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												Verse 1-2Numbers 13:1-2. The Israelites 
												being now come to the borders of 
												Canaan, Moses commanded them, in 
												the name of God, to go up and 
												possess it, reminding them of 
												his promise to give them the 
												possession of it, and exhorting 
												them not to fear nor be 
												discouraged, Deuteronomy 1:21. 
												But the unbelieving and 
												distrustful multitude, 
												forgetting the power and 
												faithfulness of God, were afraid 
												to venture on this hazardous 
												undertaking, as they thought it, 
												till some persons were sent to 
												examine and bring them 
												information what sort of country 
												it was, and what kind of people 
												they should have to contend 
												with. We will send men before 
												us, said they, and they shall 
												search out the land, and bring 
												us word again, Deuteronomy 1:22. 
												Moses, therefore, in compliance 
												with their request, is directed 
												by God to send proper persons, 
												chosen from all the tribes, for 
												this purpose. Every one a ruler 
												among them — Not those called 
												princes of the tribes, in the 
												first chapter of this book, but 
												men of wisdom and authority, and 
												rulers or officers of an 
												inferior kind.
 
 Verse 8
 Numbers 13:8. Oshea — Called 
												also Joshua, Numbers 13:16.
 
 Verse 11
 Numbers 13:11. Of Joseph — The 
												name of Joseph is elsewhere 
												appropriated to Ephraim, here to 
												Manasseh; possibly to aggravate 
												the sin of the ruler of this 
												tribe, who did so basely 
												degenerate from his noble 
												ancestor.
 
 Verse 16
 Numbers 13:16. Jehoshua — Oshea 
												denotes a desire of salvation, 
												signifying, Save, we pray thee; 
												but Jehoshua, or Joshua, 
												includes a promise of salvation, 
												He will save. So this was a 
												prophecy of his succession to 
												Moses in the government, and of 
												the success of his arms. Joshua 
												is the same name with Jesus, of 
												whom Joshua was a type. He was 
												the Saviour of God’s people from 
												the powers of Canaan, Christ 
												from the powers of hell.
 
 Verse 17-18
 Numbers 13:17-18. Southward — 
												Into the southern part of 
												Canaan, which was the nearest 
												part, and the worst too, being 
												dry and desert, and therefore 
												fit for them to enter and pass 
												through with less observation. 
												Into the mountain — Into the 
												mountainous country, and thence 
												into the valleys, and so take a 
												survey of the whole land. What 
												it is — Both for largeness, and 
												for nature and quality.
 
 Verse 19-20
 Numbers 13:19-20. In tents — As 
												the Arabians did; or in unwalled 
												villages, which, like tents, are 
												exposed to an enemy. Fat — Rich 
												and fertile.
 
 Verse 21
 Numbers 13:21. Zin — In the 
												south of Canaan, differing from 
												the wilderness of Sin, which was 
												nigh unto Egypt. To Hamath — 
												From the south they passed 
												through the whole land to the 
												northern parts of it; Rehob was 
												a city in the north-west part, 
												Hamath a city in the north-east.
 
 Verse 22
 Numbers 13:22. By the south — 
												Moses having described their 
												progress from south to north, 
												more particularly relates some 
												memorable places and passages. 
												They came — Hebrew, He came; 
												namely, Caleb, as appears from 
												Joshua 14:9; Joshua 14:12; 
												Joshua 14:14. For the spies 
												distributed their work among 
												them, and went either severally, 
												or by pairs; and it seems the 
												survey of this part was left to 
												Caleb. Anak — A famous giant, 
												whose children these are called, 
												either more generally, as all 
												giants sometimes were, or rather 
												more specially because Arbah, 
												from whom Hebron was called 
												Kiriath-arbah, was the father of 
												Anak, Joshua 15:13. And this 
												circumstance is mentioned as an 
												evidence of the goodness of that 
												land, because the giants chose 
												it for their habitation. Before 
												Zoan — This seems to be noted to 
												confront the Egyptians, who 
												vainly boasted of the antiquity 
												of their city Zoan above all 
												places.
 
 Verse 23-24
 Numbers 13:23-24. Upon a staff — 
												Either for the weight of it, 
												considering the length of the 
												way they were to carry it, or 
												for the preservation of it whole 
												and entire. In those eastern and 
												southern countries there are 
												vines and grapes of an 
												extraordinary bigness, as Strabo 
												and Pliny affirm. Eshcol — That 
												is, a cluster of grapes, as the 
												word signifies.
 
