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The 1599
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Historical Book
Flavius Josephus
Philip Schaff
History
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8 Vol.
Keil & Delitzsch
OT Commentary
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"It is enough for good
people to do nothing, for evil people to succeed."
12 Little Things Every Filipino Can Do To Help Our Country
by Alexander L. Lacson
Keil & Delitzsch
Commentary on the Old Testament
(Exodus 4)
Exo 4:1-9 -
Moses now started a fresh difficulty: the Israelites
would not believe that Jehovah had appeared to him. There was so
far a reason for this difficulty, that from the time of Jacob-an interval,
therefore, of 430 years - God had never appeared to any Israelite. God
therefore removed it by giving him three signs by which he might attest
his divine mission to his people. These three signs were intended indeed
for the Israelites, to convince them of the reality of the appearance of
Jehovah to Moses; at the same time, as even Ephraem Syrus observed,
they also served to strengthen Moses' faith, and dissipate his fears as to
the result of his mission. For it was apparent enough that Moses did not
possess true and entire confidence in God, from the fact that he still
raised this difficulty, and distrusted the divine assurance, “They will
hearken to thy voice,”
Exo_3:18).
And finally, these signs were intended for Pharaoh, as is stated in
Exo_4:21; and
to him the
אֹתֹות
(σημεῖα)
were to become
מֹפְתִים
(τέρατα).
By these signs Moses was installed as the servant of Jehovah (Exo_14:31),
and furnished with divine power, with which he could and was to appear
before the children of Israel and Pharaoh as the messenger of Jehovah. The
character of the three signs corresponded to this intention.
Exo_4:2-5
The First Sign. - The turning of Moses' staff into a
serpent, which became a staff again when Moses took it by the tail, had
reference to the calling of Moses. The staff in his hand was his
shepherd's crook ( מַזֶּה
Exo_4:2,
for
מַה־זֶה, in this place alone), and represented his
calling as a shepherd. At the bidding of God he threw it upon the ground,
and the staff became a serpent, before which Moses fled. The giving up of
his shepherd-life would expose him to dangers, from which he would desire
to escape. At the same time, there was more implied in the figure of a
serpent than danger which merely threatened his life. The serpent had been
the constant enemy of the seed of the woman (Gen 3), and represented the
power of the wicked one which prevailed in Egypt. The explanation in
Pirke Elieser, c. 40, points to this: ideo Deum hoc signum Mosi
ostendisse, quia sicut serpens mordet et morte afficit homines, ita quoque
Pharao et Aegyptii mordebant et necabant Israelitas. But at the
bidding of God, Moses seized the serpent by the tail, and received his
staff again as “the rod of God,” with which he smote Egypt with great
plagues. From this sign the people of Israel would necessarily perceive,
that Jehovah had not only called Moses to be the leader of Israel,
but had endowed him with the power to overcome the serpent-like cunning
and the might of Egypt; in other words, they would “believe that
Jehovah, the God of the fathers, had appeared to him.” (On the special
meaning of this sign for Pharaoh, see
Exo_7:10.)
Exo_4:6-8
The Second Sign. - Moses' hand became leprous, and was
afterwards cleansed again. The expression
כַּשֶּׁלֶג
מְצֹרַעַת, covered with leprosy like snow,
refers to the white leprosy (vid.,
Lev_13:3). - “Was turned again as his
flesh;” i.e., was restored, became healthy, or clean like the rest of
his body. So far as the meaning of this sign is concerned, Moses' hand has
been explained in a perfectly arbitrary manner as representing the
Israelitish nation, and his bosom as representing first Egypt, and then
Canaan, as the hiding-place of Israel. If the shepherd's staff represented
Moses' calling, the hand was that which directed or ruled the calling. It
is in the bosom that the nurse carried the sucking child (Num_11:12),
the shepherd the lambs (Isa_40:11),
and the sacred singer the many nations, from whom he has suffered reproach
and injury (Psa_89:50).
So Moses also carried his people in his bosom, i.e., in his heart: of that
his first appearance in Egypt was a proof (Exo_2:11-12).
