601 lines
44 KiB
XML
601 lines
44 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Ex.iii" n="iii" next="Ex.iv" prev="Ex.ii" progress="31.51%" title="Chapter II">
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<h2 id="Ex.iii-p0.1">E X O D U S</h2>
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<h3 id="Ex.iii-p0.2">CHAP. II.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Ex.iii-p1">This chapter begins the story of Moses, that man
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of renown, famed for his intimate acquaintance with Heaven and his
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eminent usefulness on earth, and the most remarkable type of
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Christ, as a prophet, saviour, lawgiver, and mediator, in all the
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Old Testament. The Jews have a book among them of the life of
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Moses, which tells a great many stories concerning him, which we
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have reason to think are mere fictions; what he has recorded
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concerning himself is what we may rely upon, for we know that his
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record is true; and it is what we may be satisfied with, for it is
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what Infinite Wisdom thought fit to preserve and transmit to us. In
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this chapter we have, I. The perils of his birth and infancy,
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<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.1-Exod.2.4" parsed="|Exod|2|1|2|4" passage="Ex 2:1-4">ver. 1-4</scripRef>. II. His
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preservation through those perils, and the preferment of his
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childhood and youth, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.5-Exod.2.10" parsed="|Exod|2|5|2|10" passage="Ex 2:5-10">ver.
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5-10</scripRef>. III. The pious choice of his riper years, which
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was to own the people of God. 1. He offered them his service at
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present, if they would accept it, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.11-Exod.2.14" parsed="|Exod|2|11|2|14" passage="Ex 2:11-14">ver. 11-14</scripRef>. 2. He retired, that he might
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reserve himself for further service hereafter, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.15-Exod.2.22" parsed="|Exod|2|15|2|22" passage="Ex 2:15-22">ver. 15-22</scripRef>. IV. The dawning of the day of
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Israel's deliverance, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.23-Exod.2.25" parsed="|Exod|2|23|2|25" passage="Ex 2:23-25">ver.
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23</scripRef>, &c.</p>
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<scripCom id="Ex.iii-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2" parsed="|Exod|2|0|0|0" passage="Ex 2" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Ex.iii-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.1-Exod.2.4" parsed="|Exod|2|1|2|4" passage="Ex 2:1-4" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Exod.2.1-Exod.2.4">
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<h4 id="Ex.iii-p1.8">The Birth of Moses. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ex.iii-p1.9">b. c.</span> 1571.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Ex.iii-p2">1 And there went a man of the house of Levi, and
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took <i>to wife</i> a daughter of Levi. 2 And the woman
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conceived, and bare a son: and when she saw him that he <i>was
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a</i> goodly <i>child,</i> she hid him three months. 3 And
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when she could not longer hide him, she took for him an ark of
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bulrushes, and daubed it with slime and with pitch, and put the
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child therein; and she laid <i>it</i> in the flags by the river's
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brink. 4 And his sister stood afar off, to wit what would be
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done to him.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p3">Moses was a Levite, both by father and
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mother. Jacob left Levi under marks of disgrace (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p3.1" osisRef="Bible:Gen.49.5" parsed="|Gen|49|5|0|0" passage="Ge 49:5">Gen. xlix. 5</scripRef>); and yet, soon after, Moses
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appears a descendant from him, that he might typify Christ, who
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came in the likeness of sinful flesh and was made a curse for us.
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This tribe began to be distinguished from the rest by the birth of
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Moses, as afterwards it became remarkable in many other instances.
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Observe, concerning this newborn infant,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p4">I. How he was hidden. It seems to have been
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just at the time of his birth that the cruel law was made for the
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murder of all the male children of the Hebrews; and many, no doubt,
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perished by the execution of it. The parents of Moses had Miriam
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and Aaron, both older than he, born to them before this edict came
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out, and had nursed them without that peril: but those that begin
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the world in peace know not what troubles they may meet with before
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they have got through it. Probably the mother of Moses was full of
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anxiety in the expectation of his birth, now that this edict was in
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force, and was ready to say, <i>Blessed are the barren that never
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bore,</i> <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p4.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.23.29" parsed="|Luke|23|29|0|0" passage="Lu 23:29">Luke xxiii. 29</scripRef>.
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Better so than bring forth children to the murderer, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p4.2" osisRef="Bible:Hos.9.13" parsed="|Hos|9|13|0|0" passage="Ho 9:13">Hos. ix. 13</scripRef>. Yet this child proves the
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glory of his father's house. Thus that which is most our fear often
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proves, in the issue, most our joy. Observe the beauty of
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providence: just at the time when Pharaoh's cruelty rose to this
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height the deliverer was born, though he did not appear for many
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years after. Note, When men are projecting the church's ruin God is
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preparing for its salvation. Moses, who was afterwards to bring
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Israel out of this house of bondage, was himself in danger of
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falling a sacrifice to the fury of the oppressor, God so ordering
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it that, being afterwards told of this, he might be the more
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animated with a holy zeal for the deliverance of his brethren out
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of the hands of such bloody men. 1. His parents observed him to be
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a <i>goodly child,</i> more than ordinarily beautiful; he was
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<i>fair to God,</i> <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p4.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.7.20" parsed="|Acts|7|20|0|0" passage="Ac 7:20">Acts vii.
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20</scripRef>. They fancied he had a lustre in his countenance that
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was something more than human, and was a specimen of the shining of
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his face afterwards, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p4.4" osisRef="Bible:Exod.34.29" parsed="|Exod|34|29|0|0" passage="Ex 34:29">Exod. xxxiv.
