Exodus.

1881 225 "The Lord brought you forth out of the iron furnace, even out of Egypt." (Deut. 4:20.) "For Zion's sake will I not hold my peace, and for Jerusalem's sake I will not rest, until the righteousness thereof go forth as brightness, and the salvation thereof as a lamp that burneth." (Isa. 62:1.)

I purpose in this paper to give a short view of the order and contents of the Book of Exodus. I shall not attempt to interpret any part fully, or to take up any incidental or occasional matter, but I shall notice only such parts of the book, and interpret those parts only in such measure, as may give us to see the order of the book and its general character. Others may follow such labour as this with an exhibition of its more hidden treasures, and a fuller application of them to the comfort and edification of the church. But may the Lord graciously keep all our thoughts under the control and guidance of His Spirit, that we may speak as the oracles of God! For the word of God is our only instrument of safety, and should be carefully used as such in days like these, when man's thoughts are very busy, and Satan very ready to take occasion by them to corrupt our minds from the simplicity that is in Christ.

The ends of the age are come upon us, as the apostle speaks (1 Cor. 10:11); but we who are placed therein are not now receiving the same external exhibitions of God's will as Israel of old had; things happened to them, but words are written for us — from what happened to them we get admonitions. "Now all these things happened unto them for ensamples, and they are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come." Wherefore it is "to God, and to the word of his grace," that we are commended, even in the worst of times — times both of wolves from without, and perverse men within. (Acts 20:30-32.) It is to the word that we are directed, as to "a light that shineth in a dark place" (2 Peter 1:19); and mindfulness of the words of the prophets, and the commandments of the apostles, is the saints' security in the last days of infidelity and scoffing. May the sword of the Spirit make a passage of light for us through the darkness, brethren. "Take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God, praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit." (Eph. 6:17-18.)

In order to enter on the Book of Exodus with my present design, it is needful that I should look back at some of the earlier ways of God.

In the opening of Genesis 15, we hear the Lord encouraging Abram; and Abram, thus encouraged, letting the Lord into the deep desire of his heart. "What wilt thou give me," says he, "seeing I go childless, and the steward of my house is this Eliezer of Damascus?" All was nothing to Abram without a child. He would have his house fixed in one out of his own loins, and not in a servant. It did not satisfy Abram, as we may gather from this, that the promised inheritance should stand united with anything less than the adoption; and the Lord answers his desire, saying, "so shall thy seed be." Though old and stricken in years, and his body now dead, he is promised a son; and he believes the Lord, and it is counted to him for righteousness.*

[*Here, for the first time in scripture, is faith expressly mentioned; and this faith of Abram is exhibited as the pattern-faith of all justified sinners. He believed God as a quickener of the dead, and thus gave glory to God. (Rom. 4:17-20.) He thus recognised the work throughout as God's alone. And so is the faith that justifies a sinner; it recognises our state of death in trespasses and sin, but trusts in the living God, who raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead, delivered indeed because of our sins, but raised again because of our justification. Thus, like the faith of Abram, it gives glory, full, undivided glory, to God, confessing our salvation as a work begun and ended in His power.]

Abram, thus secured in the seed, immediately gets a renewal of the promise of the inheritance; for the purpose of God runs thus, "if children, then heirs." And He said unto him, "I am the Lord that brought thee out of Ur of the Chaldees, to give thee this land to inherit it." Upon this the patriarch's faith becomes bolder still. He desires, as it were, to read his title-deed touching this inheritance, saying, "Lord God, whereby shall I know that I inherit it?" He did not stagger at the promise of the inheritance, any more than he had done at that of the seed; but he desired to search out the ground of his confidence, he would know the covenant of his God. And the Lord hears him in this also; He directs the solemnities to be duly prepared, and then, as it were, reads and seals the covenant by which his seed was given the land, from the river of Egypt unto the river Euphrates. (See Jer. 34:18.)

The seals of this covenant were a smoking furnace and a burning lamp. These seals were significant, bearing on them the impressions of God's proposed dealings with Abram's seed, which were now revealed to Abram; "affliction" being, as it were, written on the one seal, and "salvation" on the other. (See vers. 13, 14.)

Now the Book of Exodus will be found to unfold the full meaning of these emblematical seals. It may be entitled, "The Book of the Smoking Furnace, and of the Burning Lamp."

This will be seen by a simple exhibition of the book in its different parts.

