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Youngs
Literal Translation
King
James Version
The 1599
Geneva
Study Bible
American Standard ASV-1901
Historical Book
Flavius Josephus
Philip Schaff
History
of the
Christian Church
8 Vol.
Keil & Delitzsch
OT Commentary
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What We Believe
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Sola Scriptura: The
Scripture Alone is the Standard
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Soli Deo Gloria: For the
Glory of God Alone
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Solo Christo: By Christ's
Work Alone are We Saved
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Sola Gratia: Salvation by
Grace Alone
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Sola Fide: Justification by
Faith Alone
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World Without End Ministry
P.O. Box 177
Cagayan de Oro
Central Post Office
Cagayan de Oro 9000
Mindanao, Philippines |
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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 17)
Exo 17:1-7 -
Want of Water at Rephidim. -
Exo_17:1.
On leaving the desert of Sin, the Israelites came
לְמַסְעֵיהֶם,
“according to their journeys,” i.e., in several marches performed with
encampings and departures, to Rephidim, at Horeb, where they found
no water. According to
Num_33:12-14, they encamped twice between the
desert of Sin and Rephidim, viz., at Dofkah and Alush. The
situation of Rephidim may be determined with tolerable certainty,
partly from Exo_17:6
as compared with Exo_18:5,
which shows that it is to be sought for at Horeb, and partly from the
fact, that the Israelites reached the desert of Sinai, after leaving
Rephidim, in a single day's march (Exo_19:2).
As the only way from Debbet er Ramleh to Horeb or Sinai, through
which a whole nation could pass, lies through the large valley of es-Sheikh,
Rephidim must be sought for at the point where this valley opens into the
broad plain of er Rahah; and not in the defile with Moses' seat (Jokad
Seidna Musa) in it, which is a day's journey from the foot of Sinai,
or five hours from the point at which the Sheikh valley opens into the
plain or er Rahah, or the plain of Szueir or Suweiri,
(Note: Burckhardt, p. 799; v. Raumer,
Zug der Israeliten, p. 29; Robinson's Palestine, pp. 178, 179;
De Laborde, comment., p. 78; Tischendorf, Reise i. p. 244.)
because this plain is so far from Sinai, that the
Israelites could not possibly have travelled thence to the desert of Sinai
in a single day; nor yet at the fountain of Abu Suweirah, which is
three hours to the north of Sinai (Strauss, p. 131), for the Sheikh
valley, which is only a quarter of a mile broad at this spot, and enclosed
on both sides by tall cliffs (Robinson, i. 215), would not afford the
requisite space for a whole nation; and the well found here, which though
small is never dry (Robinson, i. 216), neither tallies with the want of
water at Rephidim, nor stands “upon the rock at (in) Horeb,” so that it
could be taken to be the spring opened by Moses. The distance from Wady
Nasb (in the desert of Sin) to the point at which the upper Sinai road
reaches the Wady es Sheikh is about 15 hours (Robinson, vol. iii.
app.), and the distance thence to the plain of er Rahah through the
Sheikh valley, which runs in a large semicircle to Horeb, 10 hours more (Burckhardt,
pp. 797ff.), whereas the straight road across el Oerf, Wady Solaf, and
Nukb Hawy to the convent of Sinai is only seven hours and a half
(Robinson, vol. iii. appendix). The whole distance from Wady Nasb to the
opening of the Sheikh valley into the plain of er Rahah, viz., 25 hours in
all, the Israelites might have accomplished in three days, answering to
the three stations, Dofkah, Alush, and Rephidim. A trace of Dofkah seems
to have been retained in el Tabbacha, which Seetzen found in
the narrow rocky valley of Wady Gné, i.e., Kineh, after his
visit to Wady Mukatteb, on proceeding an hour and a half farther in a
north-westerly(?) direction, and where he saw some Egyptian antiquities.
Knobel supposes the station Alush to have been in the Wady
Oesch or Osh (Robinson, i. 125; Burckhardt, p. 792),
where sweet water may be met with at a little distance off. But apart from
the improbability of Alush being identical with Osh, even if al
were the Arabic article, the distance is against it, as it is at least
twelve camel-hours from Horeb through the Sheikh valley. Alush is
rather to be sought for at the entrance to the Sheikh valley; for in no
other case could the Israelites have reached Rephidim in one day.
Exo_17:2-6
As there was no water to drink in Rephidim, the people
murmured against Moses, for having brought them out of Egypt to perish
with thirst in the wilderness. This murmuring Moses called “tempting God,”
i.e., unbelieving doubt in the gracious presence of the Lord to help them
( Exo_17:7).
