Apologetics Bible · Scripture Reader

Apologetics Bible

Read Scripture with the original-language, translation, commentary, and apologetics layers kept close to the text.

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Four study layers kept near the text.

The reader keeps Scripture first, then brings original-language notes, translation comparison, commentary witness, and apologetics exposition into an ordered study path without letting the tools outrank the passage.

Layer 01
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Hebrew and Greek source shelves sit near the passage with transliteration and morphology notes where the source data is available.

Layer 02
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A broad translation-comparison set brings KJV, ASV, YLT, BSB, Darby, and many other renderings near the verse so wording differences can be studied carefully.

Layer 03
Commentary Witness

Historical witness notes appear where source coverage is available, helping readers compare older interpreters without replacing the passage.

Layer 04
Apologetics Exposition

Apologetics exposition helps trace how passages function in canonical argument, what doctrinal claims they touch, and how themes connect across the 66 books.

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Genesis 1:1 · Old Testament
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Each chapter starts with the passage, then keeps the supporting study layers close enough to check without replacing the text.

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Open the chapter itself first. Summaries, verse waypoints, ancient witnesses, cross-references, and the citation apparatus are here to serve the Word YHWH has given, never to outrank it.

The Bible is the authority here. Notes, languages, witnesses, and defenses sit below the text as servants of faithful study.

Published chapter Reader summary first Numbers live Chapter 28 of 36 31 verse waypoints 31 commentary witnesses

Holy Scripture opened

Numbers 28 — Numbers 28

Connected primary witness
  • Connected ID: Numbers_28
  • Primary Witness Text: And the LORD spake unto Moses, saying, Command the children of Israel, and say unto them, My offering, and my bread for my sacrifices made by fire, for a sweet savour unto me, shall ye observe to offer unto me in their due season. And thou shalt say unto them, This is the offering made by fire which ye shall offer unto the LORD; two lambs of the first year without spot day by day, for a continual burnt offering. The one lamb shalt thou offer in the morning, and the other lamb shalt thou offer at even; And a tenth part of an ephah of flour for a meat offering, mingled with the fourth part of an hin of beaten oil. It is a continual burnt offering, which was ordained in mount Sinai for a sweet savour, a sacrifice made by fire unto the LORD. And the drink offering thereof shall be the fourth part of an hin for the one lamb: in the holy place shalt thou cause the strong wine to be poured unto the LORD for a drink offering. And the other lamb shalt thou offer at even: as the meat offering of the morning, and as the drink offering thereof, thou shalt offer it, a sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD. And on the sabbath day two lambs of the first year without spot, and two tenth deals of flour for a meat offering, mingled with oil, and the drink offering thereof: This is the burnt offering of every sabbath, beside the continual burnt offering, and his drink offering. And in the beginnings of your months ye shall offer a burnt offering unto the LORD; two young bulloc...

Connected dataset overlay
  • Connected ID: Numbers_28
  • Chapter Blob Preview: And the LORD spake unto Moses, saying, Command the children of Israel, and say unto them, My offering, and my bread for my sacrifices made by fire, for a sweet savour unto me, shall ye observe to offer unto me in their due season. And thou shalt say unto them, This is the offering made by fire which ye shall offer unto the LORD; two lambs of the first year without spot day by d...

Chapter frameStart here before opening notes.

Chapter frame

Numbers (Bamidbar — "In the wilderness") records Israel's 40-year journey through the Sinai desert, framing disobedience and consequence alongside God's patient, covenant-sustaining provision.

The book's apologetics yield is significant: the bronze serpent episode (21:8-9) is cited by Jesus as a direct type of His own crucifixion (John 3:14-15); the Balaam oracles (chs. 22-24) contain one of the OT's earliest messianic star prophecies (24:17); and the Levitical census figures inform scholarly discussion of ancient Near Eastern population records and the historicity of the Exodus.


Verse-by-verse study laneOpen only when you are ready for notes and witnesses.

Verse-by-verse study lane

Numbers 28:1

Hebrew
וַיְדַבֵּר יְהוָה אֶל־מֹשֶׁה לֵּאמֹֽר׃

vayedaver-yehvah-'el-mosheh-le'mor

KJV: And the LORD spake unto Moses, saying,

AKJV: And the LORD spoke to Moses, saying,

ASV: And Jehovah spake unto Moses, saying,

YLT: And Jehovah speaketh unto Moses, saying,

Commentary WitnessNumbers 28:1
Quoted commentary witness

Commentary Witness

Numbers 28:1

Quoted commentary witness

<Dixit quoque.>ORIG., hom. 23 in Num. Alia littera, etc., usque ad qui putat aliquid se Deo praestare velut indigenti. ID. <In diebus festis meis.>Habet Deus dies festos suos, etc., usque ad ubi adhuc nulla sunt peccata, dies festos meos dicit.

Provenance. Rendered as a quoted commentary witness with explicit reference extraction from the source prose.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:1

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Named authorities or texts detected in the witness

  • Num

Exposition: Numbers 28:1 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And the LORD spake unto Moses, saying,'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:2

Hebrew
צַו אֶת־בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל וְאָמַרְתָּ אֲלֵהֶם אֶת־קָרְבָּנִי לַחְמִי לְאִשַּׁי רֵיחַ נִֽיחֹחִי תִּשְׁמְרוּ לְהַקְרִיב לִי בְּמוֹעֲדֽוֹ׃

tzav-'et-veney-yishera'el-ve'amareta-'alehem-'et-qarevaniy-lachemiy-le'ishay-reycha-niychochiy-tishemerv-lehaqeriyv-liy-vemvo'advo

KJV: Command the children of Israel, and say unto them, My offering, and my bread for my sacrifices made by fire, for a sweet savour unto me, shall ye observe to offer unto me in their due season.

AKJV: Command the children of Israel, and say to them, My offering, and my bread for my sacrifices made by fire, for a sweet smell to me, shall you observe to offer to me in their due season.

