Apologetics Bible
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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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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.
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Connected primary witness
- Connected ID:
Numbers_29
- Primary Witness Text: And in the seventh month, on the first day of the month, ye shall have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work: it is a day of blowing the trumpets unto you. And ye shall offer a burnt offering for a sweet savour unto the LORD; one young bullock, one ram, and seven lambs of the first year without blemish: And their meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil, three tenth deals for a bullock, and two tenth deals for a ram, And one tenth deal for one lamb, throughout the seven lambs: And one kid of the goats for a sin offering, to make an atonement for you: Beside the burnt offering of the month, and his meat offering, and the daily burnt offering, and his meat offering, and their drink offerings, according unto their manner, for a sweet savour, a sacrifice made by fire unto the LORD. And ye shall have on the tenth day of this seventh month an holy convocation; and ye shall afflict your souls: ye shall not do any work therein: But ye shall offer a burnt offering unto the LORD for a sweet savour; one young bullock, one ram, and seven lambs of the first year; they shall be unto you without blemish: And their meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil, three tenth deals to a bullock, and two tenth deals to one ram, A several tenth deal for one lamb, throughout the seven lambs: One kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the sin offering of atonement, and the continual burnt offering, and the meat offering of it, and their drink offerings. And on the fifteen...
Connected dataset overlay
- Connected ID:
Numbers_29
- Chapter Blob Preview: And in the seventh month, on the first day of the month, ye shall have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work: it is a day of blowing the trumpets unto you. And ye shall offer a burnt offering for a sweet savour unto the LORD; one young bullock, one ram, and seven lambs of the first year without blemish: And their meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil, thre...
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.
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Verse-by-verse study lane
Numbers 29:1
Hebrew
וּבַחֹדֶשׁ הַשְּׁבִיעִי בְּאֶחָד לַחֹדֶשׁ מִֽקְרָא־קֹדֶשׁ יִהְיֶה לָכֶם כָּל־מְלֶאכֶת עֲבֹדָה לֹא תַעֲשׂוּ יוֹם תְּרוּעָה יִהְיֶה לָכֶֽם׃vvachodesh-hasheviy'iy-ve'echad-lachodesh-miqera'-qodesh-yiheyeh-lakhem-khal-mele'khet-'avodah-lo'-ta'ashv-yvom-terv'ah-yiheyeh-lakhem
KJV: And in the seventh month, on the first day of the month, ye shall have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work: it is a day of blowing the trumpets unto you.
AKJV: And in the seventh month, on the first day of the month, you shall have an holy convocation; you shall do no servile work: it is a day of blowing the trumpets to you.
ASV: And in the seventh month, on the first day of the month, ye shall have a holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work: it is a day of blowing of trumpets unto you.
YLT: `And in the seventh month, in the first of the month, a holy convocation ye have, ye do no servile work; a day of shouting it is to you;
Exposition: Numbers 29:1 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And in the seventh month, on the first day of the month, ye shall have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work: it is a day of blowing the trumpets unto 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 29:2
Hebrew
וַעֲשִׂיתֶם עֹלָה לְרֵיחַ נִיחֹחַ לַֽיהוָה פַּר בֶּן־בָּקָר אֶחָד אַיִל אֶחָד כְּבָשִׂים בְּנֵי־שָׁנָה שִׁבְעָה תְּמִימִֽם׃va'ashiytem-'olah-lereycha-niychocha-layhvah-far-ven-vaqar-'echad-'ayil-'echad-khevashiym-veney-shanah-shive'ah-temiymim
KJV: And ye shall offer a burnt offering for a sweet savour unto the LORD; one young bullock, one ram, and seven lambs of the first year without blemish:
AKJV: And you shall offer a burnt offering for a sweet smell to the LORD; one young bullock, one ram, and seven lambs of the first year without blemish:
ASV: And ye shall offer a burnt-offering for a sweet savor unto Jehovah: one young bullock, one ram, seven he-lambs a year old without blemish;
YLT: and ye have prepared a burnt-offering, for sweet fragrance to Jehovah: one bullock, a son of the herd, one ram, seven lambs, sons of a year, perfect ones;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:2Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:2
Numbers 29:2 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: 'And ye shall offer a burnt offering for a sweet savour unto the LORD; one young bullock, one ram, and seven lambs of the first year 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 29:2
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:2
Exposition: Numbers 29:2 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And ye shall offer a burnt offering for a sweet savour unto the LORD; one young bullock, one ram, and seven lambs of the first year 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 29:3
Hebrew
וּמִנְחָתָם סֹלֶת בְּלוּלָה בַשָּׁמֶן שְׁלֹשָׁה עֶשְׂרֹנִים לַפָּר שְׁנֵי עֶשְׂרֹנִים לָאָֽיִל׃vminechatam-solet-velvlah-vashamen-sheloshah-'esheroniym-lafar-sheney-'esheroniym-la'ayil
KJV: And their meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil, three tenth deals 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 for a bullock, and two tenth deals for a ram,
ASV: and their meal-offering, fine flour mingled with oil, three tenth parts for the bullock, two tenth parts for the ram,
YLT: and their present, flour mixed with oil, three-tenth deals for the bullock, two-tenth deals for the ram,
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:3Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:3
Numbers 29:3 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 their meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil, three tenth deals 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 29:3
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:3
Exposition: Numbers 29:3 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 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 29:4
Hebrew
וְעִשָּׂרוֹן אֶחָד לַכֶּבֶשׂ הָאֶחָד לְשִׁבְעַת הַכְּבָשִֽׂים׃ve'isharvon-'echad-lakhevesh-ha'echad-leshive'at-hakhevashiym
KJV: And one tenth deal for one lamb, throughout the seven lambs:
AKJV: And one tenth deal for one lamb, throughout the seven lambs:
ASV: and one tenth part for every lamb of the seven lambs;
YLT: and one-tenth deal for the one lamb, for the seven lambs;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:4Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:4
Numbers 29:4 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: 'And one tenth deal for 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 29:4
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:4
Exposition: Numbers 29:4 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And one tenth deal for 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 29:5
Hebrew
וּשְׂעִיר־עִזִּים אֶחָד חַטָּאת לְכַפֵּר עֲלֵיכֶֽם׃vshe'iyr-'iziym-'echad-chata't-lekhafer-'aleykhem
KJV: And one kid of the goats for a sin offering, to make an atonement for you:
AKJV: And one kid of the goats 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 kid of the goats, a sin-offering, to make atonement for you;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:5Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:5
Numbers 29:5 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 one kid of the goats 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 29:5
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:5
Exposition: Numbers 29:5 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, 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 29:6
Hebrew
מִלְּבַד עֹלַת הַחֹדֶשׁ וּמִנְחָתָהּ וְעֹלַת הַתָּמִיד וּמִנְחָתָהּ וְנִסְכֵּיהֶם כְּמִשְׁפָּטָם לְרֵיחַ נִיחֹחַ אִשֶּׁה לַיהוָֽה׃milevad-'olat-hachodesh-vminechatah-ve'olat-hatamiyd-vminechatah-venisekheyhem-khemishefatam-lereycha-niychocha-'isheh-layhvah
KJV: Beside the burnt offering of the month, and his meat offering, and the daily burnt offering, and his meat offering, and their drink offerings, according unto their manner, for a sweet savour, a sacrifice made by fire unto the LORD.
