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Exodus Chapter
Fourteen
New King James Version
(NKJV)
INTRODUCTION TO
EXODUS 14
This chapter begins with directions
of God to Moses, to be given to the children of Israel about the course they
were to steer in their journey, with the reason thereof, Exodus 14:1, which
they observing, a report was brought to Pharaoh that they were fled, and this
determined him and his servants to get ready and pursue after them, as they did
with a great army, Exodus 14:5, which
when the Israelites saw, it put them in great fear, and set them to murmuring
and complaining against Moses for bringing them out of Egypt, Exodus 14:10, who
desired them to be still and quiet, and they should see the salvation of the
Lord, Exodus 14:13, and
he is bid to order the people to go on in their journey, and to take his rod
and stretch it over the sea and divide it, that Israel might pass through it on
dry ground, and the Egyptians follow them, whereby God would be honoured and
glorified, Exodus 14:15, upon
which the Angel of the Lord in a pillar of cloud removed from before there, and
went behind them for their protection, Exodus 14:19, and
Moses stretching out his hand over the sea, and a strong east wind blowing upon
it, the waters divided and the Israelites went into it, and the Egyptians
followed them, but their host being troubled by the Lord, and their chariot
wheels taken off, they found themselves in great danger, and were thrown into a
panic, Exodus 14:20 and
upon Moses's stretching out his hand again over the sea, the waters returned,
and Pharaoh and his host were drowned, but the Israelites passed through
safely, as on dry land, Exodus 14:26, which
great work of the Lord being observed by them, influenced their fear of him,
their faith in him and his servant Moses, Exodus 14:30.
Exodus 14:1 Now the Lord spoke to
Moses, saying:
YLT 1And Jehovah speaketh unto Moses, saying,
And the Lord
spake unto Moses,.... Out of the pillar of the cloud in which he went before them;
either while they were at Etham, or when journeying from thence, and a little
before they turned off to the right, as they were now directed:
saying; as follows:
Exodus 14:2 2 “Speak to the children of
Israel, that they turn and camp before Pi Hahiroth, between Migdol and the sea,
opposite Baal Zephon; you shall camp before it by the sea.
YLT 2`Speak unto the sons of Israel, and they turn
back and encamp before Pi-Hahiroth, between Migdol and the sea, before
Baal-Zephon; over-against it ye do encamp by the sea,
Speak unto the
children of Israel, that they turn,.... Not return to Egypt,
or to the place, or towards the place from whence they came, but turn off, out
of the road in which they were; for, as a late traveller saysF1Dr.
Shaw's Travels, p. 307. Ed. 2. ,"there were two roads, through which the
Israelites might have been conducted from Cairo (which he supposes may be
Rameses) to Pihahiroth. One of them lies through the valleys, as they are now
called, of Jendily, Rumaleah, and Baideah, bounded on each side by the
mountains of the lower Thebais; the other lies higher, having the northern
range of these mountains (the mountains of Mocattee) running parallel with it
on the right hand, and the desert of the Egyptian Arabia, which lies all the
way open to the land of the Philistines, on the left, (see Exodus 13:17) about
the middle of this range we may turn short on our right hand into the valley of
Baideah, through a remarkable breach or discontinuation, in which we afterwards
continued to the very banks of the Red sea; this road then, through the valley
of Baideah, which is some hours longer than the other open road, which leads
directly from Cairo to Suez, was in all probability the very road which the
Israelites took to Pihahiroth, on the banks of the Red sea.'And again he saysF2lb.
p. 309. , this valley ends at the sea in a small bay, made by the eastern
extremities of the mountains, and is called "Tiah beni Israel", i.e.
the road of the Israelites, from a tradition of the Arabs, of their having
passed through it; as it is also called Baideah from the new and unheard of
miracle that was wrought near it, by dividing the Red sea, and destroying
therein Pharaoh, his chariots and horsemen:
and encamp
before Pihahiroth: which was sixteen miles from EthamF3Bunting's
Travels, p. 82. , and by someF4See the Universal History, vol. 3. p.
387. thought to be the same with the city of Heroes (or Heroopolis), on the
extreme part of the Arabic gulf, or the Phagroriopolis, placed by StraboF5Geograph.
l. 17. p. 553. near the same place: according to the above travellerF6Shaw,
ib. p. 310. , Pihahiroth was the mouth, or the most advanced part of the valley
of Baideah to the eastward toward the Red sea; with which Jarchi in some
measure agrees, who says Pihahiroth is Pithom, now so called, because the
Israelites became free: they (Hahiroth) are two rocks, and the valley between
them is called (Pi) the mouth of the rocks: so Dr. Shaw observesF7;
the word may be deduced from חר, "a hole"
or "gullet", and by a latitude common in those cases, be rendered a
narrow "defile", road or passage, such as the valley of Baideah has
been described: but as the Israelites were properly delivered at this place
from their captivity and fear of the Egyptians, Exodus 14:13 we may
rather suppose that Hhiroth denotes the place where they were restored to their
liberty; as Hhorar and Hhiroth are words of the like sort in the Chaldee: but
another very learned manF8Jablonski de Terra Goshen, Dissert. 5.
sect. 9. says, that in the Egyptian language Pihahiroth signifies a place where
grew great plenty of grass and herbs, and was contiguous to the Red sea, and
was like that on the other shore of the sea, the Arabian, which Diodorus
SiculusF9Bibliothec. c. 3. p. 175. speaks of as a pleasant green
field:
between Migdol
and the sea; which signifies a tower, and might be one: there was a city of
this name in Egypt, and in those parts, but whether the same with this is not
certain, Jeremiah 44:1.
over against
Baalzephon; which the Targums of Jonathan and Jerusalem take to be an
"idol": and so does Jarchi, and say it was the only one left of the
idols of Egypt; see Exodus 12:12 and so
some Christian as well as Jewish writers suppose it to be; and that it was as a
watch, or guard, or amulet, to keep fugitives from going out of the land: but
by Ezekiel the tragedianF11Apud Euseb. Praepar. Evangel. l. 9. c.
29. p. 444. it is called a city; and so by JosephusF12Antiqu. l. 2.
c. 15. sect. 1. , who says they came to Baalzephon the third day, a place
situated by the Red sea; which is most likely, and it is highly probable that
this and Migdol were two fortified places, which guarded the mouth of the
valley, or the straits which led to the Red sea: ArtapanusF13Apud
Euseb. ib. c. 27. p. 436. the Heathen historian agrees with Josephus in saying
it was the third day when they came to the Red sea:
before it shall
ye encamp by the sea; and there wait till Pharaoh came up to them.
