Moses
The Lord Calls Moses from the Burning Bush
The holy, covenant-keeping Lord reveals Himself to Moses, promises His presence, and declares that He will redeem His suffering people by His mighty hand.
Reading a chapter
What this page is: Each chapter page shows the big idea, the argument flow, key original-language terms, doctrine connections, and passage units, all in one place.
How to use it: Start with the Overview tab to get the chapter's main point. Then move to Passages to study individual units, or Language to trace key terms.
Going deeper: The Doctrines and Motifs tabs show how this chapter connects to the broader biblical story.
The holy, covenant-keeping Lord reveals Himself to Moses, promises His presence, and declares that He will redeem His suffering people by His mighty hand.
Exodus 3 argues that redemption begins in God's self-revelation and covenant faithfulness. Moses is not the source of deliverance; He is the summoned servant. Israel's suffering has been seen, heard, and known by the Lord, who now reveals His holy presence, His covenant name, and His sovereign intention to rescue. The chapter establishes that the Exodus will be accomplished not by Moses' adequacy, Pharaoh's permission, or Israel's strength, but by the Lord's presence and mighty hand.
Israel, the covenant people redeemed from Egypt and taught to understand their deliverance as the Lord's faithful action according to His covenant promise.
Moses is shepherding the flock of Jethro in Midian and comes to Horeb, the mountain of God, while Israel remains in bondage in Egypt.
The holy, covenant-keeping Lord reveals Himself to Moses, promises His presence, and declares that He will redeem His suffering people by His mighty hand.
Moses
Israel, the covenant people redeemed from Egypt and taught to understand their deliverance as the Lord's faithful action according to His covenant promise.
Moses is shepherding the flock of Jethro in Midian and comes to Horeb, the mountain of God, while Israel remains in bondage in Egypt.
- Israel is suffering under Egyptian slavery, crying out under oppression, while Moses lives as a fugitive and sojourner away from Egypt.
Moses has moved from Egyptian royal surroundings to wilderness shepherding. The wilderness, often seen as a place of obscurity and hardship, becomes the place of divine revelation and commissioning.
Exodus 3 is the theological turning point where the God who heard Israel's groaning now reveals Himself, declares His covenant faithfulness, and commissions Moses as the human instrument of deliverance.
The Lord appears to Moses in the burning bush, reveals His holiness and covenant name, announces His concern for Israel's suffering, and sends Moses to Pharaoh with the promise of deliverance.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Exodus 3 prepares gospel clarity by showing that redemption is God's initiative, rooted in His compassion, covenant faithfulness, self-revelation, and power. Israel cannot free itself; Moses cannot deliver by mere human strength; Pharaoh will not yield voluntarily. The Lord must come down, send, speak, act, and redeem. This movement points forward to Christ, in whom God comes near, reveals Himself fully, and accomplishes the greater Exodus from sin and death.
Moses encounters the holy God in the wilderness, not in Egypt's palace. The deliverance story begins with God's revelation, not human strategy.
The Lord responds to Israel's misery with personal concern and a declared intention to deliver them.
Moses' insufficiency is answered by God's presence, not by Moses' self-confidence.
The Lord reveals His self-existence, faithfulness, and covenant identity as the God of the fathers.
God sends Moses with a message, foretells Pharaoh's resistance, and promises deliverance by His mighty hand.
- 1-3: Moses sees the strange sight of a burning bush that remains unconsumed, drawing Him into an encounter with God.
- 4-6: God calls Moses personally, commands reverence, and reveals Himself as the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
- 7-10: God announces that He has seen Israel's misery, heard their cries, and come down to rescue them.
- 11-12: Moses questions His own adequacy, and God promises to be with Him.
- 13-15: God reveals Himself as I AM WHO I AM and as the Lord, the covenant God of Israel's fathers.
- 16-18: Moses is commanded to gather the elders and then go with them to Pharaoh to request release for worship.
- 19-22: God foretells Pharaoh's refusal, His own mighty acts, and Israel's departure with provision from Egypt.
Theological Argument
Exodus 3 argues that redemption begins in God's self-revelation and covenant faithfulness. Moses is not the source of deliverance; He is the summoned servant. Israel's suffering has been seen, heard, and known by the Lord, who now reveals His holy presence, His covenant name, and His sovereign intention to rescue. The chapter establishes that the Exodus will be accomplished not by Moses' adequacy, Pharaoh's permission, or Israel's strength, but by the Lord's presence and mighty hand.
From wilderness obscurity, to holy revelation, to covenant compassion, to personal commission, to the revelation of God's name, to the promised defeat of Pharaoh.
- 1.God reveals Himself as holy before He sends Moses to serve.
- 2.God's deliverance arises from His covenant concern for His suffering people.
- 3.The servant's inadequacy is answered by God's presence.
- 4.God's name reveals His self-existence, faithfulness, and covenant identity.
- 5.Pharaoh's resistance will not stop redemption because God Himself will act with power.
Theological Focus
- Divine holiness
- Covenant remembrance
- Divine self-revelation
- God's presence with His servant
- Redemption by God's mighty hand
- The name of the Lord
- God's compassion toward His oppressed people
- Worship as the goal of deliverance
- Holy ground and divine presence
- God who sees, hears, and knows
- Redemption as divine descent
- Calling and inadequacy
- The divine name
- Conflict with Pharaoh
- Deliverance unto worship
- Divine Holiness
- Divine Self-Existence
- Covenant Faithfulness
- Providence
- Divine Compassion
- Redemption
- Calling and Commission
- Worship
- Divine Sovereignty over Opposition
Theological Themes
The command to remove sandals teaches that God's presence makes the place holy and demands reverent response.
The Lord is not distant from Israel's affliction. He sees misery, hears cries, and knows suffering covenantally and compassionately.
God says He has come down to rescue Israel, presenting deliverance as His initiative and action.
Moses' question, 'Who am I?' is answered not by Moses' qualifications but by God's promise, 'I will be with You.'
God reveals Himself as I AM WHO I AM and as the Lord, grounding the mission in His eternal, self-existent, covenant-keeping identity.
God foretells Pharaoh's resistance so Moses will understand that opposition is not a surprise but part of the stage on which God's power will be displayed.
The request to go into the wilderness to sacrifice to the Lord shows that redemption is not mere escape but movement toward worshipful covenant service.
Covenant Significance
Exodus 3 explicitly roots the coming deliverance in God's covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. The Lord remembers His promises, reveals His covenant name, and announces that He will bring Israel from bondage into the promised land. The chapter turns the Exodus from a human rescue mission into covenant redemption initiated by the God of the fathers.
- The God of the fathers - God identifies Himself as the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, tying Moses' mission to the patriarchal covenant.
- Covenant remembrance becomes covenant action - The remembrance of Exodus 2 becomes the declared rescue of Exodus 3.
- Promise of land - God promises to bring Israel into a good and spacious land, fulfilling the land dimension of the Abrahamic covenant.
- Covenant identity through divine name - The Lord's name is given as the enduring memorial by which Israel will know and worship Him.
- Worship as covenant goal - Israel is to be brought out of Egypt so they may worship and serve the Lord.
- Genesis 12:1-3 - The promise to Abraham begins the covenant line through which Israel's deliverance must be understood.
- Genesis 15:13-16 - God foretold Israel's oppression and promised deliverance from a foreign land.
- Genesis 17:7-8 - God established His covenant with Abraham and His offspring and promised the land.
- Genesis 46:3-4 - God promised Jacob that He would make Him a great nation in Egypt and bring Him up again.
- Exodus 2:23-25 - God hears Israel's groaning and remembers His covenant, leading directly to His revelation in Exodus 3.
Canonical Connections
God's self-identification links the Exodus directly to the patriarchal promises.
God's seeing and hearing of suffering becomes a recurring biblical basis for prayer, lament, and hope.
The revelation of the divine name becomes foundational for Israel's worship, theology, and covenant memory.
Moses is sent as God's mediator before Pharaoh and Israel, anticipating later biblical patterns of divine sending.
The Exodus is ordered toward worship and service, not mere independence.
The promise of God's hand against Egypt becomes a major Exodus motif of judgment and redemption.
Cross References
You shall answer and say before Yahweh your God, “My father was a Syrian ready to perish. He went down into Egypt, and lived there, few in number. There he became a great, mighty, and populous nation. The Egyptians mistreated us, afflicted...
Now Yahweh said to Abram, “Leave your country, and your relatives, and your father’s house, and go to the land that I will show you. I will make of you a great nation. I will bless you and make your name great. You will be a blessing. I...
He said to Abram, “Know for sure that your offspring will live as foreigners in a land that is not theirs, and will serve them. They will afflict them four hundred years. I will also judge that nation, whom they will serve. Afterward they...
I will establish my covenant between me and you and your offspring after you throughout their generations for an everlasting covenant, to be a God to you and to your offspring after you. I will give to you, and to your offspring after you,...
Yahweh appeared to him the same night, and said, “I am the God of Abraham your father. Don’t be afraid, for I am with you, and will bless you, and multiply your offspring for my servant Abraham’s sake.”
Behold, Yahweh stood above it, and said, “I am Yahweh, the God of Abraham your father, and the God of Isaac. I will give the land you lie on to you and to your offspring. Your offspring will be as the dust of the earth, and you will spread...
God spoke to Israel in the visions of the night, and said, “Jacob, Jacob!” He said, “Here I am.” He said, “I am God, the God of your father. Don’t be afraid to go down into Egypt, for there I will make of you a great nation. I will go down...
He said, “I am God, the God of your father. Don’t be afraid to go down into Egypt, for there I will make of you a great nation. I will go down with you into Egypt. I will also surely bring you up again. Joseph’s hand will close your eyes.”
Joseph said to his brothers, “I am dying, but God will surely visit you, and bring you up out of this land to the land which he swore to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob.” Joseph took an oath from the children of Israel, saying, “God will...
Exodus 3 prepares gospel clarity by showing that redemption is God's initiative, rooted in His compassion, covenant faithfulness, self-revelation, and power. Israel cannot free itself; Moses cannot deliver by mere human strength; Pharaoh will not yield voluntarily. The Lord must come down, send, speak, act, and redeem. This movement points forward to Christ, in whom God comes near, reveals Himself fully, and accomplishes the greater Exodus from sin and death.
- Redemption begins with God - God says, 'I have come down to rescue them.' Salvation begins in divine initiative, not human self-rescue.
- God hears suffering - The gospel is not detached from human misery. God sees bondage and acts to redeem.
- A mediator is sent - Moses is sent as God's servant, preparing the category of mediated deliverance fulfilled in Christ.
- God's presence secures the mission - The promise 'I will be with You' grounds confidence in God's saving work.
- Deliverance leads to worship - God redeems His people to belong to Him, serve Him, and worship Him.
- The mighty hand overcomes resistance - Pharaoh's power cannot stop God's redeeming purpose, just as sin and death cannot overcome Christ.
