Moses
Livestock, Boils, Hail, and the Lord’s Sovereign Display
The Lord displays His sovereign power over Egypt’s life, bodies, land, sky, and ruler so His name will be proclaimed in all the earth.
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The Lord displays His sovereign power over Egypt’s life, bodies, land, sky, and ruler so His name will be proclaimed in all the earth.
Exodus 9 argues that the Lord’s judgments are precise, purposeful, and revelatory. Pharaoh continues to resist the command to release Israel for worship, but each plague exposes another realm under the Lord’s authority. Livestock die while Israel’s livestock are preserved. Bodies are afflicted while the magicians are humiliated. Hail devastates Egypt while Goshen is spared.
The Lord explicitly states that Pharaoh remains in place not because Pharaoh is powerful, but because God is displaying His power and proclaiming His name. Pharaoh’s temporary confession under pressure shows that words of guilt are not necessarily true repentance when the fear of the Lord is absent.
Israel, the covenant people redeemed from Egypt and taught to understand the Exodus as the Lord’s judgment against oppressive powers and His covenant deliverance of His people for worship.
Egypt during the continuing plague confrontation after Pharaoh has repeatedly refused to release Israel and has hardened his heart after receiving relief.
The Lord displays His sovereign power over Egypt’s life, bodies, land, sky, and ruler so His name will be proclaimed in all the earth.
Moses
Israel, the covenant people redeemed from Egypt and taught to understand the Exodus as the Lord’s judgment against oppressive powers and His covenant deliverance of His people for worship.
Egypt during the continuing plague confrontation after Pharaoh has repeatedly refused to release Israel and has hardened his heart after receiving relief.
- Israel remains under Pharaoh’s control, but the Lord is increasingly distinguishing His people from Egypt. Egypt’s economy, health, religious-magical confidence, agriculture, and royal authority are being struck by escalating judgments.
Livestock, bodily health, and crops were crucial to Egyptian life, economy, worship, and stability. The plague on livestock attacks Egyptian wealth and resources; the boils humiliate the magicians and afflict human bodies; the hail devastates fields, servants, animals, flax, and barley. The chapter reveals the Lord’s rule over disease, body, sky, storm, fire, agriculture, and life itself.
Exodus 9 advances the plague cycle by intensifying judgment and making the theological purpose explicit: Pharaoh has been raised up so that the Lord’s power may be displayed and His name proclaimed in all the earth.
The Lord strikes Egypt’s livestock while preserving Israel’s, afflicts Egypt with boils that silence the magicians, and sends devastating hail while declaring that Pharaoh exists for the display of God’s power and name.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Exodus 9 prepares gospel clarity by showing that God’s judgment is purposeful, His warnings are merciful, His people are preserved by His covenant care, and His name is to be proclaimed in all the earth. Pharaoh’s shallow confession exposes the difference between fear of consequences and true repentance. In Christ, God provides the greater refuge from judgment, accomplishes the greater redemption from sin’s bondage, and displays His power through the cross and resurrection so that His name is proclaimed among all nations.
The Lord strikes Egyptian livestock while preserving Israel’s, showing precision in judgment and care for His people.
The Lord afflicts Egypt’s bodies and silences the magicians who once opposed Moses.
The Lord announces that Pharaoh has been raised up for the display of divine power and the proclamation of God’s name in all the earth.
The warning creates a distinction among Egyptians: some fear the Lord’s word and take shelter; others ignore it.
The Lord devastates Egypt’s fields but spares Goshen, revealing His rule over storm and land.
Pharaoh confesses under pressure, asks for prayer, receives relief, and then hardens his heart again.
- 1-7: The Lord kills Egypt’s livestock but preserves Israel’s livestock, yet Pharaoh remains unyielding.
- 8-12: Soot becomes dust that causes boils on people and animals, and the magicians can no longer stand before Moses.
- 13-17: The Lord declares that Pharaoh has been raised up so God’s power may be shown and His name proclaimed in all the earth.
- 18-21: The Lord warns Egypt to shelter servants and livestock, and some officials fear His word while others ignore it.
- 22-26: Thunder, hail, and lightning devastate Egypt’s fields, but Goshen is spared.
- 27-30: Pharaoh admits sin and asks for prayer, but Moses discerns that he still does not fear the Lord.
- 31-35: When the storm stops, Pharaoh hardens his heart and refuses to release Israel.
Pastoral Entry
שָׁלַח is the Hebrew word Scripture reaches for whenever someone or something is dispatched, released, stretched out, or set in motion toward a destination or purpose. At its most basic it describes the act of sending — a messenger to a king, a letter to a distant nation, a bird from the hand of Noah over the waters. But to reduce שָׁלַח to a logistical word is to miss the theological weight it carries across the local OT index count of about 847 uses in the Hebrew Bible. In theologically weighted uses, something or someone moves because someone with authority has caused them to move. Sending implies a sender, a purpose, and an accountability on the part of the one sent.
This verb carries an enormous range of application in Scripture: God sends his prophets to warn a rebellious people; he sends plagues upon Egypt; he sends his word to accomplish what he purposes; he sends his Spirit; he sends fire; he sends angels. In each case, the sending is not incidental — it is the expression of his sovereign will entering a situation that needs it. When God stretches out his hand (שָׁלַח יָד), the gesture carries either rescue or judgment depending on the direction of his purpose.
Human beings also send in the pages of Scripture: Abraham sends his servant to find a wife for Isaac; Moses is sent before Pharaoh; the spies are sent into Canaan; Elijah is sent back into the wilderness with provision. But perhaps more poignant is the use of שָׁלַח in contexts of release or dismissal — the sending away of Hagar, the releasing of slaves in the Sabbath year, the divorce that sends a wife from her husband's house. The word covers the whole range of human relationships, obligations, authority, and consequence.
Pastorally, שָׁלַח anchors the biblical theology of mission. It is not a New Testament import. The God who sends is the God of Genesis through Malachi — the God whose word does not return void, whose messengers are not mere volunteers, and whose purposes are carried forward by those he commissions. When Isaiah says 'send me' (שְׁלָחֵנִי), he is stepping into a current already flowing through the whole of Scripture: God sends, God's purposes move outward, and the ones sent go with the authority and accountability of the one who dispatched them.
Sense to send, release, let go
Definition To send away or release.
References Exodus 9:1, 2, 7, 13, 17, 28, 35
Lexicon to send, release, let go
Why it matters The command to release Israel remains the central demand in the confrontation with Pharaoh.
Pastoral Entry
עָבַד is the primary Hebrew verb for work, service, and worship — three realities the word holds together without separating them. In its basic range it means to labor, to till, to serve a master, or to perform assigned work. But the same root also carries the full weight of religious devotion: to serve God, to worship, to do the acts of obedience that belong to the covenant relationship. The noun form עֶבֶד (servant, slave) and the related עֲבֹדָה (service, labor, worship) share the same root, so that in Hebrew thought the servant and the worshiper are joined by the same word.
Deuteronomy is the book of עָבַד in concentrated form. Deuteronomy 6:13 — 'Fear the Lord your God, serve him only (אֹתוֹ תַעֲבֹד), and take your oaths in his name' — places service alongside fear and oath-taking as the defining posture of covenant loyalty. The same verse is cited by Jesus in the wilderness temptation when Satan offers him the kingdoms of the world: 'Worship the Lord your God and serve him only' (Matthew 4:10). Service to God is presented as exclusive: Israel may not עָבַד other gods (Deuteronomy 6:14, 7:16, 13:5). The verb marks out who or what receives the devotion that belongs to God alone.
Deuteronomy 28:47-48 uses the word at the hinge of the curse section: 'Because you did not serve (עָבַד) the Lord your God with joyfulness and gladness of heart, when you had abundance of all things, therefore you shall serve your enemies.' The failure to serve God with joy — not merely to perform religious duty but to do it with the affective quality of delight — becomes the root of covenant breach and its consequences. Joyless worship is not neutral. It is a form of withheld service that the covenant cannot tolerate.
Across the OT, עָבַד names the vocation of Israel: to serve the living God, not idols. The prophets use it to indict Israel for serving Baals (Jeremiah 2:20), and to promise restoration when Israel will return to serve God rightly (Isaiah 40:26-31; Malachi 3:14-18). The NT builds on this foundation: Jesus comes as the Servant (using the Greek δοῦλος and διάκονος), and Paul calls himself a δοῦλος of Christ. The category of servant-worship is not abolished in the NT but transformed — those who serve the risen Lord do so not from duty under threat but from love in the Spirit.
Sense to serve, worship, labor
Definition To serve or worship, depending on context.
References Exodus 9:1, 13
Lexicon to serve, worship, labor
Why it matters The Lord demands Israel’s release so they may serve and worship Him rather than remain under Pharaoh’s bondage.
Sense livestock, cattle, possessions
Definition Domesticated animals or herds, often associated with wealth and livelihood.
References Exodus 9:3-7
Lexicon livestock, cattle, possessions
Why it matters The plague strikes Egypt’s economic and agricultural strength while sparing Israel’s livestock.
Sense to distinguish, set apart, deal differently
Definition To make a distinction or treat separately.
References Exodus 9:4
Lexicon to distinguish, set apart, deal differently
Why it matters The Lord distinguishes between Egypt’s livestock and Israel’s, showing covenant precision in judgment.
Pastoral Entry
לֵב is the Hebrew word English Bibles almost always render 'heart,' but that translation requires immediate rescue from centuries of misreading. In contemporary use, 'heart' has been privatised into the realm of emotion and sentiment — the seat of feeling as opposed to thinking. The Hebrew word refuses that division entirely. לֵב is the integrated centre of the human person: the place where thought is formed, will is exercised, decisions are made, desires are shaped, and character is revealed. When the Old Testament speaks of the heart, it is speaking of what we would distribute across the brain, the soul, the conscience, and the will. The heart is not the irrational self in contrast to the rational self. It is the whole self at its deepest level of operation.
This means that לֵב carries extraordinary theological weight throughout the Hebrew scriptures. When God commands Israel to love him with all their heart in Deuteronomy 6:5, he is not asking for emotional warmth alongside intellectual distance. He is demanding the total allegiance of the whole person — mind, will, desire, and direction — toward himself. When Proverbs 4:23 instructs the reader to guard the heart above all else, because from it flow the springs of life, the sage is identifying the heart as the generative centre of the whole moral life, not merely the emotional life. What the heart believes and treasures will determine what the hands do and what the mouth says.
The Old Testament is unflinching about the heart's problem. Jeremiah 17:9 delivers one of the most sobering verdicts in Scripture: the heart is deceitful above all things and desperately sick. The heart that was made to orient toward God has turned in on itself. It plots, deceives, and conceals its own corruption. No human diagnosis can fully expose it. Only God searches the heart and tests it. This realism about the heart's condition is not cynical anthropology; it is the biblical setup for one of the Old Testament's most stunning promises.
That promise arrives in Jeremiah 31:33 and Ezekiel 36:26 — the two great new-covenant heart-texts. God will write his law not on stone tablets but on the heart itself. He will remove the heart of stone and give a heart of flesh. The transformation Israel could not achieve by discipline or religious effort, God himself will accomplish by sovereign grace. The heart that was the problem becomes the site of redemption. Pastorally, this arc — from the commanded heart (Deuteronomy), to the guarded heart (Proverbs), to the exposed heart (Jeremiah 17), to the transformed heart (Jeremiah 31, Ezekiel 36) — is one of the most pastorally rich trajectories in the Hebrew scriptures.
Sense heart, inner person, will, mind
Definition The inner person, including thought, will, desire, and moral response.
References Exodus 9:7, 12, 34, 35
Lexicon heart, inner person, will, mind
Why it matters Pharaoh’s heart remains the moral center of resistance to the Lord’s word.
Sense to be heavy, hardened, unyielding
Definition To become heavy or stubborn; used metaphorically of Pharaoh’s heart.
References Exodus 9:7, 34
Lexicon to be heavy, hardened, unyielding
Why it matters Pharaoh’s unyielding heart remains resistant even after seeing that Israel’s livestock were spared.
Sense soot, ashes
Definition Soot or ash, here taken from a furnace.
References Exodus 9:8, 10
Lexicon soot, ashes
Why it matters Soot from the furnace becomes the means of bodily affliction, connecting judgment to a symbol of labor, heat, and Egypt’s oppressive environment.
Sense furnace, kiln
Definition A furnace or kiln used for heat or burning.
References Exodus 9:8, 10
Lexicon furnace, kiln
Why it matters The furnace soot becomes an instrument of judgment, possibly recalling the harsh labor environment of Egypt.
Sense boils, inflamed sores
Definition Painful skin eruptions or sores.
References Exodus 9:9-11
Lexicon boils, inflamed sores
Why it matters The boils afflict people and animals and render the magicians unable to stand before Moses.
Sense magicians, ritual specialists
Definition Egyptian ritual or magical specialists.
References Exodus 9:11
Lexicon magicians, ritual specialists
Why it matters The magicians’ inability to stand shows the collapse of Egypt’s counterfeit opposition before the Lord.
Pastoral Entry
חָזַק (chazaq) is the Hebrew verb most commonly translated 'be strong' or 'strengthen.' It covers the spectrum from simple physical strength (a firm grip, a reinforced wall) to the moral courage required to face an overwhelming task. In the Piel stem, it means to strengthen or encourage someone; in the Hiphil, to make strong, seize, or hold fast.
