In this chapter we have, I. An order, pursuant to the laws
already made, for the removing of the unclean out of the camp (v. 1-4). II. A
repetition of the laws concerning restitution, in case of wrong done to a
neighbour (v. 5-8), and concerning the appropriating of the hallowed things to
the priests (v. 9, 10). III. A new law made concerning the trial of a wife
suspected of adultery, by the waters of jealousy (v. 11, etc.).
Here is, I. A command for the purifying of the camp, by turning
out from within its lines all those that were ceremonially unclean, by issues,
leprosies, or the touch of dead bodies, until they were cleansed according to
the law, v. 2, 3.
1. These orders are executed immediately, v. 4. (1.) The camp
was now newly-modelled and put in order, and therefore, to complete the
reformation of it, it is next to be cleansed. Note, The purity of the church
must be as carefully consulted and preserved as the peace and order of it. It is
requisite, not only that every Israelite be confined to his own standard, but
that every polluted Israelite be separated from it. The wisdom from above is
first pure, then peaceable. (2.) God's tabernacle was now fixed in the
midst of their camp, and therefore they must be careful to keep it clean. Note,
The greater profession of religion any house or family make the more they are
obliged to put away iniquity far from their tabernacle, Job 22:23. The
person, the place, in the midst of which God dwells, must not be defiled;
for, if it be, he will be affronted, offended, and provoked to withdraw, 1 Co.
3:16, 17.
2. This expulsion of the unclean out of the camp was to signify,
(1.) What the governors of the church ought to do: they must separate between
the precious and the vile, and purge out scandalous persons, as old leaven
(1 Co. 5:8, 13), lest others should be infected and defiled, Heb. 12:15. It is
for the glory of Christ and the edification of his church that those who are
openly and incorrigibly profane and vicious should be put out and kept from
Christian communion till they repent. (2.) What God himself will do in the great
day: he will thoroughly purge his floor, and gather out of his kingdom
all things that offend. As here the unclean were shut out of the camp, so
into the new Jerusalem no unclean thing shall enter, Rev. 21:27.
II. A law concerning restitution, in case of wrong done to a
neighbour. It is called a sin that men commit (v. 6), because it is
common among men; a sin of man, that is, a sin against man, so it
is thought it should be translated and understood. If a man overreach or defraud
his brother in any matter, it is to be looked upon as a trespass against the
Lord, who is the protector of right, the punisher of wrong, and who strictly
charges and commands us to do justly. Now what is to be done when a man's
awakened conscience charges him with guilt of this kind, and brings it to his
remembrance though done long ago? 1. He must confess his sin, confess it
to God, confess it to his neighbour, and so take shame to himself. If he have
denied it before, though it go against the grain to own himself in a lie, yet he
must do it; because his heart was hardened he denied it, therefore he has no
other way of making it appear that his heart is now softened but by confessing
it. 2. He must bring a sacrifice, a ram of atonement, v. 8. Satisfaction
must be made for the offence done to God, whose law is broken, as well as for
the loss sustained by our neighbour; restitution in this case is not sufficient
without faith and repentance. 3. Yet the sacrifices would not be accepted till
full amends were made to the party wronged, not only the principal, but a fifth
part added to it, v. 7. It is certain that while that which is got by injustice
is knowingly retained in the hands the guilt of the injustice remains upon the
conscience, and is not purged by sacrifice nor offering, prayers not tears, for
it is one and the same continued act of sin persisted in. This law we had before
(Lev. 6:4), and it is here added that if the party wronged was dead, and he had
no near kinsman who was entitled to the debt, or if it was any way uncertain to
whom the restitution should be made, this should not serve for an excuse to
detain what was unjustly gotten; to whomsoever it pertained, it was certainly
none of his that got it by sin, and therefore it must be given to the priest, v.
8. If there were any that could make out a title to it, it must not be given to
the priest (God hates robbery for burnt-offerings); but, if there were not, then
it lapsed to the great Lord (ob defectum sanguinisfor want of issue),
and the priests were his receivers. Note, Some work of piety or charity is a
piece of necessary justice to be done by those who are conscience to themselves
that they have done wrong, but know not how otherwise to make restitution; what
is not our property will never be our profit.
