collapse all
Text -- Exodus 3:17-22 (NET)

Parallel
Cross Reference (TSK)
ITL
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Hath appeared to us, declaring his will, that we should do what follows.

Wesley: Exo 3:19 - -- God sends his messengers to those whose obstinacy he foresees, that it may appear he would have them turn and live.
God sends his messengers to those whose obstinacy he foresees, that it may appear he would have them turn and live.

Everywoman shall ask (not borrow!) jewels.

Wesley: Exo 3:22 - -- God sometimes makes the enemies of his people not only to be at peace with them, but to be kind to them. And he has many ways of balancing accounts be...
God sometimes makes the enemies of his people not only to be at peace with them, but to be kind to them. And he has many ways of balancing accounts between the injured and the injurious, of righting the oppressed, and compelling those that have done wrong to make restitution.
Clarke: Exo 3:18 - -- They shall hearken to thy voice - This assurance was necessary to encourage him in an enterprise so dangerous and important
They shall hearken to thy voice - This assurance was necessary to encourage him in an enterprise so dangerous and important

Clarke: Exo 3:18 - -- Three days’ journey into the wilderness - Evidently intending Mount Sinai, which is reputed to be about three days’ journey, the shortes...
Three days’ journey into the wilderness - Evidently intending Mount Sinai, which is reputed to be about three days’ journey, the shortest way, from the land of Goshen. In ancient times, distances were computed by the time required to pass over them. Thus, instead of miles, furlongs, etc., it was said, the distance from one place to another was so many days’, so many hours’ journey; and it continues the same in all countries where there are no regular roads or highways.

Clarke: Exo 3:19 - -- I am sure that the king of Egypt will not let you go, no, not by a mighty hand - When the facts detailed in this history have been considered in con...
I am sure that the king of Egypt will not let you go, no, not by a mighty hand - When the facts detailed in this history have been considered in connection with the assertion as it stands in our Bibles, the most palpable contradiction has appeared. That the king of Egypt did let them go, and that by a mighty hand, the book itself amply declares. We should therefore seek for another meaning of the original word.

Clarke: Exo 3:22 - -- Every woman shall borrow - This is certainly not a very correct translation: the original word שאל shaal signifies simply to ask, request, dem...
Every woman shall borrow - This is certainly not a very correct translation: the original word
Our exceptionable translation of the original has given some countenance to the desperate cause of infidelity; its abettors have exultingly said: "Moses represents the just God as ordering the Israelites to borrow the goods of the Egyptians under the pretense of returning them, whereas he intended that they should march off with the booty."Let these men know that there was no borrowing in the case; and that if accounts were fairly balanced, Egypt would be found still in considerable arrears to Israel. Let it also be considered that the Egyptians had never any right to the services of the Hebrews. Egypt owed its policy, its opulence, and even its political existence, to the Israelites. What had Joseph for his important services? Nothing! He had neither district, nor city, nor lordship in Egypt; nor did he reserve any to his children. All his services were gratuitous; and being animated with a better hope than any earthly possession could inspire, he desired that even his bones should be carried up out of Egypt. Jacob and his family, it is true, were permitted to sojourn in Goshen, but they were not provided for in that place; for they brought their cattle, their goods, and all that they had into Egypt, Gen 46:1, Gen 46:6; so that they had nothing but the bare land to feed on; and had built treasure cities or fortresses, we know not how many; and two whole cities, Pithom and Raamses, besides; and for all these services they had no compensation whatever, but were besides cruelly abused, and obliged to witness, as the sum of their calamities, the daily murder of their male infants. These particulars considered, will infidelity ever dare to produce this case again in support of its worthless pretensions

Clarke: Exo 3:22 - -- Jewels of silver, etc. - The word כלי keley we have already seen signifies vessels, instruments, weapons, etc., and may be very well translate...
Jewels of silver, etc. - The word

