry: Num 14:20-35 - -- We have here God's answer to the prayer of Moses, which sings both of mercy and judgment. It is given privately to Moses (Num 14:20-25), and then di...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Num 14:20-23
Keil-Delitzsch: Num 14:20-23 - --
In answer to this importunate prayer, the Lord promised forgiveness, namely, the preservation of the nation, but not the remission of the well-merit...
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 13:1--14:45 - --The failure of the first generation chs. 13-14
The events recorded in chapters 13 and 14...





