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Text -- Exodus 22:27-31 (NET)

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22:27 for it is his only covering– it is his garment for his body. What else can he sleep in? And when he cries out to me, I will hear, for I am gracious. 22:28 “You must not blaspheme God or curse the ruler of your people. 22:29 “Do not hold back offerings from your granaries or your vats. You must give me the firstborn of your sons. 22:30 You must also do this for your oxen and for your sheep; seven days they may remain with their mothers, but give them to me on the eighth day. 22:31 “You will be holy people to me; you must not eat any meat torn by animals in the field. You must throw it to the dogs.
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Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

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NET Notes , Geneva Bible

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TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Exo 22:28 - -- That is, the judges and magistrates. Princes and magistrates are our fathers, whom the fifth commandment obligeth us to honour, and forbids us to revi...

That is, the judges and magistrates. Princes and magistrates are our fathers, whom the fifth commandment obligeth us to honour, and forbids us to revile. St. Paul applies this law to himself, and owns that he ought not to speak evil of the ruler of his people, no, not though he was then his most unrighteous persecutor, Act 23:5.

Wesley: Exo 22:29 - -- born of thy sons shalt thou give unto me - And much more reason have we to give ourselves and all we have to God, who spared not his own Son, but deli...

born of thy sons shalt thou give unto me - And much more reason have we to give ourselves and all we have to God, who spared not his own Son, but delivered him up for us all. The first ripe of their corn they must not delay to offer; there is danger if we delay our duty, lest we wholly omit it; and by slipping the first opportunity in expectation of another, we suffer Satan to cheat us of all our time.

Wesley: Exo 22:31 - -- And one mark of that honourable distinction is appointed in their diet, which was, that they should not eat any flesh that was torn of beasts - Both b...

And one mark of that honourable distinction is appointed in their diet, which was, that they should not eat any flesh that was torn of beasts - Both because the blood was not duly taken out of it, and because the clean beast was ceremonially defiled, by the touch of the unclean.

JFB: Exo 22:26-27 - -- From the nature of the case, this is the description of a poor man. No Orientals undress, but, merely throwing off their turbans and some of their hea...

From the nature of the case, this is the description of a poor man. No Orientals undress, but, merely throwing off their turbans and some of their heavy outer garments, they sleep in the clothes which they wear during the day. The bed of the poor is usually nothing else than a mat; and, in winter, they cover themselves with a cloak--a practice which forms the ground or reason of the humane and merciful law respecting the pawned coat.

JFB: Exo 22:28 - -- A word which is several times in this chapter rendered "judges" or magistrates.

A word which is several times in this chapter rendered "judges" or magistrates.

JFB: Exo 22:28 - -- And the chief magistrate who was also the high priest, at least in the time of Paul (Act 23:1-5).

And the chief magistrate who was also the high priest, at least in the time of Paul (Act 23:1-5).

Clarke: Exo 22:28 - -- Thou shalt not revile the gods - Most commentators believe that the word gods here means magistrates. The original is אלהים Elohim , and shoul...

Thou shalt not revile the gods - Most commentators believe that the word gods here means magistrates. The original is אלהים Elohim , and should be understood of the true God only: Thou shalt not blaspheme or make light of [ תקלל tekallel ] God, the fountain of justice and power, nor curse the ruler of thy people, who derives his authority from God. We shall ever find that he who despises a good civil government, and is disaffected to that under which he lives, is one who has little fear of God before his eyes. The spirit of disaffection and sedition is ever opposed to the religion of the Bible. When those who have been pious get under the spirit of misrule, they infallibly get shorn of their spiritual strength, and become like salt that has lost its savor. He who can indulge himself in speaking evil of the civil ruler, will soon learn to blaspheme God. The highest authority says, Fear God: honor the king.

Clarke: Exo 22:29 - -- The first of thy ripe fruits - This offering was a public acknowledgment of the bounty and goodness of God, who had given them their proper seed tim...