But now he was to set his hand to deliver them from the reproach and
bondage of Egypt. He put (הֵבִיא)
his hand into his bosom, and his hand was covered with leprosy. The nation
was like a leper, who defiled every one that touched him. The leprosy
represented not only “the servitude and contemptuous treatment of the
Israelites in Egypt” (Kurtz), but the
ἀσέβεια
of the Egyptians also, as Theodoret expresses it, or rather the
impurity of Egypt in which Israel was sunken. This Moses soon discovered
(cf. Exo_5:17.),
and on more than one occasion afterwards (cf. Num 11); so that he had to
complain to Jehovah, “Wherefore hast Thou afflicted Thy servant, that Thou
layest the burden of all this people upon me?...Have I conceived all this
people, that Thou shouldest say to me, Carry them in thy bosom?” (Num_11:11-12).
But God had the power to purify the nation from this leprosy, and would
endow His servant Moses with that power. At the command of God, Moses put
his hand, now covered with leprosy, once more into his bosom, and drew it
out quite cleansed. This was what Moses was to learn by the sign; whilst
Israel also learned that God both could and would deliver it, through the
cleansed hand of Moses, from all its bodily and spiritual misery. The
object of the first miracle was to exhibit Moses as the man whom
Jehovah had called to be the leader of His people; that of the second,
to show that, as the messenger of Jehovah, he was furnished with the
necessary power for the execution of this calling. In this sense God says,
in Exo_4:8,
“If they will not hearken to the voice of the first sign, they will
believe the voice of the latter sign.” A voice is ascribed to the
sign, as being a clear witness to the divine mission of the person
performing it. (Psa_105:27).
Exo_4:9
The Third Sign. - If the first two signs should not be
sufficient to lead the people to believe in the divine mission of Moses,
he was to give them one more practical demonstration of the power which he
had received to overcome the might and gods of Egypt. He was to take of
the water of the Nile (the river,
Gen_41:1) and pour it upon the dry land, and
it would become blood (the second
וְהָיוּ
is a resumption of the first, cf.
Exo_12:41). The Nile received divine honours
as the source of every good and all prosperity in the natural life of
Egypt, and was even identified with Osiris (cf. Hengstenberg, Egypt and
the Books of Moses, p. 109 transl.). If Moses therefore had power to
turn the life-distributing water of the Nile into blood, he must also have
received power to destroy Pharaoh and his gods. Israel was to learn this
from the sign, whilst Pharaoh and the Egyptians were afterwards to
experience this might of Jehovah in the form of punishment (Exo_7:15.).
Thus Moses as not only entrusted with the word of God, but also endowed
with the power of God; and as he was the first God-sent prophet, so was he
also the first worker of miracles, and in this capacity a type of the
Apostle of our profession (Heb_3:1),
even the God-man, Christ Jesus.
Exo 4:10-18 -
Moses raised another difficulty. “I am not a man of
words,” he said (i.e., I do not possess the gift of speech), “but
am heavy in mouth and heavy in tongue” (i.e., I find a difficulty in
the use of mouth and tongue, not exactly “stammering”); and that “both
of yesterday and the day before” (i.e., from the very first,
Gen_31:2), “and
also since Thy speaking to Thy servant.” Moses meant to say, “I
neither possess the gift of speech by nature, nor have I received it since
Thou hast spoken to me.”
Exo_4:11-12
Jehovah both could and would provide for this defect.
He had made man's mouth, and He made dumb or deaf, seeing or blind. He
possessed unlimited power over all the senses, could give them or take
them away; and He would be with Moses' mouth, and teach him what he was to
say, i.e., impart to him the necessary qualification both as to matter and
mode. - Moses' difficulties were now all exhausted, and removed by the
assurances of God. But this only brought to light the secret reason in his
heart. He did not wish to undertake the divine mission.
Exo_4:13
“Send, I pray Thee,” he says, “by whom Thou
wilt send;” i.e., carry out Thy mission by whomsoever Thou wilt.
בְּיַד
שָׁלַח:
to carry out a mission through any one, originally with accus. rei
(1Sa_16:20;
2Sa_11:14),
then without the object, as here, “to send a person” (cf.
