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Text -- Numbers 35:31-34 (NET)

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Context
35:31 Moreover, you must not accept a ransom for the life of a murderer who is guilty of death; he must surely be put to death. 35:32 And you must not accept a ransom for anyone who has fled to a town of refuge, to allow him to return home and live on his own land before the death of the high priest. 35:33 “You must not pollute the land where you live, for blood defiles the land, and the land cannot be cleansed of the blood that is shed there, except by the blood of the person who shed it. 35:34 Therefore do not defile the land that you will inhabit, in which I live, for I the Lord live among the Israelites.”
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Israel a citizen of Israel.,a member of the nation of Israel


Dictionary Themes and Topics: SHED, SHEDDING | SATISFACTION | Redemption | REFUGE, CITIES OF | RANSOM | PUNISHMENTS | PENTATEUCH, 2B | Moab | MURDER | JOSHUA (2) | GODLESS | EZEKIEL, 2 | EXODUS, THE BOOK OF, 3-4 | DEFILE; DEFILEMENT | City | COURTS, JUDICIAL | CLEANSE | Blood | ATONEMENT | ASSASSINATION | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

JFB: Num 35:29-34 - -- The law of the blood-avenger, as thus established by divine authority, was a vast improvement on the ancient practice of Goelism. By the appointment o...

The law of the blood-avenger, as thus established by divine authority, was a vast improvement on the ancient practice of Goelism. By the appointment of cities of refuge, the manslayer was saved, in the meantime, from the blind and impetuous fury of vindictive relatives; but he might be tried by the local court, and, if proved guilty on sufficient evidence, condemned and punished as a murderer, without the possibility of deliverance by any pecuniary satisfaction. The enactment of Moses, which was an adaptation to the character and usages of the Hebrew people, secured the double advantage of promoting the ends both of humanity and of justice.

Clarke: Num 35:31 - -- Ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of a murderer - No atonement could be made for him, nor any commutation, so as to save him from death. Al...

Ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of a murderer - No atonement could be made for him, nor any commutation, so as to save him from death. All the laws of the civilized world have either adjudged the murderer to death, or to a punishment equivalent to it; such as perpetual imprisonment, in a dungeon, under ground, on a stone floor, without light, and to be fed on a small portion of bread and water. In such circumstances a man could live but a short time; and though it is not called the punishment of death, yet, from its inevitable consequences, it only differed from it by being a little longer respite than was usual where the punishment of death was awarded. See the note on Gen 9:6.

Clarke: Num 35:32 - -- Until the death of the priest - Probably intended to typify, that no sinner can be delivered from his banishment from God, or recover his forfeited ...

Until the death of the priest - Probably intended to typify, that no sinner can be delivered from his banishment from God, or recover his forfeited inheritance, till Jesus Christ, the great high priest, had died for his offenses, and risen again for his justification.

Clarke: Num 35:33 - -- For blood it defileth the land - The very land was considered as guilty till the blood of the murderer was shed in it. No wonder God is so particula...

For blood it defileth the land - The very land was considered as guilty till the blood of the murderer was shed in it. No wonder God is so particularly strict in his laws against murderers

1.    Because he is the author of life, and none have any right to dispose of it but himself

2.    Because life is the time to prepare for the eternal world, and on it the salvation of the soul accordingly depends; therefore it is of infinite consequence to the man that his life be lengthened out to the utmost limits assigned by Divine Providence. As he who takes a man’ s life away before his time may be the murderer of his soul as well as of his body, the severest laws should be enacted against this, both to punish and prevent the crime

The Mosaic cities of refuge have in general been considered, not merely as civil institutions, but as types or representations of infinitely better things; and in this light St. Paul seems to have considered them and the altar of God, which was a place of general refuge, as it is pretty evident that he had them in view when writing the following words: "God, willing more abundantly to show unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel, confirmed it by an oath; that by two immutable things, (his oath and promise), in which it was impossible for God to lie, we might have a strong consolation who have Fled for Refuge to lay Hold upon the Hope set before us,"Heb 6:17, Heb 6:18. Independently of this, it was a very wise political institute; and while the patriarchal law on this point continued in force, this law had a direct tendency to cool and moderate the spirit of revenge, to secure the proper accomplishment of the ends of justice, and to make way for every claim of mercy and equity. But this is not peculiar to the ordinance of the cities of refuge; every institution of God is distinguished in the same way, having his own glory, in the present and eternal welfare of man, immediately in view.

