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A56633 A commentary upon the second book of Moses, called Exodus by the Right Reverend Father in God, Symon, Lord Bishop of Ely. Patrick, Simon, 1626-1707. 1697 (1697) Wing P775; ESTC R21660 441,938 734

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made him very unfit he thought to be an Ambassadour And this doth not disagree with what St. Stephen saith that he was mighty in Words as well as Deeds VII Acts 22. for the sense of what he spake was great and weighty though his pronunciation was not answerable to it Nor did his ill or weak pronunciation nor his slowness in bringing forth his words hinder him from being an excellent Judge and deciding Causes from Morning to Night as we read XVIII Exod. In the determination of which there was no need of Oratory but of a quick Apprehension exact Judgment and proper Language which he never wanted One would think also that by Use and Exercise he grew prompt in the delivery of his Mind for he made several very long Speeches to the People and especially an incomparable Discourse before his departure out of the World in the beginning of the Book of Deuteronomy In the latter end of which his Song shows that he wanted no eloquent words when he pleased to use them Ver. 11. And the LORD said unto him who hath made mans mouth c. Cannot I who formed all the Organs of Speech and made the rest of mens Senses and when I please deprive them of their use take away this Impediment of which thou complainest and make thee to speak as roundly and gracefully as any Man living The Authour of the Life of Moses who makes Pharaoh to have condemned Moses for killing the Egyptian c. See II. 15. fancies that God puts him in mind of his Deliverance at that time As if he had said Who taught thee to make thy Defence when thou wast Arraigned before Pharaoh Who made the King dumb that he could not urge and press thy Execution Who made the Executioner deaf that he could not hear the Sentence when pronounced And who made them all blind that they could not see when thou madest thy escape which is very ingeniously invented but we have no assurance of the truth of this Explication Ver. 12. Now therefore go and I will be with thy mouth and teach thee what thou shalt say Excuse thy self no longer but obey the Commission I have given thee and I will both help thy Speech and suggest to thy Mind what thou shalt deliver This doth not signifie as I take it that if he had without further disputing gone about his Business God would have given him a better Elocution but that he would have made his words as powerful as if they had been pronounced with the greatest advantage Or the meaning may be that he should never want either words or thoughts to instruct his Brother Aaron whom God always intended to send along with him Ver. 13. And he said O my Lord. The same form of Speech with that v. 10. Send I pray thee by the hand of him whom thou wilt send The Vulgar Latin having translated the word SCHILO XLIX Gen. 10. qui mittendus est him that is to be sent it hath inclined several great Men to think that Moses here desires God to send the MESSIAH And several of the ancient Fathers Just Mart. Tertull. and S. Cyprian c. were of this mind as many later Interpreters both of the Roman and of the Reformed Church have been Particularly Flacius Illyricus in his Clavis upon the word MITTO thus explains this Passage Manda id functionis c. commit this Office to the true Messiah or blessed Seed whom thou hast resolved to send who will discharge this Trust far better than I can do c. But there have been and are other very considerable Persons who think Moses means no more than this Send a more proper Person one sitter for this Imployment than I am And the truth is such Speeches as these in Scripture do not denote any certain Person or Thing but signifie something indesinite and in general Examples of which we have in 1 Sam. XXIII 13. 2 Sam. XV. 20. upon which Phrase Vado quo vado I go whither I may the same Flacius observes that it denotes an uncertain motion In like manner Moses here determines his desire to no particular Person but only wishes God would send any Body rather than himself And that he did not think of the Messiah there is this Argument that he had no reason to believe he was now born and yet God's Promise was to send one immediately to relieve the Israelites Upon which Errand also if he had prayed God to send him it would argue Moses to have been in the same Errour with the present Jews that the Messiah was to be a Temporal Deliverer Ver. 14. And the Anger of the LORD was kindled against Moses These words seem to import that God was highly displeased with him and consequently that he had very much offended him Yet some of the Fathers particularly St. Hierom and St. Basil impute his backwardness to serve in this Imployment unto his great Modesty Humility and a deep Sense of his own Infirmities of which the wisest and best Men are far more sensible than other Persons And then this Anger amounts to no more than such a Displeasure as a Father hath at his Child when he is too dissident notwithstanding all that he hath said and done to breed in him a just confidence And therefore no Punishment followed this Anger unless we think as R. Solomon doth that because of this backwardness God preferred Aaron's Family above his or that this was the Cause he would not Cure his Imperfection of Speech but only a Chiding which we may suppose went before the following Question Is not Aaron the Levite thy Brother which carries something of sharpness in it And indeed this may be said in Moses his Excuse That the most Excellent Persons are the least forward to embrace the Offers of great Advancement According to the observation of Plato L. I. de Republ which I find Eusebius also hath noted out of him L. XII Praep. Evang. c. 9. that no Magistracy being designed for the Profit of him that Governs but of those that are Governed I must needs conclude saith he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that no Man who is considerate he means will voluntarily take upon him the Government of a People but he must be hired to it or he must be punished if he will not undertake it For he that will use his Power well 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 never doth that which is best for himself but for those whom he governs Such an one was Moses who sought not his own Profit or Glory as those that now seek for great Places by which they design a Benefit to themselves and not to their Neighbours and therefore was not easily perswaded to accept of the high Authority which was offered to him Is not Aaron the Levite thy Brother One would think by this that Aaron was now a principal Person and of most eminent Quality in the Tribe of Levi as may be concluded also from his Marriage with the Sister of the
this Cloud stood just as it did here at the Door of it XII Numb 5. And stood at the door of the Tabernacle Openly to assert the Authority of Moses with whom God showed himself present though he had forsaken them And the LORD talked with Moses Which shows the Divine Glory was within the Tabernacle where Moses now was and so the People understood it as appears by the next Verse Ver. 10. And all the people saw the cloudy pillar stand at the Tabernacle door Which they knew was an evident Token that God was there And all the people rose up and worshipped every man in his Tent door Bowed themselves unto the Divine Majesty and humbly deprecated his Displeasure acknowledging we may reasonably think his great Goodness in condescending to appear again to them though at a distance from them Ver. 11. And the LORD spake unto Moses face to face In a familiar manner which did not affright or astonish him by a dreadful appearance of his Majesty which in the sight of the Children of Israel lookt like devouring fire XXIV 17. but appeared to Moses in a milder and more chearful brightness The like expression in XII Numb 8. seems to relate only to the Discourse he had with Moses which was clear and plain and by a Voice not in Visions and Dreams and obscure Resemblances and so it may be understood here as Maimonides takes it More Nevoch P. III. c. 45. But Abarbinel thinks that these Expressions signifie God treated with Moses in his own Person not by an Ambassadour just as one Friend converses with another And this is a common Notion among the Jews that God did not speak to Moses by an Angel but by himself which they take to be the meaning of this Phrase face to face Which seem to me rather to import the clearness and evidence of that Divine Light wherein God revealed himself to Moses whether it was by himself or an Angel it matters not Yet the New Testament determines this question when it tells us The Law it self was given by Angels in the hand of a Mediator And accordingly the old Tradition was That Moses saw things in a clear and bright Glass but the rest of the Prophets in a Glass that was dim and cloudy As a man speaks to his friend This is added to show how differently God treated Moses from all other Men. For he is said to have talked face to face with all the Israelites V. Deut. 4. but it was out of the midst of fire which struck a terrour into them whereas he spake to Moses out of the midst of a glorious but comfortable Light which gave him high satisfaction And he turned again into the Camp After some time spent in Conversation with the Divine Majesty he went to comfort the People it is likely with hopes of recovering his Favour of which they might have quite despaired if he had staid long from them But his servant Joshua a young man departed not out of the Tabernacle It is hard to tell for what end Joshua should stay behind his Master and it seems not