2Sa_12:25;
1Ki_2:25).
Before
תִּשְׁלַח the word
אֲשֶׁר
is omitted, which stands with
בְּיַד
in the construct state (vid., Ges. §123, 3). The anger of God was
now excited by this groundless opposition. But as this unwillingness also
arose from weakness of the flesh, the mercy of God came to the help of his
weakness, and He referred Moses to his brother Aaron, who could speak
well, and would address the people for him (Exo_4:14-17).
Aaron is called
הַלֵּוִי,
the Levite, from his lineage, possibly with reference to the primary
signification of
לָוָה
“to connect one's self” (Baumgarten), but not with any allusion to
the future calling of the tribe of Levi (Rashi and Calvin).
הוּא
יְדַבֵּר
דַּבֵּר
speak will he. The inf. abs. gives emphasis to the verb, and
the position of
הוּא
to the subject. He both can and will speak, if thou dost not know it.
Exo_4:14-17
And Aaron is quite ready to do so. He is already coming
to meet thee, and is glad to see thee. The statement in
Exo_4:27,
where Jehovah directs Aaron to go and meet Moses, is not at variance with
this. They can both be reconciled in the following simple manner: “As soon
as Aaron heard that his brother had left Midian, he went to meet him of
his own accord, and then God showed him by what road he must go to find
him, viz., towards the desert” (R. Mose ben Nachman). - “Put the
words” (sc., which I have told thee) “into his mouth;” and I
will support both thee and him in speaking. “He will be mouth to thee,
and thou shalt be God to him.” Cf.
Exo_7:1, “Thy
brother Aaron shall be thy prophet.” Aaron would stand in the same
relation to Moses, as a prophet to God: the prophet only spoke what God
inspired him with, and Moses should be the inspiring God to him. The
Targum softens down the word “God” into “master, teacher.” Moses was
called God, as being the possessor and medium of the divine word.
As Luther explains it, “Whoever possesses and believes the word of
God, possesses the Spirit and power of God, and also the divine wisdom,
truth, heart, mind, and everything that belongs to God.” In
Exo_4:17, the
plural “signs” points to the penal wonders that followed; for only
one of the three signs given to Moses was performed with the rod.
Exo_4:18
In consequence of this appearance of God, Moses took
leave of his father-in-law to return to his brethren in Egypt, though
without telling him the real object of his journey, no doubt because
Jethro had not the mind to understand such a divine revelation, though he
subsequently recognised the miracles that God wrought for Israel (Exo 18).
By the “brethren” we are to understand not merely the nearer
relatives of Moses, or the family of Amram, but the Israelites generally.
Considering the oppression under which they were suffering at the time of
Moses' flight, the question might naturally arise, whether they were still
living, and had not been altogether exterminated.
Exo 4:19-31 -
Return of Moses to Egypt. -
Exo_4:19-23.
On leaving Midian, Moses received another communication from God with
reference to his mission to Pharaoh. The word of Jehovah, in
Exo_4:19, is
not to be regarded as a summary of the previous revelation, in which case
וַיֹּאמֶר would be a pluperfect, nor as the account
of another writer, who placed the summons to return to Egypt not in Sinai
but in Midian. It is not a fact that the departure of Moses is given in
Exo_4:18;
all that is stated there is, that Jethro consented to Moses' decision to
return to Egypt. It was not till after this consent that Moses was able to
prepare for the journey. During these preparations God appeared to him in
Midian, and encouraged him to return, by informing him that all the men
who had sought his life, i.e., Pharaoh and the relatives of the Egyptian
whom he had slain, were now dead.
Exo_4:20
Moses then set out upon his journey, with his wife and
sons.
בָּנָיו is not to be altered into
בְּנֹו,
as Knobel supposes, notwithstanding the fact that the birth of only
one son has hitherto been mentioned (Exo_2:22);
for neither there, nor in this passage (Exo_4:25),
is he described as the only son. The wife and sons, who were still young,
he placed upon the ass (the one taken for the purpose), whilst he
himself went on foot with “the staff of God” - as the staff was called
with which he was to perform the divine miracles (Exo_4:17)
- in his hand. Poor as his outward appearance might be, he had in his hand
the staff before which the pride of Pharaoh and all his might would have
to bow.
