
Text -- Exodus 31:18 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Exo 31:18 - -- These tables of stone, were not prepared by Moses, but probably by the ministry of angels.
These tables of stone, were not prepared by Moses, but probably by the ministry of angels.

Wesley: Exo 31:18 - -- That is, by his will and power immediately, without the use of any instrument. They were written in two tables, being designed to direct us in our dut...
That is, by his will and power immediately, without the use of any instrument. They were written in two tables, being designed to direct us in our duty, towards God, and towards man. And they were called tables of testimony, because this written law testified the will of God concerning them, and would be a testimony against them if they were disobedient.
JFB -> Exo 31:18
Clarke: Exo 31:18 - -- When he had made an end of communing - When the forty days and forty nights were ended
When he had made an end of communing - When the forty days and forty nights were ended

Clarke: Exo 31:18 - -- Two tables of testimony - See Clarke’ s note on Exo 34:1. Tables of stone - That the record might be lasting, because it was a testimony that r...
Two tables of testimony - See Clarke’ s note on Exo 34:1. Tables of stone - That the record might be lasting, because it was a testimony that referred to future generations, and therefore the materials should be durable

Clarke: Exo 31:18 - -- Written with the finger of God - All the letters cut by God himself. Dr. Winder, in his History of Knowledge, thinks it probable that this was the f...
Written with the finger of God - All the letters cut by God himself. Dr. Winder, in his History of Knowledge, thinks it probable that this was the first writing in alphabetical characters ever exhibited to the world, though there might have been marks or hieroglyphics cut on wood, stone, etc., before this time; see Exo 17:14. That these tables were written, not by the commandment but by the power of God himself, the following passages seem to prove: "And the Lord said unto Moses, Come up to me into the mountain, and be thou there; and I will give thee tables of stone Which I Have Written, that thou mayest teach them;"Exo 24:12. "And he gave unto Moses, upon Mount Sinai, two tables of testimony, tables of stone, Written With The Finger Of God;"Exo 31:18. "And Moses went down from the mount, and the two tables of testimony were in his hand; the tables were Written on both their sides. And the tables were The Work Of God, and the Writing Was The Writing Of God, graven upon the tables;"Exo 32:15, Exo 32:16. "These words [the ten commandments] the Lord spake in the mount, out of the midst of the fire, of the cloud, and of the thick darkness, with a great voice; and he added no more, But He Wrote Them on two tables of stone;"Deu 5:22. It is evident therefore that this writing was properly and literally the writing of God himself. God wrote now on tables of stone what he had originally written on the heart of man, and in mercy he placed that before his eyes which by sin had been obliterated from his soul; and by this he shows us what, by the Spirit of Christ, must be rewritten in the mind, 2Co 3:3; and this is according to the covenant which God long before promised to make with mankind, Jer 31:33. See also what is said on this subject, Exo 20:1 (note), Exo 34:1 (note), and Exo 17:14 (note)
"No time,"says Dr. A. Bayley, "seems so proper from whence to date the introduction of letters among the Hebrews as this, for after this period we find continual mention of letters, reading, and writing, in the now proper sense of those words. See Deu 27:8; Deu 31:9. Moses, it is said,
1. Reason may show us how near to an impossibility it was that a just and proper number of convenient characters for the sounds in language should naturally be hit upon by any man, for whom it was easy to imitate and vary, but not to invent
2. From evidence of the Mosaic history, it appears that the introduction of writing among the Hebrews was not from man, but God
3. There are no evident vestiges of letters subsisting among other nations till after the delivery of the law at Mount Sinai; nor then, among some, till very late."
Calvin -> Exo 31:18
Calvin: Exo 31:18 - -- 18.And he gave unto Moses. It must be observed, that, after the voice of God had been heard from the midst of the fire, and He had delivered the Ten ...
18.And he gave unto Moses. It must be observed, that, after the voice of God had been heard from the midst of the fire, and He had delivered the Ten Commandments, and the form of the tabernacle had been described, and the work had been already finished by the artificers, though its dedication had not yet taken place, Moses was again withdrawn from the sight and intercourse of men, that he might be taught apart by himself to be a faithful interpreter of the Law. For although God had briefly comprised in the Ten Commandments the sum of His doctrine, which might suffice for the rule of a pious and righteous life, still a clearer exposition was needed, such as Moses afterwards added. With this object he was taken up into the sanctuary ( adytum) of heaven, as it were, in order that he might familiarly learn all things that concerned the full and complete understanding of the Ten Commandments, since he could never have attained their genuine meaning if God had not been his Master and Teacher. Hence we gather that he wrote his five books not only under the guidance of the Spirit of God, but as God Himself had suggested them, speaking to him out of His own mouth. Wherefore he observed silence for forty days, that he might afterwards freely speak by the authority of God. Thus ought all true pastors of the Church to be disciples, so as to teach nothing but what they have received. But although God might in a moment have fully perfected His servant, yet, in order more surely to evince that he advanced nothing which did not proceed from the school of heaven, he was separated for forty days from the human race, so that the Israelites might henceforth look up to him as to an angel sent from heaven; for there could be no savour of earth about him who had thus lived with God, without meat and drink, or any other means of nourishment, and divested of all infirmity of the flesh.
