Verse 1
Exodus 10:1. Go unto Pharaoh:
for I have hardened his heart —
That is, either, 1st, Go and
make a new address unto him, for
what I have yet done has but
hardened his heart: or, 2d, כי,
here translated for, must, as is
often the case, be rendered
although; go and speak to him
again, although I have suffered
his heart to be hardened, and to
continue obdurate, that I might
more fully display my power and
providence, not only to Egypt
and the adjacent countries, but
to generations yet unborn, and
especially to the posterity of
my people Israel; that thou
mayest tell (Exodus 10:2) in the
ears of thy son, and thy son’s
son, what things I have wrought.
These plagues are standing
monuments of the greatness of
God, the happiness of the
church, and the sinfulness of
sin; and standing monitors to
the children of men in all ages,
not to provoke the Lord to
jealousy, nor to strive with
their Maker. The benefit of
these instructions to the world
doth sufficiently balance the
expense.
Verse 3
Exodus 10:3. How long wilt thou
refuse to humble thyself? — By
this it appears that God’s
design was not to harden
Pharaoh, but to humble him by
these extraordinary judgments.
It is justly expected from the
greatest of men that they should
humble themselves before the
great God, and it is at their
peril if they refuse to do it.
Those that will not humble
themselves, God will humble.
Verse 5
Exodus 10:5. They shall cover
the face — Hebrew, the eye; of
the earth — That is, of its
inhabitants; that one cannot be
able to see the earth — It is
observable that no living
creature multiplies so fast as
the locust. It is almost
incredible in what swarms they
are sometimes seen in some
parts. Thevenot gives an account
of armies of locusts laying
waste the country of the
Cossacks. “They live,” he says,
“about six months, and lay their
eggs in autumn, to the number of
three hundred each, which are
hatched in the spring following.
Such as have been eye-witnesses
report, that they have seen the
whole air in Arabia darkened by
them, in their flight, for
eighteen or twenty miles.” “They
eclipse the light of the sun,”
says Pliny, “in their flight,
the people looking up to them in
anxious suspense lest they
should cover their whole
country. They are so destructive
that large territories have bean
laid bare by them in a few
hours, and the inhabitants
reduced to famine. They do not
spare even the bark of trees,
but eat every thing that comes
in their way, even to the very
doors of the houses.”
Verse 6
Exodus 10:6. They shall fill the
houses of all the Egyptians —
Dr. Shaw says, the locusts he
saw in Barbary, in the year
1724, “climbed, as they marched
forward, over every tree or wall
that was in their way; they
entered into our very houses and
bed-chambers, like so many
thieves.” — See Encycl. Brit. on
the term Gryllus, p. 162, 3d
edit.
Verse 7
Exodus 10:7. Pharaoh’s servants
— His nobles and counsellors;
said, How long shall this man be
a snare unto us? — That is, lay
before us the occasion of our
falling into one calamity after
another. To the impenitent the
punishment of sin, not the sin
which is punished, is the cause
of their sorrow. Knowest thou
not yet that Egypt is destroyed?
— It was so in a great degree by
these repeated and very
destructive plagues.
Verse 8
Exodus 10:8. Who are they that
shall go? — I am not willing you
should all go: it will degrade
me in the sight of my subjects
that I should be obliged to
submit to him who thus makes
himself the very friend of my
slaves. When he is compelled to
yield, yet it is with extreme
reluctance, and as little as
possible.
Verse 9
Exodus 10:9. We must hold a
feast unto the Lord — And in
such solemnities the whole body
of the nation, men, women, and
children, and all who were not
confined by sickness, were wont
to join.
Verse 10
Exodus 10:10. The Lord be so
with you, as I will let you go —
As if he had said, “May your God
Jehovah assist you to my ruin,
if I let you go on these terms.”
Look to it, for evil is before
you — More evil and affliction
shall befall you forthwith,
unless you be content to go on
my terms. Here the spirit of
wickedness speaks its own
language in impotent wishes of
evil, when all its guile,
malice, rage, and pride could
perform nothing to hurt or
hinder the Israel of God from
doing as they were commanded. He
especially curses and threatens
them in case they offered to
take their little ones, telling
them it was at their peril.
Satan doth all he can to hinder
those that serve God themselves,
from bringing their children to
serve him. He is a sworn enemy
to early piety, knowing how
destructive it is to the
interests of his kingdom.
