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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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Synedris c. 6. The sense is this in short He that violates a Negative Precept as they call it either doth it secretly which is most frequent or openly which happens seldom unless a Man be one of those profligate Wretches whom we call Apostates Now him that secretly brake the Sabbath the Scripture threatens with cutting off viz. by the hand of God according to what is written here in this place In like manner incestuous and unlawful Conjunctions are threatned XVIII Lev. 29. because they were wont to be committed secretly But if any Man did any Work openly on the Sabbath so that there were Witnesses of it he was to be stoned according to what is said XV Numb 35. Though if he did it out of mistake either secretly or openly he was only to bring a Sacrifice for his Errour And if he offended against any of the Decrees of the Wise-men about the Sabbath he was to be beaten Or if there was no Court of Judgment in the place as now in their present Condition then all such Transgressors were left to God to punish them of whatsoever sort they were Ver. 15. Six days may work be done but in the seventh is the Sabbath of rest holy to the LORD So it is called also XXXV 2. and XXIII Lev. 3. And so the Sabbath wherein the Land rested is likewise called XXV Lev. 4. But the Hebrew words Schabbat Schabbaton Sabbath of Rest properly signifies Sabbath above all Sabbaths i. e. the greatest Sabbath on which a rest was to be most punctually observed from all manner of Work which the Jews as de Dieu notes call the weighty Sabbath as if other days of rest were but light in comparison with this According to that saying of R. Josee Great is Circumcision because the weighty Sabbath gives place to it that is admits of this Work though the Rest on this Sabbath be so very great Shall surely be put to death As an Idolater who did not acknowledge the Creator of the World See before v. 14. Ver. 16. Wherefore the Children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath to observe the Sabbath throughout their Generation for a perpetual Covenant The most litteral Interpretation of this Verse seems to me to be that of Lud. de Dieu The Children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath by making the Sabbath a perpetual Covenant throughout their Generations That is by never suffering it to be interrupted they made it a perpetual Covenant between God and them throughout all Ages Ver. 17. It is a sign between me and the Children of Israel for ever A Badge and Livery that they were the Servants of the most High who made the Heavens and Earth A Mark of their being devoted to him and continuing in Covenant with him no less than Circumcision For in six days the LORD made Heaven and Earth In memory of which the Sabbath was first instituted to preserve perpetually and establish that most precious History and Doctrine of the Creation of the World as Maimonides speaks More Nevoch P. III. c. 43. And on the seventh day he rested and was refreshed Delighted in the Contemplation of all his Works which he saw were very good I Gen. 31. The same Maimonides observes that the word jinnaphash which we translate was refreshed comes from nephesh which among other things signifies the intention of the Mind and the Will and therefore the sense of this Phrase is All the Will of God was perfected and brought to a Conclusion his whole good Pleasure was absolutely finished on the seventh day More Nevoch P. I. c. 67. Ver. 18. And he gave unto Moses when he made an end of communing with him upon Mount Sinai When he dismissed him having said all that is before related during his forty days stay with him in the Mount he delivered unto him two Tables of Testimony to carry down with him to the People Two Tables of Testimony Wherein God testified to them his Mind and Will in the principal things which concerned their Duty See XVI 34. Tables of stone That what was written upon them might be more durable There is no ground to think that these Tables were made of some precious Stone as the Author of the Book Cosri and other Jews fancy for the word Eben in the Hebrew simply signifies any sort of Stone and is wont to have some other joyned to it when precious Stones are meant as in 2 Sam. XII 30. 1 Kings X. 2. 2 Chron. III. 6. Written with the finger of God i. e. By God himself Just as the Heavens saith Maimonides are said to be the work of his fingers VIII Psal 4. which he interprets in another place XXXIII 6. By the word of the LORD were the Heavens made Therefore written by the singer of God is as much saith he as by the word that is the Will and good Pleasure of God More Nevoch P. I. c. 66. In short this Phrase signifies that God employed neither Moses nor any other Instrument in this Writing but it was done by his own powerful Operation For all things that we do being wrought by our hands and our fingers these words are used to express God's power See XXXII 16. This was a thing so notorious in ancient times and so much believed by those who were not Jews that many other Nations pretended to the like Divine Writings that they might gain the greater Authority to their Laws Thus the Brachmans report in their Histories That the Book of their Law which they call Caster was delivered by God to Bremavius upon a Mount in a Cloud and that God gave also another Book of Laws to Brammon in the first Age of the World The Persians say the same of those of Zoroaster and the Getes of Xamolxis Nay the Brachmans have a Decalogue like this of Moses and accurate Interpretations of it in which they say there is this Prophecy That one day there shall be one Law alone throughout the World This evidently shows how well the World was anciently acquainted with these Books of Moses and what a high esteem they had of them See Huetius L. II. Alnetan Quaest c. 12. n. 19. CHAP. XXXII Verse 1. AND when the People Not the whole Body of the Congregation but so many of them that the rest durst not appear to oppose their desires Saw that Moses delayed to come down out of the Mount The Jews fancy that he stayed beyond the time that he had appointed for his return to them But that is not likely for he himself was not told how long God would detain him there See XXIV 14. The meaning therefore is that he stayed longer than they expected so that they did not know what to think of it And having as yet received no Directions about the Service of God for which they were called out of Egypt VII 16. and other places they thought it was time to desire Aaron to set about it in such a way as other People served their Gods The people gathered themselves
to grind and bake it c. v. 23. and make ready all things that were necessary against the next day which was to be a Festival viz. the Sabbath on which they were to do nothing For the Sabbath was not to be disturbed with such kind of Work but though on other Festivals they might prepare their Meat and only abstain from labour yet on this they might not so much as dress their Meat but it was to de done the Evening before on which they were to prepare every thing for the next day From which preparation this day was called the Parascue XXIII Luke 54. the preparation for the Sabbath And it shall be twice as much as they gather daily Enough that is for two days viz. that sixth day and the next which was to be the Sabbath v. 23. Where what is here briefly said in general is more particularly and largely explained The Talmudists are generally of an opinion that the XVth day of the second Month when they came hither v. 1. was the seventh day of the week See Mr. Selden L. III. de Jure N. G. c. 11. Which if it be true they knew nothing of the rest of the Sabbath for they travelled upon this day But Mr. Mede hath observed that it is altogether uncertain whether or no it was the seventh day from the Creation It might possibly fall out so by the Providence of God that the seventh day designed by him for their Sabbath might be both the seventh in order from the Creation and also from the day of their deliverance out of Egypt But that which now determined this seventh day after six days labour to be their rest was their Redemption out of Egypt and the Overwhelming of Pharaoh and his Host in the Red Sea which was upon this very day The Example of the Creation was a reason for sanctifying one day in seven but the designation of this seventh day was as I said from their wonderful deliverance See Discourse XV. Book 1. Ver. 6. And Moses and Aaron said unto all the Children of Israel What God spake to Moses alone v. 4. is delivered to the People by Aaron also who was assistant to his Brother in the Government of them At Even On the Evening of this fifteenth day God sent them Quails as we translate v. 13. Then ye shall know that the LORD hath brought you out from the Land of Egypt Be convinced that it was by the LORD's Direction and Command that you were brought out of Egypt into this place And therefore you have no reason to quarrel with us who did nothing of our selves without his order but rather to trust in him who can make as good provision for you here in the Wilderness as ever you saw in Egypt Ver. 7. And in the Morning When the Manna fell down v. 13. Then ye shall see the Glory of the LORD His great power some interpret it in sending them Bread from Heaven and Flesh also with it But I take it rather to refer unto the visible appearance of the Divine Majesty which they saw presently after this v. 10. and were convinced of his real Presence in that Cloud by the descent of the Manna from thence next Morning which no Power but the Divine could produce And so I find Abarbinel himself interprets it Their seeing the Glory of the LORD is not to be understood of the Bread or the Flesh he sent them but of the Fire which appeared to all the People to reprove them for their Murmurings For that he heareth your Murmurings against the LORD He is present among you and takes notice of your ungrateful behaviour towards him For what are we that ye murmur against us Alas we are but poor Instruments of his who hath done all the Wonders you have seen