Finally, the Ten Commandments were written on two tables, so that they might never be lost. I have elsewhere stated why they were divided into two tables, viz., because they consist of two parts, the first of which is the rule of piety, whilst the second prescribes how we must live righteously, innocently, and chastely with men. Thus the worship of God comes first in order, and then the duties of charity follow. The tables were of stone, inasmuch as it is usual for enduring monuments to be engraven on brass, or stones. That they were “written with the finger of God,” we must understand to mean that the characters were formed without the hand or skill of men, by the secret virtue of God; nor is it a matter of wonder that a writing should have suddenly been brought into existence at the same will ( nutu) of God, whereby the waste and shapeless materials of the world, which they call chaos, were changed so as to be resplendent with astonishing elegance and beauty. This expression, however, is metaphorical, whereby what is only applicable to men is figuratively spoken of God; for God is not corporeal so as to write with His finger; and for Him to act is only to command; as it is said in the Psalms,
“He spake, and all things were made; he commanded, and they were created.” (Psa 33:9.)
Many approve of the allegory, that the Law was written by the Spirit of God on stones, because the hardness of our heart does not receive it without the grace of regeneration; but we must rather hold to the antithesis of Paul, wherein he shews that the Gospel differs from the Law in this respect, because it is written on fleshy hearts, subdued unto obedience, (2Co 3:3;) and indeed it is by no means fitting that we should trifle in such conceits as this, when the simple intention of God is abundantly manifest, viz., that the Law was registered upon stones, in order that the perpetuity of its doctrine should be maintained in all ages.
TSK -> Exo 31:18
TSK: Exo 31:18 - -- gave : Exo 24:12, Exo 24:18, Exo 32:15, Exo 32:16, Exo 34:1-4, Exo 34:28, Exo 34:29; Deu 4:13, Deu 5:22, Deu 9:9-11; 2Co 3:3
the finger : Exo 8:19, Ex...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Exo 31:18
Barnes: Exo 31:18 - -- Two tables of testimony - See Exo 25:16; Exo 32:15. The tables of stone which represented the covenant between Yahweh and His people, and which...
Two tables of testimony - See Exo 25:16; Exo 32:15.
The tables of stone which represented the covenant between Yahweh and His people, and which, when covered with the mercy-seat were to give the sanctuary its significance, are now delivered to Moses in accordance with the promise in Exo 24:12.
The history of what relates to the construction of the sanctuary is here interrupted, and is taken up again in Exo 35:1.
Poole -> Exo 31:18
Poole: Exo 31:18 - -- i.e. The tables of the law, which was the witness of God’ s will and Israel’ s duty. See Exo 16:34 .
Tables of stone ; whereby was signif...
i.e. The tables of the law, which was the witness of God’ s will and Israel’ s duty. See Exo 16:34 .
Tables of stone ; whereby was signified both the durable and perpetual obligation of the moral law, whereas the ceremonial law was to end with the Jewish polity at Christ’ s coming; and the stoniness of men’ s hearts by nature, in which the law of God could not be written but by a Divine and omnipotent hand.
Written with the finger of God , i.e. with the power or Spirit of God, by comparing Mat 12:18 ; not by any art of man, but immediately by a Divine hand.
BC 1491
Haydock -> Exo 31:18
Haydock: Exo 31:18 - -- Testimony, to inform men of their duty. ---
Written, not by Moses, or by any man, but by God himself, or by an angel. (Chap. xxxiv. 1.; Galatians ...
Testimony, to inform men of their duty. ---
Written, not by Moses, or by any man, but by God himself, or by an angel. (Chap. xxxiv. 1.; Galatians iii. 19.) (Calmet)
Gill -> Exo 31:18
Gill: Exo 31:18 - -- And he gave unto Moses, when he had made an end of communing with him on Mount Sinai,.... After all those laws, orders, and instructions before relate...
And he gave unto Moses, when he had made an end of communing with him on Mount Sinai,.... After all those laws, orders, and instructions before related, which having done, he ceased to converse with him any longer in that manner he had, and at parting gave him
two tables of testimony; the two tables of the law, which is a testimony of the will of God, and contained the duty of the Israelites both towards God and man, and are reducible to these two, love to God, and love to our neighbour: five of the commands of the decalogue were written on one table, and five on the other; or it may be rather four on one table, the first being the largest, and containing the duty owing to God, and six on the other, which regard the duty of men one to another; so Orpheus the Heathen poet, speaking of the law of Moses, calls it
written with the finger of God: by God himself, and not by an angel, or by any creature or instrument: and it is by the finger of God, the Spirit, grace, and power of God, that the laws of God are put into the inward part, and written on the heart, to which the apostle refers, 2Co 3:3. This account is given by way of transition to what is recorded in the next chapter.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Exo 31:18
NET Notes: Exo 31:18 The expression “the finger of God” has come up before in the book, in the plagues (Exod 8:15) to express that it was a demonstration of th...
Geneva Bible -> Exo 31:18
Geneva Bible: Exo 31:18 And he gave unto Moses, when he had made an end of communing with him upon mount Sinai, two tables ( i ) of testimony, tables of stone, written with t...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Exo 31:1-18
TSK Synopsis: Exo 31:1-18 - --1 Bezaleel and Aholiab are appointed and qualified for the work of the tabernacle.12 The observation of the sabbath is again commanded.18 Moses receiv...
MHCC -> Exo 31:18
MHCC: Exo 31:18 - --The law was written in tables of stone, to show how lasting it is: to denote likewise the hardness of our hearts; one might more easily write on stone...
Matthew Henry -> Exo 31:12-18
Matthew Henry: Exo 31:12-18 - -- Here is, I. A strict command for the sanctification of the sabbath day, Exo 31:13-17. The law of the sabbath had been given them before any other la...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Exo 31:18
Keil-Delitzsch: Exo 31:18 - --
When Moses had received all the instructions respecting the sanctuary to be erected, Jehovah gave him the two tables of testimony-tables of stone, u...
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 24:12--32:1 - --C. Directions regarding God's dwelling among His people 24:12-31:18
Having given directions clarifying I...
