Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Exodus 14:23
And the Egyptians pursued, and went in after them to the midst of the sea, [even] all Pharaoh’s horses, his chariots, and his horsemen.
23. the Egyptians pursued, and wentin after them to the midst of the seaFrom the darkness causedby the intercepting cloud, it is probable that they were not aware onwhat ground they were driving: they heard the sound of the fugitivesbefore them, and they pushed on with the fury of the avengers ofblood, without dreaming that they were on the bared bed of the sea.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And the Egyptians pursued,…. The Israelites going forwards towards the sea as they were ordered, and going into it:
and went in after them into the midst of the sea; which if fearful of, they might conclude it was as safe for them to go in as for the Israelites; but perhaps through the darkness of the night, and the eagerness of their pursuit, they might not perceive where they were, nor the danger they were exposed unto:
even all Pharaoh’s horses, his chariots, and his horsemen: which is observed to show, that as all that did go in perished, not one was saved, as after related, so all he brought with him, the whole of his army, went in, so that all that went out of Egypt were destroyed.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Verses 23-25:
The text implies that only the Egyptian chariots entered the seabed in pursuit of Israel. Jehovah observed their progress, and “troubled” the Egyptians, literally, “threw into confusion.” This came about by the chariot wheels sinking into the sandy seabed, some even coming off their axles.
The Egyptians became terrified. They attempted to retreat, because they realized that Jehovah was fighting against them, and they could not resist Him.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
CRITICAL NOTES.
Exo. 14:25. Took off their chariot wheels.] And made glide out their chariot wheelsKalisch. And turneth aside the wheels of their chariotsYoung. The original word means to make depart, turn away, put aside, remove, &c. Hence, and from the incongruity of supposing any further progress made in wheelless chariots, it may well be doubted whether the rendering of the English version conveys the true meaning of the narrative. More in keeping with the context would be the more general notion of removing the wheels from their track, causing them to slip away so as to make progress extremely difficult. Only, this effect should clearly be connected with the Divine troubling of the Egyptian host. Precisely how the cause produced this effect we are not told: it is a matter of little or no Importance.
MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.Exo. 14:23-29
THE DIVINE TROUBLING OF THE WICKED
I. That the Divine troubling of the wicked takes place in the midst of their presumption and sin. And the Egyptians pursued, and went in after them to the midst of the sea. Thus we see that the Egyptians were at this time in full pursuit of the Israelites, and were presumptuously following them into the miraculously divided waters. Hence they were in direct opposition to the command of God,they were seeking the bondage and ruin of a vast people. They were animated by their besetting sin,an intense spirit of selfish despotism Sin has immense power of will. It is careless of the greatest peril, it will pursue its design into the waters of the Red Sea, and will venture on paths which are only safe for the people of God, and in which it can easily be destroyed. It does not always act with sufficient calculation and caution; it rushes blindly to its awful destiny. It was when the Egyptians were in the midst of the waters that they were troubled by God. It is easy for God to trouble the sinner in the midst of his sin. When the sinner is hottest in pursuit and surest of success in his unholy aim, then the Divine Being can trouble him through the cloud. Belshazzar was thus troubled in the hour of his impious feast (Dan. 5:9). Thus the wicked are troubled when they are engaged in their most desperate attempts at evil; when they are least expecting disaster, they are troubled by the smitings of an alarmed conscience,they are troubled by the hand of God. The Divine eye looks through the cloud upon the exploits of the wicked.
II. That the Divine troubling of the wicked causes the mad schemes in which they are engaged to drag heavily. And took off their chariot wheels, that they drave them heavily. The Egyptians had got their best armaments with them,their strongest chariots, their finest horses, their most skilful men, and all was in splendid battle array. And yet their chariots drave heavily! Why? Were they not well made? Were they not well managed? Yes; but they were troubled by God. Thus God can bring to naught the best preparations of the sinner for his cruel designs; He can render useless the finest chariots. The sinner finds it hard work to drive his car. The Divine troubling is an impediment to the enterprise of the evil-doer; in this way the success of evil to an alarming extent is prevented, and the safety of the Church is attained. Sin cannot prosper, because it is against God. It is a mercy that the chariots of sin drag heavily, or men would ride to hell more quickly than they do.
