
Text -- Numbers 21:3 (NET)




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Wesley: Num 21:3 - -- Neither Moses nor the whole body of the people did this but a select number sent out to punish that king and people, who were so fierce and malicious ...
Neither Moses nor the whole body of the people did this but a select number sent out to punish that king and people, who were so fierce and malicious that they came out of their own country to fight with the Israelites in the wilderness; and these, when they had done this work, returned to their brethren into the wilderness. But why did they not all now go into Canaan, and pursue this victory? Because God would not permit it, there being several works yet to be done, other people must be conquered, the Israelites must be farther humbled and tried and purged, Moses must die, and then they shall enter, and that in a more glorious manner, even over Jordan, which shall be miraculously dried up, to give them passage.
JFB -> Num 21:2-3
JFB: Num 21:2-3 - -- Made to feel their own weakness, they implored the aid of Heaven, and, in anticipation of it, devoted the cities of this king to future destruction. T...
Made to feel their own weakness, they implored the aid of Heaven, and, in anticipation of it, devoted the cities of this king to future destruction. The nature and consequence of such anathemas are described (Lev. 27:1-34; Deu. 13:1-18). This vow of extermination against Arad [Num 21:2] gave name to the place Hormah (slaughter and destruction) though it was not accomplished till after the passage of the Jordan. Others think Hormah the name of a town mentioned (Jos 12:14).
Clarke -> Num 21:3
Clarke: Num 21:3 - -- The Lord hearkened to the voice of Israel - The whole of this verse appears to me to have been added after the days of Joshua. It is certain the Can...
The Lord hearkened to the voice of Israel - The whole of this verse appears to me to have been added after the days of Joshua. It is certain the Canaanites were not utterly destroyed at the time here spoken of, for this did not take place till after the death of Moses. If, instead of utterly destroyed them,
TSK -> Num 21:3
TSK: Num 21:3 - -- hearkened : Psa 10:17, Psa 91:15, Psa 102:17
and they utterly : Wyyacharem , rather with the LXX και ανεθεματισεν , ""and they ana...
hearkened : Psa 10:17, Psa 91:15, Psa 102:17
and they utterly :
the name : Num 14:45; Deu 1:44; 1Sa 30:30

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Barnes -> Num 21:3
Barnes: Num 21:3 - -- He called the name of the place - Render it as: "the name of the place was called."The transitive verb here is, by a common Hebrew idiom, equiv...
He called the name of the place - Render it as: "the name of the place was called."The transitive verb here is, by a common Hebrew idiom, equivalent to an impersonal one.
Hormah - i. e. "Ban."See Num 14:45 and note. In Jdg 1:17, we read that the men of Judah and Simeon "slew the Canaanites that inhabited Zephath, and utterly destroyed it;"and further, that "the name of the city was called Hormah."But it does not follow that the name "Hormah"was first bestowed in consequence of the destruction of the place in the time of the Judges, and that in Numbers its occurrence is a sign of a post-Mosaic date of composition. The text here informs us that this aggression of the king of Arad was repelled, and avenged by the capture and sack of his cities; and that the Israelites "banned"them (compare Lev 27:28-29). But it was not the plan of the Israelites in the time of Moses to remain in this district. They therefore marched away southeastward; and no doubt for the time the Canaanites resumed possession, and restored the ancient name (Zephath). But Joshua again conquered the king of this district, and finally in the time of the early Judges the ban of Moses and his contemporaries was fully executed. We have therefore in the passage before us the history of the actual origin of the name "Hormah."
Poole -> Num 21:3
Poole: Num 21:3 - -- They utterly destroyed them: when?
Answ Either,
1. Some time after this, under Joshua, who subdued, among others, the king of Arad , Jos 12:14 . ...
They utterly destroyed them: when?
Answ Either,
1. Some time after this, under Joshua, who subdued, among others, the king of Arad , Jos 12:14 . And so this is mentioned here by anticipation, that the vow being now made and mentioned, the effect or performance of it might be recorded, though out of its place; and so this verse must be supposed to be added by some of the prophets, and inserted into Moses’ s history, as some other passages seem to be. Or,
2. At this time; and so this is not the same Arad with that, Jos 12:14 , nor this the same Hormah with that there mentioned, but another of the same name, which is most frequent in persons and places in Scripture. And this is the more probable, because that Arad and Hormah, Jos 12:14 , are two distinct places, and had divers kings, whereas here the same place is called both Arad and Hormah; and because that Arad seems to be at some good distance from this, and more within the country, and more northward, as may be gathered from the other places joined with it, Jos 12 . whereas this Arad was near Edom, Num 21:4 , and in the south, Num 21:1 .
Quest. 1. How could this be done in the land of Canaan, when Moses neither entered himself, nor led the people into that land?
Answ Neither Moses nor the whole body of the people did this exploit, but a select number sent out for this purpose to punish that king and people, who were so fierce and malicious that they came out of their own country to fight with the Israelites in the wilderness; and these, when they had done this work, returned to their brethren into the wilderness.
Quest. 2. Why did they not all now go into Canaan, when some of them had once entered it, and pursue this victory?
Answ Because God would not permit it, there being several works yet to be done, other people must be conquered, the Israelites must be further humbled and tried and purged, Moses must die, and then they shall enter, and that in a more glorious manner, even over Jordan, which shall be miraculously dried up, and give them passage.
Haydock -> Num 21:3
Haydock: Num 21:3 - -- Anathema. That is, a thing devoted to utter destruction. (Challoner) ---
The explanation of Horma is inserted by St. Jerome. (Haydock)
Anathema. That is, a thing devoted to utter destruction. (Challoner) ---
The explanation of Horma is inserted by St. Jerome. (Haydock)
Gill -> Num 21:3
Gill: Num 21:3 - -- And the Lord hearkened to the voice of Israel,.... In their prayers and vows; with acceptance heard, and answered them according to their wish:
and...
And the Lord hearkened to the voice of Israel,.... In their prayers and vows; with acceptance heard, and answered them according to their wish:
and delivered up the Canaanites: into their hands, gave them victory over them:
and they utterly destroyed them and their cities; that is, "anathematized" them, and devoted them to destruction; for as yet they did not actually destroy them, since we read of Arad afterwards, Jos 12:14, but this they did in Joshua's time, when the whole land of Canaan came into their hands; for had they entered the land now, and took and destroyed the cities belonging to Arad, they would doubtless have proceeded, and pursued their conquests, and not have returned into the wilderness again to go round about Edom, in order to enter another way; many think, as Aben Ezra observes on Num 21:1 that this section was written by Joshua, after the land was subdued:
and he called the name of the place Hormah; which before was called Zephath, and it seems to have its name from various disasters which happened at this place; as the defeat of the Israelites by the Amalekites, Num 14:45, and here of the Canaanites by the Israelites, and afterwards of the inhabitants of this place by Judah and Simeon, Jdg 1:17 it had its name from "Cherem", the anathema or destruction it was devoted to.

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