The word appears at every great moment of transition and commission in the OT. When Moses charges Joshua before the entire assembly, when Joshua commissions the tribal leaders, when God speaks to Joshua after Moses dies — the repeated command is chazaq: 'Be strong and courageous.' The word creates a frame for covenantal obedience: the courage called for is not self-confidence but trust in the God who goes before.
But chazaq also describes Pharaoh's hardened heart (Exod 4:21 and throughout the plague narrative). This is the same word used for Israel's courageous call — and the contrast is theologically intentional. The strength that responds to God's commission and the stubbornness that resists God's demand are both described by chazaq. Strength, in biblical terms, is always morally directional: it can be strength toward God or strength against him.
Sense to strengthen, harden, make firm
Definition To strengthen or make firm; used here of the LORD hardening Pharaoh’s heart.
References Exodus 9:12
Lexicon to strengthen, harden, make firm
Why it matters The Lord’s hardening of Pharaoh confirms that the confrontation unfolds under divine sovereignty.
Sense plagues, blows, pestilences
Definition Severe blows or plagues of judgment.
References Exodus 9:14
Lexicon plagues, blows, pestilences
Why it matters The Lord describes the plagues as His own acts directed against Pharaoh, his officials, and his people.
Sense there is none like me
Definition A declaration of divine uniqueness and incomparability.
References Exodus 9:14
Lexicon there is none like me
Why it matters The hail plague is introduced so Pharaoh may know that there is no one like the Lord in all the earth.
Pastoral Entry
אֶרֶץ is the Hebrew word that carries one of the broadest freight-loads in all of Scripture. It can mean the earth in its totality — the physical cosmos as created and upheld by God — and it can mean a particular land, a defined territory, a region, or even the ground beneath one's feet. The range is not a weakness. It is a strength, because it means that אֶרֶץ holds together what we tend to separate: cosmic theology and local address, creation and covenant, universal sovereignty and particular promise.
In its widest sense, אֶרֶץ names the created order as the domain of God's lordship. The opening movement of Genesis does not merely describe origins; it establishes ownership. The earth belongs to its Maker. What fills it, what is drawn from it, what walks upon it — all of it exists under the governance of the One who spoke it into being. The earth is not a neutral stage for human history. It is the theater of God's redemptive purposes, and those purposes are inseparable from the ground itself.
In its narrower, partitive sense, אֶרֶץ becomes one of the most theologically loaded terms in the Hebrew Bible. The land — the particular territory sworn to Abraham, promised to his descendants, given to Israel, lost in exile, and longed for in return — is not simply geography. Land in Israel's story is the embodiment of covenant relationship. To be in the land is to dwell under God's blessing. To be cast out of the land is to experience the weight of covenant failure. To return to the land is to taste the mercy of God who keeps his promises beyond the reach of human faithlessness.
For the pastor and teacher, the word does something that no English gloss fully achieves. It holds cosmic and covenantal together in a single term. When the Psalms invite all the earth to worship, and when Deuteronomy warns Israel about the land they are about to enter, the same word is doing both kinds of work. Recognizing this prevents the common error of flattening every אֶרֶץ into either pure cosmology or pure geography. Context must govern. But both dimensions belong to the theology the word carries.
Sense earth, land
Definition Earth or land, depending on context.
References Exodus 9:14, 15, 16, 29, 33
Lexicon earth, land
Why it matters The chapter emphasizes both Egypt’s land and the universal truth that the earth belongs to the Lord.
Pastoral Entry
עָמַד (amad) is the Hebrew verb for standing — one of the most morally and liturgically charged postures in the OT. To amad is to take a position, to be in a place of service or accountability, to endure under pressure, or to maintain one's ground. The fundamental question the word raises is: where are you standing, before whom, and can you stand? Psalm 1:5 gives the judgment-day form of the question: 'The wicked will not stand (lo yaqumu) in the judgment' — the contrast is with the righteous who stand because they are on solid ground.
Psalm 1:1 uses amad in the negative: 'Blessed is the man who... does not stand (amad) in the way of sinners.' The three-stage downward movement of Psalm 1:1 — walking in the counsel of the wicked, standing in the way of sinners, sitting in the seat of scoffers — shows amad as the middle stage: what began as walking advice becomes a position taken, and the position becomes a permanent seat. The blessed person's amad is directed differently: they stand before YHWH (Gen 18:22, Moses and Joshua's posture), they stand in his sanctuary, they stand in his covenant.
Psalm 130:3 presses amad into the deepest question of human existence before God: 'If you, O YHWH, kept account of iniquities (avirot), O Lord, who could stand (ya'amod)?' The answer is that no one could amad before the holy God if he kept the full account. The only amad possible before YHWH is the amad of grace — 'but with you there is forgiveness (selichah), that you may be feared' (v. 4). The amad of verse 3 (the impossible standing-in-holiness) becomes possible in verse 4 (the standing-in-grace).
First Kings 10:8 gives amad its most honored application: 'Happy are your men, happy are these your servants, who continually stand (ha-omedim) before you and hear your wisdom.' The constant amad before Solomon — and by extension before YHWH — is the posture of the servant who listens. The Levites were designated to amad before YHWH (Deut 10:8, 18:5, 18:7) — their vocation was the standing-before that defined service.
For the preacher, עָמַד (amad) asks two questions of every person: can you stand before the holy God, and where are you standing in relation to his purposes?
Sense to cause to stand, establish, raise up
Definition To cause someone to stand or remain in place.
References Exodus 9:16
Lexicon to cause to stand, establish, raise up
Why it matters The Lord declares that Pharaoh has been kept standing for the purpose of displaying divine power.
Sense power, strength
Definition Strength, power, or capacity.
References Exodus 9:16
Lexicon power, strength
Why it matters The Lord’s purpose is to show His power through Pharaoh’s resistance and Egypt’s judgment.
Pastoral Entry
שֵׁם (šēm) in the OT carries a range of meanings that cluster around one core idea: a name is not merely a label but a bearer of identity, character, and presence. To know someone's name is to have access to who they are; to call on the name is to invoke that person's presence and power; to do something 'for the sake of the name' is to act in accordance with the character of the one named.
These ideas are theologically maximized when šēm refers to the name of YHWH: the Name becomes a near-synonym for the divine presence, character, and action. The theology of the divine Name runs through the entire OT. God's self-revelation at the burning bush (Exod 3:13-15) is a šēm-revelation: Moses asks 'what is your name?' and receives the foundational answer — YHWH, the self-existent, covenant-keeping God.
The Aaronic blessing of Numbers 6:24-27 concludes: 'so they shall put my name on the people of Israel, and I will bless them' — the Name, placed on the people, is the mechanism of blessing. The temple is the place where God causes his name to dwell (Deut 12:11; 1 Kgs 8:29). To call on the Name (qārāʾ bĕšēm YHWH) is the definitive act of worship and prayer throughout the OT, beginning with Enosh (Gen 4:26) and running through Abraham (Gen 12:8), the Psalms (Ps 116:13), and the prophets (Joel 2:32: 'everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved').
Sense name, reputation, revealed identity
Definition Name as identity, reputation, and revealed character.
References Exodus 9:16
Lexicon name, reputation, revealed identity
Why it matters The Lord’s name is to be proclaimed in all the earth through the Exodus judgments.
Pastoral Entry
יָרֵא (yare) is the Hebrew verb for fear and reverence — a single word that covers both the terror-of-the-holy and the reverent-awe-of-the-beloved. The English word 'fear' has lost most of its awe-dimension in modern usage; the Hebrew yare still holds both together: the trembling of one who has encountered real power and the reverence of one who has been undone by holiness. The local Hebrew index currently counts about 329 occurrences in the OT.
Proverbs 1:7 places the fear of the Lord at the beginning of all wisdom: 'The fear of the Lord (yir'at YHWH) is the beginning of wisdom; fools despise wisdom and instruction.' The yir'ah here is not slavish terror but the foundational orientation that rightly orders all other knowledge — seeing reality from beneath God rather than from a position of independent evaluation. The person who fears the Lord has the right starting point for all thinking; the fool who does not fear God has no coherent framework because they have placed themselves at the center.
Genesis 22:12 gives the most concentrated example of yir'ah in narrative: 'now I know that you fear God (yere Elohim), seeing you have not withheld your son, your only son, from me.' The fear of God that Abraham demonstrates is the willingness to obey God absolutely, including in the thing that cost him everything. This is yir'ah as the motivating force of obedience: not the terror of punishment avoided but the awe of the God who is worth obeying even when obedience is the hardest thing imaginable.
The wisdom tradition consistently develops the yir'at YHWH as the orienting principle of human life: it is the beginning of wisdom (Prov 1:7), its crown (Prov 9:10), the thing that prolongs life (Prov 10:27), what keeps one from evil (Prov 16:6), and the source of what the Lord shares with those who fear Him (Ps 25:14). The yir'ah-tradition is the OT's answer to the deepest human question: where do I find the framework for living well? The answer is: in the awe of the God who made you, sustains you, and calls you.
For the preacher, יָרֵא is the word that restores the dimension of awe to the God-relationship — and insists that genuine love of God is not only warmth and affection but also the trembling recognition of who He is.
Sense to fear, revere, be afraid
Definition To fear or revere; here to take the LORD’s word seriously.
References Exodus 9:20, 30
Lexicon to fear, revere, be afraid
Why it matters Some officials fear the Lord’s word and act wisely, while Pharaoh and others do not truly fear Him.
Sense word of the LORD
Definition The spoken command, warning, or revelation of the LORD.
References Exodus 9:20-21
Lexicon word of the LORD
Why it matters The warning before the hail divides those who fear the Lord’s word from those who ignore it.
Sense hail
Definition Frozen precipitation, here sent as devastating judgment.
References Exodus 9:18-34
Lexicon hail
Why it matters The hail reveals the Lord’s rule over the sky and devastates Egypt’s land while sparing Goshen.
Pastoral Entry
קוֹל (qol) is the Hebrew word for voice and sound — the primary word for auditory experience in the OT, appearing 505 times. It covers every kind of sound: the human voice, the divine voice at Sinai and Horeb, the sevenfold voice of YHWH in the storm of Psalm 29, the still small voice after the fire at Horeb (1 Kgs 19:12), the voice crying in the wilderness of Isaiah 40, and the voice of the beloved in the Song of Songs. The qol is never merely acoustic — it is always relational and transformative.
Genesis 3:8 gives qol its first theological use and its most haunting context: 'They heard the sound (qol) of YHWH God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of YHWH God.' The qol of YHWH was heard before the fall — it was the expected sound of the daily walk together. After the fall, the qol is still heard, but the response has changed: they hide. The first consequence of sin is not that the qol goes silent but that the hearers go into hiding. The entire redemptive story is, in one sense, YHWH's pursuit of people who are hiding from his qol.
Psalm 29 is the OT's great qol text — the sevenfold qol YHWH in the storm: 'The qol of YHWH is over the waters; the God of glory thunders, YHWH, over many waters. The qol of YHWH is powerful (bekhoach); the qol of YHWH is full of majesty (behadar). The qol of YHWH breaks (shever) the cedars... The qol of YHWH flashes forth flames of fire. The qol of YHWH shakes the wilderness. The qol of YHWH makes the deer give birth... In his temple all cry, "Glory!"' Seven attributes and seven effects of the divine qol, structured around the sevenfold repetition of qol YHWH. The qol of YHWH does not merely announce — it acts.
First Kings 19:12 gives qol its most paradoxical form: 'after the fire a still small voice (qol demamah daqah, a voice of gentle stillness or a thin, quiet sound).' Elijah, who fled from Jezebel, encounters YHWH not in the wind that tears mountains (the cherev of Ps 29's qol), not in the earthquake, not in the fire — but in the demamah daqah. The qol YHWH can be the overwhelming sevenfold storm of Psalm 29 or the gentle stillness of Horeb. The theological point is the same: YHWH speaks, and the task is to listen.
Isaiah 40:3 introduces the qol of the herald: 'A qol of one crying: In the wilderness prepare the way of YHWH; make straight in the desert a highway for our God.' The qol is heard before the speaker is identified. All four Gospels apply this qol to John the Baptist (Matt 3:3, Mark 1:3, Luke 3:4, John 1:23). The qol prepares before the one it announces arrives.
For the preacher, קוֹל (qol) asks the fundamental question of every sermon: are we hiding from YHWH's voice, or are we listening for the still, quiet sound that Elijah needed to hear?
Sense voices, sounds, thunder
Definition Sound or voice; in storm contexts, thunder.
References Exodus 9:23, 28, 29, 33, 34
Lexicon voices, sounds, thunder
Why it matters The thunder accompanies the hail as part of the Lord’s terrifying judgment from the sky.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Pastoral Entry
אֵשׁ (esh) is the Hebrew word for fire, currently indexed about 378 times in the local Hebrew index. Fire in the OT is not merely a physical phenomenon; it is consistently the medium of divine presence, divine judgment, and divine purification. The three functions are related: the same fire that represents God's presence burns up what does not belong before him, and refines what does. The theological trajectory of esh runs from the burning bush of Exodus 3 to the fire of Hebrews 12:29 ('our God is a consuming fire').