and by that means brought you hither And therefore why do you complain of us as if we acted any thing by our own Authority Ver. 8. And Moses said this shall be when the LORD shall give you c. I say again therefore mark it when the LORD shall give you Flesh to eat in the Evening and in the Morning Bread to the full then you shall be convinced that he hath taken notice of your Murmurings which are really against him who imploys us only as his Ministers and will be so gracious as not to punish your Discontents but provide for your Necessities Ver. 9. And Moses spake unto Aaron Who was his Minister as Moses was more immediately God's Speak unto the whole Congregation of the Children of Israel Who were all ingaged in this undutiful Murmuring v. 2. Come near before the LORD Before the SCHECHINAH or Divine Majesty which was in the Cloud as I observed XIII 21. and now was about to break forth upon them in a glorious manner But because of their Murmurings the Cloud was removed it is probable to a greater distance from them than it used to be Bonfrerius will have it that they were to come near to the Tabernacle of Moses where the Glory of the LORD appeared XXXIII 7 9. But there is no proof that it was wont to be there till that occasion See upon that place For he hath heard your murmurings He will show that he is among you and observes how ungratefully you requite him It is not unlikely that Moses bad Aaron go and speak to the People because he himself retired to speak to God That is to pray for them and to acknowledge his great Goodness in passing by their Murmurings Ver. 10. And it came to pass as Aaron spake unto the whole Congregation of the Children of Israel According to the Command of Moses v. 9. That they looked They were suddenly surprised I conceive with an unwonted brightness which made them look about to see whence it came Or Aaron perhaps bad them look that way Towards the Wilderness Whether the Cloud had conducted them and stood at some distance from them And behold the Glory of the LORD appeared in the Cloud The Divine Majesty appeared in flaming Light such as they had never seen before See XIII 21. Thus N. Lyra truly expounds Fulgor quidam insolitus c. an unusual Splendor representing the Divine Power to reprove the Murmurings of the People Ver. 11. And the LORD spake unto Moses Who was gone as I said to pray unto God whilst Aaron was speaking unto the People Ver. 12. I have heard the murmurings of the Children of Israel c. He repeats to Moses what he had bidden him tell them v. 4 5 6. and perhaps spake it from the Cloud of Glory in the Audience of all the People In the Evening ye shall eat Flesh v. 8. And in the Morning ye shall be silled with Bread v. 4. And ye shall know that I am the LORD your God Who brought you out of Egypt and will provide for you here in the Wilderness Ver. 13. And it came to pass that at Even According to God's Promise v. 6 8. The Quails
not require so much as others Ver. 18. And when they did mete it with an Omer When it was brought unto their Tents v. 16. then the Father of the Family or some of the Rulers of the Congregation v. 22. measured what they had gathered with an Omer and gave to every one his proportion according as God directed He that gathered much had nothing over Had no more than his Omer And he that gathered little had no lack He that had not gathered enough to make an Omer for every man had it made up to him out of other Mens gatherings who had more than enough Abarbinel will have it that they were so directed by a miraculous Providence as to gather just so much for their several Families that every Person 's share would come to an Omer and neither more nor less And so Greg. Nyssen calls this the Second Miracle which was in the Manna having observed one before v. 14. But others think that if any part of it remained after every one in the Family had an Omer it was Food for their Cattle which in the Wilderness wanted Grass sufficient for them And this seems the more probable because otherwise we must make a new Miracle that every Man Woman and Child should be able to eat an Omer which all grant was sufficient for the Sustenance of any Man whatsoever but was too much sure for a Child They gathered every Man according to his eating As they were directed v. 16. Ver. 19. And Moses said Let no Man leave of it till the morning It was therefore to be all spent one way or other the same day it fell Which was the Law of all the Holy Feasts particularly of the Passover XII 10. and of the Sacrifice of Peace-Offerings XXI Lev. 30. Besides God would have them depend upon his Providence and trust him for fresh Supplies every day as Aben-Ezra well notes And R. Levi ben Gersom He that kept it till the morning betrayed his want of Faith and feared God would send no more for if he believed to what purpose should he be at the pains to keep it Here was a new Wonder that as it fell every day for Forty years together both in Winter and in Summer and likewise fell in such quantity that every one had an Omer and none wanted this Measure so it would not keep till the next Morning which it might have done in its own Nature and did once in a Week and in the Ark was preserved to many Generations Ver. 20. Notwithstanding they hearkned not unto Moses but some of them left of it till the morning Either through unbelief or meer negligence or a wanton inclination to make an Experiment some among them disobeyed his Command And it bred Worms and stank This was a Wonder also that such an heavenly Food so pure and simple should not only breed Worms but also stink Which was a Punishment for their Disobedience though a merciful one in that God did not inflict it upon themselves but upon their Food The Jews commonly take these words to be transposed things being wont first to putrifie and then to breed Worms and in that order Moses relates this matter when it was laid up for the Sabbath v. 24. That it neither stank neither was any Worm therein But Abarbinel thinks that Moses here speaks of it according to the order wherein they found it which was that first Worms appeared in it to their Eyes and then they smelt the stink But in speaking of what fell out on the seventh day he follows the natural order and saith it did not stink neither was any Worm in it And Moses was wroth with them Chid them severely for their Disobedience to him who had bestowed such a singular benefit upon them Ver. 21. And they gathered it every morning every man according to his eating This is not needlesly repeated but a further Explication of their Care and Diligence to furnish themselves early in the Morning with as much as was necessary before the Sun grew hot and melted it or as some of the Jews add raised the Wind which blew dust upon it When the Sun waxed hot it melted That it might not be trod upon nor putrified Which seems to be spoken of that which remained in the open Field ungathered though Abarbinel will have it that what they had brought into their Tents melted also when the Sun grew hot which obliged them not only to gather it early but to bake and prepare it presently while it was yet hard and not dissolved But I see no ground for this nor is it likely that they were constrained to prepare it all together but might any time that day at Supper as well as Dinner order it according to their liking Others of the Jews fancy that being melted it made little Brooks and Rivolets in the Fields c. but the plain sence is that the Sun which melted it exhaled it also into the Air from whence it came and returned again the next Morning Ver. 22. On the sixth day they gathered twice as much Bread c. According to the Command of God v. 5. It appears by this place where it is called Bread as it is v. 4 12. that it was of a hard Substance when it fell though it dissolved by the heat of the Sun being like the Corn of which Bread is made And the Rulers of the Congregation came and told Moses He had bidden them gather a double quantity on the sixth day but had not told them the reason of it v. 5. and therefore they come now to enquire what they should do with it By this one would think they were the Rulers who saw a distribution made to every one in a just proportion or that they appointed Overseers to take care of it Ver. 23. And he said unto them this is that which the LORD hath said This is the Command which I have received from God about this matter To morrow is the rest Or shall be the rest Of the holy Sabbath unto the LORD To be kept holy so as to do no work therein And therefore you must not so much as go into the field to gather your Food which is the reason why you are ordered to make two days Provision in one The words in the Hebrew which we translate the rest of the holy Sabbath unto the LORD may be rendred as they lye in order the Sabbath the holy Sabbath unto the LORD Which Abarbinel explains as if the word Sabbath being repeated signified that it was to be a Cessation from all manner of Work because it was the Sabbath of the LORD himself wherein he ceased from his Works At this time and not before the rest of the seventh day seems to have been appointed They performed Religious Offices upon one day in seven but did not cease from all Labour until now These very words seem to show there had been some observation of a Sabbath heretofore and was not wholly a new