AKJV: Beside the burnt offering of the month, and his meat offering, and the daily burnt offering, and his meat offering, and their drink offerings, according to their manner, for a sweet smell, a sacrifice made by fire to the LORD. ¶
ASV: besides the burnt-offering of the new moon, and the meal-offering thereof, and the continual burnt-offering and the meal-offering thereof, and their drink-offerings, according unto their ordinance, for a sweet savor, an offering made by fire unto Jehovah.
YLT: apart from the burnt-offering of the month, and its present, and the continual burnt-offering, and its present, and their libations, according to their ordinance, for sweet fragrance, a fire-offering to Jehovah.
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:6Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:6
Numbers 29:6 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: 'Beside the burnt offering of the month, and his meat offering, and the daily burnt offering, and his meat offering, and their drink offerings, according unto their manner, 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 29:6
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:6
Exposition: Numbers 29:6 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'Beside the burnt offering of the month, and his meat offering, and the daily burnt offering, and his meat offering, and their drink offerings, according unto their manner, for a sweet savour, a sacrifice made by fire...'. 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 29:7
Hebrew
וּבֶעָשׂוֹר לַחֹדֶשׁ הַשְּׁבִיעִי הַזֶּה מִֽקְרָא־קֹדֶשׁ יִהְיֶה לָכֶם וְעִנִּיתֶם אֶת־נַפְשֹׁתֵיכֶם כָּל־מְלָאכָה לֹא תַעֲשֽׂוּ׃vve'ashvor-lachodesh-hasheviy'iy-hazeh-miqera'-qodesh-yiheyeh-lakhem-ve'iniytem-'et-nafeshoteykhem-khal-mela'khah-lo'-ta'ashv
KJV: And ye shall have on the tenth day of this seventh month an holy convocation; and ye shall afflict your souls: ye shall not do any work therein:
AKJV: And you shall have on the tenth day of this seventh month an holy convocation; and you shall afflict your souls: you shall not do any work therein:
ASV: And on the tenth day of this seventh month ye shall have a holy convocation; and ye shall afflict your souls: ye shall do no manner of work;
YLT: `And on the tenth of this seventh month a holy convocation ye have, and ye have humbled your souls; ye do no work;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:7Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:7
Numbers 29:7 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 ye shall have on the tenth day of this seventh month an holy convocation; and ye shall afflict your souls: ye shall not do any 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 29:7
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:7
Exposition: Numbers 29:7 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And ye shall have on the tenth day of this seventh month an holy convocation; and ye shall afflict your souls: ye shall not do any 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 29:8
Hebrew
וְהִקְרַבְתֶּם עֹלָה לַֽיהוָה רֵיחַ נִיחֹחַ פַּר בֶּן־בָּקָר אֶחָד אַיִל אֶחָד כְּבָשִׂים בְּנֵֽי־שָׁנָה שִׁבְעָה תְּמִימִם יִהְיוּ לָכֶֽם׃vehiqeravetem-'olah-layhvah-reycha-niychocha-far-ven-vaqar-'echad-'ayil-'echad-khevashiym-veney-shanah-shive'ah-temiymim-yiheyv-lakhem
KJV: But ye shall offer a burnt offering unto the LORD for a sweet savour; one young bullock, one ram, and seven lambs of the first year; they shall be unto you without blemish:
AKJV: But you shall offer a burnt offering to the LORD for a sweet smell; one young bullock, one ram, and seven lambs of the first year; they shall be to you without blemish:
ASV: but ye shall offer a burnt-offering unto Jehovah for a sweet savor: one young bullock, one ram, seven he-lambs a year old; they shall be unto you without blemish;
YLT: and ye have brought near a burnt-offering to Jehovah, a sweet fragrance, one bullock, a son of the herd, one ram, seven lambs, sons of a year, perfect ones they are for you,
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:8Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:8
Numbers 29:8 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: 'But ye shall offer a burnt offering unto the LORD for a sweet savour; one young bullock, 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 29:8
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:8
Exposition: Numbers 29:8 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'But ye shall offer a burnt offering unto the LORD for a sweet savour; one young bullock, 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 29:9
Hebrew
וּמִנְחָתָם סֹלֶת בְּלוּלָה בַשָּׁמֶן שְׁלֹשָׁה עֶשְׂרֹנִים לַפָּר שְׁנֵי עֶשְׂרֹנִים לָאַיִל הָאֶחָֽד׃vminechatam-solet-velvlah-vashamen-sheloshah-'esheroniym-lafar-sheney-'esheroniym-la'ayil-ha'echad
KJV: And their meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil, three tenth deals to a bullock, and two tenth deals to one ram,
AKJV: And their meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil, three tenth deals to a bullock, and two tenth deals to one ram,
ASV: and their meal-offering, fine flour mingled with oil, three tenth parts for the bullock, two tenth parts for the one ram,
YLT: and their present, flour mixed with oil, three-tenth deals for the bullock, two-tenth deals for the one ram,
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:9Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:9
Numbers 29:9 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 to a bullock, and two tenth deals to 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 29:9
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:9
Exposition: Numbers 29:9 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 to a bullock, and two tenth deals to 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 29:10
Hebrew
עִשָּׂרוֹן עִשָּׂרוֹן לַכֶּבֶשׂ הָאֶחָד לְשִׁבְעַת הַכְּבָשִֽׂים׃'isharvon-'isharvon-lakhevesh-ha'echad-leshive'at-hakhevashiym
KJV: A several tenth deal for one lamb, throughout the seven lambs:
AKJV: A several tenth deal for one lamb, throughout the seven lambs:
ASV: a tenth part for every lamb of the seven lambs:
YLT: a several tenth deal for the one lamb, for the seven lambs,
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:10Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:10
Numbers 29:10 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: 'A several tenth deal for 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 29:10