III. That the Divine troubling of the wicked sometimes causes them to wish to retreat from their evil designs when it is too late. So that the Egyptians said, Let us flee from the face of Israel, for the Lord fighteth for them against the Egyptians. Why did the Egyptians wish to flee? Were they not well armed? Was not their King with them? Were they not brave? Were they not near to the slaves they wished to recapture? There are times when sinners are obliged to see that their wicked enterprises are vain, and that they cannot succeed. They are obliged to acknowledge the failure of their best energies. They soon know when they are troubled by the Lord. Then they wish to make the best escape they can, but it is too late. Let us beware of the folly and danger of pursuing a life of sin so long that there can be no escape therefrom. It is dangerous to delay conversion. Some men will never retreat from sin till they are troubled by God, and then perhaps they cannot.
IV. That the Divine troubling of the wicked will in all probability culminate in their utter ruin and destruction. And the Lord said unto Moses, Stretch out thine hand over the sea, that the waters may come again upon the Egyptians, upon their chariots, and upon their horsemen. There remained not so much as one of them. Here, then, we have a picture of what will be the end of those who sin against God, and who provoke His troubling ministries. God can employ many agencies to work their ruin. The waters will obey His behest. There are many rods by which they may be smitten. Then the display of sin, the best strength of sin, and all the allies of sin will yield to the retributive hand of God. The end of sin is to be buried in the great waters. The sinner is walking to an awful destiny. LESSONS:
1. That the wicked are sure to be Divinely troubled.
2. That it is vain to seek to bring the Church into bondage.
3. That the end of sin is death.
SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS ON THE VERSES
Exo. 14:22-23. The Church is pursued:
1. By cruel tyrants.
2. By combined enemies.
3. Into hazardous places.
4. By intense hatred.
The folly of sin:
1. It will rush into dangerous places.
2. It will risk all its best agencies.
3. It will go beyond the possibility of retreat.
The enterprise of the wicked:
1. Divinely observed.
2. Easily troubled.
3. Terribly defeated.
Sinners are troubled:
1. By the voice of conscience.
2. By the painful discipline of life.
3. By the failure of their best concerted schemes.
Exo. 14:25-28. Morning and evening may not be the same to the wicked for their hopes.
God will stop the movements of persecuting powers in His due and proper time.
Persecutors always find that Jehovah fights for His Church.
ILLUSTRATIONS
BY
REV. WM. ADAMSON
Convictions! Exo. 14:23-29. Away on the Pampa dell Sacramento roam wild tribes of Indians. Of all, the Cashiboos are the most savage and warlike. Equally cunning as fierce, when they see the traveller they do not attack him at once in the broad day. They watch and track him to his sleeping-place, and when he is locked in slumber deep, they spring upon him for the cannibal feast. Sometimes the sleeper is aroused in time to defend himself. When these wild, subtle savages find that they have no chance of success, they retire. But it is only to watch and wait, until some other night arrives when they may renew the attack with more success. Pharaohs lusts sought his destruction. Again and again, did they spring upon him in his sleep of self-indulgence; but he awoke to timelythough alas! transientrepentance. With cruel craft and confidence did they persist, until at last they accomplished their remorseless purpose
Until, at last, the crushing torrent fell,
And swept from earth the pampered child of hell.
Wheels Dragging! Exo. 14:25. It is sometimes of Gods mercy, remarks Beecher, that men in the eager pursuit of worldly aggrandisement are baffled. They are like a train going down an inclined planeputting on the break is not pleasant, but it keeps the car on the track. A man was driving furiously down a hill in the direction of the seaport, where he was to embark for California. The carriage wheel struck against a stone, and was shattered to pieces. Bruised and angry, he curse his adverse fate, which forced him to trudge for miles along the road, only to find on arrival that the vessel had sailed. But this drag upon the wheel proved a mercy in disguise; for the same night, the stormy wind arose, and swept the departed ship beneath its mountain waves. How often, God makes a mans chariot wheels drag heavily in mercy to his soul, when he will not see it. Persisting in his course, he finds himself at last sinking beneath the Waves of Woe, like Pharaoh
Whose heart of adamant,
Had led him to assay the ocean depths,
And satisfy his lust on Israel there.
Bickersteth.
Death! Exo. 14:28-30. Pharaoh and his charioteer had the same watery grave. What a pill for pride! Napoleon the Great must die as well as the meanest of his camp-followers. When Xerxes wept over his three million warriors as the sure prey of relentless death, he probably forgot for the moment that his own ambitious heart would be pierced by the same sharp dart. The waters of death lie before us allwhether proud or poor, prince or pauper. Monarch and slave alike are swallowed up there, as the waves of the Red Sea make no distinction between mighty Pharaoh and the meanest of his host. What then will be the gain!
Can storied urn, or monumental bust,
Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath?
Can glorys voice awake the silent dust?
Or flattery soothe the dull cold ear of death?