Sabbath therefore he giveth you on the sixth day the bread of two days You have no reason to seek it on the Sabbath being provided before-hand with as much as is sufficient for that day Let no man go out of his place The Jews say that a Man went out of his place if he went above Two thousand paces from his dwelling That is if he went beyond the Suburbs of his City XXXV Numb 5. Ver. 30. So the people rested on the seventh day The Reprehension which God gave them by Moses v. 28. and the solemn renewal of the Precept v. 29. wrought so much upon them that for the present they rested upon this day And they not having been used to this rest God did not immediately punish their Disobedience in going abroad to gather Manna though afterward he ordered a Man to be stoned for gathering Sticks on this day for he had often repeated this Law to them before that time Ver. 31. And the House of Israel called the name thereof Manna This is repeated again to show that the name which they gave it at first v. 15. continued to it afterward being so apt and proper to signifie God's Providence over them that they could find no better And it was like Coriander Seed Of a round sigure like that Seed v. 14. White Being like Bedolach as Moses saith XI Numb 7. which signifies Pearl as Bochartus shows in his Hierozoic P. II. p. 678. where he observes the Talmudick Doctors in the Title Joma expresly say it was like Margalith or Margarith i.e. Pearl The taste of it was like Wafers made with honey All things of a pleasant relish are compared in Scripture to Honey Whence those words of David XIX Psalm 11. CXIX 103. Onkelos saith Manna tasted like Escaritae which was a delicious Food at Rhodes as Bochart observes out of Julius Pollux between Bread and Cake like our Bisket I suppose which was so grateful that they who did eat it were never satiated but still desired more In the XI Numb 7 8. Manna is said to taste like fresh Oyl Which doth not contradict this for as Abarbinel and others observe the meaning is that when it first fell before it was prepared it tasted like Honey-wafers but when it was baked then it tasted like fresh Oyl And so the words XI Numb 8. plainly import they took it and beat it in a Mortar and baked it c. and the taste of it i. e. thus prepared was like the taste of fresh Oyl Nay the Jewish Doctors commonly say it had all manner of pleasant savours according to Mens different Palates and thence they fancy it is called v. 29. the Bread Mischne which we translate of two days because it was changed according to the diversity of those that did eat it Children young men and old Which conceit the Author of the Book of Wisdom follows XVI 20 21. Ver. 32. And Moses said This is the thing which the LORD commandeth I have this further Command to deliver from God concerning the Manna Take an Omer of it Just so much as was assigned to every one for his daily Bread v. 16. To be kept for your Generations For your Posterity in future Ages That they may see the Bread wherewith I have fed you c. For seeing with ones eyes saith Isaac Aramah mightily confirms a thing and leaves one in no doubt of it And he took care they should see both the Manna it self and the measure which he bountifully allowed to every one of them Ver. 33. And Moses said unto Aaron What God commanded Moses he now commands Aaron to do Take a Pot. He saith nothing of the matter of this Pot or Vrn which some say was an Earthen Pot others say of Lead Brass or Iron and Abarbinel thinks it was of Glass that one might see what was within But the Apostle hath setled this Controversie by calling it a Golden Pot IX Hebr. 4. and so do the LXX in this place And indeed all the Vessels of the Sanctuary being of Gold it was but reason that this which contained such a precious Monument of God's Mercy should be of the same Metal Lay it up before the LORD i.e. Before the Ark of the Testimony as it is explained in the next Verse Which shows that this Command was given after the building of the Tabernacle and is here mentioned because it belongs to the same matter which Moses relates in this Chapter Others suppose it was spoken by way of Prolepsis which seems not to me so probable Ver. 34. So Aaron laid it up When the Tabernacle was built Before the Testimony This is the same with before the LORD in the foregoing Verse For the Divine Glory dwelt between the Cherubims which were over the Ark which is commonly called the Ark of the Testimony XXX 6. XL. 3 5. But here and XXV 36. is simply called the Testimony by an Ellipsis or leaving out the first word which is very usual in other Instances For thus it is called the Ark of God's strength 2 Chron. VI. 41. but elsewhere the first word being omitted it is called only his strength LXXVIII Psalm 61. CV 4. And therefore the Ark is called the Testimony partly because there God gave them a special Token of his Dwelling among them and partly because the two Tables of Stone were in the Ark which are called the Testimony XL. 20. Where it is said Moses put the Testimony into the Ark and then immediately v. 21. he calls it the Ark of the Testimony Ver. 35. And the Children of Israel did eat Manna forty years Within a Month which wanted to make compleat forty years For it begun to fall just XXX days after they came out of Egypt on the XVth of April and ceased to fall on the XVth or XVIth of March the day after the Passover which they kept in the Fortieth year V Josh 11 12. Now in all Writers some days under or over are not wont to be considered when there is a round Number But there are those who fancy these words were put into this Book after Moses his death for which I can see no ground For it is certain he lived the greatest part of the Fortieth year after they came out of Egypt and brought them to the Borders of Canaan within sight of it I Dent. 3. XXXIV 1 2 c. And therefore may well be supposed to have added these words himself to this History as he did the foregoing v. 32. that all belonging to this matter might be put together in one place Vntil they came to a Land inhabited i. e. To Canaan or the Borders of it as it here follows For these words saith Aben-Ezra have respect to the Wilderness in which they now were which was not inhabited Vntil they came unto the Borders of the Land of Canaan That is saith he to Gilgal which was the Borders when they had passed over Jordan when they did eat of the Corn of the Land and had no
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
of two Eye-witnesses And they make this Precept as much as Thou shalt not judge out of Conjectures Nay if there were two Witnesses that did not speak to the same matter he was not to be Condemned As if one Witness said he saw such a Man break the Sabbath and another said he saw him commit Idolatry Judgment was not to be given against him upon this Testimony because Moses saith Slay not the Innocent Another Example of which is still more close which is mentioned in the T. Sanhedrim If one said he saw him Worship the Moon and another that he saw him Worship the Sun the Man was not to be Condemned who was thus accused because the Witnesses did not speak to the same sort of Idolatry See Selden L. II. de Synedr c. 13. p. 567. By the same reason they were not to acquit him who was plainly Convicted of such Impieties For I will not justifie the wicked i. e. Such an unjust Judge Ver. 8. And thou shalt take no gift No not to Absolve the Innocent or to Condemn the Guilty as it is interpreted in Siphri For a gift blindeth the wise Such Presents made to a Judge are apt to cast a Mist as we speak before his Eyes i.e. to corrupt his Understanding though he be otherwise perspicacious enough to discern between Truth and Falshood Good and Evil 1 Sam. VIII 3. The word which we translate wise is in the Hebrew Piccehim open or seeing concerning which consult Bochart L. I. Canaan c. 16. p. 470. And perverteth the words of the righteous By words seems to be meant the Sentence of those who might otherwise have been inclined to be righteous and upright Judges The Hebrew Lawyers say That not only Pecuniary Gifts are here forbidden but such words also I suppose they mean Promises of Reward as may win the Affection and that he who gave the Present was guilty as well as he that received it See Selden de Synedriis L. II. c. 13. p. 570. But especially Joh. Coch. ad excerpt Gem. Sanhedrim cap. 1. sect 10. Annot. 4. where among other things he gives this ingenious derivation of the Hebrew word Schochad which we translate gift out of the Treatise called Chetuboth where it is said to be as much as Schechu chad that is whereby he is one For the Party who receives the Gift hath his Mind so drawn to the giver that he becomes one and the same with him And no Man is fit to be Judge in his own Cause Plato thought this so necessary a Law that he expresly enacts L. XII de Legibus p. 955. that all Men who served their Country in any Office should 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 perform their Duty without Gifts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that offended against this Law was to suffer death Which was the Law of the XII Tables among the ancient Romans Judex qui ob rem dicendam pecuniam accepisse convictus est capite punitor A Judge that is convicted to have received Money for giving his Sentence let him lose his Head Ver. 9. Also thou shalt not oppress a stranger This was said before XXII 21. but then it was a Precept to all Israel which is here applied peculiarly to Judges Whom he would have to deal equally with Strangers and to make no difference between them and Israelites remembring what they themselves were not long ago and that they found by experience it was Affliction enough to be Strangers That 's the meaning of what follows in this Verse For ye know the heart of a stranger seeing ye were strangers in the land of Egypt Ye have felt what a distressed Condition that is how friendless and helpless See XXIV Deut. 17 18. XXVII 19. Ver. 10. And six years thou shalt sow thy land There was the same reason for dressing their Trees And gather in the fruit thereof Together with the Fruit of their Trees Ver. 11. But the seventh year thou shalt let it rest and lie still Neither sow nor reap nor prune their Trees nor gather the Fruit. The poor of thy people may eat And the Levites and themselves also who might take their share not to lay up but for present use though not as Proprietors but in common with the rest of the Country Whence it was that Alexander the Great allowing them to live by their ancient Laws among other things granted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every seventh year should be tribute free Josephus L. XI Archaeol c. 8. For since they received nothing it seemed reasonable to him they should pay nothing And what they leave the beasts of the field shall eat This signifies God sent such vast Plenty when they observed his Laws that so much sprung up of it self as would more than satisfie Men and afford Food to the Beasts In like manner thou shalt deal with thy vineyard and olive-yard Under these two are comprehended all other