Calvin: Num 35:33 - -- 33.So ye shall not pollute the land. In this concluding sentence, He again reminds them that, unless they should exercise severe justice against murd...

33.So ye shall not pollute the land. In this concluding sentence, He again reminds them that, unless they should exercise severe justice against murderers, they would be guilty of sin against God; because the land stained with human blood is polluted, and lying under His curse, until expiation has been made. Again, since God dwells in the land of Canaan, having chosen His abode among the children of Israel, his sanctity is also profaned. The sum is, that, in every respect, care should be taken lest the land, which is sacred to God, should be contaminated by bloodshed.

TSK: Num 35:31 - -- Moreover : Gen 9:5, Gen 9:6; Exo 21:14; Deu 19:11-13; 2Sa 12:13; 1Ki 2:28-34; Psa 51:14 guilty of death : Heb. faulty to die

Moreover : Gen 9:5, Gen 9:6; Exo 21:14; Deu 19:11-13; 2Sa 12:13; 1Ki 2:28-34; Psa 51:14

guilty of death : Heb. faulty to die

TSK: Num 35:32 - -- Act 4:12; Gal 2:21, Gal 3:10-13, Gal 3:22; Rev 5:9; The region east of Jordan was nearly as long as that on the west, and therefore three cities were ...

Act 4:12; Gal 2:21, Gal 3:10-13, Gal 3:22; Rev 5:9; The region east of Jordan was nearly as long as that on the west, and therefore three cities were appointed in each division. One or other of these cities would be within half a day’ s journey of every part of the land; and as it would rarely happen that the avenger of blood would be on the spot, and none had a right to assault or detain the manslayer, at least if no malicious intention was manifest, the unhappy men would, therefore, get the start of their adversaries, and very few of them be overtaken before they gained the place of refuge. But then they must forsake their families, employments, most important interests, and dearest comforts; and they must neither loiter nor yield to weariness, nor regard difficulties, nor slacken their pace, till they had got safe within the walls of the city. The Jewish writers inform us, that to afford every facility to those who thus fled for their life, the road to these cities was always preserved in good repair; and way-posts, upon which was inscribed REFUGE were placed wherever needful, that they might not so much as hesitate for a moment.

TSK: Num 35:33 - -- it defileth : Lev 18:25; Deu 21:1-8, Deu 21:23; 2Ki 23:26, 2Ki 24:4; Psa 106:28; Isa 26:21; Eze 22:24-27; Hos 4:2, Hos 4:3; Mic 4:11; Mat 23:31-35; Lu...

it defileth : Lev 18:25; Deu 21:1-8, Deu 21:23; 2Ki 23:26, 2Ki 24:4; Psa 106:28; Isa 26:21; Eze 22:24-27; Hos 4:2, Hos 4:3; Mic 4:11; Mat 23:31-35; Luk 11:50, Luk 11:51

the land cannot be cleansed : Heb. there can be no expiation for the land

TSK: Num 35:34 - -- Defile not : Num 5:3; Lev 20:24-26 I dwell : Psa 135:21; Isa 57:15; Hos 9:3; 2Co 6:16, 2Co 6:17; Rev 21:3, Rev 21:27 dwell among : Num 5:3; Exo 25:8, ...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Num 35:31 - -- No satisfaction - Rather, ransom (see Exo 21:30). The permission to demand pecuniary compensation for murders (expressly sanctioned by the Kora...

No satisfaction - Rather, ransom (see Exo 21:30). The permission to demand pecuniary compensation for murders (expressly sanctioned by the Koran) undoubtedly mitigates, in practice, the system of private retaliation; but it does so by sacrificing the principle named in Num 35:12, Num 35:33.

Barnes: Num 35:34 - -- For I the Lord dwell ... - An emphatic protest against all enactment or relaxation of laws by men for their own private convenience.

For I the Lord dwell ... - An emphatic protest against all enactment or relaxation of laws by men for their own private convenience.

Poole: Num 35:31 - -- No intercession nor ransom shall be accepted to save his life, or procure him a pardon.

No intercession nor ransom shall be accepted to save his life, or procure him a pardon.

Poole: Num 35:32 - -- Whereby God would signify the absolute and indispensable necessity of Christ’ s death to expiate sin, and to redeem the sinner.

Whereby God would signify the absolute and indispensable necessity of Christ’ s death to expiate sin, and to redeem the sinner.