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:10
Exposition: Numbers 29:10 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'A several tenth deal for 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 29:11
Hebrew
שְׂעִיר־עִזִּים אֶחָד חַטָּאת מִלְּבַד חַטַּאת הַכִּפֻּרִים וְעֹלַת הַתָּמִיד וּמִנְחָתָהּ וְנִסְכֵּיהֶֽם׃she'iyr-'iziym-'echad-chata't-milevad-chata't-hakhifuriym-ve'olat-hatamiyd-vminechatah-venisekheyhem
KJV: One kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the sin offering of atonement, and the continual burnt offering, and the meat offering of it, and their drink offerings.
AKJV: One kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the sin offering of atonement, and the continual burnt offering, and the meat offering of it, and their drink offerings. ¶
ASV: one he-goat for a sin-offering; besides the sin-offering of atonement, and the continual burnt-offering, and the meal-offering thereof, and their drink-offerings.
YLT: one kid of the goats, a sin-offering; apart from the sin-offering of the atonements, and the continual burnt-offering, and its present, and their libations.
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:11Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:11
Numbers 29:11 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: 'One kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the sin offering of atonement, and the continual burnt offering, and the meat offering of it, 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 29:11
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:11
Exposition: Numbers 29:11 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'One kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the sin offering of atonement, and the continual burnt offering, and the meat offering of it, 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.
Numbers 29:12
Hebrew
וּבַחֲמִשָּׁה עָשָׂר יוֹם לַחֹדֶשׁ הַשְּׁבִיעִי מִֽקְרָא־קֹדֶשׁ יִהְיֶה לָכֶם כָּל־מְלֶאכֶת עֲבֹדָה לֹא תַעֲשׂוּ וְחַגֹּתֶם חַג לַיהוָה שִׁבְעַת יָמִֽים׃vvachamishah-'ashar-yvom-lachodesh-hasheviy'iy-miqera'-qodesh-yiheyeh-lakhem-khal-mele'khet-'avodah-lo'-ta'ashv-vechagotem-chag-layhvah-shive'at-yamiym
KJV: And on the fifteenth day of the seventh month ye shall have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work, and ye shall keep a feast unto the LORD seven days:
AKJV: And on the fifteenth day of the seventh month you shall have an holy convocation; you shall do no servile work, and you shall keep a feast to the LORD seven days:
ASV: And on the fifteenth day of the seventh month ye shall have a holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work, and ye shall keep a feast unto Jehovah seven days:
YLT: `And on the fifteenth day of the seventh month a holy convocation ye have; ye do no servile work; and ye have celebrated a festival to Jehovah seven days,
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:12Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:12
Numbers 29:12 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 fifteenth day of the seventh month ye shall have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work, and ye shall keep a feast unto the LORD seven days:'. 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 29:12
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:12
Exposition: Numbers 29:12 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And on the fifteenth day of the seventh month ye shall have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work, and ye shall keep a feast unto the LORD seven days:'. 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 29:13
Hebrew
וְהִקְרַבְתֶּם עֹלָה אִשֵּׁה רֵיחַ נִיחֹחַ לַֽיהוָה פָּרִים בְּנֵי־בָקָר שְׁלֹשָׁה עָשָׂר אֵילִם שְׁנָיִם כְּבָשִׂים בְּנֵֽי־שָׁנָה אַרְבָּעָה עָשָׂר תְּמִימִם יִהְיֽוּ׃vehiqeravetem-'olah-'isheh-reycha-niychocha-layhvah-fariym-veney-vaqar-sheloshah-'ashar-'eylim-shenayim-khevashiym-veney-shanah-'areva'ah-'ashar-temiymim-yiheyv
KJV: And ye shall offer a burnt offering, a sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD; thirteen young bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year; they shall be without blemish:
AKJV: And you shall offer a burnt offering, a sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet smell to the LORD; thirteen young bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year; they shall be without blemish:
ASV: and ye shall offer a burnt-offering, an offering made by fire, of a sweet savor unto Jehovah; thirteen young bullocks, two rams, fourteen he-lambs a year old; they shall be without blemish;
YLT: and have brought near a burnt-offering, a fire-offering, a sweet fragrance, to Jehovah; thirteen bullocks, sons of the herd, two rams, fourteen lambs, sons of a year; perfect ones they are;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:13Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:13
Numbers 29:13 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 ye shall offer a burnt offering, a sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD; thirteen young bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year; they shall be 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 29:13
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:13
Exposition: Numbers 29:13 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And ye shall offer a burnt offering, a sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD; thirteen young bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year; they shall be 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 29:14
Hebrew
וּמִנְחָתָם סֹלֶת בְּלוּלָה בַשָּׁמֶן שְׁלֹשָׁה עֶשְׂרֹנִים לַפָּר הָֽאֶחָד לִשְׁלֹשָׁה עָשָׂר פָּרִים שְׁנֵי עֶשְׂרֹנִים לָאַיִל הָֽאֶחָד לִשְׁנֵי הָאֵילִֽם׃vminechatam-solet-velvlah-vashamen-sheloshah-'esheroniym-lafar-ha'echad-lisheloshah-'ashar-fariym-sheney-'esheroniym-la'ayil-ha'echad-lisheney-ha'eylim
KJV: And their meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil, three tenth deals unto every bullock of the thirteen bullocks, two tenth deals to each ram of the two rams,
AKJV: And their meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil, three tenth deals to every bullock of the thirteen bullocks, two tenth deals to each ram of the two rams,
ASV: and their meal-offering, fine flour mingled with oil, three tenth parts for every bullock of the thirteen bullocks, two tenth parts for each ram of the two rams,