Deuteronomy 4:24 is the foundational theological statement: 'For the Lord your God is a consuming esh (esh okhelet), a jealous God.' The fire is not a secondary attribute of God; it is a description of what God himself is in relation to everything that opposes him and competes for loyalty to him. The jealousy and the consuming fire are the same thing: God's total commitment to his own glory and to his people's exclusive devotion means that whatever rivals him will be consumed. This is not cruelty; it is the natural result of the infinite standing next to the finite, the holy next to the unholy.
Exodus 3:2-4 gives fire its most memorable OT role: the burning bush. 'The angel of the Lord appeared to him in a flame of esh (labbat-esh) out of the midst of a bush. He looked, and behold, the bush was burning, yet it was not consumed.' The burning-but-not-consumed bush is the visual paradox of divine fire: the esh of God's presence is consuming, yet when God chooses to be present to his people, his fire does not destroy them. The bush burns but is not burned up — divine fire without destruction. This is the OT's picture of God's covenantal self-limitation: he is the consuming fire who chooses to be present without consuming.
First Kings 18:38 uses esh for the divine confirmation of Elijah's contest with the prophets of Baal: 'Then the fire (esh) of the Lord fell and consumed the burnt offering and the wood and the stones and the dust, and licked up the water that was in the trench.' The esh YHWH (fire of the Lord) falls from heaven and consumes not only the sacrifice but the altar, the stones, and the water — total consumption, leaving no ambiguity. The fire is the divine response to Elijah's prayer and the proof that YHWH, not Baal, is God.
For the preacher, אֵשׁ (esh) is the word that insists God cannot be approached casually: he is fire, and the approach to him requires the mediation of the sacrifice he provides.
Sense fire, lightning
Definition Fire; in this storm context, lightning or fire flashing to the ground.
References Exodus 9:23-24
Lexicon fire, lightning
Why it matters Fire mingled with hail intensifies the judgment and displays the Lord’s command over destructive forces.
Pastoral Entry
חָטָא is the OT's primary word for sin as a moral and relational reality. The root image is missing — not hitting what you aimed at, not arriving where you were bound to go. But this is not mere imprecision. In the OT, missing is ordinarily relational: it happens in relation to someone. Joseph says 'How could I sin against God?' (Gen 39:9). David says 'Against You, You only, have I sinned' (Ps 51:4).
Sin is not failure measured against an abstract standard; it is an offense committed against a Person. The word also spans remedy: the Piel stem means to decontaminate, to perform the priestly act that removes what the Qal named. The architecture is built into the root itself: the same word that names the wound also names the work of cleansing it.
Sense to sin, miss the mark, do wrong
Definition To sin or act wrongly.
References Exodus 9:27, 34
Lexicon to sin, miss the mark, do wrong
Why it matters Pharaoh admits sin under pressure, but the narrative shows his confession does not become true repentance.
Pastoral Entry
צַדִּיק is the Hebrew adjective for righteous or just — but the English word 'righteous' has accumulated religious connotations that obscure the original force of the Hebrew. צַדִּיק is a relational term before it is a moral one. The root צֶדֶק (righteousness) is a legal and relational concept: to be righteous is to be in right standing within a relationship, to have fulfilled the obligations that the relationship demands, to be the kind of person who can be counted on to act consistently with the covenant that defines the relationship.
A צַדִּיק judge is not merely a good person — he is one who delivers just judgments, who acts in accordance with the standard the legal relationship requires. A צַדִּיק man in a business transaction is one who deals fairly, whose word can be trusted, whose conduct matches the covenant. The local Hebrew artifact indexes the word at about 206 OT occurrences, spanning every domain: the righteous God who will not pervert justice (Gen 18:25), the righteous person whose life exhibits covenant-consistent character (Ps 1:6), the righteous suffering one whose vindication becomes the central OT question (Job, Ps 22, Isa 53), and the Righteous Branch who will execute justice and righteousness in the land (Jer 23:5).
The concentration of צַדִּיק in the Psalms and Proverbs reflects its wisdom-literature home: the righteous are those whose lives are aligned with God's order and whose character can be trusted in the full range of human relationships. The prophetic application of צַדִּיק is twofold: God as the standard of all righteousness ('shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?'
Gen 18:25), and the coming Righteous One who will establish that standard definitively. For Paul, δίκαιος (the LXX translation of צַדִּיק) becomes the word for what believers are declared to be in Christ — justified, reckoned righteous — which imports the full relational weight of צַדִּיק into the NT doctrine of justification.
Sense righteous, just
Definition Righteous or just.
References Exodus 9:27
Lexicon righteous, just
Why it matters Pharaoh verbally acknowledges the Lord’s righteousness, but his later hardening exposes the shallowness of his confession.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
| v.1 | H935בּוֹאQal · Imperative · ImperativeH559אָמַרQal · Perfect · IndicativeH7971שָׁלַחPiel · Imperative · Imperative |
| v.10 | H6524פָּרַחQal · Participle |
| v.11 | H3201יָכֹלQal · Perfect · IndicativeH1961הָיָהQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.12 | H8085שָׁמַעQal · Perfect · IndicativeH1696דָבַרPiel · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.13 | H7925שָׁכַםHiphil · Imperative · ImperativeH559אָמַרQal · Perfect · IndicativeH7971שָׁלַחPiel · Imperative · Imperative |
| v.14 | H7971שָׁלַחQal · ParticipleH3045יָדַעQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.15 | H7971שָׁלַחQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.16 | H5608סָפַרPiel · Infinitive construct |
| v.17 | H5549סָלַלHithpolel · Participle active |
| v.18 | H4305מָטַרHiphil · ParticipleH1961הָיָהQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.19 | H7971שָׁלַחQal · Imperative · ImperativeH5756Hiphil · Imperative · ImperativeH4672מָצָאNiphal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH622אָסַףNiphal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.2 | H3986Piel · ParticipleH2388חָזַקHiphil · Participle |
| v.20 | H5127נוּסHiphil · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.21 | H7760שׂוּםQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.22 | H5186נָטָהQal · Imperative · Imperative |
| v.23 | H5414נָתַןQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.24 | H3947לָקַחHithpael · ParticipleH1961הָיָהQal · Perfect · IndicativeH1961הָיָהQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.25 | H5221נָכָהHiphil · Perfect · IndicativeH7665שָׁבַרPiel · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.26 | H1961הָיָהQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.27 | H2398חָטָאQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.28 | H6279עָתַרHiphil · Imperative · Imperative |
| v.29 | H6566פָּרַשׂQal · Imperfect · Indicative/cohortativeH1961הָיָהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussiveH3045יָדַעQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.3 | H1961הָיָהQal · Participle |
| v.30 | H3045יָדַעQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.31 | H5221נָכָהPual · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.32 | H5221נָכָהPual · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.33 | H5413Niphal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.34 | H2308חָדַלQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.35 | H7971שָׁלַחPiel · Perfect · IndicativeH1696דָבַרPiel · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.4 | H4191מוּתQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.5 | H6213עָשָׂהQal · Imperfect · Indicative/jussive |
| v.6 | H4191מוּתQal · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.7 | H4191מוּתQal · Perfect · IndicativeH7971שָׁלַחPiel · Perfect · Indicative |
| v.8 | H3947לָקַחQal · Imperative · Imperative |
| v.9 | H6524פָּרַחQal · Participle |
Aspect in Hebrew is grammatical form, not tense. Perfect = completed action; Imperfect = incomplete/ongoing. Stem modifies action type (Qal=simple, Niphal=passive, Piel=intensive).
Morphology: OSHB WLC (Open Scriptures, CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible TEHMC (Tyndale House, CC BY 4.0)
Theological Argument
Exodus 9 argues that the Lord’s judgments are precise, purposeful, and revelatory. Pharaoh continues to resist the command to release Israel for worship, but each plague exposes another realm under the Lord’s authority. Livestock die while Israel’s livestock are preserved. Bodies are afflicted while the magicians are humiliated. Hail devastates Egypt while Goshen is spared.
The Lord explicitly states that Pharaoh remains in place not because Pharaoh is powerful, but because God is displaying His power and proclaiming His name. Pharaoh’s temporary confession under pressure shows that words of guilt are not necessarily true repentance when the fear of the Lord is absent.
From covenant distinction over livestock, to bodily affliction and magician humiliation, to the declaration of God’s global purpose, to hail judgment, to Pharaoh’s temporary confession and renewed hardening.
- 1.The LORD judges Egypt’s resources while preserving Israel’s, proving His ability to distinguish between oppressor and covenant people.
- 2.The LORD afflicts Egypt’s bodies and exposes the impotence of Egypt’s magicians.
- 3.The LORD’s purpose in Pharaoh’s continued existence is the display of divine power and the proclamation of His name.
- 4.The LORD’s warning creates accountability; some Egyptians fear His word while others ignore it.
- 5.The LORD rules the sky, storm, fire, crops, trees, animals, and human life.
- 6.Confession without the fear of the LORD collapses into repeated sin when pressure is removed.
Theological Focus
- The Lord’s sovereignty over Egypt
- Covenant distinction between Egypt and Israel
- Judgment as revelation
- The humiliation of counterfeit power
- Pharaoh raised up for God’s purpose
- The proclamation of God’s name in all the earth
- The fear of the Lord’s word
- False confession without true repentance
- The earth belonging to the Lord
- Hardening after mercy
- Covenant distinction
- Judgment against Egypt’s economy and security
- The humiliation of Egypt’s magicians
- God’s purpose over Pharaoh
- The word of the Lord divides hearers
- The earth is the Lord’s
- False repentance
- Divine Sovereignty
- Judgment
- Covenant Preservation
- Human Hardness
- Repentance
- Revelation
- Mission and Divine Name
- Fear of the Lord
Theological Themes
The Lord preserves Israel’s livestock and spares Goshen from hail, showing that His judgments are governed by covenant purpose and divine precision.
Livestock and crops are struck, showing that Egypt’s material strength cannot stand before the Lord.
The magicians cannot stand before Moses because of the boils, demonstrating the collapse of Egypt’s counterfeit spiritual opposition.
Pharaoh’s continued place in history serves the Lord’s purpose: the display of God’s power and the proclamation of His name.
Some officials fear the Lord’s word and shelter their servants and livestock; others ignore it and suffer loss.
Moses declares that the cessation of the storm will show Pharaoh that the earth belongs to the Lord.
Pharaoh admits sin under judgment, but Moses identifies that Pharaoh still does not fear the Lord, and Pharaoh hardens again after relief.
Covenant Significance
Exodus 9 shows that the Lord’s covenant redemption involves both judgment on Egypt and protection of Israel. The Lord’s people are distinguished in the midst of plagues, while Pharaoh’s refusal to release them for worship brings intensified judgment. The chapter also broadens the scope of the Exodus: God acts not only to free Israel but to make His name known in all the earth.
- Covenant preservation - Israel’s livestock and land are preserved while Egypt is struck.
- Covenant worship - The repeated demand remains that Israel be released to worship the Lord.
- Covenant judgment - Egypt is judged for holding the Lord’s people in bondage and refusing His command.
- Covenant witness - The Lord’s acts in Egypt are meant to proclaim His name beyond Israel to all the earth.
- Covenant accountability - Those who fear the Lord’s word respond by seeking shelter · those who ignore it are accountable for unbelief.
- Genesis 15:13-16 - God foretold that He would judge the nation that enslaved Abraham’s descendants.
- Exodus 4:22-23 - The Lord had warned Pharaoh that refusal to release His firstborn son would bring judgment.
- Exodus 6:6-8 - The Lord promised redemption with an outstretched arm and mighty acts of judgment.
- Exodus 8:22-23 - The Lord had already made a distinction between Egypt and Goshen in the plague of flies.
- Exodus 11:7 - The final plague will again show the Lord’s distinction between Egypt and Israel.
Canonical Connections
The Lord’s purpose for Pharaoh becomes a key text for later biblical reflection on divine sovereignty, judgment, and the proclamation of God’s name.
Moses’ declaration that the earth is the Lord’s connects Exodus judgment to the broader biblical theology of God’s ownership over creation.
The divided response to the hail warning anticipates biblical teaching that wise people fear and heed God’s word.
Pharaoh’s pressured confession parallels later biblical warnings about sorrow that does not produce true repentance.
Hail appears elsewhere in Scripture as an instrument or image of divine judgment.
The Exodus display of God’s power anticipates the global proclamation of God’s glory and salvation.
Cross References
Yahweh will strike you with the boils of Egypt, with the tumors, with the scurvy, and with the itch, of which you can not be healed.
When your son asks you in time to come, saying, “What do the testimonies, the statutes, and the ordinances, which Yahweh our God has commanded you mean?” then you shall tell your son, “We were Pharaoh’s slaves in Egypt. Yahweh brought us...
Yahweh said, “I have surely seen the affliction of my people who are in Egypt, and have heard their cry because of their taskmasters, for I know their sorrows. I have come down to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians, and to bring...
You shall tell Pharaoh, ‘Yahweh says, Israel is my son, my firstborn, and I have said to you, “Let my son go, that he may serve me;” and you have refused to let him go. Behold, I will kill your firstborn son.’ ”
Now Yahweh said to Abram, “Leave your country, and your relatives, and your father’s house, and go to the land that I will show you. I will make of you a great nation. I will bless you and make your name great. You will be a blessing. I...