Exodus 14:3 3 For Pharaoh will say of
the children of Israel, ‘They are bewildered by the land; the wilderness
has closed them in.’
YLT 3and Pharaoh hath said of the sons of Israel,
They are entangled in the land, the wilderness hath shut upon them;
For Pharaoh
will say of the children of Israel,.... The Septuagint
version adds, "to his people", his ministers and courtiers, when he
hears where they are:
they are
entangled in the land; have lost their way, and got into places they cannot easily get
out of, and are perplexed in their minds, and do not know what way to take or
course to steer:
the wilderness
hath shut them in; or, "shut up the way to them"F14סגר עליהם "clausit viam
illis", Pagninus, "praeclusit sese illis", Vatablus. ; the
wilderness between the mountains the above mentioned traveller speaks ofF15Dr.
Shaw's Travels, p. 309. Ed. 2. the mountains of Gewoubee; these would stop
their flight or progress to the southward, as those of the Attackah would do
the same towards the land of the Philistines; the Red sea likewise lay before
them to the east, while Pharaoh (could) close up the valley behind them, with
his chariots and his horsemen; and which, no doubt, appeared very advantageous
and encouraging to him, as it must be very distressing to the Israelites.
Exodus 14:4 4 Then I will harden
Pharaoh’s heart, so that he will pursue them; and I will gain honor over
Pharaoh and over all his army, that the Egyptians may know that I am the
Lord.” And they did
so.
YLT 4and I have strengthened the heart of Pharaoh,
and he hath pursued after them, and I am honoured on Pharaoh, and on all his
force, and the Egyptians have known that I [am] Jehovah;' and they do so.
And I will
harden Pharaoh's heart,.... Once more, as he had often done:
that he shall
follow after them: to Pihahiroth, and even into the sea after them:
and I will be
honoured upon Pharaoh, and upon all his host; in his wisdom,
faithfulness, power, and justice, by the destruction of them:
that the
Egyptians may know that I am the Lord; the only Jehovah, the
Lord God omnipotent; even those that feel the weight of his hand while
troubling their host, and bringing the waters upon them; especially those that
shall remain in the land, and will not be involved in the catastrophe:
and they did so: the
Israelites turned to the right to Pihahiroth, instead of going by Bishbesh and
Tinah (Bubastis and Pelusium), and so along the sea coast towards Gaza and
Ascalon, and encamped there between Migdol and the sea over against Baalzephon,
as they were ordered and directed.
Exodus 14:5 5 Now it was told the king
of Egypt that the people had fled, and the heart of Pharaoh and his servants
was turned against the people; and they said, “Why have we done this, that we
have let Israel go from serving us?”
YLT 5And it is declared to the king of Egypt that
the people hath fled, and the heart of Pharaoh and of his servants is turned
against the people, and they say, `What [is] this we have done? that we have
sent Israel away from our service.'
And it was told
the king of Egypt,.... By some of the Egyptians, or mixed multitude that went out
with Israel, but returned upon their encampment at the Red sea, or by some
spies Pharaoh sent with them to observe their motions: the Targums of Jonathan
and Jarchi make use of a word which Buxtorf translates military officers: and
the latter says, they went out with them the three days' journey, but the
Israelites not returning to Egypt (as expected), they tell Pharaoh of it the
fourth day; and on the fifth and sixth he pursued them, and in the night of the
seventh went into the sea after them, and on the morning they (the Israelites)
sung the song, which was the seventh of the passover: these reported to
Pharaoh:
that the people
fled; that under a pretence of going three days' journey into the
wilderness, to serve and sacrifice to the Lord, they were about to make their
escape out of the land:
and the heart
of Pharaoh and of his servants were turned against the people; who had so
much favour in their sight, not only to give them leave to go, and to hasten
their departure, but to lend and give them things of great value; but now their
hearts were filled with hatred of them, and with malice and revenge:
and they said,
why have we done this, that we have let Israel go from serving us? not Pharaoh
only, but his servants said so, even those who had entreated him to let them
go, Exodus 10:7 yet now
repent of it, and cannot think what reason they had to do it, when at that time
they saw reason, and gave a very sufficient one, namely, the destruction of
Egypt; but now the judgments and plagues of God being no more upon them, they
recollect the great service of the Israelites to them and the benefits and
advantages they had reaped by it, and the loss they had sustained by parting
with them, and therefore reflect upon themselves for such a piece of conduct.
Exodus 14:6 6 So he made ready his
chariot and took his people with him.
YLT 6And he harnesseth his chariot, and his people
he hath taken with him,
And he made
ready his chariot,.... Which he usually rode in when he went forth to war; for this
seems to be a military chariot, and not for show or grandeur; and this was got
ready not by himself, as Jarchi, but rather by his orders, as Aben Ezra:
and took his
people with him; the Greek version reads, "all his people"; not all his
subjects, but his soldiers; at least a great number, and especially his
cavalry.
Exodus 14:7 7 Also, he took six hundred
choice chariots, and all the chariots of Egypt with captains over every one of
them.
YLT 7and he taketh six hundred chosen chariots,
even all the chariots of Egypt, and captains over them all;
And he took six
hundred chosen chariots,.... The chief and best he had, war chariots, chariots of iron;
perhaps such as had iron scythes to them, to cut down men as they drove along;
these were taken partly for quickness of dispatch, that they might be able the
sooner to overtake the Israelites, who had got several days' marches before
them; and partly for their strength and the annoyance of their enemies with
them:
and all the
chariots of Egypt: as many as could in so short a time be got together: for the
words are not to be taken in the utmost latitude, but to signify a great
number, and all that could be conveniently come at: the Greek version is,
"all the horse", the cavalry, which better distinguishes them from
the former:
and captains
over everyone of them: over everyone of the chariots, so that they must each of them
have many in them, to have captains over them: and perhaps the infantry, or
foot soldiers, for, quickness of expedition, were put into them; for, besides
these, there were horsemen: JosephusF16Antiqu. l. 2. c. 15. sect. 3.
makes the whole number of his army to be 50,000 horse, and 200,000 foot, and
the same number is given by a Jewish chronologerF17Shalshalet
Hakabala, fol. 77. 4. : but Patricides, an Arabic writer, saysF18Apud
Hottinger. Smegma, p. 464. it consisted of 600,000, and EzekielF19Apud
Euseb. ut supra. (Praepar. Evangel. c. 27. p. 436.) , the tragic poet, has made
it amount to a million of horse and foot: should it be asked where horses could
be had to draw the chariots, and horses for the horsemen after mentioned, when
all were destroyed by the hail, Exodus 9:25 it may
be replied, that only those in the field were killed, not such as were in
stables, where chariot horses and horses for war may be supposed to be:
besides, as the Targum of Jonathan intimates, these might belong to these
servants of Pharaoh who feared the word of the Lord, and took their cattle
home, Exodus 9:20.
