
Text -- Exodus 1:7 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Exo 1:7
Wesley: Exo 1:7 - -- Like fishes or insects, so that they multiplied; and being generally healthful and strong, they waxed exceeding mighty, so that the land was filled wi...
Like fishes or insects, so that they multiplied; and being generally healthful and strong, they waxed exceeding mighty, so that the land was filled with them, at least Goshen, their own allotment. This wonderful increase was the product of the promise long before made to the fathers. From the call of Abraham, when God first told him he would make him a great nation, to the deliverance of his seed out of Egypt, was 430 years; during the first 215 of which, they were increased to 70, but in the latter half, those 70 multiplied to 600,000 fighting men.
JFB -> Exo 1:7
JFB: Exo 1:7 - -- They were living in a land where, according to the testimony of an ancient author, mothers produced three and four sometimes at a birth; and a modern ...
They were living in a land where, according to the testimony of an ancient author, mothers produced three and four sometimes at a birth; and a modern writer declares "the females in Egypt, as well among the human race as among animals, surpass all others in fruitfulness." To this natural circumstance must be added the fulfilment of the promise made to Abraham.
Clarke: Exo 1:7 - -- The children of Israel were fruitful - פרו paru , a general term, signifying that they were like healthy trees, bringing forth an abundance of f...
The children of Israel were fruitful -

Clarke: Exo 1:7 - -- And increased - ישרץ yishretsu , they increased like fishes, as the original word implies. See Gen 1:20 (note), and the note there
And increased -

Clarke: Exo 1:7 - -- Abundantly - ירבו yirbu , they multiplied; this is a separate term, and should not have been used as an adverb by our translators
Abundantly -

Clarke: Exo 1:7 - -- And waxed exceeding mighty - ויעצמו במאד מאד vaiyaatsmu bimod meod , and they became strong beyond measure - superlatively, superlativ...
And waxed exceeding mighty -
1. The Hebrew women were exceedingly fruitful, suffered very little in parturition, and probably often brought forth twins
2. There appear to have been no premature deaths among them. Thus in about two hundred and fifteen years they were multiplied to upwards of 600,000, independently of old men, women, and children.
Calvin -> Exo 1:7
Calvin: Exo 1:7 - -- 7.And the children of Israel were fruitful 8 To what an extent they increased Moses relates in the 12th chapter, viz., to the number of 600,000, besi...
7.And the children of Israel were fruitful 8 To what an extent they increased Moses relates in the 12th chapter, viz., to the number of 600,000, besides women and children; which was certainly an incredible increase for so short a time. For, though 430 years be counted from the date of the covenant with Abraham to the departure of the people, it is clear that half of them had elapsed before Jacob went down into Egypt; so that the Israelites sojourned in that land only 200 years, or little more — say ten years more. How then could it come to pass that in so short a time a single family could have grown into so many myriads? It would have been an immense and extraordinary increase if 10,000 had sprung from every tribe; but this more than quadruples that number. Wherefore certain sceptics, perceiving that the relation of Moses surpasses the ordinary ratio of human propagation, and estimating the power of God by their own sense and experience, altogether refuse to credit it. For such is the perverseness of men, that they always seek for opportunities of despising or disallowing the works of God; such, too, is their audacity and insolence that they shamelessly apply all the acuteness they possess to detract from his glory. If their reason assures them that what is related as a miracle is possible, they attribute it to natural causes, — so is God robbed and defrauded of the praise his power deserves; if it is incomprehensible to them, they reject it as a prodigy. 9 But if they cannot bring themselves to acknowledge the interference of God except in matters by the magnitude of which they are struck with astonishment, why do they not persuade themselves of the truth of whatever common sense repudiates? They ask how this can be, as if it were reasonable that the hand of God should be so restrained as to be unable to do anything which exceeds the bounds of human comprehension. Whereas, because we are naturally so slow to profit by his ordinary operations, it is rather necessary that we should be awakened into admiration by extraordinary dealings.