ASV: Command the children of Israel, and say unto them, My oblation, my food for my offerings made by fire, of a sweet savor unto me, shall ye observe to offer unto me in their due season.

YLT: `Command the sons of Israel, and thou hast said unto them, My offering, My bread for My fire-offerings, My sweet fragrance, ye take heed to bring near to Me in its appointed season.

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:2
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:2

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:2 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'Command the children of Israel, and say unto them, My offering, and my bread for my sacrifices made by fire, for a sweet savour unto me, shall ye observe to offer unto me in their due season.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:2

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:2

Named authorities or texts detected in the witness

  • Israel

Exposition: Numbers 28:2 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'Command the children of Israel, and say unto them, My offering, and my bread for my sacrifices made by fire, for a sweet savour unto me, shall ye observe to offer unto me in their due season.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:3

Hebrew
וְאָמַרְתָּ לָהֶם זֶה הָֽאִשֶּׁה אֲשֶׁר תַּקְרִיבוּ לַיהוָה כְּבָשִׂים בְּנֵֽי־שָׁנָה תְמִימִם שְׁנַיִם לַיּוֹם עֹלָה תָמִֽיד׃

ve'amareta-lahem-zeh-ha'isheh-'asher-taqeriyvv-layhvah-khevashiym-veney-shanah-temiymim-shenayim-layvom-'olah-tamiyd

KJV: And thou shalt say unto them, This is the offering made by fire which ye shall offer unto the LORD; two lambs of the first year without spot day by day, for a continual burnt offering.

AKJV: And you shall say to them, This is the offering made by fire which you shall offer to the LORD; two lambs of the first year without spot day by day, for a continual burnt offering.

ASV: And thou shalt say unto them, This is the offering made by fire which ye shall offer unto Jehovah: he-lambs a year old without blemish, two day by day, for a continual burnt-offering.

YLT: `And thou hast said to them, This is the fire-offering which ye bring near to Jehovah: two lambs, sons of a year, perfect ones, daily, a continual burnt-offering;

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:3
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:3

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:3 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'And thou shalt say unto them, This is the offering made by fire which ye shall offer unto the LORD; two lambs of the first year without spot day by day, for a continual burnt offering.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:3

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:3

Exposition: Numbers 28:3 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And thou shalt say unto them, This is the offering made by fire which ye shall offer unto the LORD; two lambs of the first year without spot day by day, for a continual burnt offering.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:4

Hebrew
אֶת־הַכֶּבֶשׂ אֶחָד תַּעֲשֶׂה בַבֹּקֶר וְאֵת הַכֶּבֶשׂ הַשֵּׁנִי תַּעֲשֶׂה בֵּין הָֽעַרְבָּֽיִם׃

'et-hakhevesh-'echad-ta'asheh-vavoqer-ve'et-hakhevesh-hasheniy-ta'asheh-veyn-ha'arevayim

KJV: The one lamb shalt thou offer in the morning, and the other lamb shalt thou offer at even;

AKJV: The one lamb shall you offer in the morning, and the other lamb shall you offer at even;

ASV: The one lamb shalt thou offer in the morning, and the other lamb shalt thou offer at even;

YLT: the one lamb thou preparest in the morning, and the second lamb thou preparest between the evenings;

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:4
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:4

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:4 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'The one lamb shalt thou offer in the morning, and the other lamb shalt thou offer at even;'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:4

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:4

Exposition: Numbers 28:4 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'The one lamb shalt thou offer in the morning, and the other lamb shalt thou offer at even;'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:5

Hebrew
וַעֲשִׂירִית הָאֵיפָה סֹלֶת לְמִנְחָה בְּלוּלָה בְּשֶׁמֶן כָּתִית רְבִיעִת הַהִֽין׃

va'ashiyriyt-ha'eyfah-solet-leminechah-velvlah-veshemen-khatiyt-reviy'it-hahiyn

KJV: And a tenth part of an ephah of flour for a meat offering, mingled with the fourth part of an hin of beaten oil.

AKJV: And a tenth part of an ephah of flour for a meat offering, mingled with the fourth part of an hin of beaten oil.

ASV: and the tenth part of an ephah of fine flour for a meal-offering, mingled with the fourth part of a hin of beaten oil.

YLT: and a tenth of the ephah of flour for a present, mixed with beaten oil, a fourth of the hin;

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:5
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:5

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:5 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'And a tenth part of an ephah of flour for a meat offering, mingled with the fourth part of an hin of beaten oil.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:5

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:5

Exposition: Numbers 28:5 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And a tenth part of an ephah of flour for a meat offering, mingled with the fourth part of an hin of beaten oil.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:6

Hebrew
עֹלַת תָּמִיד הָעֲשֻׂיָה בְּהַר סִינַי לְרֵיחַ נִיחֹחַ אִשֶּׁה לַֽיהוָֽה׃

'olat-tamiyd-ha'ashuyah-vehar-siynay-lereycha-niychocha-'isheh-layhvah

KJV: It is a continual burnt offering, which was ordained in mount Sinai for a sweet savour, a sacrifice made by fire unto the LORD.

AKJV: It is a continual burnt offering, which was ordained in mount Sinai for a sweet smell, a sacrifice made by fire to the LORD.

ASV: It is a continual burnt-offering, which was ordained in mount Sinai for a sweet savor, an offering made by fire unto Jehovah.

YLT: a continual burnt-offering, which was made in mount Sinai, for sweet fragrance, a fire-offering to Jehovah;

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:6
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:6

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:6 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'It is a continual burnt offering, which was ordained in mount Sinai for a sweet savour, a sacrifice made by fire unto the LORD.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:6

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:6

Exposition: Numbers 28:6 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'It is a continual burnt offering, which was ordained in mount Sinai for a sweet savour, a sacrifice made by fire unto the LORD.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:7

Hebrew
וְנִסְכּוֹ רְבִיעִת הַהִין לַכֶּבֶשׂ הָאֶחָד בַּקֹּדֶשׁ הַסֵּךְ נֶסֶךְ שֵׁכָר לַיהוָֽה׃

venisekhvo-reviy'it-hahiyn-lakhevesh-ha'echad-vaqodesh-hasekhe-nesekhe-shekhar-layhvah

KJV: And the drink offering thereof shall be the fourth part of an hin for the one lamb: in the holy place shalt thou cause the strong wine to be poured unto the LORD for a drink offering.