Exodus 14:8 8 And the Lord hardened the
heart of Pharaoh king of Egypt, and he pursued the children of Israel; and the
children of Israel went out with boldness.
YLT 8and Jehovah strengtheneth the heart of
Pharaoh king of Egypt, and he pursueth after the sons of Israel, and the sons
of Israel are going out with a high hand,
And the Lord
hardened the heart of Pharaoh king of Egypt,.... As he said he would,
Exodus 14:4,
and he pursued
after the children of Israel; took their rout in pursuit of them:
and the
children of Israel went out with an high hand: not once dreaming they
should be pursued by Pharaoh as an enemy, when they went out with his full
consent, and with such pressing solicitations to be gone, and with so much
favour shown them by the Egyptians; wherefore they set out, and went on with
great boldness, courage, and intrepidity; "with an uncovered head",
as the Targum of Onkelos, without any fear, and with great alacrity and
cheerfulness; they carried both their heads and their hands high, were fearless
and thoughtless of any danger when this mighty preparation was making against
them.
Exodus 14:9 9 So the Egyptians pursued
them, all the horses and chariots of Pharaoh, his horsemen and his army,
and overtook them camping by the sea beside Pi Hahiroth, before Baal Zephon.
YLT 9and the Egyptians pursue after them, and all
the chariot horses of Pharaoh, and his horsemen, and his force, overtake them,
encamping by the sea, by Pi-Hahiroth, before Baal-Zephon.
But the
Egyptians pursued after them,.... When they thought nothing of it, and
had no fears about it:
all the horses
and chariots of Pharaoh, and his horsemen, and his army; by the latter
Aben Ezra understands the foot, as distinguished from the cavalry, the horses
and horsemen; and perhaps these, as before observed, might be carried in the
chariots for quicker dispatch:
and overtook
them encamping by the sea, beside Pihahiroth, before Baalzephon; where they
had pitched their camp by divine appointment, Exodus 14:2.
Exodus 14:10 10 And when Pharaoh drew
near, the children of Israel lifted their eyes, and behold, the Egyptians
marched after them. So they were very afraid, and the children of Israel cried
out to the Lord.
YLT 10And Pharaoh hath drawn near, and the sons of
Israel lift up their eyes, and lo, the Egyptians are journeying after them, and
they fear exceedingly, and the sons of Israel cry unto Jehovah.
And when
Pharaoh drew nigh,.... Or "caused to draw nigh"F20הקריב "fecit accedere", Pagninus, Montanus;
"admovit castra", Junius & Tremellius. ; that is, his army,
brought it very near to the camp of the Israelites:
the children of
Israel lifted up their eyes, and, behold, the Egyptians marched after them; in great
numbers, with full speed, threatening them with utter destruction:
and they were
sore afraid; being an unarmed people, though numerous, and so unable to
defend themselves against armed and disciplined troops; and besides, through
their long time of slavery their spirits were broken, and were a mean, abject,
dispirited people; and especially were so on the sight of the Egyptians, whom
they had so many years looked upon and served as their lords and masters:
and the
children of Israel cried out unto the Lord: had they prayed unto him
in this their distress for help and assistance, protection and preservation,
with an holy and humble confidence in him for it, they had acted a right and
laudable part; but their crying out to him seems to be only an outcry of the
troubles they were in, and rather the effect of despair than of faith and hope;
and was by way of complaint and lamentation of their miserable condition and
circumstances, as appears by what follows, which shows what temper of mind they
were in.
Exodus 14:11 11 Then
they said to Moses, “Because there were no graves in Egypt, have you
taken us away to die in the wilderness? Why have you so dealt with us, to bring
us up out of Egypt?
YLT 11And they say unto Moses, `Because there are
no graves in Egypt, hast thou taken us away to die in a wilderness? what is
this thou hast done to us -- to bring us out from Egypt?
And they said
unto Moses,.... The Targum of Jonathan is,"the ungodly of that
generation said unto Moses;'but it seems rather to be understood of the body of
the people in general, and is not to be limited to some particular persons of
the worse characters among them:
because there
were no graves in Egypt; as if there had been none, when there were so many; the
Egyptians being more solicitous about their graves than their houses, as
Diodorus Siculus reportsF21Bibliothec. l. 1. p. 47. ; thus
upbraiding Moses in a sarcastic way for what he had done:
hast thou taken
us away to die in the wilderness? that so there might be
room and graves enough to bury them in, for nothing but death was before their
eyes:
wherefore hast
thou dealt thus with us, to carry us forth out of Egypt? which was
very ungrateful and disingenuous.
Exodus 14:12 12 Is
this not the word that we told you in Egypt, saying, ‘Let us alone that we may
serve the Egyptians’? For it would have been better for us to serve the
Egyptians than that we should die in the wilderness.”
YLT 12Is not this the word which we spake unto thee
in Egypt, saying, Cease from us, and we serve the Egyptians; for better for us
to serve the Egyptians than to die in a wilderness?'
Is not this the
word that we did tell thee in Egypt,.... The thing they
suggested to him, and talked with him about while they were in the land of
Egypt, before they came out of it, particularly after their service and bondage
were made more severe and cruel upon Moses and Aaron's demanding their
dismission, see Exodus 5:21,
saying, let us
alone, that we may serve the Egyptians? peaceably and quietly,
as we have been used to do, since there is no likelihood of being freed, and
since we are more evilly treated than before:
for it had been
better for us to serve the Egyptians, than that we should die in the wilderness: of such mean
spirits were they, and had so poor a notion of, and taste for liberty, and so
ungrateful were they to their deliverer.
Exodus 14:13 13 And Moses said to the
people, “Do not be afraid. Stand still, and see the salvation of the Lord, which He will
accomplish for you today. For the Egyptians whom you see today, you shall see
again no more forever.