 Verse 25
 Numbers 13:25. They returned 
												after forty days — It is a 
												wonder the people had patience 
												to stay forty days, when they 
												were just ready to enter Canaan, 
												under all the assurances of 
												success they could have from the 
												divine power, proved by a 
												constant series of miracles, 
												that had hitherto attended them. 
												But they distrusted God, and 
												chose to be held in suspense by 
												their own counsels, rather than 
												to rest upon God’s promise! How 
												much do we stand in our own 
												light by unbelief!
 
 Verses 27-29
 Numbers 13:27-29. They told him 
												— In the audience of the people. 
												The Amalekites in the south — 
												Where we are to enter the land; 
												and they who were so fierce 
												against us that they came into 
												the wilderness to fight with us, 
												will, without doubt, oppose us 
												when we come close by their 
												land, the rather, to revenge 
												themselves for their former 
												loss. Therefore they mention 
												them, though they were not 
												Canaanites. In the mountains — 
												In the mountainous country, in 
												the south-east part of the land, 
												so that you cannot enter there 
												without great difficulty, both 
												because of the noted strength 
												and valour of those people, and 
												because of the advantage they 
												have from the mountains. By the 
												sea — Not the mid-land sea, 
												which is commonly understood by 
												that expression, but the Salt or 
												Dead sea; as appears, 1st, 
												Because it is that sea which is 
												next to Jordan; 2d, Because the 
												Canaanites dwelt principally in 
												those parts, and not near the 
												mid-land sea. So these guard the 
												entrance on the east side, as 
												the others do on the south.
 
 Verse 30
 Numbers 13:30. Caleb — Together 
												with Joshua, as is manifest from 
												chap. Numbers 14:6-7; Numbers 
												14:30; but Caleb alone is here 
												mentioned, possibly because he 
												spake first and most, which he 
												might better do, because he 
												might be presumed to be more 
												impartial than Joshua, who, 
												being Moses’s minister, might be 
												thought to speak only what he 
												knew his master would like. 
												Stilled the people — Which 
												implies either that they had 
												begun to murmur, or that by 
												their looks and carriage, they 
												discovered the anger which 
												boiled in their breasts.
 
 Before Moses — Or, toward Moses, 
												against whom they were incensed, 
												as the man who had brought them 
												into such sad circumstances. Let 
												us go up and possess it. He does 
												not say, Let us go up and 
												conquer it. He looks on that to 
												be as good as done already: but, 
												Let us go up and possess it! 
												There is nothing to be done but 
												to enter without delay, and take 
												the possession which our great 
												Lord is now ready to give us! 
												Thus difficulties that lie in 
												the way of salvation, vanish 
												away before a lively faith.
 
 Verse 31
 Numbers 13:31. The men — All of 
												them, Joshua excepted. Stronger 
												— Both in stature of body and 
												numbers of people. Thus they 
												question the power, and truth, 
												and goodness of God, of all 
												which they had such ample 
												testimonies.
 
 Verse 32
 Numbers 13:32. Eateth up its 
												inhabitants — Not so much by 
												civil wars, for that was likely 
												to make their conquest more 
												easy; but rather by the 
												unwholesomeness of the air and 
												place, which they guessed from 
												the many funerals which, as some 
												Hebrew writers, not without 
												probability, affirm they 
												observed in their travels 
												through it; though that came to 
												pass from another cause, even 
												from the singular providence of 
												God, which, to facilitate the 
												Israelites’ conquest, cut off 
												vast numbers of the Canaanites, 
												either by a plague, or by the 
												hornet sent before them, as is 
												expressed Joshua 24:12. Le 
												Clerc, indeed, explains this of 
												their being liable to be 
												destroyed, or eaten up, by the 
												incursions of many neighbouring 
												enemies, in which sense the same 
												phrase is used Ezekiel 36:12. 
												The Jews, however, take it to be 
												meant of famine, by which the 
												country was wont to consume its 
												inhabitants, and which they 
												suppose to have distressed it at 
												that time.
 
 But the spies had before 
												acknowledged it to be a 
												plentiful land, a land flowing 
												with milk and honey. Many, 
												therefore, understand the 
												expression as denoting the 
												number of the inhabitants, and 
												would translate the original 
												words, The land is meat for its 
												inhabitants; that is, the 
												inhabitants devour and eat up 
												all the produce of the land.
 
 Verse 33
 Numbers 13:33. We were in our 
												own sight as grasshoppers — Thus 
												their fear magnified these sons 
												of Anak above measure, so that 
												in comparison of them they 
												thought themselves as weak and 
												contemptible as insignificant 
												insects. And so we were in their 
												sight — An hyperbole, signifying 
												that the Anakims looked down 
												upon them with the utmost 
												contempt.
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