AKJV: And the drink offering thereof shall be the fourth part of an hin for the one lamb: in the holy place shall you cause the strong wine to be poured to the LORD for a drink offering.

ASV: And the drink-offering thereof shall be the fourth part of a hin for the one lamb: in the holy place shalt thou pour out a drink-offering of strong drink unto Jehovah.

YLT: and its libation, a fourth of the hin for the one lamb; in the sanctuary cause thou a libation of strong drink to be poured out to Jehovah.

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:7
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:7

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:7 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'And the drink offering thereof shall be the fourth part of an hin for the one lamb: in the holy place shalt thou cause the strong wine to be poured unto the LORD for a drink offering.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:7

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:7

Exposition: Numbers 28:7 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And the drink offering thereof shall be the fourth part of an hin for the one lamb: in the holy place shalt thou cause the strong wine to be poured unto the LORD for a drink offering.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:8

Hebrew
וְאֵת הַכֶּבֶשׂ הַשֵּׁנִי תַּעֲשֶׂה בֵּין הָֽעַרְבָּיִם כְּמִנְחַת הַבֹּקֶר וּכְנִסְכּוֹ תַּעֲשֶׂה אִשֵּׁה רֵיחַ נִיחֹחַ לַיהוָֽה׃

ve'et-hakhevesh-hasheniy-ta'asheh-veyn-ha'arevayim-kheminechat-havoqer-vkhenisekhvo-ta'asheh-'isheh-reycha-niychocha-layhvah

KJV: And the other lamb shalt thou offer at even: as the meat offering of the morning, and as the drink offering thereof, thou shalt offer it, a sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD.

AKJV: And the other lamb shall you offer at even: as the meat offering of the morning, and as the drink offering thereof, you shall offer it, a sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet smell to the LORD. ¶

ASV: And the other lamb shalt thou offer at even: as the meal-offering of the morning, and as the drink-offering thereof, thou shalt offer it, an offering made by fire, of a sweet savor unto Jehovah.

YLT: `And the second lamb thou dost prepare between the evenings; as the present of the morning, and as its libation thou preparest--a fire-offering, a sweet fragrance to Jehovah.

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:8
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:8

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:8 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'And the other lamb shalt thou offer at even: as the meat offering of the morning, and as the drink offering thereof, thou shalt offer it, a sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:8

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:8

Exposition: Numbers 28:8 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And the other lamb shalt thou offer at even: as the meat offering of the morning, and as the drink offering thereof, thou shalt offer it, a sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:9

Hebrew
וּבְיוֹם הַשַּׁבָּת שְׁנֵֽי־כְבָשִׂים בְּנֵֽי־שָׁנָה תְּמִימִם וּשְׁנֵי עֶשְׂרֹנִים סֹלֶת מִנְחָה בְּלוּלָה בַשֶּׁמֶן וְנִסְכּֽוֹ׃

vveyvom-hashavat-sheney-khevashiym-veney-shanah-temiymim-vsheney-'esheroniym-solet-minechah-velvlah-vashemen-venisekhvo

KJV: And on the sabbath day two lambs of the first year without spot, and two tenth deals of flour for a meat offering, mingled with oil, and the drink offering thereof:

AKJV: And on the sabbath day two lambs of the first year without spot, and two tenth deals of flour for a meat offering, mingled with oil, and the drink offering thereof:

ASV: And on the sabbath day two he-lambs a year old without blemish, and two tenth parts of an ephah of fine flour for a meal-offering, mingled with oil, and the drink-offering thereof:

YLT: `And on the sabbath-day, two lambs, sons of a year, perfect ones, and two-tenth deals of flour, a present, mixed with oil, and its libation;

Commentary WitnessNumbers 28:9
Quoted commentary witness

Commentary Witness

Numbers 28:9

Quoted commentary witness

<Die autem Sabbati.>RAB. in Num. Secunda ergo festivitas est, etc., usque ad qui sacerdos est in aeternum secundum ordinem Melchisedech Hebr. 5.. <Et duas decimas similae oleo conspersae.>RAB. Haec offert qui spirituali gratia repletus scientiam duorum testamentorum, docente Spiritu sancto, verbis et exemplis docet auditores suos, non pro temporali lucro, sed pro vitae aeternae praemio.

Provenance. Rendered as a quoted commentary witness with explicit reference extraction from the source prose.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:9

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Named authorities or texts detected in the witness

  • Sabbati
  • Num
  • Melchisedech Hebr

Exposition: Numbers 28:9 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And on the sabbath day two lambs of the first year without spot, and two tenth deals of flour for a meat offering, mingled with oil, and the drink offering thereof:'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:10

Hebrew
עֹלַת שַׁבַּת בְּשַׁבַּתּוֹ עַל־עֹלַת הַתָּמִיד וְנִסְכָּֽהּ׃

'olat-shavat-veshavatvo-'al-'olat-hatamiyd-venisekhah

KJV: This is the burnt offering of every sabbath, beside the continual burnt offering, and his drink offering.

AKJV: This is the burnt offering of every sabbath, beside the continual burnt offering, and his drink offering. ¶

ASV: this is the burnt-offering of every sabbath, besides the continual burnt-offering, and the drink-offering thereof.

YLT: the burnt-offering of the sabbath in its sabbath, besides the continual burnt-offering and its libation.