I will bless those who bless you, and I will curse him who treats you with contempt. All the families of the earth will be blessed through you.”
He said to Abram, “Know for sure that your offspring will live as foreigners in a land that is not theirs, and will serve them. They will afflict them four hundred years. I will also judge that nation, whom they will serve. Afterward they...
All countries came into Egypt, to Joseph, to buy grain, because the famine was severe in all the earth.
So Satan went out from the presence of Yahweh, and struck Job with painful sores from the sole of his foot to his head.
Canon-Wide Connections
Cross-reference data: OpenBible.info (CC BY 4.0)
Exodus 9 prepares gospel clarity by showing that God’s judgment is purposeful, His warnings are merciful, His people are preserved by His covenant care, and His name is to be proclaimed in all the earth. Pharaoh’s shallow confession exposes the difference between fear of consequences and true repentance. In Christ, God provides the greater refuge from judgment, accomplishes the greater redemption from sin’s bondage, and displays His power through the cross and resurrection so that His name is proclaimed among all nations.
- God warns before judgment - The warning before the hail shows mercy within judgment, calling hearers to respond to the Lord’s word.
- True repentance is more than pressured confession - Pharaoh says the right words under judgment, but his heart remains without the fear of the Lord.
- God preserves His people - Israel’s livestock and Goshen are spared, showing covenant preservation amid judgment.
- God displays His power through judgment and deliverance - The Lord raises up Pharaoh for the display of His power and the proclamation of His name.
- Christ is the true refuge - Those who heed God’s warning must flee not merely indoors from hail, but to Christ from coming judgment.
- The gospel is for the nations - The Lord’s name proclaimed in all the earth anticipates the global announcement of salvation in Christ.
- Do not confuse Pharaoh’s confession with saving repentance.
- Do not reduce the plagues to punishment without seeing warning, revelation, and redemptive purpose.
- Do not treat God’s sovereignty over Pharaoh as canceling Pharaoh’s responsibility.
- Do not miss the mercy shown in the warning before the hail.
- Do not read covenant distinction as moral superiority in Israel · it is grounded in the Lord’s covenant purpose.
- Do not jump to Christ without preserving the Exodus movement through warning, judgment, distinction, false confession, and the proclamation of God’s name.
Primary Emphasis
Exodus 9 deepens the biblical categories of judgment, redemption, distinction, and the proclamation of God’s name. Pharaoh is raised up so God’s power may be displayed; Egypt is judged so Israel may be freed for worship. This prepares for the gospel’s greater revelation: in Christ, God displays His power and name through judgment and salvation, defeats oppressive powers, preserves His people, and brings the message of His glory to the nations.
Chapter Contribution
Exodus 9 argues that the Lord’s judgments are precise, purposeful, and revelatory. Pharaoh continues to resist the command to release Israel for worship, but each plague exposes another realm under the Lord’s authority. Livestock die while Israel’s livestock are preserved. Bodies are afflicted while the magicians are humiliated. Hail devastates Egypt while Goshen is spared.
The Lord explicitly states that Pharaoh remains in place not because Pharaoh is powerful, but because God is displaying His power and proclaiming His name. Pharaoh’s temporary confession under pressure shows that words of guilt are not necessarily true repentance when the fear of the Lord is absent.
Israel’s livestock are spared because the Lord is preserving His covenant people for the redemption He has promised.
The hail is a judicial act against Pharaoh's self-exaltation and Egypt's refusal to heed the Lord's command.
The Lord governs Pharaoh's preservation, the timing and reach of the plague, the distinction of Goshen, and the public revelation of his name.
The magicians' affliction displays the failure of Egypt's religious specialists before the word and power of the Lord.
The Lord intends his power and name to be known beyond Israel and Egypt, extending the meaning of the exodus toward all the earth.
Pharaoh’s investigation of the spared Israelite livestock does not lead to submission, exposing the stubbornness of unbelieving resistance.
Pharaoh, his officials, and his servants are accountable for how they respond to the Lord's word. Hardness is not excused by divine sovereignty.
Before the hail falls, the Lord warns Egypt and provides a means of shelter for those who fear his word.
Pharaoh's confession shows that admitting fault under pressure is not the same as fearing the Lord with a changed heart.
The plague cycle reveals the Lord's identity by demonstrating his supremacy over Egypt and its spiritual claims.
The repeated demand to let Israel go shows that redemption is ordered toward worshipful service to the Lord.
The Lord rules over Pharaoh, Egypt, plague timing, storm, disease, life, death, and the global purpose of His name.
The plagues are acts of judgment against Egypt’s refusal and oppression.
The Lord distinguishes Israel from Egypt and preserves what belongs to His people.
Pharaoh hardens his heart despite evidence, warning, confession, and mercy.
Pharaoh’s confession under pressure lacks true fear of the Lord and does not produce lasting obedience.
The Lord reveals His uniqueness, power, and ownership of the earth through the plagues.
God’s purpose includes the proclamation of His name in all the earth.
The chapter contrasts those who fear the Lord’s word with Pharaoh and officials who still do not fear Him.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Exodus 9 prepares gospel clarity by showing that God’s judgment is purposeful, His warnings are merciful, His people are preserved by His covenant care, and His name is to be proclaimed in all the earth. Pharaoh’s shallow confession exposes the difference between fear of consequences and true repentance. In Christ, God provides the greater refuge from judgment, accomplishes the greater redemption from sin’s bondage, and displays His power through the cross and resurrection so that His name is proclaimed among all nations.
The Lord sovereignly rules over Egypt, Pharaoh, creation, judgment, mercy, and covenant distinction so that His power is displayed and His name proclaimed in all the earth.
God’s people must learn to fear His word, reject shallow confession, trust His preserving power, and recognize that no ruler or earthly security stands outside His authority.
Reverent fear, repentance, humility, trust, courage, discernment, and mission-minded confidence in the Lord’s global glory.
- Identify a warning from God’s Word that requires immediate obedience.
- Examine whether your confession of sin continues after pressure is removed.
- Thank God that earthly rulers and systems are not ultimate.
- Pray for a soft heart before relief comes, not merely after pain increases.
- Look for ways God’s work in your life can make His name known to others.
- Refuse to trust possessions, health, economy, or status as ultimate security.
- Teach others that the earth belongs to the Lord.
- The chapter gives severe warnings against hardening after repeated mercy, confessing sin only to escape consequences, ignoring the Lord’s word after clear warning, trusting counterfeit spiritual power, and opposing God’s purpose while imagining oneself secure.
- Assuming Pharaoh’s confession is genuine repentance. - Pharaoh says he has sinned, but Moses states that Pharaoh and his officials still do not fear the Lord, and Pharaoh hardens his heart again after relief.
- Treating the plagues as random natural disasters. - The chapter repeatedly shows timing, distinction, warning, purpose, and fulfillment according to the Lord’s word.
- Thinking God’s patience with Pharaoh means Pharaoh is in control. - The Lord explicitly states that Pharaoh has been raised up so God’s power may be displayed and His name proclaimed.
- Reducing the livestock plague to economic inconvenience. - The plague strikes Egyptian resources, security, and religious-cultural confidence while preserving Israel’s livestock.
- Overlooking the Egyptians who feared the Lord’s word. - The hail warning creates a real distinction among Egyptians between those who heed the Lord’s word and those who ignore it.
- Ignoring the global purpose of the Exodus. - The chapter states that God’s name is to be proclaimed in all the earth, so the Exodus has witness beyond Egypt and Israel.
- Do I respond to the Lord’s warnings with action, or do I leave my heart and life exposed?
- Have I ever confessed sin mainly because consequences were painful rather than because I feared the Lord?
- Where am I tempted to harden again after God gives relief?
- Do I trust that God rules over the powerful people who appear to oppose His purposes?
- How does Exodus 9 challenge the things I rely on for earthly security?
- Do I see God’s acts in my life as part of a larger purpose to make His name known?
- What would genuine fear of the Lord look like in the area where I have been resistant?
- Distinguish confession from repentance.
- Warn against hardening after relief.
- Teach divine sovereignty over rulers.
- Call people to fear the Lord’s word.
- Comfort God’s people with His preserving power.
- Connect judgment and mission.
- Expose false security.
Pharaoh verifies that Israel’s livestock were spared, yet evidence does not soften his heart.
The magicians, once imitators of signs, are now afflicted and unable to stand.
The Lord declares that Pharaoh’s role serves the proclamation of God’s name in all the earth.
Some Egyptians fear the word and seek shelter; others ignore it and suffer loss.
Pharaoh’s pressured confession collapses when relief comes, revealing the absence of true fear.
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The Lord strikes Egypt’s livestock while preserving Israel’s, afflicts Egypt with boils that silence the magicians, and sends devastating hail while declaring that Pharaoh exists for the display of God’s power and name.
Exodus 9 shows that the Lord’s covenant redemption involves both judgment on Egypt and protection of Israel. The Lord’s people are distinguished in the midst of plagues, while Pharaoh’s refusal to release them for worship brings intensified judgment. The chapter also broadens the scope of the Exodus: God acts not only to free Israel but to make His name known in all the earth.
Exodus 9 prepares gospel clarity by showing that God’s judgment is purposeful, His warnings are merciful, His people are preserved by His covenant care, and His name is to be proclaimed in all the earth. Pharaoh’s shallow confession exposes the difference between fear of consequences and true repentance. In Christ, God provides the greater refuge from judgment, accomplishes the greater redemption from sin’s bondage, and displays His power through the cross and resurrection so that His name is proclaimed among all nations.
Reverent fear, repentance, humility, trust, courage, discernment, and mission-minded confidence in the Lord’s global glory.
Focus Points
- The Lord’s sovereignty over Egypt
- Covenant distinction between Egypt and Israel
- Judgment as revelation
- The humiliation of counterfeit power
- Pharaoh raised up for God’s purpose
- The proclamation of God’s name in all the earth
- The fear of the Lord’s word
- False confession without true repentance
- The earth belonging to the Lord
- Hardening after mercy
- Covenant distinction
- Judgment against Egypt’s economy and security
- The humiliation of Egypt’s magicians
- God’s purpose over Pharaoh
- The word of the Lord divides hearers
- The earth is the Lord’s
- False repentance
- Divine Sovereignty
- Judgment
- Covenant Preservation
- Human Hardness
- Repentance
- Revelation
- Mission and Divine Name
- Fear of the Lord
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Exodus 9:1-7
Exo 9:1-2 The fifth plague consisted of a severe Murrain, which carried off the cattle (מקנה, the living property) of the Egyptians, that were in the field. To show how Pharaoh was accumulating guilt by his obstinate resistance, in the announcement of this plague the expression, “ If thou refuse to let them go ” (cf. Exo 8:2), is followed by the words, “ and wilt hold them (the Israelites) still ” (עוד still further, even after Jehovah has so emphatically declared His will).
Exo 9:1-2 The fifth plague consisted of a severe Murrain, which carried off the cattle (מקנה, the living property) of the Egyptians, that were in the field. To show how Pharaoh was accumulating guilt by his obstinate resistance, in the announcement of this plague the expression, “ If thou refuse to let them go ” (cf. Exo 8:2), is followed by the words, “ and wilt hold them (the Israelites) still ” (עוד still further, even after Jehovah has so emphatically declared His will).
Exo 9:3-5 “ The hand of Jehovah will be (הויה, which only occurs here, as the participle of היה, generally takes its form from הוה, Neh 6:6; Ecc 2:22) against thy cattle... as a very severe plague (דּבר that which sweeps away, a plague), i. e. , will smite them with a severe plague. A distinction was again made between the Israelites and the Egyptians. “ Of all (the cattle) belonging to the children of Israel, not one (דּבּר Exo 9:4, = אחד Exo 9:6) shall die .
” A definite time was also fixed for the coming of the plague, as in the case of the previous one (Exo 8:23), in order that, whereas murrains occasionally occur in Egypt, Pharaoh might discern in his one the judgment of Jehovah.
Exo 9:3-5 “ The hand of Jehovah will be (הויה, which only occurs here, as the participle of היה, generally takes its form from הוה, Neh 6:6; Ecc 2:22) against thy cattle... as a very severe plague (דּבר that which sweeps away, a plague), i. e. , will smite them with a severe plague. A distinction was again made between the Israelites and the Egyptians. “ Of all (the cattle) belonging to the children of Israel, not one (דּבּר Exo 9:4, = אחד Exo 9:6) shall die .
” A definite time was also fixed for the coming of the plague, as in the case of the previous one (Exo 8:23), in order that, whereas murrains occasionally occur in Egypt, Pharaoh might discern in his one the judgment of Jehovah.
Exo 9:3-5 “ The hand of Jehovah will be (הויה, which only occurs here, as the participle of היה, generally takes its form from הוה, Neh 6:6; Ecc 2:22) against thy cattle... as a very severe plague (דּבר that which sweeps away, a plague), i. e. , will smite them with a severe plague. A distinction was again made between the Israelites and the Egyptians. “ Of all (the cattle) belonging to the children of Israel, not one (דּבּר Exo 9:4, = אחד Exo 9:6) shall die .
” A definite time was also fixed for the coming of the plague, as in the case of the previous one (Exo 8:23), in order that, whereas murrains occasionally occur in Egypt, Pharaoh might discern in his one the judgment of Jehovah.
