Readings
- Numbers 25:10–30:1
- 1Kings 18:46–19:21: It fits well with the aftermath of the judgment that followed Israel’s chasing after the false god Ba’al of Peor with the women of Moab.
- John 2:13–25
Highlights
Tribe | Numbers 1–2 | Numbers 26 | Change |
---|---|---|---|
Reuben | 46,500 | 43,730 | -2,770 |
Shimon (Simeon) | 59,300 | 22,200 | -37,100 |
Gad | 45,650 | 40,500 | -5,150 |
Yehudah (Judah) | 74,600 | 76,500 | 1,900 |
Issachar | 54,400 | 64,300 | 9,900 |
Zebulun | 57,400 | 60,500 | 3,100 |
Yosef: Ephraim | 40,500 | 32,500 | -8,000 |
Yosef: Manasseh | 32,200 | 52,700 | 20,500 |
Ben Yamin (Benjamin) | 35,400 | 45,600 | 10,200 |
Dan | 62,700 | 64,400 | 1,700 |
Asher | 41,500 | 53,400 | 11,900 |
Naphtali | 53,400 | 45,400 | -8,000 |
Total | 603,550 | 601,730 | -1,820 |
Levi | 22,300 | 23,000 | 700 |
Simeon suffers a dramatic drop in numbers, probably as a result of judgment from the incident in Numbers 25.1
Hebrew hints
פִּינְחָס Pinkhas/Pinchas (Phinehas, H6372): The name has two main derivations in lexicons.
- from Egyptian Pe-nehasi
- apparently from H6310 and a variation of H5175: “mouth of a serpent” (Strong’s Hebrew and Chaldee Dictionary of the Old Testament)
- פֶּה peh (H6310), from H6284, the mouth (as the means of blowing), whether literal or figurative (particularly speech)
- נָחָשׁ nachash (H5175) from H5172 (נָחַשׁ nachash, to hiss), a snake (from its hiss)
laborious work = מְלֶאכֶת עֲבֹדַת melechet ’avodat
- work = מְלָאכָה melaʾkhah (H4399): work, business, task, assignment
- laborious = עֲבֹדַת ʿavodat (עבדה, H5656): service, worship
- מְלֶאכֶת עֲבֹדַת is used in:
- Ex. 36:1, 3
- Lev. 23:7-8, 21, 25, 35-36
- “you shall not do any laborious work”
- “you shall not do any laborious work of any kind” (first day of Sukkot)
- Num. 28:18, 25-26; 29:1, 12, 35
- “you shall not do any laborious work”
- 1Chron. 9:13; 28:13, 20; 2Chron. 24:12
Resources for kids
Hallel Fellowship has curated a list of Yeshua-friendly coloring page sites that can help you help your children grasp Torah studies at their own pace in an entertaining, yet respectful way.
Pinchas-related studies
Path to spiritual maturity: How to align our thoughts, emotions, actions with God’s words (Numbers 9 and 27)
How God guides us to pursue real change by standing up for what’s right (Numbers 25–26)
Why the Messiah has so much zeal for the LORD’s house. And why we should too (Numbers 25; John 2)
How to know if there’s a leader worth following (Numbers 25–29)
Why the Sabbath is an important first step in learning how to worship God (Numbers 25:10-30:1)
Numbers 25:10–30:1: Righteousness apart from the law
Num. 25:10–30:1: Zeal for God’s house consumed Pinchas, Eliyahu and Messiah Yeshua
Numbers 25:10-29:40: A ‘snake’ again becomes an icon of salvation
Numbers 25:10–30:1: Losing your first love
Did Eliyahu understand what God wanted? (1st Kings 19)
Eliyahu of YHWH challenges Ahab and Yezebel of Ba’al and Asherah (1st Kings 18)
Messiah in offerings on Trumpets, Atonement and Tabernacles (Numbers 29)
Meaning behind monthly, Passover and Pentecost offerings (Numbers 28:11–31)
Messiah in daily and Sabbath offerings (Numbers 28:1-10)
Accounting for light and righteousness in Israel (Numbers 26–27)
Perpetual priesthood of peace and mercy for wayward Israel (Numbers 25)
Does אלף ’elef mean ‘thousand’ or ‘clan’ in Exodus and Numbers?
Some have asserted that the huge numbers of people listed in various places in Exodus and Numbers are impossible or unlikely for a number of real-world reasons. Those include lack of mention of such big numbers in Egyptian and other secular accounts, archaeological estimates of populations at the time, food supply and other logistics for such huge numbers during the Exodus, number of years Israel was in Egypt, smaller numbers mentioned in the Bible hundreds of years later, trepidation of Israel to invade the Land despite having huge army, etc. Rather than exegesis — a critical examination of a text from the text — this is eisegesis — a critical examination of a text from considerations outside the text. What follows is a close study of the numbers listed in Numbers 1 (cf. Ex. 12:37 and 38:26), the pattern for which is used in following chapters and elsewhere in the Hebrew Bible. The plain reading of the text is that the Hebrew word אלף ’elef (Strong’s lexicon No. 505) means “thousand,” rather than “clan,” “chief,” or “group.”
- W.H. Jr. Bellinger, Leviticus, Numbers, Understanding the Bible Commentary Series; Accordance electronic ed. (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2012), 280. ↩︎
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