Exodus 7
1 Moses and Aaron are encouraged to go again to Pharaoh.7 Their age.8 Aaron's rod is turned into a serpent.11 The sorcerers do the like; but their rods are swallowed up by Aaron's.13 Pharaoh's heart is hardened.14 God's message to Pharaoh.19 The river is turned into blood; and the consequent distress of the Egyptians. See.16:29; Ge 19:21; 1Ki 17:23; 2Ki 6:32; Ec 1:10a god.4:15,16; Ps 82:6; Jer 1:10; Joh 10:35,36 4:15; 6:29; De 4:2; 1Ki 22:14; Jer 1:7,17; Eze 3:10,17; Mt 28:20Ac 20:27 And I.4:21,29multiply.4:7; 9:16; 11:9; De 4:34; 7:19; Ne 9:10; Ps 78:43-51; 105:27-36Ps 135:9; Isa 51:9; Jer 32:20,21; Mic 7:15; Joh 4:48; Ac 2:22; 7:36Ro 15:19 that I.9:3; 10:1; 11:9; Jud 2:15; La 3:3armies.6:26; 12:51by great.6:6; Pr 19:29; Isa 26:9; Eze 14:21; 25:11; 30:14,19; Re 15:4; 16:7Re 19:2 Egyptians.17; 8:10,22; 14:4,18; Ps 9:16; Eze 25:17; 28:22; 36:23; 39:7,22I stretch.3:20 2,10; 12:28; 39:43; 40:16; Ge 6:22; 22:18; Ps 119:4; Joh 15:10,14 2:23; Ge 41:46; De 29:5; 31:2; 34:7; Ps 90:10; Ac 7:23,30 8 Shew.Isa 7:11; Mt 12:39; Joh 2:18; 6:30; 10:38Take.10-12; 4:2,17,20; 9:23; 10:13a serpent.Ps 74:12,13; Eze 29:3 as the Lord.9it became.4:3; Am 9:3; Mr 16:18; Lu 10:19 wise men.Ge 41:8,38,39; Isa 19:11,12; 47:12,13; Da 2:2,27; 4:7-9; 5:7,112Ti 3:8; Re 19:20sorcerers.{Mechashshaphim,} probably from the Arabic {kashapha,} to discover, reveal, signifies diviners, or those who pretended to reveal futurity, to discover things lost, or to find hidden treasures. they also.22; 8:7,18; De 13:1-3; Mt 24:24; Ga 3:1; Eph 4:14; 2Th 2:9Re 13:11-15enchantments.By the word {lahatim,} from {lahat,} to burn, may be meant such incantations as required lustral fires, fumigations, etc. but Aaron's.8:18,19; 9:11; Ac 8:9-13; 13:8-11; 19:19,20; 1Jo 4:4 4; 4:21; 8:15; 10:1,20,27; 14:17; De 2:30; Zec 7:11,12; Ro 1:28; 2:5Heb 3:7,8,13 Pharaoh's.8:15; 10:1,20,27; Zec 7:12he refuseth.4:23; 8:2; 9:2; 10:4; Isa 1:20; Jer 8:5; 9:6; Heb 12:25 he goeth.2:5; 8:20; Eze 29:3the rod.10; 4:2-4 The Lord.3:18; 5:3; 9:1,13; 10:3; 1Sa 4:6-9Let my.8:1,20; 13:15; 14:5; Isa 45:13; Jer 50:33; Ac 4:21-23serve.3:12,18; 5:1-3; 9:1 thou shalt.5; 5:2; 6:7; 1Sa 17:46,47; 1Ki 20:28; 2Ki 19:19; Ps 9:16; 83:18Eze 29:9; 30:8,19; 32:15; 38:23; 39:28; Da 4:17,32,37; 5:21,23and they.1:22; 4:9; Ps 78:44; 105:29; Re 8:8; 16:3-6 the fish.21Egyptians."The water of Egypt," says Abbé Mascrier, "is so delicious, that one would not wish the heat to be less, or to be delivered from the sensation of thirst. The Turks find it so exquisite, that they excite themselves to drink of it by eating salt." "A person," adds Mr. Harmer, "who never before heard of the deliciousness of the Nile water, and of the large quantities which on that account are drunk of it, will, I am sure, find an energy in those words of Moses to Pharaoh, the Egyptians shall loathe to drink of the water of the river, which he never did before." shall loathe.24; Nu 11:20; 21:5 stretch.8:5,6,16; 9:22,23,33; 10:12,21; 14:21,26their pools. Heb. gathering of their waters.Ge 1:10 he lifted.17:5,6,9-12; Nu 20:8-12all the waters.As the Nile was held sacred by the Egyptians, as well as the animals it contained, to which they annually sacrificed a girl, or as others say, both a boy and girl, God might have designed this plague as a punishment for such idolatry and cruelty; and to shew them the baseness of those elements which they reverenced, and the insufficiency of the gods in which they trusted. All the punishments brought upon them bore a strict analogy to their crimes. 17,18; Ps 78:44; 105:29; Joh 2:9-11; Re 8:8 18; Re 8:9The first miracle of Christ turned water into wine, the first plague upon Egypt turned all their water into blood. magicians.11; 8:7,8; Jer 27:18; 2Ti 3:8and Pharaoh's.13as the.3 neither.9:21; De 32:46; 1Sa 4:20; *marg:Job 7:17; Ps 62:10; Pr 22:17; 24:32; *marg:Pr 29:1; Isa 26:11; Jer 5:3; 36:24; Eze 40:4; Am 4:7-12; Hab 1:5Mal 2:2 for they.18-21 8:9,10; 10:23; 2Sa 24:13
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