Exo_4:21
“In thy going (returning) to Egypt, behold,
all the wonders which I have put into thy hand, thou doest them before
Pharaoh.”
מֹופֵת,
τὸ
τέρας,
portentum, is any object (natural event, thing, or person) of
significance which surpasses expectation or the ordinary course of nature,
and excites wonder in consequence. It is frequently connected with
אֹות,
σημεῖον,
a sign (Deu_4:34;
Deu_6:22;
Deu_7:19,
etc.), and embraces the idea of
אֹות
within itself, i.e., wonder-sign. The expression, “all those
wonders,” does not refer merely to the three signs mentioned in
Exo_4:2-9, but
to all the miracles which were to be performed by Moses with the staff in
the presence of Pharaoh, and which, though not named, were put into his
hand potentially along with the staff. - But all the miracles would not
induce Pharaoh to let Israel go, for Jehovah would harden his heart.
אֶת־לִבֹּו
אֲחַזֵּק
אֲנִי,
lit., I will make his heart firm, so that it will not move, his
feelings and attitude towards Israel will not change. For
אֲחַזֵּק
אֲנִי
or
וְחִזַּקְתִּי (Exo_14:4)
and
מְחַזֵּק
אֲנִי
(Exo_14:17),
we find
אַקְשֶׁה
אֲנִי
in Exo_7:3,
“I will make Pharaoh's heart hard, or unfeeling;” and in
Exo_10:1,
הִכְבַּדְתִּי
אֲנִי
“I have made his heart heavy,” i.e., obtuse, or insensible to
impressions or divine influences. These three words are expressive of the
hardening of the heart.
The hardening of Pharaoh is ascribed to God, not
only in the passages just quoted, but also in
Exo_9:12;
Exo_10:20,
Exo_10:27;
Exo_11:10;
Exo_14:8;
that is to say, ten times in all; and that not merely as foreknown or
foretold by Jehovah, but as caused and effected by Him. In the last five
passages it is invariably stated that “Jehovah hardened (יְהַזֵּק)
Pharaoh's heart.” But it is also stated just as often, viz., ten times,
that Pharaoh hardened his own heart, or made it heavy or firm; e.g., in
Exo_7:13,
Exo_7:22;
Exo_8:15;
Exo_9:35,
לֵב
וַיֶּֽחֱזַק “and Pharaoh's heart was (or became)
hard;” Exo_7:14,
לֵב
כָּבֵד
“Pharaoh's heart was heavy;” in
Exo_9:7,
ל
יִכְבַּד;
in Exo_8:11,
Exo_8:28;
Exo_9:34,
אֶת־לִבֹּו
וַיַּכְבֵּד
or
וְהַכְבֵּד; in
Exo_13:15,
פ
הִקְשָׁה
כִּי
“for Pharaoh made his heart hard.” According to
this, the hardening of Pharaoh was quite as much his own act as the decree
of God. But if, in order to determine the precise relation of the divine
to the human causality, we look more carefully at the two classes of
expressions, we shall find that not only in connection with the first
sign, by which Moses and Aaron were to show their credentials as the
messengers of Jehovah, sent with the demand that he would let the
people of Israel go (Exo_7:13-14),
but after the first five penal miracles, the hardening is invariably
represented as his own. After every one of these miracles, it is stated
that Pharaoh's heart was firm, or dull, i.e., insensible to the voice of
God, and unaffected by the miracles performed before his eyes, and the
judgments of God suspended over him and his kingdom, and he did not listen
to them (to Moses and Aaron with their demand), or let the people go (Exo_7:22;
Exo_8:8,
Exo_8:15,
Exo_8:28;
Exo_9:7).
It is not till after the sixth plague that it is stated that Jehovah
made the heart of Pharaoh firm (Exo_9:12).