- Do not make Moses the hero in a way that sidelines the Lord's initiative.
- Do not reduce God's name to a slogan detached from covenant redemption.
- Do not present salvation as mere circumstantial improvement.
- Do not disconnect deliverance from worship and obedience.
- Do not jump to Christ in a way that erases the Exodus setting · trace the redemptive pattern faithfully.
Primary Emphasis
Exodus 3 advances the canonical pattern of divine redemption through a sent mediator, God's presence with His servant, and deliverance from bondage for worship. Moses is commissioned as the deliverer of Israel, but His mission points beyond Himself to Christ, the greater Mediator and Redeemer, who is sent by the Father, reveals God fully, enters the affliction of His people, defeats the greater bondage of sin and death, and brings His people into worship and communion with God.
Chapter Contribution
Exodus 3 argues that redemption begins in God's self-revelation and covenant faithfulness. Moses is not the source of deliverance; He is the summoned servant. Israel's suffering has been seen, heard, and known by the Lord, who now reveals His holy presence, His covenant name, and His sovereign intention to rescue. The chapter establishes that the Exodus will be accomplished not by Moses' adequacy, Pharaoh's permission, or Israel's strength, but by the Lord's presence and mighty hand.
The Lord binds His name to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, showing that the exodus is the fulfillment of prior promise rather than a disconnected rescue event.
The Lord is not indifferent to the suffering of His people. His seeing, hearing, and knowing are covenantal and active, leading to saving intervention.
God’s presence makes the ground holy and requires reverent response; holiness is not an abstract quality but the reality of God’s own consecrating presence.
Moses does not discover a mission by self-direction; God appears, calls, and speaks before Moses is commissioned.
God calls and sends servants to act within His redemptive purpose, but the mission remains God's work from beginning to end.
The sufficiency of Moses' calling rests on the Lord's promise, 'I will be with You,' not on Moses' natural confidence.
God makes Himself known by His name and deeds, giving Moses a message grounded in God's own self-disclosure.
The Lord is not defined by creation, Egypt, Pharaoh, or Moses' adequacy; He is the God who is and who acts from the fullness of His own being.
Moses’ hidden face is not unbelief but reverent fear before the God who comes near yet remains holy.
Moses' 'Who am I?' question rightly recognizes insufficiency, but it becomes unbelief if it refuses to rest in the presence and promise of God.
The promised plundering of Egypt reverses exploitation and shows that the oppressor's wealth is not beyond God's righteous jurisdiction.
The passage prepares for Moses’ mediatorial role, but shows first that any true mediator stands under God’s holy authority.
God announces Pharaoh's resistance in advance and includes it within His saving plan, demonstrating that opposition cannot overturn divine purpose.
Israel's liberation will not come through negotiation alone but through the Lord's mighty hand and wonders against Egypt.
God makes Himself known through word and manifestation, moving Moses from sight to speech and from wonder to covenant understanding.
Deliverance from Egypt aims at service and worship before God. Freedom is not autonomy but restored covenant allegiance.
God's presence makes the ground holy and demands reverent response from Moses.
God reveals Himself as I AM WHO I AM, grounding His identity in Himself rather than in creation or human definition.
The Lord identifies Himself as the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob and acts in accordance with His covenant promises.
Moses' years in Midian lead to the mountain where God will call Him, showing that wilderness obscurity is not outside divine governance.
God sees, hears, and knows Israel's misery and declares His concern for their suffering.
God announces His intent to rescue Israel from Egypt and bring them into the promised land.
Moses is sent by God, and His authority depends on God's presence and command.
Israel's deliverance is ordered toward worship and sacrifice to the Lord.
God foretells Pharaoh's resistance and promises to overcome it by His mighty hand.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Exodus 3 prepares gospel clarity by showing that redemption is God's initiative, rooted in His compassion, covenant faithfulness, self-revelation, and power. Israel cannot free itself; Moses cannot deliver by mere human strength; Pharaoh will not yield voluntarily. The Lord must come down, send, speak, act, and redeem. This movement points forward to Christ, in whom God comes near, reveals Himself fully, and accomplishes the greater Exodus from sin and death.
Sense Horeb, mountain of God
Definition The mountain region associated with Moses' call and later Sinai revelation.
References Exodus 3:1
Lexicon Horeb, mountain of God
Why it matters Horeb becomes the place of divine revelation, commission, and later covenant worship.
Sense messenger of the LORD
Definition A divine messenger associated here with the LORD's own presence and speech.
References Exodus 3:2
Lexicon messenger of the LORD
Why it matters The passage moves from the angel of the Lord appearing to God Himself calling from the bush, marking a profound divine encounter.
Sense thornbush, bush
Definition A bush or thornbush in which the LORD appears in fire.
References Exodus 3:2
Lexicon thornbush, bush
Why it matters The ordinary bush becomes the site of extraordinary revelation because God is present.
Sense fire
Definition Fire, often associated in Scripture with divine presence, holiness, judgment, and purification.
References Exodus 3:2
Lexicon fire
Why it matters The fire that burns without consuming signals God's holy presence and sovereign power.
Sense holy, set apart
Definition That which is set apart because of relation to God.
References Exodus 3:5
Lexicon holy, set apart
Why it matters The ground is holy because God is present, establishing reverence as the proper response to divine nearness.
Sense God identified by covenant relationship with the patriarchs
Definition God identifies Himself as the covenant God of Israel's fathers.
References Exodus 3:6
Lexicon God identified by covenant relationship with the patriarchs
Why it matters The Exodus is grounded in God's prior covenant commitments, not in a new or disconnected divine action.
Sense to see, perceive, attend to
Definition To see or perceive, here with emphasis through repetition.
References Exodus 3:7
Lexicon to see, perceive, attend to
Why it matters God's seeing is covenantal attention to Israel's misery, not detached observation.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense cry, outcry, cry for help
Definition A cry of distress or appeal for help.
References Exodus 3:7
Lexicon cry, outcry, cry for help
Why it matters Israel's cry reaches the Lord, showing that oppression is brought before divine justice and mercy.
Sense to go down, descend
Definition To descend or come down.
References Exodus 3:8
Lexicon to go down, descend
Why it matters God describes redemption as His own decisive intervention on behalf of His people.
Sense to deliver, rescue, snatch away
Definition To rescue from danger or oppression.
References Exodus 3:8
Lexicon to deliver, rescue, snatch away
Why it matters This term names the Lord's saving action toward Israel in Egypt.
Sense I will be with you
Definition A promise of divine presence accompanying the sent servant.
References Exodus 3:12
Lexicon I will be with you
Why it matters God answers Moses' inadequacy with His own presence, which becomes the foundation of the mission.
Sense I AM WHO I AM / I WILL BE WHAT I WILL BE
Definition A divine self-declaration associated with God's self-existence, faithfulness, and sovereign presence.
References Exodus 3:14
Lexicon I AM WHO I AM / I WILL BE WHAT I WILL BE
Why it matters God's name grounds Moses' mission and Israel's hope in who God is in Himself and who He will be for His people.
Sense YHWH, the covenant name of God
Definition The personal covenant name of Israel's God.
References Exodus 3:15
Lexicon YHWH, the covenant name of God
Why it matters The Lord's name is His memorial name for all generations, anchoring Israel's worship and trust.
Sense to visit, attend to, take note of, intervene
Definition To attend to someone with action, whether in blessing, care, or judgment depending on context.
References Exodus 3:16
Lexicon to visit, attend to, take note of, intervene
Why it matters God's visitation signals covenant intervention on Israel's behalf.
Sense strong hand, mighty power
Definition A figure for power, strength, and decisive action.
References Exodus 3:19
Lexicon strong hand, mighty power
Why it matters God's mighty hand will overcome Pharaoh's resistance and become a central Exodus motif.
Sense wonders, extraordinary acts
Definition Marvelous acts displaying divine power.
References Exodus 3:20
Lexicon wonders, extraordinary acts
Why it matters The wonders against Egypt will publicly reveal the Lord's power over Pharaoh and Egypt's gods.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
The God who redeems is holy, self-existent, covenant-faithful, compassionate, and sovereign over opposition.
God's people must learn to trust His presence, His name, and His promise more than their own adequacy or the visible power of resistance.
Reverence, trust, humility, courage, worship, obedience, and confidence in God's covenant faithfulness.
- Begin service with reverent attention to God's holiness.
- Name areas of inadequacy and answer them with God's promise of presence.
- Pray for suffering people with confidence that God sees, hears, and knows.
- Measure calling by God's Word and promise, not by personal strength alone.
- Expect resistance in obedience without surrendering to fear.
- Keep worship as the goal, not merely relief from pressure.
- Meditate on God's revealed name as the foundation of trust.
- The chapter warns against approaching God's work casually, trusting human adequacy, separating deliverance from worship, or assuming that opposition means God's mission has failed.
- Making the burning bush mainly about personal inspiration or mystical curiosity. - The burning bush is a holy revelation of the covenant God who calls Moses into His redemptive mission.
- Treating Moses' inadequacy as the main point. - Moses' weakness matters, but the central answer is God's presence and authority.
- Reading 'I AM WHO I AM' as abstract philosophy only. - The name reveals God's self-existence and faithfulness, but it is given in a covenant-redemptive context where God is sending Moses to rescue His people.
- Reducing the Exodus to political liberation. - God delivers Israel from bondage in order to bring them into covenant worship and life under His presence.
- Assuming Pharaoh's resistance is outside God's control. - God foretells Pharaoh's refusal and declares that His mighty hand will compel the deliverance.
- Treating holy ground as a place-based superstition. - The ground is holy because God is present. Holiness is governed by God's presence, not by inherent geography.
- Do I approach God's presence and Word with reverence or with casual familiarity?
- Where am I asking 'Who am I?' when I need to hear God's promise, 'I will be with You'?
- How does God's seeing, hearing, and knowing strengthen me in suffering?
- Do I define salvation mainly as escape from difficulty, or as redemption into worship and obedience?
- Where have I mistaken opposition for failure when God has already warned that obedience may meet resistance?
- How does God's revealed name deepen my confidence in His faithfulness?
- What calling or responsibility requires me to trust God's presence more than my own adequacy?
- Teach reverence before service.
- Comfort the afflicted with God's covenant attention.
- Strengthen weak servants with God's presence.
- Guard against man-centered calling.
- Prepare people for resistance.
- Keep worship central to redemption.
- Anchor prayer in God's name and promise.
Moses is tending sheep in Midian when God meets Him. Obscurity does not place a person outside God's reach.
Moses turns aside to look, but God teaches Him that this moment demands holiness, not mere investigation.
Israel's groaning is answered by God's declaration that He has seen, heard, and come down.
Moses' weakness is real, but God's presence is decisive.
Moses is sent with the knowledge that Pharaoh will resist, yet God's mighty hand will prevail.