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29</scripRef>. Note, God sometimes gives early earnests of his
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gifts, and manifests himself betimes in those for whom and by whom
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he designs to do great things. Thus he put an early strength into
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Samson (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p4.5" osisRef="Bible:Judg.13.24-Judg.13.25" parsed="|Judg|13|24|13|25" passage="Jdg 13:24,25">Judge xiii. 24,
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25</scripRef>), an early forwardness into Samuel (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p4.6" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.2.18" parsed="|1Sam|2|18|0|0" passage="1Sa 2:18">1 Sam. ii. 18</scripRef>), wrought an early
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deliverance for David (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p4.7" osisRef="Bible:1Sam.17.37" parsed="|1Sam|17|37|0|0" passage="1Sa 17:37">1 Sam. xvii.
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37</scripRef>), and began betimes with Timothy, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p4.8" osisRef="Bible:1Tim.3.15" parsed="|1Tim|3|15|0|0" passage="1Ti 3:15">1 Tim. iii. 15</scripRef>. 2. Therefore they were the
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more solicitous for his preservation, because they looked upon this
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as an indication of some kind purpose of God concerning him, and a
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happy omen of something great. Note, A lively active faith can take
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encouragement from the least intimation of the divine favour; a
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merciful hint of Providence will encourage those whose spirits make
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diligent search, <i>Three months</i> they hid him in some private
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apartment of their own house, though probably with the hazard of
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their own lives, had he been discovered. Herein Moses was a type of
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Christ, who, in his infancy, was forced to abscond, and in Egypt
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too (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p4.9" osisRef="Bible:Matt.2.13" parsed="|Matt|2|13|0|0" passage="Mt 2:13">Matt. ii. 13</scripRef>), and was
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wonderfully preserved, when many innocents were butchered. It is
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said (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p4.10" osisRef="Bible:Heb.11.23" parsed="|Heb|11|23|0|0" passage="Heb 11:23">Heb. xi. 23</scripRef>) that
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the parents of Moses <i>hid him by faith;</i> some think they had a
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special revelation to them that the deliverer should spring from
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their loins; however they had the general promise of Israel's
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preservation, which they acted faith upon, and in that faith hid
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their child, not being afraid of the penalty annexed to the king's
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commandment. Note, Faith in God's promise is so far from
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superseding that it rather excites and quickens to the use of
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lawful means for the obtaining of mercy. Duty is ours, events are
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God's. Again, Faith in God will set us above the ensnaring fear of
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man.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p5">II. How he was exposed. At three months'
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end, probably when the searchers came about to look for concealed
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children, so that they could not hide him any longer (their faith
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perhaps beginning now to fail), they put him in an ark of bulrushes
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by the <i>river's brink</i> (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.3" parsed="|Exod|2|3|0|0" passage="Ex 2:3"><i>v.</i>
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3</scripRef>), and set his little sister at some distance to watch
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what would become of him, and into whose hands he would fall,
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<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p5.2" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.4" parsed="|Exod|2|4|0|0" passage="Ex 2:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>. God put it into
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their hearts to do this, to bring about his own purposes, that
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Moses might by this means be brought into the hands of Pharaoh's
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daughter, and that by his deliverance from this imminent danger a
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specimen might be given of the deliverance of God's church, which
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now lay thus exposed. Note, 1. God takes special care of the
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outcasts of Israel (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p5.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.147.2" parsed="|Ps|147|2|0|0" passage="Ps 147:2">Ps. cxlvii.
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2</scripRef>); they are <i>his</i> outcasts, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p5.4" osisRef="Bible:Isa.16.4" parsed="|Isa|16|4|0|0" passage="Isa 16:4">Isa. xvi. 4</scripRef>. Moses seemed quite abandoned by
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his friends; his own mother durst not own him: but now the Lord
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took him up and protected him, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p5.5" osisRef="Bible:Ps.27.10" parsed="|Ps|27|10|0|0" passage="Ps 27:10">Ps.
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xxvii. 10</scripRef>. 2. In times of extreme difficulty it is good
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to venture upon the providence of God. Thus to have exposed their
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child while they might have preserved it, would have been to tempt
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Providence; but, when they could not, it was to trust to
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Providence. "Nothing venture, nothing win." <i>If I perish, I
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perish.</i></p>
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</div><scripCom id="Ex.iii-p5.6" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.5-Exod.2.10" parsed="|Exod|2|5|2|10" passage="Ex 2:5-10" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Exod.2.5-Exod.2.10">
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<h4 id="Ex.iii-p5.7">The Deliverance of Moses. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ex.iii-p5.8">b. c.</span> 1571.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Ex.iii-p6">5 And the daughter of Pharaoh came down to wash
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<i>herself</i> at the river; and her maidens walked along by the
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river's side; and when she saw the ark among the flags, she sent
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her maid to fetch it. 6 And when she had opened <i>it,</i>
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she saw the child: and, behold, the babe wept. And she had
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compassion on him, and said, This <i>is one</i> of the Hebrews'
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children. 7 Then said his sister to Pharaoh's daughter,
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Shall I go and call to thee a nurse of the Hebrew women, that she
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may nurse the child for thee? 8 And Pharaoh's daughter said
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to her, Go. And the maid went and called the child's mother.
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9 And Pharaoh's daughter said unto her, Take this child away, and
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nurse it for me, and I will give <i>thee</i> thy wages. And the
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woman took the child, and nursed it. 10 And the child grew,
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and she brought him unto Pharaoh's daughter, and he became her son.
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And she called his name Moses: and she said, Because I drew him out
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of the water.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p7">Here is, I. Moses saved from perishing.