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:10
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:10

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:10 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'This is the burnt offering of every sabbath, beside the continual burnt offering, and his drink offering.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:10

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:10

Exposition: Numbers 28:10 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'This is the burnt offering of every sabbath, beside the continual burnt offering, and his drink offering.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:11

Hebrew
וּבְרָאשֵׁי חָדְשֵׁיכֶם תַּקְרִיבוּ עֹלָה לַיהוָה פָּרִים בְּנֵֽי־בָקָר שְׁנַיִם וְאַיִל אֶחָד כְּבָשִׂים בְּנֵי־שָׁנָה שִׁבְעָה תְּמִימִֽם׃

vvera'shey-chadesheykhem-taqeriyvv-'olah-layhvah-fariym-veney-vaqar-shenayim-ve'ayil-'echad-khevashiym-veney-shanah-shive'ah-temiymim

KJV: And in the beginnings of your months ye shall offer a burnt offering unto the LORD; two young bullocks, and one ram, seven lambs of the first year without spot;

AKJV: And in the beginnings of your months you shall offer a burnt offering to the LORD; two young bullocks, and one ram, seven lambs of the first year without spot;

ASV: And in the beginnings of your months ye shall offer a burnt-offering unto Jehovah: two young bullocks, and one ram, seven he-lambs a year old without blemish;

YLT: `And in the beginnings of your months ye bring near a burnt-offering to Jehovah: two bullocks, sons of the herd, and one ram, seven lambs, sons of a year, perfect ones;

Commentary WitnessNumbers 28:11
Quoted commentary witness

Commentary Witness

Numbers 28:11

Quoted commentary witness

<In Kalendis.>Id est in neomeniis, cum Ecclesia vel quaelibet anima soli justitiae sic propinquat, ut unus spiritus cum eo fiat, et per ipsum innovata veterem hominem abjiciat. ID. Tertia festivitas neomeniae dies, etc., usque ad innovata jugulat. <Vitulos de armento.>Potest in duobus vitulis jucunditas boni operis in anima vel in corpore signari: quae secundum duo Testamenta offertur Domino in duobus praeceptis charitatis. <Arietem unum.>In ariete regimen disciplinae forte et immobile secundum unitatem fidei catholicae. <Agnos anniculos septem.>Simplicitatem et mansuetudinem morum pro coelesti requie per gratiam septiformis Spiritus.

Provenance. Rendered as a quoted commentary witness with explicit reference extraction from the source prose.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:11

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Named authorities or texts detected in the witness

  • In Kalendis
  • Spiritus

Exposition: Numbers 28:11 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And in the beginnings of your months ye shall offer a burnt offering unto the LORD; two young bullocks, and one ram, seven lambs of the first year without spot;'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:12

Hebrew
וּשְׁלֹשָׁה עֶשְׂרֹנִים סֹלֶת מִנְחָה בְּלוּלָה בַשֶּׁמֶן לַפָּר הָאֶחָד וּשְׁנֵי עֶשְׂרֹנִים סֹלֶת מִנְחָה בְּלוּלָה בַשֶּׁמֶן לָאַיִל הָֽאֶחָֽד׃

vsheloshah-'esheroniym-solet-minechah-velvlah-vashemen-lafar-ha'echad-vsheney-'esheroniym-solet-minechah-velvlah-vashemen-la'ayil-ha'echad

KJV: And three tenth deals of flour for a meat offering, mingled with oil, for one bullock; and two tenth deals of flour for a meat offering, mingled with oil, for one ram;

AKJV: And three tenth deals of flour for a meat offering, mingled with oil, for one bullock; and two tenth deals of flour for a meat offering, mingled with oil, for one ram;

ASV: and three tenth parts of an ephah of fine flour for a meal-offering, mingled with oil, for each bullock; and two tenth parts of fine flour for a meal-offering, mingled with oil, for the one ram;

YLT: and three-tenth deals of flour, a present, mixed with oil, for the one bullock, and two-tenth deals of flour, a present, mixed with oil, for the one ram;

Commentary WitnessNumbers 28:12
Quoted commentary witness

Commentary Witness

Numbers 28:12

Quoted commentary witness

<Et tres decimas similae.>Haec offert qui scientiam spiritualem in sanctae Trinitatis fide, oleo laetitiae illuminatus exhibet cum bono opere. <Et duas decimas.>Hoc facit, qui decalogum legis in duobus praeceptis charitatis ad suam et proximorum utilitatem studet convertere, et sic totam vitam suam in suavem odorem Domino dedicare.

Provenance. Rendered as a quoted commentary witness with explicit reference extraction from the source prose.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:12

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Exposition: Numbers 28:12 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And three tenth deals of flour for a meat offering, mingled with oil, for one bullock; and two tenth deals of flour for a meat offering, mingled with oil, for one ram;'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:13

Hebrew
וְעִשָּׂרֹן עִשָּׂרוֹן סֹלֶת מִנְחָה בְּלוּלָה בַשֶּׁמֶן לַכֶּבֶשׂ הָאֶחָד עֹלָה רֵיחַ נִיחֹחַ אִשֶּׁה לַיהוָֽה׃

ve'isharon-'isharvon-solet-minechah-velvlah-vashemen-lakhevesh-ha'echad-'olah-reycha-niychocha-'isheh-layhvah

KJV: And a several tenth deal of flour mingled with oil for a meat offering unto one lamb; for a burnt offering of a sweet savour, a sacrifice made by fire unto the LORD.

AKJV: And a several tenth deal of flour mingled with oil for a meat offering to one lamb; for a burnt offering of a sweet smell, a sacrifice made by fire to the LORD.

ASV: and a tenth part of fine flour mingled with oil for a meal-offering unto every lamb; for a burnt-offering of a sweet savor, an offering made by fire unto Jehovah.

YLT: and a several tenth deal of flour, a present, mixed with oil, for the one lamb; a burnt-offering, a sweet fragrance, a fire-offering to Jehovah;

Commentary WitnessNumbers 28:13
Quoted commentary witness

Commentary Witness

Numbers 28:13

Quoted commentary witness

<Et decimam decimae,>etc., <per agnos singulos.>Hoc fit cum simplicitas morum secundum Scripturarum regulam gratia Spiritus sancti cooperante instituitur et ornatur. Bene autem haec omnia in holocaustum Domino jubentur offerri, quia haec agere debemus, non ut humanam laudem, vel praesentem retributionem quaeramus, sed omnium bonorum datori Deo per omnia placeamus, et aeternae vitae retributionem mereamur.

