Selected quad for the lemma: judgement_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
judgement_n aaron_n adore_v name_n 20 3 4.7638 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

presently when I have noted that this Translation fashioned it with a graving Tool is not so agreeable to what here follows as another which the Hebrew words will as well bear After he had made it a molten Calf The words in the Hebrew are and he made it c. we translate them after c. to make this agree with what goes before according to our Translation he fashioned it with a graving Tool which may as litterally be translated he bound them up in a bag For we find the word jatzar which we here translate fashioned to have the signification also of binding or tying up and cheret in the Plural Number to signifie a bag 2 Kings V. 23. And thus the Prophet Isaiah as Bochart observes describes the making of Images XLVI 6. they lavish Gold out of the Bag and they make it a God Which agrees with what is here said of Aaron He received the Ear-rings and put them in a Bag and then having made a Mold cast them into it and made a golden Calf See v. 24. A molten Calf So he calls it because it was no bigger than a Calf though the Head was like an Ox and therefore as I observed before so called by the Psalmist What moved Aaron to represent God in this sigure is hard to resolve Most think he imitated the Egyptians among whom he had long lived which seems not to me at all likely since he had seen the Judgment that God executed against all their Gods XII 12. yet so great a Man as J. Gerh. Vossius hath taken a great deal of pains to prove that Joseph was adored by them under the Name of Apis and Serapis and that his Symbol was an Ox. This he hath laboured to support by many ingenious Conjectures But it is not likely if he were thus publickly honoured as a God that a King should arise who knew not Joseph i. e. had no regard to him I Exod. 8. and another succeed him who endeavoured to ruin all his Kindred The Worship of Serapis also was not so ancient for Herodotus saith not a word of it nor any Body else till the time of Alexander the Great and many Authors say it was brought into Egypt out of Pontus by Ptolomy See Bochartus in his Hierozoic P. I. p. 338. And though Apis was more ancient yet not of such antiquity as Moses as a very learned Person of our own Dr. Tenison now Archbishop of Canterbury hath shown in his Book of Idolatry Chap. VI. Part 4 5 c. And as for Osiris both Plutarch and Strabo say he was the same with Apis which was not then known as I have said in Egypt no more than Typhus or Typhon whom Philo thinks to be here intended but was certainly a later Invention and as Bochartus imagines represented Moses himself though very much disguised Cuperus indeed hath made it probable in his Harpocrates p. 83 c. that there was a Serapis worshipped in Egypt before that brought out of Pontus But whether it be so or no I do not take it to be at all material because it is not likely that Aaron would make such a Representation of the Divinity as was in use among them from whose Slavery God had lately deliver'd them For how could he think the LORD to whom he proclaimed a Feast would be pleased to be represented by any of those Idols on whom as I said before he had executed Judgment at their departure out of Egypt Or what reason is there to think the Israelites themselves could be inclined to think their God to be like any thing which that People worshipped who abhorred the Sacrifices which the God of Israel required Their Conjecture seems to me far more likely who think that Aaron in making this Calf took his pattern from some part of the SCHECHINAH which appeared to him and the Elders of Israel when they eat before God XXIV 10. attended with the Angels Some of which called Cherubim they think appeared with the faces of Oxen. But as there is no mention in that place of Cherubims nor of the Angels appearing in any shape whatsoever and Moses expresly saith the Israelites saw no manner of Similitude on the day when the LORD spake to them in Horeb IV Deut. 15. and therefore Aaron and the Elders in all probability saw none afterward so I think there is no evidence that the heavenly Ministers at any time appeared in this shape till the SCHECHINAH departed from the Temple in the days of Ezekiel See XXV 18 20. After all this considered Aaron seems to me to have chosen an Ox to be the Symbol of the Divine Presence in hope the People would never be so sottish as to worship it but only be put in mind by it of the Divine Power which was hereby represented For an Oxes head was anciently an Emblem of Strength and Horns a common sign of Kingly Power So they were among the Phoenicians as Pignorius observes in his Mensa Isiaca p. 15. out of Eusebius his Praepar Evang. L. I. cap. ult and among the Egyptians as Diodorus Siculus relates L. I. and among the Romans as appears by that famous story of Genucius Cipus in Val. Maximus L. V. c. 6. who when he was Praetor had Horns come out of his Head on a sudden as he was going out of the City to the Wars whereupon he was told Regem eum fore si in Vrbem revertisset That he should be a King if he returned into the City And something like it is related by Julius Capitolinus concerning Clodius Albinus at whose Birth a Cow brought forth a Calf with purple Horns which they lookt upon as signum Imperij a Token of Empire Which made the ancient Fathers perhaps when they spake of this Calf or Ox of Aarons mention only its Head For so doth Tertullian L. ad versus Judaeos c. 1. cum processisset eis bubulum caput and St. Cyprian Lactantius St. Hierom St. Ambrose and others Not because they thought Aaron made only the Head but because this was the principal part whereby God was represented And they said The People cried out aloud These be thy Gods O Israel Or as Nehemiah expresses it IX 18. This is thy God c. the Image or Symbol of the Divine Majesty or as Abulensis interprets it His Divine Vertue resideth in this golden Body The Plural Number is commonly used for the Singular especially when God is spoken of as I observed before XX Gen. 13. XXXV 7. 