Verse 1
Exodus 7:1. A god to Pharaoh —
That is, my representative in
this affair, as magistrates are
called gods, because they are
God’s vicegerents. He was
authorized to speak and act in
God’s name, and endued with a
divine power, to do that which
is above the ordinary course of
nature. And Aaron shall be thy
prophet — That is, he shall
speak from thee to Pharaoh, as
prophets do from God to the
children of men. Thou shalt as a
god inflict and remove the
plagues, and Aaron as a prophet
shall denounce them.
Verse 7
Exodus 7:7. Moses was fourscore
years old — Joseph, who was to
be only a servant to Pharaoh,
was preferred at thirty years
old; but Moses, who was to be a
god to Pharaoh, was not so
dignified till he was eighty
years old. It was fit he should
long wait for such an honour,
and be long in preparing for
such a service.
Verse 9
Exodus 7:9. Say unto Aaron, Take
thy rod — This Moses ordinarily
held in his hand, and delivered
to Aaron, upon occasion, for the
execution of his commands. For
this and some other miracles
were to be done, not by Moses
immediately, but by Aaron,
partly, perhaps, to preclude or
take off the suspicion that
these miracles were wrought by
some magic arts of Moses, and
partly for the greater honour of
Moses, that he might be what God
had said, (Exodus 7:1,) a god to
Pharaoh, who not only could work
miracles himself, but also give
power to others to do so.
Perhaps the conjecture of
Grotius upon this place may be
worth mentioning here, which is,
that the custom of ambassadors
bearing a caduceus, or rod, in
their hands, had its origin in
this event, being taken up first
by the neighbouring nations, and
from them communicated to the
Greeks and Romans. And it is
remarkable that the caduceus of
Mercury, the messenger of the
gods of Greece and Rome, was
formed of two serpents twisted
round a rod.
Verse 10
Exodus 7:10. It became a serpent
— This was proper, not only to
affect Pharaoh with wonder, but
to strike a terror upon him.
This first miracle, though it
was not a plague, yet amounted
to the threatening of a plague;
if it made not Pharaoh feel, it
made him fear; and this is God’s
method of dealing with sinners;
he comes upon them gradually.
Verse 11
Exodus 7:11. Moses had been
originally instructed in the
learning of the Egyptians, and
was suspected to have improved
in magical arts in his long
retirement. The magicians are
therefore sent for to vie with
him. The two chief of them were
Jannes and Jambres. Their rods
became serpents, probably by the
power of evil angels, artfully
substituting serpents in the
room of the rods, God permitting
the delusion to be wrought for
wise and holy ends. But the
serpent which Aaron’s rod was
turned into, swallowed up the
others: which was sufficient to
have convinced Pharaoh on which
side the right lay.
Verse 12
Exodus 7:12. They became
serpents — The authors of the
Universal History cast
considerable light on this
subject: “If it be asked,” say
they, “why God suffered the
magicians to act thus, by a
power borrowed from the devil,
in order to invalidate, if
possible, those miracles which
his servant wrought by his
divine power, the following
reasons may be given for it:
First, It was necessary that
those magicians should be
suffered to exert the utmost of
their power against Moses, in
order to clear him from the
imputation of magic or sorcery;
for as the notion of such an
extraordinary art was very rife,
not only among the Egyptians,
but all other nations, if they
had not entered into this
strenuous competition with him,
and been at length overcome by
him, both the Hebrews and
Egyptians would have been more
apt to attribute all his
miracles to his skill in magic,
than to the divine power.
Secondly, It was necessary in
order to confirm the faith of
the wavering and desponding
Israelites, by making them see
the difference between Moses’s
acting by the power of God, and
the sorcerers by that of Satan.
And, lastly, In order to
preserve them afterward from
being seduced by any false
miracles, from the true worship
of God.”
Verse 13
Exodus 7:13. And he hardened
Pharaoh’s heart — That is,
permitted it to be hardened: or,
as the very same Hebrew word is
rendered in Exodus 7:22,
Pharaoh’s heart was hardened.
Verse 14
Exodus 7:14. Pharaoh’s heart is
hardened — כבד לב, is made
heavy.
Neither my word nor works make
any impression upon him. He is
obdurate and obstinate, and what
was designed for his conviction
and humiliation only aggravates
his guilt, and prepares him for
a more signal destruction.
Verse 15
Exodus 7:15. Lo, he goeth out
unto the water — Of the river
Nile: whither he went at that
time, either for his recreation,
or to pay his morning worship to
that river, which, as Plutarch
testifies, the Egyptians had in
great veneration.