Contrast! Exo. 14:23. In some respects Pharaoh and Nebuchadnezzar resembled each other. Both held the Israelites in captivityboth were of mighty and lofty spiritand both oppressed the children of the captivesboth were warned by a holy prophetand on both dread judgments descended. But here the resemblance stops. In Pharaoh, we behold a man whom no chastisement could reclaimwhom no grief could effectually humble. He had trembled at the awful thunder from heavenand started as the fierce fire ran along the ground. He had seen the clouds of locusts darken in the skyhad beheld the river running bloodand had swelled the wail of a nation when his first-born was smitten with death. Yet Pharaoh never truly repented. His heart, like the hardened rock, returned sparks of fire for the blows that struck it. He died, as he had lived, in open rebellion against God.
Meroys boon refused
Shall fall in judgment on the soul perverse
That slights the gift.
Mant.
Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell
(23) All Pharaohs horses, his chariots, and his horsemen.The chariot and cavalry force alone entered the sea, not the infantry. (Comp, Exo. 14:28 and Exo. 15:1.) The point is of importance as connected with the question whether the Pharaoh himself perished. If all his force entered, he could not well have stayed behind; if only a portion, he might have elected to remain with the others. Menephthah, the probable Pharaoh of the Exodus, was apt to consult his own safety. (Records of the Past, vol. iv., pp. 44-45.)
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
(23-28) The Egyptians pursued.All the Israelites having entered the bed of the sea, the pillar of the cloud, it would seem, withdrew after them, and the Egyptians, who, if they could not see, could at any rate hear the sound of the departure, began to advance, following on the track of the fugitives. What they thought concerning the miracle, or what they expected, it is difficult to say. They can scarcely have entered on the bed of the sea without knowing it. Probably they assumed that, as the bed had somehow become dry, it would continue dry long enough for their chariots and horsemen to get across. The distance may not have been so much as a mile, which they may have expected to accomplish in ten minutes; but when once they were entered, their troubles began. The Lord looked unto the host of the Egyptians through the pillar . . . and troubled the host of the Egyptians (Exo. 14:24). By some terrible manifestation of His presence and of His anger, proceeding from the pillar of the cloud in their front, God threw the Egyptian troops into consternation and confusion. A panic terror seized them. Some probably stopped, some fled; but there were others who persevered. Then followed a second difficulty. The progress of the chariots was obstructed. According to the present reading of the Hebrew text, the wheels parted from the axles, which would naturally bring the vehicles to a stand. According to the LXX. and a reading found in the Samaritan Pentateuch, the wheels became entangled, as they would if they sank up to the axles in the soft ooze. Hereby the advance was rendered slow and difficult: they drave them heavily. To the Egyptians the obstruction seemed more than could be accounted for by natural causes, and they became convinced that Jehovah was fighting for Israel and against them (Exo. 14:25). Hereupon they turned and fled. But the flight was even harder than the advance. A confused mass of horses and chariots filled the channelthey impeded each othercould make no progresscould scarcely move. Then came the final catastrophe. At Gods command, Moses once more stretched his hand over the sea, and the waters returned on either sidea north-west wind brought back those of the Bitter Lakes (Exo. 14:10), the flood tide those of the Bed Seaand the whole of the force that had entered on the sea-bed in pursuit of the Israelites was destroyed.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
EXPOSITION
THE DESTRUCTION OF THE EGYPTIANS. As the rearguard of the Israelite host having entered the tract from which the waters had retired, proceeded along it, and left the western end of the isthmus vacant, the pillar of the cloud seems to have followed it up and withdrawn with it. The Egyptians immediately advanced. Notwithstanding the preternatural darkness, they had become aware, perhaps by means of their ears, of the movement that was taking place, and with early dawn they were under arms and pressing on the line of the Israelite retreat. They found the channel still dry, and hastily entering it with their chariot force, they hurried forward in pursuit. The first check which they received was wholly supernatural. “The Lord looked unto the host of the Egyptians through the pillar of fire and of the cloud, and troubled the host of the Egyptians” (Exo 14:24). Details here are wanting; but less cannot be meant, than that some strange phenomena connected with the retiring “pillar” caused a panic and threw the ranks of the army into confusion. Then followed natural impediments. The Lord “took off,” or “clogged” their chariot Wheels, and made them go heavilyi.e; the chariot wheels, not by miracle, but by the operation of God’s natural laws, sank into the soft sand over which the Israelites had passed easily, having no wheeled vehicles, and the chariots were consequently dragged forward slowly and with difficulty. The double hindrance, from the confusion and the stoppage of the chariots, so discouraged the Egyptians, that after a time they resolved on beating a retreat (Exo 14:25). They had set out on their return, when Moses, at God’s instance, stretched forth his hand once mere over the sea, and the waters on both sides began at once to return. The Egyptians saw their danger, and “fled against” the advancing tide, racing against it, as it were, and seeking to reach the shore. But in vain. The waves came on rapidly, and (in the language of Exo 14:28) there was not a man of all those who had entered the dry bed of the sea that was not overwhelmed and drowned in the waters. We should he wrong to press this language to the extreme letter. In graphic narrative the sacred writers uniformly employ universal expressions, where they mean to give the general fact or general result. The true meaning is, that the pursuit altogether failed. Not an Egyptian made his way alive across the strait. All that the Israelites ever saw afterwards of the army that they had so much dreaded (Exo 14:10) was a ghastly mass of corpses thrown up by the tide on the Asiatic shore (Exo 14:30).
