Verse 1
Exodus 1:1. These are the names
— This list of names is here
repeated, that by comparing this
small root with the multitude of
branches which arose from it, we
may see and acknowledge the
wonderful providence of God in
the fulfilment of his promises.
Every man and his household —
That is, his children and
grand-children.
Verse 3
Exodus 1:3. And Benjamin — Who,
though youngest of all, is
placed before Dan, Naphtali,
&c., because they were the
children of the hand-maidens.
Verse 5
Exodus 1:5. Seventy souls — Or
persons, according to the
computation we had, Genesis
46:27, including Joseph and his
two sons. This was just the
number of the nations by which
the earth was peopled, (Genesis
10.,) for when “God separated
the sons of Adam, he set the
bounds of the people according
to the number of the children of
Israel,”
Deuteronomy 32:8.
Verse 6
Exodus 1:6. All that generation
— By degrees wore off. Perhaps
all Jacob’s sons died much about
the same time, for there was not
past seven years’ difference in
age between the eldest and the
youngest of them, except
Benjamin.
Verse 7
Exodus 1:7. And the children of
Israel were fruitful, and
increased abundantly — Like
fishes or insects, as one of the
words here used signifies, and
being generally healthful and
strong, they waxed exceeding
mighty, so that the land was
filled with them — At least
Goshen, their own allotment.
This wonderful increase was the
product of the promise long
before made to their fathers.
From the call of Abraham, when
God first told him he would make
him a great nation, to the
deliverance of his seed out of
Egypt, were four hundred and
thirty years; during the first
two hundred and fifteen of which
they were increased to seventy,
but in the latter half, those
seventy multiplied to six
hundred thousand fighting men.
Verse 8
Exodus 1:8. There arose a new
king — One of another family,
according to Josephus; for it
appears from ancient writers
that the kingdom of Egypt often
passed from one family to
another. That knew not Joseph —
All that knew him loved him, and
were kind to his relations for
his sake; but when he was dead
he was soon forgotten, and the
remembrance of the good offices
he had done was either not
retained or not regarded. If we
work for men only, our works, at
furthest, will die with us; if
for God, they will follow us,
Revelation 14:13.
Verse 10-11
Exodus 1:10-11. Come on, let us
deal wisely with them, lest they
multiply — When men deal
wickedly, it is common for them
to imagine that they deal
wisely, but the folly of sin
will at last be manifested
before all men. They set over
them task-masters, to afflict
them — With this very design.
They not only made them serve,
which was sufficient for
Pharaoh’s profit, but they made
them serve with rigour, so that
their lives became bitter to
them; intending hereby to break
their spirits, and to rob them
of every thing in them that was
generous; to ruin their health,
and shorten their days, and so
diminish their numbers; to
discourage them from marrying,
since their children would be
born to slavery; and to oblige
them to desert the Hebrews, and
incorporate with the Egyptians.
And it is to be feared the
oppression they were under did
bring over many of them to join
with the Egyptians in their
idolatrous worship; for we read,
Joshua 24:14, that they served
other gods in Egypt; and we
find, Ezekiel 20:8, that God had
threatened to destroy them for
it, even while they were in the
land of Egypt. Treasure-cities —
To keep the king’s money or
corn, wherein a great part of
the riches of Egypt consisted.
Verse 12
Exodus 1:12. The more they
multiplied — To the grief and
vexation of the Egyptians. The
original expression, rendered
grew, is very emphatical,
יפרצjiphrots.
They broke forth and expanded
themselves with impetuosity,
like a river swollen with the
rains, whose waters increase and
gain strength by being confined,
Here we see how vain and
fruitless the devices of men are
against the designs of God: and
how easily he, in his
providence, can turn their
counsels against themselves, and
cause the very means which they
employ to oppress his people, to
become the greatest helps and
advantages to them. Times of
persecution and affliction have
often been the church’s growing
times: Christianity spread most
when it was most persecuted.