In this the people manifested not only their ingratitude to Jehovah, who
had hitherto interposed so gloriously and miraculously in every time of
distress or need, but their distrust in the guidance of Jehovah and the
divine mission of Moses, and such impatience of unbelief as threatened to
break out into open rebellion against Moses. “Yet a little,” he
said to God (i.e., a very little more), “and they stone me;” and
the divine long-suffering and grace interposed in this case also, and
provided for the want without punishing their murmuring. Moses was to pass
on before the people, and, taking some of the elders with him, and his
staff with which he smote the Nile, to go to the rock at Horeb, and smite
upon the rock with the staff, at the place where God should stand before
him, and water would come out of the rock. The elders were to be
eye-witnesses of the miracle, that they might bear their testimony to it
before the unbelieving people, “ne dicere possint, jam ab antiquis
temporibus fontes ibi fuisse” (Rashi). Jehovah's standing
before Moses upon the rock, signified the gracious assistance of God.
לִפְנֵי
עָמַד
frequently denotes the attitude of a servant when standing before his
master, to receive and execute his commands. Thus Jehovah condescended to
come to the help of Moses, and assist His people with His almighty power.
His gracious presence caused water to flow out of the hard dry rock,
though not till Moses struck it with his staff, that the people might
acknowledge him afresh as the possessor of supernatural and miraculous
powers. The precise spot at which the water was smitten out of the rock
cannot be determined; for there is no reason whatever for fixing upon the
summit of the present Horeb, Ras el Sufsafeh, from which you can
take in the whole of the plain of er Rahah (Robinson, i. p. 154).
Exo_17:7
From this behaviour of the unbelieving nation the place
received the names Massah and Meribah, “temptation and
murmuring,” that this sin of the people might never be forgotten (cf.
Deu_6:16;
Psa_78:20;
Psa_95:8;
Psa_105:41).
Exo 17:8-13 -
The want of water had only just been provided for, when
Israel had to engage in a conflict with the Amalekites, who had fallen
upon their rear and smitten it ( Deu_25:18).
The expansion of this tribe, that was descended from a grandson of Esau
(see Gen_36:12),
into so great a power even in the Mosaic times, is perfectly conceivable,
if we imagine the process to have been analogous to that which we have
already described in the case of the leading branches of the Edomites, who
had grown into a powerful nation through the subjugation and incorporation
of the earlier population of Mount Seir. The Amalekites had no doubt come
to the neighbourhood of Sinai for the same reason for which, even in the
present day, the Bedouin Arabs leave the lower districts at the beginning
of summer, and congregate in the mountain regions of the Arabian
peninsula, viz., because the grass is dried up in the former, whereas in
the latter the pasturage remains green much longer, on account of the
climate being comparatively cooler (Burckhardt, Syr. p. 789). There
they fell upon the Israelites, probably in the Sheikh valley, where the
rear had remained behind the main body, not merely for the purpose of
plundering or of disputing the possession of this district and its pasture
ground with the Israelites, but to assail Israel as the nation of God, and
if possible to destroy it. The divine command to exterminate Amalek (Exo_17:14)
points to this; and still more the description given of the Amalekites in
Balaam's utterances, as
גֹּויִם
רֵאשִׁית,
“the beginning,” i.e., the first and foremost of the heathen nations (Num_24:20).
In Amalek the heathen world commenced that conflict with the people of
God, which, while it aims at their destruction, can only be terminated by
the complete annihilation of the ungodly powers of the world. Earlier
theologians pointed out quite correctly the deepest ground for the
hostility of the Amalekites, when they traced the causa belli to this
fact, “quod timebat Amalec, qui erat de semine Esau, jam implendam
benedictionem, quam Jacob obtinuit et praeripuit ipsi Esau, praesertim cum
in magna potentia venirent Israelitae, ut promissam occuparent terram”
Münster, C. a Lapide, etc.). This peculiar significance in the
conflict is apparent, not only from the divine command to exterminate the
Amalekites, and to carry on the war of Jehovah with Amalek from generation
to generation (Exo_17:14
and Exo_17:16),
but also from the manner in which Moses led the Israelites to battle and
to victory. Whereas he had performed all the miracles in Egypt and on the
journey by stretching out his staff, on this occasion he directed his
servant Joshua to choose men for the war, and to fight the battle with the
sword. He himself went with Aaron and Hur to the summit of a hill to hold
up the staff of God in his hands, that he might procure success to the
warriors through the spiritual weapons of prayer.
The proper name of Joshua, who appears here for
the first time in the service of Moses, as Hosea ( הֹושֵׁעַ);
he was a prince of the tribe of Ephraim (Num_13:8,
Num_13:16;
Deu_32:44).