The first of thy ripe fruits - This offering was a public acknowledgment of the bounty and goodness of God, who had given them their proper seed time, the first and the latter rain, and the appointed weeks of harvest

From the practice of the people of God the heathens borrowed a similar one, founded on the same reason. The following passage from Censorinus, De Die Natali, is beautiful, and worthy of the deepest attention: -

Illi enim (majores nostri) qui alimenta, patriam, lucem, se denique ipsos deorum dono habebant, ex omnibus aliquid diis sacrabant, magis adeo, ut se gratos approbarent, quam quod deos arbitrarentur hoc indigere. Itaque cum perceperant fruges, antequam vescerentur, Diis libare instituerunt: et cum agros atque urbes, deorum munera, possiderent, partem quandam templis sacellisque, ubi eos colerent, dicavere

"Our ancestors, who held their food, their country, the light, and all that they possessed, from the bounty of the gods, consecrated to them a part of all their property, rather as a token of their gratitude, than from a conviction that the gods needed any thing. Therefore as soon as the harvest was got in, before they had tasted of the fruits, they appointed libations to be made to the gods. And as they held their fields and cities as gifts from their gods, they consecrated a certain part for temples and shrines, where they might worship them.

Pliny is express on the same point, who attests that the Romans never tasted either their new corn or wine, till the priests had offered the First-Fruits to the gods. Acts ne degustabant quidem, novas fruges aut vina, antequam sacerdotes Primitias Libassent . Hist. Nat., lib. xviii., c. 2

Horace bears the same testimony, and shows that his countrymen offered, not only their first-fruits, but the choicest of all their fruits, to the Lares or household gods; and he shows also the wickedness of those who sent these as presents to the rich, before the gods had been thus honored: -

Dulcia poma

Et quoscumque feret cultus tibi fundus honores

Ante Larem gustet venerabilior Lare dives

Sat., lib. ii., s. v., ver. 12

"What your garden yields

The choicest honors of your cultured fields

To him be sacrificed, and let him taste

Before your gods, the vegetable feast.

Dunkin

And to the same purpose Tibullus, in one of the most beautiful of his elegies: -

Et quodcumque mihi pomum novus educat annus

Libatum agricolae ponitur ante deo

Flava Ceres, tibi sit nostro de rure coron

Spicea, quae templi pendeat ante fores

Eleg., lib. i., eleg. i. ver. 13

"My grateful fruits, the earliest of the year

Before the rural god shall daily wait

From Ceres’ gifts I’ ll cull each browner ear

And hang a wheaten wreath before her gate.

Grainger

The same subject he touches again in the fifth elegy of the same book, where he specifies the different offerings made for the produce of the fields, of the flocks, and of the vine, ver. 27: -

Illa deo sciet agricolae pro vitibus uvam

Pro segete spicas, pro grege ferre dapem

"With pious care will load each rural shrine

For ripen’ d crops a golden sheaf assign

Cates for my fold, rich clusters for my wine

Id. - See Calmet

These quotations will naturally recall to our memory the offerings of Cain and Abel, mentioned Gen 4:3, Gen 4:4

The rejoicings at our harvest-home are distorted remains of that gratitude which our ancestors, with all the primitive inhabitants of the earth, expressed to God with appropriate signs and ceremonies. Is it not possible to restore, in some goodly form, a custom so pure, so edifying, and so becoming? There is a laudable custom, observed by some pious people, of dedicating a new house to God by prayer, etc., which cannot be too highly commended.

Clarke: Exo 22:30 - -- Seven days it shall be with his dam - For the mother’ s health it was necessary that the young one should suck so long; and prior to this time ...

Seven days it shall be with his dam - For the mother’ s health it was necessary that the young one should suck so long; and prior to this time the process of nutrition in a young animal can scarcely be considered as completely formed. Among the Romans lambs were not considered as pure or clean before the eighth day; nor calves before the thirtieth: Pecoris faetus die octavo purus est, bovis trigesimo - Plin. Hist. Nat., lib. viii.

Clarke: Exo 22:31 - -- Neither shall ye eat - flesh - torn of beasts in the field - This has been supposed to be an ordinance against eating flesh cut off the animal while...