2 Sam. VII 23. Which brought thee up out of the Land of Egypt This shows they lookt upon this Ox only as a Representation of the Almighty LORD their God for it being but newly made they could not imagine they were brought by it from the Egyptian Slavery but by his Power which perhaps they fancied now resided in it Ver. 5. And when Aaron saw it he built an Altar before it As at the Peoples request he made it so he seeing them receive it with
thereof unto the rings of the Ephod with a lace of blue that it may be above the curious girdle of the Ephod A blue Lace or Ribbon being put through the two lower Rings of the Breast-plate and then through the Rings of the Ephod they by it were tied together a little above the girdle of the Ephod And that the Breast-plate be not loosed from the Ephod And thus being joyned they were not to be separated one from another no not out of the time of Ministration but always continued so fast together that the Ephod could not be put on without the Breast-plate Thus Maimonides and the Gemara c. 7. of Joma If any one remove the Breast-plate from the Ephod or the Staves from the Ark he shall receive forty stripes Ver. 29. And Aaron shall bear the names of the Children of Israel in the Breast-plate of Judgment upon his heart Appear in the Name of the whole People of Israel to beg direction of God in all difficult Cases When he goeth in unto the holy place Where with his Face toward the Ark where the Divine Glory sate he prayed to God for them For a memorial before the LORD continually That God might remember them when he remembred him daily of the Promises made to them and to their Forefathers Which in Scripture phrase denotes God's gracious hearing his Prayers when he addressed himself unto him in the manner he required For then he is said to remember his People when he granted their Desires and they remembred him when they did as he bad them Ver. 30. And thou shalt put in the Breast-plate of Judgment It is called both here and in the fore-going Verse the Breast-plate of Judgment not only for the reason there named but because the High Priest nay the whole Body of the Priests but he especially sate as a Judge to determine several Controversies as appears from many places X Lev. 11. XVII Deut. 8 9. XIX 7. XXXIII 8. 2 Chron. XV. 3. c. The Vrim and the Thummim There is not the least intimation any where what these were nor any direction given to Moses for the making of them as there is for the rest of the Priestly Attire Which may incline one to conclude one of these two things either that they were things delivered to Moses by God himself as the two Tables of Stone were or that they are not things different from the precious Stones before-mentioned But if the former of these were true I should think it would have been as plainly mentioned that God delivered these unknown things to him as that he did the two Tables of Stone The other hath something in the Scripture to countenance it For in the XXXIX Chapter of this Book where Moses sets down the making of all those things which are here ordered he mentions only the four rows of Stones in the same manner as he doth here but saith not a word of putting the Vrim and Thummim in the Breast-plate though he spake particularly of other things even of the Rings and the Chains and the Lace whereby it was tied to the Ephod And on the other side when he speaks of habiting Aaron with all these Vestments in order to his Consecration he only saith VIII Lev. 8. that he put the Breast-plate upon him also he put in the Breast-plate the Vrim and the Thummim but saith not a word of the four rows of Stones For which it is hard to give a reason unless it be because the Vrim and the Thummim were one and the same thing with the XII precious Stones So that it was indifferent whether he said Vrim and Thummim were put into the Breast-plate or the XII precious Stones which are the only things in all this description of the holy Vestments that can be thought to be Vrim and Thummim And indeed there being such a particular direction for every thing else and also a description of their form and fashion as that the Chains should be of wreathen work one cannot but think there would have been something said of these if they had been distinct from what was mentioned before Mr. Mede indeed thinks that nothing is said concerning them because they were things well known to the Patriarchs But this is well confuted lately by another great Man Dr. Pocock in his late learned Commentary upon the Prophet Hosea pag. 149. unto which I refer the Reader because I have other things to note and would not willingly enlarge too much on this Subject As for that which some have said concerning two little Images or Representations of Angels which were put in the hollow of the Breast-plate I see no foundation for such a Conceit One may better say that these two words Vrim and Thummim were written or wrought on the Breast-plate signifying that from hence they should receive the clearest and most perfect Resolution of all their Doubts And of this opinion was R. Asaria in his Meor Enajim c. 46. But if we take the former to be the truer Account that he only repeats what he said before as he doth what he had said of the Rings belonging to the Breast-plate