Verse 13
Exodus 10:13. The east wind
brought the locusts — From
Arabia, where they are in great
numbers: and God miraculously
increased them. The locusts are
usually conveyed by the wind. In
the year 1527 great troops of
locusts were brought by a strong
wind out of Turkey into Poland,
which country they wasted; and
in 1536 a wind from the Euxine
Sea brought such vast numbers
into Podolia, that, for many
miles round, they destroyed
every thing. And “in the year
1650, a cloud of locusts was
seen to enter Russia in three
different places; and from
thence they spread themselves
over Poland and Lithuania, in
such astonishing multitudes that
the air was darkened, and the
earth covered with their
numbers. In some places they
were seen lying dead, heaped
upon each other to the depth of
four feet; in others they
covered the surface like a black
cloth; the trees bent with their
weight, and the damage which the
country sustained exceeded
computation.” — Encycl. Brit.,
vol. 8. p. 162, 3d edit.
Verse 15
Exodus 10:15. They did eat every
green herb of the land — There
seems to have been some distance
of time between the last plague
and this, during which, in that
warm and fertile country, new
productions had sprouted forth,
both out of the ground and from
the trees. There remained not
any green thing — The earth God
has given to the children of
men; yet when he pleaseth he can
disturb their possession of it,
even by locusts and
caterpillars. Herb grows for the
service of man, yet, when God
pleaseth, these contemptible
insects shall not only be
fellow-commoners with him, but
shall eat the bread out of his
mouth.
Verse 17
Exodus 10:17. Pharaoh desires
their prayers that this death
only might be taken away, not
this sin: he deprecates the
plague of locusts, not the
plague of a hard heart.
Verse 19
Exodus 10:19. An east wind
brought the locusts, and now a
west wind carried them off.
Whatever point of the compass
the wind is in, it is fulfilling
God’s word, and turns about by
his counsel; the wind blows
where it listeth for us, but not
where it listeth for him; he
directeth it under the whole
heaven.
Verse 21
Exodus 10:21. We may observe
concerning this plague, 1st,
That it was a total darkness. We
have reason to think, not only
that the lights of heaven were
clouded, but that all their
fires and candles were put out
by the damps or clammy vapours
which were the cause of this
darkness, for it is said, they
saw not one another. 2d, That it
was darkness which might be
felt; felt in its causes by
their finger-ends, so thick were
the fogs; felt in its effects,
(some think,) by their eyes,
which were pricked with pain,
and made the more sore by their
rubbing them. Great pain is
spoken of as the effect of that
darkness, (Revelation 16:10,)
which alludes to this. 3d, No
doubt it was very frightful and
amazing. The tradition of the
Jews is, that in this darkness
they were terrified by the
apparition of evil spirits, or
rather by dreadful sounds and
murmurs which they made; and
this is the plague which some
think is intended, (for
otherwise it is not mentioned at
all here,) Psalms 78:49, “He
poured upon them the fierceness
of his anger, by sending evil
angels among them;” for to those
to whom the devil has been a
deceiver, he will at length be a
terror. 4th, It continued three
days; six nights in one; so long
they were imprisoned by those
chains of darkness.
Verse 23
Exodus 10:23. Neither rose any
from his place — This
circumstance is one of the
lively strokes in description
which critics call picturesque:
it strongly paints the horror
and dismay which this palpable
darkness cast upon their minds.
Le Clerc, however, justly
remarks, that we are not to
understand the expression so
strictly, as if not one of the
Egyptians rose from his place;
for the servants, at least, must
have moved about the best way
they could to find victuals for
themselves and their masters.
The expression denotes that
there was a total inaction and
cessation from ordinary
business, that they were all
confined to their houses, and
that such a terror seized them,
that few of them had courage to
go even from their chairs to
their beds, or from their beds
to their chairs. Thus were they
silent in darkness, 1 Samuel
2:9. Now Pharaoh had time to
consider, if he would have
improved it. But the children of
Israel had light in their
dwellings — Not only in the land
of Goshen, where most of them
inhabited, but in the particular
dwellings which in other places
the Israelites had dispersed
among the Egyptians, as it
appears they had, by the
distinction afterward appointed
to be put on their door-posts.
And during these three days of
darkness to the Egyptians, if
God had so pleased, the
Israelites, by the light which
they had, might have made their
escape, and have asked Pharaoh
no leave; but God would bring
them out with a high hand, and
not by stealth, or in haste.
Verse 29
Exodus 10:29. I will see thy
face no more — Namely, after
this time, for this conference
did not break off till Exodus
11:8, when Moses went out in
great anger, and told Pharaoh
how soon his proud stomach would
come down; which was fulfilled
Exodus 12:31, when Pharaoh
became an humble supplicant to
Moses to depart. So that after
this interview Moses came no
more till he was sent for. |