Neither shall ye eat - flesh - torn of beasts in the field - This has been supposed to be an ordinance against eating flesh cut off the animal while alive, and so the Syriac seems to have understood it. If we can credit Mr. Bruce, this is a frequent custom in Abyssinia; but human nature revolts from it. The reason of the prohibition against eating the flesh of animals that had been torn, or as we term it worried in the field, appears to have been simply this: That the people might not eat the blood, which in this case must be coagulated in the flesh; and the blood, being the life of the beast, and emblematical of the blood of the covenant, was ever to be held sacred, and was prohibited from the days of Noah. See Clarke’ s note on Gen 9:4

In the conclusion of this chapter we see the grand reason of all the ordinances and laws which it contains. No command was issued merely from the sovereignty of God. He gave them to the people as restraints on disorderly passions, and incentives to holiness; and hence he says, Ye shall be holy men unto me. Mere outward services could neither please him nor profit them; for from the very beginning of the world the end of the commandment was love out of a pure heart and good conscience, and faith unfeigned, 1Ti 1:5. And without these accompaniments no set of religious duties, however punctually performed, could be pleasing in the sight of that God who seeks truth in the inward parts, and in whose eyes the faith that worketh by love is alone valuable. A holy heart and a holy, useful life God invariably requires in all his worshippers. Reader, how standest thou in his sight?

Calvin: Exo 22:28 - -- Exo 22:28.Thou shalt not revile the gods. These four passages confirm what I have said, that in the: Fifth Commandment are comprised, by synecdoche ...

Exo 22:28.Thou shalt not revile the gods. These four passages confirm what I have said, that in the: Fifth Commandment are comprised, by synecdoche all superiors in authority.: For it was not the design of God to add to the Two Tables, as if something better and more perfect had afterwards come into His mind; which it is sinful to suppose. He was therefore content with the rule once laid down, although He afterwards spoke in a more explanatory manner. But the precepts here given would be unconnected with the Law, if they were not an adjunct, and therefore a part, of the Fifth Commandment.

First of all, He commands that we should think and speak reverently of judges, and others, who exercise the office of magistrate: nor is it to be questioned, that, in the ordinary idiom of the Hebrew language, He repeats the same thing twice over; and consequently that the same persons are called “gods,” and “rulers of the people.” The name of God is, figuratively indeed, but most reasonably, applied to magistrates, upon whom, as the ministers of His authority, He has inscribed a mark of His glory. For, as we have seen that honor is due to fathers, because God has associated them with Himself in the possession of the name, so also here His own dignity is claimed for judges, in order that the people may reverence them, because they are God’s representatives, as His lieutenants, and vicars. And so Christ, the surest expositor, explains it, when He quotes the passage from Psa 82:6, “I have said, Ye are gods, and all of you are children of the Most High,” (Joh 10:34,) viz., “that they are called gods, unto whom the word of God came,” which is to be understood not of the general instruction addressed to all God’s children, but of the special command to rule.

It is a signal exaltation of magistrates, that God should not only count them in the place of parents, but present them to us dignified by His own name; whence also it clearly appears that they are not to be obeyed only from fear of punishment, “but also for conscience sake,” (Rom 13:5,) and to be reverently honored, lest God should be despised in them. If any should object, that it would be wrong to praise the vices of those whom we perceive to abuse their power; the answer is easy, that although judges are to be borne with even if they be not the best, 13 still that the honor with which they are invested, is not a covering for vice. Nor does God command us to applaud their faults, but that the people should rather deplore them in silent sorrow, than raise disturbances in a licentious and seditious spirit, and so subvert political government.

Calvin: Exo 22:29 - -- 29.Thou shalt not delay We may gather from this passage that the first-fruits were offered, to the end that the Israelites should devote themselves a...

29.Thou shalt not delay We may gather from this passage that the first-fruits were offered, to the end that the Israelites should devote themselves and their possessions to God; for Moses enjoins these two things in conjunction, that they should not delay to consecrate to God of the abundance of their fresh fruits, and their first-born. But we know that, in offering the first-born, the recollection of their deliverance was revived, by the acknowledgment of the preservation of their race, and of their cattle. And there was, moreover, added to the grace of their redemption, the continual supply of food to them from day to day. I do not assent to their opinion who restrict the word fullness 339 to wine, because it flows more abundantly from the press, and take the word tear 340 to mean oil, because it runs less freely; nor do I approve of their notion who apply fullness only to dry fruits. It seems to me more proper to take fullness as the generic term, whilst tear is taken to denote liquids, as if Moses commanded them not only to offer grapes, and olive-berries, but the very drops which were expressed from the fruit. The other passages confirm this command, that they should not defraud God of the first-fruits, and so bury the remembrance of their redemption, and profane themselves in their very eating and drinking, but rather by this portion of the fruits sanctify the food of the whole year. Nor is it causelessly that Moses so often inculcates a point by no means obscure, since all these admonitions were despised and neglected by the Jews, as soon as they had returned from the Babylonish captivity, as Malachi complains in his third chapter.

