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												Verse 1-2Numbers 15:1-2. When the 
												following laws were delivered, 
												is uncertain. But it would seem, 
												from Numbers 15:23, to have been 
												toward the end of their 
												peregrinations, and not long 
												before their settlement in 
												Canaan, consequently at a time 
												when part of that mutinous 
												generation, mentioned in the 
												former chapter, were cut off by 
												death. If this remark be just, 
												these laws were enjoined only to 
												the children of the murmurers, 
												who had not forfeited a right to 
												the inheritance in the promised 
												land, as their fathers had done. 
												Le Clerc, however, is of opinion 
												that the laws here recorded were 
												delivered before the rebellion 
												recorded in the former chapter.
 
 Verse 3
 Numbers 15:3. An offering made 
												by fire — This is a general 
												expression for those offerings 
												which were in whole or in part 
												burned upon the altar. A 
												sacrifice in performing a vow — 
												Namely, peace-offerings, which 
												are often called sacrifices, in 
												general, as Exodus 18:12, and 
												Leviticus 17:5; Leviticus 17:8. 
												See the nature of them 
												explained, Leviticus 3:1; 
												Leviticus 7:11.
 
 Verse 4-5
 Numbers 15:4-5. Bring a 
												meat-offering — Sacrifices, 
												being of the nature of spiritual 
												feasts, were each of them to 
												have מנחה, mincha, a meat or 
												meal- offering, and 
												drink-offering, as an appendage 
												annexed to them, consisting of 
												flour, oil, and wine, in the 
												proportion following: for as 
												wine and oil are the most 
												excellent liquors which the 
												earth, through Divine 
												Providence, produces for the use 
												of mankind, God would have them 
												to be offered to him in all 
												sacrifices, that men might be 
												continually put in mind of him 
												from whom they received these 
												blessings, and might openly 
												acknowledge their great 
												benefactor.
 
 Verse 14
 Numbers 15:14. If a stranger 
												sojourn with you — It is plain 
												this is to be understood of such 
												strangers as had renounced 
												idolatry and become proselytes 
												to the worship of the true God. 
												And if strangers, who were 
												intermixed with the Jews, and 
												resided in their country, had 
												not been obliged to conform to 
												the same ceremonies of public 
												worship with the Jews, their 
												example might, by degrees, have 
												produced a change in, and 
												corruption of, that form of 
												worship which God himself had 
												instituted.
 
 Verse 15
 Numbers 15:15. So shall the 
												stranger be before the Lord — As 
												to the worship of God; his 
												sacrifices shall be offered in 
												the same manner, and accepted by 
												God upon the same terms, as 
												yours; which was a presage of 
												the future calling of the 
												Gentiles. And this is added by 
												way of caution, to show that 
												strangers were not upon this 
												pretence to partake of their 
												civil privileges.
 
 Verse 19-20
 Numbers 15:19-20. When ye eat — 
												When you are about to eat it; 
												for before they eat it, they 
												were to offer this offering to 
												God. The bread of the land — 
												That is, the bread-corn. The 
												threshing-floor — That is, of 
												the corn in the threshing-floor, 
												when you have gathered in your 
												corn.
 
 Verse 22
 Numbers 15:22. Have erred, and 
												not observed all these 
												commandments — If the whole body 
												of the people be guilty of any 
												neglect of the public ceremonies 
												of religion, or of any deviation 
												from any of the rites instituted 
												concerning the outward service 
												of God, (for of these only Moses 
												seems here to speak,) which 
												might happen involuntarily, and 
												through ignorance, then the 
												following method is prescribed 
												to expiate the sin of such 
												omissions or deviations upon 
												their being known. It may be 
												observed, however, that this 
												plea of ignorance could not be 
												admitted except in cases that 
												were liable to obscurity. The 
												law in Leviticus 4:13, which 
												appears partly similar to this, 
												probably speaks of some positive 
												miscarriage, or the doing what 
												ought not to have been done; 
												whereas this speaks of an 
												omission of something which 
												ought to have been done.
 
 Verse 25
 Numbers 15:25. It shall be 
												forgiven, for it is ignorance — 
												Proceeding from some mistake, 
												and not from contempt of God and 
												his laws; for then the guilty 
												person was to be utterly cut 
												off.
 
 Verse 30
 Numbers 15:30. The soul that 
												doeth aught presumptuously — 
												Hebrew, With a high hand, or, 
												with violence. It is meant to 
												express the action or conduct of 
												a man who knowingly and wilfully 
												broke the law, and when 
												admonished, despised the 
												admonition, and set the law at 
												naught. Maimonides and other 
												rabbis think this law is to be 
												restrained to sins of idolatry, 
												which certainly are most 
												properly a reproaching of 
												Jehovah, and a despising of his 
												word, and therefore were 
												commanded, in the law of Moses, 
												to be punished with greater 
												severity than other crimes, as 
												being high treason against their 
												state, subversive of the 
												essential form of their 
												government, and an implicit 
												rejecting of Jehovah for their 
												God and King, and yielding their 
												allegiance to the idols of the 
												nations. The same reproacheth 
												the Lord — He sets God at 
												defiance, and exposeth him to 
												contempt, as if he were unable 
												to punish transgressors. But 
												every wilful sin is, in the 
												nature of things, a reproach or 
												dishonour to the Lord, Romans 
												2:23. It is saying, in effect, 
												that his commandments are not 
												wise, just, and good, and that 
												we know better what is fit for 
												ourselves than he can judge for 
												us. But acts of idolatry, or 
												whatever tended to favour it, 
												whether in a Jew or proselyte, 
												were especially reproachful to 
												God, for the reasons just 
												mentioned. That soul shall be 
												cut off — Here this phrase 
												signifies put to death, though 
												in many other places it seems to 
												denote only exclusion from the 
												privileges of the Jewish 
												community. Persons sinning thus 
												presumptuously could have no 
												benefit by the expiatory 
												sacrifices of the law, for they 
												blasphemed the Lawgiver, and 
												disowned the authority of the 
												law. Thus, (Hebrews 10:29,) He 
												that despised Moses’s law died 
												without mercy, under two or 
												three witnesses.
 
