
Text -- Numbers 34:3 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Num 34:3 - -- Which is here described from east to west by divers windings and turnings, by reason of the mountains and rivers.
Which is here described from east to west by divers windings and turnings, by reason of the mountains and rivers.

So called from the salt and sulphurous taste of its waters.

Wesley: Num 34:3 - -- That is, at the eastern part of that sea, where the eastern and southern borders meet.
That is, at the eastern part of that sea, where the eastern and southern borders meet.
JFB -> Num 34:3-5
JFB: Num 34:3-5 - -- The line which bounded it on the south is the most difficult to trace. According to the best biblical geographers, the leading points here defined are...
The line which bounded it on the south is the most difficult to trace. According to the best biblical geographers, the leading points here defined are as follows: The southwest angle of the southern boundary should be where the wilderness of Zin touches the border of Edom, so that the southern boundary should extend eastward from the extremity of the Dead Sea, wind around the precipitous ridge of Akrabbim ("scorpions"), thought to be the high and difficult Pass of Safeh, which crosses the stream that flows from the south into the Jordan--that is, the great valley of the Arabah, reaching from the Dead to the Red Sea.
Clarke -> Num 34:3
TSK -> Num 34:3
TSK: Num 34:3 - -- south quarter : Exo 23:31; Jos 15:1-12; Eze 47:13, Eze 47:19-23
salt sea eastward : The lake Asphaltites, Dead sea, or Salt sea, is, according to the ...
south quarter : Exo 23:31; Jos 15:1-12; Eze 47:13, Eze 47:19-23
salt sea eastward : The lake Asphaltites, Dead sea, or Salt sea, is, according to the most authentic accounts, about 70 miles in length, and 18 in breadth. Viewing this sea from the spot where the Jordan discharges its waters into it, it takes a south-easterly direction, visible for ten or fifteen miles, when it disappears in a curve towards the east. Its surface is generally unruffled, from the hollow of the basin in which it lies scarcely admitting the free passage necessary for a strong breezecaps1 . icaps0 t is, however, for the same reason, subject to whirlwinds or squalls of short duration. The mountains on each side are apparently separated by a distance of eight miles; but the expanse of water at this point has been supposed not to exceed five or sixcaps1 . acaps0 s it advances towards the south, it evidently increases in breadth. The acrid saltness of its waters is much greater than that of the sea; and of such specific gravity that bodies will float on it that would sink in common sea-water. It is probably on this account that few fish can live in it; though the monks of St. Saba affirmed to Dr. Shaw, that they had seen fish caught in it. Gen 14:3; Jos 3:16, Jos 15:2; Eze 47:8, Eze 47:18