sort of Fruit-trees as the Hebrews themselves acknowledge who give several Reasons for this Law Which was ordained saith Maimonides P. III. More Nevoch c. 39. in compassion to all Men in general that they might have some time of breathing and refreshment But principally say others of them to be a memorial of the Creation of the World and the production of all things by the Power of God in six days and his resting on the seventh● Their exposing all things in common which that year produced as well as letting the Land rest Put them in remembrance saith R. Levi of Barcelona Praecept LXIX that God was their Preserver as well as Creator the Earth bringing forth Fruit every year not by its own proper strength or of its own accord but because it hath a Lord upon whom it depends who when he speaks hath a right to dispose of its Fruits to a publick use This Command also bred in them a trust in God and in his Providence and was a Curb to Covetousness and taught them Mercy also and Liberality Philo adds that this was a Politick contrivance to let the Earth rest partly that it might have time to recruit its strength that it might bring forth more plentifully and partly that the People might grow stronger and more apt for all Employments by so long forbearance of their Labours This Eusebius thought worthy to transcribe out of him at large in his Praepar Evang. L. VIII c. 7. But this Precept about the Year of Rest is more fully delivered in XXV Lev. v. 2 3. where see what I have noted Ver. 12. Six days thou shalt do thy work and on the seventh day thou shalt rest He would not have them imagine they should rest less on the Sabbath this Year than in others because this whole Year was a kind of Sabbath but keep it with the usual strictness Which is the reason perhaps of the repetition of this Precept in this place That thine ox and thine ass may rest c. This shows that one great end of instituting the Observation of this Day
not read in the foregoing Chapters of any carved Work about the Tabernacle and therefore this word may better be rendred as it is in the beginning of the Verse cutting rather than carving Timber For it signifies in general doing all the Work of Carpenters and Joyners To work in all manner of Workmanship That was necessary for the making of every thing God had commanded Ver. 6. And I behold I have given with him Lest Moses should think one principal Contriver and Director not to be sufficient God joyns another with him Aholiab of the Tribe of Dan. It is observed by R. Bechai that God chose one out of the lowest Tribe for so they accounted that of Dan as well as one out of the chief which was Judah that Bezaleel saith he might not be lifted up with vain Conceit for great and small are equal before God And he truly observes that one of the same Tribe of Dan by the Mothers side was the most skilful Person that could be found for the Building of the Temple by Solomon 2 Chron. II. 14. And in the hearts of all that are wise-hearted I have put wisdom That is God indued the Minds of all ingenious Persons among them with an extraordinary Skill which they never learnt either by their own study or any Master but had it by an inspiration from above There were several no doubt who had a natural Genius to such Arts as were necessary in this Work but they could not by their own Industry have attained such Skill as God bestowed on them at least not so soon as to go immediately about the building of the Tabernacle and all things belonging to it That they may make all that I have commanded thee Not to imitate the Egyptian Contrivances as some have fancied for which no such great Skill one would think was necessary but to make all exactly according to the Model which Moses had seen in the Mount and he described to them which could not have been done without God's extraordinary Assistance Ver. 7. The Tabernacle of the Congregation and the Ark of the Testimony c. These things are here mentioned according to the order of Nature which is first to build an House and then to provide its Furniture And it is observable that there was but one House or Tabernacle one Ark and one Altar either for Sacrifice or Incense to preserve in their Minds the belief of the Unity of God contrary to the Gentiles who had their Temples and Altars every where and each Family its domestick Gods and particular Superstitions Ver. 8. The pure Candlestick It is hard to tell why this is particularly called pure unless it be because it was intirely of pure Gold XXV 31. which the Table and Altar of Incense were not for they were only overlaid with pure Gold XXV 24. XXX 3. Some have thought that it is called pure because no Blood was ever sprinkled upon it as there was on the Altar of Incense but this is not a good reason for we do not find there was any sprinkled on the Table Ver. 9. The Altar of Burnt-offering c. Concerning this and the Laver he had received orders XXVII 1. XXX 17. Ver. 10. And the Clothes of Service Wherewith the Ark and the Table and the Candlestick and the golden Altar were covered IV Numb 6 7 9 11 c. when the Camp removed The holy Garments for Aaron c. Which are ordered Chap. XXVIII Ver. 11. And the anointing Oyl and sweet Incense c. These was ordered in the foregoing Chapter v. 23 34. Ver. 12. And the LORD spake unto Moses saying After he had delivered him all the foregoing Orders about the Tabernacle its Furniture and the Workmen to be imployed in making them he added what follows Ver. 13. Speak unto the Children of Israel saying Verily my Sabbaths shall ye keep This hath been mention'd thrice already see XVI 23. XX. 8. XXIII 12. but here seems to be repeated again upon this special occasion that they might not think this Sacred Work would warrant them to break the Sabbath On which he bids Moses tell them they must not do this Work no more than any other For the Tabernacle was built for the Service of God which was principally performed upon this day And he uses a word of the Plural Number not to signifie any other Sabbath but this which recurring so often as once in seven days he might well admonish them to keep his Sabbaths And so the Apostle plainly speaks II Coloss 16. For it is a sign between me and you This plainly shows he speaks of the weekly Sabbath the observation of which testified to all the World what God they worshipped as all Nations signified by their Rites and Ceremonies what their Gods were to whom their Services were paid Now the Israelites stood in a double relation to God as his Creatures and as those who were redeemed by him from the Egyptian Bondage In both which regards the Sabbath was a Sign or a Token between him and them For by observing one day in seven after six days labour they signified that they worshipped the Creator of the World who in six days made all things and then rested and by observing such a seventh day See XVI 5. after six days labour rather than any other they signified they owned him to be their Deliverer from Egyptian Slavery This is opened excellently by our Mr. Mede Discourse XV. p. 73 74. Throughout your Generations During this Polity which God now establishes among you That ye may know that I am the LORD that doth sanctifie you To be my peculiar People by observing this Solemnity For it was peculiarly enjoyned to them and to no other Nation and was looked upon as a singular Benefit conferred on them above all People as appears by the devout Acknowledgment Nehemiah makes of this among the rest of the Divine Favours to them That he made known unto them his holy Sabbath IX 14. and see XX Ezek. 11 12. Ver. 14. Ye shall keep the Sabbath therefore Since it is such a distinguishing Mark be the more careful to observe it For it is holy unto you This depends upon what was said in the Conclusion of the foregoing Verse that hereby they were sanctified or separated to God as a peculiar People and therefore in all reason should look upon this as an holy day Every one that desileth it shall surely be put to death If there were credible Witnesses of his Profanation For whosoever doth any work thereon This was to defile or profane it That Soul shall be cut off from amongst his People God seems to threaten that he himself would shorten his days if the Judges for want of Witnesses could not punish him So Eliah ben Moseh one of those whom the Jews call Karaites most excellently expounds this and all the rest of the Punishments threatned to the Violation of this Precept which Mr. Selden hath given us out of a MS. L. I. de
Egypt which was so sudden and hasty that they had not time to bake the Dough they had prepared nor so much as put Leaven to it XII 39. There shall no leavened Bread be seen with thee From whence the Jews conclude That not only all such Bread is to be carefully sought for and thrown out of their Houses but all their Vessels that have been used the year before thoroughly scoured least any thing should remain in them that might give a tincture of acidity to the Bread that might be made in them In which work they spend some days before the Passover as Buxtorf observes in his Synag Jud. c. 17. Neither shall there be Leaven seen with thee c. For which Cause as he there observes they abstain all the time of this Feast from all such things as may possibly have some Leaven in them As from Honey and Sugar which are often adulterated with Flowre c. Ver. 8. And thou shalt shew thy Son in that day c. That is on the first day of Unleavened Bread it was to be a part of their Religion to instruct their Children in the meaning of their Killing the Lamb and their Abstinence from Leaven This the Jewish Doctors make one of the DCXIII Precepts that Parents should tell the whole Story of their going out of Egypt on the fifteenth day of Nisan when every one according to his Ability was bound in his own Language to bless and praise the Name of God for all his Miracles which he wrought for them They are the words of R. Levi of Barcelona Ver. 9. And it shall be for a Sign unto thee These seem to be still the words that the Parents were to say to their Children upon these Festivals whereby they taught them to look upon this Observation as a Token or Memorial of what God had done for their Forefathers when he brought them out