III. A general rule concerning hallowed things given upon this
occasion, that, whatever was given to the priest, his it shall be, v. 9,
10. 1. He that gave it was not to receive his gift again upon any pretence
whatsoever. This law ratifies and confirms all grants for pious uses, that
people might not give things to the priests in a fit of zeal, and then recall
them in a fit of vexation. 2. The other priests should not come in sharers with
that priest who then officiated, and to whom the hallowed thing, whatever it
was, was given. Let him that was most ready and diligent in attending fare the
better for it: if he do the work, let him have the pay, and much good may it do
him.
We have here the law concerning the solemn trial of a wife whose
husband was jealous of her. Observe,
I. What was the case supposed: That a man had some reason to
suspect his wife to have committed adultery, v. 12-14. Here, 1. The sin of
adultery is justly represented as an exceedingly sinful sin; it is going aside
from God and virtue, and the good way, Prov. 2:17. It is committing a trespass
against the husband, robbing him of his honour, alienating his right,
introducing a spurious breed into his family to share with his children in his
estate, and violating her covenant with him. It is being defiled; for nothing
pollutes the mind and conscience more than this sin does. 2. It is supposed to
be a sin which great care is taken by the sinners to conceal, which there is no
witness of. The eye of the adulterer waits for the twilight, Job 24:15.
And the adulteress takes her opportunity when the good man is not at home,
Prov. 7:19. It would not covet to be secret if it were not shameful; and the
devil who draws sinners to this sin teaches them how to cover it. 3. The spirit
of jealousy is supposed to come upon the husband, of which Solomon says, It
is the rage of a man (Prov. 6:34), and that it is cruel as the grave,
Cant. 8:6. 4. "Yet" (say the Jewish writers) "he must make it
appear that he has some just cause for the suspicion." The rule they give
is, "If the husband have said unto his wife before witnesses, 'Be not
thou in secret with such a man;' and, notwithstanding that admonition, it is
afterwards proved that she was in secret with that man, though her father or her
brother, then he may compel her to drink the bitter water." But the law
here does not tie him to that particular method of proving the just cause of his
suspicion; it might be otherwise proved. In case it could be proved that she had
committed adultery, she was to be put to death (Lev. 20:10); but, if it was
uncertain, then this law took place. Hence, (1.) Let all wives be admonished not
to give any the least occasion for the suspicion of their chastity; it is not
enough that they abstain from the evil of uncleanness, but they must abstain
from all appearance of it, from every thing that looks like it, or leads to it,
or may give the least umbrage to jealousy; for how great a matter may a little
fire kindle! (2.) Let all husbands be admonished not to entertain any
causeless or unjust suspicions of their wives. If charity in general, much more
conjugal affection, teaches to think no evil, 1 Co. 13:5. It is the
happiness of the virtuous woman that the heart of her husband does safely
trust in her, Prov. 31:11.
II. What was the course prescribed in this case, that, if the
suspected wife was innocent, she might not continue under the reproach and
uneasiness of her husband's jealousy, and, if guilty, her sin might find her
out, and others might hear, and fear, and take warning.
1. The process of the trial must be thus:(1.) Her husband
must bring her to the priest, with the witnesses that could prove the
ground of his suspicion, and desire that she might be put upon her trial. The
Jews say that the priest was first to endeavour to persuade her to confess the
truth, saying to this purport, "Dear daughter, perhaps thou wast overtaken
by drinking wine, or wast carried away by the heat of youth or the examples of
bad neighbours; come, confess the truth, for the sake of his great name which is
described in the most sacred ceremony, and do not let it be blotted out with the
bitter water." If she confessed, saying, "I am defiled," she was
not put to death, but was divorced and lost her dowry; if she said, "I am
pure," then they proceeded. (2.) He must bring a coarse offering of
barley-meal, without oil or frankincense, agreeably to the present afflicted
state of his family; for a great affliction it was either to have cause to be
jealous or to be jealous without cause. It is an offering of memorial, to
signify that what was to be done was intended as a religious appeal to the
omniscience and justice of God. (3.) The priest was to prepare the water of
jealousy, the holy water out of the laver at which the priests were to wash when
they ministered; this must be brought in an earthen vessel, containing
(they say) about a pint; and it must be an earthen vessel, because the