decent that Moses should return alone without his Servant to attend him They that say he stayed to guard the Tabernacle have no foundation for it and they have not much who say he stayed to give Judgment in small Causes which needed not Moses his Resolution according to XVIII 26. For we never read that Joshua was a Judge but a constant Attendant upon Moses his Person And therefore the words may better be translated as they plainly run in the Hebrew He turned again to the Camp and his servant Joshua the son of Nun a young man At which there is a stop in the Hebrew over the word Naar young Man to distinguish these from the following words which are Departed not out of the Tabernacle That is the LORD departed not from thence but his Presence remained there and would not come into the Camp as Moses did And this Interpretation is the more likely because the last words in the Hebrew are out of the midst of the Tabernacle which cannot refer to Joshua because he did not go thither but only Moses who conversed alone with the Divine Majesty Why Joshua is called a young Man when he was near sixty years old is not easie to resolve Perhaps it signifies a valiant Man for so he was or he had waited on Moses from his youth or as Maimonides this is the Phrase of the Hebrew Nation who call all Men young till they begin to decay as Joseph is called when he was Thirty years old XLII Gen. 2. More Nevoch P. II. c. 32. Ver. 12. And Moses said unto the LORD When or where Moses spake what follows we are not here informed It is likely that after he was satisfied the People were very penitent he returned to the Tabernacle and there made this Address unto the Divine Majesty for a perfect Reconciliation with his People See A word imploring attention and regard to his Petition Thou sayest unto me Bring up this people Lead them to the Land of Promise XXXII 34. XXXIII 1. And thou hast not let me know whom thou wilt send with me Thou hast only said thou wilt send an Angel before me but I hope to obtain greater favour from thee which thou hast not yet declared to me And I have no heart to proceed if thou thy self wilt not guide us in the Pillar of Cloud as thou hast done hitherto and dwell among us as thou hast promised in thy Sanctuary This seems to be the sense if this Verse be compared with the 15th and not barely that he did not know what Angel he would send with him Yet thou hast said I know thee by name The Chaldee takes it to be the same with what is said of Bezaleel whom God called by name XXXI 2. that is particularly designed to make the Tabernacle and all belonging to it But to know is more than to call signifying God's special Love and Kindness to Moses above all Men as the LXX interpret it And thou hast also found grace in my sight God had often heard his Prayers for this People as he hoped he would do now For that was the effect of his being an acceptable person unto him which is the proper signification of this Phrase Ver. 13. Now therefore I pray thee if I have found grace in thy sight If I still continue in thy favour Shew me now thy way The Interpretation of Maimonides More Nevoch P. I. c. 54. is too much strained who thinks he here desires the knowledge of God's Attributes as v. 18. he desires the sight of his Essence The plain meaning of this Prayer is That God himself would conduct him and show him the way wherein he should lead his People unto their rest in the Land of Canaan XXXII 34. That I may know thee that I may find grace in thy sight That I may be fully assured of thy gracious acceptance of me And
which she her self said she had respect might have the same signification in her Language that it had in Hebrew there being a great affinity between these two Tongues See XL Gen. 45. Clem. Alexandrinus saith that the Name he had given him by his Parents at his Circumcision was Joachim Which he had I suppose out of some fabulous Book for in the same place he speaks of the Name was given him after he was translated to Heaven L. I. Strom. p. 343. Ver. 11. And it came to pass in those days when Moses was grown When he was not only arrived at Man's estate but was full Forty years old as St. Stephen observes VII Acts 23. and may be gathered from this History That he went out unto his Brethren c. He had a motion from God as St. Stephen there seems to interpret it to go and acquaint himself with the Condition of his Brethren and to own himself more than he had done hitherto to be one of them The Jews tell many Tales what passed between him and Pharaoh till this time but there is no more credit to be given to them than to what Artapanus an Heathen Historian relates of his Military Exploits in a War with the Ethiopians against whom Cenephres sent him as General of his Forces Though this is remarkable that his Name and several Passages of his Life mixed with some Fables were known to other Nations and by them magnified and admired As appears by what Eusebius hath extracted out of Artapanus Eupolemus Demetrius and other Heathen Writers L. IX Praepar Evang. c. 26 27 c. And looked upon their burdens Which he did very often as Philo understands it L. I. de Vita Mosis and not without great Grief and Heaviness that he was neither able to hinder their Oppression nor to help them under it But he exhorted Pharaoh's Officers to moderate their Severity and the Israelites to be patient in hope of Deliverance And he spied an Egyptian smiting an Hebrew The Cause of it is reported in The Life of Moses in Hebrew and in Schalsch Hakkabalah that this Egyptian had broken the Hebrew 's House and bound him and ravished his Wife and now endeavoured to murder him But this looks like a Tale which is a little better told by the Author of Schemoth Rabba and others mentioned by Mr. Selden L. II. de Synedr c. 1. who say that this Egyptian was one of the Taskmasters who called this Man out of his Bed in the Night to go to work and then took his opportunity to slip into it and lye with Selomith his Wife who took him for her Husband The plainest account and most likely is this of Philo in the place above mentioned that some of Pharaoh's Officers little differing from the most furious Beasts not at all mollified but more exasperated by Intreaties one of them of the most violent temper fell in an outragious manner upon an Hebrew because he did not do his work so fast as he would have him beating him most cruelly till he had almost kill'd him One of his Brethren All the Hebrews were his Brethren but this Man was of his own Tribe and one of the Children of Kohath as the forenamed Authors take it Ver. 12. And he looked this way and that way c. Round about him that he might not run into danger himself by delivering his Brother from it He slew the Egyptian Being stirred up to it by a Divine motion otherways he could not have justified this Fact to God and his own Conscience And therefore St. Stephen plainly makes this an Indication to the Children of Israel that God intended to deliver them by his means and says Moses thought they would have so understood it VII Acts 25. Nay Maimonides himself gives this account of it Pars II. Cap. XLV More Nevochim where he making this the first Degree of Prophecy when a Man is moved and animated by God to some great and heroick Enterprise either for the Preservation of the whole Church or the Deliverance of eminent Men from Oppression he reckons Moses among others as an Instance of it in these words Moses was indued with this Power when he grew up to be a Man by the impulse of which he slew the Egyptian and checked him who unjustly strove with one of his Brethren c. The Hebrews generally say that Moses did not kill this Man with a Sword or any other Weapon but meerly by the word of his Mouth pronouncing him Dead in the Name of God Which Tradition is so old that it is mentioned by Clemens Alexandrinus L. I. Strom. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. They that pretend to Secrets say that he killed the Egyptian with his word alone as Peter afterwards in the Acts killed Ananias and Sapphira And hid him in the Sand. An inaccessible Desert lay on the West of Egypt as Diodorus Siculus observes and there was another also on the East of it so that if this hapned upon the Borders there was Sand enough wherein to bury him Ver. 13. And when he went out the second day Having begun to Act by the Divine Commission he seems to have resolved every day to give proofs of his Authority and awaken the People to expect deliverance by his means And therefore went out among them this day as he had done the day before Behold Two Men of the Hebrews strove together He was surprized to find two of his Brethren contending one with another when they were so grievously oppressed by the Egyptians And he said to him that did the wrong Wherefore smitest thou thy fellow He had no less Authority to admonish and reprove his Brethren than to chastise their Oppressors Ver. 14. And he said Who made thee a Prince and a Judge over us It is plain by this that he acted as one that had Authority but this Man questioned from whence he had it Intendest thou to kill me as thou killedst the Egyptian It is not likely the Man thought he had any such intention but meant only to fright Moses from medling in his matters by letting him know that what he had done already was not such a secret as he thought it And Moses feared He had not yet received a Commission from God to act publickly as their Governour and therefore durst not stay to answer a Charge against him which he thought might be possibly brought for what he had done privately Some have troubled themselves to reconcile this with what the Apostle saith XI Hebr. 27. that he feared not the wrath of the King which doth not seem to agree with what is said here that Moses feared But there he may very well be thought to speak not of his flight out of Egypt but of his last departure with the whole body of the Israelites Though if we should allow Moses and the Apostle to speak of the same thing there would be no contradiction between them For he might so fear as to make him cautious and