The destination of deliverance is not autonomy but worship before the Lord.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The Lord appears to Moses in the burning bush, reveals His holiness and covenant name, announces His concern for Israel's suffering, and sends Moses to Pharaoh with the promise of deliverance.
Exodus 3 explicitly roots the coming deliverance in God's covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. The Lord remembers His promises, reveals His covenant name, and announces that He will bring Israel from bondage into the promised land. The chapter turns the Exodus from a human rescue mission into covenant redemption initiated by the God of the fathers.
Exodus 3 prepares gospel clarity by showing that redemption is God's initiative, rooted in His compassion, covenant faithfulness, self-revelation, and power. Israel cannot free itself; Moses cannot deliver by mere human strength; Pharaoh will not yield voluntarily. The Lord must come down, send, speak, act, and redeem. This movement points forward to Christ, in whom God comes near, reveals Himself fully, and accomplishes the greater Exodus from sin and death.
Reverence, trust, humility, courage, worship, obedience, and confidence in God's covenant faithfulness.
Focus Points
- Divine holiness
- Covenant remembrance
- Divine self-revelation
- God's presence with His servant
- Redemption by God's mighty hand
- The name of the Lord
- God's compassion toward His oppressed people
- Worship as the goal of deliverance
- Holy ground and divine presence
- God who sees, hears, and knows
- Redemption as divine descent
- Calling and inadequacy
- The divine name
- Conflict with Pharaoh
- Deliverance unto worship
- Divine Self-Existence
- Covenant Faithfulness
- Providence
- Divine Compassion
- Redemption
- Calling and Commission
- Worship
- Divine Sovereignty over Opposition
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Exodus 3:1-6
Exo 3:1 When Moses was keeping the flock of Jethro, his father-in-law, he drove them on one occasion behind the desert, and came to the mountains of Horeb. רעה היה, lit . “ he was feeding: ” the participle expresses the continuance of the occupation. המּדבּר אחר does not mean ad interiora deserti ( Jerome ); but Moses drove the sheep from Jethro’s home as far as Horeb, so that he passed through a desert with the flock before he reached the pasture land of Horeb.
For “in this, the most elevated ground of the peninsula, you find the most fertile valleys, in which even fruit-trees grow. Water abounds in this district; consequently it is the resort of all the Bedouins when the lower countries are dried up” ( Rosenmüller ). Jethro’s home was separated from Horeb, therefore, by a desert, and is to be sought to the south-east, and not to the north-east.
For it is only a south-easterly situation that will explain these two facts: First , that when Moses returned from Midian to Egypt, he touched again at Horeb, where Aaron, who had come from Egypt, met him (Exo 4:27); and, secondly , that the Israelites never came upon any Midianites on their journey through the desert, whilst the road of Hobab the Midianite separated from theirs as soon as they departed from Sinai (Num 10:30). Horeb is called the Mount of God by anticipation, with reference to the consecration which it subsequently received through the revelation of God upon its summit.
The supposition that it had been a holy locality even before the calling of Moses, cannot be sustained. Moreover, the name is not restricted to one single mountain, but applies to the central group of mountains in the southern part of the peninsula (vid. , Exo 19:1). Hence the spot where God appeared to Moses cannot be precisely determined, although tradition has very suitably given the name Wady Shoeib , i.
e. , Jethro’s Valley, to the valley which bounds the Jebel Musa towards the east, and separates it from the Jebel ed Deir , because it is there that Moses is supposed to have fed the flock of Jethro. The monastery of Sinai, which is in this valley, is said to have been built upon the spot where the thorn-bush stood, according to the tradition in Antonini Placent.
Itinerar. c. 37, and the annals of Eutychius (vid. , Robinson, Palestine).
Exo 3:2-5 Here, at Horeb, God appeared to Moses as the Angel of the Lord “ in a flame of fire out of the midst of the thorn-bush ” (סנה, βάτος, rubus ), which burned in the fire and was not consumed. אכּל, in combination with איננּוּ, must be a participle for מאכּל. When Moses turned aside from the road or spot where he was standing, “ to look at this great sight ” (מראה), i.
e. , the miraculous vision of the bush that was burning and yet not burned up, Jehovah called to him out of the midst of the thorn-bush, “ Moses, Moses (the reduplication as in Gen 22:11), draw not nigh hither: put off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground ” (אדמה). The symbolical meaning of this miraculous vision, - that is to say, the fact that it was a figurative representation of the nature and contents of the ensuing message from God, - has long been admitted.
The thorn-bush in contrast with the more noble and lofty trees (Jdg 9:15) represented the people of Israel in their humiliation, as a people despised by the world. Fire and the flame of fire were not “symbols of the holiness of God;” for, as the Holy One, “God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all” (1Jo 1:5), He “dwells in the light which no man can approach unto” (1Ti 6:16); and that not merely according to the New Testament, but according to the Old Testament view as well, as is evident from Isa 10:17, where “the Light of Israel” and “the Holy One of Israel” are synonymous.
But “the Light of Israel became fire, and the Holy One a flame, and burned and consumed its thorns and thistles. ” Nor is “fire, from its very nature, the source of light,” according to the scriptural view. On the contrary, light, the condition of all life, is also the source of fire. The sun enlightens, warms, and burns (Job 30:28; Sol. Sol 1:6); the rays of the sun produce warmth, heat, and fire; and light was created before the sun.
Fire, therefore, regarded as burning and consuming, is a figurative representation of refining affliction and destroying punishment (1Co 3:11.) , or a symbol of the chastening and punitive justice of the indignation and wrath of God. It is in fire that the Lord comes to judgment (Dan 7:9-10; Eze 1:13-14, Eze 1:27-28; Rev 1:14-15). Fire sets forth the fiery indignation which devours the adversaries (Heb 10:27).
He who “judges and makes war in righteousness’ has eyes as a flame of fire (Rev 19:11-12). Accordingly, the burning thorn-bush represented the people of Israel as they were burning in the fire of affliction, the iron furnace of Egypt (Deu 4:20). Yet, though the thorn-bush was burning in the fire, it was not consumed; for in the flame was Jehovah, who chastens His people, but does not give them over unto death (Psa 118:18).
The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob had come down to deliver His people out of the hand of the Egyptians (Exo 3:8). Although the affliction of Israel in Egypt proceeded from Pharaoh, yet was it also a fire which the Lord had kindled to purify His people and prepare it for its calling. In the flame of the burning bush the Lord manifested Himself as the “jealous God, who visits the sins of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generations of them that hate Him, and showeth mercy unto thousands of them that love Him and keep His commandments” (Exo 20:5; Deu 5:9-10), who cannot tolerate the worship of another god (Exo 34:14), and whose anger burns against idolaters, to destroy them (Deu 6:15).
The “jealous God” was a “consuming fire” in the midst of Israel (Deu 4:24). These passages show that the great sight which Moses saw not only had reference to the circumstances of Israel in Egypt, but was a prelude to the manifestation of God on Sinai for the establishment of the covenant (Exo 19 and 20), and also a representation of the relation in which Jehovah would stand to Israel through the establishment of the covenant made with the fathers.
For this reason it occurred upon the spot where Jehovah intended to set up His covenant with Israel. But, as a jealous God, He also “takes vengeance upon His adversaries” (Nah 1:2.) Pharaoh, who would not let Israel go, He was about to smite with all His wonders (Exo 3:20), whilst He redeemed Israel with outstretched arm and great judgments (Exo 6:6). - The transition from the Angel of Jehovah (Exo 3:2) to Jehovah (Exo 3:4) proves the identity of the two; and the interchange of Jehovah and Elohim , in Exo 3:4, precludes the idea of Jehovah being merely a national God.
The command of God to Moses to put off his shoes, may be accounted for from the custom in the East of wearing shoes or sandals merely as a protection from dirt. No Brahmin enters a pagoda, no Moslem a mosque, without first taking off at least his overshoes ( Rosenm . Morgenl. i. 261; Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 373); and even in the Grecian temples the priests and priestesses performed the service barefooted ( Justin , Apol.
i. c. 62; Bähr, Symbol. ii. 96). when entering other holy places also, the Arabs and Samaritans, and even the Yezidis of Mesopotamia, take off their shoes, that the places may not be defiled by the dirt or dust upon them (vid. , Robinson, Pal. iii. 100, and Layard's Nineveh and its Remains). The place of the burning bush was holy because of the presence of the holy God, and putting off the shoes was intended to express not merely respect for the place itself, but that reverence which the inward man (Eph 3:16) owes to the holy God.
Exo 3:2-5 Here, at Horeb, God appeared to Moses as the Angel of the Lord “ in a flame of fire out of the midst of the thorn-bush ” (סנה, βάτος, rubus ), which burned in the fire and was not consumed. אכּל, in combination with איננּוּ, must be a participle for מאכּל. When Moses turned aside from the road or spot where he was standing, “ to look at this great sight ” (מראה), i.
e. , the miraculous vision of the bush that was burning and yet not burned up, Jehovah called to him out of the midst of the thorn-bush, “ Moses, Moses (the reduplication as in Gen 22:11), draw not nigh hither: put off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground ” (אדמה). The symbolical meaning of this miraculous vision, - that is to say, the fact that it was a figurative representation of the nature and contents of the ensuing message from God, - has long been admitted.
The thorn-bush in contrast with the more noble and lofty trees (Jdg 9:15) represented the people of Israel in their humiliation, as a people despised by the world. Fire and the flame of fire were not “symbols of the holiness of God;” for, as the Holy One, “God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all” (1Jo 1:5), He “dwells in the light which no man can approach unto” (1Ti 6:16); and that not merely according to the New Testament, but according to the Old Testament view as well, as is evident from Isa 10:17, where “the Light of Israel” and “the Holy One of Israel” are synonymous.
But “the Light of Israel became fire, and the Holy One a flame, and burned and consumed its thorns and thistles. ” Nor is “fire, from its very nature, the source of light,” according to the scriptural view. On the contrary, light, the condition of all life, is also the source of fire. The sun enlightens, warms, and burns (Job 30:28; Sol. Sol 1:6); the rays of the sun produce warmth, heat, and fire; and light was created before the sun.
Fire, therefore, regarded as burning and consuming, is a figurative representation of refining affliction and destroying punishment (1Co 3:11.) , or a symbol of the chastening and punitive justice of the indignation and wrath of God. It is in fire that the Lord comes to judgment (Dan 7:9-10; Eze 1:13-14, Eze 1:27-28; Rev 1:14-15). Fire sets forth the fiery indignation which devours the adversaries (Heb 10:27).
He who “judges and makes war in righteousness’ has eyes as a flame of fire (Rev 19:11-12). Accordingly, the burning thorn-bush represented the people of Israel as they were burning in the fire of affliction, the iron furnace of Egypt (Deu 4:20). Yet, though the thorn-bush was burning in the fire, it was not consumed; for in the flame was Jehovah, who chastens His people, but does not give them over unto death (Psa 118:18).