coarser and plainer every thing was the more agreeable it was to the occasion. Dust
must be put into the water, to signify the reproach she lay under, and the shame
she ought to take to herself, putting her mouth in the dust; but dust from the
floor of the tabernacle, to put an honour upon every thing that pertained to
the place God had chosen to put his name there, and to keep up in the people a
reverence for it; see Jn. 8:6. (4.) The woman was to be set before the Lord,
at the east gate of the temple-court (say the Jews), and her head was to be
uncovered, in token of her sorrowful condition; and there she stood for a
spectacle to the world, that other women might learn not to do after her
lewdness, Eze. 23:48. Only the Jews say, "Her own servants were not to
be present, that she might not seem vile in their sight, who were to give honour
to her; her husband also must be dismissed." (5.) The priest was to adjure
her to tell the truth, and to denounce the curse of God against her if she were
guilty, and to declare what would be the effect of her drinking the water of
jealousy, v. 19-22. He must assure her that, if she were innocent, the water
would do her no harm, v. 19. None need fear the curse of the law if they have
not broken the commands of the law. But, if she were guilty, this water would be
poison to her, it would make her belly to swell and her thigh to rot, and
she should be a curse or abomination among her people, v. 21, 22. To this she
must say, Amen, as Israel must do to the curses pronounced on mount Ebal,
Deu. 27:15-26. Some think the Amen, being doubled, respects both parts
of the adjuration, both that which freed her if innocent and that which
condemned her if guilty. No woman, if she were guilty, could say Amen to
this adjuration, and drink the water upon it, unless she disbelieved the truth
of God or defied his justice, and had come to such a pitch of impudence and
hard-heartedness in sin as to challenge God Almighty to do his worst, and choose
rather to venture upon his curse than to give him glory by making confession;
thus has whoredom taken away the heart. (6.) The priest was to write this
curse in a scrip or scroll o parchment, verbatimword for word, as he
had expressed it, and then to wipe or scrape out what he had written into the
water (v. 23), to signify that it was that curse which impregnated the water,
and gave it its strength to effect what was intended. It signified that, if she
were innocent, the curse should be blotted out and never appear against her, as
it is written, Isa. 43:25, I am he that blotteth out thy transgression,
and Ps. 51:9, Blot out my iniquities; but that, if she were guilty, the
curse, as it was written, being infused into the water, would enter into her
bowels with the water, even like oil into her bones (Ps. 109:18), as we
read of a curse entering into a house, Zec. 5:4. (7.) The woman must then drink
the water (v. 24); it is called the bitter water, some think because they
put wormwood in it to make it bitter, or rather because it caused the curse.
Thus sin is called an evil thing and a bitter for the same reason,
because it causeth the curse, Jer. 2:19. If she had been guilty (and
otherwise it did not cause the curse), she was made to know that though her
stolen waters had been sweet, and her bread eaten in secret pleasant, yet
the end was bitter as wormwood, Prov. 9:17, and ch. 5:4. Let all that
meddle with forbidden pleasures know that they will be bitterness in the latter
end. The Jews say that if, upon denouncing the curse, the woman was so terrified
that she durst not drink the water, but confessed she was defiled, the priest
flung down the water, and cast her offering among the ashes, and she was
divorced without dowry: if she confessed not, and yet would not drink, they
forced her to it; and, if she was ready to throw it up again, they hastened her
away, that she might not pollute the holy place. (8.) Before she drank the
water, the jealousy-offering was waved and offered upon the altar (v. 25, 26); a
handful of it was burnt for a memorial, and the remainder of it eaten by the
priest, unless the husband was a priest, and then it was scattered among the
ashes. This offering in the midst of the transaction signified that the whole
was an appeal to God, as a God that knows all things, and from whom no secret
is hid. (9.) All things being thus performed according to the law, they were
to wait the issue. The water, with a little dust put into it, and the scrapings
of a written parchment, had no natural tendency at all to do either good or
hurt; but if God was thus appealed to in the way of an instituted ordinance,
though otherwise the innocent might have continued under suspicion and the
guilty undiscovered, yet God would so far own his own institution as that in a
little time, by the miraculous operation of Providence, the innocency of the
innocent should be cleared, and the sin of the guilty should find them out. [1.]
