Verse 1-2
Exodus 12:1-2. The Lord spake
unto Moses — Or had spoken
before what is related in the
foregoing chapter, if not also
before the three days’ darkness:
but the mention of it was put
off to this place, that the
history of the plagues might not
be interrupted. This month shall
be to you the beginning of
months — That is, the first and
principal month of the year. It
was called Abib, (Exodus 13:4;
Exodus 23:15,) which signifies
an ear of corn, because then the
corn was eared. It answers
nearly to our March. Before this
time, the Jews, like most other
nations, began their year about
the autumnal equinox, in the
month Tisri, answering to our
September, after their harvest
and vintage. But in
commemoration of this, their
signal deliverance out of Egypt,
their computation, at least as
to their feasts and sacred
things, was from the month Abib.
And therefore, what was before
their first month, now became
their seventh. The beginning of
their civil year, however,
appears still to have been
reckoned as before. We may
suppose that while Moses was
bringing the ten plagues upon
the Egyptians, he was directing
the Israelites to prepare for
their departure at an hour’s
warning. Probably he had, by
degrees, brought them near
together from their dispersions,
for they are here called the
congregation of Israel; and to
them, as a congregation, orders
are here sent.
Verse 3
Exodus 12:3. In the tenth day of
this month — It was necessary
they should now begin to prepare
the passover four days before,
because otherwise it would have
been difficult to get ready so
many lambs in Egypt, especially
as they were to depart in haste;
besides, this being the first
instance of the celebration of
the ordinance, they would
require more time to prepare for
a ceremony entirely new. But in
future ages they did not begin
the preparation till the
thirteenth, the day before the
passover. They shall take every
man a lamb — The Hebrew word
signifies a lamb, or kid,
(Deuteronomy 14:4,) as is
evident from Exodus 12:5; for
they might take either for this
sacrifice: but commonly they
made choice of a lamb.
Verse 4
Exodus 12:4. If the household be
too little — The Hebrew doctors
tell us, that there were not to
be fewer than ten persons, nor
more than twenty, to the eating
of one lamb. And at this sacred
repast, men, women, and
children, masters and servants,
if circumcised, were
entertained.
Verse 5
Exodus 12:5. Your lamb shall be
without blemish — Shall be
perfect, as the Hebrew is, that
is, in all its parts. This was a
qualification indispensably
requisite in all sacrifices:
Leviticus 22:20-24. Even the
heathen, in the worship of their
false gods, were particular in
this circumstance. A male —
Because the males were accounted
more excellent, and their flesh
better than that of females. Of
the first year — Under a year
old, not above: for the lamb, as
also a kid and calf, was fit for
sacrifice at eight days old, but
not before, Exodus 22:30. And
the same law was observed in the
daily sacrifice, Exodus 29:38.
They were not to be offered
before the eighth day,
“because,” says Bochart, “till
then they have hardly attained
to the perfection of animal
life, and are not sufficiently
purified.” He adds, “they were
not to be offered after the
first year, because then they
begin to feel the heat of
libidinous appetite, and
consequently are not fit emblems
of purity and innocence.”
Verse 6
Exodus 12:6. Ye shall keep it up
— Keep it apart from the rest of
the flock. The whole assembly,
shall kill it — That is, any man
of the whole assembly might kill
it. For slaying the passover was
not appropriated to the priests.
Verse 7
Exodus 12:7. They shall take of
the blood — Which was to be
sprinkled before the flesh was
eaten. Strike it on the two
side-posts, and the upper door-
post — These were to be
sprinkled by dipping a bunch of
hyssop into the blood, Exodus
12:22; but not the threshold,
lest any one should tread upon
the blood, which would have been
profane.
Verse 8-9
Exodus 12:8-9. Eat it not raw —
Nor half dressed; but roast with
fire — Not only because it might
be sooner roasted than boiled,
and they were in haste to be
gone; but because it was thus
the better type of him who
endured the fierceness of divine
wrath for us, Lamentations 1:13.