The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob had come down to deliver His people out of the hand of the Egyptians (Exo 3:8). Although the affliction of Israel in Egypt proceeded from Pharaoh, yet was it also a fire which the Lord had kindled to purify His people and prepare it for its calling. In the flame of the burning bush the Lord manifested Himself as the “jealous God, who visits the sins of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generations of them that hate Him, and showeth mercy unto thousands of them that love Him and keep His commandments” (Exo 20:5; Deu 5:9-10), who cannot tolerate the worship of another god (Exo 34:14), and whose anger burns against idolaters, to destroy them (Deu 6:15).
The “jealous God” was a “consuming fire” in the midst of Israel (Deu 4:24). These passages show that the great sight which Moses saw not only had reference to the circumstances of Israel in Egypt, but was a prelude to the manifestation of God on Sinai for the establishment of the covenant (Exo 19 and 20), and also a representation of the relation in which Jehovah would stand to Israel through the establishment of the covenant made with the fathers.
For this reason it occurred upon the spot where Jehovah intended to set up His covenant with Israel. But, as a jealous God, He also “takes vengeance upon His adversaries” (Nah 1:2.) Pharaoh, who would not let Israel go, He was about to smite with all His wonders (Exo 3:20), whilst He redeemed Israel with outstretched arm and great judgments (Exo 6:6). - The transition from the Angel of Jehovah (Exo 3:2) to Jehovah (Exo 3:4) proves the identity of the two; and the interchange of Jehovah and Elohim , in Exo 3:4, precludes the idea of Jehovah being merely a national God.
The command of God to Moses to put off his shoes, may be accounted for from the custom in the East of wearing shoes or sandals merely as a protection from dirt. No Brahmin enters a pagoda, no Moslem a mosque, without first taking off at least his overshoes ( Rosenm . Morgenl. i. 261; Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 373); and even in the Grecian temples the priests and priestesses performed the service barefooted ( Justin , Apol.
i. c. 62; Bähr, Symbol. ii. 96). when entering other holy places also, the Arabs and Samaritans, and even the Yezidis of Mesopotamia, take off their shoes, that the places may not be defiled by the dirt or dust upon them (vid. , Robinson, Pal. iii. 100, and Layard's Nineveh and its Remains). The place of the burning bush was holy because of the presence of the holy God, and putting off the shoes was intended to express not merely respect for the place itself, but that reverence which the inward man (Eph 3:16) owes to the holy God.
Exo 3:2-5 Here, at Horeb, God appeared to Moses as the Angel of the Lord “ in a flame of fire out of the midst of the thorn-bush ” (סנה, βάτος, rubus ), which burned in the fire and was not consumed. אכּל, in combination with איננּוּ, must be a participle for מאכּל. When Moses turned aside from the road or spot where he was standing, “ to look at this great sight ” (מראה), i.
e. , the miraculous vision of the bush that was burning and yet not burned up, Jehovah called to him out of the midst of the thorn-bush, “ Moses, Moses (the reduplication as in Gen 22:11), draw not nigh hither: put off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground ” (אדמה). The symbolical meaning of this miraculous vision, - that is to say, the fact that it was a figurative representation of the nature and contents of the ensuing message from God, - has long been admitted.
The thorn-bush in contrast with the more noble and lofty trees (Jdg 9:15) represented the people of Israel in their humiliation, as a people despised by the world. Fire and the flame of fire were not “symbols of the holiness of God;” for, as the Holy One, “God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all” (1Jo 1:5), He “dwells in the light which no man can approach unto” (1Ti 6:16); and that not merely according to the New Testament, but according to the Old Testament view as well, as is evident from Isa 10:17, where “the Light of Israel” and “the Holy One of Israel” are synonymous.
But “the Light of Israel became fire, and the Holy One a flame, and burned and consumed its thorns and thistles. ” Nor is “fire, from its very nature, the source of light,” according to the scriptural view. On the contrary, light, the condition of all life, is also the source of fire. The sun enlightens, warms, and burns (Job 30:28; Sol. Sol 1:6); the rays of the sun produce warmth, heat, and fire; and light was created before the sun.
Fire, therefore, regarded as burning and consuming, is a figurative representation of refining affliction and destroying punishment (1Co 3:11.) , or a symbol of the chastening and punitive justice of the indignation and wrath of God. It is in fire that the Lord comes to judgment (Dan 7:9-10; Eze 1:13-14, Eze 1:27-28; Rev 1:14-15). Fire sets forth the fiery indignation which devours the adversaries (Heb 10:27).
He who “judges and makes war in righteousness’ has eyes as a flame of fire (Rev 19:11-12). Accordingly, the burning thorn-bush represented the people of Israel as they were burning in the fire of affliction, the iron furnace of Egypt (Deu 4:20). Yet, though the thorn-bush was burning in the fire, it was not consumed; for in the flame was Jehovah, who chastens His people, but does not give them over unto death (Psa 118:18).
The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob had come down to deliver His people out of the hand of the Egyptians (Exo 3:8). Although the affliction of Israel in Egypt proceeded from Pharaoh, yet was it also a fire which the Lord had kindled to purify His people and prepare it for its calling. In the flame of the burning bush the Lord manifested Himself as the “jealous God, who visits the sins of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generations of them that hate Him, and showeth mercy unto thousands of them that love Him and keep His commandments” (Exo 20:5; Deu 5:9-10), who cannot tolerate the worship of another god (Exo 34:14), and whose anger burns against idolaters, to destroy them (Deu 6:15).
The “jealous God” was a “consuming fire” in the midst of Israel (Deu 4:24). These passages show that the great sight which Moses saw not only had reference to the circumstances of Israel in Egypt, but was a prelude to the manifestation of God on Sinai for the establishment of the covenant (Exo 19 and 20), and also a representation of the relation in which Jehovah would stand to Israel through the establishment of the covenant made with the fathers.
For this reason it occurred upon the spot where Jehovah intended to set up His covenant with Israel. But, as a jealous God, He also “takes vengeance upon His adversaries” (Nah 1:2.) Pharaoh, who would not let Israel go, He was about to smite with all His wonders (Exo 3:20), whilst He redeemed Israel with outstretched arm and great judgments (Exo 6:6). - The transition from the Angel of Jehovah (Exo 3:2) to Jehovah (Exo 3:4) proves the identity of the two; and the interchange of Jehovah and Elohim , in Exo 3:4, precludes the idea of Jehovah being merely a national God.
The command of God to Moses to put off his shoes, may be accounted for from the custom in the East of wearing shoes or sandals merely as a protection from dirt. No Brahmin enters a pagoda, no Moslem a mosque, without first taking off at least his overshoes ( Rosenm . Morgenl. i. 261; Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 373); and even in the Grecian temples the priests and priestesses performed the service barefooted ( Justin , Apol.
i. c. 62; Bähr, Symbol. ii. 96). when entering other holy places also, the Arabs and Samaritans, and even the Yezidis of Mesopotamia, take off their shoes, that the places may not be defiled by the dirt or dust upon them (vid. , Robinson, Pal. iii. 100, and Layard's Nineveh and its Remains). The place of the burning bush was holy because of the presence of the holy God, and putting off the shoes was intended to express not merely respect for the place itself, but that reverence which the inward man (Eph 3:16) owes to the holy God.
Exo 3:2-5 Here, at Horeb, God appeared to Moses as the Angel of the Lord “ in a flame of fire out of the midst of the thorn-bush ” (סנה, βάτος, rubus ), which burned in the fire and was not consumed. אכּל, in combination with איננּוּ, must be a participle for מאכּל. When Moses turned aside from the road or spot where he was standing, “ to look at this great sight ” (מראה), i.
e. , the miraculous vision of the bush that was burning and yet not burned up, Jehovah called to him out of the midst of the thorn-bush, “ Moses, Moses (the reduplication as in Gen 22:11), draw not nigh hither: put off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground ” (אדמה). The symbolical meaning of this miraculous vision, - that is to say, the fact that it was a figurative representation of the nature and contents of the ensuing message from God, - has long been admitted.
The thorn-bush in contrast with the more noble and lofty trees (Jdg 9:15) represented the people of Israel in their humiliation, as a people despised by the world. Fire and the flame of fire were not “symbols of the holiness of God;” for, as the Holy One, “God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all” (1Jo 1:5), He “dwells in the light which no man can approach unto” (1Ti 6:16); and that not merely according to the New Testament, but according to the Old Testament view as well, as is evident from Isa 10:17, where “the Light of Israel” and “the Holy One of Israel” are synonymous.
But “the Light of Israel became fire, and the Holy One a flame, and burned and consumed its thorns and thistles. ” Nor is “fire, from its very nature, the source of light,” according to the scriptural view. On the contrary, light, the condition of all life, is also the source of fire. The sun enlightens, warms, and burns (Job 30:28; Sol. Sol 1:6); the rays of the sun produce warmth, heat, and fire; and light was created before the sun.
Fire, therefore, regarded as burning and consuming, is a figurative representation of refining affliction and destroying punishment (1Co 3:11.) , or a symbol of the chastening and punitive justice of the indignation and wrath of God. It is in fire that the Lord comes to judgment (Dan 7:9-10; Eze 1:13-14, Eze 1:27-28; Rev 1:14-15). Fire sets forth the fiery indignation which devours the adversaries (Heb 10:27).
He who “judges and makes war in righteousness’ has eyes as a flame of fire (Rev 19:11-12). Accordingly, the burning thorn-bush represented the people of Israel as they were burning in the fire of affliction, the iron furnace of Egypt (Deu 4:20). Yet, though the thorn-bush was burning in the fire, it was not consumed; for in the flame was Jehovah, who chastens His people, but does not give them over unto death (Psa 118:18).
The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob had come down to deliver His people out of the hand of the Egyptians (Exo 3:8). Although the affliction of Israel in Egypt proceeded from Pharaoh, yet was it also a fire which the Lord had kindled to purify His people and prepare it for its calling. In the flame of the burning bush the Lord manifested Himself as the “jealous God, who visits the sins of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generations of them that hate Him, and showeth mercy unto thousands of them that love Him and keep His commandments” (Exo 20:5; Deu 5:9-10), who cannot tolerate the worship of another god (Exo 34:14), and whose anger burns against idolaters, to destroy them (Deu 6:15).
The “jealous God” was a “consuming fire” in the midst of Israel (Deu 4:24). These passages show that the great sight which Moses saw not only had reference to the circumstances of Israel in Egypt, but was a prelude to the manifestation of God on Sinai for the establishment of the covenant (Exo 19 and 20), and also a representation of the relation in which Jehovah would stand to Israel through the establishment of the covenant made with the fathers.