Poole: Num 35:33 - -- These words are added as a reason not of the last law, Num 35:32 , for in that case the land was cleansed without the blood of the man-slayer. but o...

These words are added as a reason not of the last law, Num 35:32 , for in that case the land was cleansed without the blood of the man-slayer. but of the law next foregoing that, Num 35:31 , in which case it holds; and the sense is, If you shall spare the murderer, or take any satisfaction for him, you do together with yourselves involve your land and people in guilt, and will certainly bring down God’ s vengeance upon yourselves and them.

Poole: Num 35:34 - -- Be not cruel to your own land by making it a den of murderers.

Be not cruel to your own land by making it a den of murderers.

Haydock: Num 35:32 - -- Cities. Hebrew, "you shall take no money to retire to a city of refuge, to return into his own country, till the death of the priest." The Septuagi...

Cities. Hebrew, "you shall take no money to retire to a city of refuge, to return into his own country, till the death of the priest." The Septuagint supply, "you shall take no redemption money, to permit (a voluntary murderer) to flee into a city of refuge, (nor of an involuntary one,) to return," &c. (Grotius) ---

The banished, may refer to people of the former description, who had gone away to screen themselves from persecution. But they could never be allowed to inhabit the country any more. Their presence would seem to defile it. (Haydock) ---

"You shall not take money of him who has fled to a city of refuge, to suffer him to return home." (Chaldean)

Haydock: Num 35:33 - -- Defile not. To inspire a greater horror for murder the earth was represented as defiled by blood, and only to be purified by the death of the crimin...

Defile not. To inspire a greater horror for murder the earth was represented as defiled by blood, and only to be purified by the death of the criminal. Without shedding of blood, there is no remission, Hebrews ix. 22. (Haydock) ---

On the same principle, our churches, &c., are deemed profane when murder, or some great indecencies, have been committed in them, so that they require a fresh consecration. (Calmet)

Gill: Num 35:31 - -- Moreover, ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of a murderer,.... Though he would give all his wealth and substance, all his estates and possess...

Moreover, ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of a murderer,.... Though he would give all his wealth and substance, all his estates and possessions, and whatever he is worth in the world; for all that a man has he will give for his life; but these are not to be taken, nor anything, and everything his friends may offer for him; all is to be rejected, the life of such a man is not to be saved on any consideration:

which is guilty of death; as he is who kills a man willingly and purposely; but one may be guilty of killing another, and yet not be deserving of death, when it is done ignorantly and accidentally with respect to him, for which reason this clause is added: but he shall be surely put to death; by the order of the civil magistrate; and if this is not done either through want of evidence, or the fault of the judge, or the criminal clemency of the chief governor, God sooner or later will take vengeance on such a person.

Gill: Num 35:32 - -- Moreover, ye shall take no satisfaction for him that is fled to the city of his refuge,.... Though for killing a man unawares: that he should come ...

Moreover, ye shall take no satisfaction for him that is fled to the city of his refuge,.... Though for killing a man unawares:

that he should come again to dwell in the land, until the death of the priest; the high priest; such a man's liberty was not to be purchased with money, nor even his life to be bought off, should he be taken without his city; a great ransom could not deliver him from the avenger, because he was guilty of this law, which so wisely and mercifully provided for him; and consequently guilty also of great ingratitude to God, as well as of a breach of his law, and of disrespect to his high priest, under whom he was protected.

Gill: Num 35:33 - -- So ye shall not pollute the land wherein ye are,.... The land of Canaan, as it had been by the old inhabitants of it, by idolatry, adultery, and murde...

So ye shall not pollute the land wherein ye are,.... The land of Canaan, as it had been by the old inhabitants of it, by idolatry, adultery, and murder:

for blood it defileth the land: the shedding of innocent blood defiles a nation, and the inhabitants of it, brings guilt thereon, and subjects to punishment:

and the land cannot be cleansed of the blood that is shed therein, but by the blood of him that shed it; or "there can be no expiation" b, or "atonement made" for it in any other way; the blood of the murderer is required at his hands, and nothing short of it will satisfy law and justice, see Gen 9:6.

Gill: Num 35:34 - -- Defile not therefore the land which ye shall inherit,.... By the commission of such atrocious crimes, or suffering them to go unpunished, or by taking...