Exo 9:6 In the words “ all the cattle of the Egyptians died, ” all is not to be taken in an absolute sense, but according to popular usage, as denoting such a quantity, that what remained was nothing in comparison; and, according to Exo 9:3, it must be entirely restricted to the cattle in the field . For, according to Exo 9:9 and Exo 9:19, much of the cattle of the Egyptians still remained even after this murrain, though it extended to all kinds of cattle, horses, asses, camels, oxen, and sheep, and differed in this respect from natural murrains.
Exo 9:7 But Pharaoh’s heart still continued hardened, though he convinced himself by direct inquiry that the cattle of the Israelites had been spared.
Exo 9:8-12 The sixth plague smote man and beast with Boils Breaking Forth in Blisters. - שׁחין (a common disease in Egypt, Deu 28:27) from the unusual word שׁחן ( incaluit ) signifies inflammation, then an abscess or boil (Lev 13:18. ; 2Ki 20:7). אבעבּעת, from בּוּע, to spring up, swell up, signifies blisters, φλυκτίδες (lxx), pustulae . The natural substratum of this plague is discovered by most commentators in the so-called Nile-blisters, which come out in innumerable little pimples upon the scarlet-coloured skin, and change in a short space of time into small, round, and thickly-crowded blisters.
This is called by the Egyptians Hamm el Nil , or the heat of the inundation. According to Dr. Bilharz , it is a rash, which occurs in summer, chiefly towards the close at the time of the overflowing of the Nile, and produces a burning and pricking sensation upon the skin; or, in Seetzen's words, “it consists of small, red, and slightly rounded elevations in the skin, which give strong twitches and slight stinging sensations, resembling those of scarlet fever”.
The cause of this eruption, which occurs only in men and not in animals, has not been determined; some attributing it to the water, and others to the heat. Leyrer , in Herzog's Cyclopaedia, speaks of the “ Anthrax which stood in a causal relation to the fifth plague; a black, burning abscess, which frequently occurs after a murrain, especially the cattle distemper, and which might be called to mind by the name ἄνθραξ, coal, and the symbolical sprinkling of the soot of the furnace.
” In any case, the manner in which this plague was produced was significant, though it cannot be explained with positive certainty, especially as we are unable to decide exactly what was the natural disease which lay at the foundation of the plague. At the command of God, Moses and Aaron took “ handfuls of soot, and sprinkled it towards the heaven, so that it became dust over all the land of Egypt, ” i.
e. , flew like dust over the land, and became boils on man and beast. הכּבשׁן פּיח: soot or ashes of the smelting-furnace or lime-kiln. כּבשׁן is not an oven or cooking stove, but, as Kimchi supposes, a smelting-furnace or lime-kiln; not so called, however, a metallis domandis , but from כּבשׁ in its primary signification to press together, hence ( a ) to soften, or melt, ( b ) to tread down.
Burder's view seems inadmissible; namely, that this symbolical act of Moses had some relation to the expiatory rites of the ancient Egyptians, in which the ashes of sacrifices, particularly human sacrifices, were scattered about. For it rests upon the supposition that Moses took the ashes from a fire appropriated to the burning of sacrifices - a supposition to which neither כּבשׁן nor פּיח is appropriate.
For the former does not signify a fire-place, still less one set apart for the burning of sacrifices, and the ashes taken from the sacrifices for purifying purposes were called אפר, and not פּיח (Num 19:10). Moreover, such an interpretation as this, namely, that the ashes set apart for purifying purposes produced impurity in the hands of Moses, as a symbolical representation of the thought, that “the religious purification promised in the sacrificial worship of Egypt was really a defilement,” does not answer at all to the effect produced.
The ashes scattered in the air by Moses did not produce defilement, but boils or blisters; and we have no ground for supposing that they were regarded by the Egyptians as a religious defilement. And, lastly, there was not one of the plagues in which the object was to pronounce condemnation upon the Egyptian worship or sacrifices; since Pharaoh did not wish to force the Egyptian idolatry upon the Israelites, but simply to prevent them from leaving the country.
The ashes or soot of the smelting-furnace or lime-kiln bore, no doubt, the same relation to the plague arising therefrom, as the water of the Nile and the dust of the ground to the three plagues which proceeded from them. As Pharaoh and his people owed their prosperity, wealth, and abundance of earthly goods to the fertilizing waters of the Nile and the fruitful soil, so it was from the lime-kilns, so to speak, that those splendid cities and pyramids proceeded, by which the early Pharaohs endeavoured to immortalize the power and glory of their reigns.
And whilst in the first three plagues the natural sources of the land were changed by Jehovah, through His servants Moses and Aaron, into sources of evil, the sixth plague proved to the proud king that Jehovah also possessed the power to bring ruin upon him from the workshops of those splendid edifices, for the erection of which he had made use of the strength of the Israelites, and oppressed them so grievously with burdensome toil as to cause Egypt to become like a furnace for smelting iron (Deu 4:20), and that He could make the soot or ashes of the lime-kiln, the residuum of that fiery heat and emblem of the furnace in which Israel groaned, into a seed which, when carried through the air at His command, would produce burning boils on man and beast throughout all the land of Egypt. These boils were the first plague which attacked and endangered the lives of men; and in this respect it was the first foreboding of the death which Pharaoh would bring upon himself by his continued resistance.
The priests were so far from being able to shelter the king from this plague by their secret arts, that they were attacked by them themselves, were unable to stand before Moses, and were obliged to give up all further resistance. But Pharaoh did not take this plague to heart, and was given up to the divine sentence of hardening.
Exo 9:8-12 The sixth plague smote man and beast with Boils Breaking Forth in Blisters. - שׁחין (a common disease in Egypt, Deu 28:27) from the unusual word שׁחן ( incaluit ) signifies inflammation, then an abscess or boil (Lev 13:18. ; 2Ki 20:7). אבעבּעת, from בּוּע, to spring up, swell up, signifies blisters, φλυκτίδες (lxx), pustulae . The natural substratum of this plague is discovered by most commentators in the so-called Nile-blisters, which come out in innumerable little pimples upon the scarlet-coloured skin, and change in a short space of time into small, round, and thickly-crowded blisters.
This is called by the Egyptians Hamm el Nil , or the heat of the inundation. According to Dr. Bilharz , it is a rash, which occurs in summer, chiefly towards the close at the time of the overflowing of the Nile, and produces a burning and pricking sensation upon the skin; or, in Seetzen's words, “it consists of small, red, and slightly rounded elevations in the skin, which give strong twitches and slight stinging sensations, resembling those of scarlet fever”.
The cause of this eruption, which occurs only in men and not in animals, has not been determined; some attributing it to the water, and others to the heat. Leyrer , in Herzog's Cyclopaedia, speaks of the “ Anthrax which stood in a causal relation to the fifth plague; a black, burning abscess, which frequently occurs after a murrain, especially the cattle distemper, and which might be called to mind by the name ἄνθραξ, coal, and the symbolical sprinkling of the soot of the furnace.
” In any case, the manner in which this plague was produced was significant, though it cannot be explained with positive certainty, especially as we are unable to decide exactly what was the natural disease which lay at the foundation of the plague. At the command of God, Moses and Aaron took “ handfuls of soot, and sprinkled it towards the heaven, so that it became dust over all the land of Egypt, ” i.
e. , flew like dust over the land, and became boils on man and beast. הכּבשׁן פּיח: soot or ashes of the smelting-furnace or lime-kiln. כּבשׁן is not an oven or cooking stove, but, as Kimchi supposes, a smelting-furnace or lime-kiln; not so called, however, a metallis domandis , but from כּבשׁ in its primary signification to press together, hence ( a ) to soften, or melt, ( b ) to tread down.
Burder's view seems inadmissible; namely, that this symbolical act of Moses had some relation to the expiatory rites of the ancient Egyptians, in which the ashes of sacrifices, particularly human sacrifices, were scattered about. For it rests upon the supposition that Moses took the ashes from a fire appropriated to the burning of sacrifices - a supposition to which neither כּבשׁן nor פּיח is appropriate.
For the former does not signify a fire-place, still less one set apart for the burning of sacrifices, and the ashes taken from the sacrifices for purifying purposes were called אפר, and not פּיח (Num 19:10). Moreover, such an interpretation as this, namely, that the ashes set apart for purifying purposes produced impurity in the hands of Moses, as a symbolical representation of the thought, that “the religious purification promised in the sacrificial worship of Egypt was really a defilement,” does not answer at all to the effect produced.
The ashes scattered in the air by Moses did not produce defilement, but boils or blisters; and we have no ground for supposing that they were regarded by the Egyptians as a religious defilement. And, lastly, there was not one of the plagues in which the object was to pronounce condemnation upon the Egyptian worship or sacrifices; since Pharaoh did not wish to force the Egyptian idolatry upon the Israelites, but simply to prevent them from leaving the country.
The ashes or soot of the smelting-furnace or lime-kiln bore, no doubt, the same relation to the plague arising therefrom, as the water of the Nile and the dust of the ground to the three plagues which proceeded from them. As Pharaoh and his people owed their prosperity, wealth, and abundance of earthly goods to the fertilizing waters of the Nile and the fruitful soil, so it was from the lime-kilns, so to speak, that those splendid cities and pyramids proceeded, by which the early Pharaohs endeavoured to immortalize the power and glory of their reigns.
And whilst in the first three plagues the natural sources of the land were changed by Jehovah, through His servants Moses and Aaron, into sources of evil, the sixth plague proved to the proud king that Jehovah also possessed the power to bring ruin upon him from the workshops of those splendid edifices, for the erection of which he had made use of the strength of the Israelites, and oppressed them so grievously with burdensome toil as to cause Egypt to become like a furnace for smelting iron (Deu 4:20), and that He could make the soot or ashes of the lime-kiln, the residuum of that fiery heat and emblem of the furnace in which Israel groaned, into a seed which, when carried through the air at His command, would produce burning boils on man and beast throughout all the land of Egypt. These boils were the first plague which attacked and endangered the lives of men; and in this respect it was the first foreboding of the death which Pharaoh would bring upon himself by his continued resistance.
The priests were so far from being able to shelter the king from this plague by their secret arts, that they were attacked by them themselves, were unable to stand before Moses, and were obliged to give up all further resistance. But Pharaoh did not take this plague to heart, and was given up to the divine sentence of hardening.
Exo 9:8-12 The sixth plague smote man and beast with Boils Breaking Forth in Blisters. - שׁחין (a common disease in Egypt, Deu 28:27) from the unusual word שׁחן ( incaluit ) signifies inflammation, then an abscess or boil (Lev 13:18. ; 2Ki 20:7). אבעבּעת, from בּוּע, to spring up, swell up, signifies blisters, φλυκτίδες (lxx), pustulae . The natural substratum of this plague is discovered by most commentators in the so-called Nile-blisters, which come out in innumerable little pimples upon the scarlet-coloured skin, and change in a short space of time into small, round, and thickly-crowded blisters.
This is called by the Egyptians Hamm el Nil , or the heat of the inundation. According to Dr. Bilharz , it is a rash, which occurs in summer, chiefly towards the close at the time of the overflowing of the Nile, and produces a burning and pricking sensation upon the skin; or, in Seetzen's words, “it consists of small, red, and slightly rounded elevations in the skin, which give strong twitches and slight stinging sensations, resembling those of scarlet fever”.
The cause of this eruption, which occurs only in men and not in animals, has not been determined; some attributing it to the water, and others to the heat. Leyrer , in Herzog's Cyclopaedia, speaks of the “ Anthrax which stood in a causal relation to the fifth plague; a black, burning abscess, which frequently occurs after a murrain, especially the cattle distemper, and which might be called to mind by the name ἄνθραξ, coal, and the symbolical sprinkling of the soot of the furnace.
” In any case, the manner in which this plague was produced was significant, though it cannot be explained with positive certainty, especially as we are unable to decide exactly what was the natural disease which lay at the foundation of the plague. At the command of God, Moses and Aaron took “ handfuls of soot, and sprinkled it towards the heaven, so that it became dust over all the land of Egypt, ” i.
e. , flew like dust over the land, and became boils on man and beast. הכּבשׁן פּיח: soot or ashes of the smelting-furnace or lime-kiln. כּבשׁן is not an oven or cooking stove, but, as Kimchi supposes, a smelting-furnace or lime-kiln; not so called, however, a metallis domandis , but from כּבשׁ in its primary signification to press together, hence ( a ) to soften, or melt, ( b ) to tread down.
Burder's view seems inadmissible; namely, that this symbolical act of Moses had some relation to the expiatory rites of the ancient Egyptians, in which the ashes of sacrifices, particularly human sacrifices, were scattered about. For it rests upon the supposition that Moses took the ashes from a fire appropriated to the burning of sacrifices - a supposition to which neither כּבשׁן nor פּיח is appropriate.
For the former does not signify a fire-place, still less one set apart for the burning of sacrifices, and the ashes taken from the sacrifices for purifying purposes were called אפר, and not פּיח (Num 19:10). Moreover, such an interpretation as this, namely, that the ashes set apart for purifying purposes produced impurity in the hands of Moses, as a symbolical representation of the thought, that “the religious purification promised in the sacrificial worship of Egypt was really a defilement,” does not answer at all to the effect produced.
