
Text -- Exodus 1:1-17 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
That is, children and grand - children.

Wesley: Exo 1:3 - -- Who tho' youngest of all is placed before Dan, Naphtali, &c. because they were the children of the hand-maidens.
Who tho' youngest of all is placed before Dan, Naphtali, &c. because they were the children of the hand-maidens.

Wesley: Exo 1:5 - -- According to the computation we had, Gen 46:27, including Joseph and his two sons. This was just the number of the nations by which the earth was peop...
According to the computation we had, Gen 46:27, including Joseph and his two sons. This was just the number of the nations by which the earth was peopled, Gen. 10:1-32, for when God separated the sons of Adam, he set the bounds of the people according to the number of the children of Israel, Deu 32:8.

Wesley: Exo 1:6 - -- All that generation by degrees wore off: perhaps all Jacob's sons died much about the same time, for there was not past seven years difference in age ...
All that generation by degrees wore off: perhaps all Jacob's sons died much about the same time, for there was not past seven years difference in age between the eldest and the youngest of them, except Benjamin.

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.

Wesley: Exo 1:8 - -- All that knew him loved him, and were kind to his relations for his sake; but when he was dead he was soon forgotten, and the remembrance of the good ...
All that knew him loved him, and were kind to his relations for his sake; but when he was dead he was soon forgotten, and the remembrance of the good offices he had done was either not retained or not regarded. If we work for men only, our works at farthest will die with us; if for God, they will follow us, Rev 14:13.

Wesley: Exo 1:10 - -- When men deal wickedly it is common for them to imagine that they deal wisely, but the folly of sin will at last be manifested before all men.
When men deal wickedly it is common for them to imagine that they deal wisely, but the folly of sin will at last be manifested before all men.

Wesley: Exo 1:11 - -- masters, to afflict them - With this very design. They not only made them serve, which was sufficient for Pharaoh's profit, but they made them serve w...
masters, to afflict them - With this very design. They not only made them serve, which was sufficient for Pharaoh's profit, but they made them serve with rigour, so that their lives became bitter to them; intending hereby to break their spirits, and to rob them of every thing in them that was generous: to ruin their health, and shorten their days, and so diminish their numbers: to discourage them from marrying, since their children would be born to slavery; and to oblige them to desert the Hebrews, and incorporate with the Egyptians. And 'tis to be feared the oppression they were under did bring over many of them to join with the Egyptians in their idolatrous worship; for we read, Jos 24:14, that they served other gods in Egypt; and we find, Eze 20:8, that God had threatned to destroy them for it, even while they were in the land of Egypt.

Wesley: Exo 1:11 - -- cities - To keep the king's money or corn, wherein a great part of the riches of Egypt consisted.
cities - To keep the king's money or corn, wherein a great part of the riches of Egypt consisted.

Wesley: Exo 1:12 - -- To the grief and vexation of the Egyptians. Times of affliction, have oft been the church's growing times: Christianity spread most when it was persec...
To the grief and vexation of the Egyptians. Times of affliction, have oft been the church's growing times: Christianity spread most when it was persecuted.

Wesley: Exo 1:15 - -- The two chief of them. They are called Hebrew midwives, probably not because they were themselves Hebrews; for sure Pharaoh could never expect they sh...
The two chief of them. They are called Hebrew midwives, probably not because they were themselves Hebrews; for sure Pharaoh could never expect they should be so barbarous to those of their own nation, but because they were generally made use of by the Hebrews, and being Egyptians he hoped to prevail with them.

Wesley: Exo 1:17 - -- Dreaded his wrath more than Pharaoh's, and therefore saved the men - children alive.
Dreaded his wrath more than Pharaoh's, and therefore saved the men - children alive.
JFB -> Exo 1:1; Exo 1:7; Exo 1:8; Exo 1:9-10; Exo 1:11; Exo 1:11; Exo 1:13-14; Exo 1:15; Exo 1:16; Exo 1:17
(See Gen. 46:8-26).

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.

JFB: Exo 1:8 - -- About sixty years after the death of Joseph a revolution took place--by which the old dynasty was overthrown, and upper and lower Egypt were united in...
About sixty years after the death of Joseph a revolution took place--by which the old dynasty was overthrown, and upper and lower Egypt were united into one kingdom. Assuming that the king formerly reigned in Thebes, it is probable that he would know nothing about the Hebrews; and that, as foreigners and shepherds, the new government would, from the first, regard them with dislike and scorn.

JFB: Exo 1:9-10 - -- They had risen to great prosperity--as during the lifetime of Joseph and his royal patron, they had, probably, enjoyed a free grant of the land. Their...
They had risen to great prosperity--as during the lifetime of Joseph and his royal patron, they had, probably, enjoyed a free grant of the land. Their increase and prosperity were viewed with jealousy by the new government; and as Goshen lay between Egypt and Canaan, on the border of which latter country were a number of warlike tribes, it was perfectly conformable to the suggestions of worldly policy that they should enslave and maltreat them, through apprehension of their joining in any invasion by those foreign rovers. The new king, who neither knew the name nor cared for the services of Joseph, was either Amosis, or one of his immediate successors [OSBURN].

JFB: Exo 1:11 - -- Having first obliged them, it is thought, to pay a ruinous rent and involved them in difficulties, that new government, in pursuance of its oppressive...
Having first obliged them, it is thought, to pay a ruinous rent and involved them in difficulties, that new government, in pursuance of its oppressive policy, degraded them to the condition of serfs--employing them exactly as the laboring people are in the present day (driven in companies or bands), in rearing the public works, with taskmasters, who anciently had sticks--now whips--to punish the indolent, or spur on the too languid. All public or royal buildings, in ancient Egypt, were built by captives; and on some of them was placed an inscription that no free citizen had been engaged in this servile employment.

JFB: Exo 1:11 - -- These two store-places were in the land of Goshen; and being situated near a border liable to invasion, they were fortified cities (compare 2Ch. 11:1-...
These two store-places were in the land of Goshen; and being situated near a border liable to invasion, they were fortified cities (compare 2Ch. 11:1-12:16). Pithom (Greek, Patumos), lay on the eastern Pelusiac branch of the Nile, about twelve Roman miles from Heliopolis; and Raamses, called by the Septuagint Heroopolis, lay between the same branch of the Nile and the Bitter Lakes. These two fortified cities were situated, therefore, in the same valley; and the fortifications, which Pharaoh commanded to be built around both, had probably the same common object, of obstructing the entrance into Egypt, which this valley furnished the enemy from Asia [HENGSTENBERG].

JFB: Exo 1:13-14 - -- Ruins of great brick buildings are found in all parts of Egypt. The use of crude brick, baked in the sun, was universal in upper and lower Egypt, both...
Ruins of great brick buildings are found in all parts of Egypt. The use of crude brick, baked in the sun, was universal in upper and lower Egypt, both for public and private buildings; all but the temples themselves were of crude brick. It is worthy of remark that more bricks bearing the name of Thothmes III, who is supposed to have been the king of Egypt at the time of the Exodus, have been discovered than of any other period [WILKINSON]. Parties of these brickmakers are seen depicted on the ancient monuments with "taskmasters," some standing, others in a sitting posture beside the laborers, with their uplifted sticks in their hands.

JFB: Exo 1:15 - -- Two only were spoken to--either they were the heads of a large corporation [LABORDE], or, by tampering with these two, the king designed to terrify th...
Two only were spoken to--either they were the heads of a large corporation [LABORDE], or, by tampering with these two, the king designed to terrify the rest into secret compliance with his wishes [CALVIN].

JFB: Exo 1:16 - -- Opinions are divided, however, what was the method of destruction which the king did recommend. Some think that the "stools" were low seats on which t...
Opinions are divided, however, what was the method of destruction which the king did recommend. Some think that the "stools" were low seats on which these obstetric practitioners sat by the bedside of the Hebrew women; and that, as they might easily discover the sex, so, whenever a boy appeared, they were to strangle it, unknown to its parents; while others are of opinion that the "stools" were stone troughs, by the river side--into which, when the infants were washed, they were to be, as it were, accidentally dropped.

JFB: Exo 1:17 - -- Their faith inspired them with such courage as to risk their lives, by disobeying the mandate of a cruel tyrant; but it was blended with weakness, whi...
Their faith inspired them with such courage as to risk their lives, by disobeying the mandate of a cruel tyrant; but it was blended with weakness, which made them shrink from speaking the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
Clarke: Exo 1:1 - -- These are the names - Though this book is a continuation or the book of Genesis, with which probably it was in former times conjoined, Moses thought...
These are the names - Though this book is a continuation or the book of Genesis, with which probably it was in former times conjoined, Moses thought it necessary to introduce it with an account of the names and number of the family of Jacob when they came to Egypt, to show that though they were then very few, yet in a short time, under the especial blessing of God, they had multiplied exceedingly; and thus the promise to Abraham had been literally fulfilled. See the notes on Genesis 46 (note).

Clarke: Exo 1:6 - -- Joseph died, and all his brethren - That is, Joseph had now been some time dead, as also all his brethren, and all the Egyptians who had known Jacob...
Joseph died, and all his brethren - That is, Joseph had now been some time dead, as also all his brethren, and all the Egyptians who had known Jacob and his twelve sons; and this is a sort of reason why the important services performed by Joseph were forgotten.

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 במ×ד מ×ד 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.

Clarke: Exo 1:8 - -- There arose up a new king - Who this was it is difficult to say. It was probably Ramesses Miamun, or his son Amenophis, who succeeded him in the gov...
There arose up a new king - Who this was it is difficult to say. It was probably Ramesses Miamun, or his son Amenophis, who succeeded him in the government of Egypt about A. M. 2400, before Christ 1604

Clarke: Exo 1:8 - -- Which knew not Joseph - The verb ידע yada , which we translate to know, often signifies to acknowledge or approve. See Jdg 2:10; Psa 1:6; Psa 31...
Which knew not Joseph - The verb

Clarke: Exo 1:9 - -- He said unto his people - He probably summoned a council of his nobles and elders to consider the subject; and the result was to persecute and destr...
He said unto his people - He probably summoned a council of his nobles and elders to consider the subject; and the result was to persecute and destroy them, as is afterwards stated.

