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												Verse 1Exodus 1:1. These are the names 
												— This list of names is here 
												repeated, that by comparing this 
												small root with the multitude of 
												branches which arose from it, we 
												may see and acknowledge the 
												wonderful providence of God in 
												the fulfilment of his promises. 
												Every man and his household — 
												That is, his children and 
												grand-children.
 
 Verse 3
 Exodus 1:3. And Benjamin — Who, 
												though youngest of all, is 
												placed before Dan, Naphtali, 
												&c., because they were the 
												children of the hand-maidens.
 
 Verse 5
 Exodus 1:5. Seventy souls — Or 
												persons, according to the 
												computation we had, Genesis 
												46:27, including Joseph and his 
												two sons. This was just the 
												number of the nations by which 
												the earth was peopled, (Genesis 
												10.,) for when “God separated 
												the sons of Adam, he set the 
												bounds of the people according 
												to the number of the children of 
												Israel,”
 
 Deuteronomy 32:8.
 
 Verse 6
 Exodus 1:6. All that generation 
												— By degrees wore off. Perhaps 
												all Jacob’s sons died much about 
												the same time, for there was not 
												past seven years’ difference in 
												age between the eldest and the 
												youngest of them, except 
												Benjamin.
 
 Verse 7
 Exodus 1:7. And the children of 
												Israel were fruitful, and 
												increased abundantly — Like 
												fishes or insects, as one of the 
												words here used signifies, and 
												being generally healthful and 
												strong, they waxed exceeding 
												mighty, so that the land was 
												filled with them — At least 
												Goshen, their own allotment. 
												This wonderful increase was the 
												product of the promise long 
												before made to their fathers. 
												From the call of Abraham, when 
												God first told him he would make 
												him a great nation, to the 
												deliverance of his seed out of 
												Egypt, were four hundred and 
												thirty years; during the first 
												two hundred and fifteen of which 
												they were increased to seventy, 
												but in the latter half, those 
												seventy multiplied to six 
												hundred thousand fighting men.
 
 Verse 8
 Exodus 1:8. There arose a new 
												king — One of another family, 
												according to Josephus; for it 
												appears from ancient writers 
												that the kingdom of Egypt often 
												passed from one family to 
												another. That knew not Joseph — 
												All that knew him loved him, and 
												were kind to his relations for 
												his sake; but when he was dead 
												he was soon forgotten, and the 
												remembrance of the good offices 
												he had done was either not 
												retained or not regarded. If we 
												work for men only, our works, at 
												furthest, will die with us; if 
												for God, they will follow us, 
												Revelation 14:13.
 
 Verse 10-11
 Exodus 1:10-11. Come on, let us 
												deal wisely with them, lest they 
												multiply — When men deal 
												wickedly, it is common for them 
												to imagine that they deal 
												wisely, but the folly of sin 
												will at last be manifested 
												before all men. They set over 
												them task-masters, to afflict 
												them — With this very design. 
												They not only made them serve, 
												which was sufficient for 
												Pharaoh’s profit, but they made 
												them serve with rigour, so that 
												their lives became bitter to 
												them; intending hereby to break 
												their spirits, and to rob them 
												of every thing in them that was 
												generous; to ruin their health, 
												and shorten their days, and so 
												diminish their numbers; to 
												discourage them from marrying, 
												since their children would be 
												born to slavery; and to oblige 
												them to desert the Hebrews, and 
												incorporate with the Egyptians. 
												And it is to be feared the 
												oppression they were under did 
												bring over many of them to join 
												with the Egyptians in their 
												idolatrous worship; for we read, 
												Joshua 24:14, that they served 
												other gods in Egypt; and we 
												find, Ezekiel 20:8, that God had 
												threatened to destroy them for 
												it, even while they were in the 
												land of Egypt. Treasure-cities — 
												To keep the king’s money or 
												corn, wherein a great part of 
												the riches of Egypt consisted.
 
 Verse 12
 Exodus 1:12. The more they 
												multiplied — To the grief and 
												vexation of the Egyptians. The 
												original expression, rendered 
												grew, is very emphatical, 
												יפרצjiphrots.
 
 They broke forth and expanded 
												themselves with impetuosity, 
												like a river swollen with the 
												rains, whose waters increase and 
												gain strength by being confined, 
												Here we see how vain and 
												fruitless the devices of men are 
												against the designs of God: and 
												how easily he, in his 
												providence, can turn their 
												counsels against themselves, and 
												cause the very means which they 
												employ to oppress his people, to 
												become the greatest helps and 
												advantages to them. Times of 
												persecution and affliction have 
												often been the church’s growing 
												times: Christianity spread most 
												when it was most persecuted.
 