The ashes scattered in the air by Moses did not produce defilement, but boils or blisters; and we have no ground for supposing that they were regarded by the Egyptians as a religious defilement. And, lastly, there was not one of the plagues in which the object was to pronounce condemnation upon the Egyptian worship or sacrifices; since Pharaoh did not wish to force the Egyptian idolatry upon the Israelites, but simply to prevent them from leaving the country.
The ashes or soot of the smelting-furnace or lime-kiln bore, no doubt, the same relation to the plague arising therefrom, as the water of the Nile and the dust of the ground to the three plagues which proceeded from them. As Pharaoh and his people owed their prosperity, wealth, and abundance of earthly goods to the fertilizing waters of the Nile and the fruitful soil, so it was from the lime-kilns, so to speak, that those splendid cities and pyramids proceeded, by which the early Pharaohs endeavoured to immortalize the power and glory of their reigns.
And whilst in the first three plagues the natural sources of the land were changed by Jehovah, through His servants Moses and Aaron, into sources of evil, the sixth plague proved to the proud king that Jehovah also possessed the power to bring ruin upon him from the workshops of those splendid edifices, for the erection of which he had made use of the strength of the Israelites, and oppressed them so grievously with burdensome toil as to cause Egypt to become like a furnace for smelting iron (Deu 4:20), and that He could make the soot or ashes of the lime-kiln, the residuum of that fiery heat and emblem of the furnace in which Israel groaned, into a seed which, when carried through the air at His command, would produce burning boils on man and beast throughout all the land of Egypt. These boils were the first plague which attacked and endangered the lives of men; and in this respect it was the first foreboding of the death which Pharaoh would bring upon himself by his continued resistance.
The priests were so far from being able to shelter the king from this plague by their secret arts, that they were attacked by them themselves, were unable to stand before Moses, and were obliged to give up all further resistance. But Pharaoh did not take this plague to heart, and was given up to the divine sentence of hardening.
Exo 9:8-12 The sixth plague smote man and beast with Boils Breaking Forth in Blisters. - שׁחין (a common disease in Egypt, Deu 28:27) from the unusual word שׁחן ( incaluit ) signifies inflammation, then an abscess or boil (Lev 13:18. ; 2Ki 20:7). אבעבּעת, from בּוּע, to spring up, swell up, signifies blisters, φλυκτίδες (lxx), pustulae . The natural substratum of this plague is discovered by most commentators in the so-called Nile-blisters, which come out in innumerable little pimples upon the scarlet-coloured skin, and change in a short space of time into small, round, and thickly-crowded blisters.
This is called by the Egyptians Hamm el Nil , or the heat of the inundation. According to Dr. Bilharz , it is a rash, which occurs in summer, chiefly towards the close at the time of the overflowing of the Nile, and produces a burning and pricking sensation upon the skin; or, in Seetzen's words, “it consists of small, red, and slightly rounded elevations in the skin, which give strong twitches and slight stinging sensations, resembling those of scarlet fever”.
The cause of this eruption, which occurs only in men and not in animals, has not been determined; some attributing it to the water, and others to the heat. Leyrer , in Herzog's Cyclopaedia, speaks of the “ Anthrax which stood in a causal relation to the fifth plague; a black, burning abscess, which frequently occurs after a murrain, especially the cattle distemper, and which might be called to mind by the name ἄνθραξ, coal, and the symbolical sprinkling of the soot of the furnace.
” In any case, the manner in which this plague was produced was significant, though it cannot be explained with positive certainty, especially as we are unable to decide exactly what was the natural disease which lay at the foundation of the plague. At the command of God, Moses and Aaron took “ handfuls of soot, and sprinkled it towards the heaven, so that it became dust over all the land of Egypt, ” i.
e. , flew like dust over the land, and became boils on man and beast. הכּבשׁן פּיח: soot or ashes of the smelting-furnace or lime-kiln. כּבשׁן is not an oven or cooking stove, but, as Kimchi supposes, a smelting-furnace or lime-kiln; not so called, however, a metallis domandis , but from כּבשׁ in its primary signification to press together, hence ( a ) to soften, or melt, ( b ) to tread down.
Burder's view seems inadmissible; namely, that this symbolical act of Moses had some relation to the expiatory rites of the ancient Egyptians, in which the ashes of sacrifices, particularly human sacrifices, were scattered about. For it rests upon the supposition that Moses took the ashes from a fire appropriated to the burning of sacrifices - a supposition to which neither כּבשׁן nor פּיח is appropriate.
For the former does not signify a fire-place, still less one set apart for the burning of sacrifices, and the ashes taken from the sacrifices for purifying purposes were called אפר, and not פּיח (Num 19:10). Moreover, such an interpretation as this, namely, that the ashes set apart for purifying purposes produced impurity in the hands of Moses, as a symbolical representation of the thought, that “the religious purification promised in the sacrificial worship of Egypt was really a defilement,” does not answer at all to the effect produced.
The ashes scattered in the air by Moses did not produce defilement, but boils or blisters; and we have no ground for supposing that they were regarded by the Egyptians as a religious defilement. And, lastly, there was not one of the plagues in which the object was to pronounce condemnation upon the Egyptian worship or sacrifices; since Pharaoh did not wish to force the Egyptian idolatry upon the Israelites, but simply to prevent them from leaving the country.
The ashes or soot of the smelting-furnace or lime-kiln bore, no doubt, the same relation to the plague arising therefrom, as the water of the Nile and the dust of the ground to the three plagues which proceeded from them. As Pharaoh and his people owed their prosperity, wealth, and abundance of earthly goods to the fertilizing waters of the Nile and the fruitful soil, so it was from the lime-kilns, so to speak, that those splendid cities and pyramids proceeded, by which the early Pharaohs endeavoured to immortalize the power and glory of their reigns.
And whilst in the first three plagues the natural sources of the land were changed by Jehovah, through His servants Moses and Aaron, into sources of evil, the sixth plague proved to the proud king that Jehovah also possessed the power to bring ruin upon him from the workshops of those splendid edifices, for the erection of which he had made use of the strength of the Israelites, and oppressed them so grievously with burdensome toil as to cause Egypt to become like a furnace for smelting iron (Deu 4:20), and that He could make the soot or ashes of the lime-kiln, the residuum of that fiery heat and emblem of the furnace in which Israel groaned, into a seed which, when carried through the air at His command, would produce burning boils on man and beast throughout all the land of Egypt. These boils were the first plague which attacked and endangered the lives of men; and in this respect it was the first foreboding of the death which Pharaoh would bring upon himself by his continued resistance.
The priests were so far from being able to shelter the king from this plague by their secret arts, that they were attacked by them themselves, were unable to stand before Moses, and were obliged to give up all further resistance. But Pharaoh did not take this plague to heart, and was given up to the divine sentence of hardening.
Exo 9:8-12 The sixth plague smote man and beast with Boils Breaking Forth in Blisters. - שׁחין (a common disease in Egypt, Deu 28:27) from the unusual word שׁחן ( incaluit ) signifies inflammation, then an abscess or boil (Lev 13:18. ; 2Ki 20:7). אבעבּעת, from בּוּע, to spring up, swell up, signifies blisters, φλυκτίδες (lxx), pustulae . The natural substratum of this plague is discovered by most commentators in the so-called Nile-blisters, which come out in innumerable little pimples upon the scarlet-coloured skin, and change in a short space of time into small, round, and thickly-crowded blisters.
This is called by the Egyptians Hamm el Nil , or the heat of the inundation. According to Dr. Bilharz , it is a rash, which occurs in summer, chiefly towards the close at the time of the overflowing of the Nile, and produces a burning and pricking sensation upon the skin; or, in Seetzen's words, “it consists of small, red, and slightly rounded elevations in the skin, which give strong twitches and slight stinging sensations, resembling those of scarlet fever”.
The cause of this eruption, which occurs only in men and not in animals, has not been determined; some attributing it to the water, and others to the heat. Leyrer , in Herzog's Cyclopaedia, speaks of the “ Anthrax which stood in a causal relation to the fifth plague; a black, burning abscess, which frequently occurs after a murrain, especially the cattle distemper, and which might be called to mind by the name ἄνθραξ, coal, and the symbolical sprinkling of the soot of the furnace.
” In any case, the manner in which this plague was produced was significant, though it cannot be explained with positive certainty, especially as we are unable to decide exactly what was the natural disease which lay at the foundation of the plague. At the command of God, Moses and Aaron took “ handfuls of soot, and sprinkled it towards the heaven, so that it became dust over all the land of Egypt, ” i.
e. , flew like dust over the land, and became boils on man and beast. הכּבשׁן פּיח: soot or ashes of the smelting-furnace or lime-kiln. כּבשׁן is not an oven or cooking stove, but, as Kimchi supposes, a smelting-furnace or lime-kiln; not so called, however, a metallis domandis , but from כּבשׁ in its primary signification to press together, hence ( a ) to soften, or melt, ( b ) to tread down.
Burder's view seems inadmissible; namely, that this symbolical act of Moses had some relation to the expiatory rites of the ancient Egyptians, in which the ashes of sacrifices, particularly human sacrifices, were scattered about. For it rests upon the supposition that Moses took the ashes from a fire appropriated to the burning of sacrifices - a supposition to which neither כּבשׁן nor פּיח is appropriate.
For the former does not signify a fire-place, still less one set apart for the burning of sacrifices, and the ashes taken from the sacrifices for purifying purposes were called אפר, and not פּיח (Num 19:10). Moreover, such an interpretation as this, namely, that the ashes set apart for purifying purposes produced impurity in the hands of Moses, as a symbolical representation of the thought, that “the religious purification promised in the sacrificial worship of Egypt was really a defilement,” does not answer at all to the effect produced.
The ashes scattered in the air by Moses did not produce defilement, but boils or blisters; and we have no ground for supposing that they were regarded by the Egyptians as a religious defilement. And, lastly, there was not one of the plagues in which the object was to pronounce condemnation upon the Egyptian worship or sacrifices; since Pharaoh did not wish to force the Egyptian idolatry upon the Israelites, but simply to prevent them from leaving the country.
The ashes or soot of the smelting-furnace or lime-kiln bore, no doubt, the same relation to the plague arising therefrom, as the water of the Nile and the dust of the ground to the three plagues which proceeded from them. As Pharaoh and his people owed their prosperity, wealth, and abundance of earthly goods to the fertilizing waters of the Nile and the fruitful soil, so it was from the lime-kilns, so to speak, that those splendid cities and pyramids proceeded, by which the early Pharaohs endeavoured to immortalize the power and glory of their reigns.
And whilst in the first three plagues the natural sources of the land were changed by Jehovah, through His servants Moses and Aaron, into sources of evil, the sixth plague proved to the proud king that Jehovah also possessed the power to bring ruin upon him from the workshops of those splendid edifices, for the erection of which he had made use of the strength of the Israelites, and oppressed them so grievously with burdensome toil as to cause Egypt to become like a furnace for smelting iron (Deu 4:20), and that He could make the soot or ashes of the lime-kiln, the residuum of that fiery heat and emblem of the furnace in which Israel groaned, into a seed which, when carried through the air at His command, would produce burning boils on man and beast throughout all the land of Egypt. These boils were the first plague which attacked and endangered the lives of men; and in this respect it was the first foreboding of the death which Pharaoh would bring upon himself by his continued resistance.
The priests were so far from being able to shelter the king from this plague by their secret arts, that they were attacked by them themselves, were unable to stand before Moses, and were obliged to give up all further resistance. But Pharaoh did not take this plague to heart, and was given up to the divine sentence of hardening.
Exo 9:13-16 As the plagues had thus far entirely failed to bend the unyielding heart of Pharaoh under the will of the Almighty God, the terrors of that judgment, which would infallibly come upon him, were set before him in three more plagues, which were far more terrible than any that had preceded them. That these were to be preparatory to the last decisive blow, is proved by the great solemnity with which they were announced to the hardened king (Exo 9:13-16).
This time Jehovah was about to “ send all His strokes at the heart of Pharaoh, and against his servants and his people ” (Exo 9:14). אל־לבּך does not signify “against thy person,” for לב is not used for נפשׁ, and even the latter is not a periphrasis for “person;” but the strokes were to go to the king’s heart, “It announces that they will be plagues that will not only strike the head and arms, but penetrate the very heart, and inflict a mortal wound” ( Calvin ).
From the plural “ strokes, ” it is evident that this threat referred not only to the seventh plague, viz. , the hail, but to all the other plagues, through which Jehovah was about to make known to the king that “there was none like Him in all the earth,;” i. e. , that not one of the gods whom the heathen worshipped was like Him, the only true God. For, in order to show this, Jehovah had not smitten Pharaoh and his people at once with pestilence and cut them off from the earth, but had set him up to make him see, i.
e. , discern or feel His power, and to glorify His name in all the earth (Exo 9:15, Exo 9:16). In Exo 9:15 וגו שׁלחתּי (I have stretched out, etc.) is to be taken as the conditional clause: “ If I had now stretched out My hand and smitten thee... thou wouldest have been cut off . ” העמדתּיך forms the antithesis to תּכּהד, and means to cause to stand or continue, as in 1Ki 15:4; 2Ch 9:8 (διετηρήθης lxx).
