Numbers

From Conservapedia
Jump to: navigation, search

This article is about the biblical book. For the mathematical concept, see Number.
Numbers [Hebrew: במדבר] is the fourth book of the Bible in the Old Testament. The Hebrew title of the book literally means "In the desert."[1] The book's English name comes from the records of the Israelite tribes that take up a large part of the book.

Numbers 23:23 (KJV) contains the verse used by Samuel Morse for his first telegraph communication (King James Version):

What hath God wrought!

This book is considered to have been written by Moses along with the other books of the Torah (the first five books of the Old Testament). It relates the story of Israel's journey from Mount Sinai to the plains of Moab on the border of Canaan.

Famous stories found in the Book of Numbers include the stories of Balaam's Ass (Numbers 22:22-35 ) and the Bronze Serpent (Numbers 21:4-9 ).

See also

Numbers (Translated)

References

  1. The NIV Study Bible, Zondervan Corporation, 1985, Pg. 185