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Wednesday, August 6th, 2025
the Week of Proper 13 / Ordinary 18
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Bilangan 33:47

Mereka berangkat dari Almon-Diblataim, lalu berkemah di pegunungan Abarim di depan Nebo.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Almon-Diblathaim;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Desert, Journey of Israel through the;   Mountains;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Abarim;   Camp, Encampments;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Abarim;   Nebo;   Tabernacle;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Abarim;   Wandering;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Abarim;   Almon-Diblathaim;   Kadesh Barnea;   Nebo (1);   Number;   Numbers, the Book of;   Wilderness of the Wanderings;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Abarim;   Almon-Diblathaim;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Abarim;   Almon-Diblathaim;   Nebo;   Numbers, Book of;   Morrish Bible Dictionary - Abarim ;   Almondiblathaim ;   Nebo ;   Wanderings of the Israelites;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - Abarim;   Journeyings of israel from egypt to canaan;   Nebo;   Paran;   Smith Bible Dictionary - Ab'arim;   Al'mon-Diblatha'im;  

Encyclopedias:

- Condensed Biblical Cyclopedia - On to Canaan;   Moses, the Man of God;   International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Abarim;   Almon-Diblathaim;   Nebo, Mount;   Numbers, Book of;   Wanderings of Israel;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Almon Diblataim;   Nebo, Mount;   Scroll of the Law;   Sidra;   Wilderness, Wanderings in the;  

Parallel Translations

Alkitab Terjemahan Baru
Mereka berangkat dari Almon-Diblataim, lalu berkemah di pegunungan Abarim di depan Nebo.
Alkitab Terjemahan Lama
Maka dari Almon-Dibelatayim berjalanlah mereka itu, lalu berhenti di bukit Abarim, pada sebelah timur.

Contextual Overview

1 These are the iourneis of the children of Israel, which went out of the land of Egypt with their armies, vnder the hand of Moyses and Aaron. 2 And Moyses wrote their goyng out by their iourneis, accordyng to the commaundement of the Lorde: euen these are the iourneis of their goyng out. 3 They departed from Rameses the fifteene day of the first moneth, on the morowe after the Passouer: and the childre of Israel went out with an hie hande in the sight of the Egyptians. 4 (For the Egyptians buryed all their first borne which the Lord had smitten among them, and vpon their gods also the Lorde dyd execution.) 5 And the children of Israel remoued from Rameses, and pitched in Sucoth. 6 And they departed from Sucoth, and pitched their tentes in Etham, which is in the edge of the wildernesse. 7 And they remoued from Etham, and turned agayne vnto Pihairoth, which is before Baal Zephon: and they pitched before Migdol. 8 And they departed from Pihairoth: and went through the middes of the sea into the wildernesse, and went three dayes iourney in the wildernesse of Etham, and pitched in Marah. 9 And they remoued from Marah, and came vnto Elim, where were twelue fountaynes of water, and threescore & ten Palme trees, & they pitched there. 10 And they remoued from Elim, and camped fast by the red sea.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

the mountains: These mountains were a ridge of rugged hills east of Jordan, and north and west of the Arnon. Nebo, Pisgah, and Peor, were but different names of the hills of which they were composed. Eusebius and Jerome inform us, that some part of them, as one went up to Heshbon, retained the old name of Abarim in their time; and that the part called Nebo was opposite Jericho, not far from the Jordan, six miles west from Heshbon, and seven east from Livias. Dr. Shaw describes them as "an exceeding high ridge of desolate mountains, no otherwise diversified than by a succession of naked rocks and precipices; rendered in some places the more frightful by a multiplicity of torrents, which fall on each side of them. This ridge is continued all along the eastern coast of the Dead sea." Mount Nebo is now called Djebel Attarous; and is described as a barren mountain, the highest point in the neighbourhood, with an uneven plain on the top. Burckhardt, Travels, pp. 369, 370. Numbers 21:20, Deuteronomy 32:49, Deuteronomy 34:1

Reciprocal: Numbers 27:12 - mount Jeremiah 48:1 - Nebo

Gill's Notes on the Bible

And they removed from Almondiblathaim, and pitched in the mountains of Abarim,.... Sixteen miles from Almondiblathaim; these were so called from passages near them over the river Jordan: and this station was pitched

before Nebo; one of those mountains, whither Moses went up and died.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

This list was written out by Moses at God’s command Numbers 33:2, doubtless as a memorial of God’s providential care for His people throughout this long and trying period.

Numbers 33:3-6. For these places, see the marginal reference.

Numbers 33:8

Pi-hahiroth - Hebrew “Hahiroth,” but perhaps only by an error of transcription. However, the omitted “pi” is only a common Egyptian prefix.

Wilderness of Etham - i. e., that part of the great wilderness of Shur which adjoined Etham; compare Exodus 15:22 note.

The list of stations up to that at Sinai agrees with the narrative of Exodus except that we have here mentioned Numbers 33:10 an encampment by the Red Sea, and two others, Dophkah and Alush Numbers 33:12-14, which are there omitted. On these places see Exodus 17:1 note.

Numbers 33:16, Numbers 33:17

See the Numbers 11:35 note.

Numbers 33:18

Rithmah - The name of this station is derived from retem, the broom-plant, the “juniper” of the King James Version. This must be the same encampment as that which is said in Numbers 13:26 to have been at Kadesh.

Numbers 33:19

Rimmon-parez - Or rather Rimmon-perez, i. e., “Rimmon (i. e., the Pomegranate) of the Breach.” It may have been here that the sedition of Korah occurred.

Verse 19-36

The stations named are those visited during the years of penal wandering. The determination of their positions is, in many cases, difficult, because during this period there was no definite line of march pursued. But it is probable that the Israelites during this period did not overstep the boundaries of the wilderness of Paran (as defined in Numbers 10:12), except to pass along the adjoining valley of the Arabah; while the tabernacle and organized camp moved about from place to place among them (compare Numbers 20:1).

Rissah, Haradah, and Tahath are probably the same as Rasa, Aradeh, and Elthi of the Roman tables. The position of Hashmonah (Heshmon in Joshua 15:27) in the Azazimeh mountains points out the road followed by the children of Israel to be that which skirts the southwestern extremity of Jebel Magrah.

Numbers 33:34

Ebronah - i. e, “passage.” This station apparently lay on the shore of the Elanitic gulf, at a point where the ebb of the tide left a ford across. Hence, the later Targum renders the word as “fords.”

Numbers 33:35

Ezion-gaber - “Giant’s backbone.” The Wady Ghadhyan, a valley running eastward into the Arabah some miles north of the present head of the Elanitic gulf. A salt marsh which here overspreads a portion of the Arabah may be taken as indicating the limit to which the sea anciently reached; and we may thus infer the existence here in former times of an extensive tidal haven, at the head of which the city of Ezion-geber stood. Here it was that from the time of Solomon onward the Jewish navy was constructed 1 Kings 9:26; 1 Kings 22:49.

Numbers 33:41-49

Zalmonah and Punon are stations on the Pilgrim’s road; and the general route is fairly ascertained by a comparison of these verses with Numbers 21:4, etc.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

STAT. XL.

Verse 47. Mountains of ABARIM, before NEBO.] The mountain on which Moses died. They came to this place after the overthrow of the Amorites. See Numbers 21:34-35.


 
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