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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Num 25:1 - -- And this was their last station, from whence they passed immediately into Canaan. This is noted as a great aggravation of their sin, that they committ...
And this was their last station, from whence they passed immediately into Canaan. This is noted as a great aggravation of their sin, that they committed it, when God was going to put them into the possession of their long - expected land.

Wesley: Num 25:1 - -- Either because they prostituted themselves to them upon condition of worshipping their God: or because their filthy God was worshipped by such filthy ...
Either because they prostituted themselves to them upon condition of worshipping their God: or because their filthy God was worshipped by such filthy acts, as Priapus and Venus were.

Wesley: Num 25:1 - -- And of Midian too; for both these people being confederated in this wicked design, the one is put for the other, and the daughters of Moab may be name...
And of Midian too; for both these people being confederated in this wicked design, the one is put for the other, and the daughters of Moab may be named, either because they began the transgression, or because they were the chief persons, possibly, the relations or courtiers of Balak.

Wesley: Num 25:2 - -- The Moabites being now neighbours to the Israelites, and finding themselves unable to effect their design by war and witchcraft, fell another way to w...
The Moabites being now neighbours to the Israelites, and finding themselves unable to effect their design by war and witchcraft, fell another way to work, by contracting familiarity with them, and, perceiving their evil inclinations, they, that is, their daughters, invited them.

Wesley: Num 25:2 - -- Unto the feasts which were made of their parts of the sacrifices, after the manner of the Jews and Gentiles too, the participation whereof, was reckon...
Unto the feasts which were made of their parts of the sacrifices, after the manner of the Jews and Gentiles too, the participation whereof, was reckoned a participation in the worship of that God to whom the sacrifices were offered.

Wesley: Num 25:2 - -- Of their God, Baal - peor, the plural Elohim being here used, as commonly it is, for one God.
Of their God, Baal - peor, the plural Elohim being here used, as commonly it is, for one God.
JFB -> Num 25:1
Calvin -> Num 25:1
Calvin: Num 25:1 - -- 1.And Israel abode in Shittim From this narrative we learn assuredly that the people were no more able to bear prosperity than adversity. Heretofore,...
1.And Israel abode in Shittim From this narrative we learn assuredly that the people were no more able to bear prosperity than adversity. Heretofore, either worn out by fatigue, or rendered impatient by abstinence and famine, they had often rebelled against God; now, when they have entered a habitable land, and are resting in the midst of fruitful fields, they are incited by their more comfortable dwelling-places, and more pleasant mode of life, to lasciviousness, and the indulgence of filthy lusts. Moses relates how, when they had given way to their lust, they fell at the same time into whoredom and idolatry. We shall presently see that this arose from the counsel of Balaam, that the Moabites should prostitute their women to the Israelites, in order to entice them by their blandishments to unholy worship. Balaam had learnt by experience that God’s favor was an invincible safeguard to protect the people from all injury. He, therefore, invents a plan whereby they may destroy themselves, by not only depriving themselves of God’s protection, but also by provoking His wrath against them. By this fan, then, Balaam stirred up the fire, which impelled these poor wretches, inflamed by blind lechery, to another crime, by which they might arouse against themselves the enmity of God. Consequently Paul, referring to this history, informs us that the punishment, which will be mentioned immediately, was inflicted upon them for fornication. (1Co 10:8.) For, although it was God’s design to avenge the violation of His worship, still it is fitting to examine into the origin and source of the evil. Just as, if a drunken man has killed a person, the murder will be imputed to his drunkenness, so Paul, seeing the Israelites impelled by fornication to idolatry, sets before us the punishment as a warning to deter us from fornication, which was the primary cause of their chastisement, and the means of their corruption. Since, then, the fall from one sin to another is so easy, let us hence learn to be more watchful, lest Satan should entangle us in his snares. Let us also observe that he creeps upon us by degrees in order to entrap us. The Moabitish damsels did not straightway solicit the Israelites to worship their idols, but first invite them to their banquets, and thus tempt them to idolatry; for, if mention had been made at first of idol-worship, perhaps they might have shuddered at the atrocity of the crime, to which they allowed themselves to be beguiled by degrees. Now, to be present at a feast which was celebrated in honor of false gods, was a kind of indirect renunciation of the true God; and when they had been attracted thus far, they threw aside all shame, and abandoned themselves to that extreme act whereby they transfer the honor due only to the one true God, to false and imaginary deities.