TSK: Exo 22:27 - -- when he crieth : Exo 2:23, Exo 2:24; Psa 34:6, Psa 72:12; Isa 19:20 for I am gracious : Exo 34:6; 2Ch 30:9; Psa 86:15, Psa 136:10, Psa 136:11

TSK: Exo 22:28 - -- the gods : or, judges, Exo 22:8, Exo 22:9; Psa 32:6, Psa 82:1-7, Psa 138:1; Joh 10:34, Joh 10:35 nor curse : Exo 21:17; 1Sa 24:6, 1Sa 24:10, 1Sa 26:9;...

TSK: Exo 22:29 - -- shalt not delay : Exo 23:16, Exo 23:19; Deu 26:2-10; 2Ki 4:42; 2Ch 31:5; Pro 3:9, Pro 3:10; Eze 20:40; Mic 7:1; Mat 6:33; Rom 8:23; Jam 1:18 the first...

shalt not delay : Exo 23:16, Exo 23:19; Deu 26:2-10; 2Ki 4:42; 2Ch 31:5; Pro 3:9, Pro 3:10; Eze 20:40; Mic 7:1; Mat 6:33; Rom 8:23; Jam 1:18

the first of thy ripe fruits : Heb. thy fulness

liquors : Heb. tear.

the firstborn : Exo 13:2, Exo 13:12, Exo 34:19

TSK: Exo 22:30 - -- Likewise : Deu 15:19 seven days : Lev 22:27

Likewise : Deu 15:19

seven days : Lev 22:27

TSK: Exo 22:31 - -- holy : Exo 19:5, Exo 19:6; Lev 11:45, Lev 19:2; Deu 14:21; 1Pe 1:15, 1Pe 1:16 neither : Lev 17:15, Lev 17:16, Lev 20:25, Lev 22:8; Deu 14:21; Eze 4:14...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Exo 22:26-27 - -- The law regarding pledges is expanded, Deu 24:6, Deu 24:10-13.

The law regarding pledges is expanded, Deu 24:6, Deu 24:10-13.

Barnes: Exo 22:28 - -- The gods - Heb. אלהים 'ělôhı̂ym . See Exo 21:6 note. Many take it as the name of God (as in Gen 1:1), and this certainly seems...

The gods - Heb. אלהים 'ělôhı̂ym . See Exo 21:6 note. Many take it as the name of God (as in Gen 1:1), and this certainly seems best to represent the Hebrew, and to suit the context.

Curse the ruler ... - See Act 23:5.

Barnes: Exo 22:29-30 - -- The offering of firstfruits appears to have been a custom of primitive antiquity and was connected with the earliest acts of sacrifice. See Gen 4:3-...

The offering of firstfruits appears to have been a custom of primitive antiquity and was connected with the earliest acts of sacrifice. See Gen 4:3-4. The references to it here and in Exo 23:19 had probably been handed down from patriarchal times. The specific law relating to the firstborn of living creatures was brought out in a strong light in connection with the deliverance from Egypt Exo 13:2, Exo 13:12-13; compare Exo 23:19; Lev 22:27; Deu 26:2-11; Neh 10:35.

The first of thy ripe fruits, and of thy liquors - See the margin. The rendering of our King James Bible is a paraphrase.

Barnes: Exo 22:31 - -- The sanctification of the nation was emphatically symbolized by strictness of diet as regards both the kind of animal, and the mode of slaughtering....

The sanctification of the nation was emphatically symbolized by strictness of diet as regards both the kind of animal, and the mode of slaughtering. See Lev. 11; 17.

Poole: Exo 22:28 - -- Gods not gods falsely so called, as some would have it, as appears by 1Ki 18:27 Jer 10:11 ; but magistrates and governors, whether civil or ecclesias...

Gods not gods falsely so called, as some would have it, as appears by 1Ki 18:27 Jer 10:11 ; but magistrates and governors, whether civil or ecclesiastical, as it is evident both from Act 23:3-5 and from the following words, which explain the former, according to the common use of Scripture, and from the title of gods commonly given to such, as Exo 7:1 Psa 82:6 Joh 10:34,35.

