Verse 1
Exodus 23:1. Thou shalt not
raise — Or, receive, as the
margin reads it, and as the
Hebrew תשׂא, tissa, also
signifies, or, give credit to a
false report. Sometimes the
receiver, in this case, is as
bad as the thief: and a
backbiting tongue would not do
so much mischief if it were not
countenanced. Sometimes we
cannot avoid hearing a false
report, but we must not receive
it, we must not hear it with
pleasure, nor easily give credit
to it.
Verse 2
Exodus 23:2. Thou shalt not
follow a multitude — Either
their counsel or their example;
to do evil — General usage will
never excuse us in any ill
practice; nor is the broad way
ever the safer for its being
crowded. We must inquire what we
ought to do, not what the most
do; because we must be judged by
our Master, not our
fellow-servants; and it is too
great a compliment to be willing
to go to hell for company.
Neither shalt thou speak in a
cause — Either to extenuate or
excuse a great fault, aggravate
a small one, vindicate an
offender, charge guilt on an
innocent person, put false
glosses, or sinister
interpretations upon things, or
do any thing tending to procure
an unjust sentence; to decline
after many — Either the friends
of the party, the judges, the
witnesses, or the opinions of
the vulgar. The word רבים,
rabbim, in this verse rendered
multitude and many, signifying
also great men, some prefer the
following translation of the
verse, Thou shalt not follow
great men to do evil — neither
shalt thou speak (Hebrew,
answer) in a cause to decline
after great men. This is a very
important sense of the words:
because the example of great
men, of men of power, wealth,
and authority, has great
influence.
Verse 3
Exodus 23:3. Neither shalt thou
countenance — Hebrew, honour or
favour; a poor man in his cause.
Thus we are properly cautioned
against an opposite error which
we may be also in danger of
falling into, that of respecting
the poor man’s cause, out of
pity and compassion, when the
cause of the richer man is more
just. For however great the
compassion of God may be for the
poor, and how much soever he may
recommend them to our care and
protection, he would not have
our tenderness for them carry us
to countenance them unjustly, or
give a wrong judgment for their
sakes. The meaning of this and
the former verse is, that there
must be no respect of persons,
whether rich or poor, but an
impartial consideration of the
cause.
Verse 4
Exodus 23:4. Thou shalt surely
bring it back to him — So far
shalt thou be from revenging his
injuries, that thou shalt render
good to him for them, whereby if
thou dost not reconcile him,
thou wilt at least procure peace
to thyself, and an honour to
religion.
Verse 5
Exodus 23:5. And wouldest
forbear to help him — The duty
inculcated in this verse is
inculcated also Deuteronomy
22:4, although not in the same
words in the original. And the
intention of both verses is
plain, but the marginal reading
here shows that there is some
difficulty in the Hebrew text in
this place. The precept,
however, evidently means,
whatever controversy thou hast
with him that hates thee, it
shall not hinder thee from
succouring him or his in any
distress.
Verse 6
Exodus 23:6. Thou shalt not
wrest the judgment of thy poor —
As a judge should beware, lest
through motives of compassion,
or an affectation of popularity,
he be biassed in favour of the
poor; so, on the other hand, he
must not despise a man because
he is poor and without friends:
he must not take advantage of
his poverty to misrepresent his
cause, to refuse to give him an
impartial hearing, to strain a
point of equity to his
prejudice, or pass sentence
wrongfully against him. The
words thy poor, are emphatical,
importing that they were members
of their body, though poor.
Verse 7
Exodus 23:7. Keep thee far from
a false matter — From assisting
or abetting all ill thing. Yea,
keep thee far from it, dread it
as a dangerous snare. I will not
justify the wicked — That is, I
will condemn him that unjustly
condemns others.
Verse 8
Exodus 23:8. Thou shalt take no
gift — From those whose causes
are depending before thee;
because, if thou dost not sell
justice for it, thou wilt both
seem and be tempted to do so.
The gift blindeth the wise —
Bribes and interest cast a mist
before the eyes, and bias the
judgment and affections even of
those who are otherwise wise and
discerning. Besides, a habit of
taking bribes will, in time,
quite extinguish the light of
reason, and destroy the sense of
right and wrong. See
Ecclesiastes 7:7. And perverteth
the words of the righteous — The
words or sentence of those who
would otherwise be righteous: or
perverteth the cause of the
righteous, and all he can say in
his own defence, and and
procures a wrong sentence to be
given against him.