For this reason it occurred upon the spot where Jehovah intended to set up His covenant with Israel. But, as a jealous God, He also “takes vengeance upon His adversaries” (Nah 1:2.) Pharaoh, who would not let Israel go, He was about to smite with all His wonders (Exo 3:20), whilst He redeemed Israel with outstretched arm and great judgments (Exo 6:6). - The transition from the Angel of Jehovah (Exo 3:2) to Jehovah (Exo 3:4) proves the identity of the two; and the interchange of Jehovah and Elohim , in Exo 3:4, precludes the idea of Jehovah being merely a national God.
The command of God to Moses to put off his shoes, may be accounted for from the custom in the East of wearing shoes or sandals merely as a protection from dirt. No Brahmin enters a pagoda, no Moslem a mosque, without first taking off at least his overshoes ( Rosenm . Morgenl. i. 261; Robinson, Pal. ii. p. 373); and even in the Grecian temples the priests and priestesses performed the service barefooted ( Justin , Apol.
i. c. 62; Bähr, Symbol. ii. 96). when entering other holy places also, the Arabs and Samaritans, and even the Yezidis of Mesopotamia, take off their shoes, that the places may not be defiled by the dirt or dust upon them (vid. , Robinson, Pal. iii. 100, and Layard's Nineveh and its Remains). The place of the burning bush was holy because of the presence of the holy God, and putting off the shoes was intended to express not merely respect for the place itself, but that reverence which the inward man (Eph 3:16) owes to the holy God.
Exo 3:6 Jehovah then made Himself known to Moses as the God of his fathers, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, reminding him through that name of the promises made to the patriarchs, which He was about to fulfil to their seed, the children of Israel. In the expression, “thy father,” the three patriarchs are classed together as one, just as in Exo 18:4 (“my father”), “because each of them stood out singly in distinction from the nation, as having received the promise of seed directly from God” ( Baumgarten ).
“ And Moses hid his face, for he was afraid to look upon God . ” The sight of the holy God no sinful man can bear (cf. 1Ki 19:12).
Exo 3:7-10 Jehovah had seen the affliction of His people, had heard their cry under their taskmasters, and had come down (ירד, vid. , Gen 11:5) to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians, and to bring them up to a good and broad land, to the place of the Canaanites; and He was about to send Moses to Pharaoh to bring them forth. The land to which the Israelites were to be taken up is called a “good” land, on account of its great fertility (Deu 8:7.)
, and a “ broad ” land, in contrast with the confinement and oppression of the Israelites in Egypt. The epithet “ good ” is then explained by the expression, “ a land flowing with milk and honey ” (זבת, a participle of זוּב in the construct state; vid. , Ges. §135); a proverbial description of the extraordinary fertility and loveliness of the land of Canaan (cf.
Exo 3:17; Exo 13:5; Exo 16:14, etc.) Milk and honey are the simplest and choicest productions of a land abounding in grass and flowers, and were found in Palestine in great abundance even when it was in a desolate condition (Isa 7:15, Isa 7:22; see my Comm. on Jos 5:6). The epithet broad is explained by an enumeration of the six tribes inhabiting the country at that time (cf.
Gen 10:15. and Gen 15:20, Gen 15:21).
Exo 3:7-10 Jehovah had seen the affliction of His people, had heard their cry under their taskmasters, and had come down (ירד, vid. , Gen 11:5) to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians, and to bring them up to a good and broad land, to the place of the Canaanites; and He was about to send Moses to Pharaoh to bring them forth. The land to which the Israelites were to be taken up is called a “good” land, on account of its great fertility (Deu 8:7.)
, and a “ broad ” land, in contrast with the confinement and oppression of the Israelites in Egypt. The epithet “ good ” is then explained by the expression, “ a land flowing with milk and honey ” (זבת, a participle of זוּב in the construct state; vid. , Ges. §135); a proverbial description of the extraordinary fertility and loveliness of the land of Canaan (cf.
Exo 3:17; Exo 13:5; Exo 16:14, etc.) Milk and honey are the simplest and choicest productions of a land abounding in grass and flowers, and were found in Palestine in great abundance even when it was in a desolate condition (Isa 7:15, Isa 7:22; see my Comm. on Jos 5:6). The epithet broad is explained by an enumeration of the six tribes inhabiting the country at that time (cf.
Gen 10:15. and Gen 15:20, Gen 15:21).
Exo 3:7-10 Jehovah had seen the affliction of His people, had heard their cry under their taskmasters, and had come down (ירד, vid. , Gen 11:5) to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians, and to bring them up to a good and broad land, to the place of the Canaanites; and He was about to send Moses to Pharaoh to bring them forth. The land to which the Israelites were to be taken up is called a “good” land, on account of its great fertility (Deu 8:7.)
, and a “ broad ” land, in contrast with the confinement and oppression of the Israelites in Egypt. The epithet “ good ” is then explained by the expression, “ a land flowing with milk and honey ” (זבת, a participle of זוּב in the construct state; vid. , Ges. §135); a proverbial description of the extraordinary fertility and loveliness of the land of Canaan (cf.
Exo 3:17; Exo 13:5; Exo 16:14, etc.) Milk and honey are the simplest and choicest productions of a land abounding in grass and flowers, and were found in Palestine in great abundance even when it was in a desolate condition (Isa 7:15, Isa 7:22; see my Comm. on Jos 5:6). The epithet broad is explained by an enumeration of the six tribes inhabiting the country at that time (cf.
Gen 10:15. and Gen 15:20, Gen 15:21).
Exo 3:7-10 Jehovah had seen the affliction of His people, had heard their cry under their taskmasters, and had come down (ירד, vid. , Gen 11:5) to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians, and to bring them up to a good and broad land, to the place of the Canaanites; and He was about to send Moses to Pharaoh to bring them forth. The land to which the Israelites were to be taken up is called a “good” land, on account of its great fertility (Deu 8:7.)
, and a “ broad ” land, in contrast with the confinement and oppression of the Israelites in Egypt. The epithet “ good ” is then explained by the expression, “ a land flowing with milk and honey ” (זבת, a participle of זוּב in the construct state; vid. , Ges. §135); a proverbial description of the extraordinary fertility and loveliness of the land of Canaan (cf.
Exo 3:17; Exo 13:5; Exo 16:14, etc.) Milk and honey are the simplest and choicest productions of a land abounding in grass and flowers, and were found in Palestine in great abundance even when it was in a desolate condition (Isa 7:15, Isa 7:22; see my Comm. on Jos 5:6). The epithet broad is explained by an enumeration of the six tribes inhabiting the country at that time (cf.
Gen 10:15. and Gen 15:20, Gen 15:21).
Exo 3:11-12 To the divine commission Moses made this reply: “ Who am I, that I should go to Pharaoh, and bring forth the children of Israel out of Egypt? ” Some time before he had offered himself of his own accord as a deliverer and judge; but now he had learned humility in the school of Midian, and was filled in consequence with distrust of his own power and fitness.
The son of Pharaoh’s daughter had become a shepherd, and felt himself too weak to go to Pharaoh. But God met this distrust by the promise, “ I will be with thee, ” which He confirmed by a sign, namely, that when Israel was brought out of Egypt, they should serve (עבד, i. e. , worship) God upon that mountain. This sign, which was to be a pledge to Moses of the success of his mission, was one indeed that required faith itself; but, at the same time, it was a sign adapted to inspire both courage and confidence.
God pointed out to him the success of his mission, the certain result of his leading the people out: Israel should serve Him upon the very same mountain in which He had appeared to Moses. As surely as Jehovah had appeared to Moses as the God of his fathers, so surely should Israel serve Him there. The reality of the appearance of God formed the pledge of His announcement, that Israel would there serve its God; and this truth was to till Moses with confidence in the execution of the divine command.
The expression “serve God” (λατρεύειν τῷ Θεῷ, lxx) means something more than the immolare of the Vulgate , or the “sacrifice” of Luther ; for even though sacrifice formed a leading element, or the most important part of the worship of the Israelites, the patriarchs before this had served Jehovah by calling upon His name as well as offering sacrifice. And the service of Israel at Mount Horeb consisted in their entering into covenant with Jehovah (Exo 24); ); not only in their receiving the law as the covenant nation, but their manifesting obedience by presenting free-will offerings for the building of the tabernacle (Exo 36:1-7; Num 7:1).
Exo 3:11-12 To the divine commission Moses made this reply: “ Who am I, that I should go to Pharaoh, and bring forth the children of Israel out of Egypt? ” Some time before he had offered himself of his own accord as a deliverer and judge; but now he had learned humility in the school of Midian, and was filled in consequence with distrust of his own power and fitness.
The son of Pharaoh’s daughter had become a shepherd, and felt himself too weak to go to Pharaoh. But God met this distrust by the promise, “ I will be with thee, ” which He confirmed by a sign, namely, that when Israel was brought out of Egypt, they should serve (עבד, i. e. , worship) God upon that mountain. This sign, which was to be a pledge to Moses of the success of his mission, was one indeed that required faith itself; but, at the same time, it was a sign adapted to inspire both courage and confidence.
God pointed out to him the success of his mission, the certain result of his leading the people out: Israel should serve Him upon the very same mountain in which He had appeared to Moses. As surely as Jehovah had appeared to Moses as the God of his fathers, so surely should Israel serve Him there. The reality of the appearance of God formed the pledge of His announcement, that Israel would there serve its God; and this truth was to till Moses with confidence in the execution of the divine command.
The expression “serve God” (λατρεύειν τῷ Θεῷ, lxx) means something more than the immolare of the Vulgate , or the “sacrifice” of Luther ; for even though sacrifice formed a leading element, or the most important part of the worship of the Israelites, the patriarchs before this had served Jehovah by calling upon His name as well as offering sacrifice. And the service of Israel at Mount Horeb consisted in their entering into covenant with Jehovah (Exo 24); ); not only in their receiving the law as the covenant nation, but their manifesting obedience by presenting free-will offerings for the building of the tabernacle (Exo 36:1-7; Num 7:1).
Exo 3:13-15 When Moses had been thus emboldened by the assurance of divine assistance to undertake the mission, he inquired what he was to say, in case the people asked him for the name of the God of their fathers. The supposition that the people might ask the name of their fathers’ God is not to be attributed to the fact, that as the Egyptians had separate names for their numerous deities, the Israelites also would want to know the name of their own God.
For, apart from the circumstance that the name by which God had revealed Himself to the fathers cannot have vanished entirely from the memory of the people, and more especially of Moses, the mere knowledge of the name would not have been of much use to them. The question, “What is His name? ” presupposed that the name expressed the nature and operations of God, and that God would manifest in deeds the nature expressed in His name.
God therefore told him His name, or, to speak more correctly, He explained the name יהוה, by which He had made Himself known to Abraham at the making of the covenant (Gen 15:7), in this way, אהיה אשׁר אהיה, “ I am that I am, ” and designated Himself by this name as the absolute God of the fathers, acting with unfettered liberty and self-dependence. This name precluded any comparison between the God of the Israelites and the deities of the Egyptians and other nations, and furnished Moses and his people with strong consolation in their affliction, and a powerful support to their confidence in the realization of His purposes of salvation as made known to the fathers.