not so in those Countries for the noblest Persons anciently rode on them as appears by a great many places of Holy Scripture XXII Gen. 1. XXII Numb 21. 2 Sam. XIX 6. and several others which are reckoned up by Bochart P. I. L. II. Cap. XIII Hierozoic And he returned to the Land of Egypt Set out and began his Journey to that Country And Moses took the Rod of God So called because God ordered him to carry it with him v. 17. and had appointed it to be the Instrument wherewith he should work wonders In his hand As a sign of his Authority So Conr. Pellicanus hath not unfitly explained it he returned with the Rod of God signo Apostolatus ducatus a sign or token of his Embassy and Government Ver. 21. And the LORD said unto Moses when thou goest to return into Egypt When thou art come thither See that thou do all those wonders before Pharaoh The Signs mentioned in the beginning of this Chapter with which he was to begin Which I have put in thy hand Given thee power to do But I will harden his heart c. The meaning is not that God would harden his heart at the first as soon as Moses began to work his Signs no more than that he would at the first slay his First-born as he threatens v. 23. But as at last he intended to slay his First-born if he would not be humbled by other Plagues so in conclusion he resolved to harden his heart after Pharaoh had often hardened it himself There are three distinct words used in this Story about this matter The first is Chazak the next is Rashah and the third is Cavad Which seem to signifie a gradual increase of his Obstinacy till at last it grew very grievous For the last word Cavad intends and increases the Sense whether it be in good or evil qualities Ver. 22. And thou shalt say unto Pharaoh In this God begins to fulfil his Promise to Moses that he would teach him what he should say v. 12. and 15 16. Thus saith the LORD This shows he came to Pharaoh in the Name and by the Authority of God Israel is my Son even my First-born Most dear to me and beloved above all People as the First-born Son commonly is above the rest of the Children God having chosen and adopted them to be his peculiar People on whom he bestowed singular Priviledges and Blessings Thus God speaks of David LXXXIX Psal 28. And Eben-Ezra's interpretation of this Phrase is not improper That Their Ancestors from the beginning had been Worshippers of him the true God Ver. 23. And I say unto thee I command and require thee so the word say here signifies Let my Son go that he may serve me Not to keep my People in thy Servitude any longer but to dismiss them that they may worship me as my Servants ought to do And if thou refuse to let him go behold I will slay thy Son even thy First-born Not upon his first refusal See v. 21. but after a long course of other Judgments which would end if he were not reformed by them in this at last With which he therefore terrifies him that he might prevent it Ver. 24. And it came to pass by the way To Egypt in the Inn where they took up their Lodging at Night That the LORD met him The SCHECHINAH I suppose appeared to him from whence an Angel was dispatched to do as follows And so both the LXX and the Chaldee interpret it The Angel of the LORD because the LORD sent an Angel to Execute what is here related And sought to kill him Appeared in such a manner as if he intended to fall upon him with a drawn Sword perhaps as he did to Balaam and David which threatning Posture could not but very much affright him and put him into disorder Others imagine he inflicted a sudden Disease upon him or made as if he would strangle him They that interpret this of killing his Child as many do See Mr. Selden L. I. de Synedr Cap. VI. p. 88. seem to me to have no reason on their side there being no mention of a Child in the foregoing Story but only of his Sons Therefore Chaskuni hath rightly observed that this Verse is connected with the last words of the 20th the three following coming by a Parenthesis and can refer to none but Moses All the difficulty is to find why the Angel of the Lord should put him in fear of present death when he was going upon God's Message The Resolution of which seems to be contained in the following words Ver. 25. Then Zipporah His Wife presently apprehended what was the Cause of Moses his danger viz. because her Child of which she is supposed to have been not long ago delivered was not Circumcised And therefore she immediately dispatcht that work her Husband being in such a Consternation that he could not do it himself but as Kimchi will have it called to her to do it or she of her self went about it having been the Cause that it was not done before Took a sharp Stone Or a sharp Knife made of a Flint for such they used which Justin Martyr in his Dialogue with Trypho calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And so the LXX and the Jews say that Knives were commonly used in this work And cut the foreskin of her Son But how come Moses to neglect this Duty Most say his Wife was unwilling to it not because she abhorred this Rite as cruel and unnatural for she was of a Race which came from Abraham who first received this Command of Circumcising all his Children and she understood it appears how to do it readily without indangering the Child which had scarce been possible if she had been a Stranger to it but because the Midianites perhaps did not Circumcise so soon as the Israelites but imitated their Neighbours the Ishmaelites who deferred it till their Children were Thirteen years old at which Age Ishmael was Circumcised XVII Gen. 25. or rather because they were about to take a Journey when she thought it might be omitted till they came to be setled among the Israelites And truly this seems to have been a good reason to defer Circumcision beyond the Eighth day motion being dangerous when the Child was sore But such a Man as Moses should have trusted God to take care of his Child and not have been afraid of the Consequence if he had performed his Duty And because he followed the tender Inclination of his Wife rather than a plain Precept XVII Gen. 12 13 c. he fell into this great danger Many other accounts are given of this for the truth is the whole matter is very obscure but I see none more probable than what I have mentioned And cast it at his feet It is uncertain at whose seet she cast it whether at he Husband 's or the Child's or the Angel's The first seems most probable if the next words be spoken to
here follows Ver. 19. Then the Magicians said unto Pharaoh This is the singer of God The same with what is called in other places of Scripture the hand of God CIX Psal 27. that is his Power There are those particularly Bochartus who think these Magicians did not by these words give Glory to God but thought to save their own Credit with Pharaoh by telling him that it was not Moses or Aaron who were too hard for them but a Divine Power superiour to them all To this purpose Jonathan But they ought then to have been sensible that the Power which they dealt withal was far from being Supream being unable to assist them upon all occasions And no doubt God intended to confound them by taking that time to disable them when they least expected it For why should not their Power have extended to such a small thing as this when they had done greater But God would not let them always abuse Pharaoh with their Illusions and gave them a check when they thought themselves most sure of Success And Pharaoh 's heart was hardned One would have rather expected to have heard that his heart began to relent when he saw his Magicians not only puzzled but quite bafled so that they owned Moses acted by a Power above theirs But this it was not to stick to the good Resolutions which had lately been wrought in him v. 8. from which he not only revolted but grew more resolute not to yield to God The effect of which was this further Induration it being natural for evil Men who resist the Means of their Cure to grow worse and worse affected This Miracle also of the Lice being more loathsom to Pharaoh than terrible might haply be the reason as Dr. Jackson conjectures that he did not intreat Moses and Aaron to pray for him as he had done upon the sight of the Frogs and as he straightway did after he felt the next Plague of the Flies I cannot but add also this further reflection of his Book X. on the Creed Chap. XL. that though the singer of God was very remarkable in producing the Lice which the Magicians could not yet it was no way remarkable in hardning Pharaoh's heart For it is neither said nor intimated that the singer of God hardned it but Pharaoh's heart was hardned that is remained obstinate The Cause of which was his not hearkning to them as it had been before v. 15. Ver. 20. And the LORD said unto Moses rise up early in the Morning and stand before Pharaoh As he had ordered him to do before he sent the second Plague VII 15. Lo he cometh forth to the Water This confirms what was said there that in the Morning it was usual with him to walk out by the River either for his Refreshment or for his Devotion Perhaps that after washing he might worship the Rising Sun For Moses is commanded to rise up early in the Morning and present himself before him And say unto him Thus saith the LORD let my People go c. The same Message he had often sent him VII 16 17. VIII 1. together with an Admonition and Warning of his Danger which God had not given him before the last Plague v. 16. Ver. 21. Behold I will send