Unleavened bread — Partly to
remind them of their hardships
in Egypt, unleavened bread being
more heavy and unsavoury; and
partly to commemorate their
hasty deliverance, which did not
allow them time to leaven it,
Exodus 12:39;
Deuteronomy 16:3. But as the
original word for unleavened
signifies pure, unmixed,
uncorrupted, leaven being a kind
of corruption, the use of
unleavened bread, no doubt, was
enjoined to show them the
necessity of sincerity and
uprightness: to which quality of
leaven the apostle alludes,
Galatians 5:2, and 1 Corinthians
5:8. With bitter herbs — To
remind them of their Egyptian
bondage, which made their lives
bitter to them.
Verse 10-11
Exodus 12:10-11. With your loins
girded — In a travelling
posture, prepared for a journey,
which is also the import of the
three following particulars. Ye
shall eat it in haste — As men
expecting every moment to begin
their journey. Now all these
ceremonies were to accompany the
feast, that it might be a more
lively commemoration of their
signal deliverance out of Egypt.
It is the Lord’s passover — A
sacrifice in honour of Jehovah,
who passed over, or spared the
Israelites, when he smote the
Egyptians. It was not, however,
strictly a sacrifice, not being
offered upon the altar, but a
religious ceremony,
acknowledging God’s goodness to
them, not only in preserving
them from, but in delivering
them by, the plagues inflicted
on the Egyptians. Let nothing of
it remain until the morning —
God would have them to depend on
him for their daily bread. That
which remaineth ye shall burn
with fire — To prevent its
corruption, and the profane
abuse of it.
Verse 12
Exodus 12:12. Dreadful work was
to be made this night in Egypt:
all the firstborn of man and
beast were this night to be
slain, and judgment to be
executed upon all the gods of
Egypt — Their idol-gods. The
images made of metal were,
probably, melted, those of wood
consumed, and those of stone
broken to pieces. To this Isaiah
19:1, and Jeremiah 43:13, have
been thought to allude. It may
also signify, that God destroyed
their sacred animals.
Verses 14-20
Exodus 12:14-20. This shall be
to you for a memorial — It was
to be annually observed as a
feast to the Lord in their
generations, to which the feast
of unleavened bread was annexed.
A holy convocation — Such solemn
festivals were called
convocations, because the people
were then assembled by sound of
trumpet to attend the rites and
ordinances of divine worship.
The first day was to be a holy
convocation, because of the
feast of the passover; and the
seventh, as being that day,
after their exit out of Egypt,
when Pharaoh and his host were
drowned in the Red sea. A
stranger — A proselyte, Heathen
were not concerned in the
passover.
It must be here observed, that
the whole of this ordinance of
the passover was typical.
(1,) The paschal lamb was
typical. Christ is our passover,
1 Corinthians 5:7. 1st, It was
to be a lamb, and Christ is the
Lamb of God, John 1:29. 2d, It
was to be a male of the first
year; in its prime. Christ
offered up himself in the midst
of his days. It denotes the
strength and sufficiency of the
Lord Jesus, on whom our help was
laid. 3d, It was to be without
blemish, signifying the purity
of the Lord Jesus, a lamb
without spot, 1 Peter 1:19. 4th,
It was to be set apart four days
before, denoting the designation
of the Lord Jesus to be a
Saviour, both in the purpose and
promise of God. It is
observable, that as Christ was
crucified at the passover, so he
solemnly entered into Jerusalem
four days before, the very day
that the paschal lamb was set
apart. 5th, It was to be slain
and roasted with fire,
representing the exquisite
sufferings of the Lord Jesus,
even unto death, the death of
the cross. 6th, It was to be
killed by the whole congregation
between the two evenings, that
is, between three o’clock and
six. Christ suffered in the
latter end of the world,
(Hebrews 9:26,) by the hand of
the Jews, the whole multitude of
them, Luke 23. 18. 7th, Not a
bone of it must be broken,
(Exodus 12:46,) which is
expressly said to be fulfilled
in Christ, John 19:33; John
19:36.