Exodus 1. — This chapter presents to us the smoking furnace now kindled for Israel, the seed of Abram, in the land of Egypt. As Moses says to them, "And the Lord brought you forth out of the iron furnace, even out of Egypt." (Deut. 4:20.) And as Solomon afterwards says, when commending Israel to the care of the Lord, "For they be thy people and thine inheritance, which thou broughtest forth out of Egypt, from the midst of the furnace of iron" (1 Kings 8:51); and as indeed the place of affliction and trial is again and again called. (See Isa. 48:10; Jer. 11:3-4; Ezek. 22:17–22.)

Exodus 2 – 4. — In these chapters we see the Lord arising to prepare the promised burning lamp; that is, to bring salvation and deliverance, according to His covenant with their father, to the long-afflicted children of Abraham. "And God heard their groaning, and God remembered His covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob, and God looked upon the children of Israel, and God had respect unto them."* (Ex. 2:24-25.)

[*I admit that the flight of Moses into Midian, and his becoming the head of a family there, after, as he says, God had been his help and deliverer, and while he was a stranger in a strange land (Ex. 18:3-4), was beautifully and exactly typical of good things then to come; but as it is rather incidental matter, and not properly of that which unfolds the direct character and order of the book, I therefore do not pursue it.]

Exodus 5 – 15:22. — The smoking furnace, which had waxed exceeding hot through the urgency of the king's command, is here by the Lord's own hand completely quenched; and the burning lamp, which of old had passed in vision before Abram, is here seen to shine out brighter and brighter, till the full glory of it breaks forth. Now is the ancient word of promise accomplished in behalf of the seed of Abram — "that nation whom they serve will I judge, and afterward shall they come out with great substance" (Gen. 15:14); and the thankful, joyous praises of Moses and of Israel now confess the love and faithfulness of the God of Abraham.*

[*There is a great deal of important instruction in the way of conducting the judgments of God upon the oppressing nation: the typical as well as commemorative nature of the Passover; in the passage through the Red Sea; the discomfiture of Pharaoh and his host, and in the song of Moses — but my present purpose does not require that I should particularly consider any of these things.]

Exodus 15:23 — 17. — But here we listen to other sounds altogether. Their songs of praise and triumph had scarcely died away, when the sound of a rebellious cry was heard among them. It was now no longer the voice of them that shouted for mastery, but the voice of them that murmured was heard. Their works of darkness began while they were still under the fullest shining of the burning lamp of God's salvation.*

[*I would here again observe, that my purpose leads me to set aside, as merely incidental matter, the giving of the manna, and of water from the rock, though these are things, as we know, of fall and blessed meaning.]

Exodus 18. — This scene is rather of an occasional character, but I would at least say this of it, that it gives us another instance of the Lord's care of His people Israel; for the; order and comfort of Moses and the congregation are here consulted and provided for. It was, if I may so speak, a little trimming of the lamp, a fresh acting in grace and kindness by God their Saviour, though the people had been proving themselves so base and unworthy.

Exodus 19. — But what shame and sorrow have we here! The seed of Abraham are willingly exchanging the glory of the burning lamp for another furnace, even fiercer than that of Egypt. (See ver. 18.) They willingly forego Jehovah as their salvation, to trust in their own flesh; they become, of their own accord, debtors to do the whole law, saying, "All that the Lord hath spoken we will do;" thus refusing, as it were, to know that "as many as are of the works of the law are under the curse."

The seed of Abraham are now about to be put under the covenant from Mount Sinai, that gendered bondage. But I must notice this — that the Lord makes no mention whatsoever of such a thing in all His previous dealings either with them or their fathers. The affliction in Egypt had been noticed in the revelation of the divine purposes, touching his seed, to the patriarch Abram (Gen. 15), but no other affliction is at all alluded to. Egypt was to be the scene of the suffering which was to prepare them for becoming the people of God's covenant. The Lord's promises to the fathers were all of grace. "The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob" is the title of the God of Israel, as full of grace, and having salvation, and it was in that name that He claimed His people from the Egyptian king (Ex. 3:6, 8), and with that name He had marked, as it were, all His dealings with them from the Red Sea to the foot of Mount Sinai, where they are now, in chapter 19, standing. I say, throughout the execution of all this mighty deliverance, which He had begun, continued, and ended in His own strength, there is no mention of Sinai terrors, no hint at anything of the kind. The counsel and expectation, which are ever and faithfully kept in view, are simply this — the people holding a feast to the Lord in the wilderness, and then going up to the land of promise. (See — among other passages — Ex. 5:1; Ex. 6:1–8; Ex. 10:9, 26; Ex. 12:25; Ex. 13:5.)