swarms of flies upon thee c. The Hebrew word Arob being generally thought to come from a word which signifies to mingle Interpreters commonly think it denotes a mixture of several sorts of Creatures And some take it as we seem here to do for all manner of Flies which Aquila calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all sorts of Insects Others take it as it is in our Margin for a mixture of noisom Beasts and so the Authour of The Life and Death of Moses God sent Lions Wolves Bears and Leopards and suck like wild Beasts which killed not only their Cattle in the Field but their Children in their Houses And so Josephus expounds it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But Bochartus hath confuted this Notion by very good Arguments in his Hierozoicon P. 2. L. IV. Cap. XV. where he shows no words have more significations than the Hebrew word Arab which signifies not only to mingle but among many other things to obscure and darken From whence the Even time is called Ereb And therefore with great reason he approves of the LXX Version who translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Flesh-sly very bold and troublesome being not easily drove away which infests Dogs very much especially about the flaps of their Ears Some take it for that large black fly which fastens upon Beasts and sucks their Blood called Arob from its black colour as Oreb from thence signifies a Crow And so Philo describes this fly called Cynomya that it is as impudent as a Dog and makes its Assaults with great Violence like a Dart fastning its Teeth so deep in the Flesh and sticking so close that it makes Cattle run mad This Plague the Jews say in the forenamed Book of The Life of Moses was sent upon the Egyptians because of the hard Service they made the Israelites undergo in feeding their Cattle Ver. 22. And I will sever in that day the Land of Goshen in which my People dwell c. Here now the distinguishing Mercy of God to the Israelites is plainly expressed which is to be understood in the foregoing Plagues And the Hebrew word as well as the Chaldee signifies I will make a wondrous difference So Jonathan in that day I will work a Miracle in the Land of Goshen For indeed it was a marvellous thing that Countries so near one another should be in such a different Condition at the same time And it was the more wonderful because there was such store of Cattle in Goshen whose Dung is apt to breed Flies That thou mayest know that I am the LORD in the midst of the Earth Who governs all things here below or that have a special care of my People For so Bochart understood by Earth the Land of Goshen In the midst of which God is said to be because he defended and delivered them from this sore Calamity which their Neighbours suffered For thus this Phrase is used in many places VII Deut. 22. XXIII 14. XLVI Psal 6 c. And thus Conr. Pellicanus seems to have understood this Passage which he interprets you shall know that I am the LORD and Prince of this Country Ver. 23. I will put a division between thy People and my People c. It is repeated again because it was a remarkable thing and denoted the Israelites to be God's peculiar People for whom he had a singular favour Which is the reason that this Mercy is called here a Redemption as the word in the Hebrew signifies which we translate division because God exempted and delivered the Israelites from those Flies which sorely infested all the rest of Pharaoh's Dominions To morrow shall this sign be The finger of God was so remarkable in the last Plague v. 19. that
Warning of their Danger that they might avoid it Ver. 20. He that feared the Word of the LORD among the Servants of Pharaoh c. That which is opposed to this in the next Verse is He that set not his heart unto the Word of the LORD or as we translate it regarded it not i. e. did not attend to what was said and done by Moses and seriously consider it Unto which the fear of God moves all those who are possessed with it and serious consideration will not fail to work in Men the fear of God and of his Judgments Ver. 21. And he that regarded not the word of the LORD c. This was the Cause of the Ruin of all that perished they did not set themselves to consider the irresistible Power of him who inflicted such terrible Judgments upon them as Moses threatned For at last they grew so stupid that they could not consider but were perfectly infatuated Ver. 22. And the LORD said unto Moses stretch forth thy hand With his Rod in it as it is explained in the next Verse and as he had directed on other occasions VIII 16 17. where it is said Aaron stretched out his and with his Rod. Towards Heaven To show the Plague was sent from God That there may be Hail on all the Land of Egypt c. Here he more fully expresses the Damage it would do both to Men and Beasts and to the Herb of the Field which comprehends all the Trees v. 25. Ver. 23. And Moses stretched forth his Rod. Sometimes Aaron did it but it was at the Command of Moses and as his Minister who sometimes did it himself and was Commanded by God so to do v. 22. He gave warning of this Plague about the fourth Day of the VIIth Month and inflicted it upon the fifth and removed it the sixth The Author of The Life and Death of Moses fancies that God sent this Plague to punish the Egyptians for the drudgery they imposed upon the Israelites in making them till their Fields for them And the LORD sent Thunder and Hail c. It was no wonder there should be Thunder but the Claps of this were far more terrible than any that had been heard before in that Country As the Hall also was more ponderous and came down with a greater force and was mixed with Fire Which the Author of the Book of Wisdom observes Chap. XVI as a thing unusual And herein consisted the miraculousness of this Plague That whereas other Storms of Hail generally reach but a little way sometimes not a Mile this spread it self over the whole Country v. 25. And Flashes of Lightning were not only mingled with it but Fire ran upon the Ground and killed their Cattle LXXVIII Psal 48. when at the same time all the Land of Goshen though a part of that Country felt nothing of this Storm v. 26. And the LORD rained Hail upon the Land of Egypt This is repeated to show that it fell as thick as Rain and was not a meer showr but a continual Hail and that this was the principal part of this Plague being alone mentioned v. 22. and 26. where nothing is said of Thunder or Fire and put in the first place by the Psalmist both in LXXVIII 48. and CV 32. Ver. 25. And the Hail smote c. That is killed every Man and Beast that was in the Field v. 19. And smote every Herb and broke every Tree of the Field Especially their Vines and Figtrees as the Psalmist tells us LXXVIII 47. CV 33. Very great Hailstones have fall'n in several Countries some of a prodigious bigness as credible Historians relate whereby some living Creatures have here and there been killed but none ever made such a general destruction as this Storm did Yet we are not to understand it as if no green thing escaped nor a Bough of any Tree was left but the meaning is that a great many of every kind were destroyed though some as appears by the following Chapter still remained Ver. 26. Only in the Land of Goshen c. So that the Egyptians that lived among them fared the better it is thought at this time for their sake Ver. 27. And Pharaoh sent and called for Moses and Aaron This is no more than he had done several times before VIII 8 25. but it may seem strange he should do it now after the LORD had hardned his heart The clearest account of it is that he acted now as a Man distracted and frighted out of his Wits which made him rave and cry out for help in very passionate words without any serious meaning I have sinned this time c. The meaning is not that he had not sinned before but I now acknowledge my Offence and the Justice of God in punishing the wickedness of me and of my People Which Confession doth not argue any tenderness of heart but was extorted by the horrible Fright he was in of being undone if he did not make some Submission Ver. 27. Intreat the LORD for it is enough Or beseech him that what I have already suffered may suffice That there be no more mighty Thundrings and Hail The words import frightful Claps of Thunder which sounded as if God was angry with them especially since the Hail fell like Thunder-bolts upon their Heads and struck those down that walkt abroad This was the reason that he begg'd their Prayers For he and his Servants could not always continue within Doors and while the Hail lasted there was no Safety abroad And I will let you go Not quite away but three days Journey into the Wilderness as they desired And ye shall stay no longer He promises to dismiss them immediately Ver. 29. And Moses said unto him as soon as I am gone out of the City By this he demonstrated the great Power of God who he knew would protect him from receiving any harm by the Thunder Lightning and Hail which killed all others that went abroad into the Fields I will spread forth my hands unto the LORD This was an ancient Posture of Supplication in all Nations as many Learned Men have shown whereby Men declared that God is the Giver of all good things and that they hoped to receive Help from him For our Hands are the Instruments whereby we receive any Gift that is bestowed upon us That thou mayest know how that the Earth is the LORD's Have a demonstration which was sufficient to make him know that the LORD governs all things as appeared by the ceasing of this dreadful storm upon Moses his Prayers to God as well as by the powring of it in such violence upon them Ver. 30. But as for thee and thy Servants I know that ye will not yet fear the LORD God The generality of the Court he knew would continue as obstinate as their Prince though some of them had some sense of God and of his Judgments as we read v. 20. Ver. 31. And the Flax and the Barley were smitten
