Verse 2
Exodus 13:2. Sanctify — That is,
command all the people to
sanctify; unto me — To my use
and service, in a manner I shall
hereafter explain; all the
firstborn — That are males, as
the command is limited, Exodus
13:12; whatsoever openeth the
womb — That is, every child
which is the firstborn of his
mother: so that if a man had
many wives, either together or
successively, his first child by
every one of these was a
firstborn, and, if a male, was
claimed by the Lord. But if a
female came first, and afterward
a male, that male was not
devoted to God, because it was
not the firstborn. Hence the
parents were not to look upon
themselves as having an interest
in their firstborn, if males,
till they had first solemnly
presented them to God, and
received them back from him
again. It is mine — By special
right and title, as being by
singular favour preserved from
the common destruction. The
firstborn of man, if males, were
claimed for the sacred
ministrations of the priestly
office. But after the Jewish
commonwealth was formed, the
Levites were chosen to officiate
in their stead, Numbers 3:12;
and the firstborn were to be
redeemed at a certain rate,
which was part of the priest’s
maintenance, Numbers 18:15-16.
And of beast — Which was to be
offered to God, if a male: only
an ass was to be redeemed.
Verse 5
Exodus 13:5. When the Lord shall
bring you into the land, thou
shalt keep this service — Until
then they were not obliged to
keep the passover, without a
particular command from God.
There shall no leavened bread be
seen in all thy quarters —
Accordingly the Jews’ usage was,
before the feast of the
passover, to cast all the
leavened bread out of their
houses; either they burned it,
or buried it, or broke it small,
and threw it into the wind; they
searched diligently with lighted
candles in all the corners of
their houses, lest any leaven
should remain. The strictness
enjoined in this matter was
designed, 1st, To make the feast
the more solemn, and
consequently the more taken
notice of by the children, who
would ask, Why is so much ado
made? 2d, To teach us how
solicitous we should be to put
away from us all sin.
Verse 8
Exodus 13:8. Thou shalt show thy
son — When you shall be come
into the land of Canaan, you
shall instruct your children in
the meaning of your killing the
lamb, and abstaining from
leaven, that so you and they may
be excited to gratitude to God
for his goodness. This was
evidently the design of the
institution.
Verse 9
Exodus 13:9. Upon thy hand,
between thine eyes — Proverbial
expressions, denoting that these
things were never to be out of
their minds. The Jews, however,
understood this literally, and
hence the use of phylacteries
among them, pieces of parchment
inscribed with sentences of
their law, which they bound upon
their left hand, and placed upon
their foreheads between their
eyes.
Verse 12
Exodus 13:12. Every firstling of
a beast shall be the Lord’s —
That is, every firstling male of
a clean beast, as of the cow,
sheep, or goat kind, was to be
offered in sacrifice; and the
blood being sprinkled, and the
fat burned on the altar, the
flesh of them was to be given to
the priests, Numbers 18:17-18.
Verse 13
Exodus 13:13. Every firstling of
an ass thou shalt redeem with a
lamb — Or kid, Exodus 12:3; and
the same is to be understood of
all unclean beasts in general,
see Numbers 18:15. The ass seems
to be particularly mentioned,
because those animals were more
numerous among them than other
beasts of burden. If a man had
not a lamb, he was to give the
price of one. This lamb was to
be given to the Lord; that is,
to his priest.
Verse 16
Exodus 13:16. For frontlets
between thine eyes — As
conspicuous as any thing fixed
to thy forehead, or between
thine eyes. That is, they were
constantly to retain such a
sense of their deliverance as if
they had it before their eyes.
