Numbers Chapter 36

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October 4, 2025

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📜 A Fair Question About Family Land

One day, some of the grown-ups from a family called Gilead came to Moses with a really important question. These men were great-great-grandsons of a man named Joseph, and they were worried about something.

🤔 The Big Worry

They said to Moses, “Remember when God told you to give land to all the families of Israel? And remember how God said that Zelophehad’s five daughtersᵃ should get their dad’s land because he didn’t have any sons? Well, we’re worried about what happens next! “What if those daughters get married to men from different tribes? Then their family land would go to those other tribes! Our tribe would lose that land forever, and that doesn’t seem fair!”

🏡 Why Family Land Was So Important

You see, back then, every family got their own special piece of land from God. It was like God giving each family their own backyard that would belong to them and their children and grandchildren forever. The grown-ups wanted to make sure their family’s land stayed in their family.

✨ God’s Wise Solution

Moses talked to Yahweh about this problem, and then he told everyone what God said: “You know what? Those men are asking a really good question! Here’s what we’ll do: Zelophehad’s daughters can marry anyone they want – but they need to marry someone from their own tribeᵇ. This way, the land will stay in the right family!” “This is an important rule for everyone in Israel: family land should stay with the family it was given to. When daughters inherit land, they should marry within their tribe so the land doesn’t get mixed up between different families.”

🎉 The Daughters Do the Right Thing

Mahlah, Tirzah, Hoglah, Milkah, and Noah – those were the names of Zelophehad’s five daughters – listened carefully to what God said. They decided to marry their cousinsᶜ, who were from their same tribe. This meant their family land would stay right where God wanted it!

🏕️ The End of the Desert Journey

This happened while all the Israelites were still camping in the desert, getting ready to go into the Promised Landᵈ. Moses had been their leader for a long, long time, helping them learn God’s rules for living together as one big, happy family.

📝 Kid-Friendly Footnotes:

  • Zelophehad’s daughters: These were five brave sisters who asked for their father’s land when he died. Back then, usually only boys got land, but God said it was fair for them to have it since their dad had no sons!
  • Tribe: Think of a tribe like a really, really big family. All the people in Israel were divided into 12 big family groups called tribes, and each tribe got their own section of the Promised Land.
  • Married their cousins: This might sound weird today, but back then it was normal and okay for cousins to marry each other. It was actually a smart way to keep families close and land in the right place.
  • Promised Land: This was the special land God promised to give Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob’s families – a beautiful place where they could live and grow crops and raise animals. Today we call it Israel!
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Footnotes:

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    And the chief fathers of the families of the children of Gilead, the son of Machir, the son of Manasseh, of the families of the sons of Joseph, came near, and spake before Moses, and before the princes, the chief fathers of the children of Israel:
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    And they said, The LORD commanded my lord to give the land for an inheritance by lot to the children of Israel: and my lord was commanded by the LORD to give the inheritance of Zelophehad our brother unto his daughters.
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    And if they be married to any of the sons of the [other] tribes of the children of Israel, then shall their inheritance be taken from the inheritance of our fathers, and shall be put to the inheritance of the tribe whereunto they are received: so shall it be taken from the lot of our inheritance.
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    And when the jubile of the children of Israel shall be, then shall their inheritance be put unto the inheritance of the tribe whereunto they are received: so shall their inheritance be taken away from the inheritance of the tribe of our fathers.
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    And Moses commanded the children of Israel according to the word of the LORD, saying, The tribe of the sons of Joseph hath said well.
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    This [is] the thing which the LORD doth command concerning the daughters of Zelophehad, saying, Let them marry to whom they think best; only to the family of the tribe of their father shall they marry.
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    So shall not the inheritance of the children of Israel remove from tribe to tribe: for every one of the children of Israel shall keep himself to the inheritance of the tribe of his fathers.
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    And every daughter, that possesseth an inheritance in any tribe of the children of Israel, shall be wife unto one of the family of the tribe of her father, that the children of Israel may enjoy every man the inheritance of his fathers.
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    Neither shall the inheritance remove from [one] tribe to another tribe; but every one of the tribes of the children of Israel shall keep himself to his own inheritance.
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    Even as the LORD commanded Moses, so did the daughters of Zelophehad:
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    For Mahlah, Tirzah, and Hoglah, and Milcah, and Noah, the daughters of Zelophehad, were married unto their father’s brothers’ sons:
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    [And] they were married into the families of the sons of Manasseh the son of Joseph, and their inheritance remained in the tribe of the family of their father.
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    These [are] the commandments and the judgments, which the LORD commanded by the hand of Moses unto the children of Israel in the plains of Moab by Jordan [near] Jericho.
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    Now the family heads of the clan of Gilead son of Machir son of Manasseh, one of the clans of Joseph, approached Moses and the leaders who were the heads of the Israelite families and addressed them,
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    saying, “When the LORD commanded my lord to give the land as an inheritance to the Israelites by lot, He also commanded him to give the inheritance of our brother Zelophehad to his daughters.
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    But if they marry any of the men from the other tribes of Israel, their inheritance will be withdrawn from the portion of our fathers and added to the tribe into which they marry. So our allotted inheritance would be taken away.
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    And when the Jubilee for the Israelites comes, their inheritance will be added to the tribe into which they marry and taken away from the tribe of our fathers.”
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    So at the word of the LORD, Moses commanded the Israelites: “The tribe of the sons of Joseph speaks correctly.
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    This is what the LORD has commanded concerning the daughters of Zelophehad: They may marry anyone they please, provided they marry within a clan of the tribe of their father.
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    No inheritance in Israel may be transferred from tribe to tribe, because each of the Israelites is to retain the inheritance of the tribe of his fathers.
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    Every daughter who possesses an inheritance from any Israelite tribe must marry within a clan of the tribe of her father, so that every Israelite will possess the inheritance of his fathers.
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    No inheritance may be transferred from one tribe to another, for each tribe of Israel must retain its inheritance.”
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    So the daughters of Zelophehad did as the LORD had commanded Moses.
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    Mahlah, Tirzah, Hoglah, Milcah, and Noah, the daughters of Zelophehad, were married to cousins on their father’s side.
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    They married within the clans of the descendants of Manasseh son of Joseph, and their inheritance remained within the tribe of their father’s clan.
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    These are the commandments and ordinances that the LORD gave the Israelites through Moses on the plains of Moab by the Jordan across from Jericho.

Numbers Chapter 36 Commentary

Numbers 36 – When Daughters Inherit the Promise

What’s Numbers 36 about?

The daughters of Zelophehad are back with another legal challenge – this time their inheritance rights clash with tribal boundaries. What happens when justice meets tradition, and how do you balance individual rights with community needs? This chapter shows us that even God’s law needs fine-tuning as real life gets complicated.

The Full Context

Numbers 36 picks up a thread from earlier in the book – the groundbreaking case of Zelophehad’s daughters who successfully argued for inheritance rights when their father died without sons. But legal victories often create new problems, and that’s exactly what’s happening here. The clan leaders of Manasseh have figured out a potential loophole that could dissolve tribal boundaries through marriage and inheritance.

This chapter represents the final piece of legislation in Numbers, positioned strategically at the end of the book as Israel prepares to enter the Promised Land. It’s dealing with the practical mechanics of how a tribal society maintains its identity and land holdings across generations. The tension between individual justice (the daughters’ right to inherit) and communal stability (keeping land within tribal boundaries) creates a fascinating case study in biblical jurisprudence. What makes this passage particularly significant is how it shows divine law adapting to unforeseen circumstances while maintaining core principles of both justice and community integrity.

What the Ancient Words Tell Us

The Hebrew language in this passage is doing some heavy lifting that we miss in English. When the text says the inheritance would be “nasal” (taken away) from their ancestral tribe, it’s using a word that means something has been permanently removed or carried off. This isn’t just administrative reshuffling – it’s talking about the irreversible loss of tribal identity and land.

Grammar Geeks

The phrase “mishpat banot” (ordinance for daughters) in verse 13 uses a technical legal term that appears throughout ancient Near Eastern law codes. It’s not just a casual ruling – it’s establishing permanent jurisprudence that future generations can reference.

