Chapter 10:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 Genesis Leviticus
Exodus 10
Complete Concise
The eighth and ninth of the plagues of Egypt, that of locusts
and that of darkness, are recorded in this chapter. I. Concerning the plague of
locusts, 1. God instructs Moses in the meaning of these amazing dispensations of
his providence (v. 1, 2). 2. He threatens the locusts (v. 3-6). 3. Pharaoh, at
the persuasion of his servants, is willing to treat again with Moses (v. 7-9),
but they cannot agree (v. 10, 11). 4. The locusts come (v. 12-15). 5. Pharaoh
cries PeccaviI have offended (v. 16, 17), whereupon Moses prays for the
removal of the plague, and it is done; but Pharaoh's heart is still hardened
(v. 18-20). II. Concerning the plague of darkness, 1. It is inflicted (v. 21-23).
2. Pharaoh again treats with Moses about a surrender, but the treaty breaks off
in a heat (v. 26, etc.).
Verses 1-11
Here, I. Moses is instructed. We may well suppose that he, for
his part, was much astonished both at Pharaoh's obstinacy and at God's
severity, and could not but be compassionately concerned for the desolations of
Egypt, and at a loss to conceive what this contest would come to at last. Now
here God tells him what he designed, not only Israel's release, but the
magnifying of his own name:
That thou mayest tell in thy writings, which
shall continue to the world's end,
what I have wrought in Egypt, v. 1,
2. The ten plagues of Egypt must be inflicted, that they may be recorded for the
generations to come as undeniable proofs, 1. Of God's overruling power in the
kingdom of nature, his dominion over all the creatures, and his authority to use
them either as servants to his justice or sufferers by it, according to the
counsel of his will. 2. Of God's victorious power over the kingdom of Satan,
to restrain the malice and chastise the insolence of his and his church's
enemies. These plagues are standing monuments of the greatness of God, the
happiness of the church, and the sinfulness of sin, and standing monitors to the
children of men in all ages not to
provoke the Lord to jealousy nor to
strive
with their Maker. The benefit of these instructions to the world
sufficiently balances the expense.
II. Pharaoh is reproved (v. 3):
Thus saith the Lord God of
the poor, despised, persecuted, Hebrews,
How long wilt thou refuse to
humble thyself before me? Note, It is justly expected from the greatest of
men that they humble themselves before the great God, and it is at their peril
if they refuse to do it. This has more than once been God's quarrel with
princes. Belshazzar did not humble his heart, Dan. 5:22. Zedekiah humbled not
himself before Jeremiah, 2 Chr. 36:12. Those that will not humble themselves God
will humble. Pharaoh had sometimes pretended to humble himself, but no account
was made of it, because he was neither sincere nor constant in it.
III. The plague of locusts is threatened, v. 4-6. The hail had
broken down the fruits of the earth, but these locusts should come and devour
them: and not only so, but they should fill their houses, whereas the former
inroads of these insects had been confined to their lands. This should be much
worse than all the calamities of that king which had ever been known. Moses,
when he had delivered his message, not expecting any better answer than he had
formerly,
turned himself and went out from Pharaoh, v. 6. Thus Christ
appointed his disciples to depart from those who would not receive them, and to
shake
off the dust of their feet for a testimony against them; and ruin is not far
off from those who are thus justly abandoned by the Lord's messengers, 1 Sa.
15:27, etc.
IV. Pharaoh's attendants, his ministers of state, or privy-counsellors,
interpose, to persuade him to come to some terms with Moses, v. 7. They, as in
duty bound, represent to him the deplorable condition of the kingdom
(Egypt
is destroyed), and advise him by all means to release his prisoners
(Let
the men go); for Moses, they found, would be a snare to them till it was
done, and it were better to consent at first than to be compelled at last. The
Israelites had become a burdensome stone to the Egyptians, and now, at length,
the princes of Egypt were willing to be rid of them, Zec. 12:3. Note, It is a
thing to be regretted (and prevented, if possible) that a whole nation should be
ruined for the pride and obstinacy of its princes,
Salus populi suprema lexTo
consult the welfare of the people is the first of laws.
V. A new treaty is, hereupon, set on foot between Pharaoh and
Moses, in which Pharaoh consents for the Israelites to go into the wilderness to
do sacrifice; but the matter in dispute was who should go, v. 8. 1. Moses
insists that they should take their whole families, and all their effects, along
with them, v. 9. note, Those that serve God must serve him with all they have.
Moses pleads, "We must hold a feast, therefore we must have our families to
feast with, and our flocks and herds to feast upon, to the honour of God."
2. Pharaoh will by no means grant this: he will allow the men to go, pretending
that this was all they desired, though this matter was never yet mentioned in
any of the former treaties; but, for the
little ones, he resolves to keep
them as hostages, to oblige them to return, v. 10, 11. In a great passion he
curses them, and threatens that, if they offer to remove their little ones, they
will do it at their peril. Note, Satan does all he can to hinder those that
serve God themselves from bringing their children in to serve him. He is a sworn
enemy to early piety, knowing how destructive it is to the interests of his
kingdom; whatever would hinder us from engaging our children to the utmost in
God's service, we have reason to suspect the hand of Satan in it. 3. The
treaty, hereupon, breaks off abruptly; those that before went out from Pharaoh's
presence (v. 6) were now driven out. Those will quickly hear their doom that
cannot bear to hear their duty. See 2 Chr. 25:16.
Quos Deus destruet eos
dementatWhom God intends to destroy he delivers up to infatuation. Never
was man so infatuated to his own ruin as Pharaoh was.
Verses 12-20
Here is, I. The invasion of the land by the locusts
God's
great army, Joel 2:11. God bids
Moses stretch out his hand (v. 12),
to beckon them, as it wee (for they came at a call), and he
stretched forth
his rod, v. 13. Compare ch. 9:22 23. Moses ascribes it to the stretching
out, not of his own hand, but the
rod of God, the instituted sign of God's
presence with him. The locusts obey the summons, and fly upon the wings of the
wind, the east wind, and
caterpillars without number, as we are told, Ps.
105:34, 35. A formidable army of horse and foot might more easily have been
resisted than this host of insects. Who then is able to stand before the great
God?
II. The desolations they made in it (v. 15): They
covered the
face of the earth, and
ate up the fruit of it. The earth God has
given
to the children of men; yet, when God pleases, he can disturb their
possession and send locusts and caterpillars to force them out. Herbs grow
for
the service of man; yet, when God pleases, those contemptible insects shall
not only be fellow-commoners with him, but shall plunder him, and eat the bread
out of his mouth. Let our labour be, not for the habitation and meat which thus
lie exposed, but for those which
endure to eternal life, which cannot be
thus invaded, nor thus corrupted.
III. Pharaoh's admission, hereupon, v. 16, 17. He had driven
Moses and Aaron from him (v. 11), telling them (it is likely) he would have no
more to do with them. But now he calls for them again in all haste, and makes
court to them with as much respect as before he had dismissed them with disdain.
Note, The day will come when those who set at nought their counsellors, and
despise all their reproofs, will be glad to make an interest in them and engage
them to intercede on their behalf. The foolish virgins court the wise to
give
them of their oil; and see Ps. 141:6. 1. Pharaoh confesses his fault:
I
have sinned against the Lord your God, and against you. He now sees his own
folly in the slights and affronts he had put on God and his ambassadors, and
seems
at least, to repent of it. When God convinces men of sin, and humbles them for
it, their contempt of God's ministers, and the word of the Lord in their
mouths, will certainly come into the account, and lie heavily upon their
consciences. Some think that when Pharaoh said, "The LORD
your God,"
he did in effect say, "The LORD shall not be
my God." Many
treat with God as a potent enemy, whom they are willing not to be at war with,
but care not for treating with him as their rightful prince, to whom they are
willing to submit with loyal affection. True penitents lament sin as committed
against God, even their own God, to whom they stand obliged. 2. He begs pardon,
not of God, as penitents ought, but of Moses, which was more excusable in him,
because, by a special commission, Moses was made a
god to Pharaoh, and
whosesoever
sins he remitted they were forgiven; when he prays,
Forgive this once,
he, in effect, promises not to offend in like manner any more, yet seems loth to
express that promise, nor does he say any thing particularly of letting the
people go. Note, Counterfeit repentance commonly cheats men with general
promises and is loth to covenant against particular sins. 3. He entreats Moses
and Aaron to pray for him. There are those who, in distress, implore the help of
other persons' prayers, but have no mind to pray for themselves, showing
thereby that they have no true love to God, nor any delight in communion with
him. Pharaoh desires their prayers
that this death only might be taken
away, not
this sin: he deprecates the plague of locusts, not the plague
of a hard heart, which yet was much the more dangerous.
IV. The removal of the judgment, upon the prayer of Moses, v.
18, 19. This was, 1. As great an instance of the power of God as the judgment
itself. An east wind brought the locusts, and now a west wind carried them off.
Note, Whatever point of the compass the wind is in, it is fulfilling God's
word, and turns about by his counsel. The
wind bloweth where it listeth,
as it respects any control of ours; not so as it respects the control of God: he
directeth it under the whole heaven. 2. It was as great a proof of the
authority of Moses, and as firm a ratification of his commission and his
interest in that God who both
makes peace and
creates evil, Isa.
45:7. Nay, hereby he not only commanded the respect, but recommended himself to
the good affections of the Egyptians, inasmuch as, while the judgment came in
obedience to his summons, the removal of it was in answer to his prayers. He
never desired the woeful day, though he threatened it. His commission indeed ran
against Egypt, but his intercession was for it, which was a good reason why they
should love him, though they feared him. 3. It was also as strong an argument
for their repentance as the judgment itself; for by this it appeared that God is
ready to forgive, and swift to show mercy. If he turn away a particular
judgment, as he did often from Pharaoh, or defer it, as in Ahab's case, upon
the profession of repentance and the outward tokens of humiliation, what will he
do if we be sincere, and how welcome will true penitents be to him! O that this
goodness of God might lead us to repentance!
V. Pharaoh's return to his impious resolution again not to let
the people go (v. 20), through the righteous hand of God upon him, hardening his
heart, and confirming him in his obstinacy. Note, Those that have often baffled
their convictions, and stood it out against them, forfeit the benefit of them,
and are justly given up to those lusts of their own hearts which (how strong
soever their convictions) prove too strong for them.
Verses 21-29
Here is, I. The plague of darkness brought upon Egypt, and a
most dreadful plague it was, and therefore is put first of the ten in Ps.
105:28, though it was one of the last; and in the destruction of the spiritual
Egypt it is produced by the fifth vial, which is poured out upon the
seat of
the beast, Rev. 16:10.
His kingdom was full of darkness. Observe
particularly concerning this plague, 1. That it was a total darkness. We have
reason to think, not only that the lights of heaven were clouded, but that all
their fires and candles were put out by the damps or clammy vapours which were
the cause of this darkness; for it is said (v. 23), They
saw not one another.
It is threatened to the wicked (Job 18:5, 6) that the
spark of his fire shall
not shine (even
the sparks of his own kindling, as they are called,
Isa. 50:11), and that the
light shall be dark in his tabernacle. Hell is
utter
darkness. The light of
a candle shall shine no more at all in thee,
Rev. 18:23. 2. That it was darkness which
might be felt (v. 21), felt in
its
causes by their fingers' ends (so thick were the fogs), felt in its
effects, some think, by their eyes, which were pricked with pain, and
made the more sore by their rubbing them. Great pain is spoken of as the effect
of that darkness, Rev. 16:10, which alludes to this. 3. No doubt it astonished
and terrified them. The cloud of locusts, which had
darkened the land (v.
15), was nothing to this. The tradition of the Jews is that in this darkness
they were terrified by the apparitions of evil spirits, or rather by dreadful
sounds and murmurs which they made, or (which is no less frightful) by the
horrors of their own consciences; and this is the plague which some think is
intended (for, otherwise, it is not mentioned at all there) Ps. 78:49,
He
poured upon them the fierceness of his anger, by sending evil angels among them;
for to those to whom the devil has been a deceiver he will, at length, be a
terror. 4. It continued three days,
six nights (says bishop Hall)
in
one; so long they were imprisoned by those chains of darkness, and the most
lightsome palaces were perfect dungeons. No
man rose from his place, v.
23. They were all confined to their houses; and such a terror seized them that
few of them had the courage to go from the chair to the bed, or from the bed to
the chair. Thus were they
silent in darkness, 1 Sa. 2:9. Now Pharaoh had
time to consider, if he would have improved it. Spiritual darkness is spiritual
bondage; while Satan blinds men's eyes that they see not, he binds them hands
and feet that they work not for God, nor move towards heaven. They
sit in
darkness. 5. It was a righteous thing with God thus to punish them. Pharaoh
and his people had rebelled against the light of God's word, which Moses spoke
to them; justly therefore are they punished with darkness, for they loved it and
chose it rather. The blindness of their minds brings upon them this darkness of
the air. Never was mind so blinded as Pharaoh's, never was air so darkened as
Egypt's. The Egyptians by their cruelty would have extinguished the lamp of
Israel, and quenched their coal; justly therefore does God put out their lights.
Compare it with the punishment of the Sodomites, Gen. 19:11. Let us dread the
consequences of sin; if three days' darkness was so dreadful, what will
everlasting darkness be? 6. The children of Israel, at the same time, had
light
in their dwellings (v. 23), not only in the land of Goshen, where most of
them dwelt, but in the habitations of those who were dispersed among the
Egyptians: for that some of them were thus dispersed appears from the
distinction afterwards appointed to be put on their door-posts, ch. 12:7. This
is an instance, (1.) Of the power of God above the ordinary power of nature. We
must not think that we share in common mercies as a matter of course, and
therefore that we owe no thanks to God for them; he could distinguish, and
withhold that from us which he grants to other. He does indeed ordinarily make
his sun to shine on the just and unjust; but he could make a difference, and we
must own ourselves indebted to his mercy that he does not. (2.) Of the
particular favour he bears to his people: they
walk in the light when
others
wander endlessly
in thick darkness; wherever there is an
Israelite indeed, though in this dark world, there is light, there is a
child
of light, one for whom
light is sown, and whom the
day-spring from
on high visits. When God made this difference between the Israelites and the
Egyptians, who would not have preferred the poorest cottage of an Israelite to
the finest palace of an Egyptian? There is still a real difference, though not
so discernible a one, between the house of the wicked, which is under a curse,
and the habitation of the just, which is blessed, Prov. 3:33. We should believe
in that difference, and govern ourselves accordingly. Upon Ps. 105:28,
He
sent darkness and made it dark, and they rebelled not against his word, some
ground a conjecture that, during these three days of darkness, the Israelites
were circumcised, in order to their celebrating the passover which was now
approaching, and that the command which authorized this was the word against
which they rebelled not; for their circumcision, when they entered Canaan, is
spoken of as a second general circumcision, Jos. 5:2. During these three days of
darkness to the Egyptians, if God had so pleased, the Israelites, by the light
which they had, might have made their escape, and without asking leave of
Pharaoh; but God would bring them out
with a high hand, and not by
stealth, nor in haste, Isa. 52:12.
II. Here is the impression made upon Pharaoh by this plague,
much like that of the foregoing plagues. 1. It awakened him so far that he
renewed the treaty with Moses and Aaron, and now, at length, consented that they
should take their little ones with them, only he would have their cattle left in
pawn, v. 24. It is common for sinners thus to bargain with God Almighty. Some
sins they will leave, but not all; they will leave their sins for a time, but
they will not bid them a final farewell; they will allow him some share in their
hearts, but the world and the flesh must share with him: thus they mock God, but
they deceive themselves. Moses resolves not to abate in his terms:
Our cattle
shall go with us, v. 26. Note, The terms of reconciliation are so fixed that
though men dispute them ever so long they cannot possibly alter them, nor bring
them lower. We must come up to the demands of God's will, for we cannot expect
he should condescend to the provisos of our lusts. God's messengers must
always be bound up by that rule (Jer. 15:19),
Let them return unto thee, but
return not thou unto them. Moses gives a very good reason why they must take
their cattle with them; they must go to do sacrifice, and therefore they must
take wherewithal. What numbers and kinds of sacrifices would be required they
did not yet know, and therefore they must take all they had. Note, With
ourselves, and our children, we must devote all our worldly possessions to the
service of God, because we know not what use God will make of what we have, nor
in what way we may be called upon to honour God with it. 2. Yet it exasperated
him so far that, when he might not make his own terms, he broke off the
conference abruptly, and took up a resolution to treat no more. Wrath now came
upon him to the utmost, and he became outrageous beyond all bounds, v. 28. Moses
is dismissed in anger, forbidden the court upon pain of death, forbidden so much
as to meet Pharaoh any more, as he had been used to do, by the river's side:
In
that day thou seest my face, thou shalt die. Prodigious madness! Had he not
found that Moses could plague him without seeing his face? Or had he forgotten
how often he had sent for Moses as his physician to heal him and ease him of his
plagues? and must he now be bidden to come near him no more? Impotent malice! To
threaten him with death who was armed with such a power, and at whose mercy he
had so often laid himself. What will not hardness of heart and contempt of God's
word and commandments bring men to? Moses takes him at his word (v. 29):
I
will see thy face no more, that is, "after this time;" for this
conference did not break off till ch. 11:8, when Moses went out
in a great
anger, and told Pharaoh how soon he would change his mind, and his proud
spirit would come down, which was fulfilled (ch. 12:31), when Pharaoh became a
humble supplicant to Moses to depart. So that, after this interview, Moses came
no more, till he was sent for. Note, When men drive God's word from them he
justly permits their delusions, and answers them according to the multitude of
their idols. When the Gadarenes desired Christ to depart, he presently left
them.
Chapter 10:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 Genesis Leviticus
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