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{"id":1147,"verse_id":"NUM.12.1","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"NUM","chapter":12,"verse":1,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"1","reference":"12.1","text":"In this short chapter we find a prime example of jealousy among leaders and how God dealt with it. Miriam and Aaron are envious of Moses leadership, but they use an occasion his marriage to criticize him. Often the immediate criticism is simply a surface issue for a deeper matter. God indicates very clearly he will speak through many people, including them, but Moses is different. Moses is the mediator of the covenant. The chapter is a lesson of what not to do. They should have fulfilled their duties before God and not tried to compete or challenge the leader in this way. There is a touch of divine irony here, for Miriam is turned white with leprosy. The chapter falls easily into the sections of the story: the accusation (vv. 1-3 ), the Lord s response (vv. 4-10 ), the intercession of Moses (vv. 11-16 ). For further information, see J. S. Kselman, “A Note on Numbers 12:6-8 ,” VT 26 (1976): 500-504.","source_note_position":1,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Numbers%2012%3A1/1"}
{"id":1148,"verse_id":"NUM.12.2","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"NUM","chapter":12,"verse":2,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"4","reference":"12.2","text":"The statement is striking. Obviously the Lord knows all things. But the statement of the obvious here is meant to indicate that the Lord was about to do something about this.","source_note_position":4,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Numbers%2012%3A2/4"}
{"id":1149,"verse_id":"NUM.12.7","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"NUM","chapter":12,"verse":7,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"1","reference":"12.7","text":"The title “my servant” or “servant of the Lord ” is reserved in the Bible for distinguished personages, people who are truly spiritual leaders, like Moses, David, Hezekiah, and also the Messiah. Here it underscores Moses obedience.","source_note_position":1,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Numbers%2012%3A7/1"}
{"id":1150,"verse_id":"NUM.12.10","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"NUM","chapter":12,"verse":10,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"3","reference":"12.10","text":"The word “leprosy” and “leprous” covers a wide variety of skin diseases, and need not be limited to the actual disease of leprosy known today as Hansens disease. The description of it here has to do with snow, either the whiteness or the wetness. If that is the case then there would be open wounds and sores like Jobs illness (see M. Noth, Numbers [OTL] , 95-96).","source_note_position":3,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Numbers%2012%3A10/3"}