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Numbers 10

Cambridge

The two silver Clarions Numbers 10:2 a. Their workmanship; Numbers 10:2 b – Numbers 10:8, their three-fold use during the wanderings; Numbers 10:9-10, their two-fold use in Canaan. Second Division: chs. Numbers 10:11 to Numbers 22:1. Journeys between Sinai and Moab Chapters Numbers 10:11 to Numbers 22:1 form the second main division of the book, comprising the journeyings between the departure from Sinai and the arrival at the steppes of Moab opposite Jericho. The first division is entirely from P , but at this point the compiler begins to insert into P narratives from the earlier writings J and E . The contents of the second division are briefly as follows: (a) Numbers 10:11 to Numbers 12:16. Events in the journey from Sinai to the Wilderness of Paran. (b) Numbers 13, 14. The narrative of the spies; the Israelites are condemned to wander for forty years. (c) Numbers 15–19. A Priestly section containing a variety of laws on ritual and offerings, and (Numbers 16:1–17:11) the narrative of Korah combined with the narrative of Dathan and Abiram. (d) Numbers 20:1–22:1. Events in the journeys until the arrival at Moab. It will be seen that this is not a history of the wanderings, but only of a few incidents at the beginning and at the end of them. See the preliminary note on ch. 20.

Numbers 10:2

  1. trumpets] or Clarions (ḥ ?aẓ ?τẓ ?erτth). This rendering serves to distinguish the word from (a) the ‘ram’s horn’ (yτbhηl), used at Sinai (Exodus 19:13), at Jericho (Joshua 6:5), and to usher in the year of yτbhηl, i.e. the ‘Jubile’—(b) the ‘trumpet’ (shτphβr), which was the instrument ordinarily employed for secular purposes. The clarion is a secular instrument only in Hosea 5:8 (R.V. ‘cornet’), 2 Kings 11:14 = 2 Chronicles 23:13 (R.V. ‘trumpet’). It is a sacred instrument in Psalms 98:6 and frequently in P and Chr.-Ezr.-Neh. Its shape was that of a straight slender tube with an expanding mouth. See the illustrations in Driver’s Amos, p. 145. 2b–8. During the journeyings the clarions are to be used for summoning an assembly of the congregation (Numbers 10:3), or a council of the princes (Numbers 10:4), or for a signal to start on the march (Numbers 10:5-6).

Numbers 10:3

  1. when they shall blow] See on Numbers 10:5. with them] i.e. with both of them together, in contrast with the use of one alone in Numbers 10:4.

Numbers 10:5

  1. blow an alarm] A signal quite different from the simple ‘blow’ in Numbers 10:3-4. But it is not known in what the difference consisted. Some think that ‘to blow’ means to produce a single long blast, while ‘to blow an alarm’ was to produce several short sharp notes—a ‘fanfare’ (Heb. terû‛ ?âh). But the converse is equally likely.

Numbers 10:6

  1. they shall blow an alarm for their journeys] i.e. for their startings. This is apparently intended as a brief way of saying that for each of the four groups of tribes a separate alarm shall be blown as a signal to start. It might be expected that the priestly writer, with his love of repetition, would continue his statement in similar language for the other three groups. In the LXX. this is actually done, the order being East, South, West, North. This statement has very possibly dropped out of the Heb. text. In the Vulg. there is the short sentence ‘and according to this manner shall the rest do.’

Numbers 10:9-10

9, 10. In Canaan the clarions are to be used in war (Numbers 10:9) and in peace (Numbers 10:10); and their purpose, in both, is to remind Jehovah of His people; see Numbers 5:26.

Numbers 10:10

  1. the day of your gladness] Any special public festival of joy or thanksgiving, e.g. after a victory. your set feasts] your fixed solemnities, whether festival or fast. They are enumerated in the priestly calendar (ch. 28 f., Leviticus 23)—the Passover, the three Annual Festivals (viz. Feast of Unleavened Cakes; F. of Weeks; F. of Booths), the Day of Atonement, and the F. of Trumpet-blowing. in the beginnings of your months] Every new moon, i.e. the 1st day of the month. The F. of Trumpet-blowing was the greatest of these—the 1st day of the sacred seventh month (Numbers 29:1). See Psalms 81:3 f.

Numbers 10:11-34

Numbers 10:11-34 The departure from Sinai The section consists of two well-defined narratives: Numbers 10:11-28 and Numbers 10:29-33 . The latter is obviously parallel to the former, and not a continuation of it; Moses’ request to Ḥ ?obab was made immediately before the departure, Numbers 10:34 is P’s continuation of Num 10:28.

Numbers 10:12

  1. their journeys] their stages; cf. Numbers 33:1 f., Exodus 17:1. the cloud abode] The verb is that to which mishkân ‘dwelling’ corresponds. The cloud settled down and abode upon the Tabernacle in the wilderness of Paran, as a sign that they were to halt there. See the opening note on ch. 11. Paran] This wilderness lay to the north of the Sinaitic peninsula. Its eastern border would be roughly a line drawn from the Dead Sea to the Gulf of Akaba. It is closely connected with Edom in Deuteronomy 33:2, Habakkuk 3:3. See the writer’s Exodus, p. ciii. It lay between Midian and Egypt (1 Kings 11:18); and was Ishmael’s dwelling-place . It apparently corresponded to the modern desert of Et-tih.