Clarke: Exo 3:22 - -- Ye shall spoil the Egyptians - The verb נצל natsal signifies, not only to spoil, snatch away, but also to get away, to escape, to deliver, to ...
Ye shall spoil the Egyptians - The verb
In this chapter we have much curious and important information; but what is most interesting is the name by which God was pleased to make himself known to Moses and to the Israelites, a name by which the Supreme Being was afterwards known among the wisest inhabitants of the earth. He who Is and who Will Be what he Is. This is a proper characteristic of the Divine Being, who is, properly speaking, the only Being, because he is independent and eternal; whereas all other beings, in whatsoever forms they may appear, are derived, finite, changeable, and liable to destruction, decay, and even to annihilation. When God, therefore, announced himself to Moses by this name, he proclaimed his own eternity and immateriality; and the very name itself precludes the possibility of idolatry, because it was impossible for the mind, in considering it, to represent the Divine Being in any assignable shape; for who could represent Being or Existence by any limited form? And who can have any idea of a form that is unlimited? Thus, then, we find that the first discovery which God made of himself was intended to show the people the simplicity and spirituality of his nature; that while they considered him as Being, and the Cause of all Being, they might be preserved from all idolatry for ever. The very name itself is a proof of a Divine revelation; for it is not possible that such an idea could have ever entered into the mind of man, unless it had been communicated from above. It could not have been produced by reasoning, for there were no premises on which it could be built, nor any analogies by which it could have been formed. We can as easily comprehend eternity as we can being, simply considered in and of itself, when nothing of assignable forms, colors, or qualities existed, besides its infinite and illimitable self
To this Divine discovery the ancient Greeks owed the inscription which they placed above the door of the temple of Apollo at Delphi: the whole of the inscription consisted in the simple monosyllable
What beautiful things have the ancient Greek philosophers stolen from the testimonies of God to enrich their own works, without any kind of acknowledgment! And, strange perversity of man! these are the very things which we so highly applaud in the heathen copies, while we neglect or pass them by in the Divine originals!
Calvin: Exo 3:17 - -- 17.And I have said By this expression God reminds us that he in his secret counsel determines what he will do, and therefore that we must put a restr...
17.And I have said By this expression God reminds us that he in his secret counsel determines what he will do, and therefore that we must put a restraint on our desires, which otherwise press forward too fast, and let him freely and voluntarily appoint what he knows to be best to be done; not because he has need of taking time to deliberate, but that we may learn to depend on his providence. By this decree the children of Israel were assured that the end of their woes was near, because there is nothing which can prevent God from performing his work. But he speaks briefly, as of a thing well known; because what had been handed down through the patriarchs, as to their future deliverance, was not entirely forgotten. He enumerates several nations whose lands He would give them, that he might thus the more attract them to come forth. With the same object he affirms that the whole country flows “with milk and honey,” lest its barrenness should alarm them, because famine had driven their fathers out from thence. But although the land of Canaan was naturally fertile, there is no doubt but that its fruitfulness chiefly arose from the blessing of God. The conclusion is, that a spacious dwelling-place is prepared for them, since for their sake God will drive out many nations, that they may possess the habitations of them all; and that, finally, they need not fear want, because God will abundantly supply them with food, as if the whole of that land were filled with rivers of milk and honey.

Calvin: Exo 3:18 - -- 18.And they shall hearken to thy voice 44 The literal translation is, “They shall hearken to thy voice,” which many take to be a promise from God...
18.And they shall hearken to thy voice 44 The literal translation is, “They shall hearken to thy voice,” which many take to be a promise from God that they should be obedient; but the sense given in the Latin, “after they shall have heard thy voice,” seems more consonant, that first of all He should command them by the mouth of Moses, and that then they should accompany him in bearing the message to Pharaoh. For, before so difficult an undertaking was enjoined to them, it was desirable that the authority of God should be propounded to them, so that they might go about it with unwavering hearts. The sum of the message is, that they should seek permission from Pharaoh to go and sacrifice; but lest they might be thought to do so from mere unfounded impulse, they are desired to premise that God had met with them and had given them the command. For the word which expresses his meeting with them, means that he presented himself voluntarily. They had indeed cried out before, and often appealed to the faithfulness and mercy of God; yet still this was a voluntary meeting with them, when, contrary to the hope of them all, he avowed that he would be their deliverer, for, as we have already said, they cried out more from the urgency of their affliction than from confidence in prayer. A pretext is suggested to them, by which suspicion and anger may be turned away from themselves; for a free permission to depart altogether, by which grievous loss would have arisen to the tyrant, never would have been accorded. Besides, by refusing so equitable a demand, he despoiled himself of his royal right and power, since he thus withheld His due honour from the King of kings; for although the Israelites were under his dominion, yet did not his rule extend so far as to defraud God of his rightful worship. It was expedient, too, that the people should depart without the king’s permission only for very good reasons, lest hereafter license of rebellion should be given to other subjects. Pharaoh indeed suspected differently, that the sacrifice was a mere false pretense; but since this mistrust proceeded from his tyranny, his ingratitude was sufficiently proclaimed by it, because through his own evil conscience he forbade that God should be served. Whatever, again, might be his feelings, still the miracles by which the command was followed must needs have taught him that their mission proceeded from God. If the Israelites had merely spoken, and no confirmation of their words had been given, he might perhaps have naturally guarded himself against deception; but when God openly shewed that he was the originator of this departure, and that he commanded the sacrifice beyond the bounds of Egypt, all grounds of excuse are taken away; and thus the departure of the people is placed out of the reach of calumny. If any object that it is alien from the nature of God to countenance any craft or pretense, the reply is easy, — that he was bound by no necessity to lay open his whole counsel to the tyrant. They mistake who suppose that there is a kind of falsehood implied in these words; for God had no desire that his people should use any deceit, he only concealed from the tyrant (as He had a perfect right to do) what He was about ultimately to effect; and in this way He detected and brought to light his obstinacy. In a word, God entered the lists for the Israelites, not in an earthly controversy, but for religion, to which all the rights of kings must give way. But Jehovah calls himself the God of the Hebrews, that Pharaoh may know him to be the peculiar God of that nation, and that their form of worship was different from the customs of Egypt, and, in fact, that he is the only true God, and all others are fictitious.

