Verse 1
Exodus 3:1. Now Moses — The
years of Moses’s life are
remarkably divided into three
forties; the first forty he
spent as a prince in Pharaoh’s
court, the second a shepherd in
Midian, the third a king in
Jeshurun. He had now finished
his second forty when he
received his commission to bring
Israel out of Egypt. Sometimes
it is long before God calls his
servants out to that work which
of old he designed them for.
Moses was born to be Israel’s
deliverer, and yet not a word is
said of him till he is eighty
years of age. To the mountain of
God — So called, either from the
vision of God here following,
(see Acts 7:30,) or by
anticipation, from God’s
glorious appearance there, and
his giving the law from thence.
Even to Horeb — Called also
Sinai, Exodus 19:1. Probably
Horeb was the name of the whole
tract of mountains, and Sinai
the name of that particular
elevation where the vision
happened, and the law was
delivered: or Horeb and Sinai
were two different summits of
the same mountain.
Verse 2
Exodus 3:2. The Angel of the
Lord appeared to him — Not a
created angel, but the Angel of
the covenant, Christ, who then
and ever was God, and was to be
man, and a messenger from God to
man. He, termed the Angel of
God’s presence, (Isaiah 63:9,)
had wrestled with Jacob,
(Genesis 32:24;) and had
redeemed him from all evil,
(Genesis 48:16;) and afterward
conducted his posterity through
the wilderness, 1 Corinthians
10:4. These his temporary
appearances were presages of his
more solemn mission and coming,
on account of which he is fitly
called the Angel or Messenger.
That this angel was no creature,
appears from his saying, I am
the Lord, a language which
angels never speak; but, I am
sent from God — I am thy
fellow-servant. In a flame of
fire — Representing God’s
majesty, purity, and power, and
showing that he was about to
bring terror and destruction to
his enemies, and light and
comfort to his people, and to
display his glory before all.
The bush burned and was not
consumed — An emblem of the
church now in bondage in Egypt,
burning in the brick-kilns, yet
not consumed; cast down, but not
destroyed; for God was in the
burning bush, was and always
will be present with his people
in their sufferings; Isaiah
43:2; Daniel 3:25.
Verse 3-4
Exodus 3:3-4. I will turn aside
and see — He speaks as one
inquisitive and bold in his
inquiry: whatever it was, he
would, if possible, know the
meaning of it. God called to
him, and said, Moses, Moses —
Probably there had been no
appearance of God to any one
since Jacob’s descent into
Egypt, above two hundred years
before: and Moses, being
addressed thus by name, must
have been much more surprised by
what he heard than by what he
saw. Divine calls are then
effectual when the Spirit of God
makes them particular, and calls
us as by name. He said, Here am
I — Not only to hear what is
spoken, but to do what is
commanded.
Verse 5
Exodus 3:5. Draw not nigh hither
— Keep thy distance. Thus God
checks his curiosity and
forwardness, and disposes his
mind to the greater reverence
and humility. Put off thy shoes
from thy feet — This is required
as a token of his reverence for
the Divine Majesty, then and
there eminently present; of his
humiliation for his sins, which
rendered him unworthy to appear
before God; of his putting away
all sin in his walk or
conversation; and of his
submission and readiness to obey
God’s will; for which reason
slaves were wont to approach
their masters barefooted. We
find the same direction given to
Joshua, for the same reason,
Joshua 5:15. And it seems not
improbable that putting off the
shoes, as a sign of humiliation
and veneration, was a ceremony
observed by the patriarchs in
their religious worship. Buxtorf
says, that to this day the Jews
go to their synagogues barefoot
on the day of atonement, (Jud.
Synag., c. 30, p. 57,) and many
learned men suppose that the
priests officiated barefoot in
the tabernacle and temple. The
custom of treading barefoot in
holy places seems to have been
general in the East: the
Egyptians used it: and
Pythagoras, who recommends to
his disciples to worship,
putting off their shoes, (
ανυποδητος προσκυνει,) is
thought to have learned this
rite from them. The Mohammedans
observe this ceremony at the
present time, as do also the
Christians of Abyssinia. The
truth seems to be, as Henry
observes, that putting off the
shoes was then what putting off
the hat is now, a token of
respect and submission. The
ground is holy — Not absolutely,
but in relation to him who
sanctified it by this peculiar
manifestation of his presence.
We ought to approach to God with
a solemn pause and preparation;
and to express our inward
reverence by a grave and
reverent behaviour in the
worship of God, carefully
avoiding every thing that looks
light or rude.
Verse 6
Exodus 3:6. I am, &c. — He lets
him know it is God that speaks
to him, to engage his reverence,
faith, and obedience. The God of
thy father — Thy pious father
Amram, and the God of Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob, thy ancestors:
engaged to them by solemn
covenant, which I am now come to
perform. And Moses hid his face,
for he was afraid to look upon
God — The more we see of God,
the more cause we shall see to
worship him with reverence and
godly fear. And even the
manifestations of God’s grace
should increase our humble
reverence of him.
Verse 8
Exodus 3:8. I am come down to
deliver them — When God doth
something very extraordinary, he
is said to come down to do it,
as Isaiah 64:1. This deliverance
was typical of our redemption by
Christ, and in that the eternal
Word did indeed come down from
heaven to deliver us. A large
land — So it was, according to
its true and ancient bounds, as
they are described, (Genesis
15:18,) and not according to
those narrow limits, to which
they were afterward confined for
their unbelief and impiety. A
land flowing with milk and honey
— A proverbial expression:
abounding with the choicest
fruits, both for necessity and
delight.