of Egypt Vpon thy hand and for a memorial between thine eyes To make thee as sensible of God's Goodness as of that which thou hast in thy Hand or of a Thing that is continually before thine Eyes The Jewish Superstition about their Phylacteries took its rise from hence but without any good ground it being evident he speaks not of tying Parchments or any thing else about their Wrists c. but of teaching their Children the meaning of their Holy Rites And so some of themselves have expounded it particularly the forementioned R. Levi of Barcelona who gives this reason why such abundant care was taken to have these things remembred Because saith he this is the Foundation of our Law and of our Religion for which Cause in all our Blessings and Prayers we Commemorate our coming out of Egypt because it is a Sign to us and a perfect Demonstration of the Creation of the World and that our Lord God is the Author of all Creatures and doth what he pleases c. For who but he could change the Course of Nature and work such great and unheard of Signs as he did This is sufficient to confute those that deny the Creation of the World and to establish us in the belief of God most blessed and to perswade both that there is a Providence and that his Power extends to all things both in general and particular So he See v. 16. That the LORD's Law may be in thy mouth That their Children might be able to declare to their Posterity the Law of the LORD about these Matters For with a strong Hand hath the LORD brought thee out of Egypt By slaying all their First-born in one Night See III. 19. Ver. 10. Thou shalt therefore keep this Ordinance Of the Passover and of the Feast of Unleavened Bread In this season from year to year On the fourteenth and the seven following days of the first Month. Ver. 11. And it shall be when the LORD shall bring thee into the Land of the Canaanites c. Under the Name of Canaanites he comprehends all the rest of the seven Nations And these words seem to import that the Law of the First-born was not to take place till they came into the Promised Land Yet we find III Numb 12 13. that God demanded all the First-born of them though he took the Levites in their stead And both being numbred and there being Two hundred seventy three First-born Males more than there were Levites v. 41 42 43. he required them to be redeemed at five Shekels apiece and the Money to be given to the Priests v. 46 47 48. But perhaps after this the Law was not observed till they came to Canaan Which he sware unto thy Fathers c. See v. 5. Ver. 12. That thou shalt set apart unto the LORD all that openeth the Matrix Here he shows what he means by that Sanctification of the First-born which was mentioned v. 2. and for what end and reason this was ordained For that which is called Sanctifying there is here called setting apart or separating it from the rest of that kind of Creatures for another use viz. to be Sacrificed to the LORD For the word heevarta which we translate set apart is in the Hebrew make to pass over Which is explained XXII 30. Thou shalt give it unto me viz. to be offered at the Altar The Males The First-born are only mentioned v. 2. but here it is explained to signifie only the Males If a Female came first and afterward a Male that Male was not devoted unto God because it did not open the Womb a Female coming before it Shall be the LORD's And therefore set apart from common uses to be imployed in his Service That is every firstling Male of a Cow Sheep or Goat was to be offered in Sacrifice and the Blood being sprinkled on the Altar the Flesh of them was given to the Priests See XVIII Numb 17 18. where what is here briefly delivered is there more largely explained Ver. 8. And every firstling of an Ass There was the same reason for Horses and Camels but an Ass is only mentioned because abundance of Asses were bred in Judea where there were few Horses or Camels And therefore XVIII Numb 15. it is said in general The firstlings of unclean Beasts thou shalt redeem Thou shalt redeem with a Lamb. Which was to be Sacrificed to God If a Man had not a Lamb he was to give the price of one And because all Lambs were not of an equal price some being worth more than others the Rabbins say that a good eye i. e. a liberal Man gave a Shekel an evil eye half as much and a middle sort of Men gave three quarters It was to be redeemed also within thirty days If thou wilt not redeem it then thou shalt break or cut off its neck It was to die one way or other and not to be imployed in common use but thus to be disposed of if they would not give a Lamb or its value in exchange for it Which Men might sometimes be unwilling to
thing for if it had they could not have understood Moses nor known what he meant See what I have noted upon the Second of Genesis where I thought it reasonable to assert That God intended to preserve a Memory of the Creation in six days by appointing the seventh day to be kept holy And therefore the more pious any people were the greater respect they had to this day But when the World grew very wicked before the Flood as they little thought of God so it is likely they neglected all distinction between this day and others And the dispersion of People after the Flood very much blotted it out of their minds as it did many other good things But in the Family of Abraham we may well suppose it was continued though not with such strict abstinence from all Labour as for special reasons was afterward enjoyned Which is the cause why we read nothing of their resting in their Travels upon that day before their coming out of Egypt Where they were under such cruel Servitude that all observation of the seventh day it is likely was laid aside they being pressed day and night by their Task-masters to hard Labour without intermission And therefore when God brought them out of that Slavery he renewed his Command for the observation of the Sabbath with this addition in memory of their Deliverance from the Egyptian Bondage that they should rest from all manner of Labour upon that day Both these Reasons are given by Moses why God commanded it to be observed in memory of the Creation in six days XX Exod. 11. and in memory of their deliverance from the Egyptian Bondage V Deut. 15. Bake that which you will bake to day c. The words to day are not in the Hebrew but are necessary to make the sense plain because they were enjoyned on this day to prepare or make ready all things against the next v. 5. And that which remaineth over lay up for you to be kept till the morning From which words some have inferred that there was no prohibition of baking and seething on the Sabbath but the contrary rather is here supposed See Dr. Heylin in his History of the Sabbath Part. I. p. 100. But I do not see how this consists with the further explication of this matter in XXXV Exod. 3. where they are forbidden to kindle a Fire upon this day Unless any one will say that for the present they might do it but shortly after were prohibited which is not at all likely For the plain meaning is that if they would make any baked Meats or boiled with the Manna they must do it upon the sixth day though what they did not then bake nor boil they might safely keep till the next day and it should not breed Worms nor stink But what they so kept was to be eaten without baking or boiling as it well might being a food prepared in Heaven for their eating without any need of further Art And therefore called Bread even when they gathered it v. 22. Ver. 24. And they laid it up until the morning c. Without any Preparation of it by baking or boiling and it kept the whole seventh day without any putrefaction Ver. 25. And Moses said Eat that to day Simple as it is without baking or boiling For to day is a Sabbath unto the LORD The frequent repetition of this in this Chapter v. 23. and again v. 29 30. hath led the Jews into this mistake that the Sabbath was not ordained by God till they came out of Egypt directly contrary to what we read in the Second of Genesis that it was instituted from the beginning And therefore Moses here only gives an account why this Precept was renewed at their coming out of Egypt when there was a new Religious observation added to it which was not necessary before viz. resting wholly from all manner of work There is an excellent Discourse on this Subject in a late Learned Author J. Wagensiel in his Confutation of R. Lipman's Carmen Memoriale p. 559 c. who well observes that this Precept having a peculiar respect to the Jews we are not bound to observe the rest of the Sabbath with such strictness as they did but only as the Patriarchs did before the giving of the Law p. 564. As for the translation of the day from the seventh to the first day of the Week it is impossible for the Jews to prove that the day they observe is the seventh from the Creation And besides that the whole World cannot be tied to the circumstance of time precisely for in some parts of it the Sabbath will fall eighteen hours later than in Palestine as he evidently shows p. 572 c. To day you shall not find it in the field This Moses said to them as Abarbinel thinks in the Evening of the Sabbath which was in effect a Prohibition to them not to go out to gather it on that day Ver. 26. Six days ye shall gather it c. The same Author thinks this is repeated to signifie that as long as they continued in the Wilderness they should gather it six days in a Week as they did now but never find any on the seventh There shall be none As you rest saith he from doing any thing about the Manna so God will cease from sending it unto you Upon which he makes this pious reflection That in this World we must work for our Souls if we would be happy in the next World which is an intire Sabbath or Rest For he that labours in the Evening of the Sabbath shall eat on the Sabbath To the same purpose Origen long before him Hom. VII in Exod. Ver. 27. There went out some of the people on the seventh day to gather c. The same wicked disposition remained in them which made them on other days keep it till next Morning v. 19 20. Ver. 28. And the LORD said unto Moses how long refuse ye to keep my Commandments c. These chiding words are full of indignation and yet signifie the long-suffering Patience of God with an untoward Generation Abarbinel expounds this passage as if upon this occasion he upbraided them with all their other Transgressions saying You kickt against me at the Red Sea and believed not my words at Marah also you murmured and uttered very discontented words at Elim Nay after I had given you Manna you violated my Precept in reserving it till the next Morning And now you break my Sabbath what hope is there that you will observe any of my Laws Refuse to keep my Commandments and my Laws He speaks thus say some of the Jews because that in which they now offended is a thing upon which the whole Law all his Commandments depend So the same Abarbinel Because the Sabbath instructed them in the Creation of the World upon which all the Law depends therefore he saith My Commandments and my Laws Ver. 29. See Consider For that the LORD hath given you the