At the seventh the statement is repeated, that “Pharaoh made his heart
heavy” (Exo_9:34-35);
but the continued refusal on the part of Pharaoh after the eighth and
ninth (Exo_10:20,
Exo_10:27)
and his resolution to follow the Israelites and bring them back again, are
attributed to the hardening of his heart by Jehovah (Exo_14:8,
cf. Exo_14:4
and Exo_14:17).
This hardening of his own heart was manifested first of all in the fact,
that he paid not attention to the demand of Jehovah addressed to him
through Moses, and would not let Israel go; and that not only at
the commencement, so long as the Egyptian magicians imitated the signs
performed by Moses and Aaron (though at the very first sign the rods of
the magicians, when turned into serpents, were swallowed by Aaron's,
Exo_7:12-13),
but even when the magicians themselves acknowledged, “This is the finger
of God” (Exo_8:19).
It was also continued after the fourth and fifth plagues, when a
distinction was made between the Egyptians and the Israelites, and the
latter were exempted from the plagues, - a fact of which the king took
care to convince himself (Exo_9:7).
And it was exhibited still further in his breaking his promise, that he
would let Israel go if Moses and Aaron would obtain from Jehovah the
removal of the plague, and in the fact, that even after he had been
obliged to confess, “I have sinned, Jehovah is the righteous one, I and my
people are unrighteous” (Exo_9:27),
he sinned again, as soon as breathing-time was given him, and would not
let the people go (Exo_9:34-35).
Thus Pharaoh would not bend his self-will to the will of God, even after
he had discerned the finger of God and the omnipotence of Jehovah in the
plagues suspended over him and his nation; he would not withdraw his
haughty refusal, notwithstanding the fact that he was obliged to
acknowledge that it was sin against Jehovah. Looked at from this side, the
hardening was a fruit of sin, a consequence of that self-will,
high-mindedness, and pride which flow from sin, and a continuous and ever
increasing abuse of that freedom of the will which is innate in man, and
which involves the possibility of obstinate resistance to the word and
chastisement of God even until death. As the freedom of the will has its
fixed limits in the unconditional dependence of the creature upon the
Creator, so the sinner may resist the will of God as long as he lives. But
such resistance plunges him into destruction, and is followed inevitably
by death and damnation. God never allows any man to scoff at Him. Whoever
will not suffer himself to be led, by the kindness and earnestness of the
divine admonitions, to repentance and humble submission to the will of
God, must inevitably perish, and by his destruction subserve the glory of
God, and the manifestation of the holiness, righteousness, and omnipotence
of Jehovah.
But God not only permits a man to harden himself; He
also produces obduracy, and suspends this sentence over the impenitent.
Not as though God took pleasure in the death of the wicked! No; God
desires that the wicked should repent of his evil way and live ( Eze_33:11);
and He desires this most earnestly, for “He will have all men to be saved
and to come unto the knowledge of the truth” (1Ti_2:4,
cf. 2Pe_3:9).
As God causes His earthly sun to rise upon the evil and the good, and
sendeth rain on the just and the unjust (Mat_5:45),
so He causes His sun of grace to shine upon all sinners, to lead them to
life and salvation. But as the earthly sun produces different effects upon
the earth, according to the nature of the soil upon which it shines, so
the influence of the divine sun of grace manifests itself in different
ways upon the human heart, according to its moral condition.
(Note: “The sun, by the force of its heat, moistens
the wax and dries the clay, softening the one and hardening the other;
and as this produces opposite effects by the same power, so, through the
long-suffering of God, which reaches to all, some receive good and
others evil, some are softened and others hardened.” - (Theodoret,
quaest. 12 in Ex.))