world accounted Gods For he did not acknowledge any more Divine Powers than One but he speaks according to the common opinion Men had in those days of other Gods besides the most High This is a common acknowledgment of good Men in after times LXXXVI Psal 8 10. CXXXV 5. For in the thing wherein they dealt proudly he was above them If we refer this to what immediately goes before viz. all Gods the meaning is that the LORD appeared superiour to all the Egyptian Gods who insolently attempted by the Magicians to equal him in his wonderful Works but were baffled and exposed to contempt and at last thrown down in their Images VIII 19. IX 11. XII 12. But it is commonly thought to relate to the Egyptians and Pharaoh mention'd in the foregoing Verse and then the meaning is That the LORD confounded them that proudly contemned his Authority saying Who is the LORD c. V. 2. whom he forced to beg his pardon IX 27. and at last drowned him and his Host in the Red Sea when they said in an haughty boasting manner I will pursue I will overtake I will divide the spoil my lust shall be satisfied upon them c. XV. 9. And to this purpose the Chaldee expounds it In that very thing wherein they thought to judge i. e. to punish or destroy the Israelites they were judged themselves i. e. drowned in the Sea as they intended to drown all their Male Children Ver. 12. And Jethro Moses Father-in-law He is constantly thus described v. 1 2 5 6 7 8. and every where else but v. 9 10. to distinguish him from any other Jethro to whom these things might possibly be thought to belong Took a Burnt-offering Which was to be wholly consumed upon the Altar and nothing of it eaten by any body I Lev. 9. This now may be thought to have been done after the giving of the Law at Mount Sinai which Moses here mentions because he would put together all that belongs to Jethro's story though not all done at the very same time just as I said he did what belonged to the History of the Manna XVI 33 35. See there And Sacrifices i. e. Peace-offerings of which the People as well as the Priests were to be partakers VII Lev. 34. XXVI Deut. 7. And regularly there never was any Burnt-offerings made which were wholly consumed upon the Altar but Peace-offerings attended upon them if they were not Offerings for the whole Congregation but for particular Persons that so they who brought them might Feast also with God upon the Sacrifices For feasting upon Sacrisices was an Appendix unto all Sacrifices whatsoever one way or other if not by themselves yet by the Priests who eat of the Sin-offerings as the Proxies of the People Of this there are numerous Instances not only among the Jews after the Law was given but among other People who had this Custom antecedent to it As appears from XXV Numb 2. where the Midianites invite the Israelites to the Sacrifices of their Gods and the People did eat c. Which they did not learn from Moses but derived from higher Antiquity it is probable even from Abraham himself For God To be offered unto God Who offered them we are not told but it should seem by the word took that Jethro himself who was a Priest was permitted to perform this Office in token that they owned him to be a faithful Servant and Minister of the most High God as Melchizedeck was And accordingly it follows that Aaron was invited with the Elders of Israel to come and Feast with him upon these Sacrifices And Aaron came This seems to signifie that Aaron was but a Guest and had not been the Priest who offered the Sacrifice For though we suppose the Law to have been now given yet it is likely Aaron and his Sons were not yet consecrated nor the Service of God as yet ordered according to the Law that had been delivered no more then Judicatures were erected as after this they were by the advice of Jethro But of these things we can have no absolute certainty but only make probable conjectures And all the Elders of Israel See III. 16. To eat Bread To partake of the Sacrifices that had been offered for this comprehends the whole Meal XLIII Gen. 25. Before God Before the Tabernacle where God dwelt Or if that was not yet set up in the place where God appeared in an extraordinary manner which it is likely was in the Tent of Moses XXXIII 7. Ver. 13. And it came to pass on the morrow The next day after this Solemn Sacrifice which the Jews I observed above say was on the XIth day of Tisri So Sepher Mechilta and others from thence as Mr. Selden hath noted L. II. de Synedr c. 2. p. 75. That Moses sate That was the posture of Judges To judge the People To hear Causes and determine them And the People stood by Moses c. That was the posture both of the Plaintiff and the Defendant And there were now so may Causes brought before him that they took up the whole day so that he had not time to eat and refresh himself Ver. 14. And when Moses Father-in-law saw all that he did to the People He either was present and observed himself or was informed by others what insupportable pains he took He said what is this thing that thou dost to the People What a burden is this to judge the Causes of a whole Nation Why sittest thou thy self alone Takest more upon thee than any one Person is able to bear And all the People stand by thee from morning to the even Till both thou and they are tired Ver. 15. Because the People come unto me to enquire of God I cannot refuse to do Justice and there is none but my self to declare what the Law of God is in such Cases as are brought before me To enquire of God Doth not signifie here to desire him to consult the Divine Majesty for them but to decide their Controversies according to the mind of God declared in the Laws he had given him So the LXX to seek for judgment from God and the Vulgar to seek God's Sentence For what was determined according to God's Law was the Judgment of God and so it is called by Moses See Mr. Selden L. I. de Synedr c. 15. p. 610. Ver. 16. When they have matter Of Controversie They come to me That I may decide it And I judge between one and another Determine where the right lyes And I do make them know the Statutes of God and his Laws This explains what is meant by enquiring of God i. e. what was the Law of God in the Case brought before him From which we may probable gather that the Law was already given from Mount Sinai and all the other Laws and Statutes which follow Chap. XXI XXII XXIII before this hapned Unless we will say as some do that Moses was directed upon the spot as we speak by
when they found any too difficult they were to refer it to be heard by Moses himself So R. Leviben Gersom explains it Every great Cause in which they know not what to judge they shall bring to thee and thou shalt show what is right or how it is to be decided There are those indeed who think there were several sorts of Causes that might not be brought before these Inferiour Courts but were to be reserved for Moses's hearing and judging These they make to be Four First All Sacred Matters or Things belonging unto God which they gather from v. 19. Secondly All Matters of Equity where the rigour of the Law was sit to be mitigated Thirdly All Capital Causes And lastly Such as the Chiliarchs i. e. Rulers of Thousands and the other Judges referred to him But this is said without ground for it is plain all sorts of Causes might be determined by the inferiour Courts if they were able to make an end of them whether Civil or Sacred Only those which were too difficult for them that is when they did not find a Law to direct them or it was obscure or they could not agree about the Punishment then they were to be brought before Moses So he himself charges not that the People should bring such Causes to him as they thought difficult but that the Judges themselves should bring them i. e. order an Appeal to him I Deut. 17. bring it unto me speaking to the Judges and I will hear it Which shows the Cause had been at the Bar of other Courts before and that it was not unlawful for them to meddle with it if they had been able to determine it And accordingly we read here below v. 26. that the Judges did so In short these words do not intimate that there were some Causes the other Judges might not try if they were able but only that such things as they found themselves not skilful enough to determine they should bring to him See Mr. Selden in the fore-named Book p. 633 c. But every small matter they shall judge Hitherto Moses but heard all Causes promiscuously great and small but Jethro well advises him to delegate the labour of judging all Causes liquidi juris as the Lawyers speak where the Right was clear and to reserve no part of the Judicature to himself but where the Law it self was either defective or obscure So shall it be casier for thy self c. Thou wilt ease thy self of a great burden by appointing others to take their share of it Ver. 23. If thou wilt do this thing and God command thee so If thou wilt follow this advice by God's approbation who was to be consulted whether he allowed it Then thou shalt be able to endure Thy days will be prolonged which otherwise will be shortned with this intolerable labour And the People go to their place in peace Go home very much satisfied with such quick dispatch and happy composure of their Differences Ver. 24. So Moses hearkened to the voice of his Father-in-law c. Followed his Counsel by God's approbation with whom no doubt he advised v. 23. Here the Samaritan Copy inserts those words of Moses I Deut. 9 c. I am not able to bear you my self alone the LORD your God hath multiplied you c. Which he spake indeed when he made this Constitution but did