But Israel (as we have observed under Ex. 15:22; Ex. 17) proves mistrustful of God. They did not answer His grace (the way in which alone it can ever be duly answered) with confidence; and thus they ceased to be "the children of Abraham," not doing the works of Abraham, though, of course, they were still his seed. (John 8:37, 39.) And this disobedience of theirs is that which calls forth the covenant from Sinai. And necessarily so, for being now not "of faith," they cannot be "blessed with faithful Abraham;" and even more than that, instead of repenting of this their unbelief and disobedience, and seeking the grace of the God of their fathers, they willingly become "of the works of the law, "saying, "All that the Lord hath spoken we will do" (Ex. 19:8); thus choosing bondage, and taking their willing place under the dark terrors and consuming fires of their own covenant. Therefore the glory, which in the cloudy pillar had stood for them in the face of Pharaoh and his host, and had guided them hitherto in grace, now changed its aspect, and stood against them on the top of the burning mount. The Lord, it is true, was about to be far better to them than they were thus proving to be to themselves; He was about to cast on all this darkness many a fair token of coming mercy (chaps. 14 – 31), to set His bow in their cloud; to join with the ministration of death and of condemnation (into which they were now willingly entering) many a pledge of life and righteousness; but this was His doing, the other was theirs. As of old, Sarai's unbelief brought Ishmael into the house of Abram, but God's love and power afterwards brought in Isaac.

Exodus 20 – 24. — In consequence, then, of this unbelief and hardness of heart, a second furnace is prepared for the seed of Abraham. They trusted in themselves — let their own arm now deliver them; let it be seen if any can be "of the works of the law," and not also "under the curse."

The terms of the covenant are here settled, the covenant itself dedicated and sealed, and Jehovah shows Himself as "the God of Israel." (Ex. 24:10.) The nation thus solemnly affianced to Jehovah is put under the ministry of an angel, who was to prove himself either an avenger or rewarder, according to their desert. (Ex. 23:20–23.)*

[*I am aware that this great transaction between Jehovah and Israel consists of two parts, which for many purposes are to he considered distinct. The first part consists of the publication of the Ten Commandments (Ex. 20:1-17), commonly called the moral law. The second part is the enactment of the statutes of the nation. (Ex. 21 — 23.) For many purposes these are to be treated as distinct, but they are commonly in scripture, I believe, considered as together constituting Jehovah's covenant with Israel from Mount Sinai, and which proved in the end a furnace to them. For both the commandments and the statutes alike called for obedience, and put Israel under works of law, which obedience they had themselves pledged, and which law they had voluntarily adopted (Ex. 19:8; Ex. 24:3, 7), and for breach and despite of which they are even to this day suffering the judgment of the fiery mount. The people were still standing in the presence of that mount, while the statutes of the kingdom, as well as the Ten Commandments, were delivered. (Ex. 24:17.)]

Exodus 25 — 31. — But here we are introduced to other things altogether, the Lord's doings, and not the people's. The Lord's purposed salvation is here revealed to Moses. While the people, abiding in their own covenant, stand under the mount, looking on its devouring fires (Ex. 24:17), Moses is called into fellowship with the Lord's covenant of grace and salvation, and he is therefore made to take a place away from the people in the midst of the cloud in the mount, in a region that lay quite on the other side of all those devouring fires. (Ex. 24:18.) The thunder is now behind him, the storm to him has passed by, and he dwells in the calm sunshine of the presence of Christ. (2 Cor. 3:14.) In quietness and assurance, he receives token after token of that grace which has virtue to quench the flames of Sinai. The testimony of Jesus was the spirit of all that he saw there. Shadows of good things to come are made to pass before him, the same, in meaning, as the burning lamp of old before the patriarch.

Exodus 32 — 34. — These chapters are parenthetical, as will at once appear by reading Ex. 35 in connection with Ex. 31. For it will be found that they may be read without interruption, so as to exclude the chapters that lie between them, that is, the chapters 1 am now considering. But although these chapters do not therefore constitute any part of the direct subject, and form a parenthesis, yet it is a parenthesis of great meaning and importance, which I will therefore consider more fully.

They begin with an act of full apostasy, which the seed of Abraham commit while Moses was in the mount. (Ex. 32:1–6.) This working the forfeiture of all the blessing engaged to them on the terms of their own covenant, the Lord therefore at once stands against them, disclaims them, and prepares to execute consuming judgment upon them. (Ex. 32:7-10.) But Moses as speedily stands for them; and as mediator he pleads the Lord's ancient promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. And the Lord repents when He thus hears the voice of the mediator. (Ex. 32:11–14.)

