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Exodus Chapter
Twenty-four
New King James Version
(NKJV)
INTRODUCTION TO
EXODUS 24
In this chapter we have an
account that Moses was ordered to come up to the Lord alone, Exodus 24:1, but
that before he did go up, he related to the people all the above laws delivered
to him, which they promised obedience to, and so a covenant was made between
God and the people by sacrifice, and by the sprinkling of blood, Exodus 24:3, upon
which he and Aaron, and his two sons and seventy elders of Israel, went up part
of the mountain, and had a vision of God, Exodus 24:9, when
Moses with Joshua was called, and went up higher, until at length he entered
into the cloud where the Lord was, and continued forty days and forty nights, Exodus 24:12.
Exodus 24:1 Now
He said to Moses, “Come up to the Lord, you and Aaron, Nadab and
Abihu, and seventy of the elders of Israel, and worship from afar.
YLT 1And unto Moses He said, `Come up unto
Jehovah, thou, and Aaron, Nadab, and Abihu, and seventy of the elders of
Israel, and ye have bowed yourselves afar off;'
And he said
unto Moses,.... Who said? no doubt a divine Person, and yet what this Person
said is:
come up unto
the Lord; meaning either to himself, or one divine Person called to Moses
to come up to another: according to the Targum of Jonathan, it was Michael, the
prince of wisdom; not a created angel, but the eternal Word, Wisdom, and Son of
God; who said this on the seventh day of the month, which was the day after the
giving of the law, or ten commands; though Jarchi says this paragraph was
before the ten commands, and was said on the fourth of Sivan; but the Targumist
seems most correct:
come up unto
the Lord, thou and Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, and seventy of the elders of Israel; Nadab and
Abihu were the two eldest sons of Aaron, Exodus 6:23 and the
seventy elders were not all the elders of Israel, but were so many of them
selected out of them, the chief and principal; who were heads of tribes and
families, and were no doubt many, if not all of them, of those who by the
advice of Jethro were chosen to be rulers of thousands, hundreds, and fifties;
these were called to come up to the Lord on the mountain, but not to the top of
it, only Moses went thither:
and worship ye
afar off: from the people, and even at a distance from Moses; for he only
was admitted near to God, as the following verse shows.
Exodus 24:2 2 And
Moses alone shall come near the Lord, but they shall not come
near; nor shall the people go up with him.”
YLT 2and Moses hath drawn nigh by himself unto
Jehovah; and they draw not nigh, and the people go not up with him.
And Moses alone
shall come near the Lord,.... Into the cloud where he was, and talk with him face to face,
as a man talketh with his friend; which was great nearness indeed, and a
peculiar favour and high honour was this:
but they shall
not come nigh; Aaron, Nadab, and Abihu, and the seventy elders of Israel:
neither shall
the people go up with him; not any of them, much less the whole body.
It seems, by this account, that Moses had been down from the mount after he had
received the laws recorded in the two preceding chapters; though as yet he had
not related them to the people, but did before he went up again by the above
order, as appears from what follows.
Exodus 24:3 3 So
Moses came and told the people all the words of the Lord and all the
judgments. And all the people answered with one voice and said, “All the words
which the Lord
has said we will do.”
YLT 3And Moses cometh in, and recounteth to the
people all the words of Jehovah, and all the judgments, and all the people
answer -- one voice, and say, `All the words which Jehovah hath spoken we do.'