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Num 25:1 - -- The records of the neighboring cities of the plain, and the circumstances of the origin of Moab (Gen 19:30 ff) suggest that the people among whom Is...
The records of the neighboring cities of the plain, and the circumstances of the origin of Moab (Gen 19:30 ff) suggest that the people among whom Israel was now thrown were more than ordinarily licentious.

And they called - i. e., "the daughters of Moab called."
Poole: Num 25:1 - -- Shittim a place called more largely Abel-shittim , Num 33:49 , it being usual with the Hebrews to abbreviate long proper names, as Hermon is put ...
Shittim a place called more largely Abel-shittim , Num 33:49 , it being usual with the Hebrews to abbreviate long proper names, as Hermon is put for Baal-hermon , Jud 3:3 , Tholad for El-tholad , Jos 19:4 , Nimrim , Isa 15:6 for Beth-nimrim , Num 32:36 . And this was their last station, from whence they passed immediately into Canaan. So this is here noted as a great aggravation of their sin, that they committed it when God was going to put them into the possession of their long-expected and much-desired land.
The people not all, but many of them, as appears from Deu 4:3,4 1Co 10:8 .
To commit whoredom both corporally and spiritually, either because they prostituted themselves to them upon condition of worshipping their god; or because their filthy god was worshipped by such filthy acts, as Priapus and Venus were.
Of Moab and of Midian too, as is evident from Num 25:6,17,18 Nu 31:16 ; for both these people being confederated in this wicked design, the one is put for the other; and the daughters of Moab may be named, either because they began fine transgression, or because they were the chief persons, possibly, the relations or courtiers of Balak king of Moab.