 Verse 13
 Exodus 1:13. With rigour — 
												בפרךְbepareck, with cruelty, or 
												tyranny; with hard words and 
												cruel usage, without mercy or 
												mitigation. This God permitted 
												for wise and just reasons: 1st, 
												As a punishment of the idolatry 
												into which, it appears, many of 
												them had fallen: 2d, To wean 
												them from the land of Egypt, 
												which was a plentiful, and, in 
												many respects, a desirable land, 
												and to quicken their desires 
												after Canaan: 3d, To prepare the 
												way for God’s glorious works, 
												and Israel’s deliverance.
 
 Verse 14
 Exodus 1:14. In mortar and brick 
												— It has been supposed by many, 
												that, besides the 
												treasure-cities, mentioned 
												Exodus 1:11, and other similar 
												works, the Israelites were 
												employed in raising those 
												enormous piles, termed pyramids, 
												which remain to this day, and 
												probably will remain to the end 
												of the world; “monuments, not so 
												much of the greatness and 
												wisdom, as of the folly, 
												caprice, exorbitant power, and 
												cruel tyranny of the monarchs 
												who projected them. It cannot 
												indeed be denied, that the skill 
												wherewith they were planned 
												equals the vastness of the 
												labour with which they were 
												completed; but then it is 
												evident they never could be 
												useful in any degree adequate to 
												the toil and expense with which 
												they were erected. The 
												supposition, however, is 
												entirely groundless; for the 
												Israelites were employed in 
												making brick; while it is well 
												known the pyramids were built of 
												hewn stone.” — Scott. “The great 
												pyramid,” says Herodotus, “was 
												covered with polished stones, 
												perfectly well joined, the 
												smallest of which was thirty 
												feet long. It was built in the 
												form of steps, on each of which 
												were placed wooden machines to 
												raise the stones from one to 
												another.” Diodorus adds, that 
												“the stories were of very 
												different workmanship, and of 
												eternal duration. It is 
												preserved to our days (the 
												middle of the Augustan age) 
												without being in the least 
												injured. The marble was brought 
												from the quarries of Arabia.” 
												Pliny bears the same testimony: 
												“It is formed of stone brought 
												from the quarries of Arabia.” — 
												Encycl. Brit. So that, it seems 
												evident, the Israelites, who 
												were employed in brick and 
												mortar, had no hand in erecting 
												the pyramids. All manner of 
												service in the field — In 
												cultivating the ground, and, 
												according to Josephus, in 
												cutting canals and trenches, to 
												convey to different parts of the 
												country the waters of the Nile, 
												to raise up mounds, lest the 
												waters overflowing should 
												stagnate, and in other laborious 
												services.
 
 Verse 15
 Exodus 1:15. The king spake to 
												the Hebrew midwives — The two 
												chief of them. They are called 
												Hebrew midwives, probably not 
												because they were themselves 
												Hebrews; for sure Pharaoh could 
												never expect they should be so 
												barbarous to those of their own 
												nation; but because they were 
												generally made use of among the 
												Hebrews, and being Egyptians, he 
												hoped to prevail with them.
 
 Verses 16-19
 Exodus 1:16-19. The stools — 
												Seats used on that occasion. But 
												the midwives feared God — 
												Dreaded his wrath more than 
												Pharaoh’s, and therefore saved 
												the men-children alive. The 
												Hebrew women are lively — We 
												have no reason to doubt the 
												truth of this; it is plain they 
												were now under an extraordinary 
												blessing of increase, which may 
												well be supposed to have had 
												this effect, that the women had 
												quick and easy labour, and the 
												mothers and children being both 
												lively, they seldom needed the 
												help of midwives: this these 
												midwives took notice of, and 
												concluding it to be the finger 
												of God, were thereby imboldened 
												to disobey the king, and with 
												this justify themselves before 
												Pharaoh when he called them to 
												an account for it.
 
 Verse 20-21
 Exodus 1:20-21. God dealt well 
												with the midwives — he made them 
												houses — He blessed them in 
												kind: for as they kept up 
												Israel’s houses or families, so 
												God, in recompense, built them 
												up into families, blessed their 
												children, and made them 
												prosperous. But a late learned 
												writer interprets the passage as 
												follows: Pharaoh, resolving 
												effectually to prevent the 
												increase of the Israelites, 
												built houses for them, that so 
												they might no longer have it in 
												their power to lodge their women 
												in child-bed out of the way to 
												save their children, by removing 
												them from place to place, as 
												they had before done when they 
												lived in the fields in tents, 
												which was their ancient way of 
												living. But the other seems the 
												true interpretation.
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