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Text -- Numbers 16:41 (NET)

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Context
16:41 But on the next day the whole community of Israelites murmured against Moses and Aaron, saying, “You have killed the Lord’s people!”
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Aaron a son of Amram; brother of Moses,son of Amram (Kohath Levi); patriarch of Israel's priests,the clan or priestly line founded by Aaron
 · Israel a citizen of Israel.,a member of the nation of Israel
 · Moses a son of Amram; the Levite who led Israel out of Egypt and gave them The Law of Moses,a Levite who led Israel out of Egypt and gave them the law


Dictionary Themes and Topics: TABERNACLE, B | REUBEN | PENTATEUCH, 2B | PENTATEUCH, 2A | Moses | Levites | Korah | Israel | Infidelity | GOVERNMENT | Exodus | EZEKIEL, 2 | DATHEMA | DATHAN | Complaint | Citizenship | Blindness | Abiram | Aaron | AARON'S ROD | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Num 16:41 - -- Prodigious wickedness and madness so soon to forget such a terrible instance of Divine vengeance! The people of the Lord - So they call those wicked w...

Prodigious wickedness and madness so soon to forget such a terrible instance of Divine vengeance! The people of the Lord - So they call those wicked wretches, and rebels against God! Tho' they were but newly saved from sharing in the same punishment, and the survivors were as brands plucked out of the burning, yet they fly in the face of Moses and Aaron, to whose intercession they owe their preservation.

JFB: Num 16:41 - -- What a strange exhibition of popular prejudice and passion--to blame the leaders for saving the rebels! Yet Moses and Aaron interceded for the people-...

What a strange exhibition of popular prejudice and passion--to blame the leaders for saving the rebels! Yet Moses and Aaron interceded for the people--the high priest perilling his own life in doing good to that perverse race.

Clarke: Num 16:41 - -- On the morrow all the congregation - murmured - It is very likely that the people persuaded themselves that Moses and Aaron had used some cunning in...

On the morrow all the congregation - murmured - It is very likely that the people persuaded themselves that Moses and Aaron had used some cunning in this business, and that the earthquake and fire were artificial; else, had they discerned the hand of God in this punishment, could they have dared the anger of the Lord in the very face of justice?

Calvin: Num 16:41 - -- 41.But on the morrow all the congregation There is something more than monstrous in this madness of theirs. The conflagration was yet smoking, wherei...

41.But on the morrow all the congregation There is something more than monstrous in this madness of theirs. The conflagration was yet smoking, wherein God had appeared as the awful avenger of pride: the chasm in which the leaders of the rebellion had been swallowed up, must still have been almost before their eyes. God had commanded the plates to be molten, which might record that severe judgment through many succeeding ages. All had confessed by their alarm and hasty flight that there was danger lest they should themselves also be exposed to similar punishments. Yet, on the next day, am if they desired deliberately to provoke God, who was still, as it were, armed, they accuse God’s holy servants of having been the authors of the destruction, though they had never lifted a finger against their enemies. Was it in the power of Moses to command the earth to open? Could he draw down the fire from heaven at his will? Since, then, both the chasm and the fire were manifest tokens of God’s wonderful power, why do not these madmen reflect that they are engaging in fatal warfare against Him? For to what purpose was this extraordinary mode of punishment, except that in their terror they might learn to humble themselves beneath God’s hand? Yet hence did they only derive greater wildness in their audacity, as if they desired to perish voluntarily with these sinners, whose punishment they had just been shuddering at. In two ways they betray their senselessness; first, by substituting Moses and Aaron as guilty of the murder, in place of God; and, secondly, by sanctifying these putrid corpses, as if in despite of God. They accuse Moses and Aaron of the slaughter, of which God had plainly shown Himself to be the author, as they themselves had been compelled to feel. But such is the blindness of the reprobate with respect to God’s works, that His glory rather stupifies them than excites their admiration. The foulest ingratitude was also added; for they do not consider that only a very few hours had elapsed since they had been preserved by the intercession of Moses from impending destruction. Thus, in their desire to avenge the death of a few, they call those the killers of the people of the Lord, to whom they ought to have been grateful for the safety of all. Again, what arrogance it is to count among the people of God, as if against His will, those reprobates, when He had not only cut them off from His Church, but had also exterminated them from the world, and from the human race! But thus do the wicked wax wanton against God under the very cover of His gifts, and especially they do not hesitate to mock Him with empty titles and outward signs, as the masks of their iniquity.

TSK: Num 16:41 - -- on the morrow : It is not unlikely, that the people persuaded themselves that Moses and Aaron had used some cunning in this business and that the eart...

on the morrow : It is not unlikely, that the people persuaded themselves that Moses and Aaron had used some cunning in this business and that the earthquake and fire were artificial; for, had they discerned the hand of God in this punishment, they would scarcely have dared the anger of the Lord in the very face of his justice. And while they thus absurdly imputed this judgment to Moses and Aaron, they impiously called the persons, thus perishing in their rebellion, ""the people of the Lord!"

all the : Num 16:1-7, Num 14:2; Psa 106:13, Psa 106:23, 25-48; Isa 26:11

Ye have : Num 16:3; 2Sa 16:7, 2Sa 16:8; 1Ki 18:17; Jer 37:13, Jer 37:14, Jer 38:4, Jer 43:3; Amo 7:10; Mat 5:11; Act 5:28, Act 21:28; 2Co 6:8

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Poole: Num 16:41 - -- Prodigious wickedness and madness, so soon to forget such a terrible instance of Divine vengeance! Ye have killed you, who should have preserved t...