Calvin: Exo 3:19 - -- 19.And I am sure that the king of Egypt God forearms his people, lest, suffering a repulse at their first onset, they should retire, and abandon in d...
19.And I am sure that the king of Egypt God forearms his people, lest, suffering a repulse at their first onset, they should retire, and abandon in despair the work enjoined to them. It was, indeed, a hard thing to hear that their expedition would be vain; and that they might as well address themselves to the trunk of a tree, since there was no hope of reaching the obstinate heart of Pharaoh; but they would have been much more discouraged by this trial, if his stubbornness had been discovered unexpectedly. Therefore God foretells that their words would avail nothing; but at the same time he announces that he should succeed by his own wondrous power. If any think it absurd for these unhappy men to be wearied by their useless labor, and to be repulsed with ridicule and insult, I answer, that this was for the sake of example, and that it was advantageous for setting forth God’s glory, that the king, having been civilly applied to, should betray his impious perversity, since nothing could be more just than that what he had unjustly refused, should be extorted from him against his will. But interpreters differ as to the meaning of the words. For some translate it literally from the Hebrew, “no, not by a mighty hand;” as though God said that the pride of the king would be unconquerable, and not to be subdued by any power or force; but the context requires a different sense, because the remedy is afterwards opposed to it, “and I will stretch out my hand;” and the result is added, that Pharaoh, overcome at length by the plagues, would let the people go. And this view is grammatically correct; for the Hebrews use the word

Calvin: Exo 3:21 - -- 21.And I will give this people favor By this extreme exercise of His bounty He encourages the Israelites to contend and strive more heartily; since o...
21.And I will give this people favor By this extreme exercise of His bounty He encourages the Israelites to contend and strive more heartily; since otherwise it would be hard for them to struggle with the great cruelty of the king. Therefore He promises them not only liberty, but also abundance of rich and precious things. But, inasmuch as this was hard to believe, that the Egyptians their bitterest enemies would become so kind and liberal as to exert such beneficence towards them, God reminds them that it is in His power to turn the hearts of men whithersoever He will. He proclaims, then, that He will cause these wolves of Egypt to become like lambs, and that they who used to bite and devour should now supply them with the very wool from their backs. This passage contains rich and extensive doctrine; that whenever men cruelly rage against us, it does not happen contrary to the design of God, because He can in a moment quiet them; and that He grants this license to their cruelty, because it is expedient thus to humble and chasten us. Again, we gather from hence, that we have no enemies so fierce and barbarous, as that it is not easy for Him readily to tame them. If we were surely persuaded of this, that men’s hearts are controlled, and guided by the secret inspiration of God, we should not so greatly dread their hatred, and threatenings, and terrors, nor should we be so easily turned from the path of duty through fear of them. This alarm is the just reward of our unbelief, when we repose not on God’s providence; and although we ought to take pains to conciliate the kindness of all by courtesy, yet should we remember that our efforts will not gain their favor, unless God should so incline their hearts.