v. 14 22. then the meaning is that the XII Stones should be the most sparkling and most perfect in their kind that could be got for Vrim all acknowledge signifies Fires or Illuminations and Thummim the greatest Perfection and that all belonging to the Breast-plate the Square stuff the Stones engraved the Rings the Chains and Lace should be prepared and made ready before they were set in the Breast-plate And of this opinion that the precious Stones were the Vrim and the Thummim were Josephus and the Talmudick Doctors who therein I take it were in the right though they do not give a likely account how the mind of God was declared by them And they shall be upon Aaron 's heart So it is said concerning the Names of the Children of Israel v. 29. which were engraven on the XII Stones and seems to confirm the fore-going Interpretation When he goeth in before the LORD To minister unto the Divine Majesty and to enquire of him which he did in the Holy Place standing with his Face towards the Ark in the Holy of Holies Into which he went only once a year upon a particular Business to expiate the Sins of the People and had not on these glorious Robes here mentioned but was only clothed in fine Linen as we read XVI Lev. And therefore it is strange that Buxtorf should say he went into the Sanctum Sanctorum with the Vrim and Thummim to enquire of God See his History of them cap. 1. where he alledges this Verse for it and cap. 3. And Aaron shall bear the Judgment of the Children of Israel By Judgment is here meant the Breast-plate of Judgment as it is called when he begins to speak of it v. 15. and in the fore-going Verse just as the Ark of the Testimony is sometimes called the Testimony Or else the meaning is that
Divinations upon the Water as a Magician Hierozoic P. 2. L. IV. Cap. XV. And thou shalt stand by the Rivers brink against he come Perhaps Pharaoh as the same Bochart observes had forbid him to come any more to the Court and so God directs him to take this occasion to meet with him And the Rod which was turned into a Serpent shalt thou take in thine hand To give him the greater Authority and to put Pharaoh in fear at the sight of that Rod which had lately swallowed up all the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Greg. Nyssen calls them Magical Staves which encountred him Ver. 16. And thou shalt say the LORD God of the Hebrews hath sent me unto thee saying See V. 3. To which add that it is plain by this whole Story that all the Messages delivered by Moses and all the Answers which Pharaoh returned were true and formal Treaties of a Solemn Embassage as Dr. Jackson speaks upon which Moses was sent to the King of Egypt from the LORD God of the Hebrews that is their King as he was become in a peculiar manner under whom Moses acted as his Deputy or Viceroy Let my People go that they may serve me c. The merciful kindness of God to an hardned Sinner is here very remarkable in renewing his Message and giving him Warning of what would come upon him if he did not yield Whereas he might in Justice have inflicted it without any Notice of his Intentions He sets before him also his Sin and his Danger in being hitherto Disobedient and behold hitherto thou wouldst not hear i. e. thou hast provoked the Divine Majesty by disregarding several Messages I have brought to thee from him Ver. 17. Thus saith the LORD Attend to this new Message I bring to thee in his Name In this thou shalt know that I am the LORD He had askt in a contemptuous way Who is the LORD and said after a supercilious manner I know him not v. 2. nor indeed cared to know him but slighted him and his Messengers as the word know not sometime signifies being as much as not to regard Therefore now he bids Moses tell him He would make him know that he was the Omnipotent LORD of the World by the change of the Waters of the River which Pharaoh perhaps adored into Blood Behold I will smite with the Rod that is in mine hand God and Moses are represented in this History as one Person according to what he had said v. 1. of this Chapter and therefore it was the same thing to say the LORD whose words Moses had begun to recite will smite or to say I will smite See v. 16. It is to be observed also that Aaron smote the River v. 19. but it being by Moses his Direction and Order it was counted his Act so that he might say I will smite c. The Waters of the River and they shall be turned into Blood This Plague was the more remarkable because as Theodoret here observes they having drowned the Hebrew Children in this River God now punishes them for it by giving them bloody Water to drink XII Wisd 7 8. And if they had the same Notions then that the Egyptians had in future times the Plague was the more terrible because it fell on that which they thought had some Divinity in it and as the same Theodoret observes was honoured as a God because it made Plenty when it overflow'd its Banks The Hebrew Doctors add another reason for this Punishment because the Egyptians had hindred them from their wonted Baptisms as the Authour of The Life and Death of Moses speaks that is saith Gaulmyn from Purifying themselves in the River by Bathing after they had lain in of their Children which in the scarcity of Water in that Country could no where be done but in the River Ver. 18. And the Fish that is in the River shall die c. Here are three grievous Effects of this Plague It deprived them of their most delicious Food for so their Fish were XI Numb 5. And took away the Pleasure they had of washing by the Rivers side because it stank both by the death of the Fish and the corruption of the Blood through the heat of the Sun by which means the Water was made unfit for their Drink Ver. 