Prodigious wickedness and madness, so soon to forget such a terrible instance of Divine vengeance!

Ye have killed you, who should have preserved them, and interceded for them, have pulled down God’ s wrath upon them, for the maintenance of your own authority and interest.

The people of the Lord so they call those wicked wretches, and rebels against God; which shows the power of passion and prejudice to corrupt men’ s judgment.

Gill: Num 16:41 - -- But on the morrow,.... The day following the dreadful catastrophe, the earth swallowing up Dathan and Abiram, and all that belonged to them, the burni...

But on the morrow,.... The day following the dreadful catastrophe, the earth swallowing up Dathan and Abiram, and all that belonged to them, the burning of Korah and the two hundred fifty men of his company:

all the congregation of the children of Israel murmured against Moses,

and against Aaron; not the princes and heads of the people only, but the whole body of them; though the above persons that murmured against them had but the day before been made such dreadful examples of divine vengeance. This is a most surprising instance of the corruption and depravity of human nature, of the blindness, hardness, and stupidity of the hearts of men, which nothing but the grace of God can remove; the images of the awful sights many of them had seen must be strong in their minds; the shrieks of the wretched creatures perishing must be as yet as it were in their ears; the smell of the fire was scarce out of their nostrils; and yet, notwithstanding this shocking scene of things, they fell into the same evil, and murmur against the men, whose authority, being called in question, had been confirmed by the above awful instances:

saying, ye have killed the people of the Lord; so they called the rebels, and hereby justified them in all the wickedness they had been guilty of; and though their death was so manifestly by the immediate hand of God, yet they lay it to the charge of Moses and Aaron, because it was in vindication of them that it was done, and because they did not intercede by prayer for them; though it is certain they did all they could to reclaim them from their sin, and prevent their ruin; yet the people insist on it that they were the cause or occasion of their death, as the Targums of Onkelos and Jonathan express it.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Num 16:41 The whole congregation here is trying to project its guilt on Moses and Aaron. It was they and their rebellion that brought about the deaths, not Mose...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

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 16:41-50 - --The gaping earth was scarcely closed, before the same sins are again committed, and all these warnings slighted. They called the rebels the people of ...

Matthew Henry: Num 16:41-50 - -- Here is, I. A new rebellion raised the very next day against Moses and Aaron. Be astonished, O heavens, at this, and wonder, O earth! Was there ever...

Keil-Delitzsch: Num 16:41-50 - -- Punishment of the Murmuring Congregation. - The judgment upon the company of Korah had filled the people round about with terror and dismay, but it ...

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...

Constable: Num 16:1-50 - --The rebellion of Korah and his followers ch. 16 "As the laws increase and the constraints grow, the people seem less willing or less capable of follow...

Guzik: Num 16:1-50 - --Numbers 16 - Korah's Rebellion A. The battle lines are drawn: Korah and his followers oppose Moses' leadership. 1. (1-3) The accusation against Mose...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Numbers (Book Introduction) NUMBERS. This book is so called because it contains an account of the enumeration and arrangement of the Israelites. The early part of it, from the fi...

JFB: Numbers (Outline) MOSES NUMBERING THE MEN OF WAR. (Num. 1:1-54) THE ORDER OF THE TRIBES IN THEIR TENTS. (Num. 2:1-34) THE LEVITES' SERVICE. (Num. 3:1-51) OF THE LEVITE...

TSK: Numbers (Book Introduction) The book of Numbers is a book containing a series of the most astonishing providences and events. Every where and in every circumstance God appears; ...

TSK: Numbers 16 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Num 16:1, The rebellion of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram; Num 16:23, Moses separates the people from the rebels’ tents; Num 16:31, The eart...

Poole: Numbers (Book Introduction) FOURTH BOOK OF MOSES, CALLED NUMBERS THE ARGUMENT This Book giveth us a history of almost forty years travel of the children of Israel through th...

Poole: Numbers 16 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 16 Korah, Dathan, and Abiram raise sedition against Moses and Aaron, Num 16:1-3 . Moses reproving them, Num 16:4-11 , sends for Dathan and ...

MHCC: Numbers (Book Introduction) This book is called NUMBERS from the several numberings of the people contained in it. It extends from the giving of the law at Sinai, till their arri...

MHCC: Numbers 16 (Chapter Introduction) (Num 16:1-11) The rebellion of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram Korah contends for the priesthood. (Num 16:12-15) Disobedience of Dathan and Abiram. (Num 1...

Matthew Henry: Numbers (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Fourth Book of Moses, Called Numbers The titles of the five books of Moses, which we use in our Bib...

Matthew Henry: Numbers 16 (Chapter Introduction) The date of the history contained in this chapter is altogether uncertain. Probably these mutinies happened after their removal back again from Kad...

Constable: Numbers (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title the Jews used in their Hebrew Old Testament for this book...

Constable: Numbers (Outline) Outline I. Experiences of the older generation in the wilderness chs. 1-25 A. Preparations f...

Constable: Numbers Numbers Bibliography Aharoni, Yohanan. The Land of the Bible. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1979. ...

Haydock: Numbers (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION. This fourth Book of Moses is called Numbers , because it begins with the numbering of the people. The Hebrews, from its first words...

Gill: Numbers (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO NUMBERS This book has its name from the account it gives of the "numbers" of the children of Israel, twice taken particularly; whic...

Gill: Numbers 16 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO NUMBERS 16 This chapter gives an account of a sedition of Korah and others against Moses and Aaron, Num 16:1, with whom Moses expos...

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