CHAPTER FOUR
INTRODUCTION TO EXODUS;
CALL OF MOSES (Ex 1-5)
The Hebrew name of this book comes from its opening words וְאֵלֶּה שְׁמוֹת – “These are the names.”
The Septuagint gives this book the designation Ἔξοδος ‑ “exit, departure.” While this name has also become the English name of this book via the Vulgate’s “Exodus,” this name is somewhat misleading as far as the content of the book is concerned. Although Israel’s departure from Egypt is historically important, the theological significance of Exodus centers in Israel’s consecration as a covenant nation. The actual departure from Egypt forms a relatively small part of the book.
The book’s major divisions are as follows:
THE LORD’S COVENANT WITH THE PEOPLE OF ISRAEL
I. The Deliverance of the Covenant People out of Egypt (Ch. 1‑18)
A. Preparation for Deliverance. (1-4)
B. Beginning of the Conflict (5-6)
C. The Plagues (7-12)
D. The journey from Egypt to Sinai (13-18)
II. The Establishing of the Covenant with Israel at Sinai (Ch. 19‑24)
A. The Covenant Proposed (19)
B. The Decalogue and the Law (20-23)
C. Ratification of the Covenant (24)
III. The Entry into the Place of the Covenant, the Tabernacle (Ch. 25‑40)
A. Directions for the Tabernacle (25-31)
B. The Covenant Broken and Restored (32-34)
C. Completion of the Tabernacle (35-40)
Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers constitute the Torah in the narrower sense of the word, in the sense of law or legislation. Genesis, as we learned, is the record of the beginnings of the Kingdom of God. Deuteronomy recapitulates the lawgiving and calls for faithful observance of the same. The three middle books present the Torah itself, with each book emphasizing the following aspects of the law:
Exodus ‑ the moral law;
Leviticus ‑ the ceremonial law;
Numbers ‑ the political or civil law.
Exodus begins with the death of Joseph and takes us to the setting up of the tabernacle at Sinai, thus covering approximately 360 years (Joseph was 30 years old when he became overseer in Egypt. He died, according to Genesis 50:26, at age 110. The entire time of Israel’s sojourn in Egypt, according to Exodus 12:40, was 430 years). Beginning with a list of the names of the children of Israel who went down to Egypt, and ending with the setting up of the tabernacle, where Jehovah dwelt in the midst of his people, the book of Exodus tells us how Israel developed into God’s covenant people.
Dating Between Genesis and Exodus (figuring backwards)
967 BC – Solomon begins building temple (see below)
1447 BC – Biblical date for exodus, 480 years before Solomon’s temple (1 Kgs 6:1)
1527 BC – Moses is born eighty years earlier
1580-1570 BC – Range of dates for the expulsion of the Hyksos from Egypt by the Theban founder of the 18th dynasty, Ahmose.
1730 BC – Approximate time of the Hyksos (“rulers of foreign lands”) takeover of Lower Egypt establishing the 15th dynasty, a dynasty of foreign pharaohs.
1877 BC – Jacob enters Egypt and stands before Pharaoh 430 years before the exodus (Ex. 12:40). Joseph is probably 39 years old.
1806 BC – Joseph dies at 110, 71 years after Jacob enters Egypt
So there are 279 years between the death of Joseph and the birth of Moses.
The book, along with Numbers, also serves as a warning against ingratitude and disobedience (See 1 Cor 10, Hebrews 4, and Psalm 95).
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PART I of EXODUS
THE DELIVERANCE OF THE COVENANT PEOPLE OUT OF EGYPT (Ch 1‑18)
EXODUS 1
v. 8 “Then a new king, who did not know about Joseph, came to power in Egypt.” Archer and others believe that the new king of this verse must be a Hyksos king coming to power some twenty to thirty years after the death of Joseph. They believe the quotes of 1:8-10 make no sense in the mouth of a native Egyptian king. Although both the Israelites and the Hyksos were Semites, the Israelite sympathies may have been with the Egyptians because of the friendly way they dealt with Joseph and his family. Therefore, the Hyksos saw them as enemies and oppressed them. The king of v. 15, then, who attempted wiping out Israel as a nation, would have been a native king of the 18th dynasty, either Ahmose or one of his successors, who hated everything Semitic and sought to cleanse the delta region of their presence (see Archer, p. 228-233). Obviously, we cannot be dogmatic about these matters.
This verse, together with what precedes (Israel’s multiplication as a people) and follows (Pharaoh’s acts of oppression), raises the question as to where Israel’s sojourn in Egypt and the exodus fit into world history.
As might be expected, there is considerable difference of opinion concerning these matters. Among those who favor a later date for the exodus (1290 or even 1225 B.C.) are H.H. Rowley, Jack Finegan, E.F. Harrison, W.F. Albright, and many others, including probably the majority of Evangelicals. The earlier date (ca. 1440 BC) is supported by Gleason Archer, Merrill Unger, J. Davis, Keil-Delitzsch, and men of a more conservative bent. Archaeological evidence is argued in support of both views, with Nelson Glueck and Kathleen Kenyon opting for a later date, and John Garstang, John Bimson, and Bryant Wood defending the earlier date on the basis of the excavations at Jericho. R.K. Harrison writes: “Attempts to establish a chronology for the Exodus have resulted in some of the most perplexing problems in the entire panorama of Hebrew history” (Introduction to the Old Testament, p 316). It might be mentioned here that a number of liberal scholars reject all biblical evidence and claim there was no exodus at all.
A person’s position will depend at least in part on his attitude toward the inerrancy of Scripture. A significant passage in this matter is 1 Kings 6:1, which places the exodus 480 years before the building of the temple, which occurred “in the fourth year of Solomon’s reign over Israel.” Edwin R. Thiele’s chronology of the kings, places the death of Solomon at 931 BC (The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings, p. 254f). This places the building of the temple at 967 BC. Add to this 480 years and the result is 1447 BC. Even if these dates are not precise, the exodus would be dated to the 15th century BC.
If we connect these dates to the standard (but very problematic) chronology of Egyptian history, two New Kingdom dynasties come into consideration as the setting for the exodus:
18th Dynasty (Early Exodus) |
19th Dynasty (Late Exodus) |
Thutmose I, ca. 1540 BC |
Seti I, ca. 1322-1300 BC |
Thutmose II, ca. 1520 BC (Hatshepsut) |
|
Thutmose III, ca. 1500-1450 BC (Oppression) |
Rameses II, ca. 1300‑1235 BC |
Amenhotep II, ca. 1450‑20 BC (Exodus) |
Merneptah, ca. 1235‑1220 B.C. |
Accordingly, the pharaoh of the oppression following the early dating would be Thutmose III, whose long reign together with Hatshepsut’s regency would fit the biblical record. The Pharaoh of the exodus, then, would be Amenhotep II (also known as Amenophis). Amenhotep’s poor war record would correspond with the catastrophic loss of chariots in the Red Sea. In this view, then, the “new King, who did not know about Joseph,” would come out of the dynasty which expelled the Hyksos, Semitic invaders, who ruled Egypt in the 16th century BC. This would provide a natural setting for the oppression of the Israelites, who would be regarded as kin to the Hyksos by native Egyptians. In “Against Apion” the 1st-century historian Josephus identified the Exodus with the expulsion of the Hyksos. If this were the case. the pharaoh of Exodus would be one of the Theban pharaohs of the 17th or early-18th Dynasty, who fought against the Hyksos, especially Ahmose I (1570–1546 BC or 1550-1525 BC). This, however, does not seem to mesh with the apparent Delta headquarters of the pharaoh.
According to the later reckoning the pharaoh of the oppression would be Seti I or Rameses II, also a ruler with a long reign, and the pharaoh of the exodus would be Merneptah. Against the latter identification would be the Merneptah Stele, which names Israel as already in Canaan during Mernepthah’s rule.
Although the biblical data strongly supports a 15th century exodus, we cannot be too certain of the pharaohs of the oppression since there are significant uncertainties with Egyptian chronology in spite of the confidence with which the figures are printed on the page. There are significant variations in the three standard chronologies of Egypt, and the astronomical basis for those chronologies is not very sound. Actually, the identity of the pharaoh is not a great concern since the Bible shows no interest in this information.
The archaeological aspects of the dating of the exodus and conquest will be discussed in more detail in connection with the book of Joshua.
EXODUS 2
v. 1 “A man of the house of Levi.” According to Ex 6:20 and Nu 26:59 Moses descended from the Levitical family of Kohath. There are apparent gaps in the genealogy. It is most likely that the gaps are in the middle of the list, and Amram and his wife Jochebed were Moses’ parents. Usually the two ends of the genealogy are the critical data. The gap here probably comes between the founder of the clan and Moses’ immediate forebears. (See notes on 6:13-26 for other possibilities.)
v. 2 In this verse the newborn child is described as טוֹב , a generic word that isn’t very descriptive. Most parents consider their children to be most beautiful. In Acts 7:20 Stephen describes him ἀστῖος τῷ θεῷ, which could be translated “beautiful” or “special in God’s sight.” Was it clear in some way to Moses’ parents that God had special plans for this child? Regardless of how we are to understand these words, He 11:23 says that the parents’ act of not obeying the ruler’s cruel command was more than just parents protecting their child. It was an act of faith.
All the items connected with this story (Nile, papyrus basket, reeds, etc.) are typical of Egypt, as historians frequently point out, again underscoring Mosaic authorship.
v. 4 “His sister …” No doubt Miriam (Nu 16:59).
v. 5 “Pharaoh’s daughter …” In the Talmud she is named as Bathia (Batya), but we know of no basis for this identification. Other traditional names are Tharmuth and Merris. Some of the pharaohs had dozens of daughters so there is no shortage of candidates.
According to Stephen (Ac 7:22) Moses received an education “in all the wisdom of the Egyptians.”
v. 11-15 Moses’ act is referred to by Stephen (Ac 7:25-26) and in Hebrews 11:24-26 as an act of faith, in that he chose to put in his lot with his own suffering people. It was at the same time, however, like the act of Peter in cutting of the servant’s ear, an impulsive act which broke the rules of justice. According to Acts 7:22 Moses was 40 years old. Moses would have been 40 around 1487 BC, 390 years after Jacob entered Egypt. Given the fact that the Lord had told Abraham that his descendants would spend 400 years in a foreign country (Gen. 15:13), Moses may have seen himself as a self-appointed deliverer whose time had come. God’s time had not come, however, and Moses’ attempt failed.
“… went to live in Midian.” The Midianites were descended from Abraham through Keturah (Gn 25:24). Since they dwelt largely to the East, we conclude this group under Jethro was a branch dwelling on the Sinaitic peninsula, near Mount Sinai or Horeb.
v. 18 Reuel. In Ex 3:1 his name or title is Jethro, “his excellency.” He is a “priest of Midian” (v. 16), the spiritual head of his tribe. Reuel means “friend of God.”
v. 22 Moses’ sons: Gershom and Eliezer (cf. Ex 18:3).
While the children of Israel were groaning under the oppression of Egypt, God was preparing the way for their deliverance, as this chapter shows us in the miraculous saving of Moses, his training in the wisdom of the Egyptians, and his seasoning in the arid Sinai peninsula.
v. 23 “And God remembered …” an anthropomorphism for “God took action.” Moses served Jethro for a period of 40 years (cf. Ac 7:30 and Ex 7:6). God chose his time to take action.
EXODUS 3
v. 1 “Horeb, the mountain of God.” No doubt so-called in anticipation of the revelation which Moses was to receive. In the Old Testament Horeb and Sinai are used as equivalent terms, although Horeb may refer to the entire range of mountains which rise to a height of 8,000 ft., and Sinai to a particular peak in this range. The NIV “far side of the desert” is better translated “west side of the desert.”
v. 2 “The angel of the Lord appeared to him …” a manifestation of the LORD himself (see Gn 16:7; 22:11; 31:11‑13; 48:15‑16, etc.).
v. 6 The LORD Yahweh makes himself known as the God of the patriarchs.
v. 12 God promises that he will bring his people to worship on this same mountain. This was fulfilled when Israel here entered into a covenant with Yahweh/Jehovah (Ex 24).
v. 14 “God said unto Moses, ‘I am who I am.’” (אֶהְיֶה אֲשֶׁר אהְיֶה) . The name indicates the absolute timelessness, constancy, and unchangeableness of God, as we see from the imperfect tense of the Hebrew verb, expressing his sovereignty and majesty. Jesus says of himself, “Before Abraham was, I am” (πρὶν Ἀβραὰμ γενέσθαι ἐγὼ εἰμί - Jn 8:58) thereby identifying himself with the God of Israel (See also He 13:8 and Rev. 1:4 & 8).