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Num 34:3-5
Barnes: Num 34:3-5 - -- The southern boundary commenced at the Dead Sea. The broad and desolate valley by which the depressed bed of that sea is protected toward the south,...
The southern boundary commenced at the Dead Sea. The broad and desolate valley by which the depressed bed of that sea is protected toward the south, is called the Ghor. A deep narrow glen enters it at its southwest corner; it is called Wady-el-Fikreh, and is continued in the same southwestern direction, under the name of Wady el-Marrah; a wady which loses itself among the hills belonging to "the wilderness of Zin;"and Kadesh-barnea (see Num 13:26 note), which is "in the wilderness of Zin,"will be, as the text implies, the southernmost point of the southern boundary. Thence, if Kadesh be identical with the present Ain el-Weibeh, westward to the river, or brook of Egypt, now Wady el-Arish, is a distance of about seventy miles. In this interval were Hazar-addar and Azmon; the former being perhaps the general name of a district of Hazerim, or nomad hamlets (see Deu 2:23), of which Adder was one: and Azmon, perhaps to be identified with Kesam, the modern Kasaimeh, a group of springs situate in the north of one of the gaps in the ridge, and a short distance west of Ain el-Kudeirat.
(Others consider the boundary line to have followed the Ghor along the Arabah to the south of the Azazimeh mountains, thence to Gadis round the southeast of that mountain, and thence to Wady el-Arish.)
Poole -> Num 34:3
Poole: Num 34:3 - -- The south quarter is here described from east to west by divers windings and turnings, by reason of the mountains, rivers, &c.
By the coast of Edom ...
The south quarter is here described from east to west by divers windings and turnings, by reason of the mountains, rivers, &c.
By the coast of Edom bordering all along upon the Edomites.
The Salt Sea so called from the salt and sulphurous taste of its waters.
Eastward i.e. at the eastern part of that sea, where the eastern and southern borders meet.
Haydock -> Num 34:3
Haydock: Num 34:3 - -- The most salt sea. The lake of Sodom, otherwise called the Dead Sea. (Challoner) ---
Limits. These are very properly defined in this place, that ...
The most salt sea. The lake of Sodom, otherwise called the Dead Sea. (Challoner) ---
Limits. These are very properly defined in this place, that the Hebrews may know what nations they ought to destroy. (Menochius) ---
A line may be drawn from the southern point of the Dead Sea, through Adar, as far as the Nile and the Mediterranean Sea, comprising a part of the desert of Sin, or Zin.
Gill -> Num 34:3
Gill: Num 34:3 - -- Then your south quarter,.... Or border of the land; which, as Jarchi observes, was from east to west:
shall be from the wilderness of Zin; which is...
Then your south quarter,.... Or border of the land; which, as Jarchi observes, was from east to west:
shall be from the wilderness of Zin; which is Kadesh, where Miriam died, Num 20:1, and if this Kadesh was Kadeshbarnea, as Dr. Lightfoot seems to have proved h, from whence the spies were sent, that was clearly on the south of the land of Canaan, for they were bid to go up their way southward, Num 13:17, and so Kadeshbarnea is hereafter mentioned, as being in the southern border: the Targum of Jonathan paraphrases it,"from the wilderness of the palm trees of the mountain of iron;''there is a smaller palm tree, which by Jewish writers is called Zin, of which there were great quantities on a mountain famous for iron mines, in this wilderness, from whence it is thought it had its name; hence we read i of palm trees of the mountain of iron, as fit to make the bunch of branches of trees, called the "lulab", carried in the hand on the feast of tabernacles:
along by the coast of Edom; the land of Canaan, to the south, bordered on three countries, Egypt, Edom, and Moab; according to Jarchi, some part of Egypt, the whole land of Edom, and the whole land of Moab; the part of the land of Egypt was in the south west corner of it; the land of Edom by it to the east; and the land of Moab by the land of Edom, at the end of the south to the east:
and your south border shall be the outmost coast of the salt sea eastward; the same that is sometimes called the Dead sea, the sea of Sodom, or the lake Asphaltites, as Heathen writers generally call it.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Num 34:1-29
TSK Synopsis: Num 34:1-29 - --1 The borders of the land.16 The names of the men who shall divide the land.
MHCC -> Num 34:1-15
MHCC: Num 34:1-15 - --Canaan was of small extent; as it is here bounded, it is but about 160 miles in length, and about 50 in breadth; yet this was the country promised to ...
Matthew Henry -> Num 34:1-15
Matthew Henry: Num 34:1-15 - -- We have here a particular draught of the line by which the land of Canaan was meted, and bounded, on all sides. God directs Moses to settle it here,...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Num 34:3-5
Keil-Delitzsch: Num 34:3-5 - --
The southern boundary is the same as that given in Jos 15:2-4 as the boundary of the territory of the tribe of Judah. We have first the general des...
Constable: Num 26:1--36:13 - --II. Prospects of the younger generation in the land chs. 26--36
The focus of Numbers now changes from the older ...

Constable: Num 33:1--36:13 - --B. Warning and encouragement of the younger generation chs. 33-36
God gave the final laws governing Isra...

Constable: Num 33:50--Deu 1:1 - --2. Anticipation of the Promised Land 33:50-36:13
"The section breaks down into two groups of thr...