To establish them in this confidence, God added still further: “ This is My name for ever, and My memorial unto all generations; ” that is to say, God would even manifest Himself in the nature expressed by the name Jehovah , and by this He would have all generations both know and revere Him. שׁם, the name , expresses the objective manifestation of the divine nature; זבר, memorial , the subjective recognition of that nature on the part of men.
דּר דּר, as in Exo 17:16 and Pro 27:24. The repetition of the same word suggests the idea of uninterrupted continuance and boundless duration ( Ewald , §313 a ). The more usual expression is ודר ידר, Deu 32:7; Psa 10:6; Psa 33:11; or דּרים דּר, Psa 72:5; Psa 102:25; Isa 51:8.
Exo 3:13-15 When Moses had been thus emboldened by the assurance of divine assistance to undertake the mission, he inquired what he was to say, in case the people asked him for the name of the God of their fathers. The supposition that the people might ask the name of their fathers’ God is not to be attributed to the fact, that as the Egyptians had separate names for their numerous deities, the Israelites also would want to know the name of their own God.
For, apart from the circumstance that the name by which God had revealed Himself to the fathers cannot have vanished entirely from the memory of the people, and more especially of Moses, the mere knowledge of the name would not have been of much use to them. The question, “What is His name? ” presupposed that the name expressed the nature and operations of God, and that God would manifest in deeds the nature expressed in His name.
God therefore told him His name, or, to speak more correctly, He explained the name יהוה, by which He had made Himself known to Abraham at the making of the covenant (Gen 15:7), in this way, אהיה אשׁר אהיה, “ I am that I am, ” and designated Himself by this name as the absolute God of the fathers, acting with unfettered liberty and self-dependence. This name precluded any comparison between the God of the Israelites and the deities of the Egyptians and other nations, and furnished Moses and his people with strong consolation in their affliction, and a powerful support to their confidence in the realization of His purposes of salvation as made known to the fathers.
To establish them in this confidence, God added still further: “ This is My name for ever, and My memorial unto all generations; ” that is to say, God would even manifest Himself in the nature expressed by the name Jehovah , and by this He would have all generations both know and revere Him. שׁם, the name , expresses the objective manifestation of the divine nature; זבר, memorial , the subjective recognition of that nature on the part of men.
דּר דּר, as in Exo 17:16 and Pro 27:24. The repetition of the same word suggests the idea of uninterrupted continuance and boundless duration ( Ewald , §313 a ). The more usual expression is ודר ידר, Deu 32:7; Psa 10:6; Psa 33:11; or דּרים דּר, Psa 72:5; Psa 102:25; Isa 51:8.
Exo 3:13-15 When Moses had been thus emboldened by the assurance of divine assistance to undertake the mission, he inquired what he was to say, in case the people asked him for the name of the God of their fathers. The supposition that the people might ask the name of their fathers’ God is not to be attributed to the fact, that as the Egyptians had separate names for their numerous deities, the Israelites also would want to know the name of their own God.
For, apart from the circumstance that the name by which God had revealed Himself to the fathers cannot have vanished entirely from the memory of the people, and more especially of Moses, the mere knowledge of the name would not have been of much use to them. The question, “What is His name? ” presupposed that the name expressed the nature and operations of God, and that God would manifest in deeds the nature expressed in His name.
God therefore told him His name, or, to speak more correctly, He explained the name יהוה, by which He had made Himself known to Abraham at the making of the covenant (Gen 15:7), in this way, אהיה אשׁר אהיה, “ I am that I am, ” and designated Himself by this name as the absolute God of the fathers, acting with unfettered liberty and self-dependence. This name precluded any comparison between the God of the Israelites and the deities of the Egyptians and other nations, and furnished Moses and his people with strong consolation in their affliction, and a powerful support to their confidence in the realization of His purposes of salvation as made known to the fathers.
To establish them in this confidence, God added still further: “ This is My name for ever, and My memorial unto all generations; ” that is to say, God would even manifest Himself in the nature expressed by the name Jehovah , and by this He would have all generations both know and revere Him. שׁם, the name , expresses the objective manifestation of the divine nature; זבר, memorial , the subjective recognition of that nature on the part of men.
דּר דּר, as in Exo 17:16 and Pro 27:24. The repetition of the same word suggests the idea of uninterrupted continuance and boundless duration ( Ewald , §313 a ). The more usual expression is ודר ידר, Deu 32:7; Psa 10:6; Psa 33:11; or דּרים דּר, Psa 72:5; Psa 102:25; Isa 51:8.
Exo 3:16-20 With the command, “ Go and gather the elders of Israel together, ” God then gave Moses further instructions with reference to the execution of his mission. On his arrival in Egypt he was first of all to inform the elders, as the representatives of the nation (i. e. , the heads of the families, households, and tribes), of the appearance of God to him, and the revelation of His design, to deliver His people out of Egypt and bring them to the land of the Canaanites.
He was then to go with them to Pharaoh, and make known to him their resolution, in consequence of this appearance of God, to go a three days’ journey into the wilderness and sacrifice to their God. The words, “ I have surely visited, ” point to the fulfilment of the last words of the dying Joseph (Gen 50:24). עלינוּ נקרה (Exo 3:18) does not mean “He is named upon us” (lxx, Onk.
, Jon .) , nor “He has called us” ( Vulg. , Luth .) The latter is grammatically wrong, for the verb is Niphal , or passive; and though the former has some support in the parallel passage in Exo 5:3, inasmuch as נקרא is the verb used there, it is only in appearance, for if the meaning really were “His name is named upon (over) us,” the word שׁמו (שׁם) would not be omitted (vid.
, Deu 28:10; 2Ch 7:14). The real meaning is, “ He has met with us, ” from נקרה, obruam fieri , ordinarily construed with אל, but here with על, because God comes down from above to meet with man. The plural us is used, although it was only to Moses that God appeared, because His appearing had reference to the whole nation, which was represented before Pharaoh by Moses and the elders.
In the words נלכה־נא, “ we will go, then, ” equivalent to “let us go,” the request for Pharaoh’s permission to go out is couched in such a form as to answer to the relation of Israel to Pharaoh. He had no right to detain them, but he had a right to consent to their departure, as his predecessor had formerly done to their settlement. Still less had he any good reason for refusing their request to go a three days’ journey into the wilderness and sacrifice to their God, since their return at the close of the festival was then taken for granted.
But the purpose of God was, that Israel should not return. Was it the case, then, that the delegates were “to deceive the king,” as Knobel affirms! By no means. God knew the hard heart of Pharaoh, and therefore directed that no more should be asked at first than he must either grant, or display the hardness of his heart. Had he consented, God would then have made known to him His whole design, and demanded that His people should be allowed to depart altogether.
But when Pharaoh scornfully refused the first and smaller request (Exo 5), Moses was instructed to demand the entire departure of Israel from the land (Exo 6:10), and to show the omnipotence of the God of the Hebrews before and upon Pharaoh by miracles and heavy judgments (Heb 7:8.) Accordingly, Moses persisted in demanding permission for the people to go and serve their God (Exo 7:16; Exo 8:1; Exo 9:1, Exo 9:13; Exo 10:3); and it was not till Pharaoh offered to allow them to sacrifice in the land that Moses replied, “We will go three days’ journey into the wilderness, and sacrifice to Jehovah our God” (Exo 8:27); but, observe, with this proviso, “as He shall command us,” which left, under the circumstances, no hope that they would return.
It was an act of mercy to Pharaoh, therefore, on the one hand, that the entire departure of the Israelites was not demanded at the very first audience of Moses and the representatives of the nation; for, had this been demanded, it would have been far more difficult for him to bend his heart in obedience to the divine will, than when the request presented was as trifling as it was reasonable. And if he had rendered obedience to the will of God in the smaller, God would have given him strength to be faithful in the greater.
On the other hand, as God foresaw his resistance (Exo 3:19), this condescension, which demanded no more than the natural man could have performed, was also to answer the purpose of clearly displaying the justice of God. It was to prove alike to Egyptians and Israelites that Pharaoh was “without excuse,” and that his eventual destruction was the well-merited punishment of his obduracy.
חזקה ביד ולא, “ not even by means of a strong hand; ” “except through great power” is not the true rendering, ולא does not mean ἐὰν μὴ, nisi . What follows, - viz. , the statement that God would so smite the Egyptians with miracles that Pharaoh would, after all, let Israel go (Exo 3:20), - is not really at variance with this, the only admissible rendering of the words.
For the meaning is, that Pharaoh would not be willing to let Israel depart even when he should be smitten by the strong hand of God; but that he would be compelled to do so against his will, would be forced to do so by the plagues that were about to fall upon Egypt. Thus even after the ninth plague it is still stated (Exo 10:27), that “Pharaoh would (אבה) not let them go;” and when he had given permission, in consequence of the last plague, and in fact had driven them out (Exo 12:31), he speedily repented, and pursued them with his army to bring them back again (Exo 14:5.)
; from which it is clearly to be seen that the strong hand of God had not broken his will, and yet Israel was brought out by the same strong hand of Jehovah .
Exo 3:16-20 With the command, “ Go and gather the elders of Israel together, ” God then gave Moses further instructions with reference to the execution of his mission. On his arrival in Egypt he was first of all to inform the elders, as the representatives of the nation (i. e. , the heads of the families, households, and tribes), of the appearance of God to him, and the revelation of His design, to deliver His people out of Egypt and bring them to the land of the Canaanites.
He was then to go with them to Pharaoh, and make known to him their resolution, in consequence of this appearance of God, to go a three days’ journey into the wilderness and sacrifice to their God. The words, “ I have surely visited, ” point to the fulfilment of the last words of the dying Joseph (Gen 50:24). עלינוּ נקרה (Exo 3:18) does not mean “He is named upon us” (lxx, Onk.
, Jon .) , nor “He has called us” ( Vulg. , Luth .) The latter is grammatically wrong, for the verb is Niphal , or passive; and though the former has some support in the parallel passage in Exo 5:3, inasmuch as נקרא is the verb used there, it is only in appearance, for if the meaning really were “His name is named upon (over) us,” the word שׁמו (שׁם) would not be omitted (vid.
, Deu 28:10; 2Ch 7:14). The real meaning is, “ He has met with us, ” from נקרה, obruam fieri , ordinarily construed with אל, but here with על, because God comes down from above to meet with man. The plural us is used, although it was only to Moses that God appeared, because His appearing had reference to the whole nation, which was represented before Pharaoh by Moses and the elders.