Verse 9
Exodus 23:9. Thou shalt not
oppress the stranger — Though
aliens might not inherit lands
among them; yet, they must have
justice done them. It is an
instance of the equity of our
law, that if an alien be tried
for any crime, except treason,
the one half of his jury, if he
desire it, shall be foreigners;
a kind provision that strangers
may not be oppressed. For ye
know the heart of a stranger —
That is, ye know by experience
what a distressed, friendless
condition that of a stranger is.
The disposition, dejection, and
distress of his heart, make him
an object of pity, not of malice
or injustice. Ye know his heart
is easily depressed, and very
unable to bear repulses. There
is a great beauty in the
expression.
Verse 10-11
Exodus 23:10-11. The institution
of the sabbatical year was
designed, 1st, To show what a
plentiful land that was into
which God was bringing them,
that so numerous a people could
have rich maintenance out of the
products of so small a country,
without foreign trade, and yet
could spare the increase of
every seventh year. 2d, To teach
them confidence in his care and
bounty while they did their
duty; that as the sixth day’s
manna served for two days’ meat,
so the sixth year’s increase
should serve for two years’
subsistence. 3d, Thus he would
try and secure their obedience,
keep them in dependance upon
himself, and give to them and
all their neighbours a manifest
proof of his singular and
gracious providence over them.
4th, By this kind of quit rent
they were likewise admonished
that God alone was the Lord of
the land, and that they were
only tenants at his will. And
being thus freed from their
great labours in cultivating the
ground, in manuring, ploughing,
sowing, weeding, reaping, they
were the more at leisure to
meditate on God’s works, and to
acquaint themselves with his
will. 5th, Another reason also
is given here, That the poor of
thy land may eat. God gave a
special blessing to the sixth
year, whereby it brought forth
the fruit of three years; and in
years of so great plenty, men
are generally more negligent in
their reaping, and therefore,
the relics are more. So that in
this appointment God had in view
a more comfortable provision for
the poor. It was likewise a curb
to avarice, and habituated them
to the exercise of humanity to
their slaves, and even beasts.
In like manner with thy vineyard
and olive-yard — Thou shalt not
prune nor dress them, nor gather
and appropriate to thy own use
what they shall produce, but
shalt leave them to the poor.
Verse 12
Exodus 23:12. The seventh day
thou shalt rest — This command
is here repeated lest any should
think the weekly rest might
cease when the whole year was
consecrated to rest. There were
three sorts of sabbaths to the
Jews, 1st, Of days: 2d, Of
years, namely, the seventh year:
3d, Of weeks of years, namely,
the jubilee. And all these are
types of the eternal rest in
heaven, where pain and sorrow
shall never enter.
Verse 13
Exodus 23:13. In all things be
circumspect — We are in danger
of missing our way on the right
hand and on the left, and it is
at our peril if we do, therefore
we have need to look about us. A
man may ruin himself through
mere carelessness, but he cannot
save himself without great care
and circumspection. Particularly
since idolatry was a sin they
were much addicted to, and would
be greatly tempted to, they must
endeavour to blot out the
remembrance of the gods of the
heathen, and must disuse all
their superstitious forms of
speech, and never mention them
but with detestation. In
Christian schools and academies,
(for it is in vain to think of
reforming the play-houses,) it
were to be wished that the names
and stories of the heathen
deities, or demons rather, were
not so commonly and familiarly
used.
Verse 14
Exodus 23:14. The passover,
pentecost, and feast of
tabernacles, in spring, summer,
and autumn, were the three times
appointed for their attendance;
not in winter, because
travelling was then
uncomfortable; nor in the midst
of their harvest.
Verse 17
Exodus 23:17. All thy males —
All that were of competent
years, and health, and strength,
and at their own disposal. It is
probable, servants were exempt:
for none was to appear without
an offering: but most of these
had nothing to offer.