And Moses came
and told the people all the words of the Lord, and all the judgments,.... Which
according to Jarchi were the seven commands given to the sons of Noah, the laws
concerning the sabbath, and honouring parents, the red heifer, and the
judgments at Marah; but all these they were acquainted with before, excepting
that of the red heifer, and the law, for that was not yet delivered to Moses,
nor were these the ten commands, for they had heard them from the Lord
themselves; but they doubtless were the judgments, or judicial laws, which he
was ordered to set before the people, contained in the two preceding chapters,
which were chiefly of the judicial kind, and related to the civil polity of the
people of Israel:
and all the
people answered with one voice; one speaking for, and in the name of the
rest, or they all lift up their voice together, and being unanimous in their
sentiments, expressed them in the same words:
and said, all
the words which the Lord hath said will we do; that is, they would be
careful to observe all the laws, statutes, judgments, and commands which the
Lord had enjoined them; and less than this they could not say, for they had
promised Moses, that if he would draw nigh to God, and hear what he should say,
and deliver it to them, they would hearken to it, and obey it, as if they had
heard God himself speak it; only they entreated the Lord would speak no more to
them, as he did the ten commands, it being so terrible to them.
Exodus 24:4 4 And
Moses wrote all the words of the Lord. And he rose early in the
morning, and built an altar at the foot of the mountain, and twelve pillars
according to the twelve tribes of Israel.
YLT 4And Moses writeth all the words of Jehovah,
and riseth early in the morning, and buildeth an altar under the hill, and
twelve standing pillars for the twelve tribes of Israel;
And Moses wrote
all the words of the Lord,.... Jarchi says, all from the creation, to
the giving of the law, and the commands at Marah; but though these were written
by him, yet not at this time; but as Aben Ezra more truly observes, what are
mentioned in this "parashah", or section, or what is contained in the
two preceding chapters, he not only related to them from his memory, but he
wrote them in a book, which is after mentioned, that they might be seen and
read hereafter; for these were not the ten commands, they were written as well
as spoken by the Lord himself, but the judicial laws before mentioned:
and rose up
early in the morning: not on the fifth of Sivan, as Jarchi, the day before the giving
of the law, but on the eighth of that month, two days after it:
and built an
altar under the hill: under Mount Sinai, about the place where the bounds were set,
beyond which the people were not to go:
and twelve
pillars, according to the twelve tribes of Israel: to answer to
them, and which were to represent them, as seems by the following account; these
probably were made of marble stone, of which Mount Sinai consisted, and of
which there was plenty thereabout.
Exodus 24:5 5 Then
he sent young men of the children of Israel, who offered burnt offerings and
sacrificed peace offerings of oxen to the Lord.
YLT 5and he sendeth the youths of the sons of
Israel, and they cause burnt-offerings to ascend, and sacrifice sacrifices of
peace-offerings to Jehovah -- calves.
And he sent
young men of the children Israel,.... To the altar under
the hill he had these young men, according to Jarchi, were the firstborn of the
children of Israel; and so the Targums Onkelos and Jonathan; and the latter
adds,"for unto this hour the worship was among the firstborn, as yet the
tabernacle of the covenant was not made, and as yet the priesthood was not
given to Aaron.'But though this is a notion that has obtained among learned
men, both Jews and Christians, it has been called in question by some, who have
such reasons against it, as are not easily refuted. And very probably, as the
seventy elders were such as were selected from the senior and graver part of
the people, so these were choice young men, that were separated from others for
this service, without any regard to birthright:
which offered
burnt offerings, and sacrificed peace offerings of oxen unto the Lord; by way of
thankfulness; and such were used at making covenants, when the parties ate and
drank together. The Vulgate Latin version has it, "twelve calves",
without any authority for it.
Exodus 24:6 6 And
Moses took half the blood and put it in basins, and half the blood he
sprinkled on the altar.
YLT 6And Moses taketh half of the blood, and
putteth in basins, and half of the blood hath he sprinkled on the altar;
And Moses took
half of the blood, and put it in basins,.... Half of the blood of
the above sacrifices, this he put into basins, and set by, in order to sprinkle
on the people:
and half of the
blood he sprinkled on the altar; the Targum of Onkelos adds, to atone for
the people. But the altar here seems to represent the Lord, who was one of the
parties covenanting, and therefore is sprinkled with blood as a ratification of
the covenant on his part, and the promises of it.