Verse 18
Exodus 13:18. There were various
reasons why God led them through
the way of the wilderness of the
Red sea. The Egyptians were to
be drowned in the Red sea, the
Israelites were to be humbled
and proved in the wilderness,
Deuteronomy 8:2. God had given
it to Moses for a sign, Exodus
3:12, Ye shall serve God in this
mountain. They had again and
again told Pharaoh that they
must go three days’ journey into
the wilderness to do sacrifice,
and therefore it was requisite
they should march that way, else
they had justly been exclaimed
against as dissemblers. Before
they entered the lists with
their enemies, matters must be
settled between them and their
God; laws must be given,
ordinances instituted, covenants
sealed; and for the doing of
this it was necessary they
should retire into the solitudes
of a wilderness, the only closet
for such a crowd; the high road
would be no proper place for
these transactions. The reason
why God did not lead them the
nearest way, which would have
brought them in a few days to
the land of the Philistines, was
because they were not yet fit
for war, much less for war with
the Philistines. Their spirits
were broken with slavery; the
Philistines were formidable
enemies; it was convenient they
should begin with the
Amalekites, and be prepared for
the wars of Canaan, by
experiencing the difficulties of
the wilderness. God is said to
bring Israel out of Egypt, as
the eagle brings up her young
ones, Deuteronomy 32:11,
teaching them by degrees to fly.
They went up harnessed — The
original word for harnessed here
is variously rendered: it comes
from a root which signifies
five, hence some render it five
in a rank. The same word is
rendered prepared for war,
Joshua 1:14; Joshua 4:12-13.
Targum, girded, harnessed. Vulg.
armati, armed. So the Seventy,
ευζωνοι equipped, διεσκυασμενοι
prepared, furnished: thus in
Joshua; but in this place of
Exodus the Seventy render the
word πεντη γενεα, the fifth
generation, and translate the
passage, In the fifth
generation, the children of
Israel went up out of the land
of Egypt.
Verse 21
Exodus 13:21. And the Lord went
before them in a pillar — In the
first two stages, it was enough
that God directed Moses whither
to march; he knew the country,
and the road; but now they are
come to the edge of the
wilderness, they would have
occasion for a guide, and a very
good guide they had, infinitely
wise, kind, and faithful, the
Lord went up before them; the
shechinah, or appearance of the
Divine Majesty, which was a
previous manifestation of the
eternal Word, who, in the
fulness of time, was to be made
flesh, and dwell among us.
Christ was with the church in
the wilderness, 1 Corinthians
10:9. What a satisfaction to
Moses and the pious Israelites,
to be sure that they were under
a divine conduct! They need not
fear missing their way who were
thus led, nor being lost who
were thus directed; they need
not fear being benighted who
were thus illuminated, nor being
robbed who were thus protected.
And they who make the glory of
God their end, and the word of
God their rule, the Spirit of
God the guide of their
affections, and the providence
of God the guide of their
affairs, may be confident that
the Lord goes before them, as
truly as he went before Israel
in the wilderness, though not so
sensibly. They had sensible
effects of God’s going before
them in this pillar. For, it led
them the way in that vast
howling wilderness, in which
there was no road, no track, no
way-marks, through which they
had no guides. When they
marched, this pillar went before
them, at the rate that they
could follow, and appointed the
place of their encampment, as
infinite Wisdom saw fit; which
eased them from care, and
secured them from danger, both
in moving, and in resting. It
sheltered them from the heat by
day, which at some times of the
year was extreme, and it gave
them light by night when they
had occasion for it.
Verse 22
Exodus 13:22. He took not away
the pillar of the cloud — No,
not when they seemed to have
less occasion for it: it never
left them until it brought them
to the borders of Canaan. It was
a cloud which the wind could not
scatter. There was something
spiritual in this pillar of
cloud and fire. 1st, The
children of Israel were baptized
unto Moses in this cloud, 1
Corinthians 10:2. By coming
under this cloud they signified
their putting themselves under
the conduct and command of
Moses. Protection draws
allegiance; this cloud was the
badge of God’s protection, and
so became the bond of their
allegiance. Thus they were
initiated, and admitted under
that government, now when they
were entering upon the
wilderness. 2d, And it signifies
the special conduct and
protection which the church of
Christ is under in this world. |