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Come see the place where that great man lay when he was a little
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child; he lay in a bulrush-basket by the river's side. Had he been
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left to lie there, he must have perished in a little time with
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hunger, if he had not been sooner washed into the river or devoured
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by a crocodile. Had he fallen into any other hands than those he
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did fall into, either they would not, or durst not, have done
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otherwise than have thrown him straightway into the river; but
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Providence brings no less a person thither than Pharaoh's daughter,
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just at that juncture, guides her to the place where this poor
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forlorn infant lay, and inclines her heart to pity it, which she
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dares do when none else durst. Never did poor child cry so
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seasonably, so happily, as this did: <i>The babe wept,</i> which
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moved the compassion of the princess, as no doubt his beauty did,
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<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.5-Exod.2.6" parsed="|Exod|2|5|2|6" passage="Ex 2:5,6"><i>v.</i> 5, 6</scripRef>. Note, 1.
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Those are hard-hearted indeed that have not a tender compassion for
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helpless infancy. How pathetically does God represent his
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compassion for the Israelites in general considered in this
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pitiable state! <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.16.5-Ezek.16.6" parsed="|Ezek|16|5|16|6" passage="Eze 16:5,6">Ezek. xvi. 5,
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6</scripRef>. 2. It is very commendable in persons of quality to
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take cognizance of the distresses of the meanest, and to be helpful
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and charitable to them. 3. God's care of us in our infancy ought to
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be often made mention of by us to his praise. Though we were not
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thus exposed (that we were not was God's mercy) yet many were the
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perils we were surrounded with in our infancy, out of which the
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Lord delivered us, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p7.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.22.9-Ps.22.10" parsed="|Ps|22|9|22|10" passage="Ps 22:9,10">Ps. xxii. 9,
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10</scripRef>. 4. God often raises up friends for his people even
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among their enemies. Pharaoh cruelly seeks Israel's destruction,
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but his own daughter charitably compassionates a Hebrew child, and
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not only so, but, beyond her intention, preserves Israel's
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deliverer. <i>O Lord, how wonderful are thy counsels!</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p8">II. Moses well provided with a good nurse,
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no worse than his own dear mother, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p8.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.7-Exod.2.9" parsed="|Exod|2|7|2|9" passage="Ex 2:7-9"><i>v.</i> 7-9</scripRef>. Pharaoh's daughter thinks it
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convenient that he should have a Hebrew nurse (pity that so fair a
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child should be suckled by a sable Moor), and the sister of Moses,
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with art and good management, introduces the mother into the place
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of a nurse, to the great advantage of the child; for mothers are
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the best nurses, and those who receive the blessings of the breasts
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with those of the womb are not just if they give them not to those
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for whose sake they received them: it was also an unspeakable
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satisfaction to the mother, who received her son as life from the
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dead, and now could enjoy him without fear. The transport of her
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joy, upon this happy turn, we may suppose sufficient to betray her
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to be the true mother (had there been any suspicion of it) to a
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less discerning eye than that of Solomon, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p8.2" osisRef="Bible:1Kgs.3.27" parsed="|1Kgs|3|27|0|0" passage="1Ki 3:27">1 Kings iii. 27</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p9">III. Moses preferred to be the son of
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Pharaoh's daughter (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p9.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.10" parsed="|Exod|2|10|0|0" passage="Ex 2:10"><i>v.</i>
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10</scripRef>), his parents herein perhaps not only yielding to
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necessity, having nursed him <i>for her,</i> but too much pleased
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with the honour thereby done to their son; for the smiles of the
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world are stronger temptations than its frowns, and more difficult
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to resist. The tradition of the Jews is that Pharaoh's daughter had
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no child of her own, and that she was the only child of her father,
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so that when he was adopted for her son he stood fair for the
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crown: however it is certain he stood fair for the best preferments
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of the court in due time, and in the meantime had the advantage of
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the best education and improvements of the court, with the help of
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which, having a great genius, he became master of all the lawful
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learning of the Egyptians, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p9.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.7.22" parsed="|Acts|7|22|0|0" passage="Ac 7:22">Acts vii.
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22</scripRef>. Note, 1. Providence pleases itself sometimes in
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raising the poor out of the dust, to set them among princes,
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<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p9.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.113.7-Ps.113.8" parsed="|Ps|113|7|113|8" passage="Ps 113:7,8">Ps. cxiii. 7, 8</scripRef>. Many
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who, by their birth, seem marked for obscurity and poverty, by
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surprising events of Providence are brought to sit at the upper end
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of the world, to make men know that <i>the heavens do rule.</i> 2.
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Those whom God designs for great services he find out ways to
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qualify and prepare beforehand. Moses, by having his education in a
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court, is the fitter to be a prince and <i>king in Jeshurun;</i> by
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having his education in a learned court (for such the Egyptian then
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was) is the fitter to be an historian; and by having his education
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in the court of Egypt is the fitter to be employed, in the name of
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God, as an ambassador to that court.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p10">IV. Moses named. The Jews tell us that his
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father, at his circumcision, called him <i>Joachim,</i> but
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Pharaoh's daughter called him <i>Moses, Drawn out of the water,</i>
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so it signifies in the Egyptian language. The calling of the Jewish
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lawgiver by an Egyptian name is a happy omen to the Gentile world,
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and gives hopes of that day when it shall be said, <i>Blessed be
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Egypt my people,</i> <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Isa.19.25" parsed="|Isa|19|25|0|0" passage="Isa 19:25">Isa. xix.
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25</scripRef>. And his tuition at court was an earnest of the
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performance of that promise, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p10.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.49.23" parsed="|Isa|49|23|0|0" passage="Isa 49:23">Isa.