19. And the LORD spake unto Moses After he had been with Pharaoh and delivered this Message to him Say unto Aaron take thy Rod and stretch out thy hand This Warning being despised by Pharaoh who would not relent God requires them actually to do as he had threatned And now Moses had delivered his Rod to Aaron that he might by his Authority execute this Judgment Vpon the Waters of Egypt These are general words comprehending all the particulurs following Vpon their Streams There were seven Branches into which the River Nile was divided before it fell into the Sea which seem to be here understood being called IX Isa 15. the seven Streams or Rivers of Egypt Vpon their Rivers There were several Cuts made by Art out of every Stream to draw the Water into their Grounds which seem to be here meant by Rivers And upon their Ponds These were digged to hold rain water when it fell as it did sometimes and near the River also they digged Wells it is likely which may be here intended And upon all Pools of Water There were here and there other Collections of Water particularly in their Gardens derived by Pipes from the River into Cisterns In Vessels of Wood or of Stone Wherein Water was kept in private Houses for their present use Ver. 20. And Moses and Aaron did so as the LORD commanded c. This first Plague our Primate Vsher makes account was inflicted about the XVIIIth day of the Sixth Month which in the next year and ever after became the Twelfth Month. Artapanus tells this Story otherwise but it is evident he had heard of it among the Gentiles and Ezekiel the Tragaedian relates it all right together with the following Miracle See Euseb Praepar Evang. L. IX Cap. XXIX p. 442. Nor is there any thing more frequent in the Roman Story as Huetius observes L. II. Alnet Quaestion Cap. XII n. 12. than Relations of Rivers of Blood flowing out of the Earth Pits full of Blood showres of Blood and Waters of Rivers changed into Blood c. And he lift up the Rod and smote the Waters that were in the River c. Here is mention only of Smiting the Water in the River And it is likely that only the Waters of the River were turned into Blood as it here follows at the first lifting up of his Rod and then all the rest of the Waters mentioned in the precedent Verse Ver. 21. And the Fish that was in the River died c. All the effects of this Plague which were threatned v. 18. See there immediately following The first of which was the death of the Fish which perished in such great numbers that
the Waters were turned into Blood And that Calamity was not so universal neither being only in the River and some think only near the Court as this Murrain which was all over the Country and did them a far greater Mischief But having accustomed himself to do evil he grew still more obstinate and hardned in Pride and Covetousness For he doth not so much as pray to be delivered from this Plague which had done all the Execution he thought that was designed and he intended perhaps to repair his loss out of the Flocks and Herds of the Israelites which haply might make him less affected with this wonder than he had been with some of the former Ver. 8. And the LORD said unto Moses and Aaron The former Plague having so little moved his proud and stubborn heart the Lord instantly without any further Message to him as being now in Process of Sentence says Dr. Jackson commands them to bring another Judgment upon the Egyptians more dreadful and noysom than any of the rest had been Take to you handfuls of Ashes of the Furnace In which Pharaoh had made them labour IV Deut. 20. which moved God to punish him and his People with this Plague for their cruel usage of his People there And let Moses sprinkle it The Jews think God imployed him only in Executing this Judgment being much heavier than all the foregoing But both he and Aaron being commanded to take Ashes in the words foregoing as we read they did v. 10. it is more probable they both sprinkled and so the meaning is let Moses as well as Aaron sprinkle it Towards Heaven To show that the Plague came from thence In the sight of Pharaoh That he might be convinced of it Ver. 9. And it shall become small dust in all the Land of Egypt c. Instead of these Ashes which they threw up into the Air there came down a small Sleet as we call it like that of Snow or the Hoar-frost which scalded the Flesh of Man and Beast and raised a Blister in every part upon which it fell The Poison of which penetrating into the Flesh made sore swellings like those we now call Bubo's Insomuch that as Philo understood it L. I. de Vita Mosis they were full of Blotches from Head to Foot Certain it is that the Hebrew word Schechni signifies an Inflammation that made a Tumor or Bile as we translate the word XIII Levit. 18 19. which turned into such a grievous Ulcer that Moses speaks of it afterwards as an unusual Plague which he calls the Botch of Egypt XXVIII Deut. 27. Dr. Lightfoot indeed observes that in the Book of Job II. 7 8. it signifies only a burning Itch or an inflamed Scab an intolerable dry Itch which his Nails could not scratch off but he was glad to make use of a Potsherd to scrub himself But then he confesses that this Schechni here spoken of was higher than that having Blains and Boils that broke out with it which Job's had not So that the Egyptians he thinks were vexed with a double Punishment at once aking Boils and a fiery Itch. But our Interpreters take it otherwise and say that Job also was smote with Boils which in conclusion perhaps had a Scab that itched very much Ver. 10. And they took Ashes of the Furnace c. This Plague was inflicted about the third Day of the seventh Month according to Archbishop Vsher's Computation who