The penitent permit the proofs of divine goodness and
grace to lead them to repentance and salvation; but the impenitent harden
themselves more and more against the grace of God, and so become ripe for
the judgment of damnation. The very same manifestation of the mercy of God
leads in the case of the one to salvation and life, and in that of the
other to judgment and death, because he hardens himself against that
mercy. In this increasing hardness on the part of the impenitent sinner
against the mercy that is manifested towards him, there is accomplished
the judgment of reprobation, first in God's furnishing the wicked with an
opportunity of bringing fully to light the evil inclinations, desires, and
thoughts that are in their hearts; and then, according to an invariable
law of the moral government of the world, in His rendering the return of
the impenitent sinner more and more difficult on account of his continued
resistance, and eventually rendering it altogether impossible. It is the
curse of sin, that it renders the hard heart harder, and less susceptible
to the gracious manifestations of divine love, long-suffering, and
patience. In this twofold manner God produces hardness, not only
permissive but effective; i.e., not only by giving time and
space for the manifestation of human opposition, even to the utmost limits
of creaturely freedom, but still more by those continued manifestations of
His will which drive the hard heart to such utter obduracy that it is no
longer capable of returning, and so giving over the hardened sinner to the
judgment of damnation. This is what we find in the case of Pharaoh. After
he had hardened his heart against the revealed will of God during the
first five plagues, the hardening commenced on the part of Jehovah with
the sixth miracle ( Exo_9:12),
when the omnipotence of God was displayed with such energy that even the
Egyptian magicians were covered with the boils, and could no longer stand
before Moses (Exo_9:11).
And yet, even after this hardening on the part of God, another opportunity
was given to the wicked king to repent and change his mind, so that on two
other occasions he acknowledged that his resistance was sin, and promised
to submit to the will of Jehovah (Exo_9:27.,
Exo_10:16.).
But when at length, even after the seventh plague, he broke his promise to
let Israel go, and hardened his heart again as soon as the plague was
removed (Exo_9:34-35),
Jehovah so hardened Pharaoh's heart that he not only did not let Israel
go, but threatened Moses with death if he ever came into his presence
again (Exo_10:20,
Exo_10:27-28).
The hardening was now completed so that he necessarily fell a victim to
judgment; though the very first stroke of judgment in the slaying of the
first-born was an admonition to consider and return. And it was not till
after he had rejected the mercy displayed in this judgment, and manifested
a defiant spirit once more, in spite of the words with which he had given
Moses and Aaron permission to depart, “Go, and bless me also” (Exo_12:31-32),
that God completely hardened his heart, so that he pursued the Israelites
with an army, and was overtaken by the judgment of utter destruction.
Now, although the hardening of Pharaoh on the part of
Jehovah was only the complement of Pharaoh's hardening of his own
heart, in the verse before us the former aspect alone is presented,
because the principal object was not only to prepare Moses for the
opposition which he would meet with from Pharaoh, but also to strengthen
his weak faith, and remove at the very outset every cause for questioning
and omnipotence of Jehovah. If it was by Jehovah Himself that Pharaoh was
hardened, this hardening, which He not only foresaw and predicted by
virtue of His omniscience, but produced and inflicted through His
omnipotence, could not possibly hinder the performance of His will
concerning Israel, but must rather contribute to the realization of His
purposes of salvation and the manifestation of His glory (cf.
Exo_9:16;
Exo_10:2;
Exo_14:4,
Exo_14:17-18).
Exo_4:22-23
In order that Pharaoh might form a true estimate of the
solemnity of the divine command, Moses was to make known to him not only
the relation of Jehovah to Israel, but also the judgment to which he would
be exposed if he refused to let Israel go. The relation in which Israel
stood to Jehovah was expressed by God in the words, “Israel is My
first-born son.” Israel was Jehovah's son by virtue of his election to be
the people of possession ( Deu_14:1-2).
This election began with the call of Abraham to be the father of the
nation in which all the families of the earth were to be blessed. On the
ground of this promise, which was now to be realized in the seed of
Abraham by the deliverance of Israel out of Egypt, the nation of Israel is
already called Jehovah's “son,” although it was through the conclusion of
the covenant at Sinai that it was first exalted to be the people of
Jehovah's possession out of all the nations (Exo_19:5-6).
The divine sonship of Israel was therefore spiritual in its nature: it
neither sprang from the fact that God, as the Creator of all nations, was
also the Creator, or Begetter, and Father of Israel, nor was it founded,
as Baumgarten supposes, upon “the physical generation of Isaac, as
having its origin, not in the power of nature, but in the power of grace.”