Clarke: Exo 1:10 - -- They join also unto our enemies - It has been conjectured that Pharaoh had probably his eye on the oppressions which Egypt had suffered under the sh...
They join also unto our enemies - It has been conjectured that Pharaoh had probably his eye on the oppressions which Egypt had suffered under the shepherd-kings, who for a long series of years had, according to Manetho, governed the land with extreme cruelty. As the Israelites were of the same occupation, (viz., shepherds), the jealous, cruel king found it easy to attribute to them the same motives; taking it for granted that they were only waiting for a favorable opportunity to join the enemies of Egypt, and so overrun the whole land.

Clarke: Exo 1:11 - -- Set over them task-masters - שרי ×ž×¡×™× sarey missim , chiefs or princes of burdens, works, or tribute; επιστατας των εÏγων,...
Set over them task-masters -

Clarke: Exo 1:11 - -- Treasure cities - ערי ×ž×¡×›× ×•×ª arey miscenoth , store cities - public granaries. Calmet supposes this to be the name of a city, and translat...
Treasure cities -
Some writers suppose that beside these cities the Israelites built the pyramids. If this conjecture be well founded, perhaps they are intended in the word
Josephus expressly says that one part of the oppression suffered by the Israelites in Egypt was occasioned by building pyramids. See Clarke’ s note on Exo 1:14
In the book of Genesis, and in this book, the word Pharaoh frequently occurs, which, though many suppose it to be a proper name peculiar to one person, and by this supposition confound the acts of several Egyptian kings, yet is to be understood only as a name of office
It may be necessary to observe that all the Egyptian kings, whatever their own name was, took the surname of Pharaoh when they came to the throne; a name which, in its general acceptation, signified the same as king or monarch, but in its literal meaning, as Bochart has amply proved, it signifies a crocodile, which being a sacred animal among the Egyptians, the word might be added to their kings in order to procure them the greater reverence and respect.

Clarke: Exo 1:12 - -- But the more they afflicted them - The margin has pretty nearly preserved the import of the original: And as they afflicted them, so they multiplied...
But the more they afflicted them - The margin has pretty nearly preserved the import of the original: And as they afflicted them, so they multiplied and so they grew That is, in proportion to their afflictions was their prosperity; and had their sufferings been greater, their increase would have been still more abundant.

Clarke: Exo 1:13 - -- To serve with rigour - בפרך bepharech , with cruelty, great oppression; being ferocious with them. The word fierce is supposed by some to be de...
To serve with rigour -

Clarke: Exo 1:14 - -- They made their lives bitter - So that they became weary of life, through the severity of their servitude
They made their lives bitter - So that they became weary of life, through the severity of their servitude

Clarke: Exo 1:14 - -- With hard bondage - בעבדה קשה baabodah kashah , with grievous servitude. This was the general character of their life in Egypt; it was a li...
With hard bondage -

Clarke: Exo 1:14 - -- In mortar, and in brick - First, in digging the clay, kneading, and preparing it, and secondly, forming it into bricks, drying them in the sun, etc
In mortar, and in brick - First, in digging the clay, kneading, and preparing it, and secondly, forming it into bricks, drying them in the sun, etc

Clarke: Exo 1:14 - -- Service in the field - Carrying these materials to the places where they were to be formed into buildings, and serving the builders while employed i...
Service in the field - Carrying these materials to the places where they were to be formed into buildings, and serving the builders while employed in those public works. Josephus says "The Egyptians contrived a variety of ways to afflict the Israelites; for they enjoined them to cut a great number of channels for the river, and to build walls for their cities and ramparts, that they might restrain the river, and hinder its waters from stagnating upon its overrunning its own banks; they set them also to build pyramids, (

Clarke: Exo 1:15 - -- Hebrew midwives - Shiphrah and Puah, who are here mentioned, were probably certain chiefs, under whom all the rest acted, and by whom they were inst...
Hebrew midwives - Shiphrah and Puah, who are here mentioned, were probably certain chiefs, under whom all the rest acted, and by whom they were instructed in the obstetric art. Aben Ezra supposes there could not have been fewer than five hundred midwives among the Hebrew women at this time, but that very few were requisite see proved on Exo 1:19 (note).

Clarke: Exo 1:16 - -- Upon the stools - על ×”××‘× ×™× al haobnayim . This is a difficult word, and occurs nowhere else in the Hebrew Bible but in Jer 18:3, where we...
Upon the stools -

Clarke: Exo 1:17 - -- The midwives feared God - Because they knew that God had forbidden murder of every kind; for though the law was not yet given, Exo 20:13, being Hebr...
The midwives feared God - Because they knew that God had forbidden murder of every kind; for though the law was not yet given, Exo 20:13, being Hebrews they must have known that God had from the beginning declared, Whosoever sheddeth man’ s blood, by man shall his blood be shed, Gen 9:6. Therefore they saved the male children of all to whose assistance they were called. See Clarke’ s note on Exo 1:19.
Calvin: Exo 1:1 - -- 1.These are the names It is the intention of Moses to describe the miraculous deliverance of the people, (from whence the Greeks gave the name to the...
1.These are the names It is the intention of Moses to describe the miraculous deliverance of the people, (from whence the Greeks gave the name to the book;) but, before he comes to that, he briefly reminds us that the promise given to Abraham was not ineffectual, that his seed should be multiplied
“as the stars of the heaven, and as the sand which is upon the sea-shore.†(Gen 22:17.)
This, then, is the commencement of the book, — that although their going down from the land of Canaan into Egypt might have seemed at the time as it were the end and abolition of God’s covenant, yet in his own time he abundantly accomplished what he had promised to his servant as to the increase of his descendants. However, he only mentions by name the twelve patriarchs who went down with their father Jacob, and then sums up the whole number of persons, as in two other passages. (Gen 46:27, and Deu 10:22.) The calculation is perfectly accurate, if Jacob is counted among the thirty and six souls in the first catalogue. For it is a far-fetched addition of the Rabbins 6 to count in Jochebed the mother of Moses, to complete the number; and it is not probable that a woman, who was afterwards born in Egypt, should be reckoned among the men whom Jacob brought with him. If any object that the seventy are said to have “come out of the loins of Jacob,†the discrepancy is easily explained by the common scriptural use of the figure synecdoche 7 That he from whom the others sprung is not excluded, we gather from the words of Moses, (Deu 10:22,)
“Thy fathers went down into Egypt with threescore and ten persons; and now the Lord thy God hath made thee as the stars of heaven for multitude.â€
But there is no reason to add five more, as we read in the address of Stephen recorded by Luke, (Act 7:14;) for we cannot be surprised that in this mode of expressing numbers this error should have occurred by the introduction of a single letter. Should any objector make this an handle for controversy, we should remember that the Spirit, by the mouth of Paul, does not warn us without purpose
“not to give heed to genealogies.†(1Ti 1:4.)

Calvin: Exo 1:6 - -- 6.And Joseph died The Rabbins ignorantly conclude from this expression that Joseph died first of his brethren, whereas it is evident that the others ...
6.And Joseph died The Rabbins ignorantly conclude from this expression that Joseph died first of his brethren, whereas it is evident that the others were passed over, and his name was expressly mentioned to do him honor, as being the only one then in authority. How long they survived their father, Moses does not say, but only marks the beginning of the change, — as much as to say, the Israelites were humanely treated for a considerable space of time; so that the condition of those who went down with Jacob was tolerable, since, free from all injustice and tyranny, they tranquilly enjoyed the hospitality accorded to them. At the same time, he gives us to understand that, when all that generation was gone, the desire and the memory of the land of Canaan, which they had never seen, might have died out of the minds of their descendants, if they had not been forcibly aroused to seek after it. And unquestionably, since that people were forgetful and careless of meditating on God’s mercies, God could not have better provided for their salvation than by allowing them to be cruelly tried and afflicted; otherwise, as though their origin had been in Egypt, they might have preferred to have remained for ever in their nest, and by that indifference the hope of the promised heritage would have been effaced from their hearts.

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

Calvin: Exo 1:8 - -- 8.Now there arose a new king When more than one hundred years had been happily passed in freedom and repose, the condition of the elect people began ...
8.Now there arose a new king When more than one hundred years had been happily passed in freedom and repose, the condition of the elect people began to be changed. Moses relates that the commencement of their troubles proceeded from jealousy, and from the groundless fear of the Egyptians, because they conceived that danger might arise from this strange nation, unless they hastened to oppress it. But before he comes to this, he premises that the remembrance of the benefits received from Joseph had departed, because it might have in some measure mitigated their cruelty, had it still been unimpaired. It is probable that this oblivion of the gratitude due to him arose from the moderation of Joseph; for if he had demanded great privileges for his people, and immunity from tributes and burdens, the remembrances of the saving of the country by an Israelite would have been famous for many ages; but it appears that he was content with the kind hospitality afforded them, that his brethren might dwell comfortably, and without molestation in the land of Goshen, because he wished them to be sojourners there until the time of deliverance arrived. And in this way he best provided for their safety, lest being thus ensnared, they might have fallen into the nets of destruction. But in proportion as the moderation of the holy man exposed them not to jealousy and complaint, so was the ingratitude of the Egyptians less excusable in forgetting, after little more than a single century, that remarkable benefit, which should have been everywhere preserved in their public monuments, lest the name of Joseph should ever perish. Their unkindness, then, was intolerable, in refusing that his kindred and descendants should sojourn with them, since they ought to have ascribed the safety of themselves and their country, after God, to him, or rather under the hand and with the blessing of God. But this disease has always been flagrant in the world; and certainly it is good for us that evil should ever be our reward from men for our kindnesses, that we may learn in the performance of our duty to look to God alone, since otherwise we are unduly addicted to conciliate favor and applause for ourselves, or to seek after more earthly advantages. Still it was no common return which the Israelites had liberally received during more than 100 years for Joseph’s sake, that they lived comfortably in a proud, avaricious, and cruel nation. Nevertheless, whatever happens, although we are not only defrauded of all recompense, but even although many of whom we have deserved well conspire for our destruction, let us never regret having done rightly; and, in the meantime, let us learn that nothing is more effective to restrain the desire of doing wrong, than those ties of mutual connection, by which God has bound us together. 12 But, although the favor conferred by Joseph had been forgotten by all, the shame and sin of ingratitude cleaves especially to the king; in whom it was more than base to forget by whose industry and care he received so rich a yearly revenue. For the holy Patriarch, by buying up the land, had obtained a fifth part of the produce as a yearly tribute for the king. But so are tyrants accustomed to engulf whatever is paid them, without considering by what right it is acquired.