Causing to stand presupposes setting up. In this first sense the Apostle Paul has rendered it ἐξήγειρα in Rom 9:17, in accordance with the purport of his argument, because “God thereby appeared still more decidedly as absolutely determining all that was done by Pharaoh” ( Philippi on Rom 9:17). The reason why God had not destroyed Pharaoh at once was twofold: (1) that Pharaoh himself might experience (הראת to cause to see, i.
e. , to experience) the might of Jehovah, by which he was compelled more than once to give glory to Jehovah (Exo 9:27; Exo 10:16-17; Exo 12:31); and (2) that the name of Jehovah might be declared throughout all the earth. As both the rebellion of the natural man against the word and will of God, and the hostility of the world-power to the Lord and His people, were concentrated in Pharaoh, so there were manifested in the judgments suspended over him the patience and grace of the living God, quite as much as His holiness, justice, and omnipotence, as a warning to impenitent sinners, and a support to the faith of the godly, in a manner that should by typical for all times and circumstances of the kingdom of God in conflict with the ungodly world.
The report of this glorious manifestation of Jehovah spread at once among all the surrounding nations (cf. Exo 15:14.) , and travelled not only to the Arabians, but to the Greeks and Romans also, and eventually with the Gospel of Christ to all the nations of the earth (vid. , Tholuck on Rom 9:17).
Exo 9:13-16 As the plagues had thus far entirely failed to bend the unyielding heart of Pharaoh under the will of the Almighty God, the terrors of that judgment, which would infallibly come upon him, were set before him in three more plagues, which were far more terrible than any that had preceded them. That these were to be preparatory to the last decisive blow, is proved by the great solemnity with which they were announced to the hardened king (Exo 9:13-16).
This time Jehovah was about to “ send all His strokes at the heart of Pharaoh, and against his servants and his people ” (Exo 9:14). אל־לבּך does not signify “against thy person,” for לב is not used for נפשׁ, and even the latter is not a periphrasis for “person;” but the strokes were to go to the king’s heart, “It announces that they will be plagues that will not only strike the head and arms, but penetrate the very heart, and inflict a mortal wound” ( Calvin ).
From the plural “ strokes, ” it is evident that this threat referred not only to the seventh plague, viz. , the hail, but to all the other plagues, through which Jehovah was about to make known to the king that “there was none like Him in all the earth,;” i. e. , that not one of the gods whom the heathen worshipped was like Him, the only true God. For, in order to show this, Jehovah had not smitten Pharaoh and his people at once with pestilence and cut them off from the earth, but had set him up to make him see, i.
e. , discern or feel His power, and to glorify His name in all the earth (Exo 9:15, Exo 9:16). In Exo 9:15 וגו שׁלחתּי (I have stretched out, etc.) is to be taken as the conditional clause: “ If I had now stretched out My hand and smitten thee... thou wouldest have been cut off . ” העמדתּיך forms the antithesis to תּכּהד, and means to cause to stand or continue, as in 1Ki 15:4; 2Ch 9:8 (διετηρήθης lxx).
Causing to stand presupposes setting up. In this first sense the Apostle Paul has rendered it ἐξήγειρα in Rom 9:17, in accordance with the purport of his argument, because “God thereby appeared still more decidedly as absolutely determining all that was done by Pharaoh” ( Philippi on Rom 9:17). The reason why God had not destroyed Pharaoh at once was twofold: (1) that Pharaoh himself might experience (הראת to cause to see, i.
e. , to experience) the might of Jehovah, by which he was compelled more than once to give glory to Jehovah (Exo 9:27; Exo 10:16-17; Exo 12:31); and (2) that the name of Jehovah might be declared throughout all the earth. As both the rebellion of the natural man against the word and will of God, and the hostility of the world-power to the Lord and His people, were concentrated in Pharaoh, so there were manifested in the judgments suspended over him the patience and grace of the living God, quite as much as His holiness, justice, and omnipotence, as a warning to impenitent sinners, and a support to the faith of the godly, in a manner that should by typical for all times and circumstances of the kingdom of God in conflict with the ungodly world.
The report of this glorious manifestation of Jehovah spread at once among all the surrounding nations (cf. Exo 15:14.) , and travelled not only to the Arabians, but to the Greeks and Romans also, and eventually with the Gospel of Christ to all the nations of the earth (vid. , Tholuck on Rom 9:17).
Exo 9:13-16 As the plagues had thus far entirely failed to bend the unyielding heart of Pharaoh under the will of the Almighty God, the terrors of that judgment, which would infallibly come upon him, were set before him in three more plagues, which were far more terrible than any that had preceded them. That these were to be preparatory to the last decisive blow, is proved by the great solemnity with which they were announced to the hardened king (Exo 9:13-16).
This time Jehovah was about to “ send all His strokes at the heart of Pharaoh, and against his servants and his people ” (Exo 9:14). אל־לבּך does not signify “against thy person,” for לב is not used for נפשׁ, and even the latter is not a periphrasis for “person;” but the strokes were to go to the king’s heart, “It announces that they will be plagues that will not only strike the head and arms, but penetrate the very heart, and inflict a mortal wound” ( Calvin ).
From the plural “ strokes, ” it is evident that this threat referred not only to the seventh plague, viz. , the hail, but to all the other plagues, through which Jehovah was about to make known to the king that “there was none like Him in all the earth,;” i. e. , that not one of the gods whom the heathen worshipped was like Him, the only true God. For, in order to show this, Jehovah had not smitten Pharaoh and his people at once with pestilence and cut them off from the earth, but had set him up to make him see, i.
e. , discern or feel His power, and to glorify His name in all the earth (Exo 9:15, Exo 9:16). In Exo 9:15 וגו שׁלחתּי (I have stretched out, etc.) is to be taken as the conditional clause: “ If I had now stretched out My hand and smitten thee... thou wouldest have been cut off . ” העמדתּיך forms the antithesis to תּכּהד, and means to cause to stand or continue, as in 1Ki 15:4; 2Ch 9:8 (διετηρήθης lxx).
Causing to stand presupposes setting up. In this first sense the Apostle Paul has rendered it ἐξήγειρα in Rom 9:17, in accordance with the purport of his argument, because “God thereby appeared still more decidedly as absolutely determining all that was done by Pharaoh” ( Philippi on Rom 9:17). The reason why God had not destroyed Pharaoh at once was twofold: (1) that Pharaoh himself might experience (הראת to cause to see, i.
e. , to experience) the might of Jehovah, by which he was compelled more than once to give glory to Jehovah (Exo 9:27; Exo 10:16-17; Exo 12:31); and (2) that the name of Jehovah might be declared throughout all the earth. As both the rebellion of the natural man against the word and will of God, and the hostility of the world-power to the Lord and His people, were concentrated in Pharaoh, so there were manifested in the judgments suspended over him the patience and grace of the living God, quite as much as His holiness, justice, and omnipotence, as a warning to impenitent sinners, and a support to the faith of the godly, in a manner that should by typical for all times and circumstances of the kingdom of God in conflict with the ungodly world.
The report of this glorious manifestation of Jehovah spread at once among all the surrounding nations (cf. Exo 15:14.) , and travelled not only to the Arabians, but to the Greeks and Romans also, and eventually with the Gospel of Christ to all the nations of the earth (vid. , Tholuck on Rom 9:17).
Exo 9:13-16 As the plagues had thus far entirely failed to bend the unyielding heart of Pharaoh under the will of the Almighty God, the terrors of that judgment, which would infallibly come upon him, were set before him in three more plagues, which were far more terrible than any that had preceded them. That these were to be preparatory to the last decisive blow, is proved by the great solemnity with which they were announced to the hardened king (Exo 9:13-16).
This time Jehovah was about to “ send all His strokes at the heart of Pharaoh, and against his servants and his people ” (Exo 9:14). אל־לבּך does not signify “against thy person,” for לב is not used for נפשׁ, and even the latter is not a periphrasis for “person;” but the strokes were to go to the king’s heart, “It announces that they will be plagues that will not only strike the head and arms, but penetrate the very heart, and inflict a mortal wound” ( Calvin ).
From the plural “ strokes, ” it is evident that this threat referred not only to the seventh plague, viz. , the hail, but to all the other plagues, through which Jehovah was about to make known to the king that “there was none like Him in all the earth,;” i. e. , that not one of the gods whom the heathen worshipped was like Him, the only true God. For, in order to show this, Jehovah had not smitten Pharaoh and his people at once with pestilence and cut them off from the earth, but had set him up to make him see, i.
e. , discern or feel His power, and to glorify His name in all the earth (Exo 9:15, Exo 9:16). In Exo 9:15 וגו שׁלחתּי (I have stretched out, etc.) is to be taken as the conditional clause: “ If I had now stretched out My hand and smitten thee... thou wouldest have been cut off . ” העמדתּיך forms the antithesis to תּכּהד, and means to cause to stand or continue, as in 1Ki 15:4; 2Ch 9:8 (διετηρήθης lxx).
Causing to stand presupposes setting up. In this first sense the Apostle Paul has rendered it ἐξήγειρα in Rom 9:17, in accordance with the purport of his argument, because “God thereby appeared still more decidedly as absolutely determining all that was done by Pharaoh” ( Philippi on Rom 9:17). The reason why God had not destroyed Pharaoh at once was twofold: (1) that Pharaoh himself might experience (הראת to cause to see, i.
e. , to experience) the might of Jehovah, by which he was compelled more than once to give glory to Jehovah (Exo 9:27; Exo 10:16-17; Exo 12:31); and (2) that the name of Jehovah might be declared throughout all the earth. As both the rebellion of the natural man against the word and will of God, and the hostility of the world-power to the Lord and His people, were concentrated in Pharaoh, so there were manifested in the judgments suspended over him the patience and grace of the living God, quite as much as His holiness, justice, and omnipotence, as a warning to impenitent sinners, and a support to the faith of the godly, in a manner that should by typical for all times and circumstances of the kingdom of God in conflict with the ungodly world.
The report of this glorious manifestation of Jehovah spread at once among all the surrounding nations (cf. Exo 15:14.) , and travelled not only to the Arabians, but to the Greeks and Romans also, and eventually with the Gospel of Christ to all the nations of the earth (vid. , Tholuck on Rom 9:17).
Exo 9:17-18 The seventh plague . - To break down Pharaoh’s opposition, Jehovah determined to send such a Hail as had not been heard of since the founding of Egypt, accompanied by thunder and masses of fire, and to destroy every man and beast that should be in the field. מסתּולל עודך: “ thou still dammest thyself up against My people . ” הסתּולל: to set one’s self as a dam, i.
e. , to oppose; from סלל, to heap up earth as a dam or rampart. “ To-morrow about this time, ” to give Pharaoh time for reflection. Instead of “from the day that Egypt was founded until now,” we find in Exo 9:24 “ since it became a nation, ” since its existence as a kingdom or nation.
Exo 9:17-18 The seventh plague . - To break down Pharaoh’s opposition, Jehovah determined to send such a Hail as had not been heard of since the founding of Egypt, accompanied by thunder and masses of fire, and to destroy every man and beast that should be in the field. מסתּולל עודך: “ thou still dammest thyself up against My people . ” הסתּולל: to set one’s self as a dam, i.
e. , to oppose; from סלל, to heap up earth as a dam or rampart. “ To-morrow about this time, ” to give Pharaoh time for reflection. Instead of “from the day that Egypt was founded until now,” we find in Exo 9:24 “ since it became a nation, ” since its existence as a kingdom or nation.
Exo 9:19-23 The good advice to be given by Moses to the king, to secure the men and cattle that were in the field, i. e. , to put them under shelter, which was followed by the God-fearing Egyptians (Exo 9:21), was a sign of divine mercy, which would still rescue the hardened man and save him from destruction. Even in Pharaoh’s case the possibility still existed of submission to the will of God; the hardening was not yet complete.
But as he paid no heed to the word of the Lord, the predicted judgment was fulfilled (Exo 9:22-26). “ Jehovah gave voices ” (קלת); called “voices of God” in Exo 9:28. This term is applied to the thunder (cf. Exo 19:16; Exo 20:18; Psa 29:3-9), as being the mightiest manifestation of the omnipotence of God, which speaks therein to men (Rev 10:3-4), and warns them of the terrors of judgment.
These terrors were heightened by masses of fire, which came down from the sky along with the hail that smote man and beast in the field, destroyed the vegetables, and shattered the trees. “ And fire ran along upon the ground; ” תּהלך is a Kal, though it sounds like Hithpael, and signifies grassari , as in Psa 73:9.
Exo 9:19-23 The good advice to be given by Moses to the king, to secure the men and cattle that were in the field, i. e. , to put them under shelter, which was followed by the God-fearing Egyptians (Exo 9:21), was a sign of divine mercy, which would still rescue the hardened man and save him from destruction. Even in Pharaoh’s case the possibility still existed of submission to the will of God; the hardening was not yet complete.
But as he paid no heed to the word of the Lord, the predicted judgment was fulfilled (Exo 9:22-26). “ Jehovah gave voices ” (קלת); called “voices of God” in Exo 9:28. This term is applied to the thunder (cf. Exo 19:16; Exo 20:18; Psa 29:3-9), as being the mightiest manifestation of the omnipotence of God, which speaks therein to men (Rev 10:3-4), and warns them of the terrors of judgment.
These terrors were heightened by masses of fire, which came down from the sky along with the hail that smote man and beast in the field, destroyed the vegetables, and shattered the trees. “ And fire ran along upon the ground; ” תּהלך is a Kal, though it sounds like Hithpael, and signifies grassari , as in Psa 73:9.
