Bible Commentary

Numbers 12:1

The Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 12:1

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

And Miriam and Aaron spake against Moses. While the people were encamped at Hazeroth (see ), and therefore probably very soon after the events of the last chapter. That Miriam's was the moving spirit in the matter is sufficiently evident,

He appears uniformly as a man of weak and pliable character, who was singularly open to influence from others, for good or for evil. Superior to his brother in certain gifts, he was as inferior to him in force of character as could well be. On the present occasion there can be little question that Aaron simply allowed himself to be drawn by his sister into an opposition with which he had little personal sympathy; a general discontent at the manifest inferiority of his position inclined him to take up her quarrel, and to echo her complaints. Because of the Ethiopian woman whom he had married: for he had married an Ethiopian woman. Hebrew, a Cushite woman. The descendants of Cush were distributed both in Africa (the Ethiopians proper) and in Asia (the southern Arabians, Babylonians, Ninevites, &c.). See . Some have thought that this Ethiopian woman was none other than the Midianite Zipporah, who might have been called a Cushite in some loose sense by Miriam. The historian, however, would not have repeated in his own name a statement so inaccurate; nor is it at all likely that that marriage would have become a matter of contention after so many years. The natural supposition undoubtedly is that Moses (whether after the death of Zipporah, or during her lifetime, we cannot tell) had taken to himself a second wife of Hamite origin. Where he found her it is useless to conjecture; she may possibly have been one of the "mixed multitude" that went up out of Egypt. It is equally useless to attribute any moral or religious character to this marriage, of which Holy Scripture takes no direct notice, and which was evidently regarded by Moses as a matter of purely private concern to himself. In general we may say that the rulers of Israel attached neither political, social, nor religious significance to their marriages; and that neither law nor custom imposed any restraint upon their choice, so long as they did not ally themselves with the daughters of Canaan (see ). It would be altogether beside the mark to suppose that Moses deliberately married a Cushite woman in order to set forth the essential fellowship between Jew and Gentile. It is true that such marriages as those of Joseph, of Salmon, of Solomon, and others undeniably became invested with spiritual importance and evangelical significance, in view of the growing narrowness of Jewish feeling, and of the coming in of a wider dispensation; but such significance was wholly latent at the time. If, however, the choice of Moses is inexplicable, the opposition of Miriam is intelligible enough. She was a prophetess (), and strongly imbued with those national and patriotic feelings which are never far removed from exclusiveness and pride of race. She had—to use modern words—led the Te Deum of the nation after the stupendous overthrow of the Egyptians. And now her brother, who stood at the head of the nation, had brought into his tent a Cushite woman, one of the dark-skinned race which seemed oven lower in the religious scale than the Egyptians themselves. Such an alliance might easily seem to Miriam nothing better than an act of apostasy which would justify any possible opposition.

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Matthew Henry on Numbers 12:1-9Numbers 12:1-9 · Matthew Henry Concise CommentaryThe patience of Moses was tried in his own family, as well as by the people. The pretence was, that he had married a foreign wife; but probably their pride was hurt, and their envy stirred up, by his superior authority.…Murmuring of Miriam and Aaron. (b. c. 1490.)Numbers 12:1-3 · Matthew Henry's Commentary on the Whole BibleMURMURING OF MIRIAM AND AARON. (B. C. 1490.) Here is, I. The unbecoming passion of Aaron and Miriam: they spoke against Moses, Numbers 12:1. If Moses, that received so much honour from God, yet received so many slights…The Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 12:1-16Numbers 12:1-16 · The Pulpit CommentaryEXPOSITION THE SEDITION AND PUNISHMENT OF MIRIAM (Numbers 12:1-16.).The Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 12:1-16Numbers 12:1-16 · The Pulpit CommentaryTHE CONTRADICTION OF SINNERS We have in this chapter, spiritually, the contradiction of the Jews against their brother after the flesh; morally, the sin and punishment of jealousy and envy in high places. Consider, ther…The Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 12:1-6Numbers 12:1-6 · The Pulpit CommentaryTHE SEDITION OF MIRIAM AND AARON Here is another sedition in Israel. What is worse, the sedition does not, at this time, originate among the mixed multitude, the pariahs of the camp. The authors of it are the two leadin…The Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 12:1-16Numbers 12:1-16 · The Pulpit CommentaryGOD THE VINDICATOR OF HIS CALUMNIATED SERVANTS The serpent's trail was found in Eden, and "a devil" among the apostles. No wonder then at this narrative of strife in a godly family. We notice— I. AN UNJUST INSINUATION.…
commentaryMatthew Henry on Numbers 12:1-9The patience of Moses was tried in his own family, as well as by the people. The pretence was, that he had married a foreign wife; but probably their pride was hurt, and their envy stirred up, by his superior authority.…Matthew HenrycommentaryMurmuring of Miriam and Aaron. (b. c. 1490.)MURMURING OF MIRIAM AND AARON. (B. C. 1490.) Here is, I. The unbecoming passion of Aaron and Miriam: they spoke against Moses, Numbers 12:1. If Moses, that received so much honour from God, yet received so many slights…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 12:1-16GOD THE VINDICATOR OF HIS CALUMNIATED SERVANTS The serpent's trail was found in Eden, and "a devil" among the apostles. No wonder then at this narrative of strife in a godly family. We notice— I. AN UNJUST INSINUATION.…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 12:1-16THE CONTRADICTION OF SINNERS We have in this chapter, spiritually, the contradiction of the Jews against their brother after the flesh; morally, the sin and punishment of jealousy and envy in high places. Consider, ther…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 12:1-16EXPOSITION THE SEDITION AND PUNISHMENT OF MIRIAM (Numbers 12:1-16.).Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 12:1-6THE SEDITION OF MIRIAM AND AARON Here is another sedition in Israel. What is worse, the sedition does not, at this time, originate among the mixed multitude, the pariahs of the camp. The authors of it are the two leadin…Joseph S. Exell and contributors