thinks it probable as many others do that from hence the Tale was spread among the Heathens that the Egyptians drove the Israelites out of Egypt because they were Scabby lest the Infection should spread all over the Country For they endeavoured in future Ages to make it be believed that what befel themselves was a Plague upon the Israelites Ver. 11. And the Magicians could not stand before Moses because of the Boils c. This Plague seized on them as well as the rest of the Egyptians and that in the Presence of Pharaoh as these words seem to import which perfectly confounded them For though since the Plague of Lice which they could not counterfeit we read of no attempt they ventured to make to vie Miracles with Moses and Aaron yet they still continued about Pharaoh it appears from this place and endeavoured to settle him in his Resolution not to let Israel go perswading him perhaps that though Moses for the present had found out some Secret beyond their skill they should at last be too hard for him But now being on a sudden smote with these Ulcers they were so amazed that we do not find they appeared again to look Moses in the face For now as the Apostle speaks their Folly was manifested to all Men 1 Tim. III. 8 9. In that they could not defend themselves from this terrible stroke whick publickly seizing on them before Moses in the sight of Pharaoh and all his Servants rendred them so contemptible that we never hear more of them Ver. 12. And the LORD hardned the heart of Pharaoh c. If we suppose that the Magicians who had hitherto confirmed Pharaoh in his obstinacy were forced to withdraw in great Confusion when they were smitten with the Boils one would have thought the next thing we should have heard would have been that Pharaoh relented But here is not the least token of that mentioned in this History but rather the express contrary that God was so angry with him that he himself hardned his heart which he had never done before This hardning therefore which is said to be God's doing was something sure very extraordinary Yet it was not an infusion of any bad Qualities or ungodly Resolutions into Pharaoh's heart but only that God did not vouchsafe him those Convictions that might have softned him and gave him up to his own hearts lusts and likewise ordered things so to fall out that he should hereafter be made by them more and more obdurate For he had hardned himself against five Plagues therefore God leaves him to himself and resolves he shall continue in his hardness Accordingly he doth not so much as desire to be freed from this Plague no more than he had done in the former which was nothing so grievous The effect of such Induration is well expressed by Dav. Chytraeus in these words Cor induratum est quod nec compunctione scinditur c. An hardned heart is neither cut by Compunction nor softned by any sense of Piety It is neither moved by Prayers and Intreaties nor yields to Threatnings nor feels the smart of Scourges It is ungrateful for Benefits treacherous to Counsels sullen to Judgments shameless to things most base fearless of Dangers For getful of things past negligent of things present improvident for the future In short it neither fears God nor reverences Man As the LORD had spoken unto Moses The Margin of our Bible directs the Reader to IV. 21. where God saith I will harden c. See there and III. 19. And observe
he might do one Wonder after another till he had finished Pharaoh's Destruction See VII 3. Ver. 10. And Moses and Aaron did all these Wonders before Pharaoh This seems to be a Summary of what hath been said hitherto concerning the wonderful Plagues of Egypt which as God designed to inflict upon that Country so he did by Moses and Aaron as his Instruments And the LORD hardned Pharaoh 's heart so that he would not let the Children of Israel go c. The Obstinacy of Pharaoh under several severe Judgments is so notorious that it need be no wonder that the LORD himself hardned his heart so that he would not suffer the People to depart till what is here threatned was Executed upon him There is nothing more agreeable to the Rules of Justice than to inflict heavy Judgments upon contumacious Offenders and no Punishment heavier than to let them undo themselves by their own Wickedness and blindly run on without any stop in their evil Courses unto utter Ruin This was the Case of Pharaoh of which the Heathen had a broken Notion when they said Quos Jupiter vult perdere prius dementat Those whom God intends to destroy he first infatuates CHAP. XII Verse 1. AND the LORD spake unto Moses and Aaron c. We are not told here when the LORD spake this to them but it is very likely it was on the Tenth day of this Month before he brought the Plague of Darkness on the Land wherein he gave the Israelites opportunity to prepare for their Departure And then he changed this Month from the Seventh as it was before to the First as it here follows Ver. 2. This Month. Which in process of time was called Abib XIII 4. XXIII 15. because then the Corn was eared and grew towards ripeness for Abib signifies an Ear of Corn and was in after Ages called Nisan II Nehem. 