Verse 19
Exodus 23:19. Thou shalt not
seethe a kid in his mother’s
milk — It is remarkable that
this command, extraordinary as
it is, is repeated Exodus 34:26,
and Deuteronomy 14:21, and that,
as here, in connection with the
offering of the first-fruits.
Hence it has been conjectured
that it has a reference to the
payment of these fruits, and to
some superstitious practices
which the Pagans used on these
occasions, who were wont, it
seems, when they had gathered in
all the fruits of the earth, to
boil a kid in its mother’s milk,
and “to sprinkle the trees, and
fields, and gardens, with the
broth in a magical manner, to
make them more fruitful the
following year.” See Dr.
Cudworth, On the Lord’s Supper,
page 14. Some, however, with an
appearance of probability, take
this for a prohibition against
offering any animal in sacrifice
when it was milky and unformed,
or before it was eight days old,
till which time it was to be
left with its dam, Exodus 22:30.
And others, again, consider the
precept as being chiefly
intended, like many other of
God’s laws, to prevent cruelty
toward the creatures, and to
inculcate a mild and tender
disposition.
Verse 20-21
Exodus 23:20-21. Behold, I send
an Angel before thee — The Angel
of the covenant: accordingly,
the Israelites, in the
wilderness, are said to tempt
Christ. It is promised that this
blessed Angel should keep them
in the way, though it lay
through a wilderness first, and
afterward through their enemies’
country; and thus Christ has
prepared a place for his
followers. Beware of him, and
obey his voice; provoke him not
— It is at your peril if you do;
for my name — My nature, my
authority; is in him.
Verse 25-26
Exodus 23:25-26. He shall bless
thy bread and thy water — And
God’s blessing will make bread
and water more refreshing and
nourishing than a feast of fat
things, and wines on the lees,
without that blessing. And I
will take sickness away — Either
prevent it or remove it. Thy
land shall not be visited with
epidemical diseases, which are
very dreadful, and sometimes
have laid countries waste. The
number of thy days I will fulfil
— And they shall not be cut off
in the midst by untimely deaths.
Thus hath godliness the promise
of the life that now is.
Verse 27-28
Exodus 23:27-28. I will send my
fear before thee — And they that
fear will soon flee: I will
strike a terror into the
inhabitants of Canaan, which
shall facilitate the conquest of
them, Joel 2:9-10. I will send
hornets before thee — Thus
Joshua observes, (Joshua 24:12,)
that the Amorites were driven
out, not by the sword and bow of
the Israelites, but by the sting
of these hornets, which are a
kind of wasps, only larger and
fiercer than the ordinary wasp.
Some explain the word hornet
metaphorically, I will send my
terror before thee as a hornet,
it appearing to them improbable
that a parcel of insects should
drive out a nation. But they are
fully confuted by Bochart, who
produces many instances of
nations being forced to leave
their country by these and such
like contemptible creatures,
appealing to the testimony of
Herodotus, Appianus, and Strabo.
And he particularly observes,
that the sting of this sort of
wasp, called a hornet, is of all
others the most pernicious; for
it seldom stings a man, as Pliny
says, (lib. 11. c. 21,) without
throwing him into the rage of a
fever.
Verse 29
Exodus 23:29. Lest the land be
desolate — The Israelites were
not numerous enough to people
all the land immediately.
Providence had likewise another
end in view in suffering some of
the Canaanites to remain in the
land: they were to prove Israel,
and show whether they would
hearken unto the commandment of
the Lord, 3:4. And the beast of
the field multiply — The wild
beasts from Arabia Deserta made
frequent inroads into Canaan, in
quest of prey, and were not to
be driven out but by continual
hunting.
Verse 32-33
Exodus 23:32-33. Thou shalt make
no covenant with them — Thou
shalt give no toleration to
idol-worship, nor suffer it to
be introduced into thy
territories. Thou shalt make no
league with them, either civil
or religious. They shall not
dwell in thy land — Unless they
renounce their idolatry, which
is plainly understood; for, upon
their becoming proselytes to the
Jewish religion, they might
dwell among them, and were
called the strangers. If thou
serve — Thou wilt serve, this
will be the fruit of thy
cohabitation with them. It will
be a snare unto thee — Will
bring great calamities upon
thee, and, at last, be thy ruin,
which accordingly came to pass. |