 Verse 32
 Numbers 15:32. A man gathered 
												sticks on the sabbath day — This 
												seems to be mentioned here as an 
												instance of sinning 
												presumptuously; and accordingly 
												it is so understood by the Jews. 
												The law of the sabbath was plain 
												and positive, and this 
												transgression of it must 
												therefore have been a known and 
												wilful sin. And from the 
												connection of this verse with 
												the former it may be justly 
												inferred that this man had 
												sinned with a high hand, 
												despising the word of the Lord, 
												and the authority of his law.
 
 Verse 33-34
 Numbers 15:33-34. To all the 
												congregation — That is, to the 
												rulers of the congregation. They 
												(Moses and Aaron, and the other 
												rulers) put him in ward — Till 
												the will of the Lord concerning 
												him should be declared. What 
												should be done — That is, in 
												what manner, or by what kind of 
												death he was to die, which, 
												therefore, God here particularly 
												determines: otherwise it was 
												known in general that sabbath-breakers 
												were to be put to death.
 
 Verse 35
 Numbers 15:35. The man shall 
												surely be put to death — One 
												reason why the breach of the 
												sabbath was punished with such 
												severity by the Jewish law is, 
												that it was an implicit denying 
												of God to be the Creator of the 
												world. For the sabbath being a 
												sign, (Exodus 31:13,) whereby 
												the worshippers of the one true 
												God, who created the world, were 
												distinguished from the 
												idolatrous nations, who believed 
												the world was eternal, and who 
												worshipped the sun, moon, and 
												stars, and a multitude of 
												nominal gods, the violation of 
												this institution implied or led 
												to a defection from the true 
												religion to polytheism and 
												idolatry.
 
 Verse 38
 Numbers 15:38. Fringes — These 
												were certain threads, or ends, 
												standing out a little farther 
												than the rest of their garments, 
												left there for this use. In the 
												borders — That is, in the four 
												borders or quarters, as it is, 
												Deuteronomy 22:12. Of their 
												garments — Of their upper 
												garments. This was practised by 
												the Pharisees in Christ’s time, 
												who are noted for making their 
												borders larger than ordinary. A 
												riband — To make it more obvious 
												to the sight, and consequently 
												more serviceable to the use here 
												mentioned. Of blue — Or, purple.
 
 Verse 39
 Numbers 15:39. That ye may 
												remember — As circumcision in 
												their persons, so this ornament 
												in their garb was designed as a 
												badge to distinguish them from 
												all other nations; so that as 
												often as they looked upon this 
												mark, they might be put in mind 
												of their being the worshippers 
												of the true God, a holy people, 
												and bound to the service of 
												their Maker by peculiar laws and 
												obligations. That ye seek not — 
												Or, inquire not, for other rules 
												and ways of serving me than I 
												have prescribed you. Your own 
												heart and eyes — Neither after 
												the devices of your own hearts, 
												as Nadab and Abihu did when they 
												offered strange fire; nor after 
												the examples of others which 
												your eyes see, as you did when 
												you were set upon worshipping a 
												calf after the manner of Egypt.
 
 Verse 40
 Numbers 15:40. That ye may 
												remember — They were not to 
												mistake the wearing of these 
												fringes or borderings, as if 
												they had real sanctity or 
												religion in themselves, but to 
												consider them as helps to their 
												memories, and means of awakening 
												them to a sense of their special 
												relation to God, as the only 
												object of their worship, their 
												Governor and Judge. But although 
												this, and many other memorial 
												signs among the Jews, seem to 
												have been admirably fitted to 
												keep up in their minds the 
												remembrance of their duty, and 
												one would have imagined that, 
												with such helps, they could 
												scarce ever have omitted the 
												practice of it; yet their 
												example proves to us that all 
												methods are insufficient to 
												affect thoroughly the hearts of 
												men, till God, according to his 
												promise, to be fulfilled 
												especially under the New 
												Testament dispensation, write 
												his laws on their hearts by his 
												Holy Spirit, Jeremiah 31:31, and 
												Ezekiel 36:26. This we should 
												look for, and seek with all our 
												hearts. When this is obtained, 
												and not before, we shall be holy 
												unto God, as Israel were here 
												exhorted to be, that is, purged 
												from sin, and sincerely devoted 
												to God in soul and body.
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