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xlix. 23</scripRef>, <i>Kings shall be thy nursing fathers, and
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queens thy nursing mothers.</i></p>
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</div><scripCom id="Ex.iii-p10.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2" parsed="|Exod|2|0|0|0" passage="Ex 2" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Ex.iii-p10.4" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.11-Exod.2.15" parsed="|Exod|2|11|2|15" passage="Ex 2:11-15" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Exod.2.11-Exod.2.15">
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<h4 id="Ex.iii-p10.5">Moses Slays an Egyptian; Rebukes a
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Contentious Hebrew. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ex.iii-p10.6">b. c.</span> 1533.)</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Ex.iii-p11">11 And it came to pass in those days, when Moses
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was grown, that he went out unto his brethren, and looked on their
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burdens: and he spied an Egyptian smiting an Hebrew, one of his
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brethren. 12 And he looked this way and that way, and when
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he saw that <i>there was</i> no man, he slew the Egyptian, and hid
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him in the sand. 13 And when he went out the second day,
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behold, two men of the Hebrews strove together: and he said to him
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that did the wrong, Wherefore smitest thou thy fellow? 14
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And he said, Who made thee a prince and a judge over us? intendest
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thou to kill me, as thou killedst the Egyptian? And Moses feared,
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and said, Surely this thing is known. 15 Now when Pharaoh
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heard this thing, he sought to slay Moses. But Moses fled from the
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face of Pharaoh, and dwelt in the land of Midian: and he sat down
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by a well.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p12">Moses had now passed the first forty years
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of his life in the court of Pharaoh, preparing himself for
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business; and now it was time for him to enter upon action,
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and,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p13">I. He boldly owns and espouses the cause of
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God's people: <i>When Moses was grown he went out unto his
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brethren, and looked on their burdens,</i> <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.11" parsed="|Exod|2|11|0|0" passage="Ex 2:11"><i>v.</i> 11</scripRef>. The best exposition of these
|
||
words we have from an inspired pen, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p13.2" osisRef="Bible:Heb.11.24-Heb.11.26" parsed="|Heb|11|24|11|26" passage="Heb 11:24-26">Heb. xi. 24-26</scripRef>, where we are told that by
|
||
this he expressed, 1. His holy contempt of the honours and
|
||
pleasures of the Egyptian court; he <i>refused to be called the son
|
||
of Pharaoh's daughter,</i> for <i>he went out.</i> The temptation
|
||
was indeed very strong. He had a fair opportunity (as we say) to
|
||
make his fortune, and to have been serviceable to Israel too, with
|
||
his interest at court. He was obliged, in gratitude as well as
|
||
interest, to Pharaoh's daughter, and yet he obtained a glorious
|
||
victory by faith over his temptation. He reckoned it much more his
|
||
honour and advantage to be a son of Abraham than to be the son of
|
||
Pharaoh's daughter. 2. His tender concern for his poor brethren in
|
||
bondage, with whom (though he might easily have avoided it) he
|
||
<i>chose to suffer affliction;</i> he looked on their burdens as
|
||
one that not only pitied them, but was resolved to venture with
|
||
them, and, if occasion were, to venture for them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p14">II. He gives a specimen of the great things
|
||
he was afterwards to do for God and his Israel in two little
|
||
instances, related particularly by Stephen (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Acts.7.23-Acts.7.53" parsed="|Acts|7|23|7|53" passage="Ac 7:23-53">Acts vii. 23</scripRef>, &c.) with design to show
|
||
how their fathers had <i>always resisted the Holy Ghost</i>
|
||
(<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p14.2" osisRef="Bible:Acts.7.51" parsed="|Acts|7|51|0|0" passage="Ac 7:51"><i>v.</i> 51</scripRef>), even in
|
||
Moses himself, when he first appeared as their deliverer, wilfully
|
||
shutting their eyes against this day-break of their enlargement. He
|
||
found himself, no doubt, under a divine direction and impulse in
|
||
what he did, and that he was in an extraordinary manner called of
|
||
God to do it. Now observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p15">1. Moses was afterwards to be employed in
|
||
plaguing the Egyptians for the wrongs they had done to God's
|
||
Israel; and, as a specimen of that, he killed the Egyptian who
|
||
smote the Hebrew (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p15.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.11-Exod.2.12" parsed="|Exod|2|11|2|12" passage="Ex 2:11,12"><i>v.</i> 11,
|
||
12</scripRef>); probably it was one of the Egyptian taskmasters,
|
||
whom he found abusing his Hebrew slave, a relation (as some think)
|
||
of Moses, a man of the same tribe. It was by special warrant from
|
||
Heaven (which makes not a precedent in ordinary cases) that Moses
|
||
slew the Egyptian, and rescued his oppressed brother. The Jew's
|
||
tradition is that he did not slay him with any weapon, but, as
|
||
Peter slew Ananias and Sapphira, with the word of his mouth. His
|
||
<i>hiding him in the sand</i> signified that hereafter Pharaoh and
|
||
all his Egyptians should, under the control of the rod of Moses, be
|
||
buried in the sand of the Red Sea. His taking care to execute this
|
||
justice privately, when no man saw, was a piece of needful prudence
|
||
and caution, it being but an assay; and perhaps his faith was as
|
||
yet weak, and what he did was with some hesitation. Those who come
|
||
to be of great faith, yet began with a little, and at first spoke
|
||
tremblingly.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p16">2. Moses was afterwards to be employed in
|
||
governing Israel, and as a specimen of this, we have him here
|
||
trying to end a controversy between two Hebrews, in which he is
|
||
forced (as he did afterwards for forty years) to suffer their
|
||
manners. Observe here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p17">(1.) The unhappy quarrel which Moses
|
||
observed between two Hebrews, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.13" parsed="|Exod|2|13|0|0" passage="Ex 2:13"><i>v.</i>
|
||
13</scripRef>. It does not appear what was the occasion; but,
|
||
whatever it was, it was certainly very unseasonable for Hebrews to
|
||
strive with one another when they were all oppressed and ruled with
|
||
rigour by the Egyptians. Had they not beating enough from the
|
||
Egyptians, but they must beat one another? Note, [1.] Even
|
||
sufferings in common do not always unite God's professing people to
|
||
one another, so much as one might reasonably expect. [2.] When God
|
||
raises up instruments of salvation for the church they will find
|
||
enough to do, not only with oppressing Egyptians, to restrain them,
|
||
but with quarrelsome Israelites, to reconcile them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p18">(2.) The way he took of dealing with them;
|
||
he marked him that caused the division, that did the wrong, and
|
||
mildly reasoned with him: <i>Wherefore smitest thou thy fellow?</i>
|
||
The injurious Egyptian was killed, the injurious Hebrew was only
|
||
reprimanded; for what the former did was from a rooted malice, what
|
||
the latter did we may suppose was only upon a sudden provocation.