Calvin: Exo 3:22 - -- 22.But every woman shall borrow 47 Those who consider these means of enriching the people to be but little in accordance with the justice of God, the...
22.But every woman shall borrow 47 Those who consider these means of enriching the people to be but little in accordance with the justice of God, themselves reflect but little how widely that justice of which they speak extends. I acknowledge that it is His attribute to defend every one’s rights, to prohibit theft, to condemn deceit and rapine; but let us see what every one’s property is. Who will boast that he has anything, except what is given him by God? And all is given on this condition, that each one should possess according to His will whatever God pleases, who is free to take away at any moment whatsoever He has given. The Hebrews spoiled the Egyptians; and should the latter complain that an injury is done them, they would argue against God that He had transferred His own free gifts from them to others. Would this complaint be listened to, that God, in whose hands are the ends of the earth, who by His power appoints the bounds of nations, and reduces their kings to poverty, had deprived certain persons of their furniture and jewels? Another defense is set up by some, that the Hebrews took nothing which was not their own, but only the wages which were due to them; because they were iniquitously driven to servile labors, and had subsisted meanly upon what belonged to themselves. And certainly it would have been just that their labor should have been recompensed in some way. But there is no need of weighing the judgment of God by ordinary rules, since we have already seen that all the possessions of the world are His, to distribute them according to His pleasure. Nevertheless I do not thus suppose Him to be without law; for although His power is above all laws, still, because His will is the most certain rule of perfect equity, whatever He does must be perfectly right; and therefore He is free from laws, because He is a law to Himself, and to all. Neither would I simply say with Augustin, 48 that this was a command of God which should not be canvassed but obeyed, because He knows that He commands justly, and that his servants must obediently perform whatever He commands. This indeed is truly said, and yet we must hold fast that higher principle, that, since whatever people call their own they possess only by God’s bounty, there is no juster title to possession than His gift. We will not therefore say that the Hebrew women purloined that which God ordered them to take, and which He chose to bestow upon them; neither will God be accounted unjust in bestowing nothing but what was His own. 49 The word which I have translated “ hospitem, ” or “hostess,” some understand as a “fellow - sojourner;” and this is not very important, because we gather from the other word, that the Egyptians were mixed among the Hebrews. In the end of the verse, because the original expresses, “ye shall put them upon your sons, and upon your daughters,” almost all interpreters expound it to mean that they should ornament them; but it seems to me that it only refers to the abundance of the spoil; as much as to say, you shall not only obtain as much as you can carry yourselves, but shall also load your sons and daughters.
Defender -> Exo 3:22
Defender: Exo 3:22 - -- A better translation here is "ask." This was the Lord's just way of requiring the Egyptians to pay for all the slave labor they had long been forcing ...
A better translation here is "ask." This was the Lord's just way of requiring the Egyptians to pay for all the slave labor they had long been forcing upon the children of Israel."
TSK: Exo 3:17 - -- I will bring : Exo 3:9, Exo 2:23-25; Gen 15:13-21, Gen 46:4, Gen 50:24
unto the land : Exo 3:8; Gen 15:14, Gen 15:18-21
I will bring : Exo 3:9, Exo 2:23-25; Gen 15:13-21, Gen 46:4, Gen 50:24
unto the land : Exo 3:8; Gen 15:14, Gen 15:18-21

TSK: Exo 3:18 - -- and they : Exo 3:16, Exo 4:31; Jos 1:17; 2Ch 30:12; Psa 110:3; Jer 26:5
and thou : Exo 5:1-3
The Lord : Exo 7:16, Exo 9:1, Exo 9:13, Exo 10:3
met : Ex...
and they : Exo 3:16, Exo 4:31; Jos 1:17; 2Ch 30:12; Psa 110:3; Jer 26:5
and thou : Exo 5:1-3
The Lord : Exo 7:16, Exo 9:1, Exo 9:13, Exo 10:3
met : Exo 4:24, Exo 5:3, Exo 25:22, Exo 29:42, Exo 29:43, Exo 30:6, Exo 30:36; Gen 12:1, Gen 15:1, Gen 17:1, Gen 48:3; Num 17:4, Num 23:3, Num 23:4, Num 23:15, Num 23:16; Isa 64:5
three days’ : Exo 8:27, Exo 13:17, Exo 13:18
that we may : Exo 3:12, Exo 7:16, Exo 8:25-28, Exo 9:1, Exo 10:24-26, Exo 19:1; Jer 2:2, Jer 2:6

