14:20 Then the Lord said, “I have forgiven them as you asked. 1 14:21 But truly, as I live, 2 all the earth will be filled with the glory of the Lord. 14:22 For all the people have seen my glory and my signs that I did in Egypt and in the wilderness, and yet have tempted 3 me now these ten times, 4 and have not obeyed me, 5 14:23 they will by no means 6 see the land that I swore to their fathers, nor will any of them who despised me see it.
1 tn Heb “forgiven according to your word.” The direct object, “them,” is implied.
2 sn This is the oath formula, but in the Pentateuch it occurs here and in v. 28.
3 tn The verb נָסָה (nasah) means “to test, to tempt, to prove.” It can be used to indicate things are tried or proven, or for testing in a good sense, or tempting in the bad sense, i.e., putting God to the test. In all uses there is uncertainty or doubt about the outcome. Some uses of the verb are positive: If God tests Abraham in Genesis 22:1, it is because there is uncertainty whether he fears the
4 tn “Ten” is here a round figure, emphasizing the complete testing. But see F. V. Winnett, The Mosaic Tradition, 121-54.
5 tn Heb “listened to my voice.”
6 tn The word אִם (’im) indicates a negative oath formula: “if” means “they will not.” It is elliptical. In a human oath one would be saying: “The
7 sn The judgment on Israel is that they turn back to the desert and not attack the tribes in the land. So a parenthetical clause is inserted to state who was living there. They would surely block the entrance to the land from the south – unless God removed them. And he is not going to do that for Israel.
8 tn The figure is aposiopesis, or sudden silence. The main verb is deleted from the line, “how long…this evil community.” The intensity of the emotion is the reason for the ellipsis.
9 sn It is worth mentioning in passing that this is one of the Rabbinic proof texts for having at least ten men to form a congregation and have prayer. If God called ten men (the bad spies) a “congregation,” then a congregation must have ten men. But here the word “community/congregation” refers in this context to the people of Israel as a whole, not just to the ten spies.
10 sn Here again is the oath that God swore in his wrath, an oath he swore by himself, that they would not enter the land. “As the
11 tn The word נְאֻם (nÿ’um) is an “oracle.” It is followed by the subjective genitive: “the oracle of the
12 tn Heb “in my ears.”
sn They had expressed the longing to have died in the wilderness, and not in war. God will now give them that. They would not say to God “your will be done,” so he says to them, “your will be done” (to borrow from C. S. Lewis).
13 tn Or “your corpses” (also in vv. 32, 33).
14 tn The relative pronoun “which” is joined with the resumptive pronoun “in it” to form a smoother reading “where.”
15 tn The Hebrew text uses the anthropomorphic expression “I raised my hand” in taking an oath.
16 tn Heb “to cause you to dwell; to cause you to settle.”