not set it down in this Book where he intended only a short account of these Transactions Ver. 25. And Moses chose able men c. Out of those who were presented to him by the People See v. 20. Ver. 26. And they judged the People at all Seasons Whensoever they resorted to them For some Court or other sate every day that was not appointed by God for other Business i. e. for Religion The hard Causes they brought to Moses c. It is plain by this that the Judges not the People brought the hard Causes unto Moses For the People could not know whether they might not have a Remedy nearer hand than by going to him on all occasions till they had tried Ver. 27. And Moses let his Father-in-law depart After he had staid some time with him and could not prevail with him to stay longer which he earnestly desired and go with them to see the Accomplishment of God's Promises to them as those words X Numb 29 c. are thought to signifie But perhaps that Hobab there mentioned was not Jethro himself but his Son whom Moses also perswaded not to return to his own Country for he makes no reply much less denies to stay with Moses when he pressed him the second time though he refused at first v. 32. But this I shall consider in that place And he went his way into his own Land To make his Children or the People of the Land Proselytes saith the Chaldee Paraphrase Which it's probable he indeavoured i. e. to bring them to true Religion and affected in some measure so that Piety was propagated in some Families among them to future Generations For the Rechabites came out of this Country 1 Chron. II. 55. whose vertue Jeremiah Praises in the latter end of the Jewish Church Chap. XXXV CHAP. XIX Verse 1. IN the third Month. Or in the third new Moon For the Hebrew word Chodesh signifies a new Moon as well as a Month nay that is the prime signification from whence the other is derived And so we are to understand it here that on the New Moon i. e. the first day of the third Month called Sivan after their coming out of Egypt they came into the Wilderness of Sinai Which was just XLV days after they departed out of Egypt For if we add to the XV. days of the first Month XXIX which made the second these put together with this New Moon make XLV Unto which if we add that day when Moses went up to God v. 3. and reported when he came down the Message God sent by him to the Elders of Israel and the next day after when he returned their Answer unto God v. 7 8. with the three days more which God gave them to prepare themselves for his coming down among them v. 10 11. there were just Fifty days from their Passover to the giving of the Law upon Mount Sinai which laid the Foundation of the great Feast of Pentecost The same day i. e. On the fore-mentioned New Moon of the third Month. Came they into the Wilderness of Sinai So called from that famous Mountain Sinai which gave the name to the Wilderness which lay before it This Mountain was also called Horeb IV Deut. 10. they being only different tops of one and the same Mountain but this higher than Horeb so that one may see the Red Sea from them as they that have travelled into those Parts affirm Who say it is now called by the Arabians Tur and by Christians the Mountain of St. Catherine Ver. 2. For they were departed from Rephidim c. They began to move from
Rephidim toward that part of the Mountain called Horeb upon their murmuring for want of Water XVII 5 6. But seem to have returned thither to fight with Amalek v. 8. And then they were led by God to this other side of the Mountain which is called the Wilderness of Sinai There Israel encamped before the Mount For the glorious Cloud having led them hither rested upon the Mount as appears from the words following Ver. 3. And Moses went up unto God Whose glorious Majesty appeared upon the Mount And the LORD called unto him out of the Mountain Or rather for the LORD called to him out of the Mountain where the Divine Glory rested unto which he would not have presumed to go if the LORD had not called to him to come up thither Which was upon the second day of the third Month. Thus shalt thou say to the House of Jacob and tell the Children of Israel There was some reason sure for calling them by these two names the House of Jacob and the Children of Israel which perhaps was to put them in mind that they who had lately been as low as Jacob when he went to Padan-Aram were now grown as great as God made him when he came from thence and was called Israel Ver. 4. You have seen There needs no proof for you your selves are witnesses What I did unto the Egyptians Smote them with divers sore Plagues and at last drowned them and their Chariots in the Red Sea And how I bare you on Eagles wings Kept you so safe and placed you so far out of the reach of your Enemies as if you had been borne up on high by an Eagle Which are observed to carry their young ones not in their feet as other Birds were wont to do but on their Wings and to soar so high and with so swift a motion that none can pursue them much less touch them Bochartus hath observed all the Properties ascribed to the Eagle with respect to which Interpreters have thought God's care of his People to be here compared with that Bird Hierozoic P. II. L. II. c. 5. But after all he judiciously concludes that Moses best explains his own meaning in his famous Song XXXII Deut. 11. where the Eagles fluttering about her Nest and making a noise to stir up her young ones to leave their dirty Nest and try their Wings represents the many means God had used to rouze up the drooping Spirits of the Israelites when they lay miserably oppressed under a cruel Servitude and incourage them to aspire after Liberty and to obey those whom he sent to deliver them And brought you unto my self And by that means brought you hither to live under my Government For this was the very Foundation of his peculiar Empire over them that he had ransom'd and redeemed them out of Slvery by a mighty Hand and stretched out Arm as he speaks XIII 3. IV Deut. 34. so as he had not delivered any other Nation and thereby by made them his own after an extraordinary manner peculiar to them alone This Joshua also recals to their mind when he was near his Death and renewed this Covenant of God with them XXIV 5 6 c. Ver. 5. Now therefore Having wonderfully delivered them and supported them in a miraculous manner by Bread from Heaven and Water out of a Rock he now proceeds to instruct them in their Duty as Greg. Nyssen observes L. de Vita Mosis p. 172. If you will obey my voice indeed c. If you will sincerely obey me as your King and Governour and keep the Covenant I intend to make with you then you shall be mine above all the People of the Earth whose LORD I am as well as yours but you shall be my peculiar Inheritance in which I will establish my Kingdom and Priesthood with such Laws as shall not only distinguish you from all other Nations but make you to excel them This is the sense of this verse and the following A peculiar treasure unto me i. e. Very dear to me and consequently I will take a singular care of you as Kings do of those things which they lay up in their Treasury So the Hebrew word Segullah signifies Which Origen proves they really were notwithstanding all the Calumnies of Celsus their Laws being so profitable and they being so early taught to know God to believe the Immortality of the Soul and the Rewards and Punishments in the Life to come and bred up to a contempt of Divination with which Mankind had been abused as proceeding rather from wicked Daemons than from any Excellent Nature and to seek for the knowledge of future things in Souls which by an extraordinary degree of Purity were rendred capable to receive the Spirit of God L. V. contra Celsum p. 260. And this the Author of Sepher Cosri happily expresses when he saith Our peculiar Blessings consist in the conjunction of Minds with God by Prophecy and that which is annexed to it that is as Muscatus explains it the Gift of the Spirit of God And therefore he doth not say in the Law if you will obey my voice I will bring you after Death into Gardens of Pleasure but ye shall be to me a People and I will be to you a God Pars I. Sect. 109. For all the Earth is mine Which made it the greater honour that he bare such a special love to them Ver. 6. And ye shall be unto me a Kingdom of Priests An honourable or a Divine Kingdom not like worldly Kingdoms which are defended by Arms but supported by Piety Or a Princely People that should rule over their Enemies For the same word signifies both Priests and Princes and in the first times of the World none was thought fit to be a Priest but he who was a King or the Chief of the Family as we see in Melchizedek and Jethro That God was peculiarly the King of this People I observed above III. 10. and here he expresly owns this peculiar Dominion over them by saying Ye shall be to me a Kingdom And one reason perhaps why he saith they shall be a Kingdom of Priests is because they were governed while they continued a Theocracy by the High Priest as the prime Minister under God who in all weighty Causes consulted God what was to be done and accordingly they ordered their Affairs XXVIII 30. XXVIII Numb 21. Which is the reason why God commands Moses to make such Garments for Aaron as should be for glory and beauty or for honour and glory as we read v. 2. of that Chapter i.e. to make him appear great like a Prince for they were really Royal Garments And for his Sons also he was to make Bonnets of the like kind for honour and glory v. 40. they being in the form of the Tiarae which Kings wore and are joyned in Scripture with Crowns XXIX Job 14. III Isa 23 c. Whence Philo says in his Book de Sacerd. Honoribus that the Law manifestly