Let us conclude, then, that since Moses does not here speak of the natural course of human procreation, but celebrates a miracle unheard of before, by which God ratified the truth of his promise, we should judge of it perversely, and maliciously, if we measure it by our own feeble reason, instead of meditating with reverence upon what far transcends all our senses. Let us rather remember how God reproves his unbelieving people by the Prophet Isaiah. ( Isa 51:1) For, in order to prove that it would not be difficult for Him, in spite of the small number to which the Israelites were reduced, to produce a great multitude, He bids them look into “the hole of the pit from whence they were digged,” viz., to Abraham, and Sarah that bare them, whom he multiplied though alone, and childless. Certain Rabbins, after their custom, imagine that four infants were produced at a birth; for as often as they meet with any point which perplexes them, they gratuitously invent whatever suits them, and then obtrude their imaginations as indubitable facts; and proceed foolishly, and unseasonably, to discuss that this is physically probable. There are Christians, too, who, with little consideration, have imitated them here, contending that what Moses describes is in accordance with experience, because the fecundity of certain nations has been almost as great. We indeed sometimes see confirmed by remarkable examples what the Psalmist says, ( Psa 107:36,) that God “maketh the hungry to dwell” in the wilderness, “that they may prepare a city for habitation, and sow the fields, and plant vineyards, which may yield fruits of increase; and he blesseth them also, so that they are multiplied greatly;” as also, that “He turneth a fruitful land into barrenness,” and strips it of inhabitants; but the design of Moses is to shew, that there never was any fecundity, which was not inferior to the increase of the people of Israel. Hence his comparison between the seventy souls, and the multitude which proceeded from them, that this special blessing of God might be distinguished from ordinary cases; hence too the accumulated expressions, which undoubtedly are meant for amplification, that “they were fruitful, and increased abundantly, and multiplied, and waxed exceeding mighty; and the land was filled with them.” For the repetition of the adverb, Meod, Meod, marks an unusual abundance, Nor do I reject the conjecture of some, that in the word
Defender -> Exo 1:7
Defender: Exo 1:7 - -- Populations can grow very rapidly under favorable conditions. For example, the seventy who came into Egypt could easily have multiplied to over five m...
Populations can grow very rapidly under favorable conditions. For example, the seventy who came into Egypt could easily have multiplied to over five million in just ten generations, assuming that the average family had six children who lived and reproduced, and that only two generations were living contemporaneously at any one time. This was only half the size of Jacob's original family. Even an average family size of four would generate a population of over 100,000 in ten generations."
TSK -> Exo 1:7
TSK: Exo 1:7 - -- fruitful : Exo 12:37; Gen 1:20, Gen 1:28, Gen 9:1, Gen 12:2, Gen 13:16, Gen 15:5, Gen 17:4-6, Gen 17:16, Gen 22:17, Gen 26:4; Gen 28:3, Gen 28:4, Gen ...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Exo 1:7
Barnes: Exo 1:7 - -- In no province does the population increase so rapidly as in that which was occupied by the Israelites. See the note at Gen 47:6. At present it has ...
In no province does the population increase so rapidly as in that which was occupied by the Israelites. See the note at Gen 47:6. At present it has more flocks and herds than any province in Egypt, and more fishermen, though many villages are deserted. Until the accession of the new king, the relations between the Egyptians and the Israelites were undoubtedly friendly. The expressions used in this verse imply the lapse of a considerable period after the death of Joseph.
The land was filled with them - i. e. the district allotted to them Gen 45:10.
Poole -> Exo 1:7
Poole: Exo 1:7 - -- Here are many words, and some very emphatical, to express their incredible multiplication. They
waxed exceeding mighty ; which may relate either to...