with an Oath that which they knew not to be true For so the word Schave frequently signifies in Scripture a Lie This relates not to their giving a Testimony before a Judge upon Oath of which he speaks afterward in a distinct Commandment but to their Intercourse and Commerce one with another For an Oath saith R. Levi of Barcelona ought to establish every thing and thereby we declare our selves to be as much resolved concerning that which we swear as we are concerning the Being of God Heathens themselves accounted an Oath so sacred a thing that it was capital for a Man to forswear himself as Hen. Stephanus in his Fontes Juris Civilis p. 7. observes out of Diodorus Siculus L. I. and the reason he gives of it is this that such a Man committed two heinous Crimes by violating his Piety to God and his Faith to Men in the highest degree But besides this both Jews and Christians always understood swearing lightly upon frivolous occasions or without any necessity to be here forbidden R. Levi before-mentioned saith this Precept may be violated four several ways besides swearing that which we mean not to perform And Salvian aplies this to the trivial naming of God and our Saviour upon all occasions and sometimes upon bad occasions Nihil jam penè vanius quam Christi nomen esse videatur c. Every body then swearing by Christ he would do this or that though of no consequence whether he did it or no or perhaps a thing which ought not to be done L. IV. de Gubern Dei p. 88. edit Baluz They that understand this of Swearing by false Gods which are called vain things in Scripture do but trifle that is condemned in the foregoing Commandment it being a piece of Worship to swear by them For the LORD will not hold him guiltless c. If Men did not punish the false Swearer the LORD threatens that he will And so Mankind always thought as appears by the Law of the XII Tables mentioned by Hen. Stephanus in the Book quoted above Perjurij poena divina exitium humana dedecus The Divine Punishment of Perjury is utter Destruction the Humane Punishment is Disgrace or Infamy And Alexander Severus was so sensible of this that he thought Juris jurandi contempta Religio satis Deum ultorem habet The contempt of the Religion of an Oath hath God for a sufficient Avenger For an Oath is the strongest Bond that is among Men to bind them to Truth and Fidelity as Cicero speaks L. III. de Ossic c. 31. Witness saith he the XII Tables witness our Sacred Forms in taking an Oath witness our Covenants and Leagues wherein we plight our Faith to Enemies witness the Animadversions of our Censors qui nulla de re diligentius quam de jurejurando judicabant who judged of nothing more diligently than of an Oath Nor was the other sort of vain that is light and idle Swearing without any just occasion suffered to go unpunished for Mr. Selden observes out of Maimonides L. II. de Synedr c. 11. p. 497. that if any Man was guilty of it he that heard him Swear was bound to Excommunicate him what that was he shows in the first Book and if he did not he was to be Excommunicated himself And there is great reason for these Civil Laws which have provided a Punishment for this Crime not only because it is a great disrespect to God to use his Name so lightly on every trivial occasion but because such contempt of the Divine Majesty makes Men fall into the fearful Sin of Perjury Ver. 8. Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy Be mindful of the day called the Sabbath to make a difference between it and all other days so that it be not employed as they are Ver. 9. Six days shalt thou labour and do all thy work This is not a Precept requiring Labour but a Permission to employ six days in a Week about such worldly Business as they had to do Which Permission also God himself abridged by appointing some other Festival days as all Governours may do upon some special occasions But the seventh day is the Sabbath of the LORD thy God Appointed by his Authority to be a day of Rest from your Labours In it thou shalt not do any work Herein the peculiar respect to the Seventh day consisted on all other days they might work but on this they were to cease from all manner of work In which very thing was the sanctifying of this day it being hereby separated and distinguished from all other days in a very remarkable manner But then it naturally followed that having no other work to do they should call to mind the reason why it was thus fanctified or set apart from other days And the reason say the Jews themselves was That having no other business they might fasten in their minds the belief that the World had a beginning which is a thred that draws after it all the foundations of the Law or the Principles of Religion They are words of R. Levi of Barcelona Besides which there was another reason which I shall mention presently But by this it appears that the Observation of this day was a Sign or a Badge to whom they belonged A profession that they were all the Servants of Him who created the Heaven and the Earth as God himself teaches them to ununderstand it XXXI 13 17. And that their Minds might be possessed with this sense he ordered this Solemn Commemoration of the Creation of the World to be made once in Seven days For as if there had been quicker returns of it their Secular Business might have been too much hindred so if it had been delayed longer this sense might have worn too much out of their minds Thou nor thy Son nor thy Daughter c. They might no more employ others in their worldly Business on this day than do it themselves But their Children though they understood not the reason were to rest that in time they might learn this great Truth that all things were made by God Nor thy Cattle Their Oxen and Asses and all other Creatures wont to be employed in their Labours were to enjoy the benefit of this Rest as well as themselves V Deut. 14. Which was absolutely necessary it being impossible for their Servants to rest as is here also required if they were to set their Cattle on work Nor thy stranger that is within thy gates No stranger who by being Circumcised had embraced the Jewish Religion But other strangers might work who only dwelt among them having renounced Idolatry but not taken upon them the Obligation to observe their whole Law Yet if any such Person was a Servant to a Jew his Master might not imploy him on the Sabbath day in any work of his but the Man might work for himself if he pleased being not bound to this Law See Selden L. III. de Jure N. G. c. 12. Ver. 11. For in six
the Cloud Where the Divine Glory was and now broke out and appeared I suppose unto Moses Some think the seventh day might be the Sabbath upon which God chose to appear to him Ver. 17. And the sight of the Glory of the LORD was like devouring fire on the top of the Mount in the Eyes of the Children of Israel It broke out of the Cloud after six days so that the People saw it like flaming fire To which the Psalmist seems to allude XCVII Psal 2 3. Clouds and darkness are round about him and fire goeth before him c. Thus the Glory of the LORD is described in other places as within a Cloud and sometimes breaking out of it XL Exod. 35. where the Cloud is said to be upon the Tabernacle and the Glory of the LORD to fill it within which v. 38. is described like fire See also XVI Numb 42. And thus at its first appearing there was a Pillar of a Cloud and of Fire led them XIII 21. And it sometimes appearing in an amazing brightness beyond that of the Sun and sometimes being wrapt up in as thick a Cloud God is likewise said both to dwell in Light and in thick Darkness 1 Kings VIII 12. Ver. 18. And Moses went into the midst of the Cloud From whence the LORD had called to him v. 16. Therefore he broke through the thick Cloud into the very Prefence of God which was in a secret part of the Cloud called the midst of it And gat him up into the Mount To the top of it where the Glory of the LORD appeared to him in the midst of the Cloud the External Parts of which and the Fire only being seen by the People And Moses was in the Mount forty days and forty nights That he might receive the two Tables of Stone and the Gift of Prophecy as Elmacinus an Arabian Christian adds with Directions for the making the Tabernacle and all things belonging to it and the Service to be performed there by the Priest apparelled according to Divine Prescription c. which follow in the ensuing Chapters where Moses relates what orders God gave him about every thing relating to his Divine Service And it need not seem strange as Clemens Alexandrinus excellently speaks L. I. Stromat p. 351. that Moses received his Laws from God when the Greeks pretend the same of their Minos only they say he went into Jupiter's Cave and was nine years there in learning the Laws which he gave him when Moses was but XL. days in the Mount where God visibly appeared They believed also that Lycurgus received his Laws from Apollo and Zaleucus as Plato Aristotle and divers others whom he mentions say received his from Minerva All this was firmly believed among them who in not acknowledging the Divinity of Moses his Ministration were very ingrateful for his was the Archetype as he speaks or Pattern of what was pretended in their Stories Forty days and forty nights It may be a question whether the