Exodus 24:7 7 Then
he took the Book of the Covenant and read in the hearing of the people. And
they said, “All that the Lord
has said we will do, and be obedient.”
YLT 7and he taketh the Book of the Covenant, and
proclaimeth in the ears of the people, and they say, `All that which Jehovah
hath spoken we do, and obey.'
And he took the
book of the covenant,.... Which contained the words of the Lord he is said to write, Exodus 24:4, and
consisted both of laws and judgments required of the people, and to which they
had given their assent, and promised obedience to; and of promises made by the
Lord of sending his angel before them to guide them in the way, and bring them
to Canaan, and to drive the Canaanites from thence, and put the Israelites into
the possession of it; so that here were promises on both sides, a restipulation
of parties, which made a formal covenant:
and read in the
audience of the people; he had rehearsed what was contained in it from his memory, by
word of mouth, to which they had assented, Exodus 24:3 and
having written the same in a book, he read it to them distinctly, that they
might the better take notice of the contents of it:
and they said,
all that the Lord hath said will we do, and be obedient; which
is a repetition and confirmation of what they had before said, and is expressed
in stronger terms; so that this was not done suddenly and inconsiderately, and
yet they seem not to be so well apprised of their own inability to keep the
laws of God, and of the treachery of their own hearts as to their regard to
them; see Deuteronomy 5:28.
Exodus 24:8 8 And
Moses took the blood, sprinkled it on the people, and said, “This is the
blood of the covenant which the Lord has made with you
according to all these words.”
YLT 8And Moses taketh the blood, and sprinkleth on
the people, and saith, `Lo, the blood of the covenant which Jehovah hath made
with you, concerning all these things.'
And Moses took
the blood,.... The other half of the blood which was in the basins:
and sprinkled
it on the people; not on the whole body of the people, who could not be brought
nigh enough, and were too numerous to be all sprinkled with it; though the
apostle so expresses it, a part being put for the whole, Hebrews 9:19 either
this was sprinkled on the young men that offered the sacrifices in the name of
all the people; or on the seventy elders, as the heads of them, so Aben Ezra;
or upon the twelve pillars, which answered to the twelve tribes, and
represented them as the altar did the Lord:
and said,
behold the blood of the covenant, which the Lord hath made with you concerning
all these words; being a ratification of the covenant on both sides, having been
sprinkled both upon the altar, and upon the people. In allusion to which, the
blood of Christ is sometimes called the blood of sprinkling, and which,
sprinkled upon the mercy seat, calls for pardon for men; and sprinkled on their
consciences, speaks peace and pardon to them, and cleanses from all sin; and
sometimes the blood of the everlasting covenant, the covenant of grace made
with him, by which it is ratified and confirmed; and our Lord may have regard
to this rite and mode of expression in Matthew 26:28.
Exodus 24:9 9 Then
Moses went up, also Aaron, Nadab, and Abihu, and seventy of the elders of
Israel,
YLT 9And Moses goeth up, Aaron also, Nadab and
Abihu, and seventy of the elders of Israel,
Then went up
Moses and Aaron, Nadab and Abihu,.... After the above things
were done, the words of the Lord were told the people, and the book of the
covenant read unto them, to which they agreed, sacrifices were offered, and the
blood of them sprinkled on the altar, and on the people. The Samaritan version
adds to these, Eleazar and Ithamar, the two younger sons of Aaron:
and seventy of
the elders of Israel, who were called up to the mountain to the Lord, Exodus 24:1.
Exodus 24:10 10 and
they saw the God of Israel. And there was under His feet as it were a
paved work of sapphire stone, and it was like the very heavens in its
clarity.