Provenance. Rendered as a quoted commentary witness with explicit reference extraction from the source prose.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:13

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Exposition: Numbers 28:13 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And a several tenth deal of flour mingled with oil for a meat offering unto one lamb; for a burnt offering of a sweet savour, a sacrifice made by fire unto the LORD.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:14

Hebrew
וְנִסְכֵּיהֶם חֲצִי הַהִין יִהְיֶה לַפָּר וּשְׁלִישִׁת הַהִין לָאַיִל וּרְבִיעִת הַהִין לַכֶּבֶשׂ יָיִן זֹאת עֹלַת חֹדֶשׁ בְּחָדְשׁוֹ לְחָדְשֵׁי הַשָּׁנָֽה׃

venisekheyhem-chatziy-hahiyn-yiheyeh-lafar-vsheliyshit-hahiyn-la'ayil-vreviy'it-hahiyn-lakhevesh-yayin-zo't-'olat-chodesh-vechadeshvo-lechadeshey-hashanah

KJV: And their drink offerings shall be half an hin of wine unto a bullock, and the third part of an hin unto a ram, and a fourth part of an hin unto a lamb: this is the burnt offering of every month throughout the months of the year.

AKJV: And their drink offerings shall be half an hin of wine to a bullock, and the third part of an hin to a ram, and a fourth part of an hin to a lamb: this is the burnt offering of every month throughout the months of the year.

ASV: And their drink-offerings shall be half a hin of wine for a bullock, and the third part of a hin for the ram, and the fourth part of a hin for a lamb: this is the burnt-offering of every month throughout the months of the year.

YLT: and their libations are a half of the hin to a bullock, and a third of the hin to a ram, and a fourth of the hin to a lamb, of wine; this is the burnt-offering of every month for the months of the year;

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:14
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:14

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:14 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'And their drink offerings shall be half an hin of wine unto a bullock, and the third part of an hin unto a ram, and a fourth part of an hin unto a lamb: this is the burnt offering of every month throughout the months of the year.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:14

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:14

Exposition: Numbers 28:14 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And their drink offerings shall be half an hin of wine unto a bullock, and the third part of an hin unto a ram, and a fourth part of an hin unto a lamb: this is the burnt offering of every month throughout the months...'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:15

Hebrew
וּשְׂעִיר עִזִּים אֶחָד לְחַטָּאת לַיהוָה עַל־עֹלַת הַתָּמִיד יֵעָשֶׂה וְנִסְכּֽוֹ׃

vshe'iyr-'iziym-'echad-lechata't-layhvah-'al-'olat-hatamiyd-ye'asheh-venisekhvo

KJV: And one kid of the goats for a sin offering unto the LORD shall be offered, beside the continual burnt offering, and his drink offering.

AKJV: And one kid of the goats for a sin offering to the LORD shall be offered, beside the continual burnt offering, and his drink offering.

ASV: And one he-goat for a sin-offering unto Jehovah; it shall be offered besides the continual burnt-offering, and the drink-offering thereof.

YLT: and one kid of the goats for a sin-offering to Jehovah; besides the continual burnt-offering it is prepared, and its libation.

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:15
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:15

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:15 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'And one kid of the goats for a sin offering unto the LORD shall be offered, beside the continual burnt offering, and his drink offering.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:15

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:15

Exposition: Numbers 28:15 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And one kid of the goats for a sin offering unto the LORD shall be offered, beside the continual burnt offering, and his drink offering.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:16

Hebrew
וּבַחֹדֶשׁ הָרִאשׁוֹן בְּאַרְבָּעָה עָשָׂר יוֹם לַחֹדֶשׁ פֶּסַח לַיהוָֽה׃

vvachodesh-hari'shvon-ve'areva'ah-'ashar-yvom-lachodesh-fesach-layhvah

KJV: And in the fourteenth day of the first month is the passover of the LORD.

AKJV: And in the fourteenth day of the first month is the passover of the LORD.

ASV: And in the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month, is Jehovah’s passover.

YLT: `And in the first month, in the fourteenth day of the month, is the passover to Jehovah;

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:16
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:16

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:16 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'And in the fourteenth day of the first month is the passover of the LORD.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:16

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:16

Exposition: Numbers 28:16 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And in the fourteenth day of the first month is the passover of the LORD.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:17

Hebrew
וּבַחֲמִשָּׁה עָשָׂר יוֹם לַחֹדֶשׁ הַזֶּה חָג שִׁבְעַת יָמִים מַצּוֹת יֵאָכֵֽל׃

vvachamishah-'ashar-yvom-lachodesh-hazeh-chag-shive'at-yamiym-matzvot-ye'akhel

KJV: And in the fifteenth day of this month is the feast: seven days shall unleavened bread be eaten.

AKJV: And in the fifteenth day of this month is the feast: seven days shall unleavened bread be eaten.

ASV: And on the fifteenth day of this month shall be a feast: seven days shall unleavened bread be eaten.

YLT: and in the fifteenth day of this month is a festival, seven days unleavened food is eaten;

Commentary WitnessNumbers 28:17
Quoted commentary witness

Commentary Witness

Numbers 28:17

Quoted commentary witness

<Quintadecima die.>ID. Sequitur huic continua festivitas, etc., usque ad efficitur nequior et deterior. ID. Omnes qui imbuendi sunt altioribus disciplinis, etc., usque ad sacrificiis spiritalibus in purificatione mentis oblatis.