Calvin: Exo 1:9 - -- 9.And he said unto his people That is to say, in a public assembly, such as kings are wont to hold for consultation on public affairs. As if Moses ha...
9.And he said unto his people That is to say, in a public assembly, such as kings are wont to hold for consultation on public affairs. As if Moses had said that this point was proposed by the king for deliberation by his estates; viz., that because it was to be apprehended that the Israelites, trusting in their multitude and strength, might rise in rebellion, or might take advantage of any public disturbance to shake off the yoke and to leave Egypt, they should be anticipated, and afflicted with heavy burdens, to prevent their making any such attempt. This Pharaoh calls 13 “dealing wisely with them;†for though the word
Behold, the people It not unfrequently happens that the minds of the wicked are aroused to jealousy by the mercies of God, acting like fans to light up their wrath. Nevertheless, the very least proof of his favor ought not on that account to be less agreeable to us, because it is made an occasion to the wicked of dealing more cruelly with us. In fact, God thus attempers his bounty towards us, lest we should be too much taken up with earthly prosperity. Thus the blessing on which all his happiness depended banished Jacob from the home of his father, and from his promised inheritance; but yet he assuaged his grief with this single consolation, that he knew God to be reconciled to him. So also his posterity, the more they experienced of God’s goodness towards them, the more they were exposed to the enmity of the Egyptians. But Pharaoh, to render them hated, or suspected, refers to their power, and accuses them of disaffection, whereof they had given no token. Yet he does not accuse them of rebellion, as if they would take armed possession of the kingdom, but that they would depart elsewhere; whence we may conjecture, that they made no secret of the hope which God had given them of their return. But this seemed a plausible excuse enough, that it was anything but just for those, who had of their own accord sought the protection of the king, to be freely sent away; and thus 14 Isaiah speaks of it. (Isa 52:4.)

Calvin: Exo 1:11 - -- 11.Therefore they did set over them The Egyptians devised this remedy for gradually diminishing the children of Israel. Since they are subjects, they...
11.Therefore they did set over them The Egyptians devised this remedy for gradually diminishing the children of Israel. Since they are subjects, they may afflict them with burdens, to depress them; and this slavery will weaken and decrease them. But their power over them as subjects should not have been carried so far as to impose upon inoffensive persons, to whom they had granted free permission to reside among them, these new tributes; for they ought first to have considered upon what conditions they had been admitted. The exaction, then, by which Pharaoh broke faith with them, was in itself unjust; but the crime to which he proceeded was still greater, because he did not simply seek for pecuniary advantage, but desired to afflict the wretched people by the heaviness of their burdens. For the Israelites were not only compelled to pay tribute, but were put to servile labor, as Moses immediately adds. As to the two cities, it is doubtful in what sense they were called miscenoth 15 This word is sometimes taken for cellars and granaries, or repositories of all things necessary as provision; but, as it sometimes signifies “fortresses,†it will not be an unsuitable meaning, that they were commanded to build with their own hands the prisons, which might prevent them from departing. For it is clear from many passages (Gen 47:11; Exo 12:37; Num 33:3) that Rhameses was situated in that part of the country, and we shall presently see that the children of Israel went out from Rhameses.

Calvin: Exo 1:12 - -- 12.But the more Moses relates the contest between the mercy of God and the cruelty of the king of Egypt. When, therefore, the wretched Israelites wer...
12.But the more Moses relates the contest between the mercy of God and the cruelty of the king of Egypt. When, therefore, the wretched Israelites were tyrannically afflicted, he says that God came to their aid, and so powerfully that his interference was successful. Thus was that wicked and deceitful design frustrated, which the Egyptians had set on foot for destroying the Church. Thence may we, too, conceive the hope, that whatsoever the wicked imagine against us will come to nought, because God’s hand is greater, and shall prevail. But we must bear afflictions patiently, because he would have us struggle against, and rise under the weight imposed upon us; 16 and because we know that it is the peculiar office of God to oppose himself to unjust counsels, in order that they may not succeed, let us learn to abstain from all deceit and violence, lest we wantonly provoke God. But this passage is especially intended to console the believer, that he may be prepared to take up his cross more patiently; since God is sufficient to supply the help, to which the wrath of the wicked must finally yield. What is said in the second part of the verse, that the Egyptians 17 were grieved, means, that they became more anxious, as they saw that they availed nothing, and that their unexpected increase threatened still greater danger; for, since they feared the Israelites before they had afflicted them, no wonder that they felt alarmed lest they should avenge themselves when provoked. And hence the profitable instruction may be gathered, that while the wicked proceed to horrible crimes in order to insure their safety, the Almighty visits them with the very just return, that thus their anxiety is augmented. Some render it, “the Egyptians hated the people of Israel;†and so the word

Calvin: Exo 1:13 - -- 13.And the Egyptians made Thus Moses informs us that, so far from being induced to kindness by their fears, they were rather hardened, and spurred on...
13.And the Egyptians made Thus Moses informs us that, so far from being induced to kindness by their fears, they were rather hardened, and spurred on to greater cruelty; for the wicked do not perceive that God is against them, when their perverse strivings are unsuccessful; and if this thought ever arises, still the blind impetuosity of their folly hurries them forwards, so that they doubt not to be able in their obstinate lust to prevail even in opposition to God; as will be made clearer in the progress of this history. The cruelty of the exactions is expressed, when he says that “their lives were made bitter,†nothing being sweeter than life; therefore, it appears, that their miseries were extreme and intolerable, which made life burdensome. He confirms this in other words, and also specifies their tasks, that they were engaged “in mortar and in brick, and in all manner of (similar) services.†He twice repeats that they were treated with rigor, i e. , harshly. 18

Calvin: Exo 1:15 - -- 15.And the king of Egypt spake The tyrant now descends from the open violence and cruelty which had availed nothing, to secret plots and deceit. He d...
15.And the king of Egypt spake The tyrant now descends from the open violence and cruelty which had availed nothing, to secret plots and deceit. He desires the infants to be killed at their birth; and commands the midwives to be the instruments of this dreadful barbarity. We read of no such detestable example of inhumanity since the world began. I admit it has occasionally happened, that, upon the capture of a city, the conquerors have not spared even children and infants; that is to say, either in the heat of battle, or because the defense had been too obstinate, and they had lost many of their men, whose death they would avenge. It has happened, too, that an uncle, or brother, or guardian, has been impelled by the ambition of reigning to put children to death. It has happened, again, that in the detestation of a tyrant, and to destroy the very memory of his family, his whole offspring has been slain; and some have proceeded to such cruelty against their enemies, as to tear the little ones from their mothers’ breasts. But never did any enemy, however implacable, ever so vent his wrath against a whole nation, as to command all its male offspring to be destroyed in the midst of peace. This was a trial, such as to inflict a heavy blow on men of the utmost firmness, much more to bring low a fainting people, already weary of their lives. For, at first sight, each would think it more advantageous and desirable for them to sink down into an humbler state, than that the wrath of their enemies should be thus provoked against them by the blessings of God. And it is probable, such was the prostration of their minds, that they were not only sorely smitten, but almost stupified. For nothing else remained, but that the men should die without hope of offspring, and that the name and race of Abraham should soon be cut off, and thus all God’s promises would come to nought. In these days, in which we have to bear similar insults, and are urged to despair, as if the Church would soon be utterly destroyed, let us learn to hold up this example like a strong shield: seeing that it is no new case, if immediate destruction seem to await us, until the divine aid appears suddenly and unexpectedly in our extremity. Josephus falsely conjectures that the midwives were Egyptian women, sent out as spies; whereas Moses expressly says, that they had been the assistants and attendants of the Hebrew women in their travail; and this erroneous idea is plainly refuted by the whole context, in which it especially appears that they were restrained by the fear of God from yielding to the sinful desire of the tyrant. Hence it follows, that they were previously possessed with some religious feeling. But another question arises, why two midwives only are mentioned by name, when it is probable that, in so great a population, there were many? Two replies may be given; either that the tyrant addressed himself to these two, who might spread the fear of his power amongst the others; or, that, desiring to proceed with secret malice, he made a trial of the firmness of these two, and if he had obtained their acquiescence, he hoped to have easily succeeded with the others; for shame forbade him from issuing an open and general command.

Calvin: Exo 1:17 - -- 17.But the midwives feared God Moses does not mean that they were then first affected with the fear of God; but he assigns this reason why they did n...
17.But the midwives feared God Moses does not mean that they were then first affected with the fear of God; but he assigns this reason why they did not obey his unjust command, viz., because reverence towards God had greater influence with them. And certainly, as all our affections are best directed by this rein, so also it is the surest shield for resisting all temptations, and a firm support to uphold our minds from wavering in seasons of danger. Now, they not only dreaded this crime as being cruel and inhuman; but because purer religion and piety flourished in their hearts; for they knew that the seed of Abraham was chosen of God, and had themselves experienced that it was blessed; and hence it was natural to feel, that it would be an act of very gross impiety to extinguish in it the grace of God. We must also observe the antithesis between the fear of God and the dread of punishment, which might have deterred them from doing right. Although tyrants do not easily allow their commands to be despised, and death was before their eyes, they still keep their hands pure from evil. Thus, sustained and supported by reverential fear of God, they boldly despised the command and the threatenings of Pharaoh. Wherefore those, whom the fear of men withdraws from the right course, betray by their cowardice an inexcusable contempt of God, in preferring the favor of men to his solemn commands. But this doctrine extends still more widely; for many would be 19 more than preposterously wise, whilst, under pretext of due submission, they obey the wicked will of kings in opposition to justice and right, being in some cases the ministers of avarice and rapacity, in others of cruelty; yea, to gratify the transitory kings of earth, they take no account of God; and thus, which is worst of all, they designedly oppose pure religion with fire and sword. It only makes their effrontery more detestable, that whilst they knowingly and willingly crucify Christ in his members, they plead the frivolous excuse, that they obey their princes according to the word of God; as if he, in ordaining princes, had resigned his rights to them; and as if every earthly power, which exalts itself against heaven, ought not rather most justly to be made to give way. But since they only seek to escape the reprobation of men for their criminal obedience, let them not be argued with by long discussions, but rather referred to the judgment of women; for the example of these midwives is abundantly sufficient for their condemnation; especially when the Holy Spirit himself commends them, as not having obeyed the king, because they feared God.
Defender: Exo 1:1 - -- The similarity of this summary passage to the eleven toledoth ("generations") passages of Genesis (Gen 2:4; Gen 5:1) suggests that Moses, who compiled...
The similarity of this summary passage to the eleven


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."