YLT 10and they see the God of Israel, and under His
feet [is] as the white work of the sapphire, and as the substance of the
heavens for purity;
And they saw
the God of Israel,.... The Targum of Jonathan restrains this to Nadab and Abihu
whereas it is doubtless true of Moses and Aaron, and the seventy elders, who
all saw him, and who were witnesses to the people that it was a divine Person
that spoke to Moses, and delivered the laws unto him, to be observed by them;
which seems to be the reason of their being called up, and favoured with this
sight which must not be understood as of anything criminal in them, as if they
curiously looked and pried to see something they should not, for which they
deserved some sort of punishment, as the Targum intimates; but of a privilege,
and a very high one they were favoured with: and this sight they had was not by
a vision of prophecy, or with the eyes of their understanding, but corporeally;
they saw the Son of God, the God of Israel, in an human form, as a pledge and presage
of his future incarnation, who is the Angel that spoke to Moses on Mount Sinai,
as Stephen says, and the Lord that was among the angels there, who afterwards
became incarnate, and having done his work on earth, ascended on high, Acts 7:38.
and there
was under his feet; which shows that there was a visible form, and that human; nor
is this contrary to what is said, "ye saw no similitude"; Deuteronomy 4:12,
since what is here related does not respect the same time, nor the same
persons; this was after the giving of the ten commands, that at the time of it;
this is said of the seventy elders, with Moses, Aaron, and his two sons, that
of all the people:
as it were
paved work of a sapphire stone: like a pavement pitched with sapphire. The
Septuagint version is,"and they saw the place where the God of Israel
stood, and what were under his feet, as the work of a sapphire brick.'The
sapphire stones, of which the pavement was, were as broad as bricks, and being
like a brick, was a memorial, as the Targum of Jonathan says, of the servitude
the Egyptians made the children of Israel to serve with in clay and bricks; but
being a sapphire, bright and glorious, may denote the liberty they now enjoyed
in exchange for their bondage. And the Targum of Jonathan understands it of the
colour, and not of the form of the sapphire, and renders it, the white
sapphire; and so do some Jewish writersF23Saadiah Gaon in Aben Ezra,
& R. Jonah in Ben Melech in loc. ; though the colour of the sapphire is
azure, or sky coloured, with which agrees what follows:
and as it were
the body of heaven in his clearness; and RuaeusF24De
Gemmis, c. 2. says, the sapphire is sky coloured, and some of them shine and
sparkle with golden points or spots, and are reckoned the best sapphires; so
that this represents the heaven as quite clear and serene, bespangled with
stars; and as the heavens, covered with clouds, may denote the displeasure of
God, so a serene heaven his favour and good will, and in such an amiable light
was he now beheld.
Exodus 24:11 11 But on the nobles of the
children of Israel He did not lay His hand. So they saw God, and they ate and
drank.
YLT 11and unto those of the sons of Israel who are
near He hath not put forth His hand, and they see God, and eat and drink.
And upon the
nobles of the children of Israel he laid not his hand,.... Which
some interpret of his hand of prophecy, and of the measure of the Spirit, such
an one as Moses had, and by virtue of which he lived forty days and nights
without eating and drinking; but these not having such a measure of the Spirit,
were obliged to eat and drink to support nature, as in the next clause: but it
is rather to be understood of the hand of God; he did not inflict any disease
or death upon them on their sight of him, it being a notion that no man could
see God and live; but these men did live, not only Moses, and Aaron and his two
sons, but the seventy elders, who were the principal choicest persons among the
children of Israel; wherefore the Targum of Jonathan wrongly restrains this to
Nadab and Abihu:
also they saw
God, and did eat and drink: though they saw God, they continued alive
and well, and in good health, of which their eating and drinking were a sign
and evidence; or they ate, as Abendana, the sacrifices of the peace offerings,
which were usually eaten by the priests and the people; and as a feast was
common at covenant making, here was a feast kept by the elders, the
representatives of the people, when they covenanted with God. Onkelos favours this
sense,"and they rejoiced in their sacrifices, which were accepted with
good will, as if they had ate and drank.'
Exodus 24:12 12 Then
the Lord
said to Moses, “Come up to Me on the mountain and be there; and I will give you
tablets of stone, and the law and commandments which I have written, that you
may teach them.”