days the Lord made Heaven and Earth There were two reasons for the Sanctification of this day One was because God rested from his Work of Creation on the Seventh day which is mentioned here the other was because he had given them rest from their Labours in Egypt which he mentions in the Vth of Deuteronomy There is no body hath explained both these better than Maimonides More Nevoch P. II. c. 31. There are two different Causes saith he for this Precept from two different Effects For when Moses first explained to us the cause of this Celebration in the Promulgation of the X. Commandments he saith it was because in six days the LORD made Heaven and Earth But in the repetition of them he saith Remember that thou was a servant in Egypt c. therefore the LORD thy God commanded thee to keep the Sabbath day V Deut. 15. The first Cause is the Glory and Magnificence of this day as it is said Therefore the LORD blessed the seventh day and sancified it II Gen. 3. This was the effect of that Cause for in six days he made Heaven and Earth this was the reason he means of the first Institution of the Sabbath but that he gave this Precept of the Sabbath unto us i.e. the Israelites and commanded us to observe it was from the other Cause which followed the first Cause because we were Servants in Egypt All which time we could not serve according to our own Will and Pleasure nor had any Rest or observed a Sabbath And therefore God gave us this special Precept of Resting and Cessation from Labours to joyn together these two Reasons viz. the belief of the beginning of the World which presently suggests to us the Being of God and then the memory of Gods Benefits unto us in giving us Rest from our intolerable Burdens in Egypt Wherefore he blessed the Sabbath day and hallowed it In the beginning of the World he blessed the Seventh day II Gen. 3. and now particularly chose this Seventh day for a Sabbath which he ordered them to observe in memory of their coming out of Egypt on that day as I observed XVI 5 23. By which he preserved in their minds that singular Benefit which he had bestowed upon them and most manifestly saith Maimonides in another place P. III. c. 43. procured great ease to all sorts of Men by freeing a seventh part of their Lives from wearisom Labour Which hath another Blessing in conjunction with it that it perpetually preserved and confirmed that most precious History and Doctrine concerning the Creation of the World Ver. 12. Honour thy Father and thy Mother In another place they are commanded to fear them XIX Lev. 3. and as here the Father is put before the Mother so there the Mother is put before the Father to show as Maimonides takes it in his Treatise called Memarim c. 6. that we ought not to make any difference between them but they are both equally to be honoured and reverenced Which is a Duty of such great concernment that we are taught by the placing of this Commandment immediately after those which peculiarly relate to God's Worship that next to his Majesty our Parents are to be honoured with that reverence love obedience and maintenance which is due to them And therefore notorious disobedience to them is threatned with death as well as Apostacy from God Wherein this honour or fear doth consist is taught in all Books of Religion and Mr. Selden hath named a great many things wherein the Jews place it as the Learned Reader may see L. II. de Synedr c. 13. p. 558 c. I shall only add that this was a Law among the Heathens mentioned by Saleucus Charondas and others in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let Children honour their Parents And thus Vlpian expresses it Filio semper honesta sancta persona Patris videri debet And afterward Filium Patrem Matrem venerari oportet With much more that Hen. Stephanus hath collected in his Fontes Rivi Juris Civilis That thy days may be long in the Land c. As disobedience to Parents is by the Law of Moses threatned to be punished with death so on the contrary long Life which is the greatest worldly Blessing is promised to the Obedient and that in their own Country which God had peculiarly inriched with abundance of his Blessings Heathens also gave the very same incouragement saying that such Children should be dear to the Gods both living and dead So Euripides 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And this famous Senarius mention'd by the fame Henr. Stephanus with many other notable Passages 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou shalt live long or as long as thou canst desire if thou nourish thy ancient Parents Whence children are called by Xenophon and others 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ver. 13. Thou shalt not kill After the Command about the respect due to Parents naturally follows the regard we ought to have to all other Men who spring from them And the greatest injury we can do another is to take away his Life whereby he is deprived of all the Enjoyments of this World and Humane Society it self is also wounded which cannot subsist if its innocent Members cannot be safe Innocent I say for this Commandment doth not hinder Men from defending themselves from violence XXII 2. nor forbids Magistrates to punish those with death who commit Crimes worthy of it for this is to preserve the Lives of other Men XXII 18 19 20. Ver. 14. Thou shalt not commit Adultery Next to a Man's self his Wife is nearer to him than any other Person they two being one flesh Which makes the injury done to him in her Person a breach of Humane Society next to Murder Nay the LXX place this Commandment before the other Thou shalt not kill Vertuous Woman valuing their Chastity more than their Lives and the Crimes to which meer Pleasure tempts Men being more grievous in the opinion of the great Philosopher than those to which they are stimulated by anger Whoredom is also forbidden in the Law of Moses and Incest as Wounding any Man is as well as Murder but in these X. Words which are a short Abridgment of their Duty it was sufficient only to mention the principal things of every kind which were hateful to God and injurious to Men. Ver. 15. Thou shalt not steal This was to injure Men in their Goods and Possessions either by open Rapine or by Craft and Cheating against which God intended to secure them by this Precept Several sorts of this Sin are afterwards mentioned in particular Laws Ver. 16. Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy Neighbour As our Neighbour is not to be injured by us in Deeds so not in Words by giving a false Testimony against him before a Judge which is the chief Sin of this kind This is both an injury to our Neighbour and an affront to God in whose place
consider that this Nation is thy people I do not beg this meerly upon my own account but for those who have been redeemed by thee out of the Land of Egypt and have engaged themselves to be thine by a Solemn Covenant XXIV and now return unto thee by Repentance v. 6. Ver. 14. And he said My Presence shall go with thee In the Hebrew My face i. e. I my self as the LXX translate it My Majesty as the Chaldee He promises that is to continue with them as he had done hitherto and not meerly send an Angel to accompany them but to lead and guide them himself by the Pillar of the Cloud and his glorious Presence in the Tabernacle And I will give thee rest Some think these words are particularly spoken to Moses and signifie that God would give him ease in this Point and quiet his Spirit which was now very solicitous about his Departure from them by returning to them But as the foregoing words are a Promise that he would take the Conduct of the People again so is this that he would not leave them till he had brought them to their rest Ver. 15. And he said unto him If thy Presence go not with us Some translate the words for he i.e. Moses had said unto him i. e. to God if thy Presence c. So that these words and the following are the reason of God's Answer to him v. 14. And if they be not thus taken one would have expected Moses should rather have given God thanks for his gracious Promise than further pressed him to it But the 17th Verse doth not well agree with this and therefore these words are to be looked on only as part of what Moses said to God after his Promise that his Presence should go with him Which he acknowledged to be the greater favour because otherwise he had rather never stir from the place where they now were Carry us not up hence Let us go no further if thou thy self dost not lead and guide us in our way Ver. 16. For wherein shall it be known here that I and thy people have found grace in thy sight How shall all the People round about us be convinced that we are not abandoned by thee in this Wilderness Is it not in that thou goest with us Is not this the great Demonstration of it that thou leadest us in a Pillar of Cloud and Fire Day and Night So shall we be separated I and thy people from all the people that are upon the face of the Earth This will distinguish us while it continues with us from all other People whatsoever none of which have such a Token of thy Presence with them The Manna indeed continued all this time to descend for their Sustenance which was a miraculous food but it might have been ascribed to other Causes if this glorious Token of God's Presence had not still appeared among them Ver. 17. And the LORD said unto Moses I will do this thing also that thou hast spoken Distinguish you from all other People not only by leading you in a Pillar of Cloud and Fire but dwelling among you as I designed XXV 8. For thou hast found grace in my sight and I know thee by name He owns Moses still to be most acceptable and dear to him as he had been v. 12. and therefore at his Intercession promises to be perfectly reconciled and return to his People Ver. 18. And he