1. III Esth 7. which is a Chaldee word denoting this to be the Month wherein they went out to War from Nissin which signifies Ensigns or Banners as Bochart probably conjectures which at that Season were usually advanced viz. in the Spring time So the Hebrews understand that place 2 Sam. XI 1. Shall be unto you the beginning of Months i.e. The principal Month of the Year It shall be the first Month of the Year to you And therefore was hereafter to begin the Year Which is a plain intimation that the Year had another beginning before this time which was in the Month they called Tisri about Autumn but was now translated unto the Spring And so we find that all the ancient Nations began their Year after their Harvest and Vintage which were the conclusion of their Year But from hence forward the Jewish Computation was from this Month of Abib at least as to their Feasts and Things Sacred though their Civil Year still began where it did before For after this we sind the old account continued as appears from the XXIII 16. where the Harvest is said to be in the end of the Year And yet the Author of Meor E Najim as Guliel Vorstius shows in his Observation upon R. D. Ganz affirms that the ancient Hebrews followed this new Account from the time of their going out of Egypt till the building of the Temple in all their Contracts and Affairs using this Aera of Exodus in memory of that illustrious Deliverance as after that time till the Captivity of Babylon they dated all their Writings from the Building of the Temple Ver. 3. In the Tenth day of this Month. This is a Law which hath respect to all future Ages as well as to this present Time that they should begin to prepare for the Passover four days before For which the Jews give such Reasons as these viz. It was necessary when they went out of Egypt to make this preparation lest a multitude of Business when they were pressed to be gone in haste should have made them neglect it And it was necessary afterwards that they might more narrowly observe if there were any Blemish in the Lamb and that they might be put in mind to dispose themselves for so great a Solemnity And it is observable that our Blessed Saviour the true Paschal Lamb came to Jerusalem on this very day viz. the Tenth of Nisan four days before he was offered XII Joh. 1 12. Yet there are those who think that this Precept was peculiar to this Time of their Departure out of Egypt For they that came in after Ages out of all parts of the Country to worship God at this Feast could not so well observe it unless we suppose them to have come some days before to Jerusalem as its certain some did XI Joh. 55. or to have sent before hand thither to have a Lamb prepared for them which is not unlikely They also who think the Egyptians now worshipped such kind of Creatures imagine withal that this day was chosen in opposition to them who because the Sun entred then into Aries began on this day the Solemn Worship of this Creature and of that Celestial Sign Thus the Author of the Chronicon Orientale in express words This was the day in which the Sun entred the first Sign of Aries and was most Solemn among the Egyptians And therefore God commanded the Israelites to Sacrifice that Creature which they worshipped But there is no certainty of this nor of what the Author of Tzeror Hamor observes that the Feast of the Egyptians being at its heighth on the fourteenth day God ordered the killing of this Lamb at that time which was the greatest contempt of their Coniger Ammon whom they worshipped then with the greatest Honours showing he could be no God whom the Israelites eat They shall take to them every Man a Lamb. The word Seh signifies a Kid as well as a Lamb XV Numb 11. XIV Deut. 4. and it is evident from the fifth Verse of this Chapter that they might take either of them for this Sacrifice But commonly they made choice of a Lamb as the fittest of the two being of a more mild and innocent Nature They that are of opinion the Egyptians now worshipped such Creatures imagine also this was ordained to preserve the Israelites from their Idolatry by commanding them to kill such Beasts as they adored So R. Levi ben Gersom God intended by this to expel out of the Minds of the Israelites the evil opinion of the Egyptians c. A Lamb for an House Some translate it for a Family But that is not true For as Tribes were divided into Families so were Families into Houses and when many Lambs were few enow for a whole Family some Houses were so small that they could not eat one and therefore were to call in the assistance of their Neighbours as it follows in the next Verse Ver. 4. And if the houshold be too little for the Lamb let him and his Neighbour c. They were not to be fewer than Ten Persons nor more than
this was and have been pleased to fancy that some Book which Moses wrote is lost When this plainly refers to what is said v. 4. where we read that Moses wrote all the words of the LORD that is the Commandments and Judgments mentioned in the four foregoing Chapters Which though they made no great Volume yet might be called a Book in their Language for even the Bill of Divorcement which they gave their Wives and was very short is called by this Name of Sepher a Book XXIV Deut. 1. Of the Covenant That they might remember upon what terms he would bestow upon them the fore-named Blessings he engages them in a Solemn Covenant to observe the Commandments and Judgments contained in this Book Ver. 8. And Moses took the blood That half of it which was in the Basons v. 6. And sprinkled it on the people As he had sprinkled one half on the Altar in token God was a Party in the Covenant so he sprinkled the other half on the XII Pillars which represented the Children of Israel in token that they were the other Party engaged in the same Covenant Thus our fore-named Primate and several others understand it and it carries some show of probability in it Yet I cannot think it unlikely that it was sprinkled upon the LXX Elders by whom the People consented if not upon all the People who stood next to the Altar and are here expresly mentioned The Apostle to the Hebrews IX 19. saith he sprinkled the Book as well as the People which is not here mentioned but supposed For when he went to sprinkle the Blood we must conceive