Numbers 3:13
Context3:13 because all the firstborn are mine. When I destroyed 1 all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, I set apart for myself all the firstborn in Israel, both man and beast. They belong to me. I am the Lord.” 2
Numbers 8:17
Context8:17 For all the firstborn males among the Israelites are mine, both humans and animals; when I destroyed 3 all the firstborn in the land of Egypt I set them apart for myself.
Numbers 16:26
Context16:26 And he said to the community, “Move away from the tents of these wicked 4 men, and do not touch anything they have, lest you be destroyed because 5 of all their sins.” 6
Numbers 21:3
Context21:3 The Lord listened to the voice of Israel and delivered up the Canaanites, 7 and they utterly destroyed them and their cities. So the name of the place was called 8 Hormah.
1 tn The form הַכֹּתִי (hakkoti) is the Hiphil infinitive construct of the verb נָכָה (nakhah, “to strike, smite, attack”). Here, after the idiomatic “in the day of,” the form functions in an adverbial clause of time – “when I destroyed.”
2 sn In the Exodus event of the Passover night the principle of substitution was presented. The firstborn child was redeemed by the blood of the Lamb and so belonged to God, but then God chose the Levites to serve in the place of the firstborn. The ritual of consecrating the firstborn son to the
3 tn The idiomatic “on the day of” precedes the infinitive construct of נָכָה (nakhah) to form the temporal clause: “in the day of my striking…” becomes “when I struck.”
4 tn The word רָשָׁע (rasha’) has the sense of a guilty criminal. The word “wicked” sometimes gives the wrong connotation. These men were opposing the
5 tn The preposition bet (בְּ) in this line is causal – “on account of their sins.”
6 sn The impression is that the people did not hear what the
7 tc Smr, Greek, and Syriac add “into his hand.”
8 tn In the Hebrew text the verb has no expressed subject, and so here too is made passive. The name “Hormah” is etymologically connected to the verb “utterly destroy,” forming the popular etymology (or paronomasia, a phonetic wordplay capturing the significance of the event).