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Numbers 20:8

Context
20:8 “Take the staff and assemble the community, you and Aaron your brother, and then speak 1  to the rock before their eyes. It will pour forth 2  its water, and you will bring water out of the rock for them, and so you will give the community and their beasts water to drink.”

Numbers 24:17

Context

24:17 ‘I see him, but not now;

I behold him, but not close at hand. 3 

A star 4  will march forth 5  out of Jacob,

and a scepter 6  will rise out of Israel.

He will crush the skulls 7  of Moab,

and the heads 8  of all the sons of Sheth. 9 

1 tn The verb is the Piel perfect with vav (ו) consecutive, following the two imperatives in the verse. Here is the focus of the instruction for Moses.

2 tn Heb “give.” The verb is the perfect tense with vav (ו) consecutive, as are the next two in the verse. These are not now equal to the imperatives, but imperfects, showing the results of speaking to the rock: “speak…and it will…and so you will….”

3 tn Heb “near.”

4 sn This is a figure for a king (see also Isa 14:12) not only in the Bible but in the ancient Near Eastern literature as a whole. The immediate reference of the prophecy seems to be to David, but the eschatological theme goes beyond him. There is to be a connection made between this passage and the sighting of a star in its ascendancy by the magi, who then traveled to Bethlehem to see the one born King of the Jews (Matt 2:2). The expression “son of a star” (Aram Bar Kochba) became a title for a later claimant to kingship, but he was doomed by the Romans in a.d. 135.

5 tn The verb is the perfect tense with vav (ו) consecutive; it is equal to the imperfect expressing the future. The verb דָּרַךְ (darakh), related to the noun “way, road,” seems to mean something like tread on, walk, march.”

6 sn The “scepter” is metonymical for a king who will rise to power. NEB strangely rendered this as “comet” to make a parallel with “star.”

7 tn The word is literally “corners,” but may refer to the corners of the head, and so “skull.”

8 tc The MT reads “shatter, devastate.” Smr reads קֹדְקֹד (qodqod, “head; crown; pate”). Smr follows Jer 48:45 which appears to reflect Num 24:17.

9 sn The prophecy begins to be fulfilled when David defeated Moab and Edom and established an empire including them. But the Messianic promise extends far beyond that to the end of the age and the inclusion of these defeated people in the program of the coming King.



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