Defender: Exo 1:8 - -- Unfortunately, Egyptian chronology is still controversial among Egyptologists and Biblical archaeologists. Various schools of thought favor different ...
Unfortunately, Egyptian chronology is still controversial among Egyptologists and Biblical archaeologists. Various schools of thought favor different identifications of this new Pharaoh, as well as other Pharaohs before and after this one. Until such arguments are settled, there is no need to attempt a precise correlation of the uncertain Egyptian histories with the divinely inspired and trustworthy Biblical records."

Defender: Exo 1:11 - -- Although various suggestions have been made, the exact locations of these ancient cities have not yet been confirmed by archaeologists."
Although various suggestions have been made, the exact locations of these ancient cities have not yet been confirmed by archaeologists."
TSK: Exo 1:1 - -- Exo 6:14-16; Gen 29:31-35, 30:1-21, Gen 35:18, Gen 35:23-26, 46:8-26, 49:3-27; 1Ch 2:1, 1Ch 2:2, 12:23-40, 1Ch 27:16-22; Rev 7:4-8
Nehemiah, Neh 10:1...
Exo 6:14-16; Gen 29:31-35, 30:1-21, Gen 35:18, Gen 35:23-26, 46:8-26, 49:3-27; 1Ch 2:1, 1Ch 2:2, 12:23-40, 1Ch 27:16-22; Rev 7:4-8
Nehemiah, Neh 10:1, in the month, Ezr 10:9; Zec 7:1, in the twentieth, Ezr 7:7, Shushan, Shushan, or Susa, was the capital of Susiana, a province of Persia, and the winter residence of the Persian monarchs; situated about 252 miles east of Babylon, and the same distance south-south-east of Ecbatana, in lat. 32 degrees, long. 49 degrees. The circumference of its walls was about 120 stadia. Shouster is supposed to occupy its site. Est 1:2, Est 3:15; Dan 8:2



TSK: Exo 1:5 - -- loins : Heb. thigh, Gen 46:26; Jdg 8:30 *marg.
seventy : Exo 1:20; Gen 46:26, Gen 46:27; Deu 10:22

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 ...

TSK: Exo 1:8 - -- a new king : Probably Rameses Miamum, or his son Amenophis, who succeeded him about this period; and by his not knowing Joseph is meant his not acknow...

TSK: Exo 1:9 - -- the people : Num 22:4, Num 22:5; Job 5:2; Psa 105:24, Psa 105:25; Pro 14:28, Pro 27:4; Ecc 4:4; Tit 3:3; Jam 3:14-16, Jam 4:5
the people : Num 22:4, Num 22:5; Job 5:2; Psa 105:24, Psa 105:25; Pro 14:28, Pro 27:4; Ecc 4:4; Tit 3:3; Jam 3:14-16, Jam 4:5

TSK: Exo 1:10 - -- Come on : Psa 10:2, Psa 83:3, Psa 83:4; Pro 1:11
wisely : Num 22:6; Job 5:13; Psa 105:25; Pro 16:25, Pro 21:30; Act 7:19, Act 23:12; 1Co 3:18-20; Jam ...
Come on : Psa 10:2, Psa 83:3, Psa 83:4; Pro 1:11
wisely : Num 22:6; Job 5:13; Psa 105:25; Pro 16:25, Pro 21:30; Act 7:19, Act 23:12; 1Co 3:18-20; Jam 3:15-18

TSK: Exo 1:11 - -- to afflict : Exo 3:7, Exo 5:15; Gen 15:13; Num 20:15; Deu 26:6
burdens : Exo 2:11, Exo 5:4, Exo 5:5; Psa 68:13, Psa 81:6, Psa 105:13
Raamses : Gen 47:...

TSK: Exo 1:12 - -- But the more : etc. Heb. and as they afflicted them, so they multiplied, etc. Psa 105:24; Pro 21:30; Rom 8:28; Heb 12:6-11
grieved : Exo 1:9; Job 5:2;...
But the more : etc. Heb. and as they afflicted them, so they multiplied, etc. Psa 105:24; Pro 21:30; Rom 8:28; Heb 12:6-11
grieved : Exo 1:9; Job 5:2; Pro 27:4; Joh 12:19; Act 4:2-4, Act 5:28-33

TSK: Exo 1:14 - -- their lives : Exo 2:23, Exo 6:9; Gen 15:13; Num 20:15; Deu 4:20, Deu 26:6; Rth 1:20; Act 7:19, Act 7:34
in mortar : Psa 68:13, Psa 81:6; Nah 3:14
was ...

TSK: Exo 1:16 - -- and see them : Or, rather, ""and ye see them by the stone-troughs;""for so ovnayim , from aven , a stone, seems to signify (compare Exo 7:19), in ...
and see them : Or, rather, ""and ye see them by the stone-troughs;""for so

TSK: Exo 1:17 - -- feared God : Gen 20:11, Gen 42:18; Neh 5:15; Psa 31:19; Pro 8:13, Pro 16:6, Pro 24:11, Pro 24:12; Ecc 8:12; Ecc 12:13; Dan 3:16-18, Dan 6:13; Hos 5:11...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Exo 1:1 - -- Now - Literally, "And,"indicating a close connection with the preceding narrative. In fact this chapter contains a fulfillment of the predictio...
Now - Literally, "And,"indicating a close connection with the preceding narrative. In fact this chapter contains a fulfillment of the predictions recorded in Gen 46:3 and in Gen 15:13.
Every man and his household - It may be inferred from various notices that the total number of dependents was considerable, a point of importance in its bearings upon the history of the Exodus (compare Gen 13:6; Gen 14:14).

Barnes: Exo 1:5 - -- Seventy - See Gen 46:27. The object of the writer in this introductory statement is to give a complete list of the heads of separate families a...

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.

Barnes: Exo 1:8 - -- The expressions in this verse are special and emphatic. "A new king"is a phrase not found elsewhere. It is understood by most commentators to imply ...
The expressions in this verse are special and emphatic. "A new king"is a phrase not found elsewhere. It is understood by most commentators to imply that he did not succeed his predecessor in the natural order of descent and inheritance. He "arose up over Egypt,"occupying the land, as it would seem, on different terms from the king whose place he took, either by usurpation or conquest. The fact that he knew not Joseph implies a complete separation from the traditions of Lower Egypt. At present the generality of Egyptian scholars identify this Pharaoh with Rameses II, but all the conditions of the narrative are fulfilled in the person of Amosis I (or, Aahmes), the head of the 18th Dynasty. He was the descendant of the old Theban sovereigns, but his family was tributary to the Dynasty of the Shepherds, the Hyksos of Manetho, then ruling in the North of Egypt. Amosis married an Ethiopian princess, and in the third year of his reign captured Avaris, or Zoan, the capital of the Hyksos, and completed the expulsion of that race.

Barnes: Exo 1:10 - -- Any war - The Northeastern frontier was infested by the neighboring tribes, the Shasous of Egyptian monuments, and war was waged with Egypt by ...
Any war - The Northeastern frontier was infested by the neighboring tribes, the Shasous of Egyptian monuments, and war was waged with Egypt by the confederated nations of Western Asia under the reigns of the successors of Amosis. These incursions were repulsed with extreme difficulty. In language, features, costume, and partly also in habits, the Israelites probably resembled those enemies of Egypt.
Out of the land - The Pharaohs apprehended the loss of revenue and power, which would result from the withdrawal of a peaceful and industrious race.

Barnes: Exo 1:11 - -- Taskmasters - The Egyptian "Chiefs of tributes."They were men of rank, superintendents of the public works, such as are often represented on Eg...
Taskmasters - The Egyptian "Chiefs of tributes."They were men of rank, superintendents of the public works, such as are often represented on Egyptian monuments, and carefully distinguished from the subordinate overseers. The Israelites were employed in forced labor, probably in detachments, but they were not reduced to slavery, properly speaking, nor treated as captives of war. Amosis had special need of such laborers, as proved by the inscriptions.
Treasure cities - " Magazines,"depots of ammunition and provisions 1Ki 9:19; 2Ch 8:4; 2Ch 32:28.
Pithom and Raamses - Both cities were situated on the canal which was dug or enlarged in the 12th Dynasty. The former is known to have existed under the 18th Dynasty. Both were in existence at the beginning of the reign of Rameses II, by whom they were fortified and enlarged. The name "Pithom"means "House or temple of Tum,"the Sun God of Heliopolis (see Exo 13:20). The name of Raamses, or Rameses, is generally assumed to have been derived from Rameses II, the Sesostris of the Greeks, but it was previously known as the name of the district. See Gen 45:10; Gen 47:11.

Barnes: Exo 1:14 - -- The use of brick, at all times common in Egypt, was especially so under the 18th Dynasty. An exact representation of the whole process of brickmakin...
The use of brick, at all times common in Egypt, was especially so under the 18th Dynasty. An exact representation of the whole process of brickmaking is given in a small temple at Thebes, erected by Tothmosis III, the fourth in descent from Amosis. Immense masses of brick are found at Belbeis, the modern capital of Sharkiya, i. e. Goshen, and in the adjoining district.
All manner of service in the field - Not merely agricultural labor, but probably the digging of canals and processes of irrigation which are peculiarly onerous and unhealthy.