Provenance. Rendered as a quoted commentary witness with explicit reference extraction from the source prose.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:17

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Exposition: Numbers 28:17 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And in the fifteenth day of this month is the feast: seven days shall unleavened bread be eaten.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:18

Hebrew
בַּיּוֹם הָרִאשׁוֹן מִקְרָא־קֹדֶשׁ כָּל־מְלֶאכֶת עֲבֹדָה לֹא תַעֲשֽׂוּ׃

vayvom-hari'shvon-miqera'-qodesh-khal-mele'khet-'avodah-lo'-ta'ashv

KJV: In the first day shall be an holy convocation; ye shall do no manner of servile work therein:

AKJV: In the first day shall be an holy convocation; you shall do no manner of servile work therein:

ASV: In the first day shall be a holy convocation: ye shall do no servile work;

YLT: in the first day is an holy convocation, ye do no servile work,

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:18
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:18

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:18 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'In the first day shall be an holy convocation; ye shall do no manner of servile work therein:'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:18

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:18

Exposition: Numbers 28:18 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'In the first day shall be an holy convocation; ye shall do no manner of servile work therein:'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:19

Hebrew
וְהִקְרַבְתֶּם אִשֶּׁה עֹלָה לַֽיהוָה פָּרִים בְּנֵי־בָקָר שְׁנַיִם וְאַיִל אֶחָד וְשִׁבְעָה כְבָשִׂים בְּנֵי שָׁנָה תְּמִימִם יִהְיוּ לָכֶֽם׃

vehiqeravetem-'isheh-'olah-layhvah-fariym-veney-vaqar-shenayim-ve'ayil-'echad-veshive'ah-khevashiym-veney-shanah-temiymim-yiheyv-lakhem

KJV: But ye shall offer a sacrifice made by fire for a burnt offering unto the LORD; two young bullocks, and one ram, and seven lambs of the first year: they shall be unto you without blemish:

AKJV: But you shall offer a sacrifice made by fire for a burnt offering to the LORD; two young bullocks, and one ram, and seven lambs of the first year: they shall be to you without blemish:

ASV: but ye shall offer an offering made by fire, a burnt-offering unto Jehovah: two young bullocks, and one ram, and seven he-lambs a year old; they shall be unto you without blemish;

YLT: and ye have brought near a fire-offering, a burnt-offering to Jehovah: two bullocks, sons of the herd, and one ram, and seven lambs, sons of a year, perfect ones they are for you;

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:19
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:19

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:19 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'But ye shall offer a sacrifice made by fire for a burnt offering unto the LORD; two young bullocks, and one ram, and seven lambs of the first year: they shall be unto you without blemish:'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:19

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:19

Exposition: Numbers 28:19 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'But ye shall offer a sacrifice made by fire for a burnt offering unto the LORD; two young bullocks, and one ram, and seven lambs of the first year: they shall be unto you without blemish:'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:20

Hebrew
וּמִנְחָתָם סֹלֶת בְּלוּלָה בַשָּׁמֶן שְׁלֹשָׁה עֶשְׂרֹנִים לַפָּר וּשְׁנֵי עֶשְׂרֹנִים לָאַיִל תַּעֲשֽׂוּ׃

vminechatam-solet-velvlah-vashamen-sheloshah-'esheroniym-lafar-vsheney-'esheroniym-la'ayil-ta'ashv

KJV: And their meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil: three tenth deals shall ye offer for a bullock, and two tenth deals for a ram;

AKJV: And their meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil: three tenth deals shall you offer for a bullock, and two tenth deals for a ram;

ASV: and their meal-offering, fine flour mingled with oil: three tenth parts shall ye offer for a bullock, and two tenth parts for the ram;

YLT: and their present, flour mixed with oil, three-tenth deals for a bullock, and two-tenth deals for a ram ye do prepare;

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:20
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:20

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:20 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'And their meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil: three tenth deals shall ye offer for a bullock, and two tenth deals for a ram;'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:20

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:20

Exposition: Numbers 28:20 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And their meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil: three tenth deals shall ye offer for a bullock, and two tenth deals for a ram;'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:21

Hebrew
עִשָּׂרוֹן עִשָּׂרוֹן תַּעֲשֶׂה לַכֶּבֶשׂ הָאֶחָד לְשִׁבְעַת הַכְּבָשִֽׂים׃

'isharvon-'isharvon-ta'asheh-lakhevesh-ha'echad-leshive'at-hakhevashiym

KJV: A several tenth deal shalt thou offer for every lamb, throughout the seven lambs:

AKJV: A several tenth deal shall you offer for every lamb, throughout the seven lambs:

ASV: a tenth part shalt thou offer for every lamb of the seven lambs;

YLT: a several tenth deal thou preparest for the one lamb, for the seven lambs,

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:21
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:21

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:21 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'A several tenth deal shalt thou offer for every lamb, throughout the seven lambs:'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:21

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:21

Exposition: Numbers 28:21 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'A several tenth deal shalt thou offer for every lamb, throughout the seven lambs:'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:22

Hebrew
וּשְׂעִיר חַטָּאת אֶחָד לְכַפֵּר עֲלֵיכֶֽם׃

vshe'iyr-chata't-'echad-lekhafer-'aleykhem

KJV: And one goat for a sin offering, to make an atonement for you.

AKJV: And one goat for a sin offering, to make an atonement for you.

ASV: and one he-goat for a sin-offering, to make atonement for you.

YLT: and one goat, a sin-offering, to make atonement for you.

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:22
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:22

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:22 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'And one goat for a sin offering, to make an atonement for you.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:22

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:22

Exposition: Numbers 28:22 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And one goat for a sin offering, to make an atonement for you.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:23

Hebrew
מִלְּבַד עֹלַת הַבֹּקֶר אֲשֶׁר לְעֹלַת הַתָּמִיד תַּעֲשׂוּ אֶת־אֵֽלֶּה׃

milevad-'olat-havoqer-'asher-le'olat-hatamiyd-ta'ashv-'et-'eleh

KJV: Ye shall offer these beside the burnt offering in the morning, which is for a continual burnt offering.

AKJV: You shall offer these beside the burnt offering in the morning, which is for a continual burnt offering.

ASV: Ye shall offer these besides the burnt-offering of the morning, which is for a continual burnt-offering.