If the suspected woman was really guilty, the water she drank would be poison to
her (v. 27), her belly would swell and her thigh rot by a vile disease for vile
deserts, and she would mourn at the last when her flesh and body were
consumed, Prov. 5:11. Bishop Patrick says, from some of the Jewish writers,
that the effect of these waters appeared immediately, she grew pale, and her
eyes ready to start out of her head. Dr. Lightfoot says that sometimes it
appeared not for two or three years, but she bore no children, was sickly,
languished, and rotted at last; it is probable that some indications appeared
immediately. The rabbin say that the adulterer also died in the same day and
hour that the adulteress did, and in the same manner too, that he belly swelled,
and his secret parts rotted: a disease perhaps not much unlike that which in
these latter ages the avenging hand of a righteous God has made the scourge of
uncleanness, and with which whores and whoremongers infect, and plague, and ruin
one another, since they escape punishment from men. The Jewish doctors add that
the waters had this effect upon the adulteress only in case the husband had
never offended in the same kind; but that, if he had at any time defiled the
marriage-bed, God did not thus right him against his injurious wife; and that
therefore in the latter and degenerate ages of the Jewish church, when
uncleanness did abound, this way of trial was generally disused and laid aside;
men, knowing their own crimes, were content not to know their wives' crimes.
And to this perhaps may refer the threatening (Hos. 4:14), I will not punish
your spouses when they commit adultery, for you yourselves are separated with
whores. [2.] If she were innocent, the water she drank would be physic to
her: She shall be free, and shall conceive seed, v. 28. The Jewish
writers magnify the good effects of this water to the innocent woman, that, to
recompense her for the wrong done to her by the suspicion, she should, after the
drinking of these waters, be stronger and look better than ever; if she was
sickly, she should become healthful, should bear a man-child, and have easy
labour.
2. From the whole we may learn, (1.) That secret sins are known
to God, and sometimes are strangely brought to light in this life; however,
there is a day coming when God will, by Jesus Christ, as here by the priest,
judge the secrets of men according to the gospel, Rom. 2:16. (2.) That,
in particular, Whoremongers and adulterers God will judge. The violation
of conjugal faith and chastity is highly provoking to the God of heaven, and
sooner or later it will be reckoned for. Though we have not now the waters of
jealousy to be a sensible terror to the unclean, yet we have a word from God
which ought to be as great a terror, that if any man defile the temple of
God, him shall God destroy, 1 Co. 3:17. (3.) That God will find out some way
or other to clear the innocency of the innocent, and to bring forth their
righteousness as the light. (4.) That to the pure all things are pure,
but to the defiled nothing is so, Tit. 1:15. The same word is to some a savour
of life unto life, to others a savour of death unto death, like those waters
of jealousy, according as they receive it; the same providence is for good to
some and for hurt to others, Jer. 24:5, 8, 9. And, whatsoever it is intended
for, it shall not return void.
Numbers 5 Bible Commentary
Matthew Henry Bible Commentary (complete)
In this chapter we have, I. An order, pursuant to the laws already made, for the removing of the unclean out of the camp (v. 1-4). II. A repetition of the laws concerning restitution, in case of wrong done to a neighbour (v. 5-8), and concerning the appropriating of the hallowed things to the priests (v. 9, 10). III. A new law made concerning the trial of a wife suspected of adultery, by the waters of jealousy (v. 11, etc.).
Verses 1-10
Here is, I. A command for the purifying of the camp, by turning out from within its lines all those that were ceremonially unclean, by issues, leprosies, or the touch of dead bodies, until they were cleansed according to the law, v. 2, 3.
1. These orders are executed immediately, v. 4. (1.) The camp was now newly-modelled and put in order, and therefore, to complete the reformation of it, it is next to be cleansed. Note, The purity of the church must be as carefully consulted and preserved as the peace and order of it. It is requisite, not only that every Israelite be confined to his own standard, but that every polluted Israelite be separated from it. The wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable. (2.) God's tabernacle was now fixed in the midst of their camp, and therefore they must be careful to keep it clean. Note, The greater profession of religion any house or family make the more they are obliged to put away iniquity far from their tabernacle, Job 22:23. The person, the place, in the midst of which God dwells, must not be defiled; for, if it be, he will be affronted, offended, and provoked to withdraw, 1 Co. 3:16, 17.
2. This expulsion of the unclean out of the camp was to signify, (1.) What the governors of the church ought to do: they must separate between the precious and the vile, and purge out scandalous persons, as old leaven (1 Co. 5:8, 13), lest others should be infected and defiled, Heb. 12:15. It is for the glory of Christ and the edification of his church that those who are openly and incorrigibly profane and vicious should be put out and kept from Christian communion till they repent. (2.) What God himself will do in the great day: he will thoroughly purge his floor, and gather out of his kingdom all things that offend. As here the unclean were shut out of the camp, so into the new Jerusalem no unclean thing shall enter, Rev. 21:27.
