2
They said, "Has the LORD indeed spoken only with Moses? Hasn't he spoken also with us?" And the LORD heard it. +
3
Now the man Moses was very humble, more than all the men who were on the surface of the earth. +
4
The LORD spoke suddenly to Moses, to Aaron, and to Miriam, "You three come out to the Tent of Meeting!"The three of them came out. +
5
The LORD came down in a
pillar of cloud, and stood at the door of the Tent, and called Aaron and Miriam; and they both came forward.
+6
He said, "Now hear my words. If there is a
prophet among you, I, The LORD, will make myself known to him in a vision. I will speak with him in a dream.
+7
My servant Moses is not so. He is
faithful in all my house.
8
With him, I will speak mouth to mouth, even plainly, and not in riddles; and he shall see The LORD's form. Why then were you not afraid to speak against my servant, against Moses?" +
9
The LORD's
anger burned against them; and he departed.
10
The
cloud departed from over the Tent; and behold, Miriam was leprous, as
white as snow. Aaron looked at Miriam, and behold, she was leprous.
+11
Aaron said to Moses, "Oh, my lord, please don't count this sin against us, in which we have done foolishly, and in which we have sinned. +
12
Let her not, I pray, be as one dead, of whom the
flesh is half consumed when he comes out of his mother's womb."
13
Moses cried to The LORD, saying, "Heal her, God, I beg you!"
14
The LORD said to Moses, "If her
father had but spit in her face, shouldn't she be ashamed
seven days? Let her be shut up outside of the camp seven days, and after that she shall be brought in again."
+15
Miriam was shut up outside of the camp seven days, and the people didn't travel until Miriam was brought in again. +
16
Afterward the people traveled from Hazeroth, and encamped in the
wilderness of Paran.
+
Nu 12:1-9. MIRIAM'S AND AARON'S SEDITION.
1. an Ethiopian woman--Hebrew, "a Cushite woman"--Arabia was usually called in Scripture the land of Cush, its inhabitants being descendants of that son of Ham (see on Ex 2:15) and being accounted generally a vile and contemptible race (see on Am 9:7). The occasion of this seditious outbreak on the part of Miriam and Aaron against Moses was the great change made in the government by the adoption of the seventy rulers [Nu 11:16]. Their irritating disparagement of his wife (who, in all probability, was Zipporah [Ex 2:21], and not a second wife he had recently married) arose from jealousy of the relatives, through whose influence the innovation had been first made (Ex 18:13-26), while they were overlooked or neglected. Miriam is mentioned before Aaron as being the chief instigator and leader of the sedition.