|
||
The wise God makes, and, according to his example, all wise
|
||
governors make, a difference between one offender and another,
|
||
according to the several qualities of the same offence. Moses
|
||
endeavoured to make them friends, a good office; thus we find
|
||
Christ often reproving his disciples' strifes (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Luke.9.46-Luke.9.50 Bible:Luke.22.24-Luke.22.27" parsed="|Luke|9|46|9|50;|Luke|22|24|22|27" passage="Lu 9:46-50,22:24-27">Luke ix. 46, &c.; xxii. 24,
|
||
&c.</scripRef>), for he was a prophet like unto Moses, a
|
||
healing prophet, a peacemaker, who visited his brethren with a
|
||
design to slay all enmities. The reproof Moses gave on this
|
||
occasion may still be of use, <i>Wherefore smitest thou thy
|
||
fellow?</i> Note, Smiting our fellows is bad in any, especially in
|
||
Hebrews, smiting with tongue or hand, either in a way of
|
||
persecution or in a way of strife and contention. Consider the
|
||
person thou smitest; it is thy fellow, thy fellow-creature, thy
|
||
fellow-christian, it is thy fellow-servant, thy fellow-sufferer.
|
||
Consider the cause, <i>Wherefore smitest?</i> Perhaps it is for no
|
||
cause at all, or no just cause, or none worth speaking of.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p19">(3.) The ill success of his attempt
|
||
(<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p19.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.14" parsed="|Exod|2|14|0|0" passage="Ex 2:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>): <i>He said,
|
||
Who made thee a prince?</i> He that did the wrong thus quarrelled
|
||
with Moses; the injured party, it should seem, was inclinable
|
||
enough to peace, but the wrong-doer was thus touchy. Note, It is a
|
||
sign of guilt to be impatient of reproof; and it is often easier to
|
||
persuade the injured to bear the trouble of taking wrong than the
|
||
injurious to bear the conviction of having <i>done wrong.</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p19.2" osisRef="Bible:1Cor.6.7-1Cor.6.8" parsed="|1Cor|6|7|6|8" passage="1Co 6:7,8">1 Cor. vi. 7, 8</scripRef>. It was a
|
||
very wise and mild reproof which Moses gave to this quarrelsome
|
||
Hebrew, but he could not bear it, he kicked against the pricks
|
||
(<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p19.3" osisRef="Bible:Acts.9.5" parsed="|Acts|9|5|0|0" passage="Ac 9:5">Acts ix. 5</scripRef>), and crossed
|
||
questions with his reprover. [1.] He challenges his authority:
|
||
<i>Who made thee a prince?</i> A man needs no great authority for
|
||
the giving of a friendly reproof, it is an act of kindness; yet
|
||
this man needs will interpret it an act of dominion, and represents
|
||
his reprover as imperious and assuming. Thus when people dislike
|
||
good discourse, or a seasonable admonition, they will call it
|
||
<i>preaching,</i> as if a man could not speak a work for God and
|
||
against sin but he took too much upon him. Yet Moses was indeed a
|
||
prince and a judge, and knew it, and thought the Hebrews would have
|
||
understood it, and struck in with him; but they stood in their own
|
||
light, and <i>thrust him away,</i> <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p19.4" osisRef="Bible:Acts.7.25 Bible:Acts.7.27" parsed="|Acts|7|25|0|0;|Acts|7|27|0|0" passage="Ac 7:25,27">Acts vii. 25, 27</scripRef>. [2.] He upbraids him with
|
||
what he had done in killing the Egyptian: <i>Intendest thou to kill
|
||
me?</i> See what base constructions malice puts upon the best words
|
||
and actions. Moses, for reproving him is immediately charged with a
|
||
design to kill him. An attempt upon his sin was interpreted an
|
||
attempt upon his life; and his having killed the Egyptian was
|
||
thought sufficient to justify the suspicion; as if Moses made no
|
||
difference between an Egyptian and a Hebrew. If Moses, to right an
|
||
injured Hebrew, had put his life in his hand, and slain an
|
||
Egyptian, he ought therefore to have submitted to him, not only as
|
||
a friend to the Hebrews, but as a friend that had more than
|
||
ordinary power and zeal. But he throws that in his teeth as a crime
|
||
which was bravely done, and was intended as a specimen of the
|
||
promised deliverance; if the Hebrews had taken the hint, and come
|
||
in to Moses as their head and captain, it is probable that they
|
||
would have been delivered now; but, despising their deliverer,
|
||
their deliverance was justly deferred, and their bondage prolonged
|
||
forty years, as afterwards their despising Canaan kept them out of
|
||
it forty years more. <i>I would, and you would not.</i> Note, Men
|
||
know not what they do, nor what enemies they are to their own
|
||
interest, when they resist and despise faithful reproofs and
|
||
reprovers. When the Hebrews strove with Moses, God sent him away
|
||
into Midian, and they never heard of him for forty years; thus the
|
||
things that belonged to their peace were hidden from their eyes,
|
||
because they knew not the day of their visitation. As to Moses, we
|
||
may look on it as a great damp and discouragement to him. He was
|
||
now <i>choosing to suffer affliction with the people of God,</i>
|
||
and embracing <i>the reproach of Christ;</i> and now, at his first
