Numbers 6:10
Context6:10 On the eighth day he is to bring 1 two turtledoves or two young pigeons to the priest, to the entrance to the tent of meeting.
Numbers 7:11
Context7:11 For the Lord said to Moses, “They must present their offering, one leader for each day, 2 for the dedication of the altar.”
Numbers 9:11
Context9:11 They may observe it on the fourteenth day of the second month 3 at twilight; they are to eat it with bread made without yeast and with bitter herbs.
Numbers 9:16
Context9:16 This is the way it used to be continually: The cloud would cover it by day, 4 and there was a fiery appearance by night.
Numbers 10:11
Context10:11 5 On the twentieth day of the second month, in the second year, the cloud was taken up from the tabernacle of the testimony. 6
Numbers 15:23
Context15:23 all that the Lord has commanded you by the authority 7 of Moses, from the day that the Lord commanded Moses and continuing through your future generations –
Numbers 16:41
Context16:41 But on the next day the whole community of Israelites murmured against Moses and Aaron, saying, “You have killed the Lord’s people!” 8
Numbers 28:17
Context28:17 And on the fifteenth day of this month is the festival. For seven days bread made without yeast must be eaten.
Numbers 29:7
Context29:7 “‘On the tenth day of this seventh month you are to have a holy assembly. You must humble yourselves; 9 you must not do any work on it.
Numbers 31:24
Context31:24 You must wash your clothes on the seventh day, and you will be ceremonially clean, and afterward you may enter the camp.’”
1 tn The imperfect tense in this verse is still instructional rather than a simple future. The translations can vary, but the point that it is directive must be caught.
2 tn The distributive sense is achieved by repetition: “one leader for the day, one leader for the day.”
3 sn The delay of four weeks for such people would have permitted enough time for them to return from their journey, or to recover from any short termed defilement such as is mentioned here. Apart from this provision, the Passover was to be kept precisely at the proper time.
4 tc The MT lacks the words “by day,” but a number of ancient versions have this reading (e.g., Greek, Syriac, Tg. Ps.-J., Latin Vulgate).
5 sn This section is somewhat mechanical: It begins with an introduction (vv. 11, 12), and then begins with Judah (vv. 13-17), followed by the rest of the tribes (vv. 18-27), and finally closes with a summary (v. 28). The last few verses (vv. 29-36) treat the departure of Hobab.
6 tc Smr inserts a lengthy portion from Deut 1:6-8, expressing the command for Israel to take the land from the Amorites.
tn The expression is difficult; it is מִשְׁכַּן הָעֵדֻת (mishkan ha’edut). The reference is to the sacred shrine that covered the ark with the commandments inside. NEB renders the expression as “tabernacle of the Token”; NAB has “the dwelling of the commandments.”
7 tn Heb “hand.”
8 sn The whole congregation here is trying to project its guilt on Moses and Aaron. It was they and their rebellion that brought about the deaths, not Moses and Aaron. The
9 tn Heb “afflict yourselves”; NAB “mortify yourselves”; NIV, NRSV “deny yourselves.”
sn The verb seems to mean “humble yourself.” There is no explanation given for it. In the days of the prophets fasting seems to be associated with it (see Isa 58:3-5), and possibly the symbolic wearing of ashes.