TSK: Exo 3:19 - -- will not : Exo 5:2, Exo 7:4
no, not by a mighty hand : or, but by a strong hand, Exo 6:1, 7:1-14:31; Psa 136:11, Psa 136:12; Isa 63:12, Isa 63:13
no, not by a mighty hand : or, but by a strong hand, Exo 6:1, 7:1-14:31; Psa 136:11, Psa 136:12; Isa 63:12, Isa 63:13

TSK: Exo 3:20 - -- Acts 7:1-13:42
stretch : Exo 6:6, Exo 7:5, Exo 9:15; Eze 20:33
smite : Exo 7:3, Exo 11:9; Deu 4:34, Deu 6:22; Neh 9:10; Psa 105:27, Psa 106:22, Psa 13...
Acts 7:1-13:42
stretch : Exo 6:6, Exo 7:5, Exo 9:15; Eze 20:33
smite : Exo 7:3, Exo 11:9; Deu 4:34, Deu 6:22; Neh 9:10; Psa 105:27, Psa 106:22, Psa 135:8, Psa 135:9; Isa 19:22; Jer 32:20, Jer 32:21; Act 7:36
after that : Exo 11:8, Exo 12:31, Exo 12:39; Gen 15:14; Jdg 6:8, Jdg 8:16; Isa 26:11; Psa 105:38


TSK: Exo 3:22 - -- But : Exo 11:2, Exo 12:35, Exo 12:36; Gen 15:14; Psa 105:37
borrow : Or, rather ask or demand, as the word שׁאל [Strong’ s H7592] properly s...
But : Exo 11:2, Exo 12:35, Exo 12:36; Gen 15:14; Psa 105:37
borrow : Or, rather ask or demand, as the word
spoil : Job 27:16, Job 27:17; Pro 13:22; Isa 33:1; Eze 39:10
the Egyptians : or, Egypt

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Exo 3:18 - -- Three days’ journey - i. e. a journey which would occupy three days in going and returning. This was a demand quite in accordance with Eg...
Three days’ journey - i. e. a journey which would occupy three days in going and returning. This was a demand quite in accordance with Egyptian customs. The refusal of Pharaoh and the subsequent proceedings were revealed to Moses at once; but it is important to observe that the first request which Pharaoh rejected could have been granted without any damage to Egypt, or any risk of the Israelites passing the strongly-fortified frontier.

Barnes: Exo 3:19 - -- No, not - See the marginal rendering. Others explain it to mean, Pharaoh will not let the people go even when severely smitten.
No, not - See the marginal rendering. Others explain it to mean, Pharaoh will not let the people go even when severely smitten.

Barnes: Exo 3:22 - -- Shall borrow - shall ask. The Egyptians had made the people serve "with rigor,"and the Israelites when about to leave the country for ever were...
Shall borrow - shall ask. The Egyptians had made the people serve "with rigor,"and the Israelites when about to leave the country for ever were to ask or claim the jewels as a just, though very inadequate, remuneration for services which had made "their lives bitter."The Egyptians would doubtless have refused had not their feelings toward Moses (see Exo 11:3) and the people been changed, under God’ s influence, by calamities in which they recognized a divine interposition, which also they rightly attributed to the obstinacy of their own king (see Exo 10:7). The Hebrew women were to make the demand, and were to make it of women, who would of course be especially moved to compliance by the loss of their children, the fear of a recurrence of calamity, perhaps also by a sense of the fitness of the request in connection with a religious festival.
Jewels - Chiefly, trinkets. These ornaments were actually applied to the purpose for which they were probably demanded, being employed in making the vessels of the sanctuary (compare Exo 35:22).
Sojourneth in her house - This indicates a degree of friendly and neighborly contact, in accordance with several indirect notices, and was a natural result of long and peaceable sojourn in the district. The Egyptians did not all necessarily share the feelings of their new king.
Poole: Exo 3:18 - -- Hath met with us hath appeared to us, expressing his displeasure for our neglect of him, and declaring his will that we should do what follows.
Thre...
Hath met with us hath appeared to us, expressing his displeasure for our neglect of him, and declaring his will that we should do what follows.
Three days’ journey to Sinai, which, going the nearest way, was no further from Egypt; for here God had declared he would be served, Exo 3:12 .
Quest. Was not this deceitfully and unjustly spoken, when they intended to go quite away from him?
Answ No; for,
1. Pharaoh had no just right and title to them, to keep them in bondage, seeing they came thither only to sojourn for a time, and by Joseph had abundantly paid for their habitation there, and therefore, they might have demanded a total dismission.
2. Moses doth not say any thing which is false, but only conceals a part of the truth; and he was not obliged to discover the whole truth to so cruel a tyrant, and so implacable an enemy.
3. Moses cannot be blamed, both because he was none of Pharaoh’ s subject, and because herein he follows the direction and command of his Master that sent him. And God surely was not obliged to acquaint Pharaoh with all his mind, but only so far as he pleased. And it pleased him for wise and just reasons to propose only this to Pharaoh, that his denial of so modest a request (which God foresaw) might make his tyranny more manifest, and God’ s vengeance upon him more just and remarkable.
Sacrifice to the Lord our God which they could not do freely and safely in Egypt, Exo 8:26 .

