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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
nothing else to support them in the Wilderness during that time because through haste they were constrained to bring their Dough out of Egypt unleavened v. 39. Even the first day ye shall put leaven out of your Houses Which they searched with great diligence the Evening before that the smallest Crumb might not be left behind So their Doctors tell us particularly Maimonides in his Treatise on this Subject See Buxtorf Synagog Judaic c. 17. That Soul shall be cut off from Israel See concerning this Cereth or cutting off which is often mentioned in these Books XVII Gen. 14. Most think it a Punishment by the Hand of God and not of Man Ver. 16. And in the first day there shall be an holy Convocation and in the seventh day c. The first and the last days of the Feast of unleavened Bread were kept holy the other five were working days because as God delivered them from their cruel Bondage in Egypt upon the first day so he overthrew Pharaoh and his Host in the Red-sea upon the seventh No manner of work shall be done in them No manner of Servile Work See XXIII Lev. 7 8. Save only that which every man must eat c. He that did any other Work was to be beaten For they equal these days with the Sabbath in this regard that whatsoever Work was forbidden on the Sabbath might not be done on any such days as these which they call good days But they might provide good Cheer on these days though not more than could be eaten See Buxtorf Synag Jud. c. 19. where he shows at large what things might be done and what not on these days according to the Opinion of their Doctors Ver. 17. And ye shall observe the Feast of unleavened Bread c. He repeats it again because it was a thing of great moment to have these seven days observed intirely and not only the Passover upon the fourteenth day in the Evening that they might every year think so long of God's great Goodness in delivering them from their miserable Condition in Egypt as not to let the sense of so singular a Benefit slip at any time quite out of their Minds By an Ordinance for ever See v. 14. Ver. 18. In the first Month on the fourteenth day of the Month at Even c. The Passover was celebrated in the Conclusion of the fourteenth day of this Month just before the beginning of the fifteenth day For the next Morning when the Israelites immediately after they had eaten the Lamb were hastned out of Egypt was not part of the fourteenth day but of the fifteenth as we read XXXII Numb 3. Vntil the one and twentieth day of the Month at Even That is for seven days as was said before v. 15. and again is repeated v. 19. which began immediately after the eating the Paschal Lamb in the end of the fourteenth day For if they should be reckoned from the beginning of the fourteenth day there would be not seven but eight days of unleavened Bread Ver. 19. Seven days shall there be no Leaven found in your Houses This still makes the Precept stricter that they were not only to abstain from any thing leavened but not so much as to have it in their Habitations Accordingly the Jews tell us of an exact Search which every one was bound to make with lighted Wax-Candles lest it should remain in any Corner or Crevise of the House Their Scrupulosity in this matter is exactly described by Buxtorf in his Synag Jud. cap. 17. p. 394 c. Whether he be a stranger c. That is one of another Nation but had embrac'd the Jewish Religion by receiving Circumcision For none else were admitted to eat of the Passover v. 48. Such a Person was called by the Greeks a Proselyte Ver. 20. Ye shall eat nothing leavened This according to the Jews explains what follows in all your Habitations shall ye eat unleavened Bread That is if they eat any Bread at all it was to be without leaven See v. 15. Accordingly on the day before the Passover they were very busie in making Cakes which they call Mazzoth without any Butter or Oyl or so much as Salt in them of meer Water and Flowre Which being very insipid some made bold as their Authors tells us to add Eggs and Sugar and sometimes the Richer sort made them of meer Almonds both for the honour of the Feast as they pretended and for the comfort of sick and infirm People as well as to render them more pleasant Yet on the first day of the Feast they would eat none of these but only the Bread of Affliction as they called it made meerly of Meal and Water Ver. 21. Then Moses called for all the Elders of Israel Immediately after he had received the Command from God he summoned them to deliver it to the People that it might be put in Execution Concerning Elders see III. 16. Draw out and take you a Lamb. It is thus expounded by Jonathan in his Paraphrase Withdraw your hands from the Idols of Egypt and take a Lamb to your Families c. By which it appears he thought this was opposed to the Rites of the Egyptians but I know not on what ground for the Israelites offered no Sacrifices there According to your Families See v. 3. And kill the Passover It belonged to every Man to do it as was said v. 6. and now there was no Priest as yet ordained but every Father of a Family exercised that Office I need not mention the manner after which the Jewish Writers say it was to be slain The Passover The Hebrew word Pesach signifies principally the Angel's passing by the Israelites when he slew the Egyptian Children From whence it came to signifie also the Lamb that was offered in memory of this Deliverance and was a means of it at this time So it signifies here and in many other places And likewise it signifies all the Sacrifices which were wont to accompany this Lamb and were offered to God with it at this Festival XVI Deut. 2. And lastly the Feast it self is called by this Name XXII Luke 1. And here it may be fit to note that the Lamb being first killed in Egypt it was killed in every Man's House for they had no Altar there nor any other place where they had liberty to kill it But after they came to the Land of Canaan it was not lawful to Sacrifice it any where but in the place which God appointed for his Worship XVI Deut. 2. From whence Meimonides concludes that whatsoever they did with other Sacrifices yet this could not be offered in the High Places but only at the Temple And it is likely they did so in the Wilderness the Tabernacle being newly erected at the keeping of the second Passover IX Numb 5. Ver. 22. And ye shall take a bunch of Hysop So the Leper was to be cleansed and the House infected with Leprosie XIV Lev. 6 7 49 50 c. and so