Barnes: Exo 1:15 - -- Hebrew midwifes - Or "midwives of the Hebrew women."This measure at once attested the inefficacy of the former measures, and was the direct cau...
Hebrew midwifes - Or "midwives of the Hebrew women."This measure at once attested the inefficacy of the former measures, and was the direct cause of the event which issued in the deliverance of Israel, namely, the exposure of Moses. The women bear Egyptian names, and were probably Egyptians.

Barnes: Exo 1:16 - -- Upon the stools - Literally, "two stones."The word denotes a special seat, such as is represented on monuments of the 18th Dynasty, and is stil...
Upon the stools - Literally, "two stones."The word denotes a special seat, such as is represented on monuments of the 18th Dynasty, and is still used by Egyptian midwives.
Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and Judah,

Poole: Exo 1:3 - -- Who, though the youngest of all, is placed before Dan, Naphtali, &c., because these were the sons of the handmaidens.
Who, though the youngest of all, is placed before Dan, Naphtali, &c., because these were the sons of the handmaidens.

Poole: Exo 1:5 - -- Seventy souls including Jacob and Joseph, and his two sons. See Gen 46:26,27 De 10:22 . Or if they were but sixty-nine, they are called seventy by a ...
Seventy souls including Jacob and Joseph, and his two sons. See Gen 46:26,27 De 10:22 . Or if they were but sixty-nine, they are called seventy by a round number, of which we shall have many instances. i.e. All that were of the same age with Joseph and his brethren.

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.

Poole: Exo 1:8 - -- A new king i.e. another king; one of another disposition, or interest, or family; for the kingdom of Egypt did oft pass from one family to another, a...
A new king i.e. another king; one of another disposition, or interest, or family; for the kingdom of Egypt did oft pass from one family to another, as appears from the history of the Dynastics recorded in ancient writers.
Which knew not Joseph or, acknowledged not the vast obligations which Joseph had laid not only upon the kingdoms of Egypt, and the king under whom Joseph lived, but upon all his successors, in regard of those vast additions of wealth and power which he had made to that crown. This phrase notes his ungrateful disowning and ill requiting of Joseph’ s favours. For words of knowledge in Scripture commonly include the affections and actions; as men are oft said not to know God, when they do not love nor serve him; and God is said not to know men, when he doth not love them.

Poole: Exo 1:9 - -- This was not a true, but an invidious representation and aggravation of the matter, the better to justify the sororities which he designed.
This was not a true, but an invidious representation and aggravation of the matter, the better to justify the sororities which he designed.

Poole: Exo 1:10 - -- War was not unusual in that country. So get them up out of the land, which they might easily learn from some of the Hebrews, that they were in due t...
War was not unusual in that country. So get them up out of the land, which they might easily learn from some of the Hebrews, that they were in due time to do. And they were very unwilling to pint with them, because of the tribute and service which they did receive and expect from them.

Poole: Exo 1:11 - -- Taskmasters Heb. masters of tribute , who were to exact from them the tribute required, which was both money and labour; that their purses might be ...
Taskmasters Heb. masters of tribute , who were to exact from them the tribute required, which was both money and labour; that their purses might be exhausted by the one, their strength by the other, and their spirits by both. To afflict, or, oppress, or humble ; to spend their strength by excessive labours, and so disenable them for the procreation of children.
Treasure cities where they laid the king’ s money or corn, which is reckoned among treasures, 2Ch 17:12 32:27 , and wherein a great part of the riches of Egypt consisted; for they had corn enough, not only for themselves, but to sell to other countries; so that Egypt was accounted the granary of the Roman empire. Or,
defenced cities in which garrisons were to be placed, which seems best to agree with the place and use of them. For they were in the borders of the land, and among the Israelites, which appears concerning the one from Gen 47:11 , (where the land in which they were placed is called Ramases , which in Hebrew consists of the same letters with this
Raamses and seems to be so called then by anticipation from the city of that name now built in it,) and may be reasonably presumed concerning the other; and therefore it is most probable that they were built to keep the Israelites in subjection, and to hinder them from going out of the land.

Poole: Exo 1:12 - -- They multiplied through God’ s overruling providence and singular blessing, which God gave them purposely to hasten first their sorer affliction...
They multiplied through God’ s overruling providence and singular blessing, which God gave them purposely to hasten first their sorer affliction, and next, and by that means, their glorious deliverance.
They were grieved through envy and fear.

Poole: Exo 1:13 - -- Or, cruelty , or, tyranny ; with hard words and cruel usage, without mercy or mitigation. This God permitted for wise and just reasons.
1. As a p...
Or, cruelty , or, tyranny ; with hard words and cruel usage, without mercy or mitigation. This God permitted for wise and just reasons.
1. As a punishment of their idolatry, into which divers of them fell there. Jos 24:14 Eze 20:5,7,8 23:8
2. To wean them from the land of Egypt, which otherwise was a plentiful and desirable land, and to quicken their desires after Canaan.
3. To prepare the way for God’ s glorious works, and Israel’ s deliverance.

Service in the field was the basest and most laborious of all their services.

Poole: Exo 1:15 - -- The Hebrew midwives such as not only were employed about the Hebrew women, but were Hebrews themselves, not Egyptians, as some suppose; as may appear...
The Hebrew midwives such as not only were employed about the Hebrew women, but were Hebrews themselves, not Egyptians, as some suppose; as may appear,
1. Because they are expressly called, not the midwives of the Hebrews , but
the Hebrew midwives
2. The Egyptian midwives would not willingly employ their time and pains among the meanest and poorest of servants, as these were. And if they were sent in design by the king, he had lost his end, which was to cover his cruelty with cunning, and to persuade the people that their death was not from his intention, but from the ellarices and dangers of child-bearing.
3. The Hebrew women, as they had doubtless midwives of their own, so they would never have admitted others.
4. They are said to fear God , Exo 2:17,21 .
You are not to think that these were the only midwives to so many thousands of Hebrew women, but they were the most eminent among them; and it may be, for their excellency in that profession called to the service of some Egyptian ladies, and by them known to Pharaoh, who might therefore think by their own interest, and by the promise of great rewards, or by severe threatenings, to oblige them to comply with his desires; and if he met with the desired success by them, he meant to proceed further, and to engage the rest in like manner.

Poole: Exo 1:16 - -- The stools a seat used by women when ready to be delivered, conveniently framed for the midwife’ s better discharge of her office.
Ye shall kil...
The stools a seat used by women when ready to be delivered, conveniently framed for the midwife’ s better discharge of her office.
Ye shall kill him which it was not difficult for them to do without much observation.
If it be a daughter, then she shall live either,
1. Because he feared not them, but the males only; and some add, that he was advised by one of their magicians, that a male child should be born of the Israelites, who should be a dreadful scourge to the Egyptians. Or,
2. They reserved them for their lust, or for service, or for the increase of their people, and the raising of a fairer breed by them.

Poole: Exo 1:17 - -- 1635
They feared God more than the king, and therefore chose to obey God rather than the king, their commands being contrary each to other.
1635
They feared God more than the king, and therefore chose to obey God rather than the king, their commands being contrary each to other.
Haydock: Exo 1:3 - -- And Benjamin. He is mentioned here because he was the son of Rachel, as the preceding were the children of Lia. The offspring of the handmaids foll...
And Benjamin. He is mentioned here because he was the son of Rachel, as the preceding were the children of Lia. The offspring of the handmaids follow. (Haydock)

Haydock: Exo 1:5 - -- Seventy: Septuagint, "75," including the offspring of Joseph. See Genesis xlvi. 26.
Seventy: Septuagint, "75," including the offspring of Joseph. See Genesis xlvi. 26.

Haydock: Exo 1:6 - -- Generation, or race of mortals who had seen his wonderful works. The tyrant, who knew not Joseph, began his reign about 58 years after that patriarc...
Generation, or race of mortals who had seen his wonderful works. The tyrant, who knew not Joseph, began his reign about 58 years after that patriarch's death. (Calmet) ---
His name was Pharao Amenophis, (Perer.) or Ramesses Miamum. (Usher.)

Haydock: Exo 1:9 - -- Numerous. Calvisius observes, that from Ephraim alone might have sprung 4,112,323,729 people. See St. Augustine, q. 43, &c. (Haydock) ---
In the ...
Numerous. Calvisius observes, that from Ephraim alone might have sprung 4,112,323,729 people. See St. Augustine, q. 43, &c. (Haydock) ---
In the space of 215 years, 70 people may produce an immense multitude, as Bonfrere shews by an accurate calculation. God also was pleased to bless the Hebrews with fecundity, so that they sprung up ( ebullierunt ) like frogs or fishes, ver. 7. In Egypt, the women had sometimes seven at a birth (Pliny, Natural History vii. 3,) and Aristotle (Anim. vii. 4,) mentions one woman who had 20 children at four births. (Tirinus) ---
Stronger. This might easily be true, if this king had only Thebais under his command. But if he was king of all Egypt, it seems an exaggeration. (Calmet) ---
Indeed, human policy often gives birth to all kinds of wickedness. The king justifies his cruelty on this pretext of self-defence. He wishes to keep the Hebrews under; yet he is not willing to let them depart, as he knew they intended, according to Joseph's prediction. (Haydock) ---
God permitted this disposition, in order to punish his people for their idolatry, (Ezechiel xxiii. 8,) to admonish them not to fix their abode in Egypt, and to manifest his power and glory in the destruction of the impious. (Menochius)

Haydock: Exo 1:11 - -- Masters . Cruel like himself, who not only made them build without proper materials, (ver. 14, and chap. v. 10, Haydock,) but oppressed them with hea...
Masters . Cruel like himself, who not only made them build without proper materials, (ver. 14, and chap. v. 10, Haydock,) but oppressed them with heavy burdens of brick and tile. Hence Aristophanes calls the Hebrews in derision Plinthophoroi. This servitude is styled the iron furnace of Egypt, Deuteronomy iv. 20; Jeremias xi. 4. ---
Of tabernacles, or of storehouses. (Challoner) ---
To keep his treasures, Chaldean, or "fortresses," Septuagint. It may also be the name of a city, Miscenoth, chap. xii. 37. Phithom, perhaps the same as the town of Heroum, where the Septuagint say Joseph first met his father, Genesis xlvi. 28. Ramesses was the capital, and situate in the Arabic nome. (Calmet)