Poole: Num 25:2 - -- They called the people: this may be noted, either,
1. As the consequent of their whoredom, an invitation to further society in their sacred feasts; ...
They called the people: this may be noted, either,
1. As the consequent of their whoredom, an invitation to further society in their sacred feasts; or rather,
2. As the cause or occasion of their whoredom, the Hebrew vau here signifying for , as it oft doth. The Moabites being now neighbours to the Israelites, and finding themselves unable to effect their design against Israel by war and witchcraft, they now fell another way to work, by contracting familiarity with them; and perceiving their evil and lustful inclinations, they , i.e. their daughters, last mentioned, invited them to their feasts.
Unto the sacrifices i.e. unto the feasts which were made of their parts of their sacrifices, after the manner of the Jews and Gentiles too, the participation whereof was reckoned a participation in the worship of that god to whom the sacrifices were offered, 1Co 10:18 , and therefore was forbidden to the Israelites when such feasts and sacrifices belonged to a false god, Exo 34:15 . Yet this was a less and more modest kind of idolatry, and therefore is fitly used to usher in what was more gross and impious.
Of their gods i.e. of their god, Baal-peor , the plural elohim being here used, as commonly it is, for one god.
Bowed down which properly notes the outward act of worship, which here consisting in or being accompanied with filthy serious, may either signify or connote them.
To their gods before their gods, or, to the honour and worship of their gods.
Haydock -> Num 25:1
Haydock: Num 25:1 - -- Settim, which had Abel, "mourning," prefixed to it, (chap. xxxiii. 49,) on account of the slaughter of 24,000 of the Israelites, ver. 6, 9. It was...
Settim, which had Abel, "mourning," prefixed to it, (chap. xxxiii. 49,) on account of the slaughter of 24,000 of the Israelites, ver. 6, 9. It was situated in the plains of Moab, near the Jordan, and was the last station of the Hebrews. (Calmet) ---
In this neighbourhood all the following transactions occurred, which are recorded, till the end of the Pentateuch. (Menochius) ---
Balaam, being convinced that the Hebrews would be invincible, as long as they continued faithful to God, advised the nations, who had sent to consult him, to let their daughters converse freely with the Israelites, but not to yield to their impure desires, unless they consented to offer sacrifice to their idols. (Calmet) ---
Thus they first captivated their hearts, and then subverted their understanding: For some rejecting a good conscience, have made shipwreck concerning the faith, 1 Timothy i. 19. (Haydock) ---
By the same method many have been drawn into heresy. (Worthington) ---
The counsels of an able but wicked man, are often followed by the most dreadful effects. That these women were sent by the Moabites, and also by the Madianites, (ver. 6, 17,) instigated by the perverse counsels of Balaam, (Calmet) appears not only from the event being recorded in this place, but also by the express declaration of Moses, chap. xxxi. 7, 8, and of the Apocalypse, chap. ii. 14. (Salien, Mic. vi. 5.) (Haydock)
Gill: Num 25:1 - -- And Israel abode in Shittim,.... A place in the plains of Moab, so called from the shittim wood, which grew here in great abundance, so often mentione...
And Israel abode in Shittim,.... A place in the plains of Moab, so called from the shittim wood, which grew here in great abundance, so often mentioned in the building of the tabernacle; which was a sort of white thorn, or rather the acacia tree, since there was scarcely any thing else grew in the deserts of Arabia; see Gill on Exo 25:5 its full name was Abelshittim, Num 33:49, here the Israelites abode even to the death of Moses, for this was their last station in the wilderness; they were now on the borders of the land of Canaan, and just ready to enter into it, which is an aggravation of the sins they here fell into, and are next observed:
and the people began to commit whoredom with the daughters of Moab; and of Midian also, as appears from Num 25:6 by the advice of Balaam, the Moabites and Midianites found ways and means to become familiar with the Israelites, and to introduce their daughters into their company and conversation, and being ensnared and enamoured with them, they were drawn to commit lewdness with them, and hereby were led on to commit other abominations, which brought the divine displeasure upon them; so that what they dared not attempt by war, and could not effect by sorceries and divinations, they accomplished by those iniquitous arts, namely, bringing the wrath, the curse, and plague of God upon them.

Gill: Num 25:2 - -- And they called the people unto the sacrifices of their gods,.... That is, the daughters of Moab and Midian, with whom the children of Israel carried ...
And they called the people unto the sacrifices of their gods,.... That is, the daughters of Moab and Midian, with whom the children of Israel carried on an unlawful correspondence, invited them, their gallants, to come and partake of the feasts which attended the sacrifices of their idols; for part of what was offered to idols a feast was kept with, to which great numbers were invited, and which was observed with all the circumstances of joy and pleasure imaginable, and which was very ensnaring, especially to young people; and the children of Israel being so much enamoured with the beauty of the Moabitish women, and so strong were their lusts and passions, that they could not refuse the invitation:
and the people did eat: of the things sacrificed to idols, and so became guilty of idolatry, even by so doing, and then when they had eaten and drank, and were merry, they were led on to other acts of idolatry:
and bowed down to their gods: which was a plain and open act of idolatry, whereby they testified their faith in their divinity, their reverence of them, and their homage and obedience to them: Jarchi says, when the evil concupiscence or lust was strong in them, and they solicited the daughters of Moab to hearken to them, and comply with them, they used to take the image of Peor out of their bosom, and said, worship this, signifying that on that condition they would gratify them; and thus whoredom led them on to idolatry, and they committed the one for the sake of being indulged in the other.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Num 25:1 The account apparently means that the men were having sex with the Moabite women. Why the men submitted to such a temptation at this point is hard to ...

NET Notes: Num 25:2 What Israel experienced here was some of the debased ritual practices of the Canaanite people. The act of prostrating themselves before the pagan deit...
Geneva Bible -> Num 25:1
Geneva Bible: Num 25:1 And Israel abode in Shittim, and the people began to commit whoredom with the ( a ) daughters of Moab.
( a ) With the women.
