Numbers 1:18
Context1:18 and they assembled 1 the entire community together on the first day of the second month. 2 Then the people recorded their ancestry 3 by their clans and families, and the men who were twenty years old or older were listed 4 by name individually,
Numbers 1:20
Context1:20 And they were as follows:
The descendants of Reuben, the firstborn son of Israel: According to the records of their clans and families, all the males twenty years old or older who could serve in the army were listed by name individually.
Numbers 1:22
Context1:22 From the descendants of Simeon: According to the records of their clans and families, all the males numbered of them 5 twenty years old or older who could serve in the army were listed by name individually.
Numbers 17:6
Context17:6 So Moses spoke to the Israelites, and each of their leaders gave him a staff, one for each leader, 6 according to their tribes 7 – twelve staffs; the staff of Aaron was among their staffs.
Numbers 17:8
Context17:8 On the next day Moses went into the tent of the testimony – and 8 the staff of Aaron for the house of Levi had sprouted, and brought forth buds, and produced blossoms, and yielded almonds! 9


[1:18] 1 tn The verb is the Hiphil of the root קָהַל (qahal), meaning “to call, assemble”; the related noun is an “assembly.”
[1:18] 2 tc The LXX adds “of the second year.”
[1:18] 3 tn The verb is the Hitpael preterite form וַיִּתְיַלְדוּ (vayyityaldu). The cognate noun תּוֹלְדוֹת (tolÿdot) is the word that means “genealogies, family records, records of ancestry.” The root is יָלַד (yalad, “to bear, give birth to”). Here they were recording their family connections, and not, of course, producing children. The verbal stem seems to be both declarative and reflexive.
[1:18] 4 tn The verb is supplied. The Hebrew text simply has “in/with the number of names of those who are twenty years old and higher according to their skulls.”
[1:22] 5 tc Some witnesses have omitted “those that were numbered of them,” to preserve the literary pattern of the text. The omission is supported by the absence of the expression in the Greek as well as in some MT
[17:6] 9 tn Heb “a rod for one leader, a rod for one leader.”
[17:6] 10 tn Heb “the house of their fathers.”
[17:8] 13 tn Here too the deictic particle (“and behold”) is added to draw attention to the sight in a vivid way.
[17:8] 14 sn There is no clear answer why the tribe of Levi had used an almond staff. The almond tree is one of the first to bud in the spring, and its white blossoms are a beautiful sign that winter is over. Its name became a name for “watcher”; Jeremiah plays on this name for God’s watching over his people (1:11-12).