The ruler of thy people Compare /APC Sir 10:20 , Jud 1:8 .

Poole: Exo 22:29 - -- Thou shalt not delay beyond the times appointed, lest this delay grow to a total neglect. And delay may here be put for neglect , as that word is ...

Thou shalt not delay beyond the times appointed, lest this delay grow to a total neglect. And delay may here be put for neglect , as that word is used, Deu 7:10 23:21 Hab 2:3 ; which may seem to be favoured by the following clause, which commands the giving or offering of the first-born without any mention of the hastening or delaying of it.

Thy ripe fruits Heb thy fulness ; and whereas this word is sometimes applied to seed or corn, as Num 18:27 , and sometimes to the vintage, as Deu 22:9 , the circumstances must determine, as it doth in like cases, how it must be taken; which here seem to restrain it to dry fruits, as corn, &c., because it is opposed to

liquors and so all sorts of fruits are comprehended here. Unless you will make this a usual figure called hendyadis , as judgment and justice , Deu 16:18 , is put for judgment of justice , or just judgment ; so here the fulness and liquors , for the fulness of thy liquors ; and so this may be one kind mentioned for all the rest, than which nothing more frequent.

Shalt thou give unto me not in kind, but by a price of redemption to be paid to me in their stead.

Poole: Exo 22:30 - -- Likewise i.e. ye shall offer their first-born. On the eighth day not sooner, because it was till then tender and imperfect, and therefore not fit t...

Likewise i.e. ye shall offer their first-born.

On the eighth day not sooner, because it was till then tender and imperfect, and therefore not fit to be offered to God; but it was not tied to that day, for it might be offered afterwards, appears from Lev 22:27 , even till it was a year old.

Poole: Exo 22:31 - -- Ye shall be holy i.e. separated from all filthiness, both moral and ceremonial. Neither shall ye eat any flesh that is torn of beasts partly, becau...

Ye shall be holy i.e. separated from all filthiness, both moral and ceremonial.

Neither shall ye eat any flesh that is torn of beasts partly, because the blood was not taken out of it; partly, because the clean beast was ceremonially defiled by the touch of the unclean; and partly, to beget in them a detestation of cruelty, even in the beasts, and much more in men.

Haydock: Exo 22:28 - -- Gods. Judges, priests, &c. Josephus and Philo say, we must not speak ill of strange gods, lest the Gentiles should take occasion to blaspheme the t...

Gods. Judges, priests, &c. Josephus and Philo say, we must not speak ill of strange gods, lest the Gentiles should take occasion to blaspheme the true God, and that we may be farther removed from the danger of taking the name of God in vain, and losing that respect which we owe to it.

Haydock: Exo 22:29 - -- Tithes. Hebrew, "thy plentitude, (first-fruits and tithes) and thy tears;" (or liquors distilled form odoriferous trees) in a word, all that is most...

Tithes. Hebrew, "thy plentitude, (first-fruits and tithes) and thy tears;" (or liquors distilled form odoriferous trees) in a word, all that is most excellent. Censorinus (de die nat.) says, excellently well: "They who acknowledged that they had received food, a country, light, and even their very persons, from the bounty of the gods, failed not to consecrate a part of all to the gods,....to the temples and chapels, where they worshipped them." (Calmet)

Haydock: Exo 22:31 - -- Beasts. "Wild beasts," Septuagint. --- This was to encourage humanity. (Theodoret)

Beasts. "Wild beasts," Septuagint. ---

This was to encourage humanity. (Theodoret)

Gill: Exo 22:27 - -- For that is his covering only,.... All that he has to cover him, the only covering he has when he lies down to sleep; and therefore should be restored...

For that is his covering only,.... All that he has to cover him, the only covering he has when he lies down to sleep; and therefore should be restored to him by the time of sunset, at which time he returns from his labour; and after some refreshment retires to his bed for rest, when his covering will be necessary:

it is his raiment for his skin; which is next to his skin, and covers his naked body, as it is when he lies down to sleep; and therefore if not returned, he must lie naked without any covering, which to deprive him of would be cruel: Jarchi interprets this covering of his shirt, but it rather means his bed clothes: the Septuagint version calls it the clothes of his shame, what cover and hide the shame of nakedness:

wherein shall he sleep? what shall he have to sleep in if this is detained from him? nothing at all; or it may be read without an interrogation, wherein he should sleep, or was used to sleep:

and it shall come to pass, when he crieth unto me; and complains of ill usage, that he has nothing to cover him in the night season, when he lies down to sleep, which is very uncomfortable, as well as unhealthful and dangerous:

that I will hear; his cry and complaint, take notice of it, and resent the usage of him:

for I am gracious; or merciful; and therefore everything cruel and uncompassionate is disagreeable, and even abominable to him, and he will take care in his providence that the injured person shall be redressed and the injurer punished.