(2,) The sprinkling of the blood
was typical. 1st, It was not
enough that the blood of the
Lamb was shed, but it must be
sprinkled, denoting the
application of the merit of
Christ’s death to our souls, by
the Holy Ghost, through faith.
2d, It was to be sprinkled upon
the door-posts, signifying the
open profession we are to make
of faith in Christ, and
obedience to him. The mark of
the beast may be received in the
forehead, or in the right hand,
but the seal of the Lamb is
always in the forehead,
Revelation 7:3. 3d, The blood
thus sprinkled was a means of
the preservation of the
Israelites from the destroying
angel. If the blood of Christ be
sprinkled upon our consciences,
it will be our protection from
the wrath of God, the curse of
the law, and the damnation of
hell.
(3,) The solemn eating of the
lamb was typical of our gospel
duty to Christ. 1st, The paschal
lamb was killed not to be looked
upon only, but to be fed upon;
so we must by faith make Christ
ours, as we do that which we
eat, and we must receive
spiritual strength and
nourishment from him, as from
our food, and have delight in
him, as we have in eating and
drinking when we are hungry or
thirsty. 2d, It was to be all
eaten: those that, by faith,
feed upon Christ, must feed upon
a whole Christ. They must take
Christ and his yoke, Christ and
his cross, as well as Christ and
his crown. 3d, It was to be
eaten with bitter herbs, in
remembrance of the bitterness of
their bondage in Egypt; we must
feed upon Christ with brokenness
of heart, in remembrance of sin.
4th, It was to be eaten in a
departing posture, Exodus 12:11;
when we feed upon Christ by
faith, we must sit loose to the
world and all things in it.
(4,) The feast of unleavened
bread was typical of the
Christian life, 1
Corinthians Exodus 5:7-8. Having
received Christ Jesus the Lord,
1st, We must keep a feast, in
holy joy, continually delighting
ourselves in Christ Jesus; for
if true believers have not a
continual feast, it is their own
fault. 2d, It must be a feast of
unleavened bread, kept in
charity, without the leaven of
malice, and in sincerity,
without the leaven of hypocrisy.
All the old leaven must be put
far from us, with the utmost
caution, if we would keep the
feast of a holy life to the
honour of Christ. 3d, It was to
be an ordinance for ever. As
long as we live we must continue
feeding upon Christ, and
rejoicing in him always, with
thankful mention of the great
things he has done for us.
Verse 22
Exodus 12:22. Out of the door of
his house — Of that house
wherein he ate the passover:
until the morning — That is,
till toward the morning, when
they would be called for to
march out of Egypt; for they
went forth very early in the
morning. This command was
peculiar to the first passover.
Verse 23
Exodus 12:23. The destroyer —
The destroying angel: whether
this was a good or an evil
angel, we have not light to
determine.
Verse 27
Exodus 12:27. The people bowed
the head and worshipped — They
hereby signified their
submission to this institution
as a law, and their thankfulness
for it as a privilege.
Verse 31-32
Exodus 12:31-32. Rise up, and
get you forth — Pharaoh had told
Moses he should see his face no
more, but now he sent for him;
those will seek God in their
distress, who before had set him
at defiance. Such a fright he
was now in that he gave orders
by night for their discharge,
fearing lest, if he delayed, he
himself should fall next. And
that he sent them out, not as
men hated (as the pagan
historians have represented this
matter) but as men feared, is
plain by his request to them.
Bless me also — Let me have your
prayers, that I may not be
plagued for what is past when
you are gone.
Verse 33
Exodus 12:33. The Egyptians were
urgent — They were willing to
make all concessions, so they
would but be gone; ransoming
their lives, not only by
prayers, but by their most
precious things. For they said,
We be all dead men — When death
comes into our houses it is
seasonable for us to think of
our own mortality.