YLT 12And Jehovah saith unto Moses, `Come up unto
Me to the mount, and be there, and I give to thee the tables of stone, and the
law, and the command, which I have written to direct them.'
And the Lord
said unto Moses, come up to me into the mount,.... For as yet Moses was
not got up to the top of the mount, only up some part of it with the elders,
though at some distance from the people: but now he is bid to come up higher:
and be there; continue
there, as he did six days after this:
and I will give
thee tables of stone, and a law, and commandments which I have written; that is, the
law of the ten commandments, which were written on tables of stone by the Lord
himself; he had already spoken them in the hearing of the people, but now he
had wrote them, and that in tables of stone; partly for the duration of them,
and partly to represent the hardness of the hearts of the Israelites, the
stubbornness of their wills to comply with his law, their contumacy and
obstinate persistence in disobedience to it:
that thou
mayest teach them; these being in hand and sight, would have an opportunity of
explaining them to them and inculcating them on their minds, and pressing them
to yield an obedience to them.
Exodus 24:13 13 So
Moses arose with his assistant Joshua, and Moses went up to the mountain of
God.
YLT 13And Moses riseth -- Joshua his minister also
-- and Moses goeth up unto the mount of God;
And Moses rose
up, and his minister Joshua,.... In order to go up higher on the mount.
Joshua, and he only, was to go up higher with him, though not to the top of the
mount, at least not into the cloud upon it, as Moses did. Joshua was his
minister or servant, and waited upon him wherever he went, and was to be his
successor; and therefore for his encouragement, and to qualify him the better
for it, he was indulged with a sight and knowledge of things others were not;
for by his not knowing anything of the idolatry of the golden calf, Exodus 32:17 it
appears that he was on some part of the mount all the forty days and forty
nights; and if it should be asked whether he fasted all that time, or, if he
did not, how he was provided with food and drink? it may be replied, that there
is no necessity to suppose that he fasted all that time; and it is easy to
imagine how he was supplied, for the manna fell round about the mountain, of
which he might gather and eat day by day, as Aben Ezra observes; and there was
a brook which descended out of the mount, from whence he might have water, Deuteronomy 9:21.
and Moses went
up into the mount of God; Mount Sinai, where he had formerly appeared to him in a bush,
and now had descended on it to give the law, and was still upon it, where his
glory was seen; and therefore might, with great propriety, be called the mount
of God; to the top of which Moses was preparing to go, but before he went gave
the following instructions.
Exodus 24:14 14 And
he said to the elders, “Wait here for us until we come back to you. Indeed,
Aaron and Hur are with you. If any man has a difficulty, let him go to
them.”
YLT 14and unto the elders he hath said, `Abide ye
for us in this [place], until that we turn back unto you, and lo, Aaron and Hur
[are] with you -- he who hath matters doth come nigh unto them.'
And he said
unto the elders,.... The seventy elders which were selected out of the several
tribes of Israel, and now about to return to the camp:
tarry ye here
for us; meaning himself and Joshua, who was going with him:
until we come
again unto you; perhaps Moses might not know how long his stay would be at the
top of the mount, but supposed it would be some time by the provision he makes
for hearing and adjusting cases in his absence:
and behold,
Aaron and Hur are with you; Hur is not mentioned before, as being with
Moses and the rest; but doubtless he was, at least it is highly probable he was
one of the seventy elders of him; see Gill on Exodus 17:10.
if any man have
any matters to do: any cases to be considered, any cause to be tried in difference
between him and another man, and which cannot be determined by the inferior
judges, is too difficult for them to take in hand:
let him come
unto them; bring his case before them, and have their advice and opinion,
and be determined by them.
Exodus 24:15 15 Then
Moses went up into the mountain, and a cloud covered the mountain.
YLT 15And Moses goeth up unto the mount, and the
cloud covereth the mount;
And Moses went
up into the mount,.... To the top of it, and as it seems alone, leaving Joshua
behind in a lower part of the mountain:
and a cloud
covered the mount; in which cloud Jehovah was.