Exo 9:19-23 The good advice to be given by Moses to the king, to secure the men and cattle that were in the field, i. e. , to put them under shelter, which was followed by the God-fearing Egyptians (Exo 9:21), was a sign of divine mercy, which would still rescue the hardened man and save him from destruction. Even in Pharaoh’s case the possibility still existed of submission to the will of God; the hardening was not yet complete.
But as he paid no heed to the word of the Lord, the predicted judgment was fulfilled (Exo 9:22-26). “ Jehovah gave voices ” (קלת); called “voices of God” in Exo 9:28. This term is applied to the thunder (cf. Exo 19:16; Exo 20:18; Psa 29:3-9), as being the mightiest manifestation of the omnipotence of God, which speaks therein to men (Rev 10:3-4), and warns them of the terrors of judgment.
These terrors were heightened by masses of fire, which came down from the sky along with the hail that smote man and beast in the field, destroyed the vegetables, and shattered the trees. “ And fire ran along upon the ground; ” תּהלך is a Kal, though it sounds like Hithpael, and signifies grassari , as in Psa 73:9.
Exo 9:19-23 The good advice to be given by Moses to the king, to secure the men and cattle that were in the field, i. e. , to put them under shelter, which was followed by the God-fearing Egyptians (Exo 9:21), was a sign of divine mercy, which would still rescue the hardened man and save him from destruction. Even in Pharaoh’s case the possibility still existed of submission to the will of God; the hardening was not yet complete.
But as he paid no heed to the word of the Lord, the predicted judgment was fulfilled (Exo 9:22-26). “ Jehovah gave voices ” (קלת); called “voices of God” in Exo 9:28. This term is applied to the thunder (cf. Exo 19:16; Exo 20:18; Psa 29:3-9), as being the mightiest manifestation of the omnipotence of God, which speaks therein to men (Rev 10:3-4), and warns them of the terrors of judgment.
These terrors were heightened by masses of fire, which came down from the sky along with the hail that smote man and beast in the field, destroyed the vegetables, and shattered the trees. “ And fire ran along upon the ground; ” תּהלך is a Kal, though it sounds like Hithpael, and signifies grassari , as in Psa 73:9.
Exo 9:19-23 The good advice to be given by Moses to the king, to secure the men and cattle that were in the field, i. e. , to put them under shelter, which was followed by the God-fearing Egyptians (Exo 9:21), was a sign of divine mercy, which would still rescue the hardened man and save him from destruction. Even in Pharaoh’s case the possibility still existed of submission to the will of God; the hardening was not yet complete.
But as he paid no heed to the word of the Lord, the predicted judgment was fulfilled (Exo 9:22-26). “ Jehovah gave voices ” (קלת); called “voices of God” in Exo 9:28. This term is applied to the thunder (cf. Exo 19:16; Exo 20:18; Psa 29:3-9), as being the mightiest manifestation of the omnipotence of God, which speaks therein to men (Rev 10:3-4), and warns them of the terrors of judgment.
These terrors were heightened by masses of fire, which came down from the sky along with the hail that smote man and beast in the field, destroyed the vegetables, and shattered the trees. “ And fire ran along upon the ground; ” תּהלך is a Kal, though it sounds like Hithpael, and signifies grassari , as in Psa 73:9.
Exo 9:24 “ Fire mingled; ” lit., collected together, i.e., formed into balls (cf. Eze 1:4). “The lightning took the form of balls of fire, which came down like burning torches.”
Exo 9:25-28 The expressions, “ every herb, ” and “ every tree, ” are not to be taken absolutely, just as in Exo 9:6, as we may see from Exo 10:5. Storms are not common in Lower or Middle Egypt, but they occur most frequently between the months of December and April; and hail sometimes accompanies them, though not with great severity. In themselves, therefore, thunder, lightning, and hail were not unheard of.
They also came at the time of year when they usually occur, namely, when the cattle were in the field, i. e. , between January and April, the only period in which cattle are turned out for pasture (for proofs, see Hengstenberg, Egypt and the Books of Moses ). The supernatural character of this plague was manifested, not only in its being predicted by Moses, and in the exemption of the land of Goshen, but more especially in the terrible fury of the hail-storm, which made a stronger impression upon Pharaoh than all the previous plagues.
For he sent for Moses and Aaron, and confessed to them, “ I have sinned this time: Jehovah is righteous; I and my people are the sinners ” (Exo 9:27.) But the very limitation “this time” showed that his repentance did not go very deep, and that his confession was far more the effect of terror caused by the majesty of God, which was manifested in the fearful thunder and lightning, than a genuine acknowledgment of his guilt.
This is apparent also from the words which follow: “ Pray to Jehovah for me, and let it be enough (רב satis , as in Gen 45:28) of the being (מהית) of the voices of God and of the hail; ” i. e. , there has been enough thunder and hail, they may cease now.
Exo 9:25-28 The expressions, “ every herb, ” and “ every tree, ” are not to be taken absolutely, just as in Exo 9:6, as we may see from Exo 10:5. Storms are not common in Lower or Middle Egypt, but they occur most frequently between the months of December and April; and hail sometimes accompanies them, though not with great severity. In themselves, therefore, thunder, lightning, and hail were not unheard of.
They also came at the time of year when they usually occur, namely, when the cattle were in the field, i. e. , between January and April, the only period in which cattle are turned out for pasture (for proofs, see Hengstenberg, Egypt and the Books of Moses ). The supernatural character of this plague was manifested, not only in its being predicted by Moses, and in the exemption of the land of Goshen, but more especially in the terrible fury of the hail-storm, which made a stronger impression upon Pharaoh than all the previous plagues.
For he sent for Moses and Aaron, and confessed to them, “ I have sinned this time: Jehovah is righteous; I and my people are the sinners ” (Exo 9:27.) But the very limitation “this time” showed that his repentance did not go very deep, and that his confession was far more the effect of terror caused by the majesty of God, which was manifested in the fearful thunder and lightning, than a genuine acknowledgment of his guilt.
This is apparent also from the words which follow: “ Pray to Jehovah for me, and let it be enough (רב satis , as in Gen 45:28) of the being (מהית) of the voices of God and of the hail; ” i. e. , there has been enough thunder and hail, they may cease now.
Exo 9:25-28 The expressions, “ every herb, ” and “ every tree, ” are not to be taken absolutely, just as in Exo 9:6, as we may see from Exo 10:5. Storms are not common in Lower or Middle Egypt, but they occur most frequently between the months of December and April; and hail sometimes accompanies them, though not with great severity. In themselves, therefore, thunder, lightning, and hail were not unheard of.
They also came at the time of year when they usually occur, namely, when the cattle were in the field, i. e. , between January and April, the only period in which cattle are turned out for pasture (for proofs, see Hengstenberg, Egypt and the Books of Moses ). The supernatural character of this plague was manifested, not only in its being predicted by Moses, and in the exemption of the land of Goshen, but more especially in the terrible fury of the hail-storm, which made a stronger impression upon Pharaoh than all the previous plagues.
For he sent for Moses and Aaron, and confessed to them, “ I have sinned this time: Jehovah is righteous; I and my people are the sinners ” (Exo 9:27.) But the very limitation “this time” showed that his repentance did not go very deep, and that his confession was far more the effect of terror caused by the majesty of God, which was manifested in the fearful thunder and lightning, than a genuine acknowledgment of his guilt.
This is apparent also from the words which follow: “ Pray to Jehovah for me, and let it be enough (רב satis , as in Gen 45:28) of the being (מהית) of the voices of God and of the hail; ” i. e. , there has been enough thunder and hail, they may cease now.
Exo 9:25-28 The expressions, “ every herb, ” and “ every tree, ” are not to be taken absolutely, just as in Exo 9:6, as we may see from Exo 10:5. Storms are not common in Lower or Middle Egypt, but they occur most frequently between the months of December and April; and hail sometimes accompanies them, though not with great severity. In themselves, therefore, thunder, lightning, and hail were not unheard of.
They also came at the time of year when they usually occur, namely, when the cattle were in the field, i. e. , between January and April, the only period in which cattle are turned out for pasture (for proofs, see Hengstenberg, Egypt and the Books of Moses ). The supernatural character of this plague was manifested, not only in its being predicted by Moses, and in the exemption of the land of Goshen, but more especially in the terrible fury of the hail-storm, which made a stronger impression upon Pharaoh than all the previous plagues.
For he sent for Moses and Aaron, and confessed to them, “ I have sinned this time: Jehovah is righteous; I and my people are the sinners ” (Exo 9:27.) But the very limitation “this time” showed that his repentance did not go very deep, and that his confession was far more the effect of terror caused by the majesty of God, which was manifested in the fearful thunder and lightning, than a genuine acknowledgment of his guilt.
This is apparent also from the words which follow: “ Pray to Jehovah for me, and let it be enough (רב satis , as in Gen 45:28) of the being (מהית) of the voices of God and of the hail; ” i. e. , there has been enough thunder and hail, they may cease now.
Exo 9:29-30 Moses promised that his request should be granted, that he might know “ that the land belonged to Jehovah, ” i.e., that Jehovah ruled as Lord over Egypt (cf. Exo 8:18); at the same time he told him that the fear manifested by himself and his servants was no true fear of God. יי מפּני ירא denotes the true fear of God, which includes a voluntary subjection to the divine will. Observe the expression, Jehovah , Elohim : Jehovah, who is Elohim, the Being to be honoured as supreme, the true God.
Exo 9:29-30 Moses promised that his request should be granted, that he might know “ that the land belonged to Jehovah, ” i.e., that Jehovah ruled as Lord over Egypt (cf. Exo 8:18); at the same time he told him that the fear manifested by himself and his servants was no true fear of God. יי מפּני ירא denotes the true fear of God, which includes a voluntary subjection to the divine will. Observe the expression, Jehovah , Elohim : Jehovah, who is Elohim, the Being to be honoured as supreme, the true God.
Exo 9:31-32 The account of the loss caused by the hail is introduced very appropriately in Exo 9:31 and Exo 9:32, to show how much had been lost, and how much there was still to lose through continued refusal. “ The flax and the barley were smitten, for the barley was ear, and the flax was גּבעל ( blossom ); i. e. , they were neither of them quite ripe, but they were already in ear and blossom, so that they were broken and destroyed by the hail.
“ The wheat, ” on the other hand, “ and the spelt were not broken down, because they were tender, or late” (אפילת); i. e. , they had no ears as yet, and therefore could not be broken by the hail. These accounts are in harmony with the natural history of Egypt. According to Pliny , the barley is reaped in the sixth month after the sowing-time, the wheat in the seventh.
The barley is ripe about the end of February or beginning of March; the wheat, at the end of March or beginning of April. The flax is in flower at the end of January. In the neighbourhood of Alexandria, and therefore quite in the north of Egypt, the spelt is ripe at the end of April, and farther south it is probably somewhat earlier; for, according to other accounts, the wheat and spelt ripen at the same time (vid.
, Hengstenberg, p. 119). Consequently the plague of hail occurred at the end of January, or at the latest in the first half of February; so that there were at least eight weeks between the seventh and tenth plagues. The hail must have smitten the half, therefore, of the most important field-produce, viz. , the barley, which was a valuable article of food both for men, especially the poorer classes, and for cattle, and the flax, which was also a very important part of the produce of Egypt; whereas the spelt, of which the Egyptians preferred to make their bread ( Herod .
2, 36, 77), and the wheat were still spared.
Exo 9:31-32 The account of the loss caused by the hail is introduced very appropriately in Exo 9:31 and Exo 9:32, to show how much had been lost, and how much there was still to lose through continued refusal. “ The flax and the barley were smitten, for the barley was ear, and the flax was גּבעל ( blossom ); i. e. , they were neither of them quite ripe, but they were already in ear and blossom, so that they were broken and destroyed by the hail.
“ The wheat, ” on the other hand, “ and the spelt were not broken down, because they were tender, or late” (אפילת); i. e. , they had no ears as yet, and therefore could not be broken by the hail. These accounts are in harmony with the natural history of Egypt. According to Pliny , the barley is reaped in the sixth month after the sowing-time, the wheat in the seventh.
The barley is ripe about the end of February or beginning of March; the wheat, at the end of March or beginning of April. The flax is in flower at the end of January. In the neighbourhood of Alexandria, and therefore quite in the north of Egypt, the spelt is ripe at the end of April, and farther south it is probably somewhat earlier; for, according to other accounts, the wheat and spelt ripen at the same time (vid.
, Hengstenberg, p. 119). Consequently the plague of hail occurred at the end of January, or at the latest in the first half of February; so that there were at least eight weeks between the seventh and tenth plagues. The hail must have smitten the half, therefore, of the most important field-produce, viz. , the barley, which was a valuable article of food both for men, especially the poorer classes, and for cattle, and the flax, which was also a very important part of the produce of Egypt; whereas the spelt, of which the Egyptians preferred to make their bread ( Herod .
2, 36, 77), and the wheat were still spared.
Exo 9:33-35 But even this plague did not lead Pharaoh to alter his mind. As soon as it had ceased on the intercession of Moses, he and his servants continued sinning and hardening their hearts.
Exo 9:33-35 But even this plague did not lead Pharaoh to alter his mind. As soon as it had ceased on the intercession of Moses, he and his servants continued sinning and hardening their hearts.