he laid down the Book that he might be at more liberty for this other action And perhaps he laid it on one of the Pillars where it was sprinkled as they were together with the People whom they represented And said Behold the Blood of the Covenant which the LORD hath made with you concerning all these words Look upon your selves as obliged by this Blood to observe all the Commands which I have delivered to you in the words you have heard For there were two ways of making Covenants anciently both which were here used The first was after a Sacrifice had been offered to sprinkle the Blood of it upon both Parties who were to be Confederates which was done here v. 6 8. And secondly the Confederates thereupon proceeded to eat together some part of the Sacrifice which follows v. 11. where we find the Elders of Israel who represented the People did eat and drink in the Presence of God Ver. 9. Then went up Moses and Aaron Nadab and Abihu and LXX of the Elders of Israel These things being done they went up into the Mount as they were ordered v. 1. i. e. they went up to that part of the Mount where Aaron and his Sons and the Elders were appointed to come but no further Ver. 10. And they saw the God of Israel When Moses is commanded to come near unto the LORD v. 2. Maimonides acknowledges it may be understood of his local approach to the place where the Light or Glory of God then appeared More Nevoch P. I. c. 18. And therefore it is something strange that he expounds the Elders seeing God of their apprehension of him by their Understanding and not rather of their beholding some glimpse of that visible Majesty which was on the Top of the Mount For that I doubt not is the meaning as appears by what follows And so the Chaldee expounds it They saw the Glory of the God of Israel surrounded we may well suppose with an heavenly Host of Angels attending upon the SCHECHINAH or Divine Majesty as it was also called And there was under his feet This hath made some conceive that this visible Glory appeared in the form of a Man with his Back towards them standing upon a shining Pavement But this is contrary to IV Deut. 15. For though that be spoken of another time and place viz. the Giving of the Law which all the People heard but saw no Similitude yet if the Elders had afterward seen a Similitude it would have spoiled Moses his Argument they being the Representatives of the People This glorious Light therefore far surpassing all other had no form nor could be described by any Art and consequently by its feet is meant only the lower part of it which rested as it were upon a most glorious Pavement And thus the Divine Majesty is said to have had a Foot-stool which was the cover of the Ark though it had no Human shape As it were a paved work of Saphire stone The glorious Majesty of God was represented as having under it a Pavement sutable to it self very bright and shineing For there is a sort of Saphire called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spotted with little points or pricks of Gold which shine like Stars interspersed in the Body of it See Salmasius in Solinum p. 131 203. Such was this Pavement as we may gather from the following words And as it were the body of Heaven in its clearness As clear as the purest and serenest Sky when it is all spangled with Stars All which signifies as I take it that the Glory of the LORD appeared far above the Glory of the Sun in its greatest brightness upon a Pavement sparkling like the Stars in the Heaven when it is most clear The LXX instead of the words saw the God of Israel have saw 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the place of the God of Israel As if they saw a Throne upon which there was a visible Majesty beyond all description And if this be admitted then this Throne may well be said to have feet standing upon such a glorious Pavement And so they translate it in the next Verse where this is repeated Ver. 11. And upon the Nobles of the Children of Israel i. e. The Elders before-mentioned v. 1 9. called here Atzilim to signifie that they were the prime and choicest Persons among the Israelites For Atzal signisies to separate and consequently atzilim imports Men distinguished from others either by their Birth Office or some excellent qualities He laid not his hand Did not hurt them Whereas it was the common Opinion That they who saw God though it was by one of his Angels should presently die The splendour of that glorious Light was so dazling that it was a singular favour it did not put out their Eyes as the Light wherein St. Paul saw our Saviour did his We are told v. 17. The sight of the Glory of the LORD was like devouring fire Which might put them in fear perhaps they had been scorched by it when it flasht out upon them but they found not the least hurt by it Thus Jonathan saith in his Paraphrase upon the XXXII Chapter that when Moses delayed to come down from the Mount the People fancied him to be burnt up by the fire which shone from the Presence of God which there appeared This sight of God which he vouchsafed to