Defile not therefore the land which ye shall inherit,.... By the commission of such atrocious crimes, or suffering them to go unpunished, or by taking a compensation for the life of the guilty person:

wherein I dwell; which is added to strengthen the exhortation, and as giving a reason why care should be taken not to pollute it, because the Holy God dwells there; as he did in the tabernacle erected for him, and in such a peculiar manner as he did not in other lands:

for I the Lord dwell among the children of Israel; he now dwelt among them as their God, and their King; his tent or tabernacle being pitched in the midst of the camps of Israel; and so he would continue to dwell among them when they were come to the land of Canaan, so long as they observed his laws, statutes, and ordinances; and therefore it behoved them to be careful that they did not pollute themselves and their land, and cause him to depart from them.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Num 35:32 Heb “the priest.” The Greek and the Syriac have “high priest.” The present translation, along with many English versions, uses...

Geneva Bible: Num 35:31 Moreover ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of a murderer, which [is] ( m ) guilty of death: but he shall be surely put to death. ( m ) Who p...

Geneva Bible: Num 35:33 So ye shall not pollute the land wherein ye [are]: for blood it defileth the land: and the land cannot be ( n ) cleansed of the blood that is shed the...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

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 - --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 - -- 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 35:29-32 - -- If, therefore, the confinement of the unintentional manslayer in the city of refuge was neither an ordinary exile nor merely a means of rescuing him...

Keil-Delitzsch: Num 35:33 - -- The Israelites were not to desecrate their land by sparing the murderer; as blood, i.e., bloodshed or murder, desecrated the land, and there was no ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Num 35:34 - -- And they were not to desecrate the land in which they dwelt by tolerating murderers, because Jehovah, the Holy One, dwelt in it, among the children ...

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...

Constable: Num 35:9-34 - --Cities of refuge 35:9-34 Six of these Levitical towns were also cities of refuge...

Guzik: Num 35:1-34 - --Numbers 35 - Levitical Cities, Cities of Refuge A. Appointment of the Levitical cities. 1. (1-3) The command to provide cities and command-lands for...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Numbers (Book Introduction) NUMBERS. This book is so called because it contains an account of the enumeration and arrangement of the Israelites. The early part of it, from the fi...

JFB: Numbers (Outline) MOSES NUMBERING THE MEN OF WAR. (Num. 1:1-54) THE ORDER OF THE TRIBES IN THEIR TENTS. (Num. 2:1-34) THE LEVITES' SERVICE. (Num. 3:1-51) OF THE LEVITE...

TSK: Numbers (Book Introduction) The book of Numbers is a book containing a series of the most astonishing providences and events. Every where and in every circumstance God appears; ...

TSK: Numbers 35 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Num 35:1, Eight and forty cities for the Levites, with their suburbs, and measure thereof; Num 35:6, Six of them are to be cities of refu...

Poole: Numbers (Book Introduction) FOURTH BOOK OF MOSES, CALLED NUMBERS THE ARGUMENT This Book giveth us a history of almost forty years travel of the children of Israel through th...

Poole: Numbers 35 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 35 Eight and forty cities given to the Levites, together with their suburbs; among which six cities of refuge, for an Israelite or stranger...

MHCC: Numbers (Book Introduction) This book is called NUMBERS from the several numberings of the people contained in it. It extends from the giving of the law at Sinai, till their arri...

MHCC: Numbers 35 (Chapter Introduction) (Num 35:1-8) The cities of the Levites. (v. 9-34) The cities of refuge, The laws about murder.

Matthew Henry: Numbers (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Fourth Book of Moses, Called Numbers The titles of the five books of Moses, which we use in our Bib...

Matthew Henry: Numbers 35 (Chapter Introduction) Orders having been given before for the dividing of the land of Canaan among the lay-tribes (as I may call them), care is here taken for a competen...

Constable: Numbers (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title the Jews used in their Hebrew Old Testament for this book...

Constable: Numbers (Outline) Outline I. Experiences of the older generation in the wilderness chs. 1-25 A. Preparations f...

Constable: Numbers Numbers Bibliography Aharoni, Yohanan. The Land of the Bible. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1979. ...

Haydock: Numbers (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION. This fourth Book of Moses is called Numbers , because it begins with the numbering of the people. The Hebrews, from its first words...

Gill: Numbers (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO NUMBERS This book has its name from the account it gives of the "numbers" of the children of Israel, twice taken particularly; whic...

Gill: Numbers 35 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO NUMBERS 35 Though the tribe of Levi had no part in the division of the land, yet cities out of the several tribes are here ordered ...

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