PREVIOUS CHAPTER - NEXT CHAPTER - HELP - GR VIDEOS - GR YOUTUBE - TWITTER - SD1 YOUTUBE CHAPTER 2 Ex 2:1-10. BIRTH AND PRESERVATION OF MOSES. 1. there went a man of the house of Levi, &c. Amram was the husband and Jochebed the wife (compare Ex 6:2; Nu 26:59). The marriage took place, and two children, Miriam and Aaron, were born some years before the infanticidal edict.
2. the woman . . . bare a son, &c.--Some extraordinary
appearance of remarkable comeliness led his parents to augur his future
greatness. Beauty was regarded by the ancients as a mark of the divine
favor.
3. she took for him an ark of bulrushes--papyrus, a thick,
strong, and tough reed.
4. his sister--Miriam would probably be a girl of ten or twelve years of age at the time.
5. the daughter of Pharaoh came down to wash herself at the
river--The occasion is thought to have been a religious solemnity
which the royal family opened by bathing in the sacred stream. Peculiar
sacredness was attached to those portions of the Nile which flowed near
the temples. The water was there fenced off as a protection from the
crocodiles; and doubtless the princess had an enclosure reserved for
her own use, the road to which seems to have been well known to
Jochebed.
6-9. when she had opened it, she saw the child--The narrative is picturesque. No tale of romance ever described a plot more skilfully laid or more full of interest in the development. The expedient of the ark, the slime and pitch, the choice of the time and place, the appeal to the sensibilities of the female breast, the stationing of the sister as a watch of the proceedings, her timely suggestion of a nurse, and the engagement of the mother herself--all bespeak a more than ordinary measure of ingenuity as well as intense solicitude on the part of the parents. But the origin of the scheme was most probably owing to a divine suggestion, as its success was due to an overruling Providence, who not only preserved the child's life, but provided for his being trained in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. Hence it is said to have been done by faith (Heb 11:23), either in the general promise of deliverance, or some special revelation made to Amram and Jochebed--and in this view, the pious couple gave a beautiful example of a firm reliance on the word of God, united with an active use of the most suitable means.
10. she brought him unto Pharaoh's daughter--Though it must have
been nearly as severe a trial for Jochebed to part with him the second
time as the first, she was doubtless reconciled to it by her belief in
his high destination as the future deliverer of Israel. His age when
removed to the palace is not stated; but he was old enough to be well
instructed in the principles of the true religion; and those early
impressions, deepened by the power of divine grace, were never
forgotten or effaced.
Ex 2:11-25. HIS SYMPATHY WITH THE HEBREWS.
11. in those days, when Moses was grown--not in age and stature
only, but in power as well as in renown for accomplishments and
military prowess
(Ac 7:22).
There is a gap here in the sacred history which, however, is supplied
by the inspired commentary of Paul, who has fully detailed the reasons
as well as extent of the change that took place in his worldly
condition; and whether, as some say, his royal mother had proposed to
make him coregent and successor to the crown, or some other
circumstances, led to a declaration of his mind, he determined to
renounce the palace and identify himself with the suffering people of
God
(Heb 11:24-29).
The descent of some great sovereigns, like Diocletian and Charles V,
from a throne into private life, is nothing to the sacrifice which
Moses made through the power of faith.
12. he slew the Egyptian, and hid him in the sand--This act of Moses may seem and indeed by some has been condemned as rash and unjustifiable--in plain terms, a deed of assassination. But we must not judge of his action in such a country and age by the standard of law and the notions of right which prevail in our Christian land; and, besides, not only is it not spoken of as a crime in Scripture or as distressing the perpetrator with remorse, but according to existing customs among nomadic tribes, he was bound to avenge the blood of a brother. The person he slew, however, being a government officer, he had rendered himself amenable to the laws of Egypt, and therefore he endeavored to screen himself from the consequences by concealment of the corpse. 13, 14. two men of the Hebrews strove together--His benevolent mediation in this strife, though made in the kindest and mildest manner, was resented, and the taunt of the aggressor showing that Moses' conduct on the preceding day had become generally known, he determined to consult his safety by immediate flight (Heb 11:27). These two incidents prove that neither were the Israelites yet ready to go out of Egypt, nor Moses prepared to be their leader (Jas 1:20). It was by the staff and not the sword--by the meekness, and not the wrath of Moses that God was to accomplish that great work of deliverance. Both he and the people of Israel were for forty years more to be cast into the furnace of affliction, yet it was therein that He had chosen them (Isa 48:10).
15. Moses fled from the face of Pharaoh--His flight took place
in the second year of Thothmes I.
16-22. the priest of Midian--or, "prince of Midian." As the
officers were usually conjoined, he was the ruler also of the people
called Cushites or Ethiopians, and like many other chiefs of pastoral
people in that early age, he still retained the faith and worship of
the true God.
23. the king of Egypt died: and the children of Israel sighed by reason of the bondage--The language seems to imply that the Israelites had experienced a partial relaxation, probably through the influence of Moses' royal patroness; but in the reign of her father's successor the persecution was renewed with increased severity. GOTO NEXT CHAPTER - D. J-F-B INDEX & SEARCH
|