YLT: and their present, flour mixed with oil, three-tenth deals to the one bullock, for the thirteen bullocks, two-tenth deals to the one ram, for the two rams,
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:14Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:14
Numbers 29:14 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 meat offering shall be of flour mingled with oil, three tenth deals unto every bullock of the thirteen bullocks, two tenth deals to each ram of the two rams,'. 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 29:14
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:14
Exposition: Numbers 29:14 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 unto every bullock of the thirteen bullocks, two tenth deals to each ram of the two rams,'. 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 29:15
Hebrew
וְעִשָּׂרוֹן עִשָּׂרוֹן לַכֶּבֶשׂ הָאֶחָד לְאַרְבָּעָה עָשָׂר כְּבָשִֽׂים׃ve'isharvon-'isharvon-lakhevesh-ha'echad-le'areva'ah-'ashar-khevashiym
KJV: And a several tenth deal to each lamb of the fourteen lambs:
AKJV: And a several tenth deal to each lamb of the fourteen lambs:
ASV: and a tenth part for every lamb of the fourteen lambs;
YLT: and a several tenth deal to the one lamb, for the fourteen lambs,
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:15Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:15
Numbers 29:15 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 a several tenth deal to each lamb of the fourteen 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 29:15
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:15
Exposition: Numbers 29:15 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And a several tenth deal to each lamb of the fourteen 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 29:16
Hebrew
וּשְׂעִיר־עִזִּים אֶחָד חַטָּאת מִלְּבַד עֹלַת הַתָּמִיד מִנְחָתָהּ וְנִסְכָּֽהּ׃vshe'iyr-'iziym-'echad-chata't-milevad-'olat-hatamiyd-minechatah-venisekhah
KJV: And one kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat offering, and his drink offering.
AKJV: And one kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat offering, and his drink offering. ¶
ASV: and one he-goat for a sin-offering; besides the continual burnt-offering, the meal-offering thereof, and the drink-offering thereof.
YLT: and one kid of the goats, a sin-offering; apart from the continual burnt-offering, its present, and its libation.
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:16Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:16
Numbers 29:16 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 one kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat 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 29:16
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:16
Exposition: Numbers 29:16 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; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat 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 29:17
Hebrew
וּבַיּוֹם הַשֵּׁנִי פָּרִים בְּנֵי־בָקָר שְׁנֵים עָשָׂר אֵילִם שְׁנָיִם כְּבָשִׂים בְּנֵי־שָׁנָה אַרְבָּעָה עָשָׂר תְּמִימִֽם׃vvayvom-hasheniy-fariym-veney-vaqar-sheneym-'ashar-'eylim-shenayim-khevashiym-veney-shanah-'areva'ah-'ashar-temiymim
KJV: And on the second day ye shall offer twelve young bullocks, two rams, fourteen lambs of the first year without spot:
AKJV: And on the second day you shall offer twelve young bullocks, two rams, fourteen lambs of the first year without spot:
ASV: And on the second dayye shall offertwelve young bullocks, two rams, fourteen he-lambs a year old without blemish;
YLT: `And on the second day twelve bullocks, sons of the herd, two rams, fourteen lambs, sons of a year, perfect ones;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:17Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:17
Numbers 29:17 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 second day ye shall offer twelve young bullocks, two rams, fourteen lambs of the first year without spot:'. 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 29:17
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:17
Exposition: Numbers 29:17 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And on the second day ye shall offer twelve young bullocks, two rams, fourteen 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 29:18
Hebrew
וּמִנְחָתָם וְנִסְכֵּיהֶם לַפָּרִים לָאֵילִם וְלַכְּבָשִׂים בְּמִסְפָּרָם כַּמִּשְׁפָּֽט׃vminechatam-venisekheyhem-lafariym-la'eylim-velakhevashiym-vemisefaram-khamishefat
KJV: And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
AKJV: And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
ASV: and their meal-offering and their drink-offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number, after the ordinance;
YLT: and their present, and their libations, for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the sheep, in their number, according to the ordinance;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:18Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:18
Numbers 29:18 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: 'And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:18
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:18
Exposition: Numbers 29:18 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:19
Hebrew
וּשְׂעִיר־עִזִּים אֶחָד חַטָּאת מִלְּבַד עֹלַת הַתָּמִיד וּמִנְחָתָהּ וְנִסְכֵּיהֶֽם׃vshe'iyr-'iziym-'echad-chata't-milevad-'olat-hatamiyd-vminechatah-venisekheyhem
KJV: And one kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, and the meat offering thereof, and their drink offerings.
AKJV: And one kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, and the meat offering thereof, and their drink offerings. ¶
ASV: and one he-goat for a sin-offering; besides the continual burnt-offering, and the meal-offering thereof, and their drink-offerings.
YLT: and one kid of the goats, a sin-offering; apart from the continual burnt-offering, and its present, and their libations.
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:19Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:19
Numbers 29:19 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: 'And one kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, and the meat offering thereof, 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 29:19
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:19
Exposition: Numbers 29:19 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; beside the continual burnt offering, and the meat offering thereof, 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.