Service. They were forced to till the land, reap, &c. (Menochius)

Haydock: Exo 1:15 - -- Midwives. Egyptian women, who assisted all of that district. (Josephus, [Antiquities] xi. 5.) There were others under them. Some think all these ...
Midwives. Egyptian women, who assisted all of that district. (Josephus, [Antiquities] xi. 5.) There were others under them. Some think all these midwives were of Hebrew extraction, as their names are Hebrew, &c. (Calmet)

Haydock: Exo 1:16 - -- The time, &c. Hebrew, "and you shall see them upon the two stones." Abenaim. Jeremias (xviii. 3,) uses the same expression, speaking of a potter...
The time, &c. Hebrew, "and you shall see them upon the two stones." Abenaim. Jeremias (xviii. 3,) uses the same expression, speaking of a potter hard at work. (Calmet) ---
A woman, from whom nothing could be feared, to be reserved for service and for pleasure. (Menochius) ---
We must not obey princes in their unjust commands. (Acts iv. and v., and Matthew x. 28.) (Worthington)
Gill: Exo 1:1 - -- Now these are the names of the children of Israel which came down into Egypt,.... Of the twelve patriarchs, the sons of Jacob, who were heads of the t...
Now these are the names of the children of Israel which came down into Egypt,.... Of the twelve patriarchs, the sons of Jacob, who were heads of the twelve tribes, whose names are here given; since the historian is about to give an account of their coming out of Egypt, and that it might be observed how greatly they increased in it, and how exactly the promise to Abraham, of the multiplication of his seed, was fulfilled: or, "and these are the names" b, &c. this book being connected with the former by the copulative "and"; and when this was wrote, it is highly probable there was no division of the books made, but the history proceeded in one continued account:
every man and his household came with Jacob; into Egypt, all excepting Joseph, and along with them their families, wives, children, and servants; though wives and servants are not reckoned into the number of the seventy, only such as came out of Jacob's loins: the Targum of Jonathan is,"a man with the men of his house,''as if only male children were meant, the sons of Jacob and his grandsons; and Aben Ezra observes, that women were never reckoned in Scripture as of the household or family; but certainly Dinah, and Serah, as they came into Egypt with Jacob, are reckoned among the seventy that came with him thither, Gen 46:15.

Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and Judah. The first sons of Jacob by Leah.

Gill: Exo 1:3 - -- Issachar, Zebulun,.... The other two sons of Jacob, by Leah:
Benjamin; the youngest of all Jacob's sons is placed here, being his son by his belove...
Issachar, Zebulun,.... The other two sons of Jacob, by Leah:
Benjamin; the youngest of all Jacob's sons is placed here, being his son by his beloved wife Rachel. Joseph is not put into the account, because he did not go into Egypt with Jacob.

Gill: Exo 1:4 - -- Dan, and Naphtali, Gad, and Asher. Who are last mentioned, being sons of the concubine wives.
Dan, and Naphtali, Gad, and Asher. Who are last mentioned, being sons of the concubine wives.

Gill: Exo 1:5 - -- And all the souls that came out of the loins of Jacob were seventy souls,.... "Souls" are put for persons; of the number seventy, and how reckoned; se...
And all the souls that came out of the loins of Jacob were seventy souls,.... "Souls" are put for persons; of the number seventy, and how reckoned; see Gill on Gen 46:27. This was but a small number that went down to Egypt, when compared with that which went out of it; and that it should be compared with it is the design of its being mentioned, see Exo 12:37,
for Joseph was in Egypt already; and is the reason why he is not reckoned among the sons of Jacob, that came thither with him; though rather it may be better rendered, "with Joseph who was in Egypt" c; for he must be reckoned, and indeed his two sons also, to make up the number seventy; therefore Jonathan rightly supplies it,"with Joseph and his sons who were in Egypt,''See Gill on Gen 46:27.

Gill: Exo 1:6 - -- And Joseph died, and all his brethren,.... It is a notion of the Jews, that Joseph died before any of his brethren; see Gill on Gen 50:26 and they gat...
And Joseph died, and all his brethren,.... It is a notion of the Jews, that Joseph died before any of his brethren; see Gill on Gen 50:26 and they gather it from these words; but it does not necessarily follow from hence, they might die some before him and some after him; and as they were all born in about seven years' time, excepting Benjamin, they might all die within a little time of each other: according to the Jewish writers d, the dates of their death were these,"Reuben lived one hundred and twenty four years, and died two years after Joseph; Simeon lived one hundred and twenty years, and died the year after Joseph; Levi lived one hundred and thirty seven years, and died twenty four years after Joseph; Judah lived one hundred and nineteen years, Issachar one hundred and twenty two, Zebulun one hundred and twenty four, and died two years after Joseph; Dan lived one hundred and twenty seven years, Asher one hundred and twenty three years, Benjamin one hundred and eleven years, and died twenty six years before Levi; Gad lived one hundred and twenty five years, and Naphtali one hundred and thirty three years;''but though this account of the Jews, of their times, and of the times of their death, is not to be depended upon, yet it is certain they all died in Egypt, though they were not buried there; but as Stephen says, Act 7:16 they were carried over to Shechem and interred there, either quickly after their decease, or, however, were taken along with the bones of Joseph by the children of Israel, when they departed out of Egypt: and it is also evident that they all died before the affliction and oppression of the children of Israel in Egypt began; and this account seems to be given on purpose to point this out unto us, being placed in the order it is. Levi lived the longest of them all, and the affliction did not begin till after his death; and the Jewish chronologers say e that from his death to the children of Israel's going out of Egypt were one hundred and sixteen years; and they further observe f, that it could not last more than one hundred and sixteen years, and not less than eighty seven, according to the years of Miriam:
and all that generation; in which Joseph and his brethren had lived. These also died, Egyptians as well as Israelites, before the oppression began.

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.

Gill: Exo 1:8 - -- Now there arose up a new king over Egypt,.... Stephen calls him another king, Act 7:18 one of another family, according to Josephus g; who was not of ...
Now there arose up a new king over Egypt,.... Stephen calls him another king, Act 7:18 one of another family, according to Josephus g; who was not of the seed royal, as Aben Ezra; and Sir John Marsham h thinks this was Salatis, who, according to Manetho i, was the first of the Hycsi or pastor kings that ruled in lower Egypt; but these kings seem to have reigned before that time; see Gill on Gen 46:34 and Bishop Usher k takes this king to be one of the ancient royal family, whose name was Ramesses Miamun; and gives us a succession of the Egyptian kings from the time of Joseph's going into Egypt to this king: the name of that Pharaoh that reigned when Joseph was had into Egypt, and whose dreams he interpreted, was Mephramuthosis; after him reigned Thmosis, Amenophis, and Orus; and in the reign of the last of these Joseph died, and after Orus reigned Acenehres a daughter of his, then Rathotis a brother of Acenchres, after him Acencheres a son of Rathotis, then another Acencheres, after him Armais, then Ramesses, who was succeeded by Ramesses Miamun, here called the new king, because, as the Jews l say, new decrees were made in his time; and this Pharaoh, under whom Moses was born, they call Talma m, and with Artapanus n his name is Palmanothes:
which knew not Joseph; which is not to be understood of ignorance of his person, whom he could not know; nor of the history of him, and of the benefits done by him to the Egyptian nation, though, no doubt, this was among their records, and which, one would think, he could not but know; or rather, he had no regard to the memory of Joseph; and so to his family and kindred, the whole people of Israel: he acknowledged not the favours of Joseph to his nation, ungratefully neglected them, and showed no respect to his posterity, and those in connection with him, on his account; though, if a stranger, it is not to be wondered at.

Gill: Exo 1:9 - -- And he said unto his people,.... His princes, nobles, and courtiers about him, his principal ministers of state:
behold, the people of the children...
And he said unto his people,.... His princes, nobles, and courtiers about him, his principal ministers of state:
behold, the people of the children of Israel are more and mightier than we: which could not be true in fact, but is said to stir up his nobles to attend to what he was about to say, and to work upon them to take some speedy measures for the crushing of this people; for that they were more in number, and mightier in power and wealth than the Egyptians, it was impossible; and indeed it may seem strange, that the king should tell such an untruth, which might be so easily contradicted by his courtiers; though the words will bear to be otherwise rendered, as that "the children of Israel are many" o; as they were very greatly multiplied, and became very numerous; and they might be "mightier", that is, more robust and strong, and fitter for war than the Egyptians, and therefore, were formidable, and a people to be guarded against; and it was high time to think of securing themselves from them, before they grew too mighty and powerful; or they might be more numerous and mighty in that part of the land in which they were, in Goshen, though not more and mightier than the Egyptians in general.

Gill: Exo 1:10 - -- Come on,.... Which is a word of exhortation, stirring up to a quick dispatch of business, without delay, the case requiring haste, and some speedy and...
Come on,.... Which is a word of exhortation, stirring up to a quick dispatch of business, without delay, the case requiring haste, and some speedy and a matter of indifference:
let us deal wisely with them; form some wise schemes, take some crafty methods to weaken and diminish them gradually; not with open force of arms, but in a more private and secret manner, and less observed:
lest they multiply; yet more and more, so that in time it may be a very difficult thing to keep them under, and many disadvantages to the kingdom may arise from them, next observed:
and it come to pass, that when there falleth out any war, they join also unto our enemies; their neighbours the Arabians, and Phoenicians, and Ethiopians: with the latter the Egyptians had wars, as they had in the times of Moses, as Josephus p relates, and Artapanus q, an Heathen writer, also: Sir John Marsham r thinks these enemies were the old Egyptians, with whom the Israelites had lived long in a friendly manner, and so more likely to join with them, the Thebans who lived in upper Egypt, and between whom and the pastor kings that reigned in lower Egypt there were frequent wars; but these had been expelled from Egypt some time ago:
and fight against us, and so get them up out of the land; take the opportunity, by joining their enemies and fighting against them, to get away from them out of Egypt into the land of Canaan, from whence they came: this, it seems, the Egyptians had some notion of, that they were meditating something of this kind, often speaking of the land of Canaan being theirs, and that they should in a short time inherit it; and though they were dreaded by the Egyptians, they did not care to part with them, being an industrious laborious people, and from whom the kingdom reaped many advantages.

