Numbers 21:20
Context21:20 and from Bamoth to the valley that is in the country of Moab, near the top of Pisgah, which overlooks the wilderness. 1
Numbers 21:22
Context21:22 “Let us 2 pass through your land; 3 we will not turn aside into the fields or into the vineyards, nor will we drink water from any well, but we will go along the King’s Highway until we pass your borders.”
Numbers 20:17
Context20:17 Please let us pass through 4 your country. We will not pass through the fields or through the vineyards, nor will we drink water from any well. We will go by the King’s Highway; 5 we will not turn to the right or the left until we have passed through your region.’” 6
Numbers 22:23
Context22:23 And the donkey saw the angel of the Lord standing in the road with 7 his sword drawn in his hand, so the donkey turned aside from the road and went into the field. But Balaam beat the donkey, to make her turn back to the road.


[21:20] 1 tn Or perhaps as a place name, “Jeshimon.”
[21:22] 2 tn The Hebrew text uses the singular in these verses to match the reference to “Israel.”
[21:22] 3 tc Smr has “by the King’s way I will go. I will not turn aside to the right or the left.”
[20:17] 3 tn The request is expressed by the use of the cohortative, “let us pass through.” It is the proper way to seek permission.
[20:17] 4 sn This a main highway running from Damascus in the north to the Gulf of Aqaba, along the ridge of the land. Some scholars suggest that the name may have been given by the later Assyrians (see B. Obed, “Observations on Methods of Assyrian Rule in Transjordan after the Palestinian Campaign of Tiglathpileser III,” JNES 29 [1970]: 177-86). Bronze Age fortresses have been discovered along this highway, attesting to its existence in the time of Moses. The original name came from the king who developed the highway, probably as a trading road (see S. Cohen, IDB 3:35-36).
[22:23] 4 tn The word has the conjunction “and” on the noun, indicating this is a disjunctive vav (ו), here serving as a circumstantial clause.