Here are many words, and some very emphatical, to express their incredible multiplication. They
waxed exceeding mighty ; which may relate either to their numbers, which greatly added to their strength, or to their constitution, to note that their offspring was strong as well as numerous. Atheistical wits cavil at this story, and pretend it impossible that out of seventy persons should come above six hundred thousand men within two hundred and fifteen years; wherein they betray no less ignorance than impiety. For, to say nothing of the extraordinary fruitfulness of the women in Egypt who oft bring forth four or five children at one birth, as Aristotle notes, Hist. Animal. 7.4, nor of the long lives of the men of that age, nor of the plurality of wives then much in use, nor of the singular blessing of God upon the Hebrews in giving them conceptions and births without abortion, all which are but very reasonable suppositions, the probability of it may plainly appear thus: Suppose there were only two hundred years reckoned, and only fifty persons who did beget children, and these begin not to beget before they he twenty years old, and then each of them beget only three children. Divide this time now into ten times twenty years. In the first time, of 50 come 150. In the second, of 150 come 450. Of them in the third, come 1350. Of them in the fourth, 4050. Of these in the fifth, 12150. Of these in the sixth, 36450. Of them in the seventh, 109350. Of them in the eighth, 328050. Of these in the ninth, 984150. And of them in the tenth, 2952450. If it be objected, that we read nothing of their great multiplication till after Joseph’ s death, which some say was not above fifty years before their going out of Egypt, it may be easily replied:
1. This is a great mistake, for there were above one hundred and forty, years between Joseph’ s death and their going out of Egypt, as may appear thus: It is granted that the Israelites were in Egypt about two hundred and ten or two hundred and fifteen years in all. They came not thither till Joseph was near forty years old, as is evident by comparing Gen 41:46 with Gen 45:6 . So there rests only seventy years of Joseph’ s life, which are the first part of the time of Israel’ s dwelling in Egypt, and there remain one hundred and forty-five years, being the other part of the two hundred and fifteen years.
2. That the Israelites did multiply much before Joseph’ s death, though Scripture be silent in it, as it is of many other passages confessedly true, cannot be reasonably doubted. But if there was any defect in the numbers proposed in the first fifty-five years, it might be abundantly compensated in the one hundred and forty-five years succeeding. And so the computation remains good.
Gill -> Exo 1:7
Gill: Exo 1:7 - -- And the children of Israel were fruitful,.... In their offspring; became like fruitful trees, as the word signifies:
and increased abundantly; like...
And the children of Israel were fruitful,.... In their offspring; became like fruitful trees, as the word signifies:
and increased abundantly; like creeping things, or rather like fishes, which increase very much, see Gen 1:20.
and multiplied; became very numerous, whereby the promises made to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, were fulfilled:
and waxed exceeding mighty; were hale, and strong, of good constitutions, able bodied men, and so more dreaded by the Egyptians: a heap of words is here used to express the vast increase of the people of Israel in Egypt:
and the land was filled with them; not the whole land of Egypt, but the land of Goshen: at first they were seated in a village in that country, but now they were spread throughout the towns and cities in it.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Exo 1:7 The text is clearly going out of its way to say that the people of Israel flourished in Egypt. The verbs פָּרָה (p...
Geneva Bible -> Exo 1:7
Geneva Bible: Exo 1:7 And the children of Israel were fruitful, and increased abundantly, and multiplied, and waxed exceeding mighty; and the ( b ) land was filled with the...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Exo 1:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Exo 1:1-22 - --1 The children of Israel, after Joseph's death, increase.8 The more they are oppressed by a new king, the more they multiply.15 The godliness of the m...
Maclaren -> Exo 1:6-7
Maclaren: Exo 1:6-7 - --Exodus 1:6-7
These remarkable words occur in a short section which makes the link between the Books of Genesis and of Exodus. The writer recapitulates...
MHCC -> Exo 1:1-7
MHCC: Exo 1:1-7 - --During more than 200 years, while Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob lived at liberty, the Hebrews increased slowly; only about seventy persons went down into ...
Matthew Henry -> Exo 1:1-7
Matthew Henry: Exo 1:1-7 - -- In these verses we have, 1. A recital of the names of the twelve patriarchs, as they are called, Act 7:8. Their names are often repeated in script...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Exo 1:6-7
Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 1:6-7 - --
After the death of Joseph and his brethren and the whole of the family that had first immigrated, there occurred that miraculous increase in the num...
Constable -> Exo 1:1--15:22; Exo 1:1-7
Constable: Exo 1:1--15:22 - --I. THE LIBERATION OF ISRAEL 1:1--15:21
"The story of the first half of Exodus, in broad summary, is Rescue. The ...