The name
יְהֹושֻׁעַ,
“Jehovah is help” (or, God-help), he probably received at the time when he
entered Moses' service, either before or after the battle with the
Amalekites (see Num_13:16,
and Hengstenberg, Dissertations, vol. ii.). Hur, who also
held a prominent position in the nation, according to
Exo_24:14, in
connection with Aaron, was the son of Caleb, the son of Hezron, the
grandson of Judah (1Ch_2:18-20),
and the grandfather of Bezaleel, the architect of the tabernacle (Exo_31:2;
Exo_35:30;
Exo_38:22,
cf. 1Ch_2:19-20).
According to Jewish tradition, he was the husband of Miriam.
The battle was fought on the day after the first attack
( Exo_17:9).
The hill (גִּבְעָה,
not Mount Horeb), upon the summit of which Moses took up his position
during the battle, along with Aaron and Hur, cannot be fixed upon with
exact precision, but it was probably situated in the table-land of Fureia,
to the north of er Rahah and the Sheikh valley, which is a fertile piece
of pasture ground (Burckhardt, p. 801; Robinson, i. pp. 139, 215),
or else in the plateau which runs to the north-east of the Horeb mountains
and to the east of the Sheikh valley, with the two peaks Umlanz and Um
Alawy; supposing, that is, that the Amalekites attacked the Israelites
from Wady Muklifeh or es Suweiriyeh. Moses went to the top of the hill
that he might see the battle from thence. He took Aaron and Hur with him,
not as adjutants to convey his orders to Joshua and the army engaged, but
to support him in his own part in connection with the conflict. This was
to hold up his hand with the staff of God in it. To understand the meaning
of this sign, it must be borne in mind that, although
Exo_17:11
merely speaks of the raising and dropping of the hand (in the singular),
yet, according to Exo_17:12,
both hands were supported by Aaron and Hur, who stood one on either side,
so that Moses did not hold up his hands alternately, but grasped the staff
with both his hands, and held it up with the two. The lifting up of the
hands has been regarded almost with unvarying unanimity by Targumists,
Rabbins, Fathers, Reformers, and nearly all the more modern commentators,
as the sign or attitude of prayer. Kurtz, on the contrary,
maintains, in direct opposition to the custom observed throughout the
whole of the Old Testament by all pious and earnest worshipers, of lifting
up their hands to God in heaven, that this view attributes an importance
to the outward form of prayer which has no analogy even in the Old
Testament; he therefore agrees with Lakemacher, in Rosenmüller's
Scholien, in regarding the attitude of Moses with his hand lifted up as
“the attitude of a commander superintending and directing the battle,” and
the elevation of the hand as only the means adopted for raising the staff,
which was elevated in the sight of the warriors of Israel as the banner of
victory. But this meaning cannot be established from
Exo_17:15 and
Exo_17:16.
For the altar with the name “Jehovah my banner,” and the watchword
“the hand on the banner of Jehovah, war of the Lord against Amalek,”
can neither be proved to be connected with the staff which Moses held in
his hand, nor be adduced as a proof that Moses held the staff in front of
the Israelites as the banner of victory. The lifting up of the staff of
God was, no doubt, a banner to the Israelites of victory over their foes,
but not in this sense, that Moses directed the battle as
commander-in-chief, for he had transferred the command to Joshua; nor yet
in this sense, that he imparted divine powers to the warriors by means of
the staff, and so secured the victory. To effect this, he would not have
lifted it up, but have stretched it out, either over the combatants, or at
all events towards them, as in the case of all the other miracles that
were performed with the staff. The lifting up of the staff secured to the
warriors the strength needed to obtain the victory, from the fact that by
means of the staff Moses brought down this strength from above, i.e., from
the Almighty God in heaven; not indeed by a merely spiritless and
unthinking elevation of the staff, but by the power of his prayer, which
was embodied in the lifting up of his hands with the staff, and was so far
strengthened thereby, that God had chosen and already employed this staff
as a medium of the saving manifestation of His almighty power. There is no
other way in which we can explain the effect produced upon the battle by
the raising and dropping (הֵנִיחַ)
of the staff in his hands. As long as Moses held up the staff, he drew
down from God victorious powers for the Israelites by means of his prayer;
but when he let it fall through the exhaustion of the strength of his
hands, he ceased to draw down the power of God, and Amalek gained the
upper hand. The staff, therefore, as it was stretched out on high, was not
a sign to the Israelites that were fighting, for it is by no means certain
that they could see it in the heat of the battle; but it was a sign to
Jehovah, carrying up, as it were, to God the wishes and prayers of Moses,
and bringing down from God victorious powers for Israel. If the intention
had been the hold it up before the Israelites as a banner of victory.