|
||
setting out, to meet with this affliction and reproach from them
|
||
was a very sore trial of his resolution. He might have said, "If
|
||
this be the spirit of the Hebrews, I will go to court again, and be
|
||
the son of Pharaoh's daughter." Note, <i>First,</i> We must take
|
||
heed of being prejudiced against the ways and people of God by the
|
||
follies and peevishness of some particular persons that profess
|
||
religion. <i>Secondly,</i> It is no new thing for the church's best
|
||
friends to meet with a great deal of opposition and discouragement
|
||
in their healing, saving attempts, even from their own mother's
|
||
children; Christ himself was set at nought by the builders, and is
|
||
still rejected by those he would save.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p20">(4.) The flight of Moses to Midian, in
|
||
consequence. The affront given him thus far proved a kindness to
|
||
him; it gave him to understand that his killing the Egyptian was
|
||
discovered, and so he had time to make his escape, otherwise the
|
||
wrath of Pharaoh might have surprised him and taken him off. Note,
|
||
God can overrule even the strife of tongues, so as, one way or
|
||
other, to bring good to his people out of it. Information was
|
||
brought to Pharaoh (and it is well if it was not brought by the
|
||
Hebrew himself whom Moses reproved) of his killing the Egyptian;
|
||
warrants are presently out for the apprehending of Moses, which
|
||
obliged him to shift for his own safety, by flying into the land of
|
||
Midian, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.15" parsed="|Exod|2|15|0|0" passage="Ex 2:15"><i>v.</i> 15</scripRef>. [1.]
|
||
Moses did this out of a prudent care of his own life. If this be
|
||
his forsaking of Egypt which the apostle refers to as done by faith
|
||
(<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p20.2" osisRef="Bible:Heb.11.27" parsed="|Heb|11|27|0|0" passage="Heb 11:27">Heb. xi. 27</scripRef>), it teaches
|
||
us that when we are at any time in trouble and danger for doing our
|
||
duty the grace of faith will be of good use to us in taking proper
|
||
methods for our own preservation. Yet there it is said, <i>He
|
||
feared not the wrath of the king;</i> here it is said he
|
||
<i>feared,</i> <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p20.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.14" parsed="|Exod|2|14|0|0" passage="Ex 2:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>.
|
||
He did not fear with a fear of diffidence and amazement, which
|
||
weakens and has torment, but with a fear of diligence, which
|
||
quickened him to take that way which Providence opened to him for
|
||
his own preservation. [2.] God ordered it for wise and holy ends.
|
||
Things were not yet ripe for Israel's deliverance: the measure of
|
||
Egypt's iniquity was not yet full; the Hebrews were not
|
||
sufficiently humbled, nor were they yet increased to such a
|
||
multitude as God designed; Moses is to be further fitted for the
|
||
service, and therefore is directed to withdraw for the present,
|
||
till the time to favour Israel, even the set time, should come. God
|
||
guided Moses to Midian because the Midianites were of the seed of
|
||
Abraham, and retained the worship of the true God among them, so
|
||
that he might have not only a safe but a comfortable settlement
|
||
among them. And through this country he was afterwards to lead
|
||
Israel, with which (that he might do it the better) he now had
|
||
opportunity of making himself acquainted. Hither he came, and sat
|
||
down by a well, tired and thoughtful, at a loss, and waiting to see
|
||
which way Providence would direct him. It was a great change with
|
||
him, since he was but the other day at ease in Pharaoh's court:
|
||
thus God tried his faith, and it was found to praise and
|
||
honour.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Ex.iii-p20.4" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2" parsed="|Exod|2|0|0|0" passage="Ex 2" type="Commentary"/>
|
||
<scripCom id="Ex.iii-p20.5" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.16-Exod.2.22" parsed="|Exod|2|16|2|22" passage="Ex 2:16-22" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Exod.2.16-Exod.2.22">
|
||
<h4 id="Ex.iii-p20.6">The Marriage of Moses. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ex.iii-p20.7">b. c.</span> 1533.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Ex.iii-p21">16 Now the priest of Midian had seven daughters:
|
||
and they came and drew <i>water,</i> and filled the troughs to
|
||
water their father's flock. 17 And the shepherds came and
|
||
drove them away: but Moses stood up and helped them, and watered
|
||
their flock. 18 And when they came to Reuel their father, he
|
||
said, How <i>is it that</i> ye are come so soon to day? 19
|
||
And they said, An Egyptian delivered us out of the hand of the
|
||
shepherds, and also drew <i>water</i> enough for us, and watered
|
||
the flock. 20 And he said unto his daughters, And where
|
||
<i>is</i> he? why <i>is</i> it <i>that</i> ye have left the man?
|
||
call him, that he may eat bread. 21 And Moses was content to
|
||
dwell with the man: and he gave Moses Zipporah his daughter.
