*H And after this he said: Hew thee two tables of stone like unto the former, and I will write upon them the words, which were in the tables, which thou brokest.
Ver. 1. Former. Deut. x. 1, adds, and come up to me into the mount, and I, &c. Here.
* Footnote * Deuteronomy 10 : 1
At that time the Lord said to me: Hew thee two tables of stone like the former, and come up to me into the mount: and thou shalt make an ark of wood,*H Be ready in the morning, that thou mayst forthwith go up into Mount Sinai, and thou shalt stand with me upon the top of the mount.
Ver. 2. Go up. From these expressions we might infer, that God gave the order first on Mount Sinai, and repeated it to Moses in the tabernacle, the night before he commenced his third fast and supplication of 40 days. H. — After the first tables were broken, others were given; so after baptism we may obtain remission of sin by penance. S. Jer. ad Dem. W.
*H Let no man go up with thee, and let not any man be seen throughout all the mount; neither let the oxen nor the sheep feed over against it.
Ver. 3. Let no, &c. This was to impress all with sentiments of reverence.
*H And when he passed before him, he said: O the Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, patient and of much compassion, and true,
Ver. 6. He said. Some refer this to Moses; others, more probably, to God, who had promised, by this signal of the name of the Lord, to testify his presence. C. — The angel addresses God in this manner, while Moses lies concealed in the rock, covered with the hand or cloud of God's representative. H. — Of the eleven attributes here claimed by God, three regard his essence, six his mercy, and the last two his justice. C.
*H Who keepest mercy unto thousands: who takest away iniquity, and wickedness, and sin, and no man of himself is innocent before thee. Who renderest the iniquity of the fathers to the children, and to the grandchildren unto the third and fourth generation.
Ver. 7. Keepest. So the Targum of Jerusalem reads. Heb. and Sept. have, "keepeth." — No man, &c. All have sinned. Rom. iii. 23. Heb. "who will not clear the guilty," which is followed by the Chal. and Sept. God is a just judge, who will assuredly punish the impenitent. Yet even in justice, he will remember mercy, and will stop at the third and fourth generation, (C.) when the influence of the progenitors' example can have but small influence upon their descendants. If, however, they prove guilty, they must expect chastisement. Ex. xx. 5.
* Footnote * Deuteronomy 5 : 10
And shewing mercy unto many thousands, to them that love me, and keep my commandments.* Footnote * Jeremias 32 : 18
Thou shewest mercy unto thousands, and returnest the iniquity of the fathers into the bosom of their children after them: O most mighty, great, and powerful, the Lord of hosts is thy name.* Footnote *** Deuteronomy 5 : 9
Thou shalt not adore them, and thou shalt not serve them. For I am the Lord thy God, a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon their children unto the third and fourth generation, to them that hate me,*H Said: If I have found grace in thy sight, O Lord, I beseech thee that thou wilt go with us, (for it is a stiffnecked people) and take away our iniquities and sin, and possess us.
Ver. 9. (For it, &c.) If thou do not support me, I shall not be able to govern. H. — Possess us. Take us for thy peculiar inheritance. M.
*H The Lord answered: I will make a covenant in the sight of all, I will do signs such as were never seen upon the earth, nor in any nations; that this people, in the midst of whom thou art, may see the terrible work of the Lord which I will do.
Ver. 10. Covenant. The first had been made void by idolatry. C. — Notwithstanding the former threats, (C. xxxiii. 3,) God here promises new benefits. W.
* Footnote * Deuteronomy 5 : 2
The Lord our God made a covenant with us in Horeb.* Footnote * Jeremias 32 : 40
And I will make an everlasting covenant with them, and will not cease to do them good: and I will give my fear in their heart, that they may not revolt from me.*H Observe all things which this day I command thee: I myself will drive out before thy face the Amorrhite, and the Chanaanite, and the Hethite, and the Pherezite, and the Hevite, and the Jebusite.
Ver. 11. Observe, O my people, (M.) you who shall serve under Josue, when these promises shall be fulfilled. H. — The Sept. add the Gergesite to the list of people who should be expelled. But Lyran. thinks they are omitted in Hebrew, because they had already retired before the approach of the Hebrews. C.
*H But destroy their altars, break their statues and cut down their groves:
Ver. 13. Statues. Sept. have "pillars," and subjoin after groves, (unless it be another translation, as Grabe insinuates) "you shall burn with fire the graven things of their gods."
*H Adore not any strange god. The Lord his name is jealous, he is a jealous God.