The name which God here reveals to Moses also stresses God as a personal being, the personal God of salvation for all time. This is God’s own explanation of the tetragrammaton יְהֹוָה , which simply changes the first person “I am” to the third person “He is.” The Hebrew word הָיָה , “to be,” was originally הָוָה , with the third person יַהוֶה in the imperfect. The Masoretic pointing יְהוָה / יְהֹוָה . (Jehovah) belongs to a time when the Jews were afraid to utter this name at all and substituted אֲדֹנָי (Lord), the vowels of which therefore were placed as Keri (to be read) in place of the Kethib (to be written). When the Hebrew word אֲדֹנָי precedes the tetragrammaton, the tetragrammation is pointed יֶהוִה and is pronounced “elohim.” Another substitution for the Tetragrammaton is “The Name.”
The name later incorrectly pronounced Jehovah (יְהֹוָה) occurs for the first time in Gn 2:4 in connection with elohim, and is identified as the God of the history of salvation, the God of the covenant. The letters יהוה were very likely originally pronounced Yahweh.
Ex 3:14 reveals the absolute independence of God, the absolute constancy of God, and the fact that all his attributes are a part of his essence. Luther translates: “Ich werde sein, der ich werde sein.” The most complete exegesis of יְהֹוָה is found in the Lord’s own “sermon” on his name in Exodus 34:5-7. We will give fuller consideration to the significance of this name at that point.
With these words the LORD also distinguishes himself from the gods of Egypt and other nations.
v. 18 Moses was to confront Pharaoh first with an easier option, i.e., to let Israel take a journey to worship the Lord. God knew in advance, however, that Pharaoh would refuse, proving beyond all doubt that Pharaoh was without excuse.
v. 22 “Every woman is to ask her neighbor.” The KJV “borrow” is an incorrect translation of the Hebrew שָׁאַל . Opponents of Scripture have frequently used this passage of the Bible to throw contempt on the word of God, claiming that God here encouraged his people to “borrow” under false pretenses. The passage clearly states that the Israelites asked without intending to restore, and the Egyptians gave without hope of receiving back, since God had made their hearts favorably disposed to the Israelites. In fact, this asking, or demanding, was small recompense for the years of slavery which Israel had been forced to bear in Egypt.
Note: Exodus 3:1-12 provides an excellent text for a service of installation, especially the Lord’s words “So now, go. I am sending you … I will be with you.”
EXODUS 4
v. 1 Moses continues his objections, which go back to the preceding chapter. In every case, however, the Lord has a ready answer, basing this not upon human argumentation, but upon the strength which he himself would supply.
Moses: God:
“Who am I … ?” “I will be with you.” (Ex 3:11‑12)
“Who shall I say sent me?” “I AM sent you.” (Ex 3:13‑14)
“What if they do not believe me?” Three signs (Ex 4:1‑8)
“I am not eloquent.” “I will help you speak (Ex 4:10‑11)
“Send someone else.” The Lord’s anger … Aaron (Ex 4:13‑14)
Moses’ reluctance to go is understandable, taking into consideration the entire situation. Humanly speaking this shepherd of Horeb had many strikes against him, including his reason for having fled from Egypt many years ago. Moses may also have been bitter over the fact that when he was ready forty years earlier, God was not. In addition, we should remember that since God’s appearance to Jacob, 430 years before this, God had never appeared to any Israelite.
An excellent study for called servants of God to reassure themselves as to where their strength can be found to do the Lord’s work!
The three signs described in this chapter (rod to snake; hand leprous and healed; water of the Nile to blood) have many fanciful and allegorical explanations. We prefer to interpret all three as signs provided by God as a testimony to Israel and to Egypt of God’s presence and power accompanying his chosen messenger. Edersheim adds an interesting comment: “For the first time in Old Testament history this power (of doing miracles) was bestowed upon man” (Bible History of the Old Testament, Vol 1, p 50).
v. 21 “But I will harden his heart …” The statement that God would harden Pharaoh’s heart, as indicated in this passage אֲחַזֵּק) , Piel form of חָזַק , “cause to be hard; harden”) has raised questions concerning the cause of impenitence. Does this rest with God or with man? In this passage the Lord gives a summary of what is eventually going to happen in the case of Pharaoh.
In studying the passages in Exodus note the difference and the progression of four kinds of passages: 1) prophecies of the hardening of the heart, 2) statements of the condition of hardness, 3) human action of hardening the heart, 4) divine action of hardening the heart.
Note: Divine hardening does not begin until Exodus 9:12, the 6th plague.
Note also the three different vocables for “harden”:
As we follow the entire situation of Moses with Pharaoh, we find that in the first instances the hardening of heart is ascribed to Pharaoh himself. Either the qal of חָזַק is used (“Pharaoh’s heart became hard,” an intransitive form of the Qal. ‑‑ Ex 7:13; 22; 8:15; 9:35), or the qal of כָּבֵד is used, meaning that “Pharaoh’s heart was hard” (Ex 7:14; 9:17). Still another verb,קָשָׁה is used in Ex 13:15 which means that “Pharaoh made his heart hard.” The process in Pharaoh’s case, in other words, is progressive. After Pharaoh hardened his own heart against God’s revealed will during the first five plagues, the LORD himself begins to take a hand and the hardening on the part of the LORD begins (Ex 9:12).
Thus it was not until after Pharaoh himself had repeatedly rejected God’s call to repentance, manifesting an obdurate, defiant spirit, that God himself stepped in and completed the process. Nowhere do we hear that Pharaoh believed. His acts of resistance to God’s will were repeated. They became a habit. Finally a complete state of obduracy and insusceptibility set in, which is God’s own final judgment upon the impenitent sinner. It is in this sense that we understand the words: “I will harden his heart.” (Confer also Ez 33:11; 1 Tm 2:4; 2 Pe 2:9).
“Hence Pharaoh (of whom we read, ‘For this purpose have I let you live to show you my power, so that my name may be declared throughout all the earth’ [Ex. 9:16]) did not perish because God did not want to grant him salvation or because it was God’s good pleasure that he should be damned and lost. For God ‘is not wishing that any should perish,’ nor has he any ‘pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his way and live …’ “But that God hardened Pharaoh’s heart so that Pharaoh continued to sin and became the more obdurate the more he was admonished was a punishment for his preceding sin and his horrible tyranny with which he oppressed the children of Israel by many, various, and most inhuman devices contrary to the voice of his conscience. But after God arranged to have his Word proclaimed and his will revealed to Pharaoh, and he deliberately rebelled against all the admonitions and warnings, God withdrew his hand from him, and so his heart became hardened and calloused, and God executed his judgment on him, for he was indeed guilty of ‘hell-fire.’ The holy apostle adduces Pharaoh’s example [Romans 9] for the sole purpose of thereby setting forth the righteousness of God which God manifests toward the impenitent and despisers of his Word, and in no way does he want us to infer that God had not wanted to grant Pharaoh or any other person eternal life, or that in his secret counsel God had ordained him to eternal damnation so that he could not and might not be saved.” (Tappert, Book of Concord, “Formula of Concord, Solid Declaration, Article XI,” paragraphs 54 and 84-86, p. 630-631).
v. 21 “Israel is my firstborn son,” confer Ex 19:5; Dt 32:18; Is 64:8; Jer 3:4; Mal 1:6; 2:10.
v. 24-26 On account of the brevity of this narrative it is somewhat obscure. Who was God seeking to kill, Moses or his son? How was God threatening to kill? Was it a sudden seizure, a fatal disease? Was it because of his neglect in circumcising his son? Had Moses neglected to do this out of deference to Zipporah? Was one son already circumcised and the others not (note the singular “son” in v. 25)?
In any case, Zipporah now does herself what had been neglected, although it was repugnant to her. She concedes that the act must be done to retain her “bridegroom of blood.” By touching Moses with the blood of the foreskin she removes the offense.
Moses, who is to be the great leader of God’s people, is shown how earnest God is concerning the keeping of his commandments (confer Gn 17:14; also Ro 4:11), a lesson for us as well.
EXODUS 5
This chapter is preliminary. It presents the first visit of Moses and Aaron to Pharaoh, to make known to him the will of their God. Pharaoh’s reply is to increase Israel’s labors, thus enlightening Moses as to what he can expect from Pharaoh. When Israel complains, Moses takes the problem to the Lord, preparing us for the Lord’s assurances in chapter 6. Moses’ words, “O Lord, why …” (Ex 5:22) serve as an excellent text on a pastor’s intercessory role as the man in the middle. God answers the “why” in Exodus 6:1: “Now you will see …”
QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW (Ex 1-5)
FOR ADDED CONSIDERATION
A. In connection with the date of the Exodus, for further reading we recommend:
Redating the Exodus and Conquest, John J. Bimson. For a survey of the issues and a defense of the early date.
Bryant G. Wood, “Did the Israelites Conquer Jericho? A New Look at the Archaeological Evidence,” Biblical Archaeology Review 16(2) (March/April 1990): p 44-58.
Bryant G. Wood, “Dating Jericho’s Destruction: Bienkowski Is Wrong on All Counts,” Biblical Archaeology Review 16:05, Sep/Oct 1990.
Bryant G. Wood, “The Walls of Jericho,” Bible and Spade 12:2 (1999).
Bruins & van der Plicht, “Tell es-Sultan (Jericho): Radiocarbon Results of Short-Lived Cereal and Multiyear Charcoal Samples from the End of the Middle Bronze Age,” Radiocarbon 37:2, 1995. Radiocarbon dates sited against Wood.
A Survey of Old Testament Introduction, Gleason L. Archer, p. 239-252.
Moses and the Gods of Egypt, J.J. Davis, p 16-37.
Archaeology and the Old Testament, Merrill F. Unger, p 140-152.
The Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings, Edwin R. Thiele, p 254 f.
B. What occasion or application is suggested by each of the following texts?
Ex 3:1‑6
Ex 3:11‑15
Ex 4:1‑17
Ex 4:20
Ex 4:19‑6:1
CHAPTER FIVE
THE PLAGUES AND THE EXODUS (Ex 6‑13)
EXODUS 6
v. 1-8 Here the negative critics see support for their claim that the Yahweh-name was not known before the days of Moses. Critics claim that in the early patriarchal period the tribal name of God was God Almighty – אֵל שַׁדָּי . Now Moses was about to reveal the name Yahweh – יְהוָה – for the first time as the God of Israel. This is a misinterpretation of the passages.
The fact of the matter is that the name Yahweh occurs frequently in Genesis. God did reveal himself to Abraham as Yahweh, the God of the Covenant (יְהֹוָה) . Abraham builds an altar unto this name (Gn 12:8; 13:4; 21:33). He calls upon this name (Gn 22:14; 24:3 and 7). When in Ex 3:13 Moses expects that the Israelites will ask who sent him, God’s answer implies that he will be recognized by the name Yahweh.
It could be argued that the occurrence of the Tetragrammaton in Genesis is an updating by Moses to the name used in his own time, but another solution seems more probable. Here the point is that although the name has already been introduced to Israel, its full implications have not as yet been made known to them. God had surely not forgotten his covenant with the patriarchs and with their descendants (v. 4-5). Now the redemptive events to follow would reveal aspects of this covenant hitherto not fully known (Confer v. 3 and especially 6-7).
Another solution is to punctuate v. 3 as a question, as the NIV note does, “And by my name the LORD, did I not make myself known to them?”
v. 13-26 At this point a genealogical table is inserted. Edward Young comments: “Obviously this is the proper place for such an insertion. Moses has received his final commission to Pharaoh. He is now shown as the leader of Israel and is ready for the great conflict with the oppressor. What better place could there be for the account of the line of Moses and Aaron than at precisely this point?” (Introduction to the Old Testament, p. 64).