Moses would not have withdrawn to a hill apart from the field of battle,
but would either have carried it himself in front of the army, or have
given it to Joshua as commander, to be borne by him in front of the
combatants, or else have entrusted it to Aaron, who had performed the
miracles in Egypt, that he might carry it at their head. The pure reason
why Moses did not do this, but withdrew from the field of battle to lift
up the staff of God upon the summit of a hill, and to secure the victory
by so doing, is to be found in the important character of the battle
itself. As the heathen world was now commencing its conflict with the
people of God in the persons of the Amalekites, and the prototype of the
heathen world, with its hostility to God, was opposing the nation of the
Lord, that had been redeemed from the bondage of Egypt and was on its way
to Canaan, to contest its entrance into the promised inheritance; so the
battle which Israel fought with this foe possessed a typical significance
in relation to all the future history of Israel. It could not conquer by
the sword alone, but could only gain the victory by the power of God,
coming down from on high, and obtained through prayer and those means of
grace with which it had been entrusted. The means now possessed by Moses
were the staff, which was, as it were, a channel through which the powers
of omnipotence were conducted to him. In most cases he used it under the
direction of God; but God had not promised him miraculous help for the
conflict with the Amalekites, and for this reason he lifted up his hands
with the staff in prayer to God, that he might thereby secure the
assistance of Jehovah for His struggling people. At length he became
exhausted, and with the falling of his hands and the staff he held, the
flow of divine power ceased, so that it was necessary to support his arms,
that they might be kept firmly directed upwards (אֱמוּנָה,
lit., firmness) until the enemy was entirely subdued. And from this Israel
was to learn the lesson, that in all its conflicts with the ungodly powers
of the world, strength for victory could only be procured through the
incessant lifting up of its hands in prayer. “And Joshua discomfited
Amalek and his people (the Amalekites and their people) with the
edge of the sword” (i.e., without quarter. See
Gen_34:26).
Exo 17:14-16 -
As this battle and victory were of such significance,
Moses was to write it for a memorial
בַּסֵּפֶר,
in “the book” appointed for a record of the wonderful works of God,
and “to put it into the ears of Joshua,” i.e., to make known to
him, and impress upon him, that Jehovah would utterly put out the
remembrance of Amalek from under heaven; not “in order that he might carry
out this decree of God on the conquest of Canaan, as Knobel
supposes, but to strengthen his confidence in the help of the Lord against
all the enemies of Israel. In
Deu_25:19 the Israelites are commanded to
exterminate Amalek, when God should have given them rest in the land of
Canaan from all their enemies round about.
Exo_17:15-16
To praise God for His help, Moses built an altar, which
he called “Jehovah my banner,” and said, when he did so, “The
hand on the throne (or banner) of Jah! War to the Lord from
generation to generation!” There is nothing said about sacrifices
being offered upon this altar. It has been conjectured, therefore, that as
a place of worship and thank-offering, the altar with its expressive name
was merely to serve as a memorial to posterity of the gracious help of the
Lord, and that the words which were spoken by Moses were to serve as a
watchword for Israel, keeping this act of God in lively remembrance among
the people in all succeeding generations.
כִּי
(Exo_17:16)
merely introduces the words as in
Gen_4:23, etc. The expression
יָהּ
עַל־כֵּס
יָד
is obscure, chiefly on account of the
ἁπ
λεγ.
כֵּס.
In the ancient versions (with the exception of the Septuagint, in which
יה
כץ
is treated as one word, and rendered
κρυφαία)
כֵּס
is taken to be equivalent to
כִּסֵּה
(1Ki_10:19;
Job_26:9)
for
כִּסֵּא, and the clause is rendered “the hand upon
the throne of the Lord.” But whilst some understand the laying of
the hand (sc., of God) upon the throne to be expressive of the attitude of
swearing, others regard the hand as symbolical of power. There are others
again, like Clericus, who suppose the hand to denote the hand laid
by the Amalekites upon the throne of the Lord, i.e., on Israel. But if
כֵּס
signifies throng or adytum arcanum, the words can hardly be
understood in any other sense than “the hand lifted up to the throne of
Jehovah in heaven, war to the Lord,” etc.; and thus understood, they can
only contain an admonition to Israel to follow the example of Moses, and
wage war against Amalek with the hands lifted up to the throne of Jehovah.
Modern expositors, however, for the most part regard
כֵּס
as a corruption of
נֵס,
“the hand on the banner of the Lord.” But even admitting this, though many
objections may be offered to its correctness, we must not understand by
“the banner of Jehovah” the staff of Moses, but only the altar with the
name Jehovah-nissi, as the symbol or memorial of the victorious help
afforded by God in the battle with the Amalekites.
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