In the words נלכה־נא, “ we will go, then, ” equivalent to “let us go,” the request for Pharaoh’s permission to go out is couched in such a form as to answer to the relation of Israel to Pharaoh. He had no right to detain them, but he had a right to consent to their departure, as his predecessor had formerly done to their settlement. Still less had he any good reason for refusing their request to go a three days’ journey into the wilderness and sacrifice to their God, since their return at the close of the festival was then taken for granted.
But the purpose of God was, that Israel should not return. Was it the case, then, that the delegates were “to deceive the king,” as Knobel affirms! By no means. God knew the hard heart of Pharaoh, and therefore directed that no more should be asked at first than he must either grant, or display the hardness of his heart. Had he consented, God would then have made known to him His whole design, and demanded that His people should be allowed to depart altogether.
But when Pharaoh scornfully refused the first and smaller request (Exo 5), Moses was instructed to demand the entire departure of Israel from the land (Exo 6:10), and to show the omnipotence of the God of the Hebrews before and upon Pharaoh by miracles and heavy judgments (Heb 7:8.) Accordingly, Moses persisted in demanding permission for the people to go and serve their God (Exo 7:16; Exo 8:1; Exo 9:1, Exo 9:13; Exo 10:3); and it was not till Pharaoh offered to allow them to sacrifice in the land that Moses replied, “We will go three days’ journey into the wilderness, and sacrifice to Jehovah our God” (Exo 8:27); but, observe, with this proviso, “as He shall command us,” which left, under the circumstances, no hope that they would return.
It was an act of mercy to Pharaoh, therefore, on the one hand, that the entire departure of the Israelites was not demanded at the very first audience of Moses and the representatives of the nation; for, had this been demanded, it would have been far more difficult for him to bend his heart in obedience to the divine will, than when the request presented was as trifling as it was reasonable. And if he had rendered obedience to the will of God in the smaller, God would have given him strength to be faithful in the greater.
On the other hand, as God foresaw his resistance (Exo 3:19), this condescension, which demanded no more than the natural man could have performed, was also to answer the purpose of clearly displaying the justice of God. It was to prove alike to Egyptians and Israelites that Pharaoh was “without excuse,” and that his eventual destruction was the well-merited punishment of his obduracy.
חזקה ביד ולא, “ not even by means of a strong hand; ” “except through great power” is not the true rendering, ולא does not mean ἐὰν μὴ, nisi . What follows, - viz. , the statement that God would so smite the Egyptians with miracles that Pharaoh would, after all, let Israel go (Exo 3:20), - is not really at variance with this, the only admissible rendering of the words.
For the meaning is, that Pharaoh would not be willing to let Israel depart even when he should be smitten by the strong hand of God; but that he would be compelled to do so against his will, would be forced to do so by the plagues that were about to fall upon Egypt. Thus even after the ninth plague it is still stated (Exo 10:27), that “Pharaoh would (אבה) not let them go;” and when he had given permission, in consequence of the last plague, and in fact had driven them out (Exo 12:31), he speedily repented, and pursued them with his army to bring them back again (Exo 14:5.)
; from which it is clearly to be seen that the strong hand of God had not broken his will, and yet Israel was brought out by the same strong hand of Jehovah .
Exo 3:16-20 With the command, “ Go and gather the elders of Israel together, ” God then gave Moses further instructions with reference to the execution of his mission. On his arrival in Egypt he was first of all to inform the elders, as the representatives of the nation (i. e. , the heads of the families, households, and tribes), of the appearance of God to him, and the revelation of His design, to deliver His people out of Egypt and bring them to the land of the Canaanites.
He was then to go with them to Pharaoh, and make known to him their resolution, in consequence of this appearance of God, to go a three days’ journey into the wilderness and sacrifice to their God. The words, “ I have surely visited, ” point to the fulfilment of the last words of the dying Joseph (Gen 50:24). עלינוּ נקרה (Exo 3:18) does not mean “He is named upon us” (lxx, Onk.
, Jon .) , nor “He has called us” ( Vulg. , Luth .) The latter is grammatically wrong, for the verb is Niphal , or passive; and though the former has some support in the parallel passage in Exo 5:3, inasmuch as נקרא is the verb used there, it is only in appearance, for if the meaning really were “His name is named upon (over) us,” the word שׁמו (שׁם) would not be omitted (vid.
, Deu 28:10; 2Ch 7:14). The real meaning is, “ He has met with us, ” from נקרה, obruam fieri , ordinarily construed with אל, but here with על, because God comes down from above to meet with man. The plural us is used, although it was only to Moses that God appeared, because His appearing had reference to the whole nation, which was represented before Pharaoh by Moses and the elders.
In the words נלכה־נא, “ we will go, then, ” equivalent to “let us go,” the request for Pharaoh’s permission to go out is couched in such a form as to answer to the relation of Israel to Pharaoh. He had no right to detain them, but he had a right to consent to their departure, as his predecessor had formerly done to their settlement. Still less had he any good reason for refusing their request to go a three days’ journey into the wilderness and sacrifice to their God, since their return at the close of the festival was then taken for granted.
But the purpose of God was, that Israel should not return. Was it the case, then, that the delegates were “to deceive the king,” as Knobel affirms! By no means. God knew the hard heart of Pharaoh, and therefore directed that no more should be asked at first than he must either grant, or display the hardness of his heart. Had he consented, God would then have made known to him His whole design, and demanded that His people should be allowed to depart altogether.
But when Pharaoh scornfully refused the first and smaller request (Exo 5), Moses was instructed to demand the entire departure of Israel from the land (Exo 6:10), and to show the omnipotence of the God of the Hebrews before and upon Pharaoh by miracles and heavy judgments (Heb 7:8.) Accordingly, Moses persisted in demanding permission for the people to go and serve their God (Exo 7:16; Exo 8:1; Exo 9:1, Exo 9:13; Exo 10:3); and it was not till Pharaoh offered to allow them to sacrifice in the land that Moses replied, “We will go three days’ journey into the wilderness, and sacrifice to Jehovah our God” (Exo 8:27); but, observe, with this proviso, “as He shall command us,” which left, under the circumstances, no hope that they would return.
It was an act of mercy to Pharaoh, therefore, on the one hand, that the entire departure of the Israelites was not demanded at the very first audience of Moses and the representatives of the nation; for, had this been demanded, it would have been far more difficult for him to bend his heart in obedience to the divine will, than when the request presented was as trifling as it was reasonable. And if he had rendered obedience to the will of God in the smaller, God would have given him strength to be faithful in the greater.
On the other hand, as God foresaw his resistance (Exo 3:19), this condescension, which demanded no more than the natural man could have performed, was also to answer the purpose of clearly displaying the justice of God. It was to prove alike to Egyptians and Israelites that Pharaoh was “without excuse,” and that his eventual destruction was the well-merited punishment of his obduracy.
חזקה ביד ולא, “ not even by means of a strong hand; ” “except through great power” is not the true rendering, ולא does not mean ἐὰν μὴ, nisi . What follows, - viz. , the statement that God would so smite the Egyptians with miracles that Pharaoh would, after all, let Israel go (Exo 3:20), - is not really at variance with this, the only admissible rendering of the words.
For the meaning is, that Pharaoh would not be willing to let Israel depart even when he should be smitten by the strong hand of God; but that he would be compelled to do so against his will, would be forced to do so by the plagues that were about to fall upon Egypt. Thus even after the ninth plague it is still stated (Exo 10:27), that “Pharaoh would (אבה) not let them go;” and when he had given permission, in consequence of the last plague, and in fact had driven them out (Exo 12:31), he speedily repented, and pursued them with his army to bring them back again (Exo 14:5.)
; from which it is clearly to be seen that the strong hand of God had not broken his will, and yet Israel was brought out by the same strong hand of Jehovah .
Exo 3:16-20 With the command, “ Go and gather the elders of Israel together, ” God then gave Moses further instructions with reference to the execution of his mission. On his arrival in Egypt he was first of all to inform the elders, as the representatives of the nation (i. e. , the heads of the families, households, and tribes), of the appearance of God to him, and the revelation of His design, to deliver His people out of Egypt and bring them to the land of the Canaanites.
He was then to go with them to Pharaoh, and make known to him their resolution, in consequence of this appearance of God, to go a three days’ journey into the wilderness and sacrifice to their God. The words, “ I have surely visited, ” point to the fulfilment of the last words of the dying Joseph (Gen 50:24). עלינוּ נקרה (Exo 3:18) does not mean “He is named upon us” (lxx, Onk.
, Jon .) , nor “He has called us” ( Vulg. , Luth .) The latter is grammatically wrong, for the verb is Niphal , or passive; and though the former has some support in the parallel passage in Exo 5:3, inasmuch as נקרא is the verb used there, it is only in appearance, for if the meaning really were “His name is named upon (over) us,” the word שׁמו (שׁם) would not be omitted (vid.
, Deu 28:10; 2Ch 7:14). The real meaning is, “ He has met with us, ” from נקרה, obruam fieri , ordinarily construed with אל, but here with על, because God comes down from above to meet with man. The plural us is used, although it was only to Moses that God appeared, because His appearing had reference to the whole nation, which was represented before Pharaoh by Moses and the elders.
In the words נלכה־נא, “ we will go, then, ” equivalent to “let us go,” the request for Pharaoh’s permission to go out is couched in such a form as to answer to the relation of Israel to Pharaoh. He had no right to detain them, but he had a right to consent to their departure, as his predecessor had formerly done to their settlement. Still less had he any good reason for refusing their request to go a three days’ journey into the wilderness and sacrifice to their God, since their return at the close of the festival was then taken for granted.
But the purpose of God was, that Israel should not return. Was it the case, then, that the delegates were “to deceive the king,” as Knobel affirms! By no means. God knew the hard heart of Pharaoh, and therefore directed that no more should be asked at first than he must either grant, or display the hardness of his heart. Had he consented, God would then have made known to him His whole design, and demanded that His people should be allowed to depart altogether.
But when Pharaoh scornfully refused the first and smaller request (Exo 5), Moses was instructed to demand the entire departure of Israel from the land (Exo 6:10), and to show the omnipotence of the God of the Hebrews before and upon Pharaoh by miracles and heavy judgments (Heb 7:8.) Accordingly, Moses persisted in demanding permission for the people to go and serve their God (Exo 7:16; Exo 8:1; Exo 9:1, Exo 9:13; Exo 10:3); and it was not till Pharaoh offered to allow them to sacrifice in the land that Moses replied, “We will go three days’ journey into the wilderness, and sacrifice to Jehovah our God” (Exo 8:27); but, observe, with this proviso, “as He shall command us,” which left, under the circumstances, no hope that they would return.
It was an act of mercy to Pharaoh, therefore, on the one hand, that the entire departure of the Israelites was not demanded at the very first audience of Moses and the representatives of the nation; for, had this been demanded, it would have been far more difficult for him to bend his heart in obedience to the divine will, than when the request presented was as trifling as it was reasonable. And if he had rendered obedience to the will of God in the smaller, God would have given him strength to be faithful in the greater.