YLT 13And Moses saith unto the people, `Fear not,
station yourselves, and see the salvation of Jehovah, which He doth for you
to-day; for, as ye have seen the Egyptians to-day, ye add no more to see them
-- to the age;
And Moses said
unto the people,.... Not in wrath and anger, but very coolly and sedately,
agreeably to his character of the meekest man on earth; though what they had
said to him was very insulting and provoking:
fear ye not; Pharaoh and
his numerous host, do not be dismayed at them or possess yourselves with a
dread of them, and of destruction by them:
stand still; do not stir
from the place where you are, do not offer to run away, or to make your escape
by flight (and which indeed seemed impossible), keep your place and station,
and put yourselves in such a situation as to wait and observe the issue of
things:
and see the
salvation of the Lord which he will shew to you today; which is
expressive of great faith in Moses in the midst of this extremity, who firmly
believed that God would save them from this numerous and enraged army, and that
very quickly, even that day; at least within twenty four hours, within the
compass of a day; for it was the night following that salvation was wrought for
them, and their eyes beheld it: and it may be called the salvation of the Lord,
for it was his own hand that only effected it, the Israelites not contributing
anything in the least unto it, and was typical of the great salvation which
Christ with his own arm, and without the help of his people, has wrought out
for them:
for the
Egyptians whom ye have seen today, ye shall see them again no more for ever; that is, in
such a posture or manner, no more armed, nor alive, and the objects of their
fear and dread; for otherwise they did see them again, but then they were on
the sea shore dead; for it should be rendered, not "whom", but
"how", or "in what manner"F23אשר
ον τροπον, Sept.
"quemadmodum", Piscator; "quomod o", Noldius, p. 107. No.
544. .
Exodus 14:14 14 The Lord will fight for
you, and you shall hold your peace.”
YLT 14Jehovah doth fight for you, and ye keep
silent.'
The Lord shall
fight for you,.... By commanding the wind of the heavens, and the waves of the
sea, and employing them against their enemies, and on their behalf; they being
unarmed, and so not in a condition to fight for themselves, as well as they had
no heart or spirit for it:
and ye shall
hold your peace; be still, and quiet, and easy in your minds, and forbear saying
or doing anything; "be silent"; and neither express the fear and
distress of their minds, by any mournful sounds, nor their joy of faith by
shouts and huzzas; as they could not draw a sword, they were not so much as to
blow a trumpet, and break a pitcher, and cry the sword of the Lord, and of
Israel as they after did on another occasion, at least their posterity.
Exodus 14:15 15 And the Lord said to Moses,
“Why do you cry to Me? Tell the children of Israel to go forward.
YLT 15And Jehovah saith unto Moses, `What? thou
criest unto Me -- speak unto the sons of Israel, and they journey;
And the Lord
said unto Moses, wherefore criest thou unto me?.... The Targum of
Jonathan is,"why standest thou and prayest before me?'and no doubt this
crying is to be understood of prayer, of mental prayer, of secret ejaculations
put up by Moses to the Lord without a voice, for no mention is made of any:
this shows, that though Moses most firmly believed that God would work
salvation for them, yet he did not neglect the use of means, prayer to God for
it; nor was the Lord displeased with him on that account, only he had other
work for him to do, and he had no need to pray any longer, God had heard him,
and would save him and his people:
speak unto the
children of Israel, that they go forward; a little further, as
Aben Ezra observes, until they were come to the sea shore, near to which they
now were; and thither they were to move in an orderly composed manner, as
unconcerned and fearless of their enemies.
Exodus 14:16 16 But lift up your rod, and
stretch out your hand over the sea and divide it. And the children of Israel
shall go on dry ground through the midst of the sea.
YLT 16and thou, lift up thy rod, and stretch out
thy hand towards the sea, and cleave it, and the sons of Israel go into the
midst of the sea on dry land.
But lift thou
up thy rod, and stretch out thine hand over the sea, and divide it,.... Even the
same rod with which so many wonders had been done in Egypt; and Artapanus, the
Heathen, saysF24Apud Euseb. Praepar. Evangel. l. 9. c. 27. p. 436. ,
that Moses being bid by a divine voice to smite the sea with his rod, he
hearkened to it, and touched the water with it, and so it divided, as it is
said it did, Exodus 14:21.
and the
children of Israel shall go on dry ground through the midst of the sea; and so they
did, Exodus 14:22.
Exodus 14:17 17 And I indeed will harden the
hearts of the Egyptians, and they shall follow them. So I will gain honor over
Pharaoh and over all his army, his chariots, and his horsemen.
YLT 17`And I -- lo, I am strengthening the heart of
the Egyptians, and they go in after them, and I am honoured on Pharaoh, and on
all his force, on his chariots, and on his horsemen;
And I, behold,
I will harden the hearts of the Egyptians,.... That they shall have
no sense of danger, and be fearless of it, incautious and thoughtless, hurried
on with wrath and fury, malice and revenge:
and they shall
follow them; the Israelites into the sea, supposing it to be as safe for the
one as the other:
and I will get
me honour upon Pharaoh, and upon all his host, upon his chariots, and upon his
horsemen: by the utter destruction of them, in just retaliation for the
many innocent infants that had been drowned by them in the river Nile.
Exodus 14:18 18 Then the Egyptians shall
know that I am the Lord, when I have gained honor
for Myself over Pharaoh, his chariots, and his horsemen.”
YLT 18and the Egyptians have known that I [am]
Jehovah, in My being honoured on Pharaoh, on his chariots, and on his
horsemen.'
And the
Egyptians shall know that I am the Lord,.... Acknowledge him to
be Jehovah, the self-existent, eternal, and immutable Being, the one only
living and true God, who is wise and powerful, faithful, just, and true; that
is, those Egyptians that were left behind in Egypt, hearing what was done at
the Red sea; for as for those that came with Pharaoh, they all perished to a
man:
when I have
gotten me honour upon Pharaoh, upon his chariots, and upon his horsemen; by casting
them into the sea, and drowning them there, thereby showing himself to be
mightier than he.
Exodus 14:19 19 And the Angel of God, who
went before the camp of Israel, moved and went behind them; and the pillar of
cloud went from before them and stood behind them.
YLT 19And the messenger of God, who is going before
the camp of Israel, journeyeth and goeth at their rear; and the pillar of the
cloud journeyeth from their front, and standeth at their rear,
And the Angel
of God which went before the camp of Israel,.... The Jews sayF25Pirke
Eliezer, c. 42. this was Michael, the great prince, who became a wall of fire
between Israel and the Egyptians; and if they understood by him the uncreated
angel, the eternal Word, the Son of God, who is always in Scripture meant by
Michael, they are right: for certainly this Angel of the Lord is the same with
Jehovah, who is said to go before them in a pillar of cloud and fire, Exodus 13:21,
removed, and
went behind them; but because removing from place to place, and going forwards or
backwards, cannot be properly said of a divine Person, who is omnipresent, and
fills every place and space; this is to be understood of the emblem of him, the
pillar of cloud, as the next clause explains it:
and the pillar
of the cloud went from before their face, and stood behind them; the Targum of
Jonathan adds,"because of the Egyptians, who cast arrows and stones, and
the cloud received them;'and so Jarchi; whereby the Israelites were protected
and preserved from receiving any hurt by them: so Christ is the protection of
his people from all their enemies, sin, Satan, and the world, that sin cannot
damn them, nor Satan destroy them, nor the world overcome them; for his
salvation is as walls and bulwarks to them, and he is indeed a wall of fire
about them.