The relation of God, as Creator, to man His creature, is never referred to
in the Old Testament as that of a father to a son; to say nothing of the
fact that the Creator of man is Elohim, and not Jehovah.
Wherever Jehovah is called the Father, Begetter, or Creator of
Israel (even in Deu_32:18;
Jer_2:27;
Isa_44:8;
Mal_1:6
and Mal_2:10),
the fatherhood of God relates to the election of Israel as Jehovah's
people of possession. But the election upon which the
υἱοθεσία
of Israel was founded, is not presented in the aspect of a “begetting
through the Spirit;” it is spoken of rather as acquiring or buying (קָנָה),
making (עָשָׂה),
founding or establishing (כֹּנֵן,
Deu_32:6).
Even the expressions, “the Rock that begat thee,” “God that bare thee” (Deu_32:18),
do not point to the idea of spiritual generation, but are to be understood
as referring to the creation; just as in
Psa_90:2,
where Moses speaks of the mountains as “brought forth” and the earth as
“born.” The choosing of Israel as the son of God was an adoption flowing
from the free grace of God which involved the loving, fatherly treatment
of the son, and demanded obedience, reverence, and confidence towards the
Father (Mal_1:6).
It was this which constituted the very essence of the covenant made by
Jehovah with Israel, that He treated it with mercy and love (Hos_11:1;
Jer_31:9,
Jer_31:20),
pitied it as a father pitieth his children (Psa_103:13),
chastened it on account of its sins, yet did not withdraw His mercy from
it (2Sa_7:14-15;
Psa_89:31-35),
and trained His son to be a holy nation by the love and severity of
paternal discipline. - Still Israel was not only a son, but the “first-born
son” of Jehovah. In this title the calling of the heathen is implied.
Israel was not to be Jehovah's only son, but simply the first-born, who
was peculiarly dear to his Father, and had certain privileges above the
rest. Jehovah was about to exalt Israel above all the nations of the earth
(Deu_28:1).
Now, if Pharaoh would not let Jehovah's first-born son depart, he
would pay the penalty in the life of his own first-born (cf.
Exo_12:29). In
this intense earnestness of the divine command, Moses had a strong support
to his faith. If Israel was Jehovah's first-born son, Jehovah could not
relinquish him, but must deliver His son from the bondage of Egypt.
Exo_4:24-26
But if Moses was to carry out the divine commission
with success, he must first of all prove himself to be a faithful servant
of Jehovah in his own house. This he was to learn from the occurrence
at the inn: an occurrence which has many obscurities on account of the
brevity of the narrative, and has received many different interpretations.
When Moses was on the way, Jehovah met him at the resting-place ( מָלֹון,
see Gen_42:27),
and sought to kill him. In what manner, is not stated: whether by a sudden
seizure with some fatal disease, or, what is more probable, by some act
proceeding directly from Himself, which threatened Moses with death. This
hostile attitude on the part of God was occasioned by his neglect to
circumcise his son; for, as soon as Zipporah cut off (circumcised) the
foreskin of her son with a stone, Jehovah let him go.
צֹור
= צוּר,
a rock, or stone, here a stone knife, with which, according to hereditary
custom, the circumcision commanded by Joshua was also performed; not,
however, because “stone knives were regarded as less dangerous than those
of metal,” nor because “for symbolical reasons preference was given to
them, as a simple production of nature, over the metal knives that had
been prepared by human hands and were applied to daily use.” For if the
Jews had detected any religious or symbolical meaning in stone, they would
never have given it up for iron or steel, but would have retained it, like
the Ethiopian tribe of the Alnaii, who used stone knives for that purpose
as late as 150 years ago; whereas, in the Talmud, the use of iron or steel
knives for the purpose of circumcision is spoken of, as though they were
universally employed. Stone knives belong to a time anterior to the
manufacture of iron or steel; and wherever they were employed at a later
period, this arose from a devoted adherence to the older and simpler
custom (see my Commentary on
Jos_5:2). From the word “her son,” it is
evident that Zipporah only circumcised one of the two sons of Moses (Exo_4:20);
so that the other, not doubt the elder, had already been circumcised in
accordance with the law. Circumcision had been enjoined upon Abraham by
Jehovah as a covenant sign for all his descendants; and the sentence of
death was pronounced upon any neglect of it, as being a breach of the
covenant (Gen_17:14).