On the other hand, as God foresaw his resistance (Exo 3:19), this condescension, which demanded no more than the natural man could have performed, was also to answer the purpose of clearly displaying the justice of God. It was to prove alike to Egyptians and Israelites that Pharaoh was “without excuse,” and that his eventual destruction was the well-merited punishment of his obduracy.
חזקה ביד ולא, “ not even by means of a strong hand; ” “except through great power” is not the true rendering, ולא does not mean ἐὰν μὴ, nisi . What follows, - viz. , the statement that God would so smite the Egyptians with miracles that Pharaoh would, after all, let Israel go (Exo 3:20), - is not really at variance with this, the only admissible rendering of the words.
For the meaning is, that Pharaoh would not be willing to let Israel depart even when he should be smitten by the strong hand of God; but that he would be compelled to do so against his will, would be forced to do so by the plagues that were about to fall upon Egypt. Thus even after the ninth plague it is still stated (Exo 10:27), that “Pharaoh would (אבה) not let them go;” and when he had given permission, in consequence of the last plague, and in fact had driven them out (Exo 12:31), he speedily repented, and pursued them with his army to bring them back again (Exo 14:5.)
; from which it is clearly to be seen that the strong hand of God had not broken his will, and yet Israel was brought out by the same strong hand of Jehovah .
Exo 3:16-20 With the command, “ Go and gather the elders of Israel together, ” God then gave Moses further instructions with reference to the execution of his mission. On his arrival in Egypt he was first of all to inform the elders, as the representatives of the nation (i. e. , the heads of the families, households, and tribes), of the appearance of God to him, and the revelation of His design, to deliver His people out of Egypt and bring them to the land of the Canaanites.
He was then to go with them to Pharaoh, and make known to him their resolution, in consequence of this appearance of God, to go a three days’ journey into the wilderness and sacrifice to their God. The words, “ I have surely visited, ” point to the fulfilment of the last words of the dying Joseph (Gen 50:24). עלינוּ נקרה (Exo 3:18) does not mean “He is named upon us” (lxx, Onk.
, Jon .) , nor “He has called us” ( Vulg. , Luth .) The latter is grammatically wrong, for the verb is Niphal , or passive; and though the former has some support in the parallel passage in Exo 5:3, inasmuch as נקרא is the verb used there, it is only in appearance, for if the meaning really were “His name is named upon (over) us,” the word שׁמו (שׁם) would not be omitted (vid.
, Deu 28:10; 2Ch 7:14). The real meaning is, “ He has met with us, ” from נקרה, obruam fieri , ordinarily construed with אל, but here with על, because God comes down from above to meet with man. The plural us is used, although it was only to Moses that God appeared, because His appearing had reference to the whole nation, which was represented before Pharaoh by Moses and the elders.
In the words נלכה־נא, “ we will go, then, ” equivalent to “let us go,” the request for Pharaoh’s permission to go out is couched in such a form as to answer to the relation of Israel to Pharaoh. He had no right to detain them, but he had a right to consent to their departure, as his predecessor had formerly done to their settlement. Still less had he any good reason for refusing their request to go a three days’ journey into the wilderness and sacrifice to their God, since their return at the close of the festival was then taken for granted.
But the purpose of God was, that Israel should not return. Was it the case, then, that the delegates were “to deceive the king,” as Knobel affirms! By no means. God knew the hard heart of Pharaoh, and therefore directed that no more should be asked at first than he must either grant, or display the hardness of his heart. Had he consented, God would then have made known to him His whole design, and demanded that His people should be allowed to depart altogether.
But when Pharaoh scornfully refused the first and smaller request (Exo 5), Moses was instructed to demand the entire departure of Israel from the land (Exo 6:10), and to show the omnipotence of the God of the Hebrews before and upon Pharaoh by miracles and heavy judgments (Heb 7:8.) Accordingly, Moses persisted in demanding permission for the people to go and serve their God (Exo 7:16; Exo 8:1; Exo 9:1, Exo 9:13; Exo 10:3); and it was not till Pharaoh offered to allow them to sacrifice in the land that Moses replied, “We will go three days’ journey into the wilderness, and sacrifice to Jehovah our God” (Exo 8:27); but, observe, with this proviso, “as He shall command us,” which left, under the circumstances, no hope that they would return.
It was an act of mercy to Pharaoh, therefore, on the one hand, that the entire departure of the Israelites was not demanded at the very first audience of Moses and the representatives of the nation; for, had this been demanded, it would have been far more difficult for him to bend his heart in obedience to the divine will, than when the request presented was as trifling as it was reasonable. And if he had rendered obedience to the will of God in the smaller, God would have given him strength to be faithful in the greater.
On the other hand, as God foresaw his resistance (Exo 3:19), this condescension, which demanded no more than the natural man could have performed, was also to answer the purpose of clearly displaying the justice of God. It was to prove alike to Egyptians and Israelites that Pharaoh was “without excuse,” and that his eventual destruction was the well-merited punishment of his obduracy.
חזקה ביד ולא, “ not even by means of a strong hand; ” “except through great power” is not the true rendering, ולא does not mean ἐὰν μὴ, nisi . What follows, - viz. , the statement that God would so smite the Egyptians with miracles that Pharaoh would, after all, let Israel go (Exo 3:20), - is not really at variance with this, the only admissible rendering of the words.
For the meaning is, that Pharaoh would not be willing to let Israel depart even when he should be smitten by the strong hand of God; but that he would be compelled to do so against his will, would be forced to do so by the plagues that were about to fall upon Egypt. Thus even after the ninth plague it is still stated (Exo 10:27), that “Pharaoh would (אבה) not let them go;” and when he had given permission, in consequence of the last plague, and in fact had driven them out (Exo 12:31), he speedily repented, and pursued them with his army to bring them back again (Exo 14:5.)
; from which it is clearly to be seen that the strong hand of God had not broken his will, and yet Israel was brought out by the same strong hand of Jehovah .
Exo 3:21-22 Not only would God compel Pharaoh to let Israel go; He would not let His people go out empty, but, according to the promise in Gen 15:14, with great substance. “ I will give this people favour in the eyes of the Egyptians; ” that is to say, the Egyptians should be so favourably disposed towards them, that when they solicited of their neighbours clothes and ornaments of gold and silver, their request should be granted.
“ So shall ye spoil the Egyptians . ” What is here foretold as a promise, the Israelites are directed to do in Exo 11:2-3; and according to Exo 12:35-36, it was really carried out. Immediately before their departure from Egypt, the Israelites asked (ישׁאלוּ) the Egyptians for gold and silver ornaments (כּלים not vessels, either for sacrifice, the house, or the table, but jewels; cf.
Gen 24:53; Exo 35:22; Num 31:50) and clothes; and God gave them favour in the eyes of the Egyptians, so that they gave them to them. For אשּׁה שׁאלה, “ Let every woman ask of her (female) neighbour and of her that sojourneth in her house ” (בּיתהּ גּרת, from which it is evident that the Israelites did not live apart, but along with the Egyptians), we find in Exo 11:2, “ Let every man ask of his neighbour, and every woman of her (female) neighbour .
” - ושׂמתּם, “ and put them upon your sons and daughters . ” על שׂוּם, to put on, applied to clothes and ornaments in Lev 8:8 and Gen 41:42. This command and its execution have frequently given occasion to the opponents of the Scriptures to throw contempt upon the word of God, the asking being regarded as borrowing, and the spoiling of the Egyptians as purloining.
At the same time, the attempts made to vindicate this purloining from the wickedness of stealing have been in many respects unsatisfactory. But the only meaning of שׁאל is to ask or beg, and השׁאיל, which is only met with in Exo 12:36 and 1Sa 1:28, does not mean to lend, but to suffer to ask, to hear and grant a request. ישׁאלוּם (Exo 12:36), lit. , they allowed them to ask; i.
e. , “the Egyptians did not turn away the petitioners, as not wanting to listen to them, but received their petition with good-will, and granted their request. No proof can be brought that השׁאיל means to lend , as is commonly supposed; the word occurs again in 1Sa 1:28, and there it means to grant or give” ( Knobel on Exo 12:36). Moreover the circumstances under which the שׁאל and השׁאיל took place, were quite at variance with the idea of borrowing and lending.
For even if Moses had not spoken without reserve of the entire departure of the Israelites, the plagues which followed one after another, and with which the God of the Hebrews gave emphasis to His demand as addressed through Moses to Pharaoh, “Let My people go, that they may serve Me,” must have made it evident to every Egyptian, that all this had reference to something greater than a three days’ march to celebrate a festival. And under these circumstances no Egyptian could have cherished the thought, that the Israelites were only borrowing the jewels they asked of them, and would return them after the festival.
What they gave under such circumstances, they could only give or present without the slightest prospect of restoration. Still less could the Israelites have had merely the thought of borrowing in their mind, seeing that God had said to Moses, “I will give the Israelites favour in the eyes of the Egyptians; and it will come to pass, that when ye go out, ye shall not go out empty” (Exo 3:21).
If, therefore, it is “natural to suppose that these jewels were festal vessels with which the Egyptians furnished the poor Israelites for the intended feast,” and even if “the Israelites had their thoughts directed with all seriousness to the feast which they were about to celebrate to Jehovah in the desert” ( Baumgarten ); their request to the Egyptians cannot have referred to any borrowing, nor have presupposed any intention to restore what they received on their return. From the very first the Israelites asked without intending to restore, and the Egyptians granted their request without any hope of receiving back, because God had made their hearts favourably disposed to the Israelites.
The expressions את־מצרים נצּלתּם in Exo 3:22, and וינצּלוּ in Exo 12:36, are not at variance with this, but rather require it. For נצל does not mean to purloin, to steal, to take away secretly by cunning and fraud, but to plunder (2Ch 20:25), as both the lxx (σκυλεύειν) and Vulgate ( spoliare ) have rendered it. Rosenmüller , therefore, is correct in his explanation: “ Et spoliabitis Aegyptios, ita ut ab Aegyptiis, qui vos tam dura servitute oppresserunt, spolia auferetis .
” So also is Hengstenberg, who says, “The author represents the Israelites as going forth, laden as it were with the spoils of their formidable enemy, trophies of the victory which God’s power had bestowed on their weakness. While he represents the gifts of the Egyptians as spoils which God had distributed to His host (as Israel is called in Exo 12:41), he leads us to observe that the bestowment of these gifts, which outwardly appeared to be the effect of the good-will of the Egyptians, if viewed more deeply, proceeded from another Giver; that the outwardly free act of the Egyptians was effected by an inward divine constraint which they could not withstand” ( Dissertations , vol.
ii. p. 431). - Egypt had spoiled Israel by the tributary labour so unjustly enforced, and now Israel carried off the spoil of Egypt-a prelude to the victory which the people of God will one day obtain in their conflict with the power of the world (cf. Zec 14:14).