Exodus 14:20 20 So it came between the
camp of the Egyptians and the camp of Israel. Thus it was a cloud and darkness to
the one, and it gave light by night to the other, so that the one
did not come near the other all that night.
YLT 20and cometh in between the camp of the
Egyptians and the camp of Israel, and the cloud and the darkness are, and he
enlighteneth the night, and the one hath not drawn near unto the other all the
night.
And it came
between the camp of the Egyptians and the camp of Israel,.... That is,
the pillar of cloud, and the Angel of God, or Jehovah, in it, whereby the camp
of Israel was secured from being annoyed by the camp of the Egyptians; and was
an emblem of the gracious interposition of Christ between his spiritual Israel,
whom he has redeemed by his blood, and their spiritual enemies, the Egyptians,
the men of the world that hate them, from whose rage and malice Christ is their
protection and safeguard:
and it was a
cloud and darkness to them; to the Egyptians; it
cast a shade upon them, and made the darkness of the night still greater to
them, so that they could not see their way, and knew not where they were:
but it gave
light by night to these; to the Israelites, so that they could see their way, and walk on
in the midst of the sea, as on dry land; and such a light and guide they
needed; for it was now the twenty first day of the month, seven days after the
full of the moon, when the passover began, and therefore could have no benefit
from the moon. The Targums of Jonathan and Jerusalem say, that half the cloud
was light, and half darkness; and it seems plain from the account, that that
side of it which was towards the Egyptians was dark, and that which was towards
the Israelites was light, and so an hinderance to the one and a benefit to the
other: thus Christ is set for the rising of some, and the fall of others; and
his Gospel is to some the savour of death unto death, and to others the savour
of life unto life; to the one it is a hidden Gospel, and lies in darkness and
obscurity, and to others a great and glorious light:
so that one
came not near the other all the night; an emblem of that
division and separation which the grace of God, the blood of Christ, and the
light of the Gospel, make between the true Israel of God, and the men of the
world; and which will continue throughout time, and to all eternity, so that
they will never come near to each other; see Luke 16:26.
Exodus 14:21 21 Then
Moses stretched out his hand over the sea; and the Lord caused the sea
to go back by a strong east wind all that night, and made the sea into
dry land, and the waters were divided.
YLT 21And Moses stretcheth out his hand towards the
sea, and Jehovah causeth the sea to go on by a strong east wind all the night,
and maketh the sea become dry ground, and the waters are cleaved,
And Moses
stretched out his hand over the sea,.... With his rod in it,
as he was directed to, Exodus 14:16. What
the poet saysF26"Tu flectis amnes, tu mare barbarum--"
Horat. Carmin. l. 2. Ode 19. of Bacchus is more true of Moses, whose rod had
been lift up upon the rivers Egypt, and now upon the Red sea:
and the Lord
caused the sea to go back by a strong east wind all that night; and the
direction of the Red sea being nearly, if not altogether, north and south, it
was in a proper situation to be wrought upon and divided by an easterly wind;
though the Septuagint version renders it a strong south wind. No wind of
itself, without the exertion and continuance of almighty power, in a miraculous
way, could have so thrown the waves of the sea on heaps, and retained them so
long, that such a vast number of people should pass through it as on dry land;
though this was an instrument Jehovah made use of, and that both to divide the
waters of the sea, and to dry and harden the bottom of it, and make it fit for
travelling, as follows:
and made the
sea dry land; or made the bottom of it dry, so that it could be trod and
walked upon with ease, without sinking in, sticking fast, or slipping about,
which was very extraordinary:
and the waters
were divided; or "after the waters were divided"F1ויבקעו "quum diffidisset se aqua illius",
Piscator; so ו seems to be used in ch. xvi. 20. ; for
they were first divided before the sea could be made dry. The Targum of
Jonathan says, the waters were divided into twelve parts, answerable to the
twelve tribes of Israel, and the same is observed by other Jewish writersF2Pirke
Eliezer, c. 42. Targum Jon. & Hieros. in Deut. i. 1. Jarchi, Kimchi, and
Arama in Psal. cxxxvi. 13. , grounded upon a passage in Psalm 136:13 and
suppose that each tribe took its particular path.
Exodus 14:22 22 So the children of Israel
went into the midst of the sea on the dry ground, and the waters were
a wall to them on their right hand and on their left.
YLT 22and the sons of Israel go into the midst of
the sea, on dry land, and the waters [are] to them a wall, on their right and
on their left.
And the
children of Israel went into the midst of the sea upon the dry ground,.... Some
Jewish writers sayF3Pirke Elizer, c. 42. , that the tribe of Judah
went in first, and then the other tribes followed; but it is most likely, what
Josephus saysF4Antiqu. l. 2. c. 16. sect. 2. , that Moses first
entered in, and then the Israelites, encouraged by his example, went in after
him; and a very adventurous action it was, and nothing but strong faith in the
almighty power and promise of God could have engaged them in it, to which the
apostle ascribes it, Hebrews 11:29. It
is the opinion of Aben Ezra, and some other Jewish writers, that the Israelites
did not pass through the Red sea to the opposite shore, only went some way into
it, and took a compass in a semicircle, and came out on the same shore again,
and which has been espoused by some Christian writers; and chiefly because they
were in the wilderness of Etham before, and from whence they went into it, and
when they came out of it, it was still the wilderness of Etham they came into,
and went three days' journey into it seeking water; see Exodus 13:20.
