Bible Commentary

Numbers 5:1-4

The Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 5:1-4

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

THE PUBLIC EXCLUSION OF THE UNCLEAN

This law, like many others, in part a sanitary law; but also educational in spiritual truth, and typical of eternal realities. Two truths taught:—

I. THE HOLINESS OF GOD. This lesson, so hard to the Israelites, was impressed on them in many ways, e.g; sacred men ministering in sacred places, on sacred days, etc. This holy God dwelt in the midst of their tents, and walked among them (Le , ). The God of life and purity was utterly alien from death and impurity. Defilement, whether willful or unavoidable, could not be tolerated in his presence. If the polluted are retained, God withdraws. Sin is "the abominable thing" which God hates. He is "of purer eyes than to behold evil" (; ).

II. THE EXCOMMUNICATING POWER OF SIN. The consequences to the excluded Hebrews, though limited, were by no means light. They had to suffer loss of privileges, ceremonial and spiritual, and a sense of humiliation from the notoriety of their position. For the time they were out of communion with God and his people. Thus sin has an isolating power. Apart from an act of ecclesiastical excommunication or Divine judgment, its tendency is to separate us from the people of God through want of sympathy. We cease to enjoy their privileges even if not debarred from them. We lose self-respect when sin is exposed, if not before. We are out of communion with God, into whose presence we cannot truly come with sin indulged in our hearts (; ). God's salvation is from sin, not in sin. No wonder, therefore, that the impure are sentenced—

HOMILIES BY D. YOUNG

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commentaryMatthew Henry on Numbers 5:1-10The camp was to be cleansed. The purity of the church must be kept as carefully as the peace and order of it. Every polluted Israelite must be separated. The wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable. The greater…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Unclean to Be Removed. (b. c. 1490.)THE UNCLEAN TO BE REMOVED. (B. C. 1490.) Here is, I. A command for the purifying of the camp, by turning out from within its lines all those that were ceremonially unclean, by issues, leprosies, or the touch of dead bod…Matthew HenrycommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 5:1-7EXPOSITION THE UNCLEAN TO BE REMOVED (Numbers 5:1-4).Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 5:1-4THINGS THAT DEFILE The book up to this point is occupied with the counting and discipline of the people, both those for war and those for tabernacle service. Now the cleansing of the camp is to be attended to. I. THE CL…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 5:1-4THE NECESSITY OF PUTTING AWAY SIN In this section we have, spiritually, the necessary sentence of banishment upon those defiled with sin, and the duty of separating them. Consider, therefore— I. THAT NO LEPER MIGHT STAY…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 5:1-4THE EXPULSION AND RESTORATION OF THE UNCLEAN The host has now been marshaled. The several tribes have taken the places allotted to them in relation to the tabernacle and to one another. They are about to set forth on th…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 5:2Every leper. The law of the leper had been given in great detail in Leviticus 13:1-59 and Leviticus 14:1-57, and it had been already ordered that he should be put out of the camp (Le Leviticus 13:46, and cf. Leviticus 1…Joseph S. Exell and contributorscommentaryThe Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 5:3That they defile not their camps, in the midst whereof I dwell. Cleanliness, decency, and the anxious removal even of unwitting pollutions were things due to God himself, and part of the awful reverence to be paid to hi…Joseph S. Exell and contributors