Verse 13
Exodus 1:13. With rigour —
בפרךְbepareck, with cruelty, or
tyranny; with hard words and
cruel usage, without mercy or
mitigation. This God permitted
for wise and just reasons: 1st,
As a punishment of the idolatry
into which, it appears, many of
them had fallen: 2d, To wean
them from the land of Egypt,
which was a plentiful, and, in
many respects, a desirable land,
and to quicken their desires
after Canaan: 3d, To prepare the
way for God’s glorious works,
and Israel’s deliverance.
Verse 14
Exodus 1:14. In mortar and brick
— It has been supposed by many,
that, besides the
treasure-cities, mentioned
Exodus 1:11, and other similar
works, the Israelites were
employed in raising those
enormous piles, termed pyramids,
which remain to this day, and
probably will remain to the end
of the world; “monuments, not so
much of the greatness and
wisdom, as of the folly,
caprice, exorbitant power, and
cruel tyranny of the monarchs
who projected them. It cannot
indeed be denied, that the skill
wherewith they were planned
equals the vastness of the
labour with which they were
completed; but then it is
evident they never could be
useful in any degree adequate to
the toil and expense with which
they were erected. The
supposition, however, is
entirely groundless; for the
Israelites were employed in
making brick; while it is well
known the pyramids were built of
hewn stone.” — Scott. “The great
pyramid,” says Herodotus, “was
covered with polished stones,
perfectly well joined, the
smallest of which was thirty
feet long. It was built in the
form of steps, on each of which
were placed wooden machines to
raise the stones from one to
another.” Diodorus adds, that
“the stories were of very
different workmanship, and of
eternal duration. It is
preserved to our days (the
middle of the Augustan age)
without being in the least
injured. The marble was brought
from the quarries of Arabia.”
Pliny bears the same testimony:
“It is formed of stone brought
from the quarries of Arabia.” —
Encycl. Brit. So that, it seems
evident, the Israelites, who
were employed in brick and
mortar, had no hand in erecting
the pyramids. All manner of
service in the field — In
cultivating the ground, and,
according to Josephus, in
cutting canals and trenches, to
convey to different parts of the
country the waters of the Nile,
to raise up mounds, lest the
waters overflowing should
stagnate, and in other laborious
services.
Verse 15
Exodus 1:15. The king spake to
the Hebrew midwives — The two
chief of them. They are called
Hebrew midwives, probably not
because they were themselves
Hebrews; for sure Pharaoh could
never expect they should be so
barbarous to those of their own
nation; but because they were
generally made use of among the
Hebrews, and being Egyptians, he
hoped to prevail with them.
Verses 16-19
Exodus 1:16-19. The stools —
Seats used on that occasion. But
the midwives feared God —
Dreaded his wrath more than
Pharaoh’s, and therefore saved
the men-children alive. The
Hebrew women are lively — We
have no reason to doubt the
truth of this; it is plain they
were now under an extraordinary
blessing of increase, which may
well be supposed to have had
this effect, that the women had
quick and easy labour, and the
mothers and children being both
lively, they seldom needed the
help of midwives: this these
midwives took notice of, and
concluding it to be the finger
of God, were thereby imboldened
to disobey the king, and with
this justify themselves before
Pharaoh when he called them to
an account for it.
Verse 20-21
Exodus 1:20-21. God dealt well
with the midwives — he made them
houses — He blessed them in
kind: for as they kept up
Israel’s houses or families, so
God, in recompense, built them
up into families, blessed their
children, and made them
prosperous. But a late learned
writer interprets the passage as
follows: Pharaoh, resolving
effectually to prevent the
increase of the Israelites,
built houses for them, that so
they might no longer have it in
their power to lodge their women
in child-bed out of the way to
save their children, by removing
them from place to place, as
they had before done when they
lived in the fields in tents,
which was their ancient way of
living. But the other seems the
true interpretation. |