Numbers 29:20
Hebrew
וּבַיּוֹם הַשְּׁלִישִׁי פָּרִים עַשְׁתֵּי־עָשָׂר אֵילִם שְׁנָיִם כְּבָשִׂים בְּנֵי־שָׁנָה אַרְבָּעָה עָשָׂר תְּמִימִֽם׃vvayvom-hasheliyshiy-fariym-'ashetey-'ashar-'eylim-shenayim-khevashiym-veney-shanah-'areva'ah-'ashar-temiymim
KJV: And on the third day eleven bullocks, two rams, fourteen lambs of the first year without blemish;
AKJV: And on the third day eleven bullocks, two rams, fourteen lambs of the first year without blemish;
ASV: And on the third day eleven bullocks, two rams, fourteen he-lambs a year old without blemish;
YLT: `And on the third day eleven bullocks, two rams, fourteen lambs, sons of a year, perfect ones;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:20Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:20
Numbers 29:20 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 on the third day eleven bullocks, two rams, fourteen lambs of the first year 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 29:20
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:20
Exposition: Numbers 29:20 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And on the third day eleven bullocks, two rams, fourteen lambs of the first year 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 29:21
Hebrew
וּמִנְחָתָם וְנִסְכֵּיהֶם לַפָּרִים לָאֵילִם וְלַכְּבָשִׂים בְּמִסְפָּרָם כַּמִּשְׁפָּֽט׃vminechatam-venisekheyhem-lafariym-la'eylim-velakhevashiym-vemisefaram-khamishefat
KJV: And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
AKJV: And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
ASV: and their meal-offering and their drink-offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number, after the ordinance;
YLT: and their present, and their libations, for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, in their number, according to the ordinance;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:21Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:21
Numbers 29:21 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: 'And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:21
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:21
Exposition: Numbers 29:21 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:22
Hebrew
וּשְׂעִיר חַטָּאת אֶחָד מִלְּבַד עֹלַת הַתָּמִיד וּמִנְחָתָהּ וְנִסְכָּֽהּ׃vshe'iyr-chata't-'echad-milevad-'olat-hatamiyd-vminechatah-venisekhah
KJV: And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat offering, and his drink offering.
AKJV: And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat offering, and his drink offering. ¶
ASV: and one he-goat for a sin-offering; besides the continual burnt-offering, and the meal-offering thereof, and the drink-offering thereof.
YLT: and one goat, a sin-offering; apart from the continual burnt-offering, and its present, and its libation.
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:22Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:22
Numbers 29:22 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; beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat 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 29:22
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:22
Exposition: Numbers 29:22 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat 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 29:23
Hebrew
וּבַיּוֹם הָרְבִיעִי פָּרִים עֲשָׂרָה אֵילִם שְׁנָיִם כְּבָשִׂים בְּנֵֽי־שָׁנָה אַרְבָּעָה עָשָׂר תְּמִימִֽם׃vvayvom-hareviy'iy-fariym-'asharah-'eylim-shenayim-khevashiym-veney-shanah-'areva'ah-'ashar-temiymim
KJV: And on the fourth day ten bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year without blemish:
AKJV: And on the fourth day ten bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year without blemish:
ASV: And on the fourth day ten bullocks, two rams, fourteen he-lambs a year old without blemish;
YLT: `And on the fourth day ten bullocks, two rams, fourteen lambs, sons of a year, perfect ones;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:23Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:23
Numbers 29:23 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: 'And on the fourth day ten bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year 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 29:23
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:23
Exposition: Numbers 29:23 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And on the fourth day ten bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year 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 29:24
Hebrew
מִנְחָתָם וְנִסְכֵּיהֶם לַפָּרִים לָאֵילִם וְלַכְּבָשִׂים בְּמִסְפָּרָם כַּמִּשְׁפָּֽט׃minechatam-venisekheyhem-lafariym-la'eylim-velakhevashiym-vemisefaram-khamishefat
KJV: Their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
AKJV: Their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
ASV: their meal-offering and their drink-offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number, after the ordinance;
YLT: their present, and their libations, for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, in their number, according to the ordinance;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:24Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:24
Numbers 29:24 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: 'Their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:24
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:24
Exposition: Numbers 29:24 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'Their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:25
Hebrew
וּשְׂעִיר־עִזִּים אֶחָד חַטָּאת מִלְּבַד עֹלַת הַתָּמִיד מִנְחָתָהּ וְנִסְכָּֽהּ׃vshe'iyr-'iziym-'echad-chata't-milevad-'olat-hatamiyd-minechatah-venisekhah
KJV: And one kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat offering, and his drink offering.
AKJV: And one kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat offering, and his drink offering. ¶
ASV: and one he-goat for a sin-offering; besides the continual burnt-offering, the meal-offering thereof, and the drink-offering thereof.
YLT: and one kid of the goats, a sin-offering, apart from the continual burnt-offering, its present, and its libation.