Exodus 24:16 16 Now
the glory of the Lord
rested on Mount Sinai, and the cloud covered it six days. And on the seventh
day He called to Moses out of the midst of the cloud.
YLT 16and the honour of Jehovah doth tabernacle on
mount Sinai, and the cloud covereth it six days, and He calleth unto Moses on
the seventh day from the midst of the cloud.
And the glory
of the Lord abode upon Mount Sinai,.... The divine Shechinah
or Majesty, some visible token of it, an exceeding great brightness and
splendour:
and the cloud
covered it six days; either the glory of the Lord, so that it could not be seen it
had been; or the mount, as Jarchi; but that is observed before, unless repeated
for the sake of the time it covered it, six days; or him, Moses, as some in
Jarchi, who for six days together was covered with a thick cloud, so that he
was not seen by any while on the mountain; and thus he remained, until he was
admitted into the immediate presence of God, for which he was now preparing:
what he did, or was made known to him during this time, is not said; it is
probable his thoughts were employed about the glory and greatness of the divine
Being; and as he was abstracted from earthly men and things, he was more at
leisure to contemplate on divine and heavenly things, and so was more fitted
for an intercourse with God, and had more courage and presence of mind to enter
into it:
and on the
seventh day he called unto Moses out of the midst of the cloud; in which the
glory of God was, and which seems to favour the first sense of the preceding
clause, that it was the glory of God the cloud covered.
Exodus 24:17 17 The
sight of the glory of the Lord was like a
consuming fire on the top of the mountain in the eyes of the children of
Israel.
YLT 17And the appearance of the honour of Jehovah
[is] as a consuming fire on the top of the mount, before the eyes of the sons
of Israel;
And the sight
of the glory of the Lord was like devouring fire on the top of the mount,.... For when
God spoke out of the cloud, the glory of the Lord flashed out like devouring
fire; it was not devouring fire, but it was like it; it was like a great blaze
of fire, which consumes all that is in its ways; it was such a large body of
light, and so clear and bright, that it looked like devouring flames of fire;
and being upon the top of the mount was very visible, and seen at a great
distance in the eyes of the children of Israel throughout, their camp.
Exodus 24:18 18 So
Moses went into the midst of the cloud and went up into the mountain. And Moses
was on the mountain forty days and forty nights.
YLT 18and Moses goeth into the midst of the cloud,
and goeth up unto the mount, and Moses is on the mount forty days and forty
nights.
And Moses went
into the midst of the cloud,.... Where the glory of God was, and he must
at this time be endowed with more than ordinary courage to enter into it, when
the glory of the Lord flashed out of it like flames of fire; yet being called
of God he was not intimidated, but with great serenity and composure of mind,
as may be thought, he went into the presence chamber of the most High, to hear
what he had to say unto him:
and gat him up
into the mount; that is, he went into the cloud, after he had ascended the
summit of the mount; for it cannot be supposed that he first went into the
cloud, and then got himself up to the mount, which yet our version, if not
carefully guarded against, may lead unto:
and Moses was
in the mount forty days and forty nights; without eating or
drinking; and just such a term of time Christ fasted in the wilderness; it is
probable that the six days before mentioned are to be reckoned part of those
forty days, since it is not said that he was in the cloud forty days and forty
nights, but in the mount. The Targum of Jonathan adds,"learning the words
of the law from the mouth of the Holy One, whose name is to be praised.'Living
without food so long must be ascribed to a miracle; for HippocratesF25Lib.
de Carn. in fine, apud Scheuchzer. Physic. Sacr. vol. 2. p. 196. that great
physician, says, that"those who remain without food seven days,
thenceforward, if they would, cannot receive any support from food, because
then the belly will not admit of any;'and gives this reason for it, because the
fasting intestine coheres, or is wrinkled.
──《John Gill’s
Exposition of the Bible》