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Text -- Numbers 35:28 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Num 35:22-28
JFB: Num 35:22-28 - -- Under the excitement of a sudden provocation, or violent passion, an injury might be inflicted issuing in death; and for a person who had thus undesig...
Under the excitement of a sudden provocation, or violent passion, an injury might be inflicted issuing in death; and for a person who had thus undesignedly committed slaughter, the Levitical cities offered the benefit of full protection. Once having reached the nearest, for one or other of them was within a day's journey of all parts of the land, he was secure. But he had to "abide in it." His confinement within its walls was a wise and salutary rule, designed to show the sanctity of human blood in God's sight, as well as to protect the manslayer himself, whose presence and intercourse in society might have provoked the passions of the deceased's relatives. But the period of his release from this confinement was not until the death of the high priest. That was a season of public affliction, when private sorrows were sunk or overlooked under a sense of the national calamity, and when the death of so eminent a servant of God naturally led all to serious consideration about their own mortality. The moment, however, that the refugee broke through the restraints of his confinement and ventured beyond the precincts of the asylum, he forfeited the privilege, and, if he was discovered by his pursuer, he might be slain with impunity.
Calvin -> Num 35:28
Calvin: Num 35:28 - -- 28.Because he should have remained in the city of his refuge. The period of banishment is prescribed, “until the death of the high-priest,” becau...
28.Because he should have remained in the city of his refuge. The period of banishment is prescribed, “until the death of the high-priest,” because it would have been anything but humane that all hopes of restoration should have been cut off from the unhappy exile; and, when a new priest succeeded to reconcile the people to God, this renewal of grace was to propitiate all offenses. Wherefore it was not unreasonable that God should entirely restore those who were only punished for inadvertency.
TSK -> Num 35:28
TSK: Num 35:28 - -- he should : Joh 15:4-6; Act 11:23, Act 27:31; Heb 3:14, Heb 6:4-8, Heb 10:26-30, Heb 10:39
after the death : Heb 9:11, Heb 9:12, Heb 9:15-17
he should : Joh 15:4-6; Act 11:23, Act 27:31; Heb 3:14, Heb 6:4-8, Heb 10:26-30, Heb 10:39
after the death : Heb 9:11, Heb 9:12, Heb 9:15-17
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Gill -> Num 35:28
Gill: Num 35:28 - -- Because he should have remained in the city of his refuge until the death of the high priest,.... Nothing could give him his liberty but his death; so...
Because he should have remained in the city of his refuge until the death of the high priest,.... Nothing could give him his liberty but his death; so that though this was a merciful provision made in such cases for such persons, and was a considerable benefit and privilege, yet it carried in it some appearance of a punishment; since such a person was confined within the boundaries of one of the cities of refuge as long as the high priest lived; and this was done to make persons cautious how they were any way accessory to the death of another, though without design:
but after the death of the high priest the slayer shall return into the land of his possession; to that part of the land, and to that tribe to which he belonged, to his house and family, and to his possessions and inheritances, whatever he had, and to all the honours and privileges he before enjoyed, and under no danger from the avenger of blood henceforward: a custom somewhat like this has prevailed in some parts of Africa, as Leo Africanus y relates, that if a man happened to kill another, all the friends of the deceased conspired to kill him, but if they could not effect it, then the guilty person was proclaimed an exile from the city, for the whole space of seven years; and at the expiration of the whole seven years, when he returned from his exile, the chief men of the city invited him to a feast, and so he was restored to his liberty: temples, groves, altars, and statues, were common among other nations for asylums or refuges, but whole cities very rarely with the ancients; it seems there were some z.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Num 35:1-34
TSK Synopsis: Num 35:1-34 - --1 Eight and forty cities for the Levites, with their suburbs, and measure thereof.6 Six of them are to be cities of refuge.9 The laws of murder and ma...
MHCC -> Num 35:9-34
MHCC: Num 35:9-34 - --To show plainly the abhorrence of murder, and to provide the more effectually for the punishment of the murderer, the nearest relation of the deceased...
Matthew Henry -> Num 35:9-34
Matthew Henry: Num 35:9-34 - -- We have here the orders given concerning the cities of refuge, fitly annexed to what goes before, because they were all Levites' cities. In this par...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Num 35:26-28
Keil-Delitzsch: Num 35:26-28 - --
If he left the city of refuge before this, and the avenger of blood got hold of him, and slew him outside the borders (precincts) of the city, it wa...
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 ...
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Constable: Num 33:1--36:13 - --B. Warning and encouragement of the younger generation chs. 33-36
God gave the final laws governing Isra...
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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...
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