Though it is possible the wilderness on the opposite shore might bear the same
name, because of its likeness to it; and if it was the same wilderness that
went round the Arabic gulf, or Red sea, and reached on to the other side of it,
and so the wilderness of Etham lay on both sides, the difficulty is removed;
for it seems most agreeable to the expressions of Scripture, that the
Israelites passed through it from shore to shore. Others, in order to lessen
the miracle, would have it that Moses, well knowing the country, and observing
the tide, took the advantage of low water, and led the Israelites through it;
and this story is told by the Egyptian priests of Memphis, as ArtapanusF5Apud
Euseb. Praepar. Evangel. l. 9. c. 27. p. 436. relates; but were the Egyptians
less knowing of their country, and of the tide of the Red sea? and could Moses
be sure of the exact time when they would come up to him, and the tide would
serve him? Besides, the Egyptian priests at Heliopolis own the miracle, and
relate it much as Moses has done; which must proceed from a conviction of the
truth of it. And the above historian reports that the king (of Egypt) with a
great army, and consecrated animals, pursued the Jews because of the substance
they had borrowed of the Egyptians, which they took with them; but Moses being
bid by a divine voice (or the voice of God, of Jehovah) to smite the sea with a
rod, and hearkening to it, he touched the water with the rod, and so it
divided, and his forces passed through a dry path, and the Egyptians attempting
the same and pursuing, fire or lightning flashed out against them; and the sea
shutting up the path again, partly by fire, and partly by the flow of the
water, they all perished: and that this affair was miraculous, and could not be
owing to any advantage taken from the tide, the following things have been
observed; it is owned that the Red sea ebbs and flows like other seas that have
a communication with the ocean, that is, the waters rise towards the shore
during six hours, and having continued about a quarter of an hour at high
water, ebb down again during another six hours; and it is observed by those who
have examined it, that the greatest distance it falls from the place of high
water is about three hundred yards; and that during the time of low water, one
may safely travel it, as some have actually done; so that those three hundred
paces, which the sea leaves uncovered during the time of low water, can
continue so but for the space of half an hour at most; for during the first six
hours, the sea retires only by degrees, and in less than half an hour it begins
again to flow towards the shore. The most therefore that can be allowed, both
of time and space of passable ground, in a moderate computation, is about two
hundred paces, during six hours, or one hundred and fifty paces, during eight
hours. Now it is further observed, that it is plain that a multitude consisting
of upwards of two millions and a half of men, women, children, and slaves,
encumbered besides with great quantities of cattle, household stuff, and the
spoils of the Egyptians, could never perform such a march within so short a
time; we may say within even double that space, though we should allow them
also double the breadth of ground to do it on. This argument, it is added, will
hold good against those who suppose they only coasted along some part of the
sea, and those who maintain that they crossed the small arm or point of it
which is toward the further end, near the isthmus of Suez; seeing that six or
eight hours could not have sufficed for the passage of so immense a multitude,
allow them what breadth of room you will; much less for Pharaoh to have entered
it with his whole hostF6Universal History, vol. 3. p. 392, 393.
marg. : and for the confirmation of the Mosaic account of this affair, and as
miraculous, may be observed the testimony of Diodorus Siculus, who reportsF7Bibliothec.
l. 3. p. 174. that it is a tradition among the Ichthyophagi, who inhabit near
the Red sea, or Arabic gulf, which they have received from the report of their
ancestors, and is still preserved with them, that upon a great recess of the
sea, every place of the gulf became dry, the sea falling to the opposite parts,
the bottom appeared green, and returning back with a mighty force, was restored
to its place again; which can have reference to nothing else but to this
transaction in the time of Moses. And StraboF8Geograph. l. 16. p.
521, 522. relates a very wonderful thing, and such as rarely happens, that on
the shore between Tyre and Ptolemais, when they of Ptolemais had a battle with
the Emperor Sarpedon at that place, and there being put to flight, a flow of
the sea like an inundation covered those that fled, and some were carried into
the sea and perished, and others were left dead in hollow places; after a
reflux followed, and discovered and showed the bodies of those that lay among
the dead fishes. Now learned men have observedF9Vid. Scheuchzer.
Physic. Sacr. vol. 1. p. 167. , that what is here said of the sea of Tyre is to
be understood of the Red sea, and that Sarpedon is not a proper name, but the
same with שר פדון,
"Sarphadon", the prince of deliverance, or of the delivered, as Moses
was:
and the waters
were a wall to them on their right hand and on their left; some of the
Jewish Rabbins from Exodus 15:8 have
supposed that the waters were frozen as they were drove back by the east wind,
and so stood up firm while the Israelites passed through, and then another wind
thawed them, which brought them upon the Egyptians; but no doubt this was done
by the wonderful interposition of divine power, and perhaps the ministry of
angels was made use of, to detain and continue them in this position, until the
end was answered. Adrichomius saysF11Theatrum Terrae, p. 123, 124. ,
the breadth of the sea was six miles at the passage of the Israelites; but a
late travellerF12Dr. Shaw's Travels, p. 314. Edit. 2. tells us, that
the channel between Sdur (or Shur, on the opposite side) and Gibbel Gewoubee,
and Attackah (which he supposes was the place of their passage), was nine or
ten miles over. Thevenot saysF13Travels into the Levant, B. 2. ch.
33. p. 175. , that during the space of five days he kept along the coast of the
Red sea, in going to Mount Sinai, he could not observe it to be anywhere above
eight or nine miles over. A later travellerF14A Journal from Grand
Cairo, &c. in 1722. p. 13. Edit. 2. tells us, that from the fountains of
Moses may be plainly seen a wonderful aperture (Pihahiroth; see Exodus 14:2) in the
mountains on the other side of the Red sea, through and from which the children
of Israel entered into it, when Pharaoh and his host were drowned; which
aperture is situated west-southwest from these fountains of Moses, and the
breadth of the sea hereabouts, where the children of Israel passed it, is about
four or five hours' journey. The Arabic geographerF15Climat. 3. par.
3. calls the place Jethren, where Pharaoh and his host were drowned; and
represents it as a dangerous place to sail in, and where many ships are lost,
and that this rough place is about the space of six miles. A countrymanF16Pitts's
Account of the Mahometans, p. 77. of ours, who had been in these parts, guesses
that the breadth of the place (called by the Mahometans, Kilt el Pharown, the
well or pit of Pharaoh) where the Israelites are said to pass through is about
six or seven leagues; the difference between these writers may be accounted for
by the different places where they suppose this passage was.
Exodus 14:23 23 And the Egyptians pursued
and went after them into the midst of the sea, all Pharaoh’s horses, his
chariots, and his horsemen.
YLT 23And the Egyptians pursue, and go in after
them (all the horses of Pharaoh, his chariots, and his horsemen) unto the midst
of the sea,
And the
Egyptians pursued,.... The Israelites going forwards towards the sea as they were
ordered, and going into it:
and went in
after them into the midst of the sea; which if fearful of,
they might conclude it was as safe for them to go in as for the Israelites; but
perhaps through the darkness of the night, and the eagerness of their pursuit,
they might not perceive where they were, nor the danger they were exposed unto:
even all
Pharaoh's horses, his chariots, and his horsemen: which is observed to
show, that as all that did go in perished, not one was saved, as after related,
so all he brought with him, the whole of his army, went in, so that all that
went out of Egypt were destroyed.
Exodus 14:24 24 Now it came to pass, in
the morning watch, that the Lord looked down upon the army
of the Egyptians through the pillar of fire and cloud, and He troubled the army
of the Egyptians.