Ver. 14. Jealous. Like a husband, He will watch all your motions.
*H Make no covenant with the men of those countries; lest, when they have committed fornication with their gods, and have adored their idols, some one call thee to eat of the things sacrificed.
Ver. 15. Covenant. The same word occurs here, as (v. 12,) in Heb. and Sept. H. — It relates chiefly to contracts of marriage, which God forbids the faithful to enter into with the Chanaanites, and with other idolatrous nations, lest they should follow their example. Solomon is reprehended for transgressing this law, (3 K. xi. 1,) and such marriages are called abominations. 1 Esd. ix. 1. x. 2. 10. Joseph. — But if any of those people became converts, the reason of the prohibition ceased. Hence a captive woman might be married, (Deut. xxi. 11,) and Salmon took Rahab to wife. If Samson and Esther married with heathens, it might be done by God's dispensation, for weighty reasons. T. — Fornication. On account of the dissolute behaviour of those idolaters, their worship is often condemned under this name, Jer. ii. and iii. Ezec. xvi. C. — Sacrificed, and thus thou be drawn into a participation in his guilt. The other laws are here repeated from C. xxiii. M.
* Footnote * Deuteronomy 7 : 2
And the Lord thy God shall have delivered them to thee, thou shalt utterly destroy them. Thou shalt make no league with them, nor shew mercy to them:*H Neither shalt thou take of their daughters a wife for thy son, lest after they themselves have committed fornication, they make thy sons also to commit fornication with their gods.
Ver. 16. Son. The Chal. and Sept. add, "nor give any of thy daughters to their sons;" or, joining this verse with the 15th, the Sept. say, "make no covenant...lest they commit fornication after their gods...and call thee and thou eat...and thou take of their daughters wives for thy sons, and thou wilt give some of thy daughters to their sons, and thy daughters shall go fornicating after their gods." The most imminent dangers attend those women, who have infidel husbands. H. — The intention of Moses, and the custom of the Hebrews, justly reprobated such marriages. C.
* Footnote * 3_Kings 11 : 2
Of the nations concerning which the Lord said to the children of Israel: You shall not go in unto them, neither shall any of them come into yours: for they will most certainly turn away your hearts to follow their gods. And to these was Solomon joined with a most ardent love.* Footnote * Deuteronomy 7 : 3
Neither shalt thou make marriages with them. Thou shalt not give thy daughter to his son, nor take his daughter for thy son:*H Thou shalt keep the feast of the unleavened bread. Seven days shalt thou eat unleavened bread, as I commanded thee in the time of the month of the new corn: for in the month of the spring time thou camest out from Egypt.
Ver. 18. New corn. Heb. Abib; the name of the month Nisan, which corresponds with our March and April.
*H Six days shalt thou work, the seventh day thou shalt cease to plough and to reap.
Ver. 21. Reap; when the most urgent necessity might seem to authorize labour. H.
*H Thou shalt keep the feast of weeks with the firstfruits of the corn of thy wheat harvest, and the feast when the time of the year returneth that all things are laid in.
Ver. 22. Harvest. Pentecost. — Laid in, at the feast of tabernacles, in September. M. — The Sept. have "the feast of gathering, in the middle of the (sacred) year." The greatest solemnity of the Passover is mentioned, v. 18. H.
* Footnote * Deuteronomy 16 : 16
Three times in a year shall all thy males appear before the Lord thy God in the place which he shall choose: in the feast of unleavened bread, in the feast of weeks, and in the feast of tabernacles. No one shall appear with his hands empty before the Lord:*H For when I shall have taken away the nations from thy face, and shall have enlarged thy borders, no man shall lie in wait against thy land when thou shalt go up, and appear in the sight of the Lord thy God thrice in a year.
Ver. 24. In wait. Heb. and Sept. "shall desire." C. — God engages to protect their land. M.
*H Thou shalt not offer the blood of my sacrifice upon leaven; neither shall there remain in the morning any thing of the victim of the solemnity of the Phase.
Ver. 25. Sacrifice of the paschal lamb, to which the Chaldee properly restrains this verse. C.
*H The first of the fruits of thy ground thou shalt offer in the house of the Lord thy God. Thou shalt not boil a kid in the milk of his dam.
Ver. 26. Dam. Chal. "thou shalt not eat flesh with milk." See C. xxiii. 19.
* Footnote * Deuteronomy 14 : 21
But whatsoever is dead of itself, eat not thereof. Give it to the stranger, that is within thy gates, to eat, or sell it to him: because thou art the holy people of the Lord thy God. Thou shalt not boil a kid in the milk of his dam.*H And he was there with the Lord forty days and forty nights: he neither ate bread nor drank water, and he wrote upon the tables the ten words of the covenant.
