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Exodus 1:14

Context
1:14 They made their lives bitter 1  by 2  hard service with mortar and bricks and by all kinds of service 3  in the fields. Every kind of service the Israelites were required to give was rigorous. 4 

Exodus 4:16

Context
4:16 He 5  will speak for you to the people, and it will be as if 6  he 7  were your mouth 8  and as if you were his God. 9 

Exodus 13:16

Context
13:16 It will be for a sign on your hand and for frontlets 10  on your forehead, for with a mighty hand the Lord brought us out of Egypt.” 11 

Exodus 35:19

Context
35:19 the woven garments for serving in the holy place, the holy garments for Aaron the priest, and the garments for his sons to minister as priests.”

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[1:14]  1 sn The verb מָרַר (marar) anticipates the introduction of the theme of bitterness in the instructions for the Passover.

[1:14]  2 tn The preposition bet (ב) in this verse has the instrumental use: “by means of” (see GKC 380 §119.o).

[1:14]  3 tn Heb “and in all service.”

[1:14]  4 tn The line could be more literally translated, “All their service in which they served them [was] with rigor.” This takes the referent of בָּהֶם (bahem) to be the Egyptians. The pronoun may also resume the reference to the kinds of service and so not be needed in English: “All their service in which they served [was] with rigor.”

[4:16]  5 tn The word “he” represents the Hebrew independent pronoun, which makes the subject emphatic.

[4:16]  6 tn The phrase “as if” is supplied for clarity.

[4:16]  7 tn Heb “and it will be [that] he, he will be to you for a mouth,” or more simply, “he will be your mouth.”

[4:16]  8 tn Heb “he will be to you for a mouth.”

[4:16]  9 tn The phrase “as if” is supplied for clarity. The word “you” represents the Hebrew independent pronoun, which makes the subject emphatic.

[13:16]  9 tn The word is טוֹטָפֹת (totafot, “frontlets”). The etymology is uncertain, but the word denotes a sign or an object placed on the forehead (see m. Shabbat 6:1). The Gemara interprets it as a band that goes from ear to ear. In the Targum to 2 Sam 1:10 it is an armlet worn by Saul (see S. R. Driver, Exodus, 110). These bands may have resembled the Egyptian practice of wearing as amulets “forms of words written on folds of papyrus tightly rolled up and sewn in linen” (W. C. Kaiser, Jr., “Exodus,” EBC 2:384).

[13:16]  10 sn The pattern of the passage now emerges more clearly; it concerns the grateful debt of the redeemed. In the first part eating the unleavened bread recalls the night of deliverance in Egypt, and it calls for purity. In the second part the dedication of the firstborn was an acknowledgment of the deliverance of the firstborn from bondage. They were to remember the deliverance and choose purity; they were to remember the deliverance and choose dedication. The NT will also say, “You are not your own, for you were bought with a price, therefore, glorify God” (1 Cor 6:20). Here too the truths of God’s great redemption must be learned well and retained well from generation to generation.



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