Verse 18
Exodus 7:18. The Egyptians shall
loathe to drink of the water —
“There are a few wells,” says
Harmer, “in Egypt, but their
waters are not drunk, being
unpleasant and unwholesome. The
water of the Nile is what they
universally make use of in this
country, which is looked upon to
be extraordinarily wholesome,
and at the same time extremely
delicious.” And he refers to
Maillett and another author, as
affirming that the Egyptians
have been wont to excite thirst
artificially, that they might
drink the more of it. He then
quotes, the Abbot Mascrier (let.
1, pp. 15, 16) in the following
words: “The water of Egypt is so
delicious that one would not
wish the heat should be less,
nor to be delivered from the
sensation of thirst. The Turks
find it so exquisitely charming
that they excite themselves to
drink of it by eating salt. It
is a common saying among them,
that if Mohammed had drunk of it
he would have begged of God not
to have died, that he might
always have done it.” On these
facts Harmer remarks as follows:
“A person that never before
heard of this delicacy of the
water of the Nile, and of the
large quantities which on that
account are drunk of it, will, I
am sure, find an energy in those
words of Moses to Pharaoh, which
he never observed before, The
Egyptians shall loathe to drink
of the river. They shall loathe
to drink of that water which
they used to prefer to all the
waters in the universe — that
which they had been wont eagerly
to long for; and will rather
drink of well-water, which in
their country is detestable.” —
Harmer, vol. 2. p. 295.
Verse 19
Exodus 7:19. Upon their streams,
&c., — both in vessels of wood
and vessels of stone — “To what
purpose this minuteness?” says
the last-mentioned author. “May
not the meaning be that the
water of the Nile should not
only look red and nauseous, like
blood, in the river, but in
their vessels too, and that no
method of purifying it should
take place, but, whether drunk
out of vessels of wood or out of
vessels of stone, by means of
which they were wont to purge
the Nile water, it should be the
same, and should appear like
blood.” — Harmer, vol. 2. p.
292.
Verse 20
Exodus 7:20. The waters in the
river were turned into blood —
This was a plague justly
inflicted on the Egyptians; for
the river of Egypt was their
idol; they and their land had so
much benefit by that creature,
that they served and worshipped
it more than their Creator. In
ancient times they annually even
sacrificed a girl to it, at the
opening of the canals, Univ.
Hist., vol. 1. p. 413. Also they
had stained the river with the
blood of the Hebrew children,
and now God made that river all
bloody; thus he gave them blood
to drink, for they were worthy,
Revelation 16:6. See the power
of God! Every creature is that
to us which he makes it to be,
water or blood. See the
mutability of all things under
the sun, and what changes we may
meet with in them. That which is
water to-day may be blood to-
morrow; what is always vain may
soon become vexatious. And see
what mischievous work sin makes!
It is sin that turns our waters
into blood. All the waters — It
seems the word all here, and in
the foregoing verse, is either
to be understood in a limited
sense, as it frequently is in
Scripture, meaning not all in
the strictest sense, but only a
very great part; or else that
although Moses’s commission
extended to all the waters in
Egypt, yet it was only executed
upon the river Nile: because we
read that the magicians did the
same thing; but if Moses had
turned all the waters into
blood, as some scoffers have,
with great raillery and triumph,
observed, how could the
magicians do the same, there
being, on this supposition, no
water for them upon which to
make the trial.
Verse 22
Exodus 7:22. The magicians did
so — By God’s permission; with
their enchantments — It seems
they performed real miracles,
for the text says expressly they
did the same as Moses, and
probably to their own surprise,
as well as that of others, not
knowing that any such effect
would follow upon their using
enchantments. Certainly they
were ignorant of the extent of
their own power, or rather, what
Satan would or could do by them,
and by what means these things
came to pass, otherwise they
would not have disgraced
themselves, by making an attempt
to bring forth lice, which they
could not perform. What they did
do served Pharaoh for an excuse
not to set his heart to this
also. And a poor excuse it was.
Could they have turned the river
of blood into water again, and
by a word have purified those
waters which the almighty power
of God had rendered corrupt,
they would have proved their
power and done Pharaoh a signal
favour. But the superiority of
the miracles of Moses, even in
these instances in which they
vied with him, was
incontestible: and they were
compelled to acknowledge that
what he did was by the finger of
God. “God, by permitting them to
succeed thus far in their
opposition, rendered their folly
more conspicuous: for by
suffering them to change the
waters into blood, and putting
it out of their power to restore
them to their former purity; and
by permitting them to produce
frogs, which they were not able
to remove, he only put it in
their power to increase those
plagues upon themselves and
their countrymen at the same
time that they demonstrated
their own inability.”— Bishop
Kidder.
Verse 24
Exodus 7:24. The Egyptians
digged round about the river for
water — Josephus says, they lost
their labour, and found only
blood there: but if they found
water, or water less bloody, it
is not material to us, as it
does not lessen Moses’s miracle,
it not being within the compass
of his commission to prevent
their getting water by digging.
Verse 25
Exodus 7:25. Seven days were
fulfilled — Before the plague
was removed. |