Ver. 28. Wrote. God wrote on the tables, as he had promised, v. 1. C. — Moses recorded all in this book, as he was ordered, v. 27. S. Cyprian (de Sp. S.) and S. Augustine (q. 186,) infer, however, from this text, that the second tables had not the same honour as the first. The contrary appears from Deut. x. 4, He (God) wrote...as before. Estius, Calmet, and Menoch. think the forty days here mentioned, were those which Moses spent with God to obtain the people's pardon, and the law, at the same time. See C. xxxii. 35. He continued all that time without meat or sleep, by the power of God, who supports Enoch and Elias in the vigour of health without corporal sustenance. Salien. A. 2544, in which year of the world he fixes the death of Job, the great prophet of the Gentiles.
* Footnote * Deuteronomy 9 : 9
When I went up into the mount to receive the tables of stone, the tables of the covenant which the Lord made with you: and I continued in the mount forty days and nights, neither eating bread, nor drinking water.* Footnote * Deuteronomy 9 : 18
And I fell down before the Lord as before, forty days and nights neither eating bread, nor drinking water, for all your sins, which you had committed against the Lord, and had provoked him to wrath:* Footnote ** Deuteronomy 4 : 23
Beware lest thou ever forget the covenant of the Lord thy God, which he hath made with thee: and make to thyself a graven likeness of those things which the Lord hath forbid to be made:*H And when Moses came down from the Mount Sinai, he held the two tables of the testimony, and he knew not that his face was horned from the conversation of the Lord.
Ver. 29. Horned. That is, shining, and sending forth rays of light like horns. Ch. — Sept. "encircled with glory." S. Paul (2 Cor. iii. 7,) says, the Hebrews could not look steadfastly at the face of Moses, on account of the glory of his countenance. Hence, he was forced to have a veil, which the apostle observes, was not taken off from the old law till Christ appeared. The Jews and heretics still read the law and the gospel with a veil over their eyes and heart, without understanding them, as they are hidden to those who perish, 2 Cor. iv. 3. The Jews are much enraged at some Christians, who have represented Moses with horns, as if, they say, he were a devil, or his wife an adulteress. Stacchus and Drusius. — Heb. "his skin was radiant" all over his face. These rays commanded respect and awe from the people, who had before said contemptuously, Moses—the man, (C. xxxii. 1,) as they shewed that God was with him. They had not appeared before, though he had often conversed with the Lord: but now, having seen the glorious vision, they adhered to him during the remainder of his life, particularly when he enforced the obligations of the law to the people. H. — The Arabs make their hair stand up like little horns, when they are about 40 years old. Patric. ii. 4. Navig. Homer mentions the like custom, and Diomed laughs at Paris calling him the pretty-horned. Iliad xi. Many of the ancient heroes and gods are represented with horns, particularly Bacchus, whose history reminds us of many particulars, which belong to Moses. He was born or educated in the confines of Egypt, was exposed on the waters, in a box; had two mothers, and very beautiful. While his army enjoyed the light, the Indians were in darkness. He was preceded by a pillar, had women in his train, dried up rivers with his thyrsus or wand, which had crawled, like a serpent, &c. Huet. &c. S. Epiphanius (her. 55,) says the Idumeans adored Moses. Their idol is called Choze by Josephus, (Ant. xviii. 11,) which may be derived from Chus, the ancestor of Sephora, as Bacchus and Iacchus may denote "the son Bar, or the god Chus," Jah-Chus, who was adored in Arabia; so that Moses, Choze, and Bacchus, probably mean the same person. Chus peopled that part of Arabia where the Hebrews sojourned. Num. xii. 1. C.
*H And having done speaking, he put a veil upon his face.
Ver. 33. And having, &c. At first, he spoke uncovered. M. — The Protestants insert the word till in Italics, to insinuate that Moses spoke with a veil on, as S. Paul mentions; (H.) and Calmet would translate, "for Moses had ceased to address the people, and had put a veil upon his face," as soon as he perceived that they could not bear the blaze of his countenance. This he did out of modesty, that they might not be afraid of coming to speak freely to him, (Jansenius) though it was also mysterious, as S. Paul remarks. For even until this day, when Moses is read, the veil is upon their heart, (2 Cor. iii. 15,) as it is upon that of heretics, who cannot see the church. S. Aug. in Ps. xxx. W.