Verse 34
Exodus 12:34. The people took
their dough — Perhaps the Hebrew
word here used had better be
rendered flour, as it is 2
Samuel 13:8; for if they had
time to make it into paste, it
seems they would also have had
time to leaven it. Their
kneading-troughs — The word thus
rendered is translated store,
Deuteronomy 28:5; Deuteronomy
28:17. And as kneading-troughs
are not things which travellers
are wont to carry with them, it
seems more natural to understand
it of their flour, grain, or
dough.
Verse 37
Exodus 12:37. About six hundred
thousand men — The word means
strong and able men fit for
wars, besides women and
children, which we cannot
suppose to make less than twelve
hundred thousand more. What a
vast increase was this to arise
from seventy souls, in little
more than two hundred years!
Verse 38-39
Exodus 12:38-39. And a mixed
multitude went up with them —
Some perhaps willing to leave
their country, because it was
laid waste by the plagues. But
probably the greatest part was
but a rude, unthinking mob, that
followed they knew not why. It
is likely, when they understood
that the children of Israel were
to continue forty years in the
wilderness, they quitted them,
and returned to Egypt again. And
flocks and herds, even very much
cattle — This is taken notice
of, because it was long ere
Pharaoh would give them leave to
remove their effects, which were
chiefly cattle. Thrust out — By
importunate entreaties.
Verse 40
Exodus 12:40. Who dwelt in Egypt
— Or sojourned. We must observe,
that it is not said, The
sojourning of the children of
Israel in Egypt was four hundred
and thirty years; but the
sojourning of the children of
Israel, who dwelt in Egypt —
That is, the sojourning of the
Israelitish nation, from the
time that Abraham left his
native country to sojourn in
Canaan, to the release of his
posterity, who were long
sojourners in Egypt, was four
hundred and thirty years.
Therefore, the Samaritan copy
hath it, Who dwelt in the land
of Canaan and in Egypt. So the
Vatican edition of the LXX. It
was just four hundred and thirty
years from the promise made to
Abraham (as the apostle explains
it, Galatians 3:17) at his first
coming into Canaan, during all
which time the Hebrews were
sojourners in a land that was
not theirs, either Canaan or
Egypt. So long the promise God
made to Abraham lay dormant and
unfulfilled, but now it revived,
and things began to work toward
the accomplishment of it. The
first day of the march of
Abraham’s seed toward Canaan was
four hundred and thirty years
(it should seem, to a day) from
the promise made to Abraham,
Genesis 12:2, “I will make of
thee a great nation.” What
reason have we then to admire
the exact accomplishment of
God’s promise! Notwithstanding
the various revolutions and
changes of all worldly affairs
that must necessarily have
happened in the space of four
hundred and thirty years, yet
God’s promise stands sure amidst
them all. Yes, God’s word will
stand fast for ever and ever!
Heaven and earth may pass away,
but his word cannot pass away.
Verse 42
Exodus 12:42. This first
passover night was a night of
the Lord, much to be observed;
but the last passover night, in
which Christ was betrayed, was a
night of the Lord, much more to
be observed, when a yoke heavier
than that of Egypt was broken
from off our necks, and a land
better than that of Canaan set
before us. That was a temporal
deliverance, to be celebrated in
their generations; this an
eternal redemption, to be
celebrated world without end!
Verses 45-48
Exodus 12:45; Exodus 12:48. A
hired servant — Unless he submit
to be circumcised. All the
congregation of Israel must keep
it — Though it was observed in
families apart, yet it is looked
upon as the act of the whole
congregation. And so the New
Testament passover, the Lord’s
supper, ought not to be
neglected by any that are
capable of celebrating it. No
stranger that was uncircumcised
might eat of it. Neither may any
now approach the Lord’s supper
who have not first submitted to
baptism; nor shall any partake
of the benefit of Christ’s
sacrifice, who are not first
circumcised in heart. Any
stranger that was circumcised
might eat of the passover, even
servants. Here is an indication
of favour to the poor Gentiles,
that the stranger, if
circumcised, stands upon the
same level with the home-born
Israelite; one law for both.
This was a mortification to the
Jews, and taught them that it
was their dedication to God, not
their descent from Abraham, that
entitled them to their
privileges. |