Poole: Exo 3:19 - -- I am sure I know it infallibly beforehand.
No, not by a mighty hand though he see and feel the miraculous and dreadful works of a strong, yea, almi...
I am sure I know it infallibly beforehand.
No, not by a mighty hand though he see and feel the miraculous and dreadful works of a strong, yea, almighty hand, yet he will not consent to your going; which the history makes good. Nor did he let them go till he could hold them no longer, till the fear of his own life, and the clamours of his people, forced him to give way to it. And yet after that he repents of his permission, and laboured to bring them back again. Others, but or except by a strong hand , i.e. except by my almighty power he be forced to it. Both translations come to the same sense.
Haydock: Exo 3:18 - -- Called. Samaritan and Septuagint, "hath been invoked upon us." Hebrew, "hath occurred, or appeared to us." (Haydock) ---
Journey, to Sinai, whic...
Called. Samaritan and Septuagint, "hath been invoked upon us." Hebrew, "hath occurred, or appeared to us." (Haydock) ---
Journey, to Sinai, which was about this distance, to go straight. But the Israelites spent 48 days in arriving at it by a circuitous road. (Calmet) ---
In Hebrew they ask, "Let us go, we beseech thee." They do not tell a lie, but withhold the truth. (Menochius)

Haydock: Exo 3:21 - -- Egyptians, among whom the Hebrews were forced to live, not being now allowed to enjoy the fertile country of Gessen alone, according to Joseph's disp...
Egyptians, among whom the Hebrews were forced to live, not being now allowed to enjoy the fertile country of Gessen alone, according to Joseph's disposition. The subsequent kings altered that wise regulation. (Haydock)

Haydock: Exo 3:22 - -- Shall spoil, &c. That is, you shall strip, and take away the goods of the Egyptians. This was not authorizing theft or injustice: but was a just di...
Shall spoil, &c. That is, you shall strip, and take away the goods of the Egyptians. This was not authorizing theft or injustice: but was a just disposal made by him, who is the great Lord and Master of all things; in order to pay the children of Israel some part of what was due to them from the Egyptians for their labours. (Challoner) ---
Wisdom (x. 17) rendered to the just the wages of their labours; and (ver. 19,) the just took the spoils of the wicked, in a just war. It is an ancient tradition of the Jews, that the Egyptians appealed to Alexander the Great for the recovery of these spoils; but when the Jews demanded their wages, they were willing to desist from their claims. (Selden, de Ture vii. 8; Tertullian, contra Marcion ii. 20.) (Calmet) ---
God had a mind to punish the extravagance of the Egyptians, while he enabled his people to appear with suitable presents before him. It was on this last plea that the Hebrews borrowed precious garments, gold, &c. (Haydock) See Clement of Alexandria, strom. 1; St. Augustine, q. 23.
Gill: Exo 3:17 - -- And I have said,.... Within himself, resolved in his own mind, and had declared it to Moses:
I will bring you up out of the affliction of Egypt: wi...
And I have said,.... Within himself, resolved in his own mind, and had declared it to Moses:
I will bring you up out of the affliction of Egypt: with which they were afflicted in Egypt, and by the Egyptians; this he both purposed and promised to bring them out of: unto the land of the Canaanites, &c. then in the possession of the Canaanites, and others after named; See Gill on Exo 3:8.