Although in this passage it is the uncircumcised themselves who are
threatened with death, yet in the case of children the punishment fell
upon the parents, and first of all upon the father, who had neglected to
keep the commandment of God. Now, though Moses had probably omitted
circumcision simply from regard to his Midianitish wife, who disliked this
operation, he had been guilty of a capital crime, which God could not pass
over in the case of one whom He had chosen to be His messenger, to
establish His covenant with Israel. Hence He threatened him with death, to
bring him to a consciousness of his sin, either by the voice of conscience
or by some word which accompanied His attack upon Moses; and also to show
him with what earnestness God demanded the keeping of His commandments.
Still He did not kill him; for his sin had sprung from weakness of the
flesh, from a sinful yielding to his wife, which could both be explained
and excused on account of his position in the Midianite's house. That
Zipporah's dislike to circumcision had been the cause of the omission, has
been justly inferred by commentators from the fact, that on Jehovah's
attack upon Moses, she proceeded at once to perform what had been
neglected, and, as it seems, with inward repugnance. The expression, “She
threw (the foreskin of her son) at his (Moses') feet,” points to this (לְ
הִגִּיעַ,
as in Isa_25:12).
The suffix in
רַגְלַיו
(his feet) cannot refer to the son, not only because such an
allusion would give no reasonable sense, but also because the suffix
refers to Moses in the immediate context, both before (in
הֲמִיתֹו,
Exo_4:24)
and after (in
מִמֶּנּוּ,
Exo_4:26);
and therefore it is simpler to refer it to Moses here. From this it
follows, then, that the words, “a blood-bridegroom art thou to me,” were
addressed to Moses, and not to the boy. Zipporah calls Moses a
blood-bridegroom, “because she had been compelled, as it were, to acquire
and purchase him anew as a husband by shedding the blood of her son” (Glass).
“Moses had been as good as taken from her by the deadly attack which had
been made upon him. She purchased his life by the blood of her son; she
received him back, as it were, from the dead, and married him anew; he
was, in fact, a bridegroom of blood to her” (Kurtz). This she said,
as the historian adds, after God had let Moses, go,
לַמּוּלֹות,
“with reference to the circumcisions.” The plural is used quite generally
and indefinitely, as Zipporah referred not merely to this one instance,
but to circumcision generally. Moses was apparently induced by what had
occurred to decide not to take his wife and children with him to Egypt,
but to send them back to his father-in-law. We may infer this from the
fact, that it was not till after Israel had arrived at Sinai that he
brought them to him again (Exo_18:2).
Exo_4:27-31
After the removal of the sin, which had excited the
threatening wrath of Jehovah, Moses once more received a token of the
divine favour in the arrival of Aaron, under the direction of God, to meet
him at the Mount of God ( Exo_3:1).
To Aaron he related all the words of Jehovah, with which He had sent
(commissioned) him (שָׁלַח
with a double accusative, as in
2Sa_11:22;
Jer_42:5), and
all the signs which He had commanded him (צִוָּה
also with a double accusative, as in
Gen_6:22).
Another proof of the favour of God consisted of the believing reception of
his mission on the part of the elders and the people of Israel. “The
people believed” (וַיַּאֲמֵן)
when Aaron communicated to them the words of Jehovah to Moses, and did the
signs in their presence. “And when they heard that Jehovah had visited
the children of Israel, and had looked upon their affliction, they bowed
and worshipped.” (Knobel is wrong in proposing to alter
יִשְׁמְעוּ
into
יִשְׂמְחוּ, according to the Sept. rendering,
καὶ
ἐχάρη).
The faith of the people, and the worship by which their faith was
expressed, proved that the promise of the fathers still lived in their
hearts. And although this faith did not stand the subsequent test (Exo 5),
yet, as the first expression of their feelings, it bore witness to the
fact that Israel was willing to follow the call of God.
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The name Bethel comes from the Hebrew beth,
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