Matthew Henry
God, having performed his promise to Moses by giving him assessors in the government, thereby proving the power he has over the spirits of men by his Spirit, he here performs his promise to the people by giving them flesh, proving thereby his power over the inferior creatures and his dominion in the kingdom of nature. Observe,
A wind(a south-east wind, as appears, Ps 78:26)
brought quails, Num 11:31. It is uncertain what sort of animals they were; the psalmist calls them
feathered fowl, or
fowl of wing. The learned bishop Patrick inclines to agree with some modern writers, who think they were
locusts, a delicious sort of food well known in those parts, the rather because they were brought with a wind, lay in heaps, and were dried in the sun for use. Whatever they were, they answered the intention, they served for a month’s feast for Israel, such an indulgent Father was God to his froward family. Locusts, that had been a plague to fruitful Egypt, feeding upon the fruits, were a blessing to a barren wilderness, being themselves fed upon.
flew upon the spoilwith an unsatiable appetite, not regarding what Moses had told them from God, that they would surfeit upon it, Num 11:32. Two days and a night they were at it, gathering flesh, till every master of a family had brought home ten homers (that is, ten ass-loads) at least. David longed for the water of the well of Bethlehem, but would not drink it when he had it, because it was obtained by venturing; much more reason these Israelites had to refuse this flesh, which was obtained by murmuring, and which, they might easily perceive, by what Moses said, was given them in anger; but those that are under the power of a carnal mind will have their lusts fulfilled, though it be to the certain damage and ruin of their precious souls.
The Lord smote them with a very great plague(Num 11:33), some bodily disease, which probably was the effect of their surfeit, and was the death of many of them, and those, it is likely, the ringleaders in the mutiny. Note, God often grants the desires of his own people in love. He
gave them their request, but
sent leanness into their soul, Ps 106:15. By all that was said to them they
were not estranged from their lusts, and therefore,
while the meat was in their mouths, the wrath of God came upon them, Ps 78:30, Ps 78:31. What we inordinately desire, if we obtain it (we have reason to fear), will be some way or other a grief and cross to us. God satiated them first, and then plagued them,
Lastly, The remembrance of this is preserved in the name given to the place, Num 11:34. Moses called it
Kibroth-hattaavah, the
graves of lustersor
of lust. And well it had been if these graves of Israel’s lusters had proved the graves of Israel’s lust: the warning was designed to be so, but it had not its due effect, for it follows (Ps 78:32),
For all this, they sinned still.