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:25Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:25
Numbers 29:25 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 one kid of the goats for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat 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 29:25
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:25
Exposition: Numbers 29:25 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; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat 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 29:26
Hebrew
וּבַיּוֹם הַחֲמִישִׁי פָּרִים תִּשְׁעָה אֵילִם שְׁנָיִם כְּבָשִׂים בְּנֵֽי־שָׁנָה אַרְבָּעָה עָשָׂר תְּמִימִֽם׃vvayvom-hachamiyshiy-fariym-tishe'ah-'eylim-shenayim-khevashiym-veney-shanah-'areva'ah-'ashar-temiymim
KJV: And on the fifth day nine bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year without spot:
AKJV: And on the fifth day nine bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year without spot:
ASV: And on the fifth day nine bullocks, two rams, fourteen he-lambs a year old without blemish;
YLT: `And on the fifth day nine bullocks, two rams, fourteen lambs, sons of a year, perfect ones;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:26Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:26
Numbers 29:26 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: 'And on the fifth day nine bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year without spot:'. 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 29:26
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:26
Exposition: Numbers 29:26 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And on the fifth day nine bullocks, two rams, and fourteen 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 29:27
Hebrew
וּמִנְחָתָם וְנִסְכֵּיהֶם לַפָּרִים לָאֵילִם וְלַכְּבָשִׂים בְּמִסְפָּרָם כַּמִּשְׁפָּֽט׃vminechatam-venisekheyhem-lafariym-la'eylim-velakhevashiym-vemisefaram-khamishefat
KJV: And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
AKJV: And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
ASV: and their meal-offering and their drink-offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number, after the ordinance;
YLT: and their present, and their libations, for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, in their number, according to the ordinance;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:27Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:27
Numbers 29:27 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: 'And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:27
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:27
Exposition: Numbers 29:27 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:28
Hebrew
וּשְׂעִיר חַטָּאת אֶחָד מִלְּבַד עֹלַת הַתָּמִיד וּמִנְחָתָהּ וְנִסְכָּֽהּ׃vshe'iyr-chata't-'echad-milevad-'olat-hatamiyd-vminechatah-venisekhah
KJV: And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat offering, and his drink offering.
AKJV: And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat offering, and his drink offering. ¶
ASV: and one he-goat for a sin-offering; besides the continual burnt-offering, and the meal-offering thereof, and the drink-offering thereof.
YLT: and one goat, a sin-offering; apart from the continual burnt-offering, and its present, and its libation.
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:28Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:28
Numbers 29:28 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 one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat 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 29:28
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:28
Exposition: Numbers 29:28 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat 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 29:29
Hebrew
וּבַיּוֹם הַשִּׁשִּׁי פָּרִים שְׁמֹנָה אֵילִם שְׁנָיִם כְּבָשִׂים בְּנֵי־שָׁנָה אַרְבָּעָה עָשָׂר תְּמִימִֽם׃vvayvom-hashishiy-fariym-shemonah-'eylim-shenayim-khevashiym-veney-shanah-'areva'ah-'ashar-temiymim
KJV: And on the sixth day eight bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year without blemish:
AKJV: And on the sixth day eight bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year without blemish:
ASV: And on the sixth day eight bullocks, two rams, fourteen he-lambs a year old without blemish;
YLT: `And on the sixth day eight bullocks, two rams, fourteen lambs, sons of a year, perfect ones;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:29Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:29
Numbers 29:29 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: 'And on the sixth day eight bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year 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 29:29
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:29
Exposition: Numbers 29:29 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And on the sixth day eight bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year 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 29:30
Hebrew
וּמִנְחָתָם וְנִסְכֵּיהֶם לַפָּרִים לָאֵילִם וְלַכְּבָשִׂים בְּמִסְפָּרָם כַּמִּשְׁפָּֽט׃vminechatam-venisekheyhem-lafariym-la'eylim-velakhevashiym-vemisefaram-khamishefat
KJV: And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
AKJV: And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
ASV: and their meal-offering and their drink-offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number, after the ordinance;
YLT: and their present, and their libations, for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, in their number, according to the ordinance;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:30Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:30
Numbers 29:30 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 their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:30
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:30
Exposition: Numbers 29:30 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:31
Hebrew
וּשְׂעִיר חַטָּאת אֶחָד מִלְּבַד עֹלַת הַתָּמִיד מִנְחָתָהּ וּנְסָכֶֽיהָ׃vshe'iyr-chata't-'echad-milevad-'olat-hatamiyd-minechatah-vnesakheyha
KJV: And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat offering, and his drink offering.
AKJV: And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat offering, and his drink offering. ¶
ASV: and one he-goat for a sin-offering; besides the continual burnt-offering, the meal-offering thereof, and the drink-offerings thereof.
YLT: and one goat, a sin-offering; apart from the continual burnt-offering, its present, and its libation.
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:31Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:31
Numbers 29:31 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: 'And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat 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 29:31
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:31
Exposition: Numbers 29:31 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat 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 29:32
Hebrew
וּבַיּוֹם הַשְּׁבִיעִי פָּרִים שִׁבְעָה אֵילִם שְׁנָיִם כְּבָשִׂים בְּנֵי־שָׁנָה אַרְבָּעָה עָשָׂר תְּמִימִֽם׃vvayvom-hasheviy'iy-fariym-shive'ah-'eylim-shenayim-khevashiym-veney-shanah-'areva'ah-'ashar-temiymim
KJV: And on the seventh day seven bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year without blemish:
AKJV: And on the seventh day seven bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year without blemish:
ASV: And on the seventh day seven bullocks, two rams, fourteen he-lambs a year old without blemish;
YLT: `And on the seventh day seven bullocks, two rams, fourteen lambs, sons of a year, perfect ones;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:32Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:32
Numbers 29:32 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 seven bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year 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 29:32
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:32
Exposition: Numbers 29:32 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And on the seventh day seven bullocks, two rams, and fourteen lambs of the first year 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 29:33
Hebrew
וּמִנְחָתָם וְנִסְכֵּהֶם לַפָּרִים לָאֵילִם וְלַכְּבָשִׂים בְּמִסְפָּרָם כְּמִשְׁפָּטָֽם׃vminechatam-venisekhehem-lafariym-la'eylim-velakhevashiym-vemisefaram-khemishefatam
KJV: And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
AKJV: And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
ASV: and their meal-offering and their drink-offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number, after the ordinance;
YLT: and their present, and their libations, for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, in their number, according to the ordinance;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:33Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:33
Numbers 29:33 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 and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:33
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:33
Exposition: Numbers 29:33 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullocks, for the rams, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:34
Hebrew
וּשְׂעִיר חַטָּאת אֶחָד מִלְּבַד עֹלַת הַתָּמִיד מִנְחָתָהּ וְנִסְכָּֽהּ׃vshe'iyr-chata't-'echad-milevad-'olat-hatamiyd-minechatah-venisekhah
KJV: And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat offering, and his drink offering.