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
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
the People and sometimes the whole Body of the People as Corn. Bon. Bertram observes de Repub. Jud. cap. 6. It seems here to be used in the first Sense for he could not speak these words to the whole Body of the People but to the principal Persons of the several Tribes by whom what he said was communicated to all Israel These are the words which the LORD hath commanded ●hat ye should do them Before they entred upon the work he admonishes them that none of it must be done upon the Sabbath Ver. 2. Six days shall work be done but on the seventh day there shall be to you an holy Sabbath c. This Commandment was particularly repeated to Moses at the end of all the directions about the building of the Tabernacle See XXXI 13 14 15. and now repeated to them as it was at his late renewing his Covenant with them XXXIV 21. that they might not imagine any of the work here commanded to be done about the Tabernacle c. would licence them to break the Sabbath The observation of which being the great Preservative of Religion that 's the reason it is so often enjoyned and particular care taken to secure it And it is not to be omitted that to show of what great concern it is he calls it here as he did XXXI 15. where the end and use of it is set down the Sabbath of Sabbaths that is the great Sabbath or Rest Ver. 3. Ye shall kindle no fire in your Habitations upon the Sabbath-day To dress their Meat or for any other work otherwise they might kindle a Fire to warm themselves in cold Weather This is sufficiently comprehended under the general Command Thou shalt not do any work XX. 10. Therefore the meaning is Thou shalt not so much as kindle a fire for any such purpose For that 's the Rule they give in Halicoth Olam cap. 2. that such particular Prohibitions forbid the whole kind i. e. all manner of work whatsoever which is here mentioned to show they might not kindle a fire for this work of the Tabernacle Ver. 4. And spake unto all the Congregation c. See v. 1. This is the Thing which the LORD commanded Having secured the observation of the Sabbath according to the Direction given just before he came down from the Mount the first time XXXI 13 14 15. he now relates to them what Commands he received from God concerning all that follows Ver. 5. Take ye from amongst you an offering unto the LORD And first he makes a motion to them from the LORD that they would make a free Oblation of Materials for the Building of the Tabernacle and all other things which the LORD commanded to be made v. 10 c. Take ye is as much as bring ye and so we translate it XXV 2. See there Where it appears that this was the very first thing God said to him concerning a voluntary Offering which was the Foundation of all the rest and therefore is first propounded to the People by him Whosoever is of a willing heart c. See there XXV 2. Ver. 6 7 8 9. All these have been explained in the XXV Chapter v. 3 4 5 c. Ver. 10. Every wise-hearted among you shall come and make all that the LORD hath commanded Every skilful Person in the Art of making the things following The same is said of the Women v. 25. The Hebrew word Cochmah which we translate Wisdom is used variously as Maimonides observes sometimes for the understanding of Divine things sometimes for Moral Vertue and sometimes for skill in a●● Art of which he alledges this place as an instance and sometimes for Craft and Subtilty See More Nevochim P. III. c. 54. The word leb or heart is used here according to the Vulgar opinion of those days that the Heart is the Seat of the Understanding And thus I observed before upon Chap. XXV that excellent Artists are by the Heathen called Wise-men Since which I have observed that this is the Language of Homer himself whose Verses concerning Margites are quoted by Aristotle in more places than one L. VI. Moral ad Nicomach c. 7. L. V. Moral ad Endemum c. 7. where he saith he was so foolish that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Gods neither made him a Ditcher nor a Plough-man nor any other sort of Wise-man Upon which Aristotle notes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We ascribe Wisdom in Arts to those who excel in them and then he instances in Phidias a Stone-Cutter and Pobycletus a Statuary Ver. 11. The Tabernacle This signifies sometimes the whole Structure of the House of God but here only the fine inward Curtains mentioned XXVI 1 2 c. His Tent. This signifies the Curtains of Goats-hair which were laid over the other XXVI 7 c. His Covering Of Rams-skins and Badger-skins which were thrown over the other two XXVI 14. His Taches and his Boards his Bars his Pillars and his Sockets All these are explained in that Chapter Ver. 12. The Ark and his Staves with the Mercy-seat See XXV 10 13 17. And the Vail of the Covering Whereby the Holy was separated from the most Holy Place Which is here fitly mentioned between the Mercy-seat which was within and the Table c. which were without this Vail Ver. 13. The Table and his Staves and all his Vessels See all these explained XXV 23 24 c. And the Shew-bread This is a short Expression one word as is usual being cut off viz. the Dishes in which the Shew-bread was set For Moses had not order to make the Bread it self but the Dishes as I said on which the Loaves were laid XXV 29. Ver. 14. The Candlestick also for the light and his Furniture and his Lamps See XXVI 31 32 c. With the Oyl for the Light See XXVII 20 21. Ver. 15. And the Incense Altar and the Staves See XXXI 1 2 c. And the anointing Oyl XXXI 23 24 c. And the sweet Incense XXXI 34 c. He mentioned before the Materials for them v. 8. and now the things themselves And the hanging for the door at the entring in of the Tabernacle Of this see XXVI 36. Ver. 16. And the Altar of Burnt-offering with his brazen Grate his Staves These are explained XXVII 1 2 4 5 6 7. And all his Vessels See there v. 3. The Laver and his foot See XXIX 17 18. Ver. 17. The hangings of the Court his Pillars and their Sockets See XXVII 9 10 c. And the hangings for the door of the Court See there v. 16. Ver. 18. The Pins of the Tabernacle c. XXVII 19. Ver. 19. The Clothes of the Service to do Service in the holy place the holy Garments for Aaron the Priest and his Sons c. Of which there is an account in the whole XXVIIIth Chapter And Moses here makes this large enumeration of all the things which God had commanded v. 10. that they might be