Gill: Exo 1:11 - -- Therefore they did set taskmasters over them, to afflict them with their burdens,.... This was the first scheme proposed and agreed on, and was carrie...
Therefore they did set taskmasters over them, to afflict them with their burdens,.... This was the first scheme proposed and agreed on, and was carried into execution, to appoint taskmasters over them; or "princes", or "masters of tribute" r, commissioners of taxes, who had power to lay heavy taxes upon them, and oblige them to pay them, which were very burdensome, and so afflictive to their minds, and tended to diminish their wealth and riches, and obliged them to harder labour in order to pay them, and so every way contributed to distress them:
and they built for Pharaoh treasure cities, Pithom and Raamses; these might be built with the money they collected from them by way of tribute, and so said to be built by them, since it was chiefly in husbandry, and in keeping flocks and herds, that the Israelites were employed; or they might be concerned in building these cities, some of them understanding architecture, or however the poorer or meaner sort might be made use of in the more laborious and servile part of the work; those two cities are, in the Targums of Jonathan and Jerusalem, called Tanis and Pelusium; but Tanis was the same with Zoan, and that was built but seven years after Hebron, an ancient city, in being long before this time, see Num 13:22. Pelusium indeed may be one of them, but then it is not that which is here called Raamses, but Pithom, as Sir John Marsham s and others think: Pithom is by Junius thought to be the same with the Pathumus of Herodotus t, a town in Arabia Petraes, upon the borders of Egypt, where a ditch was dug from the Nile to the Red sea, and supposed to be the work of the Israelites: Raamses is a place different from Ramesses, Gen 47:11 and had its name from the then reigning Pharaoh, Ramesses Miamun, as Pithom is thought by some to be so called from his queen: Pliny u makes mention of some people called Ramisi and Patami, who probably were the inhabitants of these cities, whom he joins to the Arabians as bordering on Egypt: the Septuagint version adds a third city, "On", which is Hellopolls: and a learned writer w is of opinion that Raamses and Heliopolis are the same, and observes, that Raamses, in the Egyptian tongue, signifies the field of the sun, being consecrated to it, as Heliopolis is the city of the sun, the same with Bethshemesh, the house of the sun, Jer 43:13 and he thinks these cities were not properly built by the Israelites, but repaired, ornamented, and fortified, being by them banked up against the force of the Nile, that the granaries might be safe from it, as Strabo x writes, particularly of Heliopolis; and the Septuagint version here calls them fortified cities; and with this agrees what Benjamin of Tudela says y, that he came to the fountain of "Al-shemesh", or the sun, which is Raamses; and there are remains of the building of our fathers (the Jew says) even towers built of bricks, and Fium, he says z, (which was in Goshen; see Gill on Gen 47:11) is the same with Pithom; and there, he says, are to be seen some of the buildings of our fathers. Here these cities are said to be built for treasure cities, either to lay up the riches of the kings of Egypt in, or as granaries and storehouses for corn, or magazines for warlike stores, or for all of these: some think the "pyramids" were built by the Israelites, and there is a passage in Herodotus a which seems to favour it; he says, the kings that built them, the Egyptians, through hatred, name them not, but call them the pyramids of the shepherd Philitis, who at that time kept sheep in those parts; which seems to point at the Israelites, the beloved people of God, who were shepherds.

Gill: Exo 1:12 - -- But the more they afflicted them, the more they multiplied and grew,.... Became more numerous, "and broke out" b, as it may be rendered, like water wh...
But the more they afflicted them, the more they multiplied and grew,.... Became more numerous, "and broke out" b, as it may be rendered, like water which breaks out and spreads itself; so the Israelites, increasing in number, spread themselves still more in the land; the Egyptians thought, by putting them to hard labour in building cities, to have weakened their strength, and made them unfit for the procreation of children; but instead of that, the more hard labour they were put unto, the more healthful and the stronger they were, and begot more children, and multiplied exceedingly: and so it is that oftentimes afflictive dispensations are multiplying and growing times to the people of God, in a spiritual sense; who grow like the palm tree, which the more weight it has upon it the more it grows; when the church of God has been most violently persecuted, the number of converts have been greater, and saints under affliction grow in grace, in faith and love, in holiness, humility, patience, peace, and joy; see Act 12:1.
and they were grieved because of the children of Israel; because of their multiplication and increase, and because their schemes for lessening them did not succeed; they were as thorns in their eyes, as some interpret the word, as Jarchi c observes.

Gill: Exo 1:13 - -- And the Egyptians made the children of Israel to serve with rigour. Or with breach c, with what might tend to break their strength; they laid heavier ...
And the Egyptians made the children of Israel to serve with rigour. Or with breach c, with what might tend to break their strength; they laid heavier burdens upon them, obliged them to harder service, used them more cruelly and with greater fierceness, adding to their hard service ill words, and perhaps blows.

Gill: Exo 1:14 - -- And they made their lives bitter with hard bondage,.... So that they had no ease of body nor peace of mind; they had no comfort of life, their lives a...
And they made their lives bitter with hard bondage,.... So that they had no ease of body nor peace of mind; they had no comfort of life, their lives and mercies were embittered to them:
in mortar and in brick, and in all manner of service of the field; if Pelusium was one of the cities they built, that had its name from clay, the soil about it being clayish, and where the Israelites might be employed in making brick for the building of that and other cities: Josephus d says, they were ordered to part the river (Nile) into many canals, to build walls about cities, and raise up mounds, lest the water overflowing the banks should stagnate; and to build pyramids, obliging them to learn various arts, and inure themselves to labour: so Philo the Jew says e, some worked in the clay, forming it into bricks, and others in carrying straw: some were appointed to build private houses, others the walls of cities, and to cut ditches and canals in the river, and obliged day and night to carry burdens, so that they had no rest, nor were they suffered to refresh themselves with sleep; and some say that they were not only employed in the fields in ploughing and sowing and the like, but in carrying of dung thither, and all manner of uncleanness: of their being employed in building of pyramids and canals; see Gill on Gen 47:11.
all their service wherein they made them serve was with rigour; they not only put them to hard work, but used them in a very churlish and barbarous manner, abusing them with their tongues, and beating them with their hands: Philo in the above place says, the king not only compelled them to servile works, but commanded them heavier things than they could bear, heaping labours one upon another; and if any, through weakness, withdrew himself, it was judged a capital crime, and the most merciless and cruel were set over them as taskmasters.

Gill: Exo 1:15 - -- And the king of Egypt spake to the Hebrew midwives,.... It is difficult to say who these midwives were, whether Egyptian or Hebrew women. Josephus is ...
And the king of Egypt spake to the Hebrew midwives,.... It is difficult to say who these midwives were, whether Egyptian or Hebrew women. Josephus is of opinion that they were Egyptians, and indeed those the king was most likely to succeed with; and it may seem improbable that he should offer such a thing to Hebrew women, who he could never think would ever comply with it, through promises or threatenings; and the answer they afterwards gave him, that the Hebrew women were not as the Egyptian women, looks as if they were of the latter: and yet, after all, it is more likely that these midwives were Hebrew women, their names are Hebrew; and besides, they are not said to be the midwives of Hebrew women, but Hebrew midwives; nor does it seem probable that the Hebrew women should have Egyptian midwives, and not those of their own nation; and they were such as feared the Lord; and the Targums of Jonathan and Jerusalem are express for it, and they pretend to tell us who they were: "of which the name of the one was Shiphrah, and the name of the other Puah"; the one, they say, was Jochebed, the wife of Amram, and mother of Moses and Aaron, and the other Miriam their sister; and this is the sense of many of the Jewish writers f: but whatever may be said for Jochebed, it is not credible that Miriam should be a midwife, who was but a girl, or maid, at this time, about seven years of age, as the following chapter shows, and much less one of so much repute as to be spoke to by the king. It may seem strange, that only two should be spoke to on this account, when, as Aben Ezra supposes, there might be five hundred of them: to which it may be answered, that these were the most noted in their profession, and the king began with these, that if he could succeed with them, he would go on to prevail on others, or engage them to use their interest with others to do the like; or these might be the midwives of the principal ladies among the Israelites, in one of whose families, according as his magicians had told, as the Targum of Jonathan observes, should be born a son, by whom the land of Egypt would be destroyed; of which Josephus g also takes notice; and therefore he might be chiefly solicitous to destroy the male children of such families; but Aben Ezra thinks, that these two were the chief over the rest of the midwives, and who collected and paid to the king the tribute out of their salaries, which was laid upon them, and so he had an opportunity of conversing with them on this subject.

Gill: Exo 1:16 - -- And he said, when ye do the office of a midwife to the Hebrew women,.... Deliver them of their children:
and see them upon the stools; seats for w...
And he said, when ye do the office of a midwife to the Hebrew women,.... Deliver them of their children:
and see them upon the stools; seats for women in labour to sit upon, and so contrived, that the midwives might do their office the more readily; but while they sat there, and before the birth, they could not tell whether the child was a son or a daughter; wherefore Kimchi h thinks the word here used signifies the place to which the infant falls down from its mother's belly, at the time of labour, and is called the place of the breaking forth of children, and takes it to be the "uterus" itself; and says it is called "Abanim", because "Banim", the children, are there, and supposes "A" or "Aleph" to be an additional letter; and so the sense then is, not when ye see the women on the seats, but the children in the place of coming forth; but then he asks, if it be so, why does he say, "and see them" there? could they see them before they were entirely out of the womb? to which he answers, they know by this rule, if a son, its face was downwards, and if a daughter, its face was upwards; how true this is, must be left to those that know better; the Jewish masters i constantly and positively affirm it: he further observes, that the word is of the dual number, because of the two valves of the womb, through which the infant passes:
if it be a son, then ye shall kill him; give it a private pinch as it comes forth, while under their hands, that its death might seem to be owing to the difficulty of its birth, or to something that happened in it. This was ordered, because what the king had to fear from the Israelites was only from the males, and they only could multiply their people; and because of the above information of his magicians, if there is any truth in that:
but if it be a daughter, then she shall live, be kept alive, and preserved, and brought up to woman's estate; and this the king chose to have done, having nothing to fear from them, being of the feeble sex, and that they might serve to gratify the lust of the Egyptians, who might be fond of Hebrew women, being more beautiful than theirs; or that they might be married and incorporated into Egyptian families, there being no males of their own, if this scheme took place, to match with them, and so by degrees the whole Israelitish nation would be mixed with, and swallowed up in the Egyptian nation, which was what was aimed at.