II. A law concerning restitution, in case of wrong done to a neighbour. It is called a sin that men commit (v. 6), because it is common among men; a sin of man, that is, a sin against man, so it is thought it should be translated and understood. If a man overreach or defraud his brother in any matter, it is to be looked upon as a trespass against the Lord, who is the protector of right, the punisher of wrong, and who strictly charges and commands us to do justly. Now what is to be done when a man's awakened conscience charges him with guilt of this kind, and brings it to his remembrance though done long ago? 1. He must confess his sin, confess it to God, confess it to his neighbour, and so take shame to himself. If he have denied it before, though it go against the grain to own himself in a lie, yet he must do it; because his heart was hardened he denied it, therefore he has no other way of making it appear that his heart is now softened but by confessing it. 2. He must bring a sacrifice, a ram of atonement, v. 8. Satisfaction must be made for the offence done to God, whose law is broken, as well as for the loss sustained by our neighbour; restitution in this case is not sufficient without faith and repentance. 3. Yet the sacrifices would not be accepted till full amends were made to the party wronged, not only the principal, but a fifth part added to it, v. 7. It is certain that while that which is got by injustice is knowingly retained in the hands the guilt of the injustice remains upon the conscience, and is not purged by sacrifice nor offering, prayers not tears, for it is one and the same continued act of sin persisted in. This law we had before (Lev. 6:4), and it is here added that if the party wronged was dead, and he had no near kinsman who was entitled to the debt, or if it was any way uncertain to whom the restitution should be made, this should not serve for an excuse to detain what was unjustly gotten; to whomsoever it pertained, it was certainly none of his that got it by sin, and therefore it must be given to the priest, v. 8. If there were any that could make out a title to it, it must not be given to the priest (God hates robbery for burnt-offerings); but, if there were not, then it lapsed to the great Lord (ob defectum sanguinisfor want of issue), and the priests were his receivers. Note, Some work of piety or charity is a piece of necessary justice to be done by those who are conscience to themselves that they have done wrong, but know not how otherwise to make restitution; what is not our property will never be our profit.
III. A general rule concerning hallowed things given upon this occasion, that, whatever was given to the priest, his it shall be, v. 9, 10. 1. He that gave it was not to receive his gift again upon any pretence whatsoever. This law ratifies and confirms all grants for pious uses, that people might not give things to the priests in a fit of zeal, and then recall them in a fit of vexation. 2. The other priests should not come in sharers with that priest who then officiated, and to whom the hallowed thing, whatever it was, was given. Let him that was most ready and diligent in attending fare the better for it: if he do the work, let him have the pay, and much good may it do him.
Verses 11-31
We have here the law concerning the solemn trial of a wife whose husband was jealous of her. Observe,
I. What was the case supposed: That a man had some reason to suspect his wife to have committed adultery, v. 12-14. Here, 1. The sin of adultery is justly represented as an exceedingly sinful sin; it is going aside from God and virtue, and the good way, Prov. 2:17. It is committing a trespass against the husband, robbing him of his honour, alienating his right, introducing a spurious breed into his family to share with his children in his estate, and violating her covenant with him. It is being defiled; for nothing pollutes the mind and conscience more than this sin does. 2. It is supposed to be a sin which great care is taken by the sinners to conceal, which there is no witness of. The eye of the adulterer waits for the twilight, Job 24:15. And the adulteress takes her opportunity when the good man is not at home, Prov. 7:19. It would not covet to be secret if it were not shameful; and the devil who draws sinners to this sin teaches them how to cover it. 3. The spirit of jealousy is supposed to come upon the husband, of which Solomon says, It is the rage of a man (Prov. 6:34), and that it is cruel as the grave, Cant. 8:6. 4. "Yet" (say the Jewish writers) "he must make it appear that he has some just cause for the suspicion." The rule they give is, "If the husband have said unto his wife before witnesses, 'Be not thou in secret with such a man;' and, notwithstanding that admonition, it is afterwards proved that she was in secret with that man, though her father or her brother, then he may compel her to drink the bitter water." But the law here does not tie him to that particular method of proving the just cause of his suspicion; it might be otherwise proved. In case it could be proved that she had committed adultery, she was to be put to death (Lev. 20:10); but, if it was uncertain, then this law took place. Hence, (1.) Let all wives be admonished not to give any the least occasion for the suspicion of their chastity; it is not enough that they abstain from the evil of uncleanness, but they must abstain from all appearance of it, from every thing that looks like it, or leads to it, or may give the least umbrage to jealousy; for how great a matter may a little fire kindle! (2.) Let all husbands be admonished not to entertain any causeless or unjust suspicions of their wives. If charity in general, much more conjugal affection, teaches to think no evil, 1 Co. 13:5. It is the happiness of the virtuous woman that the heart of her husband does safely trust in her, Prov. 31:11.