The word “nachalah” (inheritance) appears repeatedly, but notice how it’s always connected to the concept of permanence. In ancient Hebrew thought, your nachalah wasn’t just property you owned – it was your connection to the covenant promises, your place in the ongoing story of God’s people. When land moved between tribes through marriage, it wasn’t just an economic transaction; it was a theological crisis.

What’s fascinating is how the text uses legal precision throughout. The phrase “al-pi YHWH” (by the command of the LORD) in verse 5 uses the same formula found in formal ancient legal pronouncements. Moses isn’t just giving his opinion here – he’s delivering a divine court ruling that carries the full authority of heaven.

What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?

Picture this: you’re part of a tribal society that’s been wandering in the wilderness for four decades, and you’re finally about to claim your promised inheritance. Every tribe has been assigned specific territories, and your family’s future – your children’s future – depends on keeping that land within your tribal boundaries.

Then someone points out that the daughters of Zelophehad, who won the right to inherit their father’s land, could marry men from other tribes. Suddenly, their inheritance would belong to their husbands’ tribes permanently. In a world where land equals survival, identity, and covenant blessing, this isn’t just an administrative headache – it’s an existential threat.

Did You Know?

In ancient Near Eastern culture, a woman typically joined her husband’s household and took on his tribal identity. The Year of Jubilee wouldn’t help here because land that transferred through marriage was considered permanently relocated, not temporarily sold.

The original audience would have immediately grasped the domino effect: if women could inherit and then marry outside their tribes, wealthy or powerful tribes could potentially absorb smaller ones through strategic marriages. The twelve-tribe structure that God had established could gradually dissolve into something unrecognizable.

But they also would have heard something revolutionary in God’s solution. Rather than rescinding the daughters’ inheritance rights (the easy fix), God refines the law to preserve both individual justice and communal stability. The daughters can inherit and marry – they just need to marry within their father’s tribe.

Wrestling with the Text

Here’s where it gets interesting: why didn’t God foresee this problem when He first granted the daughters their inheritance rights? Some readers get uncomfortable with the idea that divine law needs amendments, but I think that misses something beautiful about how God works.

“Sometimes the most profound theology happens not in the grand pronouncements, but in the careful adjustments that show God’s law is meant for real people living real lives.”

The text suggests that God’s justice isn’t a rigid system that can’t adapt to unforeseen circumstances. Instead, it’s a living framework that maintains core principles while addressing new situations. The daughters’ original case established the principle that women have inheritance rights. This follow-up case establishes the principle that individual rights must be balanced with community needs.

What’s remarkable is that God doesn’t choose sides between individual justice and communal stability – He finds a way to honor both. The daughters keep their inheritance and their right to marry, but within parameters that preserve tribal integrity. It’s a both/and solution in a world that often thinks in either/or terms.

How This Changes Everything

This passage completely reframes how we think about biblical law. Too often we imagine that divine commands came down as a complete, unchangeable legal code. But Numbers 36 shows us something different: God’s justice is both principled and flexible, both absolute and adaptive.

The daughters of Zelophehad represent something larger than individual women fighting for their rights. They represent the ongoing tension between justice and tradition, between individual needs and community stability, between the letter of the law and its spirit.

Wait, That’s Strange…

Why does the text specifically mention that this happened “in the plains of Moab by the Jordan at Jericho”? This geographical precision suggests these weren’t just theoretical legal discussions – they were urgent, practical decisions being made as Israel prepared to cross into the Promised Land.

Their story also reveals something profound about how change happens in faith communities. Real progress often comes not from overthrowing existing systems, but from thoughtful people asking hard questions that force communities to live up to their highest ideals. The daughters didn’t reject the tribal system – they asked it to be more just. The clan leaders didn’t reject individual rights – they asked how to balance them with community needs.

The result is law that’s both more just and more stable than what came before. The daughters’ inheritance rights are preserved, tribal boundaries are maintained, and future generations have a precedent for how to navigate similar tensions between individual and communal needs.

Key Takeaway

When justice and tradition seem to conflict, the answer isn’t always choosing sides – sometimes it’s finding creative solutions that honor both the rights of individuals and the needs of the community.

Further Reading

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