AKJV: And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat offering, and his drink offering. ¶
ASV: and one he-goat for a sin-offering; besides the continual burnt-offering, the meal-offering thereof, and the drink-offering thereof.
YLT: and one goat, a sin-offering; apart from the continual burnt-offering, its present, and its libation.
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:34Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:34
Numbers 29:34 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; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat 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 29:34
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:34
Exposition: Numbers 29:34 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, his meat 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 29:35
Hebrew
בַּיּוֹם הַשְּׁמִינִי עֲצֶרֶת תִּהְיֶה לָכֶם כָּל־מְלֶאכֶת עֲבֹדָה לֹא תַעֲשֽׂוּ׃vayvom-hashemiyniy-'atzeret-tiheyeh-lakhem-khal-mele'khet-'avodah-lo'-ta'ashv
KJV: On the eighth day ye shall have a solemn assembly: ye shall do no servile work therein:
AKJV: On the eighth day you shall have a solemn assembly: you shall do no servile work therein:
ASV: On the eighth day ye shall have a solemn assembly: ye shall do no servile work;
YLT: `On the eighth day a restraint ye have, ye do no servile work;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:35Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:35
Numbers 29:35 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: 'On the eighth day ye shall have a solemn assembly: ye shall do no 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 29:35
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:35
Exposition: Numbers 29:35 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'On the eighth day ye shall have a solemn assembly: ye shall do no 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 29:36
Hebrew
וְהִקְרַבְתֶּם עֹלָה אִשֵּׁה רֵיחַ נִיחֹחַ לַֽיהוָה פַּר אֶחָד אַיִל אֶחָד כְּבָשִׂים בְּנֵי־שָׁנָה שִׁבְעָה תְּמִימִֽם׃vehiqeravetem-'olah-'isheh-reycha-niychocha-layhvah-far-'echad-'ayil-'echad-khevashiym-veney-shanah-shive'ah-temiymim
KJV: But ye shall offer a burnt offering, a sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD: one bullock, one ram, seven lambs of the first year without blemish:
AKJV: But you shall offer a burnt offering, a sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet smell to the LORD: one bullock, one ram, seven lambs of the first year without blemish:
ASV: but ye shall offer a burnt-offering, an offering made by fire, of a sweet savor unto Jehovah: one bullock, one ram, seven he-lambs a year old without blemish;
YLT: and ye have brought near a burnt-offering, a fire-offering, a sweet fragrance, to Jehovah; one bullock, one ram, seven lambs, sons of a year, perfect ones;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:36Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:36
Numbers 29:36 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 burnt offering, a sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD: one bullock, one ram, seven lambs of the first year 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 29:36
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:36
Exposition: Numbers 29:36 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'But ye shall offer a burnt offering, a sacrifice made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the LORD: one bullock, one ram, seven lambs of the first year 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 29:37
Hebrew
מִנְחָתָם וְנִסְכֵּיהֶם לַפָּר לָאַיִל וְלַכְּבָשִׂים בְּמִסְפָּרָם כַּמִּשְׁפָּֽט׃minechatam-venisekheyhem-lafar-la'ayil-velakhevashiym-vemisefaram-khamishefat
KJV: Their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullock, for the ram, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
AKJV: Their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullock, for the ram, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:
ASV: their meal-offering and their drink-offerings for the bullock, for the ram, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the ordinance:
YLT: their present, and their libations, for the bullock, for the ram, and for the lambs, in their number, according to the ordinance;
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:37Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:37
Numbers 29:37 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: 'Their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullock, for the ram, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:37
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:37
Exposition: Numbers 29:37 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'Their meat offering and their drink offerings for the bullock, for the ram, and for the lambs, shall be according to their number, after the manner:'. 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 29:38
Hebrew
וּשְׂעִיר חַטָּאת אֶחָד מִלְּבַד עֹלַת הַתָּמִיד וּמִנְחָתָהּ וְנִסְכָּֽהּ׃vshe'iyr-chata't-'echad-milevad-'olat-hatamiyd-vminechatah-venisekhah
KJV: And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat offering, and his drink offering.
AKJV: And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat offering, and his drink offering.
ASV: and one he-goat for a sin-offering; besides the continual burnt-offering, and the meal-offering thereof, and the drink-offering thereof.
YLT: and one goat, a sin-offering; apart from the continual burnt-offering, and its present, and its libation.
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:38Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:38
Numbers 29:38 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; beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat 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 29:38
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:38
Exposition: Numbers 29:38 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And one goat for a sin offering; beside the continual burnt offering, and his meat 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 29:39
Hebrew
אֵלֶּה תַּעֲשׂוּ לַיהוָה בְּמוֹעֲדֵיכֶם לְבַד מִנִּדְרֵיכֶם וְנִדְבֹתֵיכֶם לְעֹלֹֽתֵיכֶם וּלְמִנְחֹתֵיכֶם וּלְנִסְכֵּיכֶם וּלְשַׁלְמֵיכֶֽם׃'eleh-ta'ashv-layhvah-vemvo'adeykhem-levad-minidereykhem-venidevoteykhem-le'oloteykhem-vleminechoteykhem-vlenisekheykhem-vleshalemeykhem
KJV: These things ye shall do unto the LORD in your set feasts, beside your vows, and your freewill offerings, for your burnt offerings, and for your meat offerings, and for your drink offerings, and for your peace offerings.
AKJV: These things you shall do to the LORD in your set feasts, beside your vows, and your freewill offerings, for your burnt offerings, and for your meat offerings, and for your drink offerings, and for your peace offerings.
ASV: These ye shall offer unto Jehovah in your set feasts, besides your vows, and your freewill-offerings, for your burnt-offerings, and for your meal-offerings, and for your drink-offerings, and for your peace-offerings.
YLT: `These ye prepare to Jehovah in your appointed seasons, apart from your vows, and your free-will offerings, for your burnt-offerings, and for your presents, and for your libations, and for your peace-offerings.'