YLT 24and it cometh to pass, in the morning watch,
that Jehovah looketh unto the camp of the Egyptians through the pillar of fire
and of the cloud, and troubleth the camp of the Egyptians,
And it came to
pass, that in the morning watch,.... The Romans divided the night into four
watches, so the Hebrews; though some say into three only. The first began at
six o'clock, and lasted till nine, the second was from thence to twelve, the
third from thence to three in the morning, and the last from three to six,
which is here called the morning watch; so that this was some time between
three and six o'clock in the morning:
the Lord looked
unto the host of the Egyptians, through the pillar of fire and of the cloud; the Angel of
the Lord, and who was Jehovah himself, who was in it, he looked to the army of
the Egyptians; not to know whereabout they were, he being the omniscient God;
nor in a friendly manner, but as an enemy, with indignation and wrath. The
Targum of Jonathan is,"he looked through the pillar of fire, to cast upon
them coals of fire, and through the pillar of cloud, to cast upon them
hailstones.'The Jerusalem Targum is,"pitch, fire, and hailstones;'and
JosephusF17Ut supra. (Antiqu. l. 2. c. 16. sect. 2.) speaks of
storms and tempests, of thunder and lightning, and of thunderbolts out of the
clouds; and ArtapanusF18Apud Euseb. ut supra. (Praepar. Evangel. l.
9. c. 27. p. 436.) of fire or lightning flashing out against them, by which
many perished. Perhaps the psalmist may have reference to this in Psalm 106:10.
and troubled
the host of the Egyptians; the thunder and lightning no doubt
frightened the horses, so that they broke their ranks, and horsemen and
chariots might run foul on one another, and the hailstones scatter and destroy
many; however, the whole must be terrible and distressing to them, especially
it being in the night season.
Exodus 14:25 25 And He took off[a] their
chariot wheels, so that they drove them with difficulty; and the Egyptians
said, “Let us flee from the face of Israel, for the Lord fights for
them against the Egyptians.”
YLT 25and turneth aside the wheels of their
chariots, and they lead them with difficulty, and the Egyptians say, `Let us
flee from the face of Israel, for Jehovah is fighting for them against the
Egyptians.'
And took off
their chariot wheels,.... The Targum of Jonathan renders it "cut" or
"sawed them off"; perhaps they might be broken off by the hailstones.
MiltonF19Paradise Lost, B. 12. ver. 210. seems to have a notion of
Pharaoh's chariot wheels being broken, when he says, "and craze"
(i.e. break) "their chariot wheels"; or, as Jarchi suggests, he burnt
them, through the force of the fire or lightning:
that they drave
them heavily; the wheels being off, the chariots must be dragged along by the
horses by mere force, which must be heavy work; or, "and made them to go,
or led them heavily", or "with heaviness"F20וינהגם בכבדת "et deduxit eos
graviter", Vatablus; "et duxit eos cum gravitate", Drusius; so
Ainsworth. ; and so to be ascribed to the Lord, who looked at the Egyptians,
took off the wheels of their chariots, and stopped them in the fury of their career,
that they could not pursue with the swiftness they had:
so that the
Egyptians said, let us flee from the face of Israel; for by this
battery and flashes of fire on them, they concluded that Israel, who they
thought were fleeing before them, had turned and were facing them, and the Lord
at the head of them; and therefore it was high time for them to flee, as
follows:
for the Lord
fighteth for them against the Egyptians; for they rightly took
the thunder and lightning, the fire and hailstones, to be the artillery of
heaven turned against them, and in favour of the Israelites. Jarchi interprets
it, the Lord fights for them in Egypt, even in Egypt itself; but so he had done
many a time before, of which they were not insensible.
Exodus 14:26 26 Then the Lord said to Moses,
“Stretch out your hand over the sea, that the waters may come back upon the
Egyptians, on their chariots, and on their horsemen.”
YLT 26And Jehovah saith unto Moses, `Stretch out
thy hand toward the sea, and the waters turn back on the Egyptians, on their
chariots, and on their horsemen.'
And the Lord
said unto Moses,.... Out of the pillar of fire and of the cloud, when the
Egyptians were in all the confusion before described, and about to make the
best of their way back again:
Stretch out
thine hand over the sea; with his rod in it, by which all the wonders were wrought, and
particularly by which the sea had been divided, and now it must be used to a
different purpose:
that the waters
may come again upon the Egyptians, upon their chariots, and upon their horsemen; the waters
which stood upright as a wall, on the right and left, might be no longer kept
in such a position, but fall down upon the Egyptians, their chariots and
horsemen, being higher than they.
Exodus 14:27 27 And Moses stretched out
his hand over the sea; and when the morning appeared, the sea returned to its
full depth, while the Egyptians were fleeing into it. So the Lord overthrew the
Egyptians in the midst of the sea.
YLT 27And Moses stretcheth out his hand towards the
sea, and the sea turneth back, at the turning of the morning, to its perennial
flow, and the Egyptians are fleeing at its coming, and Jehovah shaketh off the
Egyptians in the midst of the sea,
And Moses
stretched forth his hand over the sea,.... Or towards it, as he
was ordered, the rod being in his hand, as before observed:
and the sea
returned to his strength when the morning appeared; being no
longer detained by a superior power, contrary to the nature of it, to stand
still as an heap, and firm as a wall, its waves came down and rolled with their
usual force and strength, or it returned to its usual course:
at the
appearance of the morning in its strength; when the morning looked
forth in its first light and brightness, when it was broad day:
and the
Egyptians fled against it; against the waves that came rolling down upon
them: or "at meeting it"F21לקראתו
"in occursum ejus", Pagninus, Montanus, Drusius; "obviam
mare", Junius & Tremellius, Piscator. , for as they turned their backs
on the Israelites and fled, the waters of the sea met them, as well as fell on
each side of them, or rather over them, and followed after them, and closed and
shut them up on all sides; so that it was in vain for them to flee, for let
them go which way they would, the sea was against them:
and the Lord
overthrew the Egyptians in the midst of the sea; or shook them
"off" or "out"F23וינער
εξετιναξε Sept. "et
excussit", Pagninus, Montanus, Drusius; "sic excussit", Junius
& Tremellius, Piscator. ; out of their chariots, blew them out with the
wind; for as there was a wind made use of to divide the waters of the sea, and
make the bottom of it dry, there was another to cause the waters to return to
their former place; see Exodus 15:10 or the
waves of the sea dashed them out of their chariots, or through the force of
them they were overturned in it.
Exodus 14:28 28 Then the waters returned
and covered the chariots, the horsemen, and all the army of Pharaoh that
came into the sea after them. Not so much as one of them remained.
YLT 28and the waters turn back, and cover the
chariots and the horsemen, even all the force of Pharaoh, who are coming in
after them into the sea -- there hath not been left of them even one.