|
||
22 And she bare <i>him</i> a son, and he called his name Gershom:
|
||
for he said, I have been a stranger in a strange land.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p22">Moses here gains a settlement in Midian,
|
||
just as his father Jacob had gained one in Syria, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p22.1" osisRef="Bible:Gen.29.2" parsed="|Gen|29|2|0|0" passage="Ge 29:2">Gen. xxix. 2</scripRef>, &c. And both these
|
||
instances should encourage us to trust Providence, and to follow
|
||
it. Events that seem inconsiderable, and purely accidental, after
|
||
wards appear to have been designed by the wisdom of God for very
|
||
good purposes, and of great consequence to his people. A casual
|
||
transient occurrence has sometimes occasioned the greatest and
|
||
happiest turns of a man's life. Observe,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p23">I. Concerning the seven daughters of Reuel
|
||
the priest or prince of Midian. 1. They were humble, and very
|
||
industrious, according as the employment of the country was: they
|
||
<i>drew water for their father's flock,</i> <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.16" parsed="|Exod|2|16|0|0" passage="Ex 2:16"><i>v.</i> 16</scripRef>. If their father was a prince, it
|
||
teaches us that even those who are honourably born, and are of
|
||
quality and distinction in their country, should yet apply
|
||
themselves to some useful business, and what their hand finds to do
|
||
do it with all their might. Idleness can be no one's honour. If
|
||
their father was a priest, it teaches us that ministers' children
|
||
should, in a special manner, be examples of humility and industry.
|
||
2. They were modest, and would not ask this strange Egyptian to
|
||
come home with them (though handsome and a great courtier), till
|
||
their father sent for him. Modesty is the ornament of woman.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p24">II. Concerning Moses. He was taken for an
|
||
Egyptian (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.19" parsed="|Exod|2|19|0|0" passage="Ex 2:19"><i>v.</i> 19</scripRef>); and
|
||
strangers must be content to be the subjects of mistake; but it is
|
||
observable, 1. How ready he was to help Reuel's daughters to water
|
||
their flocks. Though bred in learning and at court, yet he knew how
|
||
to turn his hand to such an office as this when there was occasion;
|
||
nor had he learned of the Egyptians to despise shepherds. Note,
|
||
Those that have had a liberal education yet should not be strangers
|
||
to servile work, because they know not what necessity Providence
|
||
may put them in of working for themselves, or what opportunity
|
||
Providence may give them of being serviceable to others. These
|
||
young women, it seems, met with some opposition in their
|
||
employment, more than they and their servants could conquer; the
|
||
shepherds of some neighbouring prince, as some think, or some idle
|
||
fellows that called themselves shepherds, <i>drove away their
|
||
flocks;</i> but Moses, though melancholy and in distress, <i>stood
|
||
up and helped them,</i> not only to get clear of the shepherds,
|
||
but, when that was done, to water the flocks. This he did, not only
|
||
in complaisance to the daughters of Reuel (though that also did
|
||
very well become him), but because, wherever he was, as occasion
|
||
offered itself, (1.) He loved to be doing justice, and appearing in
|
||
the defence of such as he saw injured, which every man ought to do
|
||
as far as it is in the power of his hand to do it. (2.) He loved to
|
||
be doing good. Wherever the Providence of God casts us we should
|
||
desire and endeavour to be useful; and, when we cannot do the good
|
||
we would, we must be ready to do the good we can. And he that is
|
||
faithful in a little shall be entrusted with more. 2. How well he
|
||
was paid for his serviceableness. When the young women acquainted
|
||
their father with the kindnesses they had received from this
|
||
stranger, he sent to invite him to his house, and made much of him,
|
||
<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p24.2" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.20" parsed="|Exod|2|20|0|0" passage="Ex 2:20"><i>v.</i> 20</scripRef>. Thus God will
|
||
recompense the kindnesses which are at any time shown to his
|
||
children; they shall in no wise lose their reward. Moses soon
|
||
recommended himself to the esteem and good affection of this prince
|
||
of Midian, who took him into his house, and, in process of time,
|
||
married one of his daughters to him (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p24.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.21" parsed="|Exod|2|21|0|0" passage="Ex 2:21"><i>v.</i> 21</scripRef>), by whom he had a son, whom he
|
||
called <i>Gershom, a stranger there</i> (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p24.4" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.22" parsed="|Exod|2|22|0|0" passage="Ex 2:22"><i>v.</i> 22</scripRef>), that if ever God should give
|
||
him a home of his own he might keep in remembrance the land in
|
||
which he had been a stranger. Now this settlement of Moses in
|
||
Midian was designed by Providence, (1.) To shelter him for the
|
||
present. God will find hiding-places for his people in the day of
|
||
their distress; nay, he will himself be to them a little sanctuary,
|
||
and will secure them, either under heaven or in heaven. But, (2.)