Obviously some links in the genealogy of Moses and Aaron are omitted. 1 Chronicles 7:20-27 shows 11 links between Joseph and Joshua. Ex 6:20‑26 shows only 4 links for the same period (Levi, Kohath, Amram, Moses). The gap likely follows Kohath, founder of the clan.
There is another way to view this information. A member of the nation of Israel was identified by the household of the father,בֵּת אֲבִי , to which he belonged. This household or family was a subpart of his clan,מִשְׁפְּחָה , which was a subpart of his tribe, שֵׁבֶת . (For an example of this identification in action see Joshua 7:16-18.) Since this is Moses’ official introduction, he is introduced as a member of the tribe of Levi, from the clan of Kohath, and the family of Amram. The four generations mentioned also remind us of the four generations the Lord told Abraham would pass before they were delivered from a foreign land (Gn. 15:16).
Note also in the lists of names the three divisions in the tribe of Levi according to sons Gershon, Kohath, and Merari (v 16), and the names of Aaron’s sons: Nadab, Abihu, Eleazar, Ithamar (v. 23). These names play significant roles in Israel’s later history.
It is somewhat puzzling that the genealogies of Reuben and Simeon are included here. Perhaps this is simply because the starting block of the genealogy was taken and pasted in as a whole. Perhaps it also serves to remind us that Levi was one of the “three less blessed,” and it shows how the fortunes of this tribe were beginning to turn.
EXODUS 7, 8, 9, 10
These chapters of Exodus contain the story of 9 of the 10 plagues. Their purpose is set forth by God himself: “That you may know that I am the Lord” (Ex 6:7; 10:2; 16:12; 29:42), “and the Egyptians will know that I am the Lord” (Ex 7:5 and 17). Thus there are both law and gospel elements in the action. To Israel God’s power meant deliverance. To the Egyptians the plagues demonstrated God’s sovereignty over all things. By Pharaoh, because of his unbelief, they were received with hardening of heart.
The first 9 plagues form a symmetrical scheme, subdivided into three groups of three each:
1. Blood (7:14‑25) 4. Flies (8:20‑32) 7. Hail (9:13‑35)
2. Frogs (8:1‑15) 5. Murrain (9:1‑7) 8. Locusts (10:1‑20)
3. Gnats (8:16‑19) 6. Boils (9:8‑12) 9. Darkness (10:21‑27)
In each series the first and second plague is announced to Pharaoh in advance. The third is given without previous warning. The series of 3 x 3 leads up to a climax in the tenth plague, showing completeness. Within the plagues there is an increase in severity. They may have extended over a period of about 10 months.
The Egyptian magicians vie with Moses in the first two plagues. At the third they acknowledge the hand of God to be present: “This is the finger of God” (8:19), and from then on they are out of consideration.
With plagues 4, 5, and 6 there is a distinction between the Israelites and the Egyptians, the Israelites being spared.
The first nine plagues were natural wonders in the sense that they were already known phenomena. Their severity and sudden disappearance at the word of Moses marked them as miracles of God’s power. Each plague was directed against some phenomenon of nature worshiped by the Egyptians as in some way related to their gods.
Pharaoh’s progressive hardening of heart we have already treated under Exodus 4. At the close of the ninth plague Moses and Pharaoh broke off all personal relations. It is clear that Exodus 11:1-3 refers to instructions given previously to Moses, while 11:4-8 is the parting warning concerning the coming of the tenth plague, which follows immediately after 10:29. The NIV translates 11:1 correctly: “Now the Lord had said to Moses …” ו ־ וַיֹּאמֶר) consecutive here used in the pluperfect sense!) In plague number ten, in other words, God dealt directly with Pharaoh and the Egyptians, and not through mediation.
EXODUS 12
This chapter presents to us first of all the regulations given by God to Moses concerning the PASSOVER (פֶּסַח) . These are found in the first portion of the chapter (v. 1-28), and the concluding verses (v. 43-50). In between these verses we have the account of Israel’s deliverance from Egypt through the killing of the firstborn of all people and livestock in Egypt (Tenth Plague).
The Passover was instituted as a memorial of Israel’s deliverance from Egypt. It was symbolic of Israel’s beginning as the people of Yahweh. According to verses 1 and 2 it was to be celebrated in the same month every year, concerning which God declared: “This month is to be for you the first month.” The Passover month, Abib, was therefore the beginning of Israel’s ecclesiastical year. After the Babylonian captivity this month received the name Nisan. (This month corresponds roughly to the end of March and the beginning of April in our calendar.)
Looking at the ordinances concerning the Passover in the light of the New Testament it is clear that the Passover was to have a prophetic bearing upon the person and work of the Savior. Through the blood of a lamb the firstborn in Israel were spared the fate of the Egyptian sons. They were delivered from the wrath of God. They were delivered through a vicarious death.
That this observance is a type of Christ is clear from various ordinances of the Passover itself in the light of New Testament fulfillment. This applies first of all to the Passover Lamb (the Hebrew שֶׂה refers to “a young one,” either of sheep or of goats, v. 3), which fits numerous references of Christ as the Lamb of God (Confer esp. Jn 1:29; 1 Cor 5:7). This lamb was to be “without defect” (v. 5), just as Christ was “a lamb without blemish or defect” (1 Pe 1:19). The lamb was to be slaughtered (v. 6), or sacrificed, even as Christ gave himself as “a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God” (Eph 5:2; He 10:14). The Israelites were to take some of the blood (v. 7) and put it on their doorframes as a token of deliverance from the angel of death (“When I see the blood, I will pass over you” v. 13). Even so we are redeemed “with the precious blood of Christ” (1 Pe 1:19; see also Ac 20:28; Ro 3:25; 5:9; Eph 1:7; 2:13; Col 1:20; He 9:22; 1 Jn 1:7; Re 5:9). Concerning the lamb the people were not to “break any of the bones (v. 46), just as none of the Savior’s bones were broken after his death on the cross (Jn 19:36).
No doubt the regulations for the Feast of the Unleavened Bread, also found here in Exodus 12:14-20, were given to Moses sometime later (see v. 17: “That I brought” etc.). The close connection between the meaning of this feast and the Passover itself explains its inclusion here.
The Keil-Delitzsch Commentary has this to say concerning this feast: The unleavened cakes were symbolical of the new life as cleansed from the leaven of a sinful nature. For this reason the Israelites were to put away all the leaven of the Egyptian nature, the leaven of malice and wickedness, and by eating pure and holy bread and meeting for the worship of God to show that they were walking in newness of life” (p. 21) … Paul brings this picture into focus in 1 Corinthians 5:7 where he tells us to “get rid of the old yeast that you may be a new batch without yeast,” connecting this also with “Christ, our Passover lamb,” who “has been sacrificed.”
He then urges Christians to “keep the Festival, not with the old yeast, the yeast of malice and wickedness, but with bread without yeast, the bread of sincerity and truth” (1 Cor 5:8). One can hardly preach on this Easter Epistle in the old historical series without carefully explaining the Old Testament picture of the Passover and its connection with the Feast of Unleavened Bread, relating this to the significance of Easter for a Christian’s walk in newness of life.
A connection is plainly implied between the Passover and the Lord’s Supper. Both are memorial feasts (Ex 12:14 – 1 Cor 11:24ff). Both imply a fellowship of faith (Ex 12:44 – 1 Cor 10:17). Both exclude “the stranger” (Ex 12:43, 45, 48 – 1 Cor 11:27). The relation of the Passover to the rite of circumcision is also the same as the Lord’s Supper is to baptism. Both circumcision and baptism establish the covenant with God and admit into fellowship with God and his church. Both Passover and Lord’s Supper proclaim and strengthen this bond. The new sacraments in place of the old are God’s way of enabling the Gentiles to enter his church of the New Testament.
The intermediate verses of Exodus 12 (v. 29-42) describe the killing of the firstborn in Egypt and Pharaoh’s urgent request to have the Israelites leave. Both the “borrowing” of the KJV and the “plundering” of the NIV are misleading translations of the Israelites demand for back pay of precious metals, jewels, and raiment from the Egyptians. The departure of the Israelites from Rameses to Succoth completes the section (see map).
The number given (“about 600,000 men on foot” v. 37), adding wives and children, would give us a figure of about 2 million souls. Many question the fact that 70 souls could multiply into such a vast number in 430 years’ time. Actually, as the Keil‑Delitzsch Commentary points out (p. 29), even based on an ordinary number of births this increase would be nothing unusual. Add to this the blessing of God to Abraham (Gn 15:13‑21) and one sees no reason why the figure should be called into question. It should be noted here also that “many other people went up with them” (v. 38). This was a crowd of mixed people (עֵרֶב רַב) from various nations, who attached themselves to the Israelites and who later on became a snare to them (See. Nu 11:4).
The number “430 years” (v. 41) as the length of Israel’s stay in Egypt “is not critically doubtful, nor are the 430 years to be reduced to 215 by an arbitrary interpolation, such as we find in the LXX” (KD Comm., p. 30). Questions have been raised about the 430 years in Egypt. In Gn 15:13 the number is given as 400 years. This simply appears to be a round number which should cause no real problem. Acts 13:19 gives about 450 years for the time in Egypt and the Wilderness and the entry to the land. Again this appears to be a round number for 400 + 40 or 430 + 40. Some versions of the Septuagint say that 430 is the number of year in Egypt and Canaan (NIV note). A simple explanation of this variant is that it is a correction of Christian Septuagints to reconcile this verse with Galatians 3:17, which states that the “law, introduced 430 years later, does not set aside the covenant previously established by God” (with Abraham). Paul here is contrasting law and gospel, so he very likely reckons the era of promise with Jacob who received the promise before he went to Egypt. It is not necessary to adjust the stay in Egypt down to 215 years. The “fly in the ointment” with this explanation is that the apparatus of the BHS lists “Egypt and Canaan” also as the reading of the Samaritan Pentateuch.
EXODUS 13
v. 1-2 “Consecrate to me every firstborn male … whether man or animal.” Since the firstborn of Israel had been spared, it was appropriate that these be set apart for the Lord’s service as a reminder of God’s grace to his people. So Israel was consecrated to God in its first‑born (see Ex 4:22; 22:29). According to Numbers 3:12-13 and Numbers 3:40-48 the Levites were later to take the place of the firstborn in their special service. All the firstborn in excess of the Levites were to be “redeemed” at the price of 5 shekels.
v. 16 “And it will be like a sign on your hand and a symbol on your forehead …”
(Heb.: (לְאוֹת...וּלְטוֹטָפֹת . The Jews took this literally, wearing phylacteries or small pouches made from the skin of ceremonially clean animals, strapped to the forehead and to the left arm of males. Inside the pouches were strips of parchment on which were written certain passages from the law. God, of course, wanted the consecration of the firstborn and the feast of the unleavened bread to be constant inner reminders for heart, mind, and action, not simplan outward wearing of phylacteries.
v. 17 God’s purpose of leading toward the southeast instead of the more direct route toward Gaza is given here: “If they face war they might change their minds and return to Egypt.” At this time the major obstacle was probably not the Philistines, but the Egyptian forts which guarded the frontier. The frontier was also blocked by a 200-foot-wide barrier canal, which may have run from the Mediterranean Sea to Pi Hahiroth, and which may have intimidated the Israelites. This route out of Egypt was called “the Way of Horus” by the Egyptians. The mention of Philistines may be a later updating of the name from an Israelite point of view, or it may refer to the Philistines that dwelt there in patriarchal time (Gn 21:32 and 26:1). These were a peace-loving people, not the more warlike Philistines who migrated to southwest Canaan during the period of the judges.
The expression in v. 18 translated in the KJV as “harnessed” and in the NIV as “armed for battle” simply means “equipped” (חֲמֻשִׁים) , actually “prepared for the march,” as contrasted with fleeing in disorderly array.
v. 19 “Moses took the bones of Joseph with him …” Confer Gn 50:25.
v. 20 The Israelites’ journey led to Succoth, a rendezvous point, which was probably in the Wadi Tumilat, then to Etham, where Egypt ends and the desert of Sinai begins, and from there to Pi Hahiroth. The exact location of these places has been much disputed. Current ideas of site locations will be discussed in more detail as part of the study of the date of the exodus and conquest at the beginning of Joshua. If Succoth was a city, it was probably at Tel Mashkhuta, and Etham was near the east end of the Wadi Tumilat. See the map at the end of this chapter.
v. 21 How God led Israel (v. 18) is here described: “In a pillar of cloud” by day and “in a pillar of fire” by night. This cloud, which was the visible representative of the invisible God, took on various forms: a bright column to lead by day; a column of fire to lead by night; a dividing wall to separate the Israelites and the Egyptians at the Red Sea; a cloud which stood still above the tabernacle; a cloud in which appeared “the glory of the Lord” (Ex 16:10; 40:34; Nu 17:7). It protected Israel from heat by day as well as lighting its path by night. This manifestation of God’s presence did not depart from Israel as long as the people continued in the wilderness.
In Ex 13:17 we read that God did not lead the Israelites “through the Philistine country” along the heavily fortified coastal road. He rather led them toward the “Red Sea” (יַם־סוּף) , usually translated as the “Sea of Reeds.” The location of the crossing of the sea will be discussed in the next chapter.
QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW (Ex 6-13)
FOR ADDED CONSIDERATION
The plagues in detail:
FOR FURTHER STUDY
Hoffmeier, James. Israel In Egypt. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1996.
“The Eastern Frontier Canal,” p. 164-175
“The Geography and Toponomy of the Exodus,” p. 187-198.
“The Problem of the Re(e)d Sea,” p. 199-222.
Charles F. Aling. Egypt and Bible History, From Earliest Times to 1000 BC. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House. 1981, reprint 1984. “The Bondage, the Length of the Sojourn” p. 64-65.
CHAPTER SIX
FROM EGYPT TO SINAI (Ex 14‑18)
EXODUS 14
v. 1-4 God led the Israelites on a circuitous way to suggest aimlessness in order to encourage pursuit by Pharaoh and to teach him a lesson. That God hardened Pharaoh’s heart is mentioned three times in this chapter in order that “the Egyptians will know that I am the Lord when I gain glory through Pharaoh, his chariots and his horsemen” (v. 18) (see explanation under Ex 4:21).
v. 11 Israel’s cry for help when they realized that they were being pursued by Pharaoh’s charioteers shows not only a lack of faith, but even bitterness against the leadership of Moses. This is typical of their shallow spiritual perspective, forgetting so quickly all demonstrations of God’s protecting care in the present crisis. This is also a warning directed to God’s children of all times, who are by nature inclined to do the same thing.
v. 12-18 The words of Moses as well as of the Lord in these verses are an excellent text for times of crisis and emergency. Moses says: “The Lord will fight for you; you need only to be still” (v. 14). The Lord declares: “Tell the Israelites to move on …” (v. 15).
v. 21 The crossing of the Red Sea itself has been a subject of much speculation. All sorts of views have been proposed (strong natural wind; ebb tide; volcanic action and tsunami; a shallow and marshy district) in order to diminish the force of God’s miraculous intervention. .
The Exodus report tells of God using the natural force of an east wind, but he affected this miraculous event at precisely the right time. How wide a path God prepared by means of this miracle is not indicated; certainly wide enough to provide a considerable passageway. In Psalm 74:13 the Psalmist declares: “It was you who split open the sea by your power.” In Psalm 77:19 the writer says of the Lord: “Your path led through the sea, your way through the mighty waters, though your footprints were not seen.” We don’t have to see all of God’s “footprints” to believe in his miraculous power.
Psalm 77:17 suggests that a sudden thunderstorm hampered the Egyptian efforts to escape and led to great confusion. Compare Exodus 14:25.
Did Pharaoh himself perish in the Red Sea? Unger, who supports Amenhotep II as the Pharaoh of the Exodus, comments that “the Bible does not state that Pharaoh personally accompanied his horses, his chariots and his horsemen into the water” (Archaeology and the Old Testament, p 142), but Psalm 136:15 seem to imply that he did.
What is the Yam Suf and where was the crossing? The term traditionally translated Red Sea is,יַם־סוּף , Sea of Reeds or more precisely, Sea of Reed, in Hebrew. Another suggestion is that the term should be read as Yam Sof, the End Sea, the equivalent of the Roman “Outer Sea” or “Farthest Sea.” This assumes the term יַם־סוּף was misunderstood and mispointed by the Masoretes. The Hebrew word סוּף definitely does mean “reed” but it is possible that it here was a homonym or a similar word that meant something else. If “Sea of Reeds” was intended, we might expect the plural.
The Hebrew term יַם־סוּף denotes, in some biblical references and in most later sources, the sea today known as the Red Sea, and even to the Indian Ocean and the Persia Gulf, to which it connects. The Red Sea is a large sea, more than 1000 miles long and more than 200 miles wide, separating the Arabian Peninsula from the northeastern corner of Africa (Egypt, Sudan, and Ethiopia) and forming a northwestern arm off the Indian Ocean. The northern part of the Red Sea splits into two fingers which enclose the Sinai Peninsula, the Gulf of Elat (Aqaba) on the east and the Gulf of Suez on the west. None of these bodies of water are associated with reeds.
The term Red Sea came into the Bible via the Septuagint and Vulgate. Interestingly, Luther did not retain this traditional translation, but translated what he believed was the literal meaning of the Hebrew, Reed Sea. (For a discussion of the history of the term “Red Sea” see Biblical Archaeological Review, July/August 1984, p. 57ff).
In the Bible יַם־סוף clearly includes the Gulf of Suez (Nu 33:8) and the Gulf of Aqaba (Nu 21:4, 1 Kg 9:26), and by extension the whole Red Sea. The crossing of the sea was probably at the northern tip of the Gulf of Suez, perhaps in an extension of the sea into the area of the Suez Isthmus today occupied by Lake Timsah or the Bitter Lakes. There is evidence that the level of the sea may have been considerably higher in the 2nd millennium BC. This area was a “sea” in the real sense of the word and not simply a marshy area subject to flooding and drying up by tides.
Some identify the “Red Sea” of the Exodus with one of the lagoons on the south shore of the Mediterranean (Bahr Manzala or the Sirbonic Lake).This theory is especially necessary for those who speculate that the submerging of Pharaoh’s army was the result of a tsunami generated by a volcanic eruption in the Aegean. This theory directly contradicts the biblical account, which states that the Israelites did not take the northern route. Those who place Mount Sinai in Saudi Arabia locate the crossing in the Gulf of Aqaba. There is no credible evidence to support the claims that the actual site of the crossing has been discovered there. Exodus 15:22 says that after crossing the Red Sea the Israelites found themselves in the wilderness of Shur. The wilderness of Shur is east of the Gulf of Suez and in the western area of the Sinai. . To cross the Red Sea and to end up in the wilderness of Shur one could only be crossing the westernmost arm of the Red Sea and not the Gulf of Aqaba. The Exodus account also seems to make it very clear that the crossing site was on the border of Egypt as Israel was entering the desert, not after they had already crossed it.
EXODUS 15
v. 1-21 Moses’ song of praise to God for the miraculous deliverance at the Red Sea is the first biblical psalm.
The song consists of three stanzas (The Lord is a Warrior, v 2-5; You Will Lead the People, v 6-10; Nations Will Tremble, v 11-18), followed by Miriam’s refrain (v. 21). Each begins with words of praise to the LORD, and ends with a description of Pharaoh’s destruction. The third strophe prophetically sings of the establishment of Israel as God’s kingdom in the promised inheritance. Negative critics, of course, have tried to place its composition at a much later time in Israel’s history.
v. 22-26 The experience at Marah, where the bitter water was miraculously made sweet, is again descriptive of Israel’s reaction to difficulty at so many occasions.
The location of all of these sites on map is by conjecture based on distance apart and the presence of water. We will discuss the sites in Sinai in connection with the itinerary in Numbers 33.
v. 27 Elim’s oasis is identified with a site that was frequently used by caravans traveling through this desert area.
One has to see personally the arid nature of this desert region to appreciate how dependent Israel was upon the LORD for support on this journey. They had now passed from a state of abject slavery in Egypt to one of complete dependence on God for support. Unfortunately they often failed to measure up to the test, as their reaction to various difficulties on the way indicates.
EXODUS 16
After they reach the Desert of Sin in v. 7 Moses and Aaron say to the Israelites: “You will see the glory of the Lord, because he has heard your grumbling against him.” Sin is a geographic term not related to the English word “sin.”
At this occasion the Lord revealed his glory (כְּבוֹד יְהוָה) in providing food, an act of providence that was to continue forty years (v. 35).
In the morning when the manna miraculously covered the ground like a layer of dew, the Israelites asked מָן הוּא (“What is this?” Archaic for מָה־הוּא ). In Hebrew the manna was called man. The English “manna” comes via the Greek (μάννα). An omer of manna (2 lbs.) per head per day was supplied.
At the same time provisions were given so as not to waste this food or hoard it. Moreover, God bestowed his gift in such a way that the Sabbath was sanctified by it. This shows us that a weekly Sabbath regulation was observed even before the Sinaitic law of the Sabbath, unless the reference and the incidence of disobedience are prospective.
Note, finally, the provision for keeping of a bowl of manna “in front of the Testimony” (v. 34).
According to John 6:31-58 manna is a type of Christ, the true “Bread of Life,” although it should be noted that Jesus comments more on the differences between himself and the manna than on the similarities.
In the evening quail came and covered the camp. The Red Sea is on a major path of bird migrations.
EXODUS 17
v. 1-7 “They camped at Rephidim.” Here follows the incident of Moses striking a rock to obtain water (See He 3:8, “time of testing”; also Ps 95). The application of Scripture itself: “Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts, etc.”
1 Cor 10:4 uses this Rock at Rephidim as a type of Christ, who supplies us with living water (Jn 4:14; 6:35; 7:37).
v. 8-13 The Amelekites came and attacked the Israelites at Rephidim.” These were, at least in part, descendants of Esau (Gn 36:12), the first to threaten Israel. Here for the first time we hear of Joshua (הוֹשֵׁעַ ‑ “He Saves” laterיְהוֹשֻׁעַ ‑ “Yahweh Saves”), a leader of the tribe of Ephraim. As Joshua led the army, Aaron and Hur held up the hands of Moses. The holding up of hands is regarded as the sign or attitude of prayer and benediction, and this text is often used as an example of the power of incessant prayer, through which we receive strength for victory over our enemies. Edersheim interprets this passage as describing Moses holding up his staff as “the banner of God.”
v. 14-16 The Lord instructs Moses to write the account of this victory “on a scroll” (בָּסֵּפֶר) . This is the first mention of writing as related to official Hebrew records. The record was most likely a papyrus scroll.
For the LORD’S threat upon the Amelekites see Dt 25:17-18. This threat recorded on the scroll was to be carried out by Saul, but he disobeyed.
EXODUS 18
This chapter relates how Moses was reunited with his wife Zipporah and his two sons Gershom and Eliezer, who had apparently spent the time of Moses’ conflict at Pharaoh’s court with Jethro. The fact that Jethro here offers sacrifices to God (v. 12) indicates his belief in the true God.
Jethro here offers good advice to Moses (v. 13-27). Instead of judging all civil cases himself ‑‑ as Moses seems to have been doing ‑‑ Jethro suggests that Moses teach the people “decrees and laws” (v. 20) and delegate the authority to serve as judges to “capable men.” Moses followed this advice (see Dt 1:12-18). Perhaps the implementation of the plan is not strictly chronological. Pastors today should be advised to make use of capable laymen rather than to attempt doing everything themselves.
With this chapter we conclude the first portion of Exodus, “The Deliverance of the Covenant People out of Egypt,” and prepare ourselves for “The Establishing of the Covenant with Israel.”
QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW (Ex 14‑18)
By what means did the Lord led his people on their journey? What added assurance was given by this method of guidance? What practical assistance?
In what unusual direction did the Lord lead Israel? Why?
What varying views are held concerning the “Red Sea”?
What practical applications do you see in the story of Israel Crossing the Red Sea?
Which words in the Song of Moses describe the LORD’S awesome power? The LORD’S faithfulness to his promise?
Describe what happened at Marah; at Elim. Which attributes of God do both stories manifest?
What happened in the Desert of Sin? Which unusual expression occurs for the first time in connection with this miracle? For which Sinaitic regulation does the Lord provide in advance in connection with this miracle?
What lesson does the incident at Rephidim teach? (see Ps 95 and He 3:8)
Who attacked Israel at Rephidim? How did this people originate (confer Gn 36:12)? How were they defeated? What stern judgment was pronounced against them (confer Dt 25:17-18)?
What good advice did Jethro give Moses? How can this same principle of leadership be applied to God’s chosen servants today?
FOR ADDED CONSIDERATION
Read the excellent article by Prof. August Pieper “The Glory of the Lord,” reprinted from WLQ in The Wauwatosa Theology, Vol. 2, p. 417-498.
Trace Israel’s journey from Rameses to Sinai on a map.
CHAPTER SEVEN
THE SINAITIC LAW (Ex 19-24)
PART II
THE ESTABLISHING OF THE COVENANT WITH ISRAEL (Ch 19-24)
EXODUS 19
As Israel approaches Mount Sinai, the time has come for God’s covenant with his people to be established. This arrival occurs in the third month after the exodus. Israel remains here at Sinai 11 months until the departure recorded in Nu 10:11f.
As soon as the people are encamped opposite the mountain, Moses goes “up to God” (v. 3) to receive God’s instructions. Moses is first of all to remind the people of these words: “I carried you on eagles’ wings and brought you to myself” (v. 4; For Moses’ own explanation of this picture see Dt 32:10-12).
This covenant introduced here governs all the solemn events at Sinai, culminating in the confirmation of the covenant recorded in Exodus 24. (At the close of Ex 24 there will be a more extensive presentation of the nature and purpose of the Sinaitic Law.)
The next verses contain regulations of the people’s preparation (washing; limits around the mountain, etc.) and the Lord’s descent upon Mount Sinai amidst thunder and lightning, trumpet blasts, smoke, earthquake and thick cloud (v. 7-25). In what more dramatic way could the LORD have impressed upon Israel the awesome importance of this moment in their history! (See also the description of Mt. Sinai in Hb 12:18-21.)
EXODUS 20
v. 1-17 “And God spoke all these words:” (כַּל־הַדְּבָרִים הָאֵלֶּה) . The Decalogue is called “these words” in distinction to the “laws” (הַמִּשְׁפָטִים) which follow in Exodus 21, which applied to specific problems and conditions in Israel. The two together form the “Book of the Covenant” (Ex 24:3 and 7).
Note the words, “I am the Lord your God” … with which the “Words” are introduced! This is the “I AM” God, the LORD. God uses these introductory words to impress upon us that he loves us, that he is our Maker, and above all our Redeemer and Savior.
The ten “words” were spoken by God directly to the people (Ex 20:19). They were also written by God on two tables of stone (Ex 31:18). The number of the “Words” is not mentioned here. The number ten comes from Ex 34:28, Dt 4:13, and Dt 10:4. The specific numbering and arrangement is not indicated. Jews count v. 2 as Word I, v. 3-6 as II, and v. 17 as X. Greek Orthodox and Reformed churches count v. 3 as I, v. 4‑6 as II, and v. 17 as X. Roman and Lutheran churches count v. 3-6 as I, v. 17 as IX and X. Our division into two tables is based on Mt 22:37-39.
The explanation of the Ten Commandments is treated in catechetics and is therefore not dealt with in detail here. For a brief exegesis of the Ten Commandments on the basis of the Hebrew text, see J. Brug WLQ, Summer 2005, p. 185-209.
v. 18-21 Out of fear the people drew back, but Moses and Aaron (cf. 19:24) drew near to receive the Lord’s further commands.
v. 22-26 From the Ten Commandments the next precepts turn to the general form of divine worship in Israel.
The LORD made clear that he could not be represented by images made out of earthly material. He wanted only an altar, an elevation built up of earth or rough stones, for the purpose of bringing sacrifices. We note how men like Samuel, Gideon, and Elijah later on followed this principle. This principle did not apply to the tabernacle, where God himself gave other directives for worship.
The passage: “Wherever I cause my name to be honored, I will come and bless you” (v. 24) is said by the source critics to be in conflict with Dt 12:10-11, which provides for one centralized place of worship. Actually it does nothing of the sort. God simply says here ‑‑ in view of Israel’s further wanderings ‑‑ that not only here at Sinai, but at every place which the Lord would subsequently designate he would come to his people and bless them.
The Mosaic Law Code sets forth a summary of the immutable holy will of God in the Ten Commandments, which were embedded within this code as its basic core. The wording as formulated through Moses is not in its entirely applicable to the NT church. This is seen particularly in the words of the Third Commandment, relating to the Old Testament Sabbath as a shadow of Christ, and in the promise of the Fourth Commandment, which relates to the life in the land of Canaan.
EXODUS 21, 22, 23
“These are the laws you are to set before them”:הַמִּשְׁפָּטִים , “the judgments,” are applications of the Lord’s moral commandments to the special conditions of Israel, the rights and the judicial arrangements on which national life and society in Israel were based. The fundamental principles for regulating society were enunciated by means of specific cases (case-law) or precedents, as in many other law collections of the time.
In general, these judgments apply to the Israelites’ social positions relative to each other (21:1-23: 12) and to the Israelites’ religious position relative to the Lord (23:13-19). In a theocratic form of government this mixture of civil-religious laws was appropriate. The ceremonial law of Israel sometimes went beyond the requirements of moral law. On the other hand, the civil law of Israel does not fully incorporate all of the moral law.
At the close (23:20‑33) are assurances from the Lord that his Angel ‑‑ a manifestation of the LORD himself ‑‑ would guide and protect them. The Lord also foretells Israel’s future conquest of Canaan and warns against alliances with strange people and their gods.
Some of the specific topics covered by these regulations are conditions of servitude (21:1-11); manslaughter and bodily injury (21:12-36); protection of property (22:1-14); social responsibility (22:16-31); laws of justice and mercy (23:1-9), and finally the Sabbath and the three annual festivals (23:10-19).
Similarity to Other Ancient Law Codes
The famous law‑code of Hammurabi, discovered in 1901 on a seven-foot stele in the acropolis of Susa by Jacque de Morgan, contains 300 paragraphs of similar laws of the Babylonians dating to ca. 1700 BC, antedating Moses by 300 years. This discovery refuted the Wellhausenian claim that sophisticated law codes of this kind could not have existed at Moses’ time. At the same time, it led to the claim that the laws of Moses were copied from Mesopotamia Codes.
Subsequently similar law codes have been found going back to an even earlier time period. Among the laws compared with biblical laws are Sumerian Laws, the laws of Urukagina 2300 BC, Laws of Urnammu 2112-2095 BC, Laws of the Kingdom of Eshnunna 2300 BC-2000 BC, Lipit-Ishtar 1850 BC, Hammurabi 18th Century BC, and the Edict of Amisaduqa 17th Century BC. Those trying to place the laws of Moses into the 1st millennium BC make comparisons to latter Hittite and Assyrian Laws.
While the Hammurabi code and other ancient codes contain similarities with the Mosaic code, these have often been exaggerated. The differences are apparent in the way biblical law repeatedly stresses divine origin and authority rather than kingly authority. Significant differences are also apparent in the tone of the laws, their arrangement, and cultural background.
Similarities are due to the natural knowledge of the Law shared by all people, to the fact that there are only so many crimes and punishments, to the various codes coming from the same cultural sphere, to the common heritage of Israel and Mesopotamia, and to translators familiar with the wording of theBible producing similarities.
Key differences are that property crimes are punished more severely in Mesopotamia, in Mesopotamia intent is less important; class distinctions are more severe, there is less social compassion; and there is no spiritual motivation. In the other codes there are divinely appointed kings who make laws, rather than laws given directly by God. The other codes are civil law, not moral law. The key difference is the difference between laws reflecting the standards of unholy gods and a law reflecting the standards of the Holy God.
Miscellaneous laws
Various forms of slavery or servitude were common in all countries of the ancient Near East (21:1-6), and they are regulated in the laws of those lands.
The Mosaic law presupposes the existence of polygamy (21:10), but the Old Testament does not sanction it.
The law of retaliation (lex talionis), “eye for eye, tooth for tooth” (21:25) has often been cited as “typical of harsh Old Testament laws.” This was restricted, however, to matters of bodily harm and intended to check passionate vengeance which could result in death. It expressed the basic principle that “the punishment is proportionate to the crime.”
Discussion of Ex 21:22-25 has intensified because of the current debate over abortion. Was the offender punished only if harm was done to the mother or also if harm was done to the unborn child? The main reading of the NIV imposes the lex talionis whether the harm is done to mother or child. The NIV footnote allows that this retribution is applied only for harm to the mother. Since the Hebrew verb used here refers to birth not miscarriage, it seems the first explanation is correct.
The regulation concerning sorcery (22:18) was misapplied in the 17th century witchcraft trials in New England. We must remember that the church in the Old Testament was a civil authority, and that witchcraft in those countries was malignant and often death-dealing (compare modern Africa).
Provisions were made for the Sabbath Year, which is more fully defined in Leviticus and Deuteronomy, and also for the Sabbath Day. The humane aspect of this ordinance is emphasized (23:10-13).
The three pilgrim feasts were to maintain national, spiritual, and social unity. They were:
These feasts will be considered in more detail in the later studies of Leviticus and Deuteronomy.
“Do not cook a young goat in its mother’s milk” (23:19, Ex 34:26; Dt 14:21) seems to be an incongruous addition here. It has been much debated whether its purpose is to forbid a custom prominent in pagan worship or whether the aim is more “humanitarian” (see similar laws in Lv 22:28, Dt 22:6,7; Lv 22:27, Ex 22:29). A third view is that the verse means that a kid should not be cooked before it has been weaned. It has been widely repeated that reference to such a heathen custom has been found in a text from Ugarit, but the text in question was reconstructed to read “cook a kid in milk,” largely by prompting from the biblical text. Even when reconstructed the text said nothing about a mother’s milk. It now appears that it also says nothing about cooking or a kid, but that it refers to coriander, not a kid. This is a good example of a translator-induced similarity.
These laws also anticipated future situations, as the laws immediately following also show, since they related to Israel’s future travel and conquest.
“I will send the hornet ahead of you.” This rather cryptic statement appears in reference to Israel’s conquest of Canaan under divine leadership and warning against heathen idolatry and alliances with other nations. There are various interpretations of the hornet: Egyptian attacks on Canaan; the sting of fear, sickness, natural disasters, etc.
With Exodus 23 the Book of the Covenant was complete. It was written down by Moses on a scroll, to be read to all the people, and formally ratified as the next chapter relates.
Criminal Law
Perhaps here is the place to digress briefly about Israel’s criminal law. The main texts are Ex 21:12-27; Dt 17:10-13; Dt 19; Dt 21:1-9; and Dt 25:1-3.
The main purposes of the law were to purge evil, to deter crime, and to compensate victims (Dt 19:19-20).
The main principle of punishment was proportionate punishment (lex talionis. Ex 21:23-24). The society had a responsibility to bring criminals to justice (Dt 21:1-9). Responsibility for prosecution lay with the family not with the state. Compensation was to the victim not to the state. The offender is restored if possible (Dt 25:1-3). If not, he was removed by execution.
The main punishments were:
EXODUS 24
v. 1,2 These two verses are actually the conclusion of the Lord’s words from the preceding chapter. God gives Moses special directions in regard to the ratification of the covenant.
Nadab and Abihu (v. 1) were the two oldest sons of Aaron (6:23). Their sin of offering “unauthorized fire” (Lv 10:1-2) prevented their succession in the priesthood.
v. 3-11 The Ratification of the Covenant. Moses first of all recited the words of the covenant to the people. The people assented to it. Then Moses wrote all the words of the LORD in the Book of the Covenant.
The next day Moses erected an altar and 12 pillars representing the 12 tribes. Burnt offerings and fellowship offerings were brought to the Lord. Blood was sprinkled both on the altar and on the people, signifying the two parties involved.
Having been consecrated with the blood of the covenant, 70 elders representing the Israelites were qualified to ascend the mountain. There they “saw the God of Israel” (v. 10), receiving a visio Dei in the form described. God revealed himself not as a consuming fire, but as a gracious God communing with his people. They saw God, and they ate and drank in a covenant meal.
Edersheim calls this entire ceremony “the most important in the whole history of Israel. By this one sacrifice, never renewed, Israel was formally set apart as the people of God; and it lay at the foundation of all the sacrificial worship which followed” (Bible History, Vol. 2, p. 120).
v. 12-18 Moses, at God’s command, ascends the mountain, where the glory of the Lord (כְּבוֹד יְהוָה) envelopes the summit. Here he is to remain 40 days and 40 nights and is to receive the law on tablets of stone.
+ + + + + + + +
This concludes the second chief part of Exodus, “The Establishing of the Covenant with Israel,” and prepares us for the next section, “The Entry into the Place of the Covenant” (Chapters 25-40).
QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW (Ex 19‑24)
Apply the LORD’s picture in Ex 19:4 to Israel (see Dt 32:10‑12).
Which basic principles does the Lord express in his preamble to the Sinaitic covenant (Ex 19:5‑6)? How does this differ from the Abrahamic covenant?
Of which New Testament passage does the theme of the Sinaitic covenant remind us? What difference, however, existed in the case of God’s people in Old Testament times (confer Ga 4:1-7)?
With which words does the LORD introduce the Sinaitic Covenant? In what spirit was Israel therefore to observe God’s laws?
Which two chief parts comprise the core of the Sinaitic covenant? Give their place in Scripture. Distinguish between them.
What do the following passages tell us aboutהַדְּבָרִים : Ex 20:1; 32:15-16; 34:28.
Discuss the division into Ten Commandments, into Two Tables.
How do negative critics interpret Ex 20:24 in its distinction from the central place of worship commanded in Dt 12:10‑11? How do we explain this passage?
What provisions were made inהַמִּשְׁפָּטִים for:
a. dealing with Hebrew servants; d. personal injury
b. polygamy; e. sorcery;
c. unintentional killing; f. money lending.
How would you explain the fact that these laws seem to make exceptions from principles expressed in the moral law?
Which three important communal festivals were established at this time?
With which unusual laws are the Mishpatim brought to a close? Explain. (See also Ex 34:26 and Dt 14:12).
In what respect does the discovery of the Code of Hammurabi support Mosaic authority of the Pentateuch? What differences, however, exist between these codes?
Describe in detail the steps taken to ratify the Sinaitic covenant. Why is Ex 24:1-11 a fitting Maundy Thursday text?
CHAPTER EIGHT
AN ANALYSIS OF THE
SINAITIC OR MOSAIC LAW
The Sinai story not only tells us of the giving of a law code, but this law is called a covenant. The whole set of laws, including the ceremonial laws, is designated as a covenant. The Ten Commandments as such, written on two tables of stone, are called the tables of the covenant, Dt 4:13; 9:9. Israel broke this covenant when the Law was broken. In the daily sacrifices of Israel and in the rites of the Day of Atonement the Lord, however, provided for a constant expiation of these sins so that the covenant might stay in effect. When Israel broke the Law not merely in weakness but in open defiance, the Lord sent judgments, and Israel was led into captivity.
The Nature and Purpose of the Sinaitic or Mosaic Law
The Abrahamic covenant was all promise and nothing but promise (pure grace). The day on which Israel left Egypt was the great turning point in its history. It was the day of the initial fulfillment of God’s covenant promises to Abraham (see Gn 15:14-18). Note that in Exodus 3:6-7 God reveals himself to Moses as the covenant God, speaking of “my people.” In Exodus 6:4-8 God says: “I have remembered my covenant.” At the start of the Decalogue he reminds them that he is the LORD who brought them out of Egypt, as he had promised.
We must not lose sight of this Abrahamic covenant. It is the great antecedent of the Sinaitic covenant. Without the Abrahamic covenant the religion of the Old Testament would indeed have been an essentially different religion from that of the New Testament. We can gain a correct understanding of the Sinaitic covenant only in the light of the Abrahamic covenant. Moses was made aware of this, when he was forcefully reminded that since he was to be the mediator of the Sinaitic covenant, he and his family should bear the sign of the Abrahamic covenant (circumcision) (Exodus 4:24-28). God himself promised never to forget the Abrahamic covenant (Lv 26:40ff). When Israel walked contrary to him, he would walk contrary to Israel and bring them into the land of their enemies, but then God would remember his covenant with Jacob, Isaac, and Abraham. The Abrahamic covenant was exclusively a gospel covenant, a covenant of an unconditional gospel, an everlasting covenant. Hence it was the refuge of the Israelite whenever he realized that he could not keep the Sinaitic covenant.
During the Old Testament, God closely regulated the religious and civil life of his chosen people Israel by laws and ordinances. Paul explains the meaning of this arrangement in Ga 4:1-3 and in Ga 3:19-24. It was like a time of childhood for God’s people in which the father provides more rules and guidance for his children. When they are adults, more is left free for them. These outward rules and regulations were set aside by Christ’s first coming. They had then outlived their usefulness.
While it was in force, the law of Israel served a five-fold purpose. Three of those purposes were the same as those served by the moral law today.
The law was a mirror: it showed God’s people their continued sinfulness
The law was a curb: it restrains outbursts of sin with its threats.
The law was a rule: it guided believers by informing them of what conduct pleased God.
The law served as a hedge which kept Israel separate from the Gentiles and from losing the promise by losing their identity.
It foreshadowed the blessings of Christ by some of its provisions.
The first three uses were primarily functions of the moral law (though the threats attached to civil law also served as a curb, and violations of some ceremonial laws were also civil crimes). The last two functions were primarily functions of the ceremonial law (though adherence to moral law would also distinguish Israel from heathen nations).
Hedged in by many and various ordinances of the Law (such as the Sabbath and circumcision and dietary restrictions) the Israelites were to be a holy nation, i.e., a people set apart and kept apart from the idolatry and wickedness surrounding it and thus better fitted to keep intact and to carry forward the worship of the LORD and the gospel until the coming of the Seed. As a kingdom of priests and a holy nation, Israel was to carry forward through the ages amidst the idolatry of a pagan world the worship of the true God and his gospel of salvation and to become the cradle of him who is the salvation of mankind. Through Israel God intended to fulfill his promises of a Redeemer for all people, given in Paradise and conferred through Noah to Shem. To fulfill this purpose he called Israel into being from the seed of Abraham, the chosen son of Shem. The promise passed through Isaac, Jacob, and Judah to David, the royal father of the King of Kings.
In the sacrificial code and particularly in the ritual of the Day of Atonement Israel had a preview of the manner in which the Savior would carry out his work of redemption. When the reality came, this shadow became unnecessary (see Col 2:16ff and He 10:1).
For Israel as for us, the most important purpose of the law in the economy of salvation is as a mirror which shows us our sin. By the law is the knowledge of sin (Ro 3:20). The law entered that offense might abound (Ro 5:20). The law works wrath (Ro 4:15). By the law God concluded all under sin that the promise by faith in Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe (Ga 3:22). The waywardness of the people which manifested itself at the outset in Egypt and throughout the journey to Sinai, and of which we hear more and more in the Pentateuch and thereafter, required a discipline which would make the people realize their sins and the futility of all their own endeavors. When they had thus learned to despair of their own righteousness, the discipline of the law would make them realize the need and attractiveness of the Abrahamic covenant of pure grace which they had possessed of old.
The “Abrogation” of the Mosaic Law
“How Christians Should Regard Moses,” Luther’s Works, Word and Sacrament I, Vol. 35, p. 157-174.
“Against the Heavenly Prophets in the Matter of Images and Sacraments,” Luther’s Works, Church and Ministry II, Vol. 40, p. 79-223.
QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW (ANALYSIS OF MOSAIC LAW)
CHAPTER NINE
THE TABERNACLE
AND PRIESTLY GARMENTS (Ex 25-31)
EXODUS PART III
THE ENTRY INTO THE PLACE OF THE COVENANT (Ch. 25-40)
EXODUS 25
To give a definite external form to the covenant that he had concluded with his people and to construct a visible bond of fellowship through which he might reveal himself to the people that they might draw near to him as their God, the LORD told Moses that the Israelites were to erect a sanctuary for him, so that he could dwell in the midst of them (25:8). The construction and arrangement of this sanctuary were determined in all respects by God himself.
God himself showed Moses a pattern of the tabernacle on Mt. Sinai (cf. He 8:5), but its features, like those of the later Temple, make use of materials and styles familiar to the contemporary culture. Close parallels to the construction techniques of the Tabernacle are found in contemporary items from Egypt from the tomb of King Tut.
Wellhausen’s theory, that the tabernacle concept found its origin in late Arabic sources and was no more than the work of a post-exilic compiler, is hardly worthy of serious thought or in need of refutation, especially in the light of discoveries which contradict his arguments.
v. 1-9 The materials for the tabernacle were derived from the free-will offerings of Israel. The word “offering” in v. 2 is a “lift-offering.” The Hebrew word תְּרוּמָה is fromרוּם , “raise high,” and designates a gift that was lifted up by the priest and thus dedicated to God for his use. Here it may have a more general connotation.
The NIV correctly translates “bronze” instead of “brass” (KJV) in v. 3. The alloy brass was unknown at that time. The metal of choice was bronze, an alloy of copper and tin.
“Hides of sea cows” (תְּחָשִׁים) rather than the “badger skin” of older translations. The translation “badger skin” seems to have come from Luther’s rendering “Dachs.” Another suggestion is “porpoise skins.”
Blue, purple, and scarlet dye were very expensive. Blue and purple shades were derived from murex (mollusk) shells. Scarlet/orange shades were derived from the eggs and carcasses of a type of worm.
Fine linen is so expertly woven from flax that it can hardly be distinguished from silk.
“Acacia” is the modern replacement for the transliteration, “shittim.” Acacia is a hard wood common in the Sinai wilderness.
v. 10-22 The Ark of the Covenant (אֲרוֹן בְּרִית־יְהֹוָה / הָאָרֹן אֵת הָעֵדֻת)
אָרוֹן is not the term for Noah’s ark but the term for a chest or coffin. It was a rectangular chest of acacia wood overlaid with gold. Around the base ran a gold molding, below which at each corner were fixed gold rings. Through these rings were slipped gold plated poles for purposes of carrying the ark. The cover is referred to asכַּפֹּרֶת (Greek ἱλαστήριον; Latin propitiatorium), “an atoning covering,” also called the “mercy seat.” Mounted upon this gold slab cover were the figures of two cherubim made out of beaten gold. These figures faced each other with spread wings, as though shadowing the mercy seat. The forms of the cherubim are uncertain. In Ezekiel 1 they are part human and part animal in appearance. Into this ark Moses was to put “the testimony” (הָעֵדֻת) , the name given to the two tables of stone (v. 17).
The ark of the covenant together with the capporeth became the throne of the LORD in the midst of his chosen people. It became a throne of grace on the Day of Atonement, when through the sprinkling of blood on the mercy seat by the High Priest the LORD granted reconciliation to his people for all their transgressions.
The ark was 2 cubits long x 1 cubit high x 1 cubit wide. 1 cubit = 18-20 inches (some say it may have been as much as 25 inches).
v. 23-30 The Table of Showbread, or The Table of the Bread of the Presence (הַשֻּׁלְחַן לֶחֶם פָּנִים)
A table (שֻׁלְחָן) was made out of the same materials and also fitted with rings and staves for carrying purposes. Vessels of gold (plates for bread and pitchers and bowls for pouring out drink offerings) were to be placed upon it.
Instead of “showbread” (KJV) the NIV translates “bread of the Presence” (v. 30), since bread was to lie upon this table “in the presence of the LORD ( לֶחֶם פָּנִים‑ lit. “bread of the face”). The bread was a constant thank-offering for the Lord’s daily blessings.
v. 31-40 The Lampstand (Golden Candlestick ‑ מְנֹרַת זָהָב טָהוֹר ) consisted of a central shaft with three branches on each side. On the shaft and branches were cups shaped like almond flowers, three on each branch and four on the shaft, for ornamental purposes. On top of each branch and shaft were set oil lamps. This was the only light furnished in the Tabernacle.
The weight of this lampstand (מְנוֹרָה) was 60 kilos or 132 lbs., made of pure gold!
The symbolism of light points to Christ, the true Light (Jn 1:6‑9; 8:12). The form of the Menorah was widely used as a representation of the Tree of Life, though this symbolism is not mentioned in Exodus.
The Altar of Incense is described in Exodus 30.
EXODUS 26
v. 1-30 The Tabernacle or the Tent (מִשְׁכָּן = the dwelling, fromשָׁכַן dwell. Also called, מִקְדָּשׁ , “sanctuary,” andאֹהֶל מוֹעֵד , tent of meeting).
The dimensions of the tabernacle as a whole were 30 cubits long x 10 cubits wide x 10 cubits high. The Holy Place was 20 x 10 x 10. The Holy of Holies was a cube 10 cubits on a side. This was a very small building since it was not a church for worshipers, but a sanctuary in which priests worked. It corresponds to our chancel.
The inner covering of the tent was linen curtains (described in v. 1-6). The three successive outer coverings were made of goat hair, ram skins dyed red, and hides of sea cows (v. 7-13).
A wooden framework supported the curtains (v. 15-30). It is not agreed whether this was made of solid planks or rectangular frames. The latter seems most likely. The frames were bound together by crossbars to give stability to the structure. Most models show the tabernacle with a flat roof, but some show a pitched roof, with the curtains not reaching the ground. In the rainy season in Israel some type of pitch would be a necessity.
Bible students today differ in their understanding of many of the features of the Tabernacle. Obviously Moses knew what was meant (Ex 25:9; He 9:5).
v. 31-35 A curtain separated the Holy Place from the Most Holy Place, where the ark rested. The table and lampstand were the north side and the south side of the Holy Place respectively.
Briefly, the tabernacle symbolized God dwelling in the midst of his people and was a copy of the heavenly sanctuary (He 8:5; 9:23). The provision for sacrifices symbolized Israel’s need to approach God through mediation (He 7:23‑28; 9:1‑14). The priesthood symbolized the Great High Priest (cf. He 7:23). As to colors: white = holiness; blue = sky; purple = royalty; crimson = blood, though this is not made explicit in the text. The tabernacle with its tent-like structure has been compared to Christ, who “tented” (ἐσκήνωσεν) among us (Jn 1:14).
We should be cautious about allegorizing the details of the Tabernacle and its furnishings.
EXODUS 27
v. 1-7 The Altar of Burnt Offering (הַמִּזְבֵּחַ)
The square altar (5 cubits x 5 cubits x 3 cubits high), with horns on each corner, was to be overlaid with bronze. It was to stand in the courtyard. Interpreters are not sure whether or not his “box” was to be filled with earth when in use. The blood of the sin-offering was smeared upon the horns (Lv 4:7), and fugitives who fled to the altar laid hold on them (1 Kgs 1:50).
The grating for the altar seems to have been supported by a ledge halfway up the altar, or perhaps it was suspended from bracket that hung down from the framework (v 5). Some reconstructions of the outer ledge picture it as wide enough for the priest to stand on while working with the sacrifices, but the altar was probably approached by a ramp made of earth.
Utensils for fat, fire, and sacrificial purposes are provided for in the instructions.
v. 9-19 The Courtyard (הֲצַר הָמִּשְׁכָּן)
The courtyard dimensions were 100 cubits x 50 cubits. It was enclosed by hangings of white linen, suspended on pillars. The entrance to this courtyard was on the east side.
Keil-Delitzsch points to the significance of the courtyard this way: Although Israel was chosen to be God’s holy people, yet their fellowship with the LORD could be sustained only through mediators appointed and sanctified by God (i.e. Moses; Aaron, and the priesthood) who offered sacrifices for the people. Though the Tabernacle was separated from the common areas of the camp by a barrier, by means of the altar of burnt offering the covenant nation consecrated itself through daily sacrifices as a possession of God (p. 189-191). Israelites could bring their offerings through the gate of the sanctuary.
EXODUS 28
The opening verses (1-5) introduce the subject of garments for the priests, to be made for Aaron and his sons to give them honor and dignity.
v. 6-14 The Ephod for the High Priest (הָאֵפֹד)
This was a kind of waistcoat, elaborately embroidered, with front and back pieces joined at the shoulders by shoulder pieces (v. 7) and bound around the waist by a belt or sash (v. 8).
On each shoulder piece was an onyx stone, on which were engraved the names of the twelve tribes of Israel.
An essential part of the ephod was the next item mentioned, the breastplate.
v. 15-30 The Breastplate of Judgment (הֹשֶׁן מִשְׁפָּט)
This was a pouch, of the same material as the ephod, with four rows of precious stones, three to each row (the names of the stones are supplied, but their identity is rather uncertain, v. 17-20). There were twelve stones, one for each of the twelve tribes.
This pouch with stones was held to the ephod by means of gold chains. In this way Aaron was to bear upon his heart the sons of Israel.
Into the breast piece they were to put the Urim and Thummim (הָאוּרִים / הַתֻּמִּים) . Their purpose: “Thus Aaron will always bear the means of making decisions for the Israelites over his heart before the Lord” (v. 30).
The name Urim in Hebrew may mean “lights” or more probably “curses.” Thummim may mean “perfections.” The LXX renders these words with δήλωσις (revelation) and ἀλήθεια (truth). The Latin is Lux et Veritas. Precisely what these two objects were is uncertain. Since Urim begins with the first letter of the Hebrew alphabet and Thummin with the last, some have suggested that they were able to use the twenty-two letters of the Hebrew alphabet to spell answers, but the accounts of their use imply that they gave only yes or no answers (1 Sa 10:20-22 2 Sa 5:22-24). By asking a series of questions more complex answers could be derived.
v. 31-35 The Robe of the Ephod (מְעִיל הָאֵפוֹד)
This was a sleeveless outer garment woven of one piece of cloth. Around the edge of the knee-length skirt were woven small golden bells, and pomegranates made of twisted yarn. The sound of the bells was to warn against coming into the Lord’s presence without the proper preparation .
v. 36-38 The Headdress and Plate of Pure Gold מִצְנֶפֶת)and (צִיץ זָהָב טָהוֹר
A turban or cap of white linen, to which was affixed a gold plate on which were engraved the words HOLY TO THE LORD (קֹדֶשׁ לַיהוָה) . Thereby the High Priest could mediate the sins of the people so that the gifts they brought would be acceptable to the LORD.
v. 39-43 The Linen Tunic (הַכְּתֹנֶת שֵׁשׁ)
This was worn close to the body, beneath the ephod, reaching to the feet. The priests were also to wear line undergarments (v. 42).
EXODUS 29
This chapter relates the Lord’s directions concerning the consecration of the priests. According to Lv 8:7-9 nine acts were required for the investiture of the High Priest. These symbolic acts are here described in detail. They were to be performed on each of seven successive days (v. 37). This chapter can be fully understood, as several commentators point out, only in connection with the sacrificial laws contained in the first seven chapters of Leviticus.
The chapter concludes (v. 36-46) with the directions for the daily burnt-offering, grain-offering, and drink-offering. Every day two lambs (one in the morning and one in the evening), flour mixed with oil, and wine were to be offered to the Lord.
EXODUS 30
v. 1-10 The Altar of Incense (מִזְבֵחַ מִקְטַר קְטֹרֶת)
This small altar was placed in the Holy Place, directly in front of the veil separating this from the Holy of Holies. Only incense was to be burned on it, and this was to be done every morning and evening. On the horns of this altar Aaron was to “make atonement” once a year (v. 10, confer also Lv 17:11). Why this description is found here rather than in a preceding chapter is difficult to say.
In Scripture incense is symbolic of prayer (Ps 141:2; Lk 1:10; Re 5:8).
This altar was quite small, 2 cubits high x 1 cubit square.
v. 11-16 Atonement Money (כֶּסֶף הַכִּפֻּרִים)
Every Israelite twenty years old and above was required to pay this at the numbering of the people. All were to pay equally, because all were equal in the LORD’s sight (v. 15). It was to be for “making atonement” for their lives (v. 16), pointing to their sinfulness and reminding the people of God’s grace as their only hope of salvation.
v. 17-21 The Bronze Basin for Washing (כִּיּוֹר נְחֹשֶׁת)
This was for the cleaning of priests for the performance of their duties. It was located between the brazen altar and the tabernacle itself. No detailed description of this basin is given.
v. 22-23 Anointing Oil (שֶׁמֶן מִשְׁחַת־קֹדֶשׁ)
A perfumed oil of myrrh, cinnamon, cassia, and fragrant cane was to be prepared for consecrating the tabernacle itself, its various furnishing, and the priests who served.
v. 34-38 Incense (קְטֹרֶת)
Incense prescribed for sacred use was also carefully prescribed. Its ingredients were gum, resin, onycha, galbanum, and pure frankincense. On these materials see the note of the NIV (Concordia) Study Bible at Ex 25:6.
EXODUS 31
v. 1-11 The chief craftsmen for the tabernacle, its furnishings, and the garments were chosen by God. The chief craftsmen were Bezalel of the tribe of Judah and his chief assistant Oholiab of the tribe of Dan. It may be of interest that Hiram, Solomon’s chief artist for the temple, was also a Danite (2 Chr 2:13-14).
v. 12-17 God concludes by admonishing his people concerning the observance of the Sabbath in a most solemn manner.
References to the Sabbath as “a lasting covenant” (v. 16), a sign between God and Israel “forever” (v. 17) are to be understood as a reference to the enduring significance of the Sabbath rest. As a “shadow” of things to come, the Sabbath pointed to Christ, the Lord of the Sabbath (Mt 12:8), who by his saving work accomplished an eternal rest for the people of God. The Sabbath truly does reach into eternity. It leads finally to that eternal Sabbath which God prepared through his own resting upon completing his work of creation.
v. 18 Moses now received from the Lord the two tablets of stone on which the Decalogue was written, the “Testimony,” inscribed “by the finger of God.” The closing words are to be understood anthropomorphically. These tablets were of divine origin. They were unchanged by mouth and speech of man. They were from God – immediately and directly.
QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW (TABERNACLE / PRIESTLY GARMENTS)
FOR FURTHER STUDY
For a visual representation see The Tabernacle of God in the Wilderness of Sinai, by Paul F. Kiene and the PowerPoint that accompanies this lesson.
The following books contain interesting suggestions and speculations on the construction of the Tabernacle, but like most books of this genre, they tend to go overboard on interpreting (allegorizing) the details.
Teaching from the Tabernacle, by Roy Lee DeWitt
The Tabernacle: Its Priests and Services, by William Brown
Read the Keil-Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament, p. 182-185 for an interpretation of the symbolism of the tabernacle.
CHAPTER TEN
CALF WORSHIP,
THE COVENANT BROKEN AND RESTORED
COMPLETION OF THE TABERNACLE (Ex 32 - 40)
EXODUS 32
v. 1 “Come, make us a god” (אֱלֹהִים) is a preferable translation rather than “gods.” The Israelites seem to regard the calf as a way of visualizing and worshipping Elohim, their God. Many commentators argue, probably correctly, that the people and Aaron intended this visual deity to represent the LORD, the God of the exodus (v. 5).
Since some gods in both Egypt and Canaan were symbolized by bulls, it has been suggested that the calf was a representation of the LORD, but since bulls, lions, and other animals often served as pedestals on which the image of the deity stood, the Israelites may have excused themselves with the notion that the calf was simply a pedestal for the invisible Yahweh, not an image of him.
The amazing fact that both Israel and Aaron (v. 21) are capable of the breach of the covenant so soon after it had been so solemnly established is only partly explained by the desire to visualize the LORD. The fact that the image chosen was that of a calf seems to indicate that the external pomp and splendor of Egyptian idolatry had made a lasting but unwholesome impression on the Israelites, creating an appetite which was not entirely satisfied with the spiritual worship into which the LORD was leading them. Moses’ delay was a test. Israel failed to meet this test.
v. 2 Aaron succumbed. Perhaps he hoped to divert the people by his request for gold earrings. But if so, his cleverness was put to shame. His act was a denial of faith in the true God (Dt 9:20). He declared that the feast should be in honor of the LORD! (see the use of Tetragrammaton in v. 5!) This was syncretism at work!
Some wish to argue that not all the Israelites participated, since only 3000 were immediately punished for this sin (v. 28). This is beside the point. Whatever the case, the whole nation was responsible. God dealt with them as a whole nation, and as a community they bore collectively the guilt of a broken covenant with God (compare Achan’s sin, Jos 7). Here, too, as the Lord indicates to Moses (v. 9 and 10), his anger was directed against the entire nation.
v. 9-13 God puts the fate of Israel into the hands of the mediatorial office of Moses. Moses stands the test, as his intercession shows. In no way did he condone the sin of Israel, but bases his appeal for forgiveness on the need for upholding the honor of God and the inviolability of the promise to Abraham.
v. 14 “Then the LORD relented (נִחַם) …” Not a change of mind in the case of God, but a change in course of action in consequence of a change in the conduct of people. (See 1 Sa 15:10&35 compared with 1 Sa 15:29)
v. 19 “His anger burned …” The extent of this anger demonstrated in his breaking the stone tablets, pulverizing the image, and letting the people literally drink the results of their sin.
v. 22-24 “You know how prone these people are to evil.” Aaron’s excuse is so contemptible that Moses does not even think it worthy of reply. “I threw it into the fire, and out came this calf.” What a fatuous statement!
v. 26 “‘Whoever is for the Lord, come to me.’ And the Levites rallied to him.” The appearance and anger of Moses did not bring contrition and repentance from some of the rebellious Israelites. Many were determined to stay their course and continue to reject Moses and the LORD whom he represented. Not so the Levites. Thus the Levites showed themselves worthy of the priestly honor bestowed upon them, as Moses states in v. 29. The Levites became the peculiar possession of the LORD (Nu 3 and 4). The curse which rested upon the Levites because of their vengeance upon the Shechemites was turned into a blessing (Gn 49:7 and Dt 33:9).
v. 30-32 Moses’ great intercession: “Oh, what a great sin … But now, please forgive their sin – but if not, then blot me out of the book you have written.”
The book of the LORD is the book of life (Ps 69:28; Dn 12:1; Php 4:3; Re 3:5). To blot someone out of this book is to cut him off from the fellowship of the living God. As a true mediator Moses was ready to stake his life for the deliverance of the nation (compare also Paul in Ro 9:1-3). Moses’ life, however, could not atone for sin.
v. 33-35 The Lord accepts Moses’ intercession and promises to lead them on: “My angel will go before you.” However, God first visited a plague upon his people to serve as a warning for the future.
Notes:
But Moses does throw Israel’s case upon the mercy of God. He reminds God of his promises. He even stakes his own life on the people’s deliverance. His own personal disappointment over the fickle attitude of the people, which must have run deep, was off-set by his love for them, which ran deeper. Bengel comments: “It is not easy to estimate the love in a Moses and a Paul; for the narrow boundary of our reasoning powers does not comprehend it, as the little child is unable to comprehend the courage of warlike heroes” (Gnomon of the NT).
The next chapter continues to throw light on this as part of Moses’ character.
EXODUS 33
v. 3 “But I will not go with you.” As God had previously promised Moses that an angel would lead them onwards, here the Lord makes his threat clearer. “Angel” here obviously refers to a messenger of God, not God himself.
v. 4 The reaction of the people is overwhelming sorrow. Finally as an act of humble repentance they stripped themselves of all ornaments.
v. 7-23 What follows is a continuation of Moses’ activity as mediator. He set up a temporary sanctuary “outside the camp” (v. 7), indicating Israel’s separation from God because of their sin. Conversation with the LORD, however, was still to be carried on through this means.
The LORD appeared in a pillar of cloud at the entrance of this tent and there spoke “face to face” with Moses (v. 11). The Lord “never appeared in his own essential glory, but only in such a mode as human weakness could bear” (KD).
Moses now asks the Lord to make clear his intentions: “Are you or are you not going to lead this people as your own people to Canaan?” (v. 13)
The Lord gives assurance: “My Presence will go with you, and I will give you rest” (v. 14). Thus the covenant bond was restored.
But to banish all doubt in view of what had happened, Moses persists: “Now show me your glory” (v. 18). Calvin comments: Moses was urged to offer this request not out of curiosity or audacity, but moved by “a desire to cross the chasm which had been made by the apostasy of the nation, so that for the future he might have a firmer footing than previous history had given him.”
The LORD granted this request, “but only so far as the limit existing between the infinite and holy God and finite and sinful man allowed” (KD, p. 237) (compare v. 19 and 20). Precautions were made to protect Moses (v. 21-23). What occurred here will never be fully known. We know that no man can see God’s face and live (Jn 1:18; 6:46; 1 Tm 1:17; 1 Jn 4:12), but Moses undoubtedly did see things which human tongue can never utter. The reflection of the “glory of the Lord” was evident in Moses’ later appearance before Israel.
August Pieper comments: “We cannot comprehend God beyond the earnestness of his Law and the faithfulness of his Gospel‑promise.” The following chapter, in which the LORD proclaims his NAME, underscores this. Only in the cross of Christ are justice and mercy, law and gospel brought together and reconciled! (Romans 3)
EXODUS 34
v. 1-26 According to God’s instructions Moses ascends the mount with stone tablets to replace those that had been broken (v. 1-3).
What Moses saw we are not told, but simply the words in which the LORD proclaimed all the glory of his being (v. 5). This “sermon on the name of the Lord” as Luther calls it, proclaims that God is love, but a love in which mercy, grace, long-suffering, goodness, and truth are united with holiness and justice (v. 5-7). We recall A. Pieper’s words that only in the cross of Christ is God’s mercy and his justice reconciled.
In the following verses (v. 11-26) the duties of the covenant are once more summarized, especially the warning against every kind of alliance with the Canaanites, and instructions concerning the true worship of the LORD. Note again the conclusion of this summary in verse 26a!
v. 27-28 Moses’ writing down the fundamental conditions of the covenant was proof of its restoration.
v. 29-35 The reflection of the glory of the Lord upon the face of Moses also was a token of the reinstatement of the covenant. Paul uses this strange happening in 2 Corinthians 3 to compare the “ministry of condemnation” with the “ministry of righteousness.”
Unfortunately the translations of the KJV and of Luther convey the impression that the veil on Moses’ face served to hide this “glory” while Moses was speaking to Israel, a concession to the fears of the people who were unable to endure this splendor. The fact of the matter is (as the NIV and other translations convey) that Israel did see the Lord’s glory reflected upon the face of Moses (v. 33 and 35!).What Israel did not see was the fading of this glory, since “when Moses finished speaking with them, he put a veil over his face” (v. 33). At this time the Lord did not want Israel to see the temporary nature of the Law Covenant in its pedagogical purpose.
This glory was “done away in Christ (2 Cor 3:14), superseded by a new ministration of the Spirit.” This fact the Israel of Paul’s day failed to appreciate (A. Pieper, WLQ, 1934, p. 1).
Note: In v. 29, “that his (Moses’) face was radiant,” is the translation of a word which Jerome translated as “horn” קֶרֶן) , horn;קָרַן , shine). Michelangelo’s statue of Moses therefore depicts him with horns rather than rays coming from his head.
EXODUS 35, 36, 37, 38, 39
Now that the covenant was restored, Israel was ready for the erection of the tabernacle. Understandably the sabbath regulations were once more enjoined before this time of busy activity was to begin (35:1-3). Freewill offerings were gathered (35:19), which proved to be more than enough (36:5-7). All this took place in a spirit of spiritual devotion and with blessing (39:43). In an incredibly short period of time (Edersheim reckons “within six months”) the work was completed (Exodus 40:17).
We see here some excellent guides for stewardship. When law and gospel are proclaimed in all fullness, and when the need is clearly demonstrated to the people, freewill offerings will result in an outpouring of “more than enough” (36:5), so that the people will need to be “restrained from bringing more” (36:6). We can recommend this as a stewardship text, especially when some people wish to suggest that other means are needed to “get results.”
The record of the construction in these chapters follows the account of the instructions (Exodus Ch. 25-31) almost verbatim. This is not useless repetition, but emphasizes Israel’s careful adherence to the stipulations of the Lord. The repetition of the directions also emphasizes their restoration.
Attempts to value the previous metals used in the construction of the tabernacle, as the Wycliffe Bible Commentary points out, “do not mean much” (p. 85) because of the changing values of commodities in relationship to income. The expenditure certainly must have been enormous. Here we think of the wealth acquired from the Egyptians immediately before the departure from Egypt.
Note: In Ex 25:1 mention was made of a “heave” or a “lift-offering,” one dedicated to God for his use. In Ex 38:24 another type of offering is referred to, a “wave-offering” (תְּנוּפָה , fromנוּף which means literally “move back and forth.”) Instead of being lifted up, this offering was waved back and forth, perhaps from donor to priest and back, or from priest to the altar and back. In the case of sacrifices a portion of the meat was given back to the priest or to the donor for his use.
EXODUS 40
The setting up of the tabernacle is simply stated. It was set up for use on the first month of the second year of the exodus from Egypt (v. 17), 9½ months after the arrival at Sinai. Israel remained here an additional two months before setting out, according to Numbers 10.
“Then the cloud covered the Tent of Meeting, and the glory of the LORD filled the tabernacle” (v. 34). We understand here “tent of meeting” and “tabernacle” to be one and the same. The pillar of cloud, with which the LORD guided Israel by day, settled upon the dwelling and also filled it with the presence of the LORD. The LORD himself consecrated his sanctuary. Even Moses was unable to enter it. (Later on the cloud rested upon the ark, so that the priests were able to enter the holy place.)
So long as the cloud rested upon the tabernacle, the children of Israel remained encamped. When the cloud ascended, they broke up camp and proceeded onwards (also Nu 9:15-23).
The Glory of the LORD settling upon the tabernacle signifies that God is taking formal possession of this dwelling and associating himself with the Ark of the Covenant.
It is significant that the book of Exodus closes with a final presentation of the Glory of the LORD (v. 34-38). This expression, begun as a special manifestation of God to Abraham in Genesis 15 (although not in the same name) is resumed again in the very beginning of Exodus (ch. 3). Although the appearance in the burning bush lacks the designation, “by its form and other accompanying circumstances it can immediately be recognized as such” (August Pieper, The Glory of the Lord, p. 15). At Succoth the LORD offers a special manifestation of his providential guidance in the pillar of cloud and of fire. At the Red Sea the LORD declares: “I will gain glory through Pharaoh” (Ex 14:15, using a Niphal verb form of כָּבֵד ), which is followed by Israel’s miraculous rescue and safe passage through the sea . The expression “glory of the LORD” (כְבוֹד יְהוָה) actually appears for the first time expressis verbis in Exodus 16:7. The Lord’s promise of food in the wilderness, which later is fulfilled in the sending of manna and quails, is thus described by Moses and Aaron. From this time on the Lord reveals himself repeatedly in connection with the establishing of his covenant at Mount Sinai, and frequently this expression “glory of the LORD” occurs. Especially as the LORD manifests his presence in connection with the tabernacle do we find both the revelation and the expression itself.
For a thorough study of this expression we recommend The Glory of the LORD, which appears in the Wisconsin Lutheran Quarterly in a series of articles by Prof. August Pieper in 1933 and 1934, and has been translated into English by Pastor John Schaadt and Prof. Carl Lawrenz and has been reprinted in The Wauwatosa Theology, Vol. II, p. 417ff. Prof. Pieper, in explaining the use of this term, sets forth the relationship between God’s grace and his wrath, the distinction between law and gospel, and the meaning of Old and New Covenants in a very convincing way, at the same time contributing much to an understanding of God’s revelation in the book of Exodus.
QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW (Ex 32‑40)
FOR FURTHER STUDY
For what occasions or special applications do the following texts from Exodus lend themselves?
Ex 3:1‑5 Ex 5:19:6:1 Ex 15:22‑27 Ex 24:9‑11 Ex 36:6‑7
Ex 3:11‑15 Ex 12:1‑13 Ex 17:8‑16 Ex 32:9‑14 Ex 39:42‑43
Ex 4:1‑17 Ex 14:13‑15 Ex 18:24‑26 Ex 33:19‑20 Ex 40:34‑35
Ex 4:19‑20 Ex 15:13 Ex 19:3‑6 Ex 34:5‑8
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