Numbers 10:11-12
Context10:11 1 On the twentieth day of the second month, in the second year, the cloud was taken up from the tabernacle of the testimony. 2 10:12 So the Israelites set out 3 on their journeys from the wilderness of Sinai; and the cloud settled in the wilderness of Paran.
Exodus 19:1
Context19:1 4 In the third month after the Israelites went out 5 from the land of Egypt, on the very day, 6 they came to the Desert of Sinai.
Leviticus 27:34
Context27:34 These are the commandments which the Lord commanded Moses to tell the Israelites 7 at Mount Sinai.
[10:11] 1 sn This section is somewhat mechanical: It begins with an introduction (vv. 11, 12), and then begins with Judah (vv. 13-17), followed by the rest of the tribes (vv. 18-27), and finally closes with a summary (v. 28). The last few verses (vv. 29-36) treat the departure of Hobab.
[10:11] 2 tc Smr inserts a lengthy portion from Deut 1:6-8, expressing the command for Israel to take the land from the Amorites.
[10:12] 3 sn The verb is the same as the noun: “they journeyed on their journeyings.” This underscores the point of their continual traveling.
[19:1] 4 sn This chapter is essentially about mediation. The people are getting ready to meet with God, receive the Law from him, and enter into a covenant with him. All of this required mediation and preparation. Through it all, Israel will become God’s unique possession, a kingdom of priests on earth – if they comply with his Law. The chapter can be divided as follows: vv. 1-8 tell how God, Israel’s great deliverer promised to make them a kingdom of priests; this is followed by God’s declaration that Moses would be the mediator (v. 9); vv. 10-22 record instructions for Israel to prepare themselves to worship Yahweh and an account of the manifestation of Yahweh with all the phenomena; and the chapter closes with the mediation of Moses on behalf of the people (vv. 23-25). Having been redeemed from Egypt, the people will now be granted a covenant with God. See also R. E. Bee, “A Statistical Study of the Sinai Pericope,” Journal of the Royal Statistical Society 135 (1972): 406-21.
[19:1] 5 tn The construction uses the infinitive construct followed by the subjective genitive to form a temporal clause.
[19:1] 6 tn Heb “on this day.”
[27:34] 7 tn Most of the commentaries and English versions translate, “which the