Exodus 12
PLUS
Share
Chapter 12
Chapter Overview:
Verses:
This chapter gives an account of one of the most memorable ordinances, and one of the most memorable providences of all that art recorded in the old testament.
- None of all the ordinances of the Jewish church were more eminent than that of the passover. It consisted of three parts.
- The killing and eating of the paschal lamb, ver. 1 - 6, 8 - 11.
- The sprinkling of the blood upon the doorposts, peculiar to the first passover, ver. 7.
with the reason for it, ver. 11 - 13.
- The feast of unleavened bread for seven days after; this points rather at what was to be done after in the observance of this ordinance, ver. 14 - 20.
This institution is communicated to the people, and they instructed in the observance.
- Of this first passover, ver. 21 - 23.
- Of the after passovers, ver. 24 - 27.
And the Israelites obedience to these orders, ver. 28.- None of all the providences of God concerning the Jewish church was more illustrious, than the deliverance of the children of Israel out of Egypt.
- The first - born of the Egyptians are slain, ver. 29, 30.
- Orders are given immediately for their discharge, ver. 31 - 33.
- They begin their march,
- Loaded with their own effects, v. 34.
- Enriched with the spoils of Egypt, ver. 35, 36.
- Attended with a mixed multitude, ver. 37, 38,
- Put to their shifts for present supply, ver. 39.
This event is dated, ver. 40 - 42.- A recapitulation in the close, 1st. Of this memorable ordinance, with some additions, ver. 43 - 49
2dly. Of this memorable providence, ver. 50, 51.
12:1 | The Lord spake - Had spoken, before the three days darkness. But the mention of it was put off to this place, that the history of the plagues might not be interrupted. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12:2 | This shall be to you the beginning of months - They had hitherto begun their year from the middle of September, but hence - forward they were to begin it from the middle of March, at least in all their ecclesiastical computations. We may suppose that while Moses was bringing the ten plagues upon the Egyptians, he was directing the Israelites to prepare for their departure at an hour's warning.Probably he had, by degrees, brought them near together from their dispersions, for they are here called the congregation of Israel; and to them, as a congregation, orders are here sent. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
12:3 | Take every man a lamb - In each of their families, or two or three families, if they were small, join for a lamb. The lamb was to be got ready four days before. and that afternoon they went, they were to kill it, ( Exodus 12:6 ,) as a sacrifice, not strictly, for it was not offered upon the altar, but as a religious ceremony, acknowledging God's goodness to them, not only in preserving them from, but in delivering them by the plagues inflicted on the Egyptians. The lamb so slain they were to eat roasted (we may suppose in its several quarters) with unleavened bread and bitter herbs; they were to eat it in haste, Exodus 12:11 , and to leave none of it until the morning; for God wouldhave them to depend upon him for their daily bread. Before they eat the flesh of the lamb, they were to sprinkle the blood upon the door - posts; by which their houses were to be distinguished from the houses of the Egyptians, and so their first - born secured from the sword of the destroying angel. Dreadful work was to be made this night in Egypt; all the first - born both of man and beast were to be slain; and judgment executed upon the gods of Egypt, Numbers 33:4 . It is probable the idols which the Egyptians worshipped were defaced, those of metal melted, those of wood consumed, and those of stone broke to pieces. This was to be annually observed as a feast of the Lord in their generations, to which the feast of unleavened bread was annexed, during which, for seven days, they were to eat no bread but what was unleavened, in remembrance of their being confined to such bread for many days after they came out of Egypt, Exodus 12:14 - 20.There was much of the gospel in this ordinance:
12:9 | Raw - Half roasted, but throughly drest. | 12:10 | Ye shall burn with fire - To prevent the profane abuse of it. | 12:11 | The Lord's passover - A sign of his passing over you, when he destroyed the Egyptians. | 12:16 | An holy convocation - A solemn day for the people to assemble together. | 12:19 | A stranger - A proselyte. Heathens were not concerned in the passover. | 12:22 | Out of the door of his house - Of that house, wherein he ate the passover: Until the morning - That is, till towards morning, when they would be called for to march out of Egypt. They went out very early in the morning. | 12:23 | The destroyer - The destroying angel, whether this was a good oran evil angel, we have not light to determine. | 12:27 | The people bowed the head and worshipped - They hereby signified their submission to this institution as a law, and their thankfulness for it as a favour and privilege. | 12:31 | Rise up, and get you forth - Pharaoh had told Moses he should see his face no more, but now he sent for him; those will seek God in their distress, who before had set him at defiance. Such a fright he was now in that he gave orders by night for their discharge, fearing lest if he delay'd, he himself should fall next. And that he sent them out, not as men hated (as the Pagan historians have represented this matter) but as men feared, is plain by his request to them. | 12:32 | Bless me also - Let me have your prayers, that I may not be plagued for what is past when you are gone. | 12:33 | We be all dead men - When death comes unto our houses, it is seasonable for us to think of our own mortality. | 12:34 | Their kneading - troughs - Or rather, their lumps of paste unleavened. | 12:37 | About six hundred thousand men - The word means strong and able men fit for wars, beside women and children, which we cannot suppose to make less than twelve hundred thousand more. What a vast increase was this to arise from seventy souls, in little more than two hundred years. | 12:38 | And a mixed multitude went up with them - Some perhaps willing to leave their country, because it was laid waste by the plagues. But probably the greatest part was but a rude unthinking mob, that followed they knew not why: It is likely, when they understood that the children of Israel were to continue forty years in the wilderness, they quitted them, and returned to Egypt again. And flocks and herds, even very much cattle - This is taken notice of, because it was long ere Pharaoh would give them leave to remove their effects, which were chiefly cattle. | 12:39 | Thrust out - By importunate entreaties. | 12:40 | It was just four hundred and thirty years from the promise made to Abraham (as the Apostle explains it, Galatians 3:17 ,) at his first coming into Canaan, during all which time the Hebrews, were sojourners in a land that was not theirs, either Canaan or Egypt. So long the promise God made to Abraham lay dormant and unfulfilled, but now, it revived, and things began to work towards the accomplishment of it. The first day of the march of Abraham's seed towards Canaan was four hundred and thirty years (it should seem, to a day) from the promise made to Abraham, Genesis 12:2 .I will make of thee a great nation. | 12:42 | This first passover night was a night of the Lord, much to be observed; but the last passover night, in which Christ was betrayed, was a night of the Lord, much more to be observed, when a yoke heavier than that of Egypt was broke from off our necks, and a land better than that of Canaan set before us. That was a temporal deliverance, to be celebrated in their generations; this an eternal redemption to be celebrated world without end. | 12:45 | An hired servant - Unless he submit to be circumcised. | 12:47 | All the congregation of Israel must keep it - Though it was observed in families apart, yet it is looked upon as the act of the whole congregation. And so the new testament passover, the Lord's supper, ought not to be neglected by any that are capable of celebrating it. | 12:48 | No stranger that was uncircumcised might eat of it.Neither may any now approach the Lord's supper who have not first submitted to baptism; nor shall any partake of the benefit of Christ's sacrifice, who are not first circumcised in heart. Any stranger that was circumcised might eat of the passover, even servants. Here is an indication of favour to the poor Gentiles, that the stranger, if circumcised, stands upon the same level with the home - born Israelite; one law for both. This was a mortification to the Jews, and taught them that it was their dedication to God, not their descent from Abraham, that entitled them to their privileges. | |