YLT: `Apart from the burnt-offering of the morning, which is for the continual burnt-offering, ye prepare these;

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:23
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:23

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:23 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'Ye shall offer these beside the burnt offering in the morning, which is for a continual burnt offering.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:23

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:23

Exposition: Numbers 28:23 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'Ye shall offer these beside the burnt offering in the morning, which is for a continual burnt offering.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:24

Hebrew
כָּאֵלֶּה תַּעֲשׂוּ לַיּוֹם שִׁבְעַת יָמִים לֶחֶם אִשֵּׁה רֵֽיחַ־נִיחֹחַ לַיהוָה עַל־עוֹלַת הַתָּמִיד יֵעָשֶׂה וְנִסְכּֽוֹ׃

kha'eleh-ta'ashv-layvom-shive'at-yamiym-lechem-'isheh-reycha-niychocha-layhvah-'al-'volat-hatamiyd-ye'asheh-venisekhvo

KJV: After this manner ye shall offer daily, throughout the seven days, the meat of the sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD: it shall be offered beside the continual burnt offering, and his drink offering.

AKJV: After this manner you shall offer daily, throughout the seven days, the meat of the sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet smell to the LORD: it shall be offered beside the continual burnt offering, and his drink offering.

ASV: After this manner ye shall offer daily, for seven days, the food of the offering made by fire, of a sweet savor unto Jehovah: it shall be offered besides the continual burnt-offering, and the drink-offering thereof.

YLT: according to these ye prepare daily, seven days, bread of a fire-offering, a sweet fragrance, to Jehovah; besides the continual burnt-offering it is prepared, and its libation;

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:24
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:24

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:24 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'After this manner ye shall offer daily, throughout the seven days, the meat of the sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD: it shall be offered beside the continual burnt offering, and his drink offering.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:24

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:24

Exposition: Numbers 28:24 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'After this manner ye shall offer daily, throughout the seven days, the meat of the sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD: it shall be offered beside the continual burnt offering, and his drink offering.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:25

Hebrew
וּבַיּוֹם הַשְּׁבִיעִי מִקְרָא־קֹדֶשׁ יִהְיֶה לָכֶם כָּל־מְלֶאכֶת עֲבֹדָה לֹא תַעֲשֽׂוּ׃

vvayvom-hasheviy'iy-miqera'-qodesh-yiheyeh-lakhem-khal-mele'khet-'avodah-lo'-ta'ashv

KJV: And on the seventh day ye shall have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work.

AKJV: And on the seventh day you shall have an holy convocation; you shall do no servile work. ¶

ASV: And on the seventh day ye shall have a holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work.

YLT: and on the seventh day a holy convocation ye have, ye do no servile work.

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:25
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:25

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:25 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'And on the seventh day ye shall have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:25

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:25

Exposition: Numbers 28:25 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And on the seventh day ye shall have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:26

Hebrew
וּבְיוֹם הַבִּכּוּרִים בְּהַקְרִיבְכֶם מִנְחָה חֲדָשָׁה לַֽיהוָה בְּשָׁבֻעֹתֵיכֶם מִֽקְרָא־קֹדֶשׁ יִהְיֶה לָכֶם כָּל־מְלֶאכֶת עֲבֹדָה לֹא תַעֲשֽׂוּ׃

vveyvom-havikhvriym-vehaqeriyvekhem-minechah-chadashah-layhvah-veshavu'oteykhem-miqera'-qodesh-yiheyeh-lakhem-khal-mele'khet-'avodah-lo'-ta'ashv

KJV: Also in the day of the firstfruits, when ye bring a new meat offering unto the LORD, after your weeks be out, ye shall have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work:

AKJV: Also in the day of the first fruits, when you bring a new meat offering to the LORD, after your weeks be out, you shall have an holy convocation; you shall do no servile work:

ASV: Also in the day of the first-fruits, when ye offer a new meal-offering unto Jehovah in your feast of weeks, ye shall have a holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work;

YLT: `And in the day of the first-fruits, in your bringing near a new present to Jehovah, in your weeks, a holy convocation ye have; ye do no servile work;

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:26
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:26

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:26 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'Also in the day of the firstfruits, when ye bring a new meat offering unto the LORD, after your weeks be out, ye shall have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work:'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:26

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:26

Exposition: Numbers 28:26 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'Also in the day of the firstfruits, when ye bring a new meat offering unto the LORD, after your weeks be out, ye shall have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work:'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:27

Hebrew
וְהִקְרַבְתֶּם עוֹלָה לְרֵיחַ נִיחֹחַ לַֽיהוָה פָּרִים בְּנֵי־בָקָר שְׁנַיִם אַיִל אֶחָד שִׁבְעָה כְבָשִׂים בְּנֵי שָׁנָֽה׃

vehiqeravetem-'volah-lereycha-niychocha-layhvah-fariym-veney-vaqar-shenayim-'ayil-'echad-shive'ah-khevashiym-veney-shanah

KJV: But ye shall offer the burnt offering for a sweet savour unto the LORD; two young bullocks, one ram, seven lambs of the first year;

AKJV: But you shall offer the burnt offering for a sweet smell to the LORD; two young bullocks, one ram, seven lambs of the first year;

ASV: but ye shall offer a burnt-offering for a sweet savor unto Jehovah: two young bullocks, one ram, seven he-lambs a year old;

YLT: and ye have brought near a burnt-offering for sweet fragrance to Jehovah: two bullocks, sons of the herd, one ram, seven lambs, sons of a year,

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:27
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:27

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:27 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'But ye shall offer the burnt offering for a sweet savour unto the LORD; two young bullocks, one ram, seven lambs of the first year;'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:27

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:27

Exposition: Numbers 28:27 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'But ye shall offer the burnt offering for a sweet savour unto the LORD; two young bullocks, one ram, seven lambs of the first year;'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:28

Hebrew
וּמִנְחָתָם סֹלֶת בְּלוּלָה בַשָּׁמֶן שְׁלֹשָׁה עֶשְׂרֹנִים לַפָּר הָֽאֶחָד שְׁנֵי עֶשְׂרֹנִים לָאַיִל הָאֶחָֽד׃

vminechatam-solet-velvlah-vashamen-sheloshah-'esheroniym-lafar-ha'echad-sheney-'esheroniym-la'ayil-ha'echad