|
||
It was also designed to prepare him for the great services he was
|
||
further designed for. His manner of life in Midian, where he kept
|
||
the flock of his father-in-law (having none of his own to keep),
|
||
would be of use to him, [1.] To inure him to hardship and poverty,
|
||
that he might learn how to want as well as how to abound. Those
|
||
whom God intends to exalt he first humbles. [2.] To inure him to
|
||
contemplation and devotion. Egypt accomplished him as a scholar, a
|
||
gentleman, a statesman, a soldier, all which accomplishments would
|
||
be afterwards of use to him; but yet he lacked one thing, in which
|
||
the court of Egypt could not befriend him. He that was to do all by
|
||
divine revelation must know, by a long experience, what it was to
|
||
live a life of communion with God; and in this he would be greatly
|
||
furthered by the solitude and retirement of a shepherd's life in
|
||
Midian. By the former he was prepared to rule in Jeshurun, but by
|
||
the latter he was prepared to converse with God in Mount Horeb,
|
||
near which mount he had spent much of his time. Those that know
|
||
what it is to be alone with God in holy exercises are acquainted
|
||
with better delights than ever Moses tasted in the court of
|
||
Pharaoh.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Ex.iii-p24.5" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.23-Exod.2.25" parsed="|Exod|2|23|2|25" passage="Ex 2:23-25" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Exod.2.23-Exod.2.25">
|
||
<h4 id="Ex.iii-p24.6">Cry of the Oppressed
|
||
Israelites. (<span class="smallcaps" id="Ex.iii-p24.7">b. c.</span> 1491.)</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Ex.iii-p25">23 And it came to pass in process of time, that
|
||
the king of Egypt died: and the children of Israel sighed by reason
|
||
of the bondage, and they cried, and their cry came up unto God by
|
||
reason of the bondage. 24 And God heard their groaning, and
|
||
God remembered his covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with
|
||
Jacob. 25 And God looked upon the children of Israel, and
|
||
God had respect unto <i>them.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Ex.iii-p26">Here is, 1. The continuance of the
|
||
Israelites' bondage in Egypt, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p26.1" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.23" parsed="|Exod|2|23|0|0" passage="Ex 2:23"><i>v.</i>
|
||
23</scripRef>. Probably the murdering of their infants did not
|
||
continue; this part of their affliction attended only the period
|
||
immediately connected with the birth of Moses, and served to
|
||
signalize it. The Egyptians now were content with their increase,
|
||
finding that Egypt was enriched by their labour; so that they might
|
||
have them for slaves, they cared not how many they were. On this
|
||
therefore they were intent, to keep them all at work, and make the
|
||
best hand they could of their labour. When one Pharaoh died,
|
||
another rose up in his place that was governed by the same maxims,
|
||
and was as cruel to Israel as his predecessors. If there was
|
||
sometimes a little relaxation, yet it presently revived again with
|
||
as much rigour as ever; and probably, as the more Israel were
|
||
oppressed the more they multiplied, so the more they multiplied the
|
||
more they were oppressed. Note, Sometimes God suffers the rod of
|
||
the wicked to lie very long and very heavily on the lot of the
|
||
righteous. If Moses, in Midian, at any time began to think how much
|
||
better his condition might have been had he staid among the
|
||
courtiers, he must of himself think this also, how much worse it
|
||
would have been if he had had his lot with brethren: it was a great
|
||
degradation to him to be keeping sheep in Midian, but better so
|
||
than making brick in Egypt. The consideration of our brethren's
|
||
afflictions would help to reconcile us to our own. 2. The preface
|
||
to their deliverance at last. (1.) <i>They cried,</i> <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p26.2" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.23" parsed="|Exod|2|23|0|0" passage="Ex 2:23"><i>v.</i> 23</scripRef>. Now, at last, they began
|
||
to think of God under their troubles, and to return to him from the
|
||
idols they had served, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p26.3" osisRef="Bible:Ezek.20.8" parsed="|Ezek|20|8|0|0" passage="Eze 20:8">Ezek. xx.
|
||
8</scripRef>. Hitherto they had fretted at the instruments of their
|
||
trouble, but God was not in all their thoughts. Thus <i>hypocrites
|
||
in heart heap up wrath; they cry not when he binds them,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p26.4" osisRef="Bible:Job.36.13" parsed="|Job|36|13|0|0" passage="Job 36:13">Job xxxvi. 13</scripRef>. But before
|
||
God unbound them he put it into their hearts to cry unto him, as it
|
||
is explained, <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p26.5" osisRef="Bible:Num.20.16" parsed="|Num|20|16|0|0" passage="Nu 20:16">Num. xx. 16</scripRef>.
|
||
Note, It is a good sign that God is coming towards us with
|
||
deliverance when he inclines and enables us to cry to him for it.
|
||
(2.) <i>God heard,</i> <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p26.6" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.24-Exod.2.25" parsed="|Exod|2|24|2|25" passage="Ex 2:24,25"><i>v.</i> 24,
|
||
25</scripRef>. The name of God is here emphatically prefixed to
|
||
four different expressions of a kind intention towards them. [1.]
|
||
<i>God heard their groaning;</i> that is, he made it to appear that
|
||
he took notice of their complaints. The groans of the oppressed cry
|
||
aloud in the ears of the righteous God, to whom vengeance belongs,
|
||
especially the groans of God's spiritual Israel; he knows the
|
||
burdens they groan under and the blessings they groan after, and
|
||
that the blessed Spirit, by these groanings, makes intercession in
|
||
them. [2.] <i>God remembered his covenant,</i> which he seemed to
|
||
have forgotten, but of which he is ever mindful. This God had an
|
||
eye to, and not to any merit of theirs, in what he did for them.
|
||
See <scripRef id="Ex.iii-p26.7" osisRef="Bible:Lev.26.42" parsed="|Lev|26|42|0|0" passage="Le 26:42">Lev. xxvi. 42</scripRef>. (3.)
|
||
<i>God looked upon the children of Israel.</i> Moses looked upon
|
||
them and pitied them (<scripRef id="Ex.iii-p26.8" osisRef="Bible:Exod.2.11" parsed="|Exod|2|11|0|0" passage="Ex 2:11"><i>v.</i>
|
||
11</scripRef>); but now God looked upon them and helped them. (4.)
|
||
<i>God had a respect unto them,</i> a favourable respect to them as
|
||
his own. The frequent repetition of the name of God here intimates
|
||
that now we are to expect something great, <i>Opus Deo dignum—A
|
||
work worthy of God.</i> His eyes, which run to and fro through the
|
||
earth, are now fixed upon Israel, to show himself strong, to show
|
||
himself a God in their behalf.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |