Chapter 6:
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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 6
Complete Concise
Much ado there was to bring Moses to his work, and when the ice
was broken, some difficulty having occurred in carrying it on, there was no less
ado to put him forward in it. Witness this chapter, in which, I. God satisfies
Moses himself in an answer to his complaints in the close of the foregoing
chapter (v. 1). II. He gives him fuller instructions than had yet been given him
what to say to the children of Israel, for their satisfaction (v. 2-8), but to
little purpose (v. 9). III. He sends him again to Pharaoh (v. 10, 11). But Moses
objects against that (v. 12), upon which a very strict charge is given to him
and his brother to execute their commission with vigour (v. 13). IV. Here is an
abstract of the genealogy of the tribes of Reuben and Simeon, to introduce that
of Levi, that the pedigree of Moses and Aaron might be cleared (v. 14-25), and
then the chapter concludes with a repetition of so much of the preceding story
as was necessary to make way for the following chapter.
Verses 1-9
Here, I. God silences Moses's complaints with the assurance of
success in this negotiation, repeating the promise made him in ch. 3:20,
After
that, he will let you go. When Moses was at his wit's end, wishing he had
staid in Midian, rather than have come to Egypt to make bad worsewhen he was
quite at a loss what to do
Then the Lord said unto Moses, for the
quieting of his mind,
"Now shalt thou see what I will do to Pharaoh
(v. 1); now that the affair has come to a crisis, things are as bad as they can
be, Pharaoh is in the height of pride and Israel in the depth of misery, now is
my time to appear." See Ps. 12:5,
Now will I arise. Note, Man's
extremity is God's opportunity of helping and saving. Moses had been expecting
what God would do; but now he shall see what he will do, shall see his day at
length, Job 24:1. Moses had been trying what he could do, and could effect
nothing. "Well," says God, "now thou shalt see what
I will
do; let me alone to deal with this proud man," Job 40:12, 13. Note, Then
the deliverance of God's church will be accomplished, when God takes the work
into his own hands.
With a strong hand, that is, being forced to it by a
strong hand,
he shall let them go. Note, As some are brought to their
duty by the strong hand of God's grace, who are made willing in the day of his
power, so others by the strong hand of his justice, breaking those that would
not bend.
II. He gives him further instructions, that both he and the
people of Israel might be encouraged to hope for a glorious issue of this
affair. Take comfort,
1. From God's name, Jehovah, v. 2, 3. He begins with this,
I
am Jehovah, the same with,
I am that I am, the fountain of being, and
blessedness, and infinite perfection. The patriarchs knew this name, but they
did not know him in this matter by that which this name signifies. God would now
be known by his name
Jehovah, that is, (1.) A God performing what he had
promised, and so inspiring confidence in his promises. (2.) A God perfecting
what he had begun, and finishing his own work. In the history of the creation,
God is never called Jehovah till the heavens and the earth were finished, Gen.
2:4. When the salvation of the saints is completed in eternal life, then he will
be known by his name Jehovah (Rev. 22:13); in the mean time they shall find him,
for their strength and support,
El-shaddai, a God all-sufficient, a God
that is enough and will be so, Mic. 7:20.
2. From his covenant:
I have established my covenant, v.
4. Note, The covenants God makes he establishes; they are made as firm as the
power and truth of God can make them. We may venture our all upon this bottom.
3. From his compassions (v. 5):
I have heard the groaning of
the children of Israel; he means their groaning on occasion of the late
hardships put upon them. Note, God take notice of the increase of his people's
calamities, and observes how their enemies grow upon them.
4. From his present resolutions, v. 6-8. Here is line upon line,
to assure them that they should be brought triumphantly out of Egypt (v. 6), and
should be put in possession of the land of Canaan (v. 8):
I will bring you
out. I will rid you. I will redeem you. I will bring you into the land of
Canaan, and
I will give it to you. Let man take the shame of his
unbelief, which needs such repetitions; and let God have the glory of his
condescending grace, which gives us such repeated assurances for our
satisfaction.
5. From his gracious intentions in all these, which were great,
and worthy of him, v. 7. (1.) He intended their happiness:
I will take you to
me for a people, a peculiar people, and
I will be to you a God; more
than this we need not ask, we cannot have, to make us happy. (2.) He intended
his own glory:
You shall know that I am the Lord. God will attain his own
ends, nor shall we come short of them if we make them our chief end too. Now,
one would think, these good words, and comfortable words, should have revived
the drooping Israelites, and cause them to forget their misery; but, on the
contrary, their miseries made them regardless of God's promises (v. 9):
They
harkened not unto Moses for anguish of spirit. That is, [1.] They were so
taken up with their troubles that they did not heed him. [2.] They were so cast
down with their late disappointment that they did not believe him. [3.] They had
such a dread of Pharaoh's power and wrath that they durst not themselves move
in the least towards their deliverance. Note,
First, Disconsolate spirits
often put from them the comforts they are entitled to, and stand in their own
light. See Isa. 28:12.
Secondly, Strong passions oppose strong
consolations. By indulging ourselves in discontent and fretfulness, we deprive
ourselves of the comfort we might have both from God's word and from his
providence, and must thank ourselves if we go comfortless.
Verses 10-13
Here, I. God sends Moses the second time to Pharaoh (v. 11) upon
the same errand as before, to command him, at his peril, that he
let the
children of Israel go. Note, God repeats his precepts before he begins his
punishments. Those that have often been called in vain to leave their sins must
yet be called again and again, whether they will hear or whether they will
forbear, Eze. 3:11. God is said to
hew sinners by his prophets (Hos.
6:5), which denotes the repetition of the strokes.
How often would I have
gathered you?
II. Moses makes objections, as one discouraged, and willing to
give up the cause, v. 12. He pleads, 1. The unlikelihood of Pharaoh's hearing:
"Behold the children of Israel have not hearkened unto me; they give
no heed, no credit, to what I have said; how then can I expect that Pharaoh
should hear me? If the anguish of their spirit makes them deaf to that which
would compose and comfort them, much more will the anger of his spirit, his
pride and insolence, make him deaf to that which will but exasperate and provoke
him." If God's professing people hear not his messengers, how can it be
thought that his professed enemy should? Note, The frowardness and
untractableness of those that are called Christians greatly discourage
ministers, and make them ready to despair of success in dealing with those that
are atheistical and profane. We would be instrumental to unite Israelites, to
refine and purify them, to comfort and pacify them; but, if they hearken not to
us, how shall we prevail with those in whom we cannot pretend to such an
interest? But with God all things are possible. 2. He pleads the unreadiness and
infirmity of his own speaking:
I am of uncircumcised lips; it is
repeated, v. 30. He was conscious to himself that he had not the gift of
utterance, had no command of language; his talent did not lie that way. To this
objection God had given a sufficient answer before, and therefore he ought not
to have insisted upon it, for the sufficiency of grace can supply the defects of
nature at any time. Note, Though our infirmities ought to humble us, yet they
ought not to discourage us from doing our best in any service we have to do for
God. His strength is made perfect in our weakness.
III. God again joins Aaron in commission with Moses, and puts an
end to the dispute by interposing his own authority, and giving them both a
solemn charge, upon their allegiance to their great Lord, to execute it with all
possible expedition and fidelity. When Moses repeats his baffled arguments, he
shall be argued with no longer, but God gives him a charge, and Aaron with him,
both to the children of Israel and to Pharaoh, v. 13. Note, God's authority is
sufficient to answer all objections, and binds us to obedience, without
murmuring or disputing, Phil. 2:14. Moses himself has need to be charged, and so
has Timothy, 1 Tim. 6:13; 2 Tim. 4:1.