Numbers 10:14-27

14–27. The group of tribes on the east of the Tabernacle having marched first, the hangings and structure of the Tent and the court were then carried by the Gershonites and Merarites. They were followed by the tribes on the south side; and then the sacred furniture and utensils were carried by the Kohathites. Next came the tribes on the west side, and those on the north side brought up the rear.

Numbers 10:17

  1. The verbs in this and the following verse, and in 21 f., 25, are perfects with Vav. This use, to describe consecutive actions in the past, though not unexampled in late literature, is rare. And it is probable that the writer intended them to be frequentative. The order of the host in the first march was that which was observed throughout the journeys.

Numbers 10:21

  1. the sanctuary] But the sacred structure is already in the hands of the Gershonites and Merarites. The required meaning is the holy things, and Ḳ ?ôdesh is probably the true reading, as in Numbers 4:15 (see note there). the other did set up] Heb. has loosely ‘and they [used to] set up,’ which is equivalent to the passive verb ‘and the Tabernacle used to be set up,’ i.e. by the other Levites. 29–33 J . This earlier account of the departure from Sinai relates that Moses asked Ḥ ?obab to be their guide, because he would be well acquainted with the places of encampment en route.

Numbers 10:29

  1. Hobab, the son of Reuel … Moses’ father in law] These words do not make it clear whether Moses’ father-in-law is Ḥ ?obab or Reuel. In Exodus 2:18 he is Reuel; and accordingly in Judges 4:11 Ḥ ?obab is described as ‘the brother-in-law of Moses’ (and cf. Judges 1:16). But ‘brother-in-law’ and ‘father-in-law’ are renderings of the same Heb. word ḥ ?τthηn; and it would be strange to find the father and the brother of the same man’s wife described by the same term. Moreover Exodus 2:16 appears to imply that Moses’ father-in-law had no sons.

It seems probable that ‘Reuel’ is a late insertion in Exodus 2:18 by some one who misunderstood the present passage, and that Ḥ ?obab was really the name of Moses’ father-in-law in J . In E the name Jethro is used (Exodus 3:1; Exodus 4:18; Exodus 18:1-2; Exodus 18:5-6; Exodus 18:9-11). The form Raguel for Reuel is due to the LXX. Ῥαγουήλ, where the γ represents the guttural ‛ ?ayin in the Heb. word. The narrative of the incident is only fragmentary, for the account of Ḥ ?obab’s arrival at Sinai (to which the parallel in E is found in Exodus 18) is omitted, and also the answer which he made to Moses’ intreaty. It may be gathered, however, from Judges 1:16; Judges 4:11 that he yielded and went with them.

Numbers 10:30

  1. Ḥ ?obab’s words shew that the route from Sinai to his home in Midian (which was on the east of the Golf of Akaba) was in a different direction from the route to Canaan. This is one of the many indications that Sinai did not lie in the position traditionally assigned to it, and found in modern maps, at the south of the peninsula; otherwise the route of the Israelites would have coincided with that of Ḥ ?obab for a large part of the distance. The site of Sinai seems to have been further north, in the region of Ḳ ?adesh. See the writer’s Exodus, pp. xcviii–cvi1 [Note: Driver (Exodus in this series, pp. 177–191) inclines to the traditional site.] .

Numbers 10:31

  1. instead of eyes] his presence would obviate the necessity of searching for halting places.

Numbers 10:33

  1. three days’ journey] A characteristic expression of J ; cf. Genesis 30:36, Exodus 3:18; Exodus 5:3; Exodus 8:27. 33b. the ark of the covenant of Jehovah] This description of the ark, as containing the tablets of the covenant (i.e. the decalogue), is Deuteronomic; cf. Numbers 14:44, Deuteronomy 10:8; Deuteronomy 31:9; Deuteronomy 31:25, Joshua 4:7; Joshua 4:18; Joshua 6:8 &c. went before them three days’ journey] It is very doubtful if the text can be right. The ark would be useless as a guide if it were three days’ journey in advance. In Joshua 3:4 it went 2000 cubits (c. 1000 yards) in front. The words ‘three days’ journey’ may have been accidentally repeated from the former half of the verse, and should perhaps be omitted.

Numbers 10:34

  1. the cloud of Jehovah was over them] This appears to mean ‘over the Tabernacle’ as it was carried in the line of march, in which case the passage is from P and is the continuation of Num 10:28. The expression ‘cloud of Jehovah’ occurs elsewhere only in Exodus 40:38 , but that is perhaps a wrong reading for ‘the cloud was’ (éִ ?äְ ?éֶ ?ä). See below on Numbers 14:14.

Numbers 10:35-36

Numbers 10:35-36. J Prayers connected with the movements of the Ark The two prayers have no real connexion with the journeyings. They appear to belong to a time when the Israelites had reached Canaan, and used to take the Ark with them into battle. The first prayer speaks of victory over enemies; and the second implies that the Ark returns to its sanctuary after the battle. In the desert it never returned to the people, but waited in advance until they came up to it. 35. The prayer is quoted in Psalms 68:1. 36. unto the myriads of the thousands] i.e. of the clans of Israel. See on Numbers 1:16; Numbers 1:46.

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