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:39Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:39
Numbers 29:39 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: 'These things ye shall do unto the LORD in your set feasts, beside your vows, and your freewill offerings, for your burnt offerings, and for your meat offerings, and for your drink offerings, and for your peace 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 29:39
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:39
Exposition: Numbers 29:39 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'These things ye shall do unto the LORD in your set feasts, beside your vows, and your freewill offerings, for your burnt offerings, and for your meat offerings, and for your drink offerings, and for your peace 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.
Numbers 29:40
KJV: And Moses told the children of Israel according to all that the LORD commanded Moses.
AKJV: And Moses told the children of Israel according to all that the LORD commanded Moses.
ASV: And Moses told the children of Israel according to all that Jehovah commanded Moses.
YLT: And Moses saith unto the sons of Israel according to all that Jehovah hath commanded Moses.
Commentary Witness (Generated)Numbers 29:40Generated editorial synthesis
Commentary Witness (Generated)
Numbers 29:40
Numbers 29:40 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 Moses told the children of Israel according to all that the LORD commanded Moses.'. 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 29:40
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Biblical cross-references named in the witness
- Numbers 29:40
Named authorities or texts detected in the witness
- Moses
Exposition: Numbers 29:40 emphasizes a key movement in the chapter's argument. In KJV form, the text reads: 'And Moses told the children of Israel according to all that the LORD commanded Moses.'. 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
1
Generated editorial witnesses
39
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Canonical references surfaced in commentary
- Numbers 29:1
- Numbers 29:2
- Numbers 29:3
- Numbers 29:4
- Numbers 29:5
- Numbers 29:6
- Numbers 29:7
- Numbers 29:8
- Numbers 29:9
- Numbers 29:10
- Numbers 29:11
- Numbers 29:12
- Numbers 29:13
- Numbers 29:14
- Numbers 29:15
- Numbers 29:16
- Numbers 29:17
- Numbers 29:18
- Numbers 29:19
- Numbers 29:20
- Numbers 29:21
- Numbers 29:22
- Numbers 29:23
- Numbers 29:24
- Numbers 29:25
- Numbers 29:26
- Numbers 29:27
- Numbers 29:28
- Numbers 29:29
- Numbers 29:30
- Numbers 29:31
- Numbers 29:32
- Numbers 29:33
- Numbers 29:34
- Numbers 29:35
- Numbers 29:36
- Numbers 29:37
- Numbers 29:38
- Numbers 29:39
- Numbers 29:40
Named authorities or texts surfaced in commentary
- Num
- Cor
- Moses
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Nahum
Rendered chapters 1–3 are mapped to the public reader path for Nahum. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Habakkuk
Rendered chapters 1–3 are mapped to the public reader path for Habakkuk. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Zephaniah
Rendered chapters 1–3 are mapped to the public reader path for Zephaniah. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Haggai
Rendered chapters 1–2 are mapped to the public reader path for Haggai. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Zechariah
Rendered chapters 1–14 are mapped to the public reader path for Zechariah. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Malachi
Rendered chapters 1–4 are mapped to the public reader path for Malachi. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Matthew
Rendered chapters 1–28 are mapped to the public reader path for Matthew. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Mark
Rendered chapters 1–16 are mapped to the public reader path for Mark. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Luke
Rendered chapters 1–24 are mapped to the public reader path for Luke. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
John
Rendered chapters 1–21 are mapped to the public reader path for John. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Acts
Rendered chapters 1–28 are mapped to the public reader path for Acts. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Romans
Rendered chapters 1–16 are mapped to the public reader path for Romans. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
1 Corinthians
Rendered chapters 1–16 are mapped to the public reader path for 1 Corinthians. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
2 Corinthians
Rendered chapters 1–13 are mapped to the public reader path for 2 Corinthians. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Galatians
Rendered chapters 1–6 are mapped to the public reader path for Galatians. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Ephesians
Rendered chapters 1–6 are mapped to the public reader path for Ephesians. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Philippians
Rendered chapters 1–4 are mapped to the public reader path for Philippians. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Colossians
Rendered chapters 1–4 are mapped to the public reader path for Colossians. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
1 Thessalonians
Rendered chapters 1–5 are mapped to the public reader path for 1 Thessalonians. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
2 Thessalonians
Rendered chapters 1–3 are mapped to the public reader path for 2 Thessalonians. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
1 Timothy
Rendered chapters 1–6 are mapped to the public reader path for 1 Timothy. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
2 Timothy
Rendered chapters 1–4 are mapped to the public reader path for 2 Timothy. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Titus
Rendered chapters 1–3 are mapped to the public reader path for Titus. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Philemon
Rendered chapter 1 are mapped to the public reader path for Philemon. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Hebrews
Rendered chapters 1–13 are mapped to the public reader path for Hebrews. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
James
Rendered chapters 1–5 are mapped to the public reader path for James. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
1 Peter
Rendered chapters 1–5 are mapped to the public reader path for 1 Peter. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
2 Peter
Rendered chapters 1–3 are mapped to the public reader path for 2 Peter. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
1 John
Rendered chapters 1–5 are mapped to the public reader path for 1 John. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
2 John
Rendered chapter 1 are mapped to the public reader path for 2 John. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
3 John
Rendered chapter 1 are mapped to the public reader path for 3 John. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Jude
Rendered chapter 1 are mapped to the public reader path for Jude. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
Revelation
Rendered chapters 1–22 are mapped to the public reader path for Revelation. Use this card to open chapter 1 and move directly into the study surface.
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What this explorer shows today
The public reader has book-by-book chapter entry points across the 66-book canon. Deeper corpus and provenance details stay on the supporting Bible Data shelves.
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Commentary Witness
Numbers 29:1
Provenance. Rendered as a quoted commentary witness with explicit reference extraction from the source prose.
Canonical locus
Numbers 29:1
Source lane
Apologetics Bible source bundle
Named authorities or texts detected in the witness