Numbers 8:4
Context8:4 This is how the lampstand was made: 1 It was beaten work in gold; 2 from its shaft to its flowers it was beaten work. According to the pattern which the Lord had shown Moses, so he made the lampstand.
Numbers 22:18
Context22:18 Balaam replied 3 to the servants of Balak, “Even if Balak would give me his palace full of silver and gold, I could not transgress the commandment 4 of the Lord my God 5 to do less or more.
Numbers 24:13
Context24:13 ‘If Balak would give me his palace full of silver and gold, I cannot go beyond 6 the commandment 7 of the Lord to do either good or evil of my own will, 8 but whatever the Lord tells me I must speak’?
Numbers 31:50
Context31:50 So we have brought as an offering for the Lord what each man found: gold ornaments, armlets, bracelets, signet rings, earrings, and necklaces, to make atonement for ourselves 9 before the Lord.” 10
Numbers 31:54
Context31:54 So Moses and Eleazar the priest received the gold from the commanders of thousands and commanders 11 of hundreds and brought it into the tent of meeting as a memorial 12 for the Israelites before the Lord.
1 tn The Hebrew text literally has “and this is the work of the lampstand,” but that rendering does not convey the sense that it is describing how it was made.
2 sn The idea is that it was all hammered from a single plate of gold.
3 tn Heb “answered and said.”
4 tn Heb “mouth.”
5 sn In the light of subsequent events one should not take too seriously that Balaam referred to Yahweh as his God. He is referring properly to the deity for which he is acting as the agent.
6 tn Heb “I am not able to go beyond.”
7 tn Heb “mouth.”
8 tn Heb “from my heart.”
9 tn Heb “our souls.”
10 sn The expression here may include the idea of finding protection from divine wrath, which is so common to Leviticus, but it may also be a thank offering for the fact that their lives had been spared.
11 tn The Hebrew text does not repeat the word “commanders” here, but it is implied.
12 tn The purpose of the offering was to remind the