Having thus secured ultimate grace and salvation, but not till then (as in the garden of old, the promise of the woman's seed was made before the curse was pronounced, and Adam was clothed with skins before he was driven out of Eden), Moses comes down, and correcting but not consuming judgment is executed on the transgressors. (Ex. 32:15–29.) He then, as mediator, returns to the Lord, laden with the sin of the people, in order to make atonement for them, and turn the wrath away; and the Lord hears him in this also, and mercy is again promised. (Ex. 32:30–35; Ex. 33:1–3.)

We are then given to look at the people thus convicted and judged, and also at their mediator with the Lord. In the first place we see their present loss of visible glory: for the tabernacle is taken from the midst of them, and they, in the attitude of repentance, stripped of their ornaments, listening to the righteous rebukes of the Lord, But still there is blessing among them, for they are humbled; they willingly take the place of shame and dishonour; they worship and wait while the mediator is settling the great question between them and their offended God. (Ex. 33:4–11.)

We then see and hear the blessed way between the Lord and the mediator; and the pleading of the mediator prevails, till the full goodness of the Lord is made to pass before him, till the name of his God and Saviour is proclaimed to him, and his soul is satisfied. He knows that he has now got his Lord on the side of the people; that though their iniquity and their sin were so great, yet still the Lord could take them for His inheritance; and satisfied with this mercy, he bows his head towards the earth and worships. (Ex. 33:12–23; Ex. 34:1-9.)

It would not be to my present purpose to pursue what here opens about the ways of our mediator. May we all have grace to know them more and more, to the glory of His name, and our own great and endless comfort!
My Advocate appears
For my defence on high:
The Father bows his ears,
And lays His thunder by;
Not all that hell or sin can say
Shall turn His heart — His love away.

The Lord then, in pledge of the mercy, again enters into covenant with Israel (Ex. 34:10–28); and the parenthesis thus contained in these chapters then closes with the mystery of Moses' veil (Ex. 34:29–35); which is indeed the summary of the whole matter: presenting, as in a glass darkly, the whole way between Jehovah and His Israel. For Moses veiled (as we learn from 2 Cor. 3) typifies Israel as they now are, in the flesh, under law, and in consequent blindness of heart; Moses unveiled typifies Israel as they shall be hereafter, in the Spirit under Christ, and in the light and liberty of the new covenant. Moses, when in the mount, was turned to the Lord, and then took his veil off; and so shall Israel hereafter turn to the Lord, and walk unveiled in the light and joy of the same countenance.

And when Israel is thus turned to the Lord, what shall it be to the world but life from the dead? The covering that is now cast over all people, and the veil that is spread over all nations shall be then destroyed also. (Isa. 25:7.) For God's salvation, God's burning lamp shall be "a light to lighten the Gentiles," as well as "the glory of his people Israel."

Exodus 35 – 40. — Here, as I have just suggested, the subject of Ex. 25 – Ex. 31 is resumed, or rather continued. We may remember that the purport of that portion of our book was to verify, by many witnesses, the final grace and salvation that is to be brought to Israel through Jesus; in other words, the return of the lamp of the Lord.*

[*It will not be thought that I mean to say that those things are not also the types and pledges of the mercy which the church now enjoys in the Lord Jesus — surely they are; but as Israel is in the last days to be gathered by, and to stand in, the same grace, their blessing is therefore also set forth by these shadows.],

The patterns there shown to Moses are here copied by the hand and art of appointed workmen; and all these ordinances (as indeed we all must know) were no part of the clouds and thick darkness of Mount Sinai; they were not the hidden meaning of its thunder and fire. But they were the witnesses of grace and salvation, the shadows of good things to come; or, to express them according to the analogy of this book of Exodus, they were the faint gleamings of the then distant (and, to Israel, still hidden) lamp of the Lord.

Thus does our Exodus open with the smoking furnace, and close with the passing in vision before us of a burning lamp, brighter, far brighter than that which of old led the ransomed of the Lord — the seed of Abraham — out of Egypt. We may then, in faith, say, that the Lord has ordained a lamp for His anointed (Ps. 132:17); and with comfort and confidence listen to the intercession of the great advocate; "For Zion's sake will I not hold my peace, and for Jerusalem's sake I will not rest, until the righteousness thereof go forth as brightness, and the salvation thereof as a lamp that burneth." (Isa. 62:1.)