Verse 10
Exodus 3:10. I will send thee —
And the same hand that now
fetched a shepherd out of a
desert to be the planter of the
Jewish Church, afterward fetched
fishermen from their ships to be
the planters of the Christian
Church, that the excellency of
the power might be of God.
Verse 11
Exodus 3:11. Who am I? — He
thinks himself unworthy of the
honour, and unable for the work.
He thinks he wants courage, and
therefore cannot go to Pharaoh:
he thinks he wants conduct, and
therefore cannot bring forth the
children of Israel out of Egypt
— They are unarmed,
undisciplined, quite dispirited,
utterly unable to help
themselves. Moses was
incomparably the fittest of any
man living for this work,
eminent for learning, wisdom,
experience, valour, faith,
holiness, and yet he says, Who
am I? The more fit any person is
for service, the less opinion he
has of himself.
Verse 12
Exodus 3:12. Certainly I will be
with thee — Those that are weak
in themselves, yet may do
wonders, being strong in the
Lord, and in the power of his
might. God’s presence puts
wisdom and strength into the
weak and foolish, and is enough
to answer all objections.
Verse 13
Exodus 3:13. When they shall
say, What is his name? what
shall I say unto them? — What
name shall I use, whereby thou
mayest be distinguished from
false gods, and thy people may
be encouraged to expect
deliverance from thee?
Verse 14
Exodus 3:14. God said — Two
names God would be known by:
1st, A name that speaks what he
is in himself, I AM THAT I AM.
The Septuagint renders the words
ειμι ο ων, I AM the existing
Being, or HE WHO IS and the
Chaldee, I AM HE WHO IS, and WHO
WILL BE. That is, I am He that
enjoys an essential,
independent, immutable, and
necessary existence, He that IS,
and WAS, and IS TO COME. It
explains his name Jehovah, and
signifies, 1st, That he is self-
existent: he has his being of
himself, and has no dependance
on any other. And being
self-existent, he cannot but be
self-sufficient, and therefore
all-sufficient, and the
inexhaustible fountain of being
and blessedness. 2d, That he is
eternal and unchangeable: the
same yesterday, to-day, and for
ever. For the words are with
equal propriety rendered, I WILL
BE WHAT I AM, or, I AM WHAT I
WILL BE, or, I WILL BE WHAT I
WILL BE. Other beings are, and
have been, and shall be; but
because what they have been
might have been otherwise, and
what they are might possibly not
have been at all, and what they
shall be may be very different
from what now is therefore their
changeable, dependant, and
precarious essence, which to-day
may be one thing, to- morrow
another thing, and the next day
possibly nothing at all, scarce
deserves the name of being.
There is another consideration
which makes this name peculiarly
applicable to God, namely that
he is the fountain of all being
and perfection, and that from
him all things have derived
their existence; so that it is
he alone that has life in
himself: and no creature, of
whatever rank or order, has so
much as an existence of its own:
For in him we live, and move,
and have our being. And though
divers of God’s attributes are,
through his goodness,
participated by his creatures,
yet because they possess them in
a way so inferior to that
transcendent, peculiar, and
divine manner in which they
belong to God, the Scriptures
seem absolutely to exclude
created beings from any title to
those attributes.
Thus our Saviour says, There is
none good but one, that is God.
Thus St. Paul terms God the only
Potentate, though the earth be
shared by several potentates;
and the only wise God, though
many men and the holy angels are
wise. And thus he describes him
as one who only hath
immortality, although angels and
human souls are also immortal.
In so incommunicable a manner
does the superiority of God’s
nature make him possess those
very excellences which the
diffusiveness of his goodness
has induced him to communicate.
3d, That he is faithful and true
to all his promises,
unchangeable in his word, as
well as in his nature; and not a
man that he should lie. Let
Israel know this; I AM hath sent
me unto you.
Verse 15
Exodus 3:15. God will be known,
2d, By a name that speaks what
he is to his people. Lest they
should not understand the name I
AM, Moses is directed to make
use of another name of God more
familiar to them. The Lord God
of your fathers hath sent me
unto you — Thus God made himself
known, that he might revive
among them the religion of their
fathers, which was much decayed,
and almost lost. And, that he
might raise their expectations
of the speedy performance of the
promises made unto their
fathers, Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob are particularly named,
because with Abraham the
covenant was first made, and
with Isaac and Jacob often
expressly renewed, and these
three were distinguished from
their brethren, and chosen to be
the trustees of the covenant.
This God will have to be his
name for ever, and it has been,
is, and will be his name, by
which his worshippers know him,
and distinguish him from all
false gods.
Verse 18-19
Exodus 3:18-19. Hath met with us
— Hath appeared to us, declaring
his will, that we should do what
follows. I am sure he will not
let you go — God sends his
messengers to those whose
obstinacy he foresees, that it
may appear he would have them
turn and live.
Verse 22
Exodus 3:22. Every woman shall
ask, שׁאלה, shaalah, (not
borrow,) jewels. And I will give
this people favour in the sight
of the Egyptians — God sometimes
makes the enemies of his people
not only to be at peace with
them, but to be kind to them.
And he has many ways of
balancing accounts between the
injured and the injurious, of
righting the oppressed, and
compelling those that have done
wrong to make restitution. |