Gill: Exo 3:18 - -- And they shall hearken to thy voice,.... The elders of Israel, who would give credit to his commission, attend to what he said, and obey his orders, a...
And they shall hearken to thy voice,.... The elders of Israel, who would give credit to his commission, attend to what he said, and obey his orders, and follow the directions that he should give them, and not slight and reject him, as some had done before:
and thou shall come, thou, and the elders of Israel, unto the king of Egypt: the elders of Israel in a body, and Moses at the head of them; though we do not read of their approaching to Pharaoh, and addressing him in such a manner, only of Moses and Aaron applying to him:
and you shall say unto him, the Lord God of the Hebrews hath met with us; with one of them, who had reported to the rest what he had said; the children of Israel are here called Hebrews, because that seems to be a name the Egyptians most commonly called them, and by which they were best known to them, see Gen 39:14.
and now let us go, we beseech thee, three days' journey into the wilderness; the wilderness of Sinai and Arabia, and to Mount Horeb in it; which from the borders of Egypt was three days' journey going the direct road, but the Israelites going somewhat about, and stopping by the way, did not get to it until the third month of their going out of Egypt, Exo 19:1,
that we may sacrifice to the Lord God; in the place where he had appeared to a principal man among them, and where they would be in no danger of being insulted and molested by the Egyptians. Some think the reason of this request they were directed to make, to sacrifice out of the land of Egypt, was, because what they sacrificed the Egyptians worshipped as gods, and therefore would be enraged at such sacrifices; but for this there is no sufficient foundation; See Gill on Gen 46:34, rather the design was under this pretence to get quite away from them, they being no subjects of the king of Egypt, nor had he a right to detain them; nor were they obliged to acquaint him with the whole of their intentions, and especially as they were directed of God himself to say this, and no more, and which being so reasonable, made Pharaoh's refusal the more inexcusable.

Gill: Exo 3:19 - -- And I am sure that the king of Egypt will not let you go,.... Or "but" c "I am sure", &c. though so reasonable a request was made him, yet it would no...
And I am sure that the king of Egypt will not let you go,.... Or "but" c "I am sure", &c. though so reasonable a request was made him, yet it would not be granted; this is observed to them, that they might not be discouraged when he should refuse to dismiss them, which the omniscient God knew beforehand, and acquaints them with it, that, when it came to pass, they might be induced to believe that the mission of Moses was of God, rather than the contrary:
no, not by a mighty hand; the mighty power of God displayed once and again, even in nine plagues inflicted on him, until the tenth and last came upon him; or "unless by a mighty hand" d, even the almighty hand of God; prayers, entreaties, persuasions, and arguments, will signify nothing, unless the mighty power of God is exerted upon him.

Gill: Exo 3:20 - -- And I will stretch out my hand,.... Or "therefore" e he would stretch out his mighty hand, exert his almighty power; and for this purpose was Pharaoh ...
And I will stretch out my hand,.... Or "therefore" e he would stretch out his mighty hand, exert his almighty power; and for this purpose was Pharaoh raised up, and his heart hardened, that God might show his power in him, and on him:
and smite Egypt with all my wonders, which I will do in the midst thereof: with those wondrous plagues, the amazing effects of his almighty power, which were wrought by him in the midst of Egypt, by which their land, their rivers, their persons, and their cattle, were smitten:
and after that he will let you go; this is said for their encouragement, that their faith and patience might hold out, who otherwise seeing him so obstinate and inflexible, might be ready to despair of ever succeeding.

Gill: Exo 3:21 - -- And I will give this people favour in the sight of the Egyptians,.... That is, give the Israelites favour in their sight, a little before their depart...
And I will give this people favour in the sight of the Egyptians,.... That is, give the Israelites favour in their sight, a little before their departure, who should be ready to do anything for them, or bestow anything upon them; or however lend them what they would desire, being glad to be at peace with them, or get rid of them, for whose sakes they would perceive all those sore calamities came upon them, they were distressed with:
and it shall come to pass, that when ye go, ye shall not go empty; destitute of what was necessary for them, but even with great substance, as was foretold by Abraham they should, and which prophecy was now about to be fulfilled, Gen 15:14.