KJV: And their meat offering of flour mingled with oil, three tenth deals unto one bullock, two tenth deals unto one ram,

AKJV: And their meat offering of flour mingled with oil, three tenth deals to one bullock, two tenth deals to one ram,

ASV: and their meal-offering, fine flour mingled with oil, three tenth parts for each bullock, two tenth parts for the one ram,

YLT: and their present, flour mixed with oil, three-tenth deals to the one bullock, two-tenth deals to the one ram,

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:28
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:28

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:28 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'And their meat offering of flour mingled with oil, three tenth deals unto one bullock, two tenth deals unto one ram,'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:28

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:28

Exposition: Numbers 28:28 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And their meat offering of flour mingled with oil, three tenth deals unto one bullock, two tenth deals unto one ram,'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:29

Hebrew
עִשָּׂרוֹן עִשָּׂרוֹן לַכֶּבֶשׂ הָאֶחָד לְשִׁבְעַת הַכְּבָשִֽׂים׃

'isharvon-'isharvon-lakhevesh-ha'echad-leshive'at-hakhevashiym

KJV: A several tenth deal unto one lamb, throughout the seven lambs;

AKJV: A several tenth deal to one lamb, throughout the seven lambs;

ASV: a tenth part for every lamb of the seven lambs;

YLT: a several tenth deal to the one lamb, for the seven lambs;

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:29
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:29

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:29 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'A several tenth deal unto one lamb, throughout the seven lambs;'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:29

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:29

Exposition: Numbers 28:29 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'A several tenth deal unto one lamb, throughout the seven lambs;'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:30

Hebrew
שְׂעִיר עִזִּים אֶחָד לְכַפֵּר עֲלֵיכֶֽם׃

she'iyr-'iziym-'echad-lekhafer-'aleykhem

KJV: And one kid of the goats, to make an atonement for you.

AKJV: And one kid of the goats, to make an atonement for you.

ASV: one he-goat, to make atonement for you.

YLT: one kid of the goats to make atonement for you;

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:30
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:30

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:30 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'And one kid of the goats, to make an atonement for you.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:30

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:30

Exposition: Numbers 28:30 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And one kid of the goats, to make an atonement for you.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Numbers 28:31

Hebrew
מִלְּבַד עֹלַת הַתָּמִיד וּמִנְחָתוֹ תַּעֲשׂוּ תְּמִימִם יִהְיוּ־לָכֶם וְנִסְכֵּיהֶֽם׃

milevad-'olat-hatamiyd-vminechatvo-ta'ashv-temiymim-yiheyv-lakhem-venisekheyhem

KJV: Ye shall offer them beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat offering, (they shall be unto you without blemish) and their drink offerings.

AKJV: You shall offer them beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat offering, (they shall be to you without blemish) and their drink offerings.

ASV: Besides the continual burnt-offering, and the meal-offering thereof, ye shall offer them (they shall be unto you without blemish), and their drink-offerings.

YLT: apart from the continual burnt-offering and its present ye prepare them (perfect ones they are for you) and their libations.

Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 28:31
Generated editorial synthesis

Commentary Witness (Generated)

Numbers 28:31

Generated editorial synthesis

Numbers 28:31 advances the immediate literary flow of the chapter and should be interpreted in its canonical context, not as an isolated proof text. In the present translation it reads: 'Ye shall offer them beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat offering, (they shall be unto you without blemish) and their drink offerings.'. A close Hebrew reading supports attention to key lexical choices, clause movement, and redemptive-historical placement so doctrinal conclusions remain textually grounded.

Provenance. Rendered as an editorial synthesis tied to the canonical verse context and current chapter source.

Canonical locus

Numbers 28:31

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Biblical cross-references named in the witness

  • Numbers 28:31

Exposition: Numbers 28:31 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'Ye shall offer them beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat offering, (they shall be unto you without blemish) and their drink offerings.'. Read in canonical context, the verse supports the coherence of biblical revelation by linking doctrine, narrative, and covenantal meaning.

Apologetics Notes
  • Scientific Correlation: This verse is suitable for cumulative-case reasoning in apologetics: historical context, textual stability, and worldview coherence are evaluated together rather than in isolation.
  • Hebrew Grammar: A close Hebrew reading should attend lexical range, clause flow, and discourse function in context; these controls reduce over-reading and preserve authorial intent.
  • Historical Evidence: Historically, this verse is interpreted within the received canonical tradition, where manuscript continuity and early community usage support stable transmission and meaning.

Citation trailOpen the commentary counts, references, and named sources.

Scholarly apparatus

Commentary citation index

This chapter now surfaces commentary as quoted witness material with an explicit citation trail. The index below gathers the canonical references and named authorities detected inside the commentary layer for faster academic review.

Direct commentary witnesses

6

Generated editorial witnesses

25

Source lane

Apologetics Bible source bundle

Canonical references surfaced in commentary

  • Numbers 28:1
  • Numbers 28:2
  • Numbers 28:3
  • Numbers 28:4
  • Numbers 28:5
  • Numbers 28:6
  • Numbers 28:7
  • Numbers 28:8
  • Numbers 28:9
  • Numbers 28:10
  • Numbers 28:11
  • Numbers 28:12
  • Numbers 28:13
  • Numbers 28:14
  • Numbers 28:15
  • Numbers 28:16
  • Numbers 28:17
  • Numbers 28:18
  • Numbers 28:19
  • Numbers 28:20
  • Numbers 28:21
  • Numbers 28:22
  • Numbers 28:23
  • Numbers 28:24
  • Numbers 28:25
  • Numbers 28:26
  • Numbers 28:27
  • Numbers 28:28
  • Numbers 28:29
  • Numbers 28:30
  • Numbers 28:31

Named authorities or texts surfaced in commentary

  • Num
  • Israel
  • Sabbati
  • Melchisedech Hebr
  • In Kalendis
  • Spiritus
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