six days that he remained in the Cloud before the LORD called him higher be included in these XL. days or were only preparatory to his nearer access to God They may well be both for it is not said he was in the midst of the Cloud forty days and forty nights but that he was so long in the Mount Part of which time was spent in the dark Cloud and the rest in the bright Presence of God in the midst of the Cloud And in all that space he did neither eat nor drink XXXIV 28. IX Deut. 9. God could if he had pleased have revealed to him all his Mind in a less time But the method of the Divine Wisdom is to do all things gradually For instance the Substance of a Child in the Womb saith the Author of Schalsch Hakkabalah is not perfected in less time than XL. Weeks in all which time it receives no Meat nor Drink at the Mouth we must understand him and so many days did the Divine Power work in Moses to form him into a new Essence as his words are and give him a full Comprehension of all that God communicated to him And all this time he neither did eat nor drink for these actions say that Jew prejudice the Understanding which God intended to exalt by depressing the Bodily Faculties and Powers Which for want of Meat and Drink were brought down very low that the Understanding might be raised and lifted up And thus we find in after times that Daniel chastened his Body for three whole Weeks together the better to dispose him for heavenly Vision X. 2 3 12. This ascent of Moses from the Cloudy part of the Mount to the fiery top of it was upon the XIVth of Sivan and we may suppose as Jacobus Capellus doth that the Cloud accompanied him as he went up to defend him from the circumambient flame CHAP. XXV Verse 1. AND the LORD spake unto Moses Out of that glorious and flaming Light wherein he appeared to him Ver. 2. Speak unto the Children of Israel When he went down from the Mount That they bring me In the Hebrew take for me out of their Goods An Offering The Hebrew word Terumah or as some pronounce it Trumah is commonly translated an Heave-offering or Offering lifted up Which the Chaldee translates that which is separated from common use and in the separation perhaps was lifted up towards Heaven in token that they desired God to accept it Of every man that giveth it willingly with his heart ye shall take my Offering They were only to be moved to it but not importuned much less told what quantity they should give but every Man was left to his own good Inclinations And accordingly Moses delivered the Mind of God unto them when he came down from the Mount and they made a free Oblation XXXV 5 21 29. Besides which there was also a Tribute laid upon them for the ransom of their Souls XXX 12 13 14. which amounted to a great Sum of Money as we find in the XXXVIII 24 c. Ver. 3. And this is the offering which ye shall take of them The things which ye shall accept as an Offering to me Gold and silver and brass Unto what uses these were to be imployed we are told afterwards Ver. 4. And blue and purple and scarlet Wool or Yarn or Stuff or as Abarbinel will have it Silk of these Colours About which there is much dispute but no Translation hath better described them than our English For Thecelet which we translate blue and Abarbinel will have to be a Sea-green is certainly a Sky-colour So Maimonides expresses it the Colour of the Firmament and Kimchi calls it ultramarine This hath been demonstrated by Braunius who shows how it was died L. I. de Vest Sacr. Hebr. L. I. c. 13. Argaman also he hath demonstrated c. 14. signifies purple as we translate it For both Josephus and Philo say so and he brings many proofs that they say true And there being
Cubits which was the breadth of this East-end of the Court as well as of the West v. 12 13. Of blue and purple and scarlet c. Concerning all this see XXV 5. and here only observe that the Hangings of the Gate were far richer than of the rest of the Court which were meerly of fine twined Linen v. 9. but these of several other beautiful Colours and adorned with that work which they called Rokem which we translate Needle-work What that was see XXXVIII 39. And their pillars shall be four and their sockets four Proportionable to those on each side of the Gate which were three for Hangings of fifteen Cubits v. 14 15. as these were four for Hangings of twenty Ver. 17. All the Pillars round about the Court shall be filletted with silver Those at the East and West-end as well as those on the South and North-sides Their hooks shall be of silver and their sockets of brass As was before directed v. 10 11. Ver. 18. The length of the Court c. Here all the Dimensions of the Court are put together the length and breadth of which might be inferred from the Hangings v. 9 12 c. but here are expresly determined together with the height which was not at all intimated before and now appointed to be five Cubits l. e. two yards and an half of larger measure than ours So that the Tabernacle might be plainly seen by the People for it was as high again as the Walls if I may so call them that incompassed it Of twined Linen and their sockets of brass This seems to be a brief repetition of what was said before concerning the Hangings and the Pillars which stood on Bases of Brass Ver. 19. All the Vessels of the Tabernacle in all the service thereof This is also a repetition in general of what was said before particularly v. 3. for all the Vessels belonging to the Tabernacle it self were of Gold as we read in the XXVth Chapter And all the pins thereof The Tabernacle had nothing of Brass in the Fabrick of it but the Bases of the Pillars at the Entrance XXVI 37. and therefore these Pins I suppose belong to them whereby the Pillars were fastned in their Sockets And all the pins of the Court shall be of brass These brazen Pins were struck into the ground as Dr. Lightfoot understands it that the Hangings which were tied to them by Cords might be kept from flying up at the bottom Ver. 20. And thou shalt command the Children of Israel that they bring thee pure Oyl-olive beaten Not squeezed out by a Press or by a Mill for such was full of Sediment and Dregs but which run freely from the Olives being bruised with a Pestel For the light In the golden Candlestick XXV 37. To cause the Lamp to burn always Sufficient to keep the Lamp always burning Some imagine that it did not burn day and night but being lighted every Evening went out in the Morning And there are some places which seem to favour this Opinion particularly 1 Sam. III. 3. where mention is made of the Lamp going out viz. in the Morning See also 2 Chron. XIII 11. where we read of setting the Lamps to burn every Evening which seems to signisie that they did not burn in the Day But Josephus who was a Priest and could not but know and had no reason to tell a lie saith they burnt Day and Night And indeed it was but necessary for otherwise the Priests must have ministred in the dark at the Altar of Incense before the Divine Majesty Who kept a Table in the Sanctuary which required light for no Body feasts in darkness And therefore R. Levi of Barcelona Praecept XCVIII saith God commanded a Lamp should always burn in the Sanctuary for the Honour and Majesty of it there being no Light conveyed to it otherways But it is highly probable there were not so many of the Lamps burning in the Day as in the Night when all the seven Lamps were lighted some of which were put out in the Morning and lighted again in the Evening So Josephus saith expresly L. III. Antiq. c. 9. Three burnt all Day before the LORD and the rest were lighted in the Evening Ver. 21. In the Tabernacle of the Congregation without the Vail That is the second Vail which was before the most Holy Place Which is before the Testimony That is the Ark of the Testimony See XXV 21 22. Aaron and his sons shall order it from evening to morning before the LORD As direction is more fully given XXX 7 8. It shall be a Statute for over c. See XXXVIII 43. CHAP. XXVIII Verse 1. AND take thou Aaron thy brother and his sons with him from among the Children of Israel Here Aaron and his Sons are designed to the Priests Office and afterward XXXII 19. the whole Tribe of Levi were Consecrated to the LORD by a noble Act of Zeal which they performed And at last I Numb 51. and many other places it was made Capital for any one else to officiate at the Tabernacle but they only That he may minister unto me Attend on me as my Servant in my Court. For Cohen signifies one that serves in ministerio honorabili in an honourable Office as appears from XII Job 19. Therefore David's Sons are called by this Name 2 Sam. VIII 18. and it was given to the Priests quatenus fuerunt primarij Dei Ministri as they were the principal Ministers of God as Junius observes upon XLI Gen. 45. In the Priests Office Wheresoever there hath been any Religion there have been Priests whose Office it peculiarly was to Minister unto God in the Service belonging to him But this is the first time we read of any Constituted in Israel by a Divine appointment at least the Priesthood was not confined to the particular Family of Aaron who was made High Priest and his Sons Priests of a lower Order Some Heathens imitated this by continuing the Priesthood in a certain Family For Plato says there were in some places 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both of Men and Women which in the founding of a City he would not have a Law-giver alter but where there was no such Constitution he would have annual Priests and none but grave Men of 60 years of Age put into the Office L. VI. de Leg. p. 759. Even Aaron Nadab and Abihu Eleazar and Ithamar Aarons sons These were all the Males in this Family at present whose Descendants in future Ages were all Priests Ver. 2. And thou shalt make holy Garments for Aarou thy brother If very good Authors did not affirm it we should scarce think it credible that the Priests among some of the ancient Heathens offered Sacrifices to their Gods naked Particularly the old Arabians as Hottinger observes in his Histor. Orientalis L. I. c. 7. But such filthiness was abhorred by most People whose Priests were not only Clothed but performed their Service at the Altar in a peculiar Habit.