said I beseech thee Having obtained so much favour of God he presumes to ask something beyond all this but with all humility Shew me thy Glory In the Hebrew the word is hareni make me to see to signifie apprehend with the understanding not with the bodily eye More Nevoch P. I. c. 4. For by Glory he there understands cap. 54. the Divine Essence which he makes Moses to be desirous to apprehend which is not likely such a Man as he should think possible For thus he explains himself in his Book de Fundamentis Legis c. 1. n. 10. Moses desired to know the truth of the Divine Essence as one Man knows another whose Face he beholds and his Image is so engraven in his Mind that he Exists there distinguished from all other Men So he begs that the Divine Essence might be distinct in his Mind from all other Essences till he knew the truth of it as it is in it self But he confesses in another place of that Book cap. 64. That by the Glory of the LORD is many times understood a created Light or Splendor whereby God miraculously set forth his Majesty XXIV 26. and other places And I can see no reason why it should not so signifie here and the meaning be That he desired to see that glorious Presence or Face of God as it is called which he promised should go with them not vailed in a Cloud but in its full Splendor and Majesty For hearing him speak from the SCHECHINAH he supposed perhaps that God appeared therein in some visible shape which he desired to be acquainted withal To confirm this it is observable that God himself in his Answer to Moses calls this Glory his Face v. 20. as he had done v. 14 15. And thus R. Jehudah in the Book Cosri Pars IV. Sect. 3. towards the latter end of it seems to have understood it See upon v. 29. Ver. 19. And he said I will make all my goodness pass before thee Which Maimonides thinks signifies his making Moses to understand the Nature of all Creatures and how they are knit and united together and after what manner they are governed both in general and particular because when God had made all his Works he saw that they were very good I Gen. 31. But that Text is a very slender ground for such an Interpretation The LXX seem to come nearer to the matter who interpret this passage 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I will pass before thee with my Glory That is he promises to give him a Transient view of his Glory while it passed by him v. 22. though it could not be seen in its full Majesty And then the word tobhi which we translate my goodness must rather be rendred my beauty it being the same with glory only a softer word to express such a degree of its Splendor as would not hurt him but be delightful to him And thus the word tobh is used in the second Chapter of this Book v. 2. and 1 Sam. IX 2. Or if this be not the meaning all his goodness must signifie his gracious Intentions concerning the Children of Israel to whom he assures him he would fulfil all his Promises which was sufficient for him to know And I will proclaim the Name of the LORD before thee The LXX seem to have understood this right when they translated it I will call to thee by my Name saying the LORD is before thee That is lest when I pass by thee thou shouldst not observe it I will admonish thee by a Voice calling
a secret inspiration how to determine every Cause Ver. 17. The thing that thou dost is not good Neither profitable for thy self nor for the People as it follows in the next Verse Ver. 18. Thou wilt surely wear away Decay apace and without remedy as the Phrase in the Hebrew signifies Both thou and the People that is with thee Such tedious Attendance will impair them also as well as thy self For this thing is too heavy for thee c. Too much for one Man to undergo Ver. 19. Hearken now unto my voice Be advised by me I will give thee counsel and God shall be with thee Though I am no Israelite I will take upon me to be thy Counsellor and I doubt not God will show my Advice to be good by the good Success which will attend it Be thou for the People to Godward that thou mayst bring the Causes unto God Appoint others to hear Causes and do thou give thy self 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Worship and Service of God alone as Josepus expounds it L. III. Antiq. c. 3. or as Ruffinus glosses reserve thy self only to the Ministry of God to attend that is upon him and know his mind Which if it be the sense must be understood with this Exception only in greater Causes as it follows afterward which he was to hear himself And that may well be the meaning of these words When the People bring any matter to thee which is too hard for other Judges to determine v. 22. do thou if need be carry it to God that he may resolve thee Not that he was alway to consult the Oracle for he knew in most Causes the sense of God's Law but in some it might be necessary to have a particular direction from Heaven As in XV Numb 34 35. XXVII 5 c. Ver. 20. And thou shalt teach them Ordinances and Laws How these two differ is not certain but Ordinances are commonly taken to concern matter of Religion and Laws civil matters of Justice and Charity In both which he was if the Case required it to bring it to God and then to report to the People what his Resolution was about it And shalt shew them the way wherein they must walk How to behave themselves towards God And the work that they must do How to behave themselves one towards another Ver. 20. Moreover Now in order to this Thou shalt provide out of all the People Look out such Men as are qualified according to the following Directions Which he did in this manner as he himself relates I Deut. 13. where he saith to the People take ye wise and understanding men c. In the Hebrew it is give ye i. e. present to me such Men as you think sit for this office And then it follows I will make them Rulers over you They chose them and then he approved them and gave them authority Or perhaps they presented a good many whom they thought qualified and out of them he appointed such as he judged most meet And thus he saith again v. 15. So I took the chief of the Tribes c. See Mr. Selden L. I. de Synedr c. 15. p. 632. Able men Men able to endure labour or Men who are not needy but rich and wealthy or Men of Parts or Men of Courage for it may refer to any of these especially the last such as did not fear potent Persons but God alone as it here follows Such as fear God Men truly Religious who would fear to offend God by doing Injustice but not fear to offend Men by doing Right Men of Truth Honest upright Men whose love to Truth would make them sift it out by hearing both sides patiently with impartial attention and unbiassed affection Hating Covetousness Not greedy of Money but abhorring Bribes and all base ways of Gain Which as Demosthenes says 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 makes Judges besides themselves and no better than mad For all these good qualities they were to be eminent and noted among the People as Moses his words import I Deut. 13. where he bids them present to him not only wise men and understanding but also known among their Tribes generally accounted Men of Understanding and Integrity And place such over them to be Rulers of Thousands c. The Hebrew words are such that it cannot be determined by them whether this relate to the number of Rulers or of People that were to be ruled by them as Mr. Selden observes and discourses upon it very largely in the sore-mentioned place L. I. de Synedr c. 15. p. 615. Where he shows that Decem vir for instance was not only one set over ten but one of the ten Judges of which a Court consisted and so the rest may be interpreted But the most ancient and most received Sense is that he doth not speak of the Number of Judges for what a strange Court would that be in which there was a Thousand Judges but of the People of whose Causes they were to take cognizance And it is commonly thought also there was but one Ruler over a Thousand Families or Men it is uncertain which and so of the rest though the words may import more than one in each of these Judicatures whether greater or smaller The Talmudists make a prodigious number of Judges of each sort but it is most rational to think that Jethro's meaning was That he should constitute greater and lesser Judicatures according to the Division of their several Tribes into Thousands Hundreds Fifties and Tens and a competent number of Persons appointed to be Judges in these greater or lesser Courts For that their Tribes were divided into Thousands for instance is apparent from several places XXII Josh 14. VI Judg. 15. where Gideon saith my Family in the Hebrew it is my Thousand is the meanest in Israel 1 Chron. XII 20. V Mic. 2. These Thousands Corn. Bertramus takes to be Families whom the Hebrew call Houses which were divided into so many Heads as they call them as the Tribes were into Families And of these he thinks Jethro advises him to make such Rulers as are here mentioned of several degrees But others particularly Herman Conringius de Republ. Hebr. Sect. 19. think we are to understand only Rulers over a thousand Men not Families as it is certain in Military Affairs the Captains of thousands were only of a thousand Soldiers XXXI Numb 14. Rulers of hundreds Rulers of fifties and Rulers of tens There were four orders of these Rulers but whether there was a subordination of the lower order to the higher as in Armies there is of the Captain to the Colonel as we now speak and the Inferiors to him I cannot determine Ver. 22. And let them judge the People at all Seasons Sit every day some or other of them in their several Districts See v. 26. Every great matter they shall bring to thee Not if they were able to determine it themselves For they had power to hear all Causes but