Numbers Chapter 5 verse 29 Holy Bible

ASV Numbers 5:29

This is the law of jealousy, when a wife, being under her husband, goeth aside, and is defiled;
read chapter 5 in ASV

BBE Numbers 5:29

This is the law for testing a wife who goes with another in place of her husband and becomes unclean;
read chapter 5 in BBE

DARBY Numbers 5:29

This is the law of jealousies, when a wife goeth astray to another instead of her husband and is defiled,
read chapter 5 in DARBY

KJV Numbers 5:29

This is the law of jealousies, when a wife goeth aside to another instead of her husband, and is defiled;
read chapter 5 in KJV

WBT Numbers 5:29

This is the law of jealousies, when a wife goeth astray to another instead of her husband, and is defiled;
read chapter 5 in WBT

WEB Numbers 5:29

"This is the law of jealousy, when a wife, being under her husband, goes astray, and is defiled;
read chapter 5 in WEB

YLT Numbers 5:29

`This `is' the law of jealousies, when a wife turneth aside under her husband, and hath been defiled,
read chapter 5 in YLT

Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 29. - This is the law of jealousies. A law prescribed by God, and yet in substance borrowed from half civilized heathens; a practice closely akin to yet prevalent superstitious, and yet receiving not only the toleration of Moses, but the direct sanction of God; an ordeal which emphatically claimed to be infallibly operative through supernatural agencies, yet amongst other nations obviously lending itself to collusion and fraud, as does the trial by red water practiced by the tribes of West Africa. In order to justify heavenly wisdom herein, we must frankly admit, to begin with - (1) That it was founded upon the superstitious notion that immaterial virtue can be imparted to physical elements. The holiness of the gathered dust and the awfulness of the written curses were both supposed to be held in solution by the water of jealousy. The record does not say as much, but the whole ordeal proceeds on this supposition, which would undoubtedly be the popular one. (2) That it was only fitted for a very rude and comparatively barbarous state of society. The Talmud states that the use of it ceased forty years before the destruction of Jerusalem (if so, during our Lord's earthly lifetime); but it may be held certain that it ceased long before - indeed there is no recorded instance of its use. It was essentially an ordeal, although one Divinely regulated, and as such would have been morally impossible and highly undesirable in any age but one of blind and uninquiring faith. And we find the justification of it exactly in the fact that it was given to a generation which believed much and knew little; which had a profound belief in magic, and no knowledge of natural philosophy. It was ever the wisdom of God, as revealed in the sacred volume, to take men as they were, and to utilize the superstitious notions which could not at once be destroyed, or the imperfect moral ideas which could not at once be reformed, by making them work for righteousness and peace. It is, above all, the wisdom of God not to destroy the imperfect, but to regulate it and restrain its abuses, and so impress it into his service, until he has educated his people for something higher. Everybody knows the extreme violence of jealousy amongst an uncivilized people, and the widespread misery and crime to which it leads. It may safely be affirmed that any ordeal which should leave no place for jealousy, because no room for uncertainty, would be a blessing to a people rude enough and ignorant enough to believe in it. Ordeals arc established in a certain stage of civilization because they are wanted, and are on the whole useful, as long as they remain in harmony with popular ideas. They are, however, always liable to two dangers. (1) They occasionally fail, and are known to have failed, and so fall into disrepute. . . .

Ellicott's Commentary