Gill: Exo 1:17 - -- But the midwives feared God,.... And therefore durst not take away the life of an human creature, which was contrary to the express law of God, Gen 9:...
But the midwives feared God,.... And therefore durst not take away the life of an human creature, which was contrary to the express law of God, Gen 9:6,
and did not as the king of Egypt commanded them; knowing it was right to obey God rather than man, though ever so great, or in so exalted a station:
but saved the men children alive; did not use any violence with them, by stifling them in the birth. The scheme was so barbarous and shocking, especially to the tender sex, to whom it was proposed, and so devoid of humanity, that one would think it should never enter into the heart of man.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Exo 1:1; Exo 1:1; Exo 1:1; Exo 1:1; Exo 1:1; Exo 1:5; Exo 1:5; Exo 1:5; Exo 1:5; Exo 1:6; Exo 1:6; Exo 1:6; Exo 1:7; Exo 1:7; Exo 1:7; Exo 1:7; Exo 1:8; Exo 1:8; Exo 1:8; Exo 1:9; Exo 1:9; Exo 1:10; Exo 1:10; Exo 1:10; Exo 1:10; Exo 1:10; Exo 1:10; Exo 1:10; Exo 1:11; Exo 1:11; Exo 1:11; Exo 1:11; Exo 1:11; Exo 1:12; Exo 1:12; Exo 1:12; Exo 1:12; Exo 1:13; Exo 1:13; Exo 1:14; Exo 1:14; Exo 1:14; Exo 1:14; Exo 1:15; Exo 1:15; Exo 1:15; Exo 1:16; Exo 1:16; Exo 1:16; Exo 1:16; Exo 1:16; Exo 1:17; Exo 1:17
NET Notes: Exo 1:1 Heb “a man and his house.” Since this serves to explain “the sons of Israel,” it has the distributive sense. So while the R...

NET Notes: Exo 1:5 Heb “and Joseph was in Egypt” (so ASV). The disjunctive word order in Hebrew draws attention to the fact that Joseph, in contrast to his b...

NET Notes: Exo 1:6 Since the deaths of “Joseph and his brothers and all that generation” were common knowledge, their mention must serve some rhetorical purp...

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...


NET Notes: Exo 1:9 The particle הִנֵּה (hinneh) introduces the foundational clause for the exhortation to follow by drawing the liste...

NET Notes: Exo 1:10 Heb “and go up from.” All the verbs coming after the particle פֶּן (pen, “otherwise, lest” in v. 10) h...

NET Notes: Exo 1:11 Many scholars assume that because this city was named Rameses, the Pharaoh had to be Rameses II, and hence that a late date for the exodus (and a late...

NET Notes: Exo 1:12 Heb “they felt a loathing before/because of”; the referent (the Egyptians) has been specified in the translation for clarity.


NET Notes: Exo 1:14 The line could be more literally translated, “All their service in which they served them [was] with rigor.” This takes the referent of ...

NET Notes: Exo 1:15 Heb “who the name of the first [was] Shiphrah, and the name of the second [was] Puah.”

NET Notes: Exo 1:16 The last form וָחָיָה (vakhaya) in the verse is unusual; rather than behaving as a III-Hey form, it is writt...

NET Notes: Exo 1:17 The verb is the Piel preterite of חָיָה (khaya, “to live”). The Piel often indicates a factitive nuance with...
Geneva Bible: Exo 1:1 Now ( a )these [are] the names of the children of Israel, which came into Egypt; every man and his household came with Jacob.
The Argument - After Ja...

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...

Geneva Bible: Exo 1:8 Now there arose up a new king over Egypt, which ( c ) knew not Joseph.
( c ) He did not consider how God had preserved Egypt for the sake of Joseph.

Geneva Bible: Exo 1:10 Come on, let us deal wisely with them; lest they multiply, and it come to pass, that, when there falleth out any war, they join also unto our enemies,...

Geneva Bible: Exo 1:12 But the more they afflicted them, the more they multiplied and grew. And ( e ) they were grieved because of the children of Israel.
( e ) The more Go...

Geneva Bible: Exo 1:15 And the king of Egypt spake to the Hebrew midwives, of which the name of the one [was] ( f ) Shiphrah, and the name of the other Puah:
( f ) These se...

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 - --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...

Maclaren: Exo 1:14 - --Exodus 1:14
The four hundred years of Israel's stay in Egypt were divided into two unequal periods, in the former and longer of which they were prospe...
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 ...

MHCC: Exo 1:8-14 - --The land of Egypt became to Israel a house of bondage. The place where we have been happy, may soon become the place of our affliction; and that may p...

MHCC: Exo 1:15-22 - --The Egyptians tried to destroy Israel by the murder of their children. The enmity that is in the seed of the serpent, against the Seed of the woman, m...
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...

Matthew Henry: Exo 1:8-14 - -- The land of Egypt here, at length, becomes to Israel a house of bondage, though hitherto it had been a happy shelter and settlement for them. Note, ...

Matthew Henry: Exo 1:15-22 - -- The Egyptians' indignation at Israel's increase, notwithstanding the many hardships they put upon them, drove them at length to the most barbarous a...
Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 1:1-5 - --
To place the multiplication of the children of Israel into a strong nation in its true light, as the commencement of the realization of the promises...

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...

Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 1:8-14 - --
The promised blessing was manifested chiefly in the fact, that all the measures adopted by the cunning of Pharaoh to weaken and diminish the Israeli...

Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 1:15-16 - --
As the first plan miscarried, the king proceeded to try a second, and that a bloody act of cruel despotism. He commanded the midwives to destroy the...

Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 1:17 - --
But the midwives feared God ( ha-Elohim , the personal, true God), and did not execute the king's command.
Constable -> Gen 11:27--Exo 1:1; Gen 37:2--Exo 1:1; Gen 49:29--Exo 1:1; Exo 1:1--15:22; Exo 1:1-7; Exo 1:8-22
Constable: Gen 11:27--Exo 1:1 - --II. PATRIARCHAL NARRATIVES 11:27--50:26
One of the significant changes in the emphasis that occurs at this point...

Constable: Gen 37:2--Exo 1:1 - --E. What Became of Jacob 37:2-50:26
Here begins the tenth and last toledot in Genesis. Jacob remains a ma...

Constable: Gen 49:29--Exo 1:1 - --15. Deaths and a promise yet to be fulfilled 49:29-50:26
Joseph received permission from Pharaoh...

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 ...

Constable: Exo 1:1-7 - --1. The growth of Jacob's family 1:1-7
The purposes of this section are three at least.
...

Constable: Exo 1:8-22 - --2. The Israelites' bondage in Egypt 1:8-22
This pericope serves a double purpose. It introduces the rigorous conditions under which the Egyptians forc...
Guzik -> Exo 1:1-22
Guzik: Exo 1:1-22 - --Exodus 1 - Israel Multiplies in Egypt
A. Israel's affliction in Egypt.
1. (1-6) The twelve sons of Jacob who came into Egypt.
Now these are the na...

expand allCommentary -- Other
Bible Query -> Exo 1:11; Exo 1:11; Exo 1:11; Exo 1:11; Exo 1:15; Exo 1:15-19; Exo 1:16-19; Exo 1:16; Exo 1:16; Exo 1:17
Bible Query: Exo 1:11 Q: In Ex 1:11 what do we know outside of the Bible about Egyptian slavemasters?
A: The Egyptian term "ser" is on a wall painting on the Theban tomb ...

Bible Query: Exo 1:11 Q: In Ex 1:11 (KJV), did the Israelites build "treasure cities"?
A: This King James expression is better translated "supply cities" (NKJV), or "stor...

Bible Query: Exo 1:11 Q: In Ex 1:11, where were the two cities of Pithom and Rameses located?
A: Pithom (house of [the god] Atum), is on the wadi Tumilat just east of the...

Bible Query: Exo 1:11 Q: In Ex 1:11, where did the term "Pharaoh" originate?
A: The meaning of words sometimes changes over time. From 2,500 to 2,000 B.C. "Pharaoh" origi...

Bible Query: Exo 1:15 Q: In Ex 1:15, how could two Hebrew midwives take care of so many Hebrew births?
A: They obviously did not attend to every birth, but supervised oth...

Bible Query: Exo 1:15-19 Q: In Ex 1:15-19, is there any evidence apart from the Bible of the names Shiphrah and Puah?
A: I am not aware of any evidence of the name Puah. But...

Bible Query: Exo 1:16-19 Q: In Ex 1:16-19, how could God bless the Hebrew midwives Shiphrah and Puah for lying to Pharaoh?
A: Christians differ on the answer.
1....

Bible Query: Exo 1:16 Q: In Ex 1:16, was it not unreasonable for Pharaoh to want to kill Israelite boys, since they made good slaves?
A: There were probably about 4.1 mil...

Bible Query: Exo 1:16 Q: In Ex 1:16, why was Moses in danger of being killed by Pharaoh, since his older brother Aaron apparently was in no such danger?
A: According to W...

Bible Query: Exo 1:17 Q: In Ex 1:17, are believers supposed to fear God?
A: Yes. See the second part of the answer for Exodus 9:30.
Critics Ask: Exo 1:5 ACTS 7:14 —Why does this text say “seventy-five people†when Exodus 1:5 says there were “seventy persons� PROBLEM: According to Exodus...

Critics Ask: Exo 1:15 EXODUS 1:15 —How could two midwives take care of so many Hebrew women? PROBLEM: According to Exodus 12:37 and Numbers chapters 1-4 , the size o...

Critics Ask: Exo 1:16 EXODUS 1:15-21 —How could God bless the Hebrew midwives for disobeying the God-ordained governmental authority (Pharaoh) and lying to him? PROBL...