Verses 14-30
I. We have here a genealogy, not an endless one, such as the
apostle condemns (1 Tim. 1:4), for it ends in those two great patriots Moses and
Aaron, and comes in here to show that they were Israelites, bone of their bone
and flesh of their flesh whom they were sent to deliver, raised up unto them of
their brethren, as Christ also should be, who was to be the prophet and priest,
the Redeemer and lawgiver, of the people of Israel, and whose genealogy also,
like this, was to be carefully preserved. The heads of the houses of three of
the tribes are here named, agreeing with the accounts we had, Gen. 46. Dr.
Lightfoot thinks that Reuben, Simeon, and Levi, are thus dignified here by
themselves for this reason, because they were left under marks of infamy by
their dying father, Reuben for his incest and Simeon and Levi for their murder
of the Shechemites; and therefore Moses would put this particular honour upon
them, to magnify God's mercy in their repentance and remission, as a pattern
to those that should afterwards believe: the two former seem rather to be
mentioned only for the sake of a third, which was Levi, from whom Moses and
Aaron descended, and all the priests of the Jewish church. Thus was the tribe of
Levi distinguished betimes. Observe here, 1. That Kohath, from whom Moses and
Aaron, and all the priests, derived their pedigree, was a younger son of Levi,
v. 16. Note, The grants of God's favours do not go by seniority of age and
priority of birth, but the divine sovereignty often prefers the younger before
the elder, so crossing hands. 2. That the ages of Levi, Kohath, and Amram, the
father, grandfather, and great grandfather, of Moses, are here recorded; they
all lived to a great age, Levi to 137, Kohath to 133, and Amram to 137. Moses
himself came much short of them, and fixed seventy or eighty for the ordinary
stretch of human life (Ps. 90:10); for now that God's Israel was multiplied
and had become a great nation, and divine revelation was by the hand of Moses
committed to writing and no longer trusted to tradition, the two great reasons
for the long lives of the patriarchs had ceased, and therefore henceforward
fewer years must serve men. 3. That Aaron married Elisheba (the same name with
that of the wife of Zecharias, Elizabeth, as Miriam is the same with Mary),
daughter of Amminadab, one of the chief of the fathers of the tribe of Judah;
for the tribes of Levi and Judah often intermarried, v. 23. 4. It must not be
omitted that Moses has recorded the marriage of his father Amram with Jochebed
his own aunt (v. 20); and it appears by Num. 26:59 that it must be taken
strictly for his father's own sister, at least by the half blood. This
marriage was afterwards forbidden as incestuous (Lev. 18:12), which might be
looked upon as a blot upon his family, though before that law; yet Moses does
not conceal it, for he sought not his own praise, but wrote with a sincere
regard to truth, whether it smiled or frowned upon him. 5. He concludes it with
a particular mark of honour on the persons he is writing of, though he himself
was one of them, v. 26, 27. These are
that Moses and Aaron whom God
pitched upon to be his plenipotentiaries in this treaty. These were those to
whom
God spoke (v. 26), and who
spoke to Pharaoh on Israel's
behalf, v. 27. Note, Communion with God and serviceableness to his church are
things that, above any other, put true honour upon men. Those are great indeed
with whom God converses and whom he employs on his service. Such were that Moses
and Aaron; and something of this honour have all his saints, who are made to our
God kings and priests.
II. In the close of the chapter Moses returns to his narrative,
from which he had broken off somewhat abruptly (v. 13), and repeats, 1. The
charge God had given him to deliver his message to Pharaoh (v. 29):
Speak all
that I say unto thee, as a faithful ambassador. Note, Those that go on God's
errand must not shun to declare
the whole counsel of God. 2. His
objection against it, v. 30. Note, Those that have at any time spoken
unadvisedly with their lips ought often to reflect upon it with regret, as Moses
seems to do here.
Chapter 6:
| 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
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
Ruth
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
1 Chronicles
2 Chronicles
Ezra
Nehemiah
Esther
Job
Psalm
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
Jeremiah
Lamentations
Ezekiel
Daniel
Hosea
Joel
Amos
Obadiah
Jonah
Micah
Nahum
Habakkuk
Zephaniah
Haggai
Zechariah
Malachi
Matthew
Mark
Luke
John
Acts
Romans
1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
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