Mount XVII 6. IX Deut. 21. By which means the Calf was utterly abolished and demonstrated as Abarbinel notes to have no more Divinity in it than the dust or water hath And made the Children of Israel drink of it He did not constrain them but having no other water they could not avoid when they were thirsty to drink with this mixture Which Moses threw into it not to discover who were guilty of Idolatry as the Jews fancy who say this was like the Water of Jealousie V Numb 27. which made their Bellies swell or their Beards as some have since fabled turn yellow for it was a general Apostacy v. 1 3. but to make them sensible how vile a thing this Idol was which was gone into their Draught and mixed with their Dung and their Urine They that have a list to see the Conceits of the Jews about it may look into Selden de diis Syris Syntag. I. c. 4. and J. Wagenseil upon Sota p. 1128. Ver. 21. And Moses said unto Aaron what did this people unto thee It was not sufficient that the Idol was destroyed but he thought fit to call his Brother to an account for his mis-government in his absence Who makes a very weak defence as all Commentators observe to whom I refer the Reader And shall only note That the best Apology he could have made had been this if it had been true that he only represented God unto them as he had represented himself to him and the Elders of Israel when the Cherubims in the form of Oxen made part of the Train of the SCHECHINAH or Divine Majesty But he says not a word of this which I suppose therefore is a groundless opinion That thou hast brought so great a sin upon them If they had made or built an House for the Divine Worship saith Sepher Cosri in the place above-named according to their own fancies that they might have offered their Sacrifices there and directed their Devotions thither it would not have seemed to me so grievous a sin for at this day we make such Houses and have a veneration for them and promise our selves the Divine Benediction in them c. But to make an Image was directly against the Command of God and to fancy that he would be present with that which he abhorred very much aggravated the Crime Ver. 22. And Aaron said let not the anger of my Lord wax hot He beseeches him in a very humble manner to hear him calmly Thou knowest the people He had been long acquainted with their rebellious and obstinate Humour which made them fall a murmuring as soon as ever they were delivered from Pharaoh at the Red-sea XV. 24. XVI 2 c. That they are set on mischief The words in the Hebrew beráhu are more emphatical they are in wickedness or in Idolatry like that expression in St. John 1 Epist V. 19. the whole World lyeth in wickedness Or as we say in our Language they were stark naught Ver. 23. For they said unto me Make us Gods c. This Verse is but a recital of what the People said to him v. 2. see there Ver. 24. And I said unto them Whosoever hath any Gold let him break it off so they gave it me This is the sense of v. 2. 3. Then I cast it into the fire and there came out this Calf He speaks as if he did not make the Calf but the Gold being cast into the fire out it came in this form Which made Dr. Jackson think it more than probable that there was some Magical or Daemoniacal skill practised in the sudden moulting of this Idol which very much increased the Peoples Superstition to it For what else saith he could Aaron mean by these words I cast it into the fire and there came out this Calf than that there was some secret invisible operation whereby it was moulded into this form in an instant which raised as I said the Peoples Devotion to it Herein he follows some Jews who go a great deal further saying That the Devil entred into it and made it roar like a Bull to strike a greater awe into the People as R. Juda saith in Pirke Elieser c. 45. And in Tanchuma they say it not only roared but danced also Which seem to me to be Conceits invented for the Excuse of Aaron who is said plainly enough v. 4. to have made this molten Calf Which he could not have done without designing it and running the Gold into a Mould of this Figure Here is no account at all given what Judgment Moses made of this defence but it appears by IX Deut. 20. that God was so angry with him that he had been destroyed if Moses had not interceded for him and beseeched God to pardon his weakness in complying with a People set on Mischief v. 22. For no doubt in his own Mind he was against this Fact as the Levites were of whom he was the Chief Ver. 25. And when Moses saw that the people were naked Without the Divine Protection For the Glory of the LORD in the Cloud it is likely departed and went up from them which we read descended again XXXIII 9. For Aaron had made them naked c. Laid them open by this Sin to the Scorn of all their Enemies who should hear of such a shameful Revolt from their God Ver. 26. Then Moses stood in the gate of the Camp Where the Courts of Judgment were wont to sit to hear Causes and to punish Offenders So it was in their Cities in after times which it is likely was derived from the usage now as now they did but follow the practices of their Fore-fathers For in the days of Abraham the City Gate was the place where all publick and private Business was transacted XXIII Gen. 10 18. which seems to have been the manner in all the Country for at Schechem we find as well as here at Hebron when Hamor and his Son proposed to make an Alliance with the Israelites they motioned it to the People at the Gate of the City XXXIV Gen. 20. Which was the same thing with the Forum or Exchange among the Romans the Market being also held here where there were Seats for the Judges and Elders And said Who is on the LORD's side Abhors this Idolatry and cleaves to the Worship of the LORD only Let him come unto me To receive his Commands who was under God their Leader And all the Sons of Levi gathered themselves together unto him If not the whole Tribe yet as many as had any Zeal for the LORD who were the most This is an Argument there was a general defection of the People to this Idolatrous Worship that none but the Sons of Levi appeared to joyn with Moses on this occasion Ver. 27. And he said unto them thus saith the LORD God of Israel put every man his sword by his side The LORD himself by his Command warrants what I bid you do And go in and out from gate to