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Thursday, May 15th, 2025
the Fourth Week after Easter
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Read the Bible

Nova Vulgata

Numeri 14:16

"Non poterat Dominus introducere populum in terram, pro qua iuraverat, idcirco occidit eos in solitudine!".

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Intercession;   Israel;   Moses;   Prayer;   Unselfishness;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Caleb;   Mediator;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Moses;   Prayer;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Mediator, Mediation;   Prayer;   Spirituality;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Circumcision;   Gilgal;   Numbers, the Book of;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Power;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Hexateuch;   Israel;   Job;   Moses;   Morrish Bible Dictionary - Caleb;   Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary - Moses;  

Encyclopedias:

- Condensed Biblical Cyclopedia - On to Canaan;   Moses, the Man of God;   International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Intercession;   Numbers, Book of;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Deuteronomy;   Hafṭarah;   Joseph;   Sidra;  

Parallel Translations

Clementine Latin Vulgate (1592)
tingetque digitum dextrum in eo, et asperget coram Domino septies.
Jerome's Latin Vulgate (405)
Non poterat introducere populum in terram pro qua juraverat: idcirco occidit eos in solitudine?

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

Deuteronomy 9:28, Deuteronomy 32:26, Deuteronomy 32:27, Joshua 7:9

Reciprocal: Genesis 24:7 - which spake Exodus 13:5 - sware Psalms 115:2 - General Isaiah 48:11 - for how Jeremiah 14:9 - cannot Jeremiah 32:22 - which Ezekiel 36:20 - These Ezekiel 47:14 - lifted up mine hand Daniel 6:20 - able

Gill's Notes on the Bible

Because the Lord was not able to bring this people into the land which he sware unto them,.... That though he brought them out of Egypt, he was not able to bring them through the wilderness into Canaan; and that though he had wrought many signs and wonders for them, he could work no more, his power failed him, he had exhausted all his might, and could not perform the promise and oath he had made:

therefore he hath slain them in the wilderness; because he could not fulfil his word, and so made short work of it, destroying them all together, which Moses suggests would greatly reflect dishonour on him; and in this he shows, that he was more concerned for the glory of God than for his own.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

The syntax of these verses is singularly broken. As did Paul when deeply moved, so Moses presses his arguments one on the other without pausing to ascertain the grammatical finish of his expressions. He speaks here as if in momentary apprehension of an outbreak of God’s wrath, unless he could perhaps arrest it by crowding in every topic of deprecation and intercession that he could mention on the instant.


 
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