Gill: Exo 22:28 - -- Thou shalt not revile the gods,.... Meaning not the idols of the Gentiles, which they reckon gods, and worship as such; which is the sense of Philo, a...

Thou shalt not revile the gods,.... Meaning not the idols of the Gentiles, which they reckon gods, and worship as such; which is the sense of Philo, and some others, particularly Josephus i, who, to curry favour with the Roman emperors given to idolatry, has from hence inserted the following among the laws given to Moses;"let no man blaspheme the gods, which other cities think are such, nor rob strange sacred places, nor receive a gift dedicated to any deity;''but this cannot be the sense of the text, being contrary to Deu 12:2 nor can it be thought that care should be taken, lest the honour of the Heathen deities should be detracted from; but civil magistrates, the judges of the land, and the like, are meant, who are powers ordained of God, are in his stead, and represent him, and therefore respect should be shown them; nor should they be treated with any degree of slight and contempt, which may discourage and intimidate them, and deter them from the execution of their office: the Targum of Jonathan interprets them of judges very rightly, agreeably to Psa 82:1 and so Aben Ezra says,"they are the judges and the priests, the sons of Levi, with whom the law is:"

nor curse the ruler of thy people whether civil or ecclesiastic; the last mentioned Jewish writer intend of the king, who is the supreme ruler in things civil, and ought to be honoured and loved, served and obeyed, and not hated and cursed, no, not secretly, not in the bedchamber, nor in the thought of the heart, since not only the thing is criminal but dangerous; it is much if it is not discovered, and then ruin follows upon it, Ecc 10:20. The Apostle Paul applies it to the high priest among the Jews, who was the ruler in sacred things, Act 23:5 and may be applicable to the prince of the sanhedrim, or chief in the grand court of judicature; and even to all dignified persons, who ought not to be spoken ill of, and to be abused in the execution of their office, and especially when they perform well.

Gill: Exo 22:29 - -- Thou shall not delay to offer the first of thy ripe fruits,.... Which, according to Maimonides k, were of seven kinds only; for he says,"they do not b...

Thou shall not delay to offer the first of thy ripe fruits,.... Which, according to Maimonides k, were of seven kinds only; for he says,"they do not bring the firstfruits, but of the seven kinds, said in the praise of the land, (the land of Canaan), Deu 8:8 and they are wheat, barley, grapes, figs, pomegranates, olives, and dates;''and how much of these were to be offered is not fixed by the law, but were left to the generosity of the people: the above mentioned writer asks l,"what measure do the wise men set? a good eye (or a bountiful man) brings one of forty (or the fortieth part of his fruits); a middling one (one that is neither liberal nor niggardly) brings one of fifty (or the fiftieth part); and an evil one (a covetous man) one of sixty (or the sixtieth part), but never less than that.''Now this was not to be delayed, but to be brought as soon and as early as could be: the Jewish writers seem to understand this of postponing things, or inverting the order of them, bringing that first which should be last, and that last which should be first; so Jarchi interprets it,"thou shall not change the order of their separation, to postpone that which should be first, and to put before that which should be last; for the first oblation should not be brought before the firstfruits, and the tithes before the first oblation.''And thus runs one of their canons or traditions m,"if anyone brings the first oblation before the firstfruits, the first tithe before the first oblation, the second tithe before the first, it is as if he transgressed a negative precept: "thou shalt not delay or postpone", &c. Exo 22:29'

And of thy liquors: and these, according to Maimonides n, were only the firstfruits of liquors of olives and grapes:

the firstborn of thy sons thou shall give unto me; which is a repetition of the law. See Gill on Exo 13:2.

Gill: Exo 22:30 - -- Likewise shalt thou do with thine oxen, and with thy sheep,.... That is, with the firstborn, which were to be set apart to the Lord; and so the Targum...