II. What was the course prescribed in this case, that, if the suspected wife was innocent, she might not continue under the reproach and uneasiness of her husband's jealousy, and, if guilty, her sin might find her out, and others might hear, and fear, and take warning.
1. The process of the trial must be thus:(1.) Her husband must bring her to the priest, with the witnesses that could prove the ground of his suspicion, and desire that she might be put upon her trial. The Jews say that the priest was first to endeavour to persuade her to confess the truth, saying to this purport, "Dear daughter, perhaps thou wast overtaken by drinking wine, or wast carried away by the heat of youth or the examples of bad neighbours; come, confess the truth, for the sake of his great name which is described in the most sacred ceremony, and do not let it be blotted out with the bitter water." If she confessed, saying, "I am defiled," she was not put to death, but was divorced and lost her dowry; if she said, "I am pure," then they proceeded. (2.) He must bring a coarse offering of barley-meal, without oil or frankincense, agreeably to the present afflicted state of his family; for a great affliction it was either to have cause to be jealous or to be jealous without cause. It is an offering of memorial, to signify that what was to be done was intended as a religious appeal to the omniscience and justice of God. (3.) The priest was to prepare the water of jealousy, the holy water out of the laver at which the priests were to wash when they ministered; this must be brought in an earthen vessel, containing (they say) about a pint; and it must be an earthen vessel, because the coarser and plainer every thing was the more agreeable it was to the occasion. Dust must be put into the water, to signify the reproach she lay under, and the shame she ought to take to herself, putting her mouth in the dust; but dust from the floor of the tabernacle, to put an honour upon every thing that pertained to the place God had chosen to put his name there, and to keep up in the people a reverence for it; see Jn. 8:6. (4.) The woman was to be set before the Lord, at the east gate of the temple-court (say the Jews), and her head was to be uncovered, in token of her sorrowful condition; and there she stood for a spectacle to the world, that other women might learn not to do after her lewdness, Eze. 23:48. Only the Jews say, "Her own servants were not to be present, that she might not seem vile in their sight, who were to give honour to her; her husband also must be dismissed." (5.) The priest was to adjure her to tell the truth, and to denounce the curse of God against her if she were guilty, and to declare what would be the effect of her drinking the water of jealousy, v. 19-22. He must assure her that, if she were innocent, the water would do her no harm, v. 19. None need fear the curse of the law if they have not broken the commands of the law. But, if she were guilty, this water would be poison to her, it would make her belly to swell and her thigh to rot, and she should be a curse or abomination among her people, v. 21, 22. To this she must say, Amen, as Israel must do to the curses pronounced on mount Ebal, Deu. 27:15-26. Some think the Amen, being doubled, respects both parts of the adjuration, both that which freed her if innocent and that which condemned her if guilty. No woman, if she were guilty, could say Amen to this adjuration, and drink the water upon it, unless she disbelieved the truth of God or defied his justice, and had come to such a pitch of impudence and hard-heartedness in sin as to challenge God Almighty to do his worst, and choose rather to venture upon his curse than to give him glory by making confession; thus has whoredom taken away the heart. (6.) The priest was to write this curse in a scrip or scroll o parchment, verbatimword for word, as he had expressed it, and then to wipe or scrape out what he had written into the water (v. 23), to signify that it was that curse which impregnated the water, and gave it its strength to effect what was intended. It signified that, if she were innocent, the curse should be blotted out and never appear against her, as it is written, Isa. 43:25, I am he that blotteth out thy transgression, and Ps. 51:9, Blot out my iniquities; but that, if she were guilty, the curse, as it was written, being infused into the water, would enter into her bowels with the water, even like oil into her bones (Ps. 109:18), as we read of a curse entering into a house, Zec. 5:4. (7.) The woman must then drink the water (v. 24); it is called the bitter water, some think because they put wormwood in it to make it bitter, or rather because it caused the curse. Thus sin is called an evil thing and a bitter for the same reason, because it causeth the curse, Jer. 2:19. If she had been guilty (and otherwise it did not cause the curse), she was made to know that though her stolen waters had been sweet, and her bread eaten in secret pleasant, yet