
Text -- Numbers 16:21 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Num 16:20-21
JFB: Num 16:20-21 - -- Curiosity to witness the exciting spectacle attracted a vast concourse of the people, and it would seem that the popular mind had been incited to evil...
Curiosity to witness the exciting spectacle attracted a vast concourse of the people, and it would seem that the popular mind had been incited to evil by the clamors of the mutineers against Moses and Aaron. There was something in their behavior very offensive to God; for after His glory had appeared--as at the installation of Aaron (Lev 9:23), so now for his confirmation in the sacred office--He bade Moses and Aaron withdraw from the assembly "that He might consume them in a moment."
Calvin -> Num 16:21
Calvin: Num 16:21 - -- 21.Separate yourselves from among this congregation Again does God declare that He will bear the people’s great impiety no longer, but will destroy...
21.Separate yourselves from among this congregation Again does God declare that He will bear the people’s great impiety no longer, but will destroy them all to a man. Just, therefore, as he had commanded Lot to depart from Sodom, nay, had drawn him out by the hand of the angel, when He desired to destroy that city, so He now commands Moses and Aaron to give Him room to exercise His wrath. In this He declares His extraordinary favor towards them; as if He were not free to execute vengeance, until they had gone out of the way, lest the destruction should reach themselves. In speaking thus, however, He does not absolutely affirm what He had determined in His secret counsel, but only pronounces what the authors of this wickedness had deserved. It is, therefore, just as if He were ascending His judgment-seat. Thus Moses by his intercession by no means changed His eternal decree; but, by appeasing Him, delivered the people from the punishment they had merited. In the same sense God is said to be influenced by our prayers; not that after the manner of men He assumes new feelings, but, in order to show the more than paternal love with which he honors us, He, as it were, indulges us, when He listens to our desires. Hence we gather that even by this express denunciation Moses was not prohibited from praying; because his faith in the adoption of the people was not destroyed. For we have already said that this principle, that the covenant which God had made with Abraham could not be made void, was so thoroughly an-graven upon his mind, that it surmounted whatever obstacles might present themselves. Resting, therefore, on the gratuitous promise, which depended not on men, his prayer was the offspring of faith. For the saints do not always reason accurately and subtlety as to the form of their prayers; but, after they have once embraced that which suffices to awaken in them confidence in prayer, viz., God’s word, their whole attention is so directed to it, that they pass over the things which seem apparently to contradict it. Nor can we doubt but that it was God’s design, when He delivered his terrible sentence as to the destruction of the people, to quicken the earnestness of Moses in prayer, since necessity more and more inflames the zeal of the pious. In short, Moses was always consistent in his care for the well-being of the people.
TSK -> Num 16:21
TSK: Num 16:21 - -- Separate : Gen 19:15-22; Jer 5:16; Act 2:40; 2Co 6:17; Eph 5:6, Eph 5:7; Rev 18:4
that I may : Num 16:45, Num 14:12, Num 14:15; Exo 32:10, Exo 33:5; P...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Poole -> Num 16:21
Gill -> Num 16:21
Gill: Num 16:21 - -- Separate yourselves, from among this congregation,.... Not only from Korah's company, but from the congregation of the children of Israel, whom Korah ...
Separate yourselves, from among this congregation,.... Not only from Korah's company, but from the congregation of the children of Israel, whom Korah had got together, besides the two hundred fifty men that were at first with him; who by their words and behaviour, and particularly by their association and standing along with him, showed them to be on his side, which greatly provoked the Lord:
that I may consume them in a moment; by fire from him, as the two hundred fifty men were afterwards consumed, Num 16:35.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Num 16:1-50
TSK Synopsis: Num 16:1-50 - --1 The rebellion of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram.23 Moses separates the people from the rebels' tents.31 The earth swallows up Korah, and a fire consumes ...
MHCC -> Num 16:16-22
MHCC: Num 16:16-22 - --The same glory of the Lord that appeared to place Aaron in his office at first, Lev 9:23, now appeared to confirm him in it; and to confound those who...
Matthew Henry -> Num 16:12-22
Matthew Henry: Num 16:12-22 - -- Here is, I. The insolence of Dathan and Abiram, and their treasonable remonstrance. Moses had heard what Korah had to say, and had answered it; now ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Num 16:18-22
Keil-Delitzsch: Num 16:18-22 - --
The next day the rebels presented themselves with censers before the tabernacle, along with Moses and Aaron; and the whole congregation also assembl...
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 15:1--19:22 - --Laws given during the 38 years of discipline chs. 15-19
Moses recorded few events during...