understood of his Vnction also which was to be by day and not by night and to be repeated seven times And by the same reason the Sacrifices were also to be repeated though if he ministred before they were offered the Doctors held it not to be illegitimate as he shows in the end of that Chapter When he cometh into the Tabernacle of the Congreation to minister in the holy place At this entrance into the Tabernacle he was to put them on for seven days together before he could go to minister in the Sanctuary Ver. 31. And thou shalt take the Ram of the Consecration That is all the rest of the Flesh which was not burnt on the Altar nor given to Moses Who having had their share v. 22 26. the Remainder as the manner was in Peace-offerings belonged to those that brought the Sacrifice And seethe his flesh in the holy place At the door of the Tabernacle of the Congregation as we read expresly VIII Lev. 31. and as it is explained in the next Verse that there they should eat it Fire was taken from the Altar to boil it Ver. 32. And Aaron and his Sons shall cat the flesh of the Ram. That is Feast with God in his own House as Persons now compleatly qualified to minister unto him And the bread that is in the basket All the remaining Bread and Cakes which were presented unto God after that which was burnt upon the Altar as his part v. 23 24 c. By the door of the Tabernacle of the Congregation Hence it appears that this Sacrifice had something in it peculiar from other Peace-offerings which might be carried home and eaten there after God and the Priests had had their parts But this was to be eaten in God's own House where they were Ministers as a thing more holy and therefore Aaron and his Sons and Daughters could not eat of it as all the Family did of other Sacrifices of this kind Ver. 33. And they shall eat those things Aaron and his Sons alone were to eat them and no Body else with them Wherewith the atonement was made The atonement was not made by these things but by the Bullock which was offered in the first place which made them fit to have their hands filled with these things as the Hebrew phrase is for Consecrating v. 23 24. to compleat their Sanctification And therefore the words should be thus translated They shall eat those things for whom the atonement or expiation was made To consecrate and to sanctifie them Their Consecration and Sanctification began by the Sacrifice for Sin and was compleated by this now mentioned But a stranger shall not eat thereof None that are not of the Family of Aaron to whom alone this holy Food belonged Nor were all his Domesticks allowed to eat of it though they might eat of other Peace-offerings but only Aaron and his Sons who being consecrated Persons were to eat these things which had a special holiness in them being part of the Sacrifice of Consecration and therefore appertained only to such Persons as had been consecrated Because they are holy Had a special holiness as I said in them which made it fit only for such Persons to eat them Ver. 34. And if ought of the flesh of the consecrations or of the bread remain unto the morning He and his Sons being not able to eat it all Then thou shalt burn the remainder with fire This is a further argument that there was a peculiar holiness in this Sacrifice of which only Aaron and his Sons might eat for if this had been like to the flesh of other Peace-offerings it might according to the following Law have been kept two days before it was eaten VII Lev. 15 16 c. It shall not be eaten Upon the second day Because it is holy Is of a more than ordinary Sanctity being offered to make Men holy to God and therefore the greatest care was taken it should not be in danger to be in the least corrupted Ver. 35. And thus shalt thou do unto Aaron and unto his Sons according to all things which I have commanded thee This is the sum of what I have to command thee concerning the Consecration of Aaron and of his Sons Seven days shalt thou consecrate them They shall not be made compleat Priests in less time than I have appointed Which no doubt was to make them sensible of the weight of their Office Ver. 36. And thou shalt offer every day a Bullock for a Sin-offering for atonement Lest he should think that only the Ram of Consecration should be offered seven days together he here expresly directs the Bullock for a Sin-offering should be so often repeated The reason of it follows because it was for atonement Which appears by the next words to signifie that it was not only for the atonement of the Priest but of the Altar it self which was by this Sacrifice made fit for God's Service And that 's the reason perhaps why he saith in the Plural Number it was for atonements So the Hebrew Text. And thou shalt cleanse the Altar when thou hast made an atonement for it The Altar was not capable of any guilt therefore this word atonement is here used improperly to signifie that by these repeated Sacrifices it was set apart to be a place where Expiations should be made Or simply this Expiation of the Altar was no more but of a common making it a sacred Place or as Fortunatus Scacchus understands it it was purified by these Rites from that desilement it must be supposed to have contracted by the hands of the Workmen that made it for all Vessels in the sense of the Law were looked upon as made unclean by the touch of any unclean Person And therefore perhaps the Altar was also washed with Water as the Priests were which is here called its cleansing And thou shalt anoint it to sanctifie it To perfect its Sanctification or Separation from common use it was anointed with the holy Oyl mentioned in the next Chapter as Aaron and his Sons were For as by the Blood of the Bullock it was Expiated so by this anointing it was Consecrated which is meant by sanctifying it Ver. 37. Seven days thou shalt make an atonement for the Altar and sanctifie it Many think that these were not distinct seven days from those in which the Priests were expiated and consecrated as the Bullock for the Cleansing of the Altar was not a distinct Bullock from that for the Priests but the same Sacrifice served for both This Opinion I shall consider in the conclusion of this Book XL. 17 18. and now only observe that thus not only the Priests among the Heathen but their Altars also were dedicated by their Taurobolia and Criobolia which I mentioned v. 20. for we find an ancient Inscription wherein one is said to have set up PETRAM TAVROBOLIATAM an Altar consecrated by besmearing it with the Blood of those Sacrifices as Fortunatus Scacchus interprets it
at Marah XV. 25. XVI 23. was that Men and Beasts might rest in remembrance of the rest that God had given them from their Burdens in Egypt See XXXV 2. R. Levi Barzelonita observes that this Precept is repeated in the Law XII times Ver. 13. In all things that I have said unto you be circumspect Be cautious lest you offend in any of the fore-named Particulars but especially in that which follows And make no mention of the names of other gods Such Cautions as these to prevent Idolatry are repeated no less than XLIV times in the Law as the same R. Levi observes And the meaning of this is either that they should not Swear by other Gods or make any Vows in their Names nor consequently enter into Society with Gentiles as the best of the Hebrew Writers understand it and as the Vulgar Latin takes it or that they should not so much as simply name the Gods of other Nations They who are of this last Opinion differ in their Explication of it For some of them say only the calling them by such Names as attribute some Divinity to them is the thing forbidden not calling them by their proper Names of Moloch or Bell or the like and thus Tertullian understood it But there are others who think it unlawful so much as to use any of their Names in common Discourse though there be no mention of their Divinity For Chemosh and Milcom and such like Names they say are not mentioned in Scripture but with detestation and reproach as the Abomination of the Moabites or Ammonites and therefore they think it unlawful to say I invite thee on the Feast-day of such an Idol of the Gentiles or the like Yet some of those who imagine the simple use of their Names to be forbidden except the Names of those mention'd in Scripture So Maimonides The Names of the Idols of the Gentiles which are mentioned in Scripture it is lawful for us to Name as Peor Bell Nebo Baal c. See Selden L. II. de Jure N. G. c. 13. p. 269 c. They say this Precept binds Men and Women in all places and at all times and the Punishment for its violation was beating Neither shall it be heard out of thy mouth i. e. With any respect or reverence to them Otherwise the simple pronunciation of the Name was not unlawful The Sabbath being instituted partly to preserve them from Idolatry some think that the reason why this Precept is joyned to that Ver. 14. Three times shalt thou keep a feast unto me in the year Viz. At the Passover Pentecost and when they gathered all the Fruits of the Earth and dwelt in Tabernacles as it follows in the next Verses The first of which was plainly instituted in memory of their coming out of Egypt The second some think was in memory of their coming into Canaan rather of the overthrow of Pharaoh in the Sea and giving the Law on Mount Sinai And the third in memory of their dwelling so long in the Wilderness and of the wonders which God did there as Maimonides observes in his More Nevoch P. III. c. 43. At these three great Solemnities three things were to be done First they were to make a Feast Secondly to appear before God in the Court of the Temple and thirdly to rejoyce Besides which they were to bring certain Offerings unto God Ver. 15. Thou shalt keep the feast of unleavened bread c. See XII 17 c. XIII 6 7. In the time appointed of the month Abib Or in the Month of new ears of Corn. See XIII 4. For many Learned men particularly Huetius think this word Abib not to be a proper Name but an Apellative as they speak the proper Names of Months being not yet used among the Hebrews who spake of them before the Captivity of Babylon according to the order and number wherein they stood viz. first second third c. Month. See Demonstr Evang. Prop. IV. Cap. de Libro Joshuae n. 2. And none shall appear before me empty The phrase in the Hebrew which we translate appear before me is very remarkable viz. None shall see my face Which doth not signifie that they beheld the External Symbol of his Presence but that they looked directly that way where it was and that they should not be accepted by God unless they brought some Present with them For none approached to an Earthly Majesty in those Countries without a Present as we read in the Sacred Story which was a Token of Love and Affection as well as of Respect and Honour And therefore this Precept did not belong only to this Feast but to all the three mentioned in the Verse before as appears from XVI Deut. 16. And accordingly there were special Oblations ordained by the Law it self which were then to be made At the Passover when their Harvest began they were to bring a Sheaf of the First-fruits of their Harvest and might not eat any Corn till this was done XXIII Lev. 10 14. At the next Feast they brought two wave Loaves for a second First-fruit of their Wheat-harvest XXIII Lev. 17. and at the Feast of Tabernacles they offered the First-fruits of Wine and Oyl See Mr. Mede Discourse XLVI p. 355. Besides all which good Men brought Free-will Offerings which are often mentioned in the Law Ver. 16. And the feast of harvest Called also the Feast of Weeks XXXIV 22. because it was Seven Weeks after the Passover Mr. Mede in the place now named thinks this was called the Harvest Feast because as Harvest began at the Passover so it ended at Pentecost And thus Bochart also At the Passover they first put the Sickle into the Corn and about Pentecost Harvest was finished and all brought into the Barn Hierozoic P. I. L. III. c. 13. But this seems not to be true for now only the First-fruits were brought which were not offered in the end but in the beginning of Harvest And so it follows here The first-fruits of thy labours which thou hast sown in the field Which is not to be understood of all their Labours but of those Fruits which were first sown in the Ground It being therefore called the Harvest Feast because the principal part of Harvest viz. the Wheat Harvest as it is expresly called XXXIV 22. then began which sort of Grain was sown before Barley as that was before Flax and therefore here called the first-fruits of their labours sown in the field And the feast of in-gathering Called also the Feast of Tabernacles XXIII Lev. 34. Which is in the end of the year By this it appears that their Year anciently began in the Month Tisri about Autumn at which time the World it self began as Scaliger and a great many other Learned Men assert with such Reasons as are not easie to be confuted When thou hast gathered in thy labours out of the field At this Feast their Harvest was compleated the Fruits of the Earth being not only ripe