And the waters
returned,.... To their place, and so in the above tradition related by
Diodorus Siculus, it is said that the sea returning with a mighty force was
restored to its place again; See Gill on Exodus 14:22.
and covered the
chariots and the horsemen; the wall they made being much higher than a
man on horseback, when they fell down, covered even those who had the advantage
of horses and chariots; and much more must the infantry be covered by them, who
may be meant in the next clause:
and all the
host of Pharaoh that came into the sea after them; the foot,
that went into the sea after the chariots and horsemen, or the whole army,
including the cavalry and infantry, which went into the sea after the children
of Israel. Who this Pharaoh was is not agreed; according to BerosusF24Antiqu.
l. 5. fol. 88. 2. & 90. 2. his name was Cenchres, or Chenchres, whom
Acherres succeeded; according to Bishop UsherF25Annal. Vet. Test. p.
19. it was Amenophis; but our English poetF26"-------whose
waves o'erthrew Busiris, and his Memphian chivalry." Milton's Paradise
Lost, B. 1. v. 306, 307. calls him Busiris; though StraboF1Geograph.
l. 17. p. 552. says there was no king or governor of that name. Diodorus
SiculusF2Bibliothec. l. 1. p. 42. indeed speaks of two so called;
yet he elsewhereF3Bibliothec. l. 1. p. 79. says, not that there was
any king of the name, only the sepulchre of Osiris was so called:
there remained
not so much as one of them; wherefore it must be a falsehood which is
related by some, that Pharaoh himself was preserved, and afterwards reigned in
NinevehF4Dibre Hayamim, fol. 13. 2. , since not one was saved; see Psalm 106:11 and so
ArtapanusF5Ut supra. (Apud Euseb. Praepar. Evangel. l. 9. c. 27. p.
436.) the Heathen says, they all perished, and among these are saidF6Midrash
in Exod. xv. 10. & Arab. MS. apud Gregory's Notes & Observ. p. 6. to be
Jannes and Jambres, the magicians of Egypt mentioned in 2 Timothy 3:8 but
this is contradicted by thoseF7Shalshalet, fol. 7. 1. who ascribe
the making of the golden calf to them.
Exodus 14:29 29 But the children of Israel
had walked on dry land in the midst of the sea, and the waters were
a wall to them on their right hand and on their left.
YLT 29And the sons of Israel have gone on dry land
in the midst of the sea, and the waters [are] to them a wall, on their right
and on their left;
But the
children of Israel walked upon dry land in the midst of the sea,.... The
bottom of it becoming so through the strong east wind, which blew all night
until they came to the opposite shore, where they landed on "terra
firma"; and so Noldius renders the phrase "through the sea";
that is, from shore to shore:
and the waters
were a wall to them on their right hand and on their left; See Gill on Exodus 14:22.
Exodus 14:30 30 So the Lord saved Israel
that day out of the hand of the Egyptians, and Israel saw the Egyptians dead on
the seashore.
YLT 30and Jehovah saveth Israel in that day out of
the hand of the Egyptians, and Israel seeth the Egyptians dead on the
sea-shore,
Thus the Lord
saved Israel that day out of the hand of the Egyptians,.... For
though it was now six or seven days since they had leave to go out of Egypt,
and actually did depart, yet they could not be said properly to be saved, or to
be in safety, till this day, when all the Egyptians their enemies were
destroyed, that pursued after them; and this was the twenty first day of the
month, and the seventh and last day of the passover, and was an holy
convocation to the Lord; See Gill on Exodus 12:16.
and Israel saw
the Egyptians dead on the sea shore; all along, as a late
travellerF8Shaw's Travels, p. 314. Ed. 2. observes, as we may
presume, from Sdur (or Shur) to Corondel, and at Corondel especially, from the
assistance and termination of the current there. The word for "dead"F9מת Mortuum, Montanus, Drusius. is in the singular number,
and joined with a plural may denote that they saw everyone of the Egyptians
dead, since they were all destroyed, and not one remained of them, as in Exodus 14:28. Aben
Ezra thinks the sense of the words is, not that the Egyptians were seen dead
upon the sea shore, but that the Israelites standing upon the sea shore saw the
dead bodies of the Egyptians, that is, floating on the waters of the sea; but
rather the meaning is, that their dead bodies were by the force of the waters
cast upon the shore, and there beheld and plundered by the Israelites. JosephusF11Antiqu.
l. 2. c. 16. sect. 6. observes, that the day following (that night the
Egyptians were drowned) the arms of the Egyptians being cast on the shore where
the Hebrews encamped, through the force of the sea and wind, Moses gathered
them up and armed the Hebrews with them; and this will account for it how they
came to have arms, since it is highly probable they came out of Egypt unarmed;
and how they could fight battles as they did in the wilderness, and when they
came into the land of Canaan.
Exodus 14:31 31 Thus Israel saw the great
work which the Lord
had done in Egypt; so the people feared the Lord, and believed
the Lord
and His servant Moses.
YLT 31and Israel seeth the great hand with which
Jehovah hath wrought against the Egyptians, and the people fear Jehovah, and
remain stedfast in Jehovah, and in Moses His servant.
And Israel saw
the great work,.... Or "hand"F12היד
την χειρα Sept. Manum, Pagninus,
Montanus, &c. ; the hand of the Lord, the mighty power of God, and took
notice of it, and seriously considered the greatness of it:
which the Lord
did upon the Egyptians; which mighty hand he laid upon them, and which great power he
exercised on them, and which great work, the effect thereof, he wrought in destroying
them in such a manner, by causing the waters, which divided for them and their
safety, to return upon the Egyptians to their utter destruction:
and the people
feared the Lord; had an awe of his power and greatness upon their minds, and a
sense of his goodness to them upon their hearts, which influenced their fear of
him, and caused them to fear him with a filial and godly fear:
and believed
the Lord and his servant Moses; they believed the Lord to be the only
Jehovah, the supreme Being, the one only living and true God, faithful to his
word, able to do all things, and wise to do them in the fittest season, for his
own glory and his people's good; and they believed his promises, and the
fulfilment of them; and that as he had now saved them out of the hands of the
Egyptians, he would bring them to the land of Canaan, which he had promised
their fathers to give unto them; and they believed Moses was sent of God to be
their deliverer out of Egypt, and to be their leader to the promised land; see Psalm 106:12 and
who were now by the apostle said to be baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in
the sea, 1 Corinthians 10:1
and of their passage through the Red sea under the direction of Moses being an
emblem of baptism; see Gill on 1 Corinthians 10:1.
──《John Gill’s
Exposition of the Bible》
New
King James Version (NKJV)
a.
Exodus 14:25
Samaritan Pentateuch, Septuagint, and Syriac read bound.