Exo 14:23
All Pharaoh’s horses, his chariots, and his horsemen. Here, as elsewhere, the word translated “horsemen” probably means the men who rode in the chariots. Observe that the Pharaoh himself is not said to have gone in. Menephthah was apt to avoid placing himself in a position of danger. Nor is any of the infantry said to have entered the bed of the sea.
Exo 14:24
In the morning watch. The “morning watch” of the Hebrews at this period of their history lasted from 2 a.m. to sunrise. Sunrise in Egypt, early in April, would take place about a quarter to six. The Lord looked unto the host of the Egyptians. The description in Psa 77:17, Psa 77:18, is generally regarded as belonging to this point in the narrative of the Exodus, and may be considered as the traditional exposition of it. “The clouds poured out water: the skies sent out a sound; thine arrows also went abroad; the voice of thy thunder was in the heavens; the lightning lightened the world; the earth trembled and shook.” As Josephus says “Showers of rain came down from the sky, and dreadful thunders and lightning, with flashes of fire; thunderbolts also were darted upon them; nor was there anything, wont to be sent by God upon men as indications of his wrath, which did not happen upon this occasion” (Ant. Jud. 2.16, 3). And troubled the host. Or “disturbed the host,” i.e.,” threw it into confusion.(, LXX.).
Exo 14:25
And took off their chariot wheels. The Sept. has “clogged the axles of their chariots;” but this is from a reading not at present found in the Hebrew MSS. Most modern commentators, however, prefer the reading, which gives a good sense; whereas the existing text is unintelligible. As Kalisch observes, “if the wheels of the chariots had been broken off, the chariots would not have moved at all.” That they drove them heavily. The marginal rendering, “and made them go heavily,” is preferable. The wheels no doubt sank into the sand up to the axles, and were with difficulty extricated, again to sink a few yards further on. Progress was thus greatly retarded. So that the Egyptians said, “Let us flee.” Literally, “And Egypt said, ‘I will flee.'” The Lord fighteth for them. Compare the promise of Moses (Exo 14:14). The Egyptians were convinced, by the various obstacles which they encountered, that Jehovah was lending his people active aid, and miraculously obstructing their advance. If this were so, it was of no use to persevere, and accordingly they began their retreat.
Exo 14:26, Exo 14:27
And the Lord said. God here interposed a new difficulty. Moses was instructed to stretch out his rod once more, and undo his former work. At the appointed sign, the east wind ceased to blow, and the waters of the Bitter Lakes, no longer driven to the north-west by its force, flowed back with something of a reflux, while at the same time, the tide having turned, the Red Sea waves came rushing on at unwonted speed. In vain the Egyptians fled. They were met by the advancing floods, which poured in on either side, overwhelming and covering up all those who had entered on the dangerous path.
Exo 14:28
The chariots and the horsemen, and all the host of Pharaoh. Rather “The chariots, and the chariot men of all the host of Pharaoh.” So Knobel correctly. Kalisch thinks”We are not permitted to suppose that only the Egyptian chariots pursued the Israelites into the sea, while the infantry remained behind, so that the former alone were devoured by the waves.” But even he admits that “both in this and in the following chapter, and in most other parts generally, the destruction of the chariots (chariot force?) and its warriors is chiefly alluded to, so that this particular stress would perhaps justify that conclusion.” What is clear is, that no force but the chariot force is said to have entered the bed of the sea in pursuit of Israel. There remained not so much as one of them. On the proper understanding of this statement, see the introductory paragraph to the chapter.
Exo 14:29
Walked. Rather, “had walked.” The waters were a wall. Rather, “had been a wall.” For the meaning of the expression, see note on Exo 14:22.