Gill: Exo 3:22 - -- But every woman shall borrow of her neighbour, and of her that sojourneth in her house,.... Or "shall ask" f, desire them to give or lend, what follow...
But every woman shall borrow of her neighbour, and of her that sojourneth in her house,.... Or "shall ask" f, desire them to give or lend, what follows; and by this it appears, that the Israelites by reason of their great increase were spread about, and mixed with the Egyptians; and hence it was that there was such a mixed multitude that went up with them out of Egypt, who either were in connection with them in civil things, or were proselyted by them:
jewels of silver, and jewels of gold; that is, jewels set in silver and in gold; or "vessels of silver, and vessels of gold" g, plate of both sorts, cups, dishes, &c:
and raiment; rich and goodly apparel, which they might borrow to appear in at their feast and sacrifices in the wilderness, whither they asked leave to go to:
and ye shall put them upon your sons, and upon your daughters; and so deck and ornament them with them at the time of their departure:
and ye shall spoil the Egyptians; and very justly, for the hard service they put them to; for which all this was but their wages due unto them, and which they would stand in need of in their travels to Canaan's land, and for the erection of the tabernacle, and providing things appertaining to it in the wilderness.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Exo 3:18 Here a cohortative with a vav (ו) follows a cohortative; the second one expresses purpose or result: “let us go…in order that we may...


NET Notes: Exo 3:20 The two uses of the root שָׁלָח (shalakh) in this verse contribute to its force. When the Lord “sends”...

NET Notes: Exo 3:21 The temporal indicator (here future) with the particle ki (וְהָיָה כִּי, vÿhaya...

NET Notes: Exo 3:22 It is clear that God intended the Israelites to plunder the Egyptians, as they might a defeated enemy in war. They will not go out “empty.”...
Geneva Bible: Exo 3:18 And they shall hearken to thy voice: and thou shalt come, thou and the elders of Israel, unto the king of Egypt, and ye shall say unto him, The LORD G...

Geneva Bible: Exo 3:22 ( p ) But every woman shall borrow of her neighbour, and of her that sojourneth in her house, jewels of silver, and jewels of gold, and raiment: and y...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Exo 3:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Exo 3:1-22 - --1 Moses keeps Jethro's flock.2 God appears to him in a burning bush.9 He sends him to deliver Israel.13 The name of God.15 His message to Israel, and ...
Maclaren -> Exo 3:10-20
Maclaren: Exo 3:10-20 - --Exodus 3:10-20
The son of Pharaoh's daughter' had been transformed, by nearly forty years of desert life, into an Arab shepherd. The influences of the...
MHCC -> Exo 3:16-22
MHCC: Exo 3:16-22 - --Moses' success with the elders of Israel would be good. God, who, by his grace, inclines the heart, and opens the ear, could say beforehand, They shal...
Matthew Henry -> Exo 3:16-22
Matthew Henry: Exo 3:16-22 - -- Moses is here more particularly instructed in his work, and informed beforehand of his success. 1. He must deal with the elders of Israel, and raise...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Exo 3:16-20; Exo 3:21-22
Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 3:16-20 - --
With the command, " Go and gather the elders of Israel together, "God then gave Moses further instructions with reference to the execution of his mi...

Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 3:21-22 - --
Not only would God compel Pharaoh to let Israel go; He would not let His people go out empty, but, according to the promise in Gen 15:14, with great...
Constable -> Exo 1:1--15:22; Exo 3:1--4:19
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 3:1--4:19 - --6. Moses' call 3:1-4:18
3:1-12 Horeb is another name for Sinai (v. 1). It probably indicates a range of mountains rather than a particular mountain pe...
Guzik -> Exo 3:1-22
Guzik: Exo 3:1-22 - --Exodus 3 - Moses and the Burning Bush
A. God's call to Moses from the burning bush.
1. (1-3) Moses and the burning bush on Mount Horeb.
Now Moses ...

expand allCommentary -- Other
Bible Query: Exo 3:10--4:17 Q: In Ex 3:10-4:17 why did Moses need a call, and why do we?
A: Before Moses put His life on the line, God confirmed to Moses that He would be doing...

Bible Query: Exo 3:17 Q: In Ex 3:8,17 and Josh 25:6, why is Canaan called the land of milk and honey?
A: To the pastoral Israelites, it was a land of lush hills and valle...

Bible Query: Exo 3:18 Q: In Ex 3:18, was Moses deceptive when He asked Pharaoh to let them take a three-day journey to offer sacrifices?
A: No. Six points to consider, an...




