
Text -- Numbers 19:11 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Clarke -> Num 19:11
Clarke: Num 19:11 - -- He that toucheth the dead body of any man shall be unclean seven days - How low does this lay man! He who touched a dead beast was only unclean for ...
He that toucheth the dead body of any man shall be unclean seven days - How low does this lay man! He who touched a dead beast was only unclean for one day, Lev 11:24, Lev 11:27, Lev 11:39; but he who touches a dead man is unclean for seven days. This was certainly designed to mark the peculiar impurity of man, and to show his sinfulness - seven times worse than the vilest animal! O thou son of the morning, how art thou fallen!
Calvin -> Num 19:11
Calvin: Num 19:11 - -- 11.He that toucheth the dead body He now recites certain forms of pollution in which the washing was necessary; all of them, however, come to the poi...
11.He that toucheth the dead body He now recites certain forms of pollution in which the washing was necessary; all of them, however, come to the point, that men are defiled by the touch of a corpse or, bones, or a grave. Nor is there here any distinction between the body of a person who is slain, or of one who has died in bed; whence it follows that death is here set forth as a mirror of God’s curse: And assuredly, if we consider its origin and cause, the corruption of nature, whereby the image of God is defaced, presents itself in every, dead man; for, unless we were altogether corrupt, we should not be born to perish But God also taught His people by another mode of signifying it, that uncleanness is contracted by our communication with the unfruitful works of darkness. For the Apostle (Heb 6:1) calls them “dead works,” either from their consequences, or because, as faith is the life of the soul, so unbelief keeps it in death. Since, then, the corpse the bones, the grave, designate whatever we bring from the womb, because, until we are born again, and God quickens us by His Spirit and faith, we are dead while we live; there is no question but that the children of Israel were reminded, that in order to keep themselves pure before God, they must abstain from all corruption; inasmuch as, if they were rendered unclean by their contact with a dead man, they must immediately have recourse to ablution. In fine, the ceremony had no other object than that they should serve God in pureness from the sins of the flesh; and exercise themselves in constant thoughts of repentance, whilst, if they fell from their purity, they should labor to obtain reconciliation with God, by means of sacrifice and ablution.
TSK -> Num 19:11
TSK: Num 19:11 - -- toucheth the dead : He who touched a dead beast was only unclean for one day (Lev 11:12, Lev 11:27, Lev 11:39); but he who touches a dead man is uncle...
toucheth the dead : He who touched a dead beast was only unclean for one day (Lev 11:12, Lev 11:27, Lev 11:39); but he who touches a dead man is unclean for seven days. This was certainly designed to show the peculiar impurity and sinfulness of man, and the hatefulness of sin, seven times worse than the vilest animal! Num 19:16, Num 5:2, Num 9:6, Num 9:10, Num 31:19; Lev 11:31, Lev 21:1, Lev 21:11; Lam 4:14; Hag 2:13; Rom 5:12; 2Co 6:17; Eph 2:1; Heb 9:14
man : Heb. soul of man

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Num 19:11-22
Barnes: Num 19:11-22 - -- One practical effect of attaching defilement to a dead body, and to all that touched it, etc., would be to insure early burial, and to correct a pra...
One practical effect of attaching defilement to a dead body, and to all that touched it, etc., would be to insure early burial, and to correct a practice not uncommon in the East, of leaving the deal to be devoured by the wild beasts.
Poole -> Num 19:11
Gill -> Num 19:11
Gill: Num 19:11 - -- He that toucheth the dead body of any man,.... A man and not a beast, as Aben Ezra observes; for he that touched the dead body of a beast was unclean ...
He that toucheth the dead body of any man,.... A man and not a beast, as Aben Ezra observes; for he that touched the dead body of a beast was unclean only until evening, Lev 11:24; any man, Jew or Gentile, as the same writer notes: this is instanced in, as being the principal pollution, though not the only one, yet so some think, for which the water of purification made of the ashes of the burnt heifer was appointed:
shall be unclean seven days; the reason of which is, because death is the fruit of sin, which is of a defiling nature, and to show that all that are dead in sins are defiled and defiling, and are not to be touched, or to have communion and fellowship held with them but to be abstained from.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Num 19:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Num 19:1-22 - --1 The water of separation made of the ashes of a red heifer.11 The law for the use of it in purification of the unclean.
MHCC -> Num 19:11-22
MHCC: Num 19:11-22 - --Why did the law make a corpse a defiling thing? Because death is the wages of sin, which entered into the world by it, and reigns by the power of it. ...
Matthew Henry -> Num 19:11-22
Matthew Henry: Num 19:11-22 - -- Directions are here given concerning the use and application of the ashes which were prepared for purification. they were laid up to be laid out; an...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Num 19:10-22
Keil-Delitzsch: Num 19:10-22 - --
Use of the Water of Purification . - The words in Num 19:10 , " And it shall be to the children of Israel, and to the stranger in the midst of the...
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...