Likewise shalt thou do with thine oxen, and with thy sheep,.... That is, with the firstborn, which were to be set apart to the Lord; and so the Targum of Jonathan paraphrases it,"the firstborn of thine oxen, and of thy sheep;''for having spoken of the firstborn of men, the Scripture proceeds to speak of the firstborn of cattle, great and small, the separation of which was enjoined in one and the same precept, Exo 13:2,

seven days it shall be with his dam; whether it be a calf or a lamb; before it was seven days old it was not to be taken from it, and given to the Lord:

on the eighth day thou shall give it me; that is, they might do it then, but not before; yet they were not obliged to bring it exactly on that day, but they might do it any time within the month, and at a month's end they were obliged to redeem it, that is, give the priest the sum of five shekels for it, Num 18:16. The Jewish canon runs thus n;"how long are Israelites bound for the bringing of the firstborn, i.e. before they offer it to the priest? in small cattle thirty days, in large cattle fifty days.''

Gill: Exo 22:31 - -- And ye shall be holy men unto me,.... They were so by God's act of election, not special and particular, but general and national; choosing and separa...

And ye shall be holy men unto me,.... They were so by God's act of election, not special and particular, but general and national; choosing and separating them to be an holy people to him, above all the people on the face of the earth, and in a ceremonial sense they observing laws and appointments of God of this kind; which is the sense here intended, as appears by what follows: all men, and so these Israelites, ought to be holy in a moral sense, and some are holy in a spiritual and evangelical sense, being made holy by the Spirit of God; of these the Apostle Peter speaks, in allusion to this, and such like passages, 1Pe 2:9.

neither shall ye eat any flesh that is torn of beasts in the field; or in the house, as Jarchi notes; but the Scripture, as he observes, speaks of the place where it is more usual for beasts to tear, and so Aben Ezra; otherwise what is torn elsewhere, or by whatsoever accident it is bruised and maimed, was not to be eaten: ye shall cast it to the dogs: for even a stranger was not to eat of it, or if he did he was unclean, and was obliged to wash his clothes, and bathe himself, Lev 17:15 and yet Jarchi interprets this figuratively of such as are like dogs, meaning the Gentiles, whom the Jews used to call so, see Mat 15:26. An Heathen poet gives instructions perfectly agreeable to this law;"do not (says he) eat flesh fed upon by beasts, but leave the remains to the swift dogs o.''

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Exo 22:27 Heb “and it will be.”

NET Notes: Exo 22:28 The word אֱלֹהִים (’elohim) is “gods” or “God.” If taken as the simple p...

NET Notes: Exo 22:29 The expressions are unusual. U. Cassuto renders them: “from the fullness of your harvest and from the outflow of your presses” (Exodus, 29...

NET Notes: Exo 22:31 Or “by wild animals.”

Geneva Bible: Exo 22:27 For that [is] his covering only, it [is] his raiment for his skin: wherein shall he sleep? and it shall come to pass, when he ( i ) crieth unto me, th...

Geneva Bible: Exo 22:29 Thou shalt not delay [to offer] the ( k ) first of thy ripe fruits, and of thy liquors: the firstborn of thy sons shalt thou give unto me. ( k ) Your...

Geneva Bible: Exo 22:31 And ye shall be holy men unto me: neither shall ye eat [any] flesh [that is] torn of beasts in the field; ye shall cast it ( l ) to the dogs. ( l ) A...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Exo 22:1-31 - --1 Of theft.5 Of damage.7 Of trespasses.14 Of borrowing.16 Of fornication.18 Of witchcraft.19 Of bestiality.20 Of idolatry.21 Of strangers, widows, and...

MHCC: Exo 22:1-31 - --The people of God should ever be ready to show mildness and mercy, according to the spirit of these laws. We must answer to God, not only for what we ...

Matthew Henry: Exo 22:25-31 - -- Here is, I. A law against extortion in lending. 1. They must not receive use for money from any that borrowed for necessity (Exo 22:25), as in that ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 22:25-27 - -- If a man should lend to one of the poor of his own people, he was not to oppress him by demanding interest; and if he gave his upper garment as a pl...

Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 22:28 - -- " Thou shalt not despise God, and the prince among thy people thou shalt not curse. " Elohim does not mean either the gods of other nations, as Jose...

Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 22:29-30 - -- " Thy fulness and thy flowing thou shalt not delay (to Me)." מלאה fulness, signifies the produce of corn (Deu 22:9); and דּמע (lit., tear, f...

Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 22:31 - -- As the whole nation sanctified itself to the Lord in the sanctification of the first-born, the Israelites were to show themselves to be holy men unt...

Constable: Exo 15:22--Lev 1:1 - --II. THE ADOPTION OF ISRAEL 15:22--40:38 The second major section of Exodus records the events associated with Go...

Constable: Exo 19:1--24:12 - --B. The establishment of the Mosaic Covenant 19:1-24:11 The Lord had liberated Israel from bondage in Egy...

Constable: Exo 20:22--24:1 - --4. The stipulations of the Book of the Covenant 20:22-23:33 Israel's "Bill of Rights" begins her...

Constable: Exo 21:1--23:13 - --The fundamental rights of the Israelites 21:1-23:12 It is very important to note that va...

Constable: Exo 22:16-31 - --Crimes against society 22:16-31 22:16-17 Next we have a case of seduction. Here the girl is viewed as the property of her father. If a young couple ha...

Guzik: Exo 22:1-31 - --Exodus 22 - More Laws to Direct Judges A. Laws regarding personal property and restitution. 1. (1-4) Restitution required in cases of theft. "...

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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Exo 22:31 "Before modern science identified bacteria, God made provision for humans by banning possibly diseased animals. As the blood carries most sickness, it...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Exodus (Book Introduction) EXODUS, a "going forth," derives its name from its being occupied principally with a relation of the departure of the Israelites from Egypt, and the i...

JFB: Exodus (Outline) INCREASE OF THE ISRAELITES. (Exo. 1:1-22) BIRTH AND PRESERVATION OF MOSES. (Exo 2:1-10) there went a man of the house of Levi, &c. Amram was the hus...

TSK: Exodus (Book Introduction) The title of this Book is derived from the Septuagint; in which it is called ΕΞΟΔΟΣ , " Exodus;" or, as it is in the Codex Alexandrinus, Ε...

TSK: Exodus 22 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Exo 22:1, Of theft; Exo 22:5, Of damage; Exo 22:7, Of trespasses; Exo 22:14, Of borrowing; Exo 22:16, Of fornication; Exo 22:18, Of witch...

Poole: Exodus (Book Introduction) SECOND BOOK OF MOSES CALLED EXODUS. THE ARGUMENT. AFTER the death of Joseph, who had sent for his father’ s house into Egypt, the children o...

Poole: Exodus 22 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 22 Of theft, Exo 22:1-4 . Of eating another man’ s vineyard, Exo 2:5 Of hurt coming by fire, Exo 22:6 . Of hurt coming to goods commi...

MHCC: Exodus (Book Introduction) The Book of Exodus relates the forming of the children of Israel into a church and a nation. We have hitherto seen true religion shown in domestic lif...

MHCC: Exodus 22 (Chapter Introduction) Judicial laws.

Matthew Henry: Exodus (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Second Book of Moses, Called Exodus Moses (the servant of the Lord in writing for him as well as ...

Matthew Henry: Exodus 22 (Chapter Introduction) The laws of this chapter relate, I. To the eighth commandment, concerning theft (Exo 22:1-4), trespass by cattle (Exo 22:5), damage by fire (Exo 2...

Constable: Exodus (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The Hebrew title of this book (we'elleh shemot) originated from the...

Constable: Exodus (Outline) Outline I. The liberation of Israel 1:1-15:21 A. God's preparation of Israel and Moses chs. ...

Constable: Exodus Exodus Bibliography Adams, Dwayne H. "The Building Program that Works (Exodus 25:4--36:7 [31:1-11])." Exegesis ...

Haydock: Exodus (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF EXODUS. INTRODUCTION. The second Book of Moses is called Exodus from the Greek word Exodos, which signifies going out; becaus...

Gill: Exodus (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO EXODUS This book is called by the Jews Veelleh Shemoth, from the first words with which it begins, and sometimes Sepher Shemoth, an...

Gill: Exodus 22 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO EXODUS 22 This chapter contains various laws concerning theft, Exo 22:1, concerning damage done to fields and vineyards by beasts, ...

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