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SRB = Scofield Margin Notes JFB = Jamieson, Fausset, Brown Commentary JFB = Introduction AC = Adam Clarke Comentary AC = Chronology by Adam Clarke OU1 = OUtline Index of Book OU = OUtline of This Chapter
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Mountain of
God
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A flame of fire, out of the
midst of a bush Among the fragments attributed to AEschylus, and
collected by Stanley in his invaluable edition of this
poet, p. 647, col. 1, we find the following beautiful
verses:-
(οις "Distinguish God from mortal men; and do not suppose
that any thing fleshly is like unto him. Thou knowest
him not: sometimes indeed he appears as a
formless and impetuous FIRE, sometimes as
water, sometimes as thick darkness." The
poet proceeds:-
(οις "The mountains, the earth, the deep and extensive
sea, and the summits of the highest mountains tremble
whenever the terrible eye of the Supreme Lord looks down
upon them."
These are very remarkable fragments, and seem all to
be collected from traditions relative to the different
manifestations of God to the Israelites in Egypt, and in
the wilderness. Moses wished to see God, but he could
behold nothing but an indescribable glory:
nothing like mortals, nothing like a human
body, appeared at any time to his eye, or to
those of the Israelites. "Ye saw no manner of
similitude," said Moses, "on the day that the Lord spake
unto you in Horeb, out of the midst of the FIRE," Deuteronomy
4:15. But sometimes the Divine power and justice
were manifested by the indescribable, formless,
impetuous, consuming flame; at other times he
appeared by the water which he brought out of the
flinty rock; and in the thick darkness on Horeb,
when the fiery law proceeded from his right hand,
then the earth quaked and the mountain
trembled: and when his terrible eye looked
out upon the Egyptians through the pillar of cloud and
fire, their chariot wheels were struck off, and
confusion and dismay were spread through all the hosts
of Pharaoh; Exodus
14:24,25.
And the bush was not
consumed.
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Observant ubi festa mero pede sabbata reges.
The ancient Greeks did the same. Jamblichus, in the
life of Pythagoras, tells us that this was one of his
maxims, (οις The place whereon thou
standest is holy ground.
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And Moses hid his
face
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Large-land
A land flowing with milk and
honey Prima tulit tell us, eadem vos ubere laeto
Accipiet. AEn., lib. iii., ver. 95.
"The land that first produced you shall receive you
again into its joyous bosom."
The poets feign that Bacchus, the fable of whom they
have taken from the history of Moses, produced rivers of
milk and honey, of water and wine:-
(οις "The land flows with milk; it flows also with wine;
it flows also with the nectar of bees, (honey.)" This
seems to be a mere poetical copy from the Pentateuch,
where the sameness of the metaphor and the
correspondence of the descriptions are obvious.
Place of the Canaanites,
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And this shall be a
token Ye shall serve God upon this
mountain.
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I have surely visited
you
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Three days' journey into the
wilderness
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Our exceptionable translation of the original
has given some countenance to the desperate cause of
infidelity; its abettors have exultingly said: "Moses
represents the just God as ordering the
Israelites to borrow the goods of the Egyptians
under the pretence of returning them, whereas he
intended that they should march off with the booty." Let
these men know that there was no borrowing in the
case; and that if accounts were fairly balanced,
Egypt would be found still in considerable
arrears to Israel. Let it also be considered that
the Egyptians had never any right to the services
of the Hebrews. Egypt owed its policy, its opulence, and
even its political existence, to the Israelites. What
had Joseph for his important services? NOTHING!
He had neither district, nor city, nor lordship in
Egypt; nor did he reserve any to his
children. All his services were gratuitous;
and being animated with a better hope than any earthly
possession could inspire, he desired that even his
bones should be carried up out of Egypt. Jacob
and his family, it is true, were permitted to sojourn in
Goshen, but they were not provided for in that place;
for they brought their cattle, their goods,
and all that they had into Egypt, Genesis
46:1,6; that they had nothing but the bare land to
feed on; and had built treasure cities or
fortresses, we know not how many; and two whole
cities, Pithom and Raamses, besides; and
for all these services they had no compensation
whatever, but were besides cruelly abused, and obliged
to witness, as the sum of their calamities, the daily
murder of their male infants. These particulars
considered, will infidelity ever dare to produce this
case again in support of its worthless pretensions?
Jewels of silver,
Ye shall spoil the
Egyptians. IN this chapter we have much curious and important
information; but what is most interesting is the name by
which God was pleased to make himself known to Moses and
to the Israelites, a name by which the Supreme Being was
afterwards known among the wisest inhabitants of the
earth. HE who IS and who WILL BE what he IS. This is a
proper characteristic of the Divine Being, who is,
properly speaking, the only BEING, because he is
independent and eternal; whereas all other
beings, in whatsoever forms they may appear, are
derived, finite, changeable, and liable to destruction,
decay, and even to annihilation. When God,
therefore, announced himself to Moses by this name, he
proclaimed his own eternity and
immateriality; and the very name itself precludes
the possibility of idolatry, because it was
impossible for the mind, in considering it, to represent
the Divine Being in any assignable shape; for who could
represent BEING or Existence by any limited
form? And who can have any idea of a form that is
unlimited? Thus, then, we find that the first
discovery which God made of himself was intended to show
the people the simplicity and spirituality
of his nature; that while they considered him as BEING,
and the Cause of all BEING, they might be preserved from
all idolatry for ever. The very name itself is a
proof of a Divine revelation; for it is not possible
that such an idea could have ever entered into the mind
of man, unless it had been communicated from above. It
could not have been produced by reasoning, for
there were no premises on which it could be
built, nor any analogies by which it could have
been formed. We can as easily comprehend eternity
as we can being, simply considered in and of
itself, when nothing of assignable forms, colours, or
qualities existed, besides its infinite and illimitable
self.
To this Divine discovery the ancient Greeks owed the
inscription which they placed above the door of the
temple of Apollo at Delphi: the whole of
the inscription consisted in the simple monosyllable EI,
THOU ART, the second person of the Greek substantive
verb (οις What beautiful things have the ancient Greek
philosophers stolen from the testimonies of God to
enrich their own works, without any kind of
acknowledgment! And, strange perversity of man! these
are the very things which we so highly applaud in the
heathen copies, while we neglect or pass them by
in the Divine originals!
• Key
SRB = Scofield Margin Notes JFB = Jamieson, Fausset, Brown Commentary JFB = Introduction AC = Adam Clarke Comentary AC = Chronology by Adam Clarke OU1 = OUtline Index of Book OU = OUtline of This Chapter Copyright Statement |
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