the end was bitter as wormwood, Prov. 9:17, and ch. 5:4. Let all that meddle with forbidden pleasures know that they will be bitterness in the latter end. The Jews say that if, upon denouncing the curse, the woman was so terrified that she durst not drink the water, but confessed she was defiled, the priest flung down the water, and cast her offering among the ashes, and she was divorced without dowry: if she confessed not, and yet would not drink, they forced her to it; and, if she was ready to throw it up again, they hastened her away, that she might not pollute the holy place. (8.) Before she drank the water, the jealousy-offering was waved and offered upon the altar (v. 25, 26); a handful of it was burnt for a memorial, and the remainder of it eaten by the priest, unless the husband was a priest, and then it was scattered among the ashes. This offering in the midst of the transaction signified that the whole was an appeal to God, as a God that knows all things, and from whom no secret is hid. (9.) All things being thus performed according to the law, they were to wait the issue. The water, with a little dust put into it, and the scrapings of a written parchment, had no natural tendency at all to do either good or hurt; but if God was thus appealed to in the way of an instituted ordinance, though otherwise the innocent might have continued under suspicion and the guilty undiscovered, yet God would so far own his own institution as that in a little time, by the miraculous operation of Providence, the innocency of the innocent should be cleared, and the sin of the guilty should find them out. [1.] If the suspected woman was really guilty, the water she drank would be poison to her (v. 27), her belly would swell and her thigh rot by a vile disease for vile deserts, and she would mourn at the last when her flesh and body were consumed, Prov. 5:11. Bishop Patrick says, from some of the Jewish writers, that the effect of these waters appeared immediately, she grew pale, and her eyes ready to start out of her head. Dr. Lightfoot says that sometimes it appeared not for two or three years, but she bore no children, was sickly, languished, and rotted at last; it is probable that some indications appeared immediately. The rabbin say that the adulterer also died in the same day and hour that the adulteress did, and in the same manner too, that he belly swelled, and his secret parts rotted: a disease perhaps not much unlike that which in these latter ages the avenging hand of a righteous God has made the scourge of uncleanness, and with which whores and whoremongers infect, and plague, and ruin one another, since they escape punishment from men. The Jewish doctors add that the waters had this effect upon the adulteress only in case the husband had never offended in the same kind; but that, if he had at any time defiled the marriage-bed, God did not thus right him against his injurious wife; and that therefore in the latter and degenerate ages of the Jewish church, when uncleanness did abound, this way of trial was generally disused and laid aside; men, knowing their own crimes, were content not to know their wives' crimes. And to this perhaps may refer the threatening (Hos. 4:14), I will not punish your spouses when they commit adultery, for you yourselves are separated with whores. [2.] If she were innocent, the water she drank would be physic to her: She shall be free, and shall conceive seed, v. 28. The Jewish writers magnify the good effects of this water to the innocent woman, that, to recompense her for the wrong done to her by the suspicion, she should, after the drinking of these waters, be stronger and look better than ever; if she was sickly, she should become healthful, should bear a man-child, and have easy labour.
2. From the whole we may learn, (1.) That secret sins are known to God, and sometimes are strangely brought to light in this life; however, there is a day coming when God will, by Jesus Christ, as here by the priest, judge the secrets of men according to the gospel, Rom. 2:16. (2.) That, in particular, Whoremongers and adulterers God will judge. The violation of conjugal faith and chastity is highly provoking to the God of heaven, and sooner or later it will be reckoned for. Though we have not now the waters of jealousy to be a sensible terror to the unclean, yet we have a word from God which ought to be as great a terror, that if any man defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy, 1 Co. 3:17. (3.) That God will find out some way or other to clear the innocency of the innocent, and to bring forth their righteousness as the light. (4.) That to the pure all things are pure, but to the defiled nothing is so, Tit. 1:15. The same word is to some a savour of life unto life, to others a savour of death unto death, like those waters of jealousy, according as they receive it; the same providence is for good to some and for hurt to others, Jer. 24:5, 8, 9. And, whatsoever it is intended for, it shall not return void.