Exo 14:30
Israel saw the Egyptians dead upon the sea-shore. Josephus says (Ant. Jud. Exo 2:16, 6), that, after the passage of the sea by the Israelites, a west wind set in, which (assisted by the current) drove the bodies of the drowned Egyptians to the eastern side of the gulf, where many of them were cast up upon the shore. In this way Moses, according to him, obtained weapons and armour for a considerable number of Israelites.
Exo 14:31
And Israel saw that great work. The “work” was, at the least,
(1) the (almost) entire destruction of that arm of the servicethe chariot force-on which the Egyptian kings mainly relied for success in all their wars; and
(2) the defeat and disgrace of the Egyptian king himself, in an expedition for which he was alone responsible, involving permanent discredit to his military capacity, and naturally tending to shake his authority over his subjects. It secured the Israelites from further persecution, mainly by the reminiscences which it left behind, but partly also by removing them to a distance from the natural course of Egyptian warlike or commercial movement. Though Egypt had mining establishments in the Sinaitic peninsula, at Wady-Magharah and Sarabit-el-Khadim, yet as these were avoided by the Israelites on their way to Sinai, and never afterwards approached, there naturally was no collision between them and the Pharaonic garrisons at those sites. Still more remote were they during their wanderings from the Egyptian military route, which proceeded along the coast from Pelusium to Gaza, and then ran northwards through the Shephelah. Thus the Passage of the Red Sea brought one phase in the life of the people to an end, and was the commencement of another. It separated them from Egypt until the time came when their king would hold communication with its monarch on equal terms (1Ki 3:1). It secured their independence, and raised them at once into a nation. It further caused them to exchange the artificial life of a bureaucratical and convention-loving community for the open space and untrammelled freedom of the desert. It thus rejuvenated and reinvigorated the race, and enabled them to enter on that career of conquest which culminated in the Kingdommay we not say the Empire?of David. some writers have supposed that the blow to the Egyptian power was greater than here represented. They believe the entire warrior caste or class to have taken part in the expedition, and to have been destroyed in the Red Sea Thus they describe the calamity as “the total annihilation of the whole military force of the Egyptians” (Kalisch). They also believe the Pharaoh to have perished with his host. To the present writer it seems that the former opinion is contrary both to the text of Scripture, and to the after course of Egyptian history, for it is agreed on all hands that Egypt continued nearly as powerful as before, while the latter he regards as at least exceedingly doubtful. Psa 86:15, is quoted as asserting it; but it appears to him
(1) that “overthrow” is not necessarily “death;” and
(2) that “Pharaoh and his host” may be put for “Pharaoh’s host” by hendiadys. The absence of any prophecy that God would take the Pharaoh’s life, and the entire silence of Moses on the subject in Psa 14:1-7. and 15. seems to be scarcely explicable on any other theory than that he escaped, not having accompanied his chariot force in its rash pursuit of the Israelites.
HOMILETICS
Exo 14:23-30
God’s dealings with the wicked and impenitent.
If the passage of Israel through the Red Sea shows conspicuously God’s protection of his people in the time of trouble, the overthrow of the Egyptians indicates, at least as conspicuously, his execution of wrath upon the wicked.
I. First of all, IT IS NOTICEABLE HOW HIS EYE UPON THEIR HEARTS, LOOKING INTO THEM THROUGH THE CLOUD AND DARKNESS WHEREIN THEY ARE ENVELOPED, TROUBLES THEM. Bad men cannot bear God’s eye upon their hearts. It sees through all veils, penetrates all disguises, detects all subterfuges. The bad man is a riddle, even to himself, and would feign continue an enigma, impenetrable, mysterious. But the searching eye of God turned full upon him, so illuminates every dark corner and unexplored cranny of his nature, that all becomes only too patent and clear. “All things are naked and open unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do.” Under that steadfast gaze the mystery melts away, like a summer fog, and the bad man sees himself revealed, without disguise as a very ordinary and commonplace offender.
II. IT IS WORTHY OF OBSERVATION THAT HE OFTEN CLOGS THEIR CHARIOT WHEELS, AND MAKES THEM TO GO HEAVILY. The enterprises which the wicked undertake are continually interfered with. God will not let them have the success which their framers anticipate, and which for their cleverness and ingenuity they may be said to deserve. He “clogs the wheels” of their various designs, and makes them drag heavily. One miscarriage follows another. This enterprise will not advance at all; that, by dint of great exertion, moves but slowly. It is as though the chariot wheels sank into quicksands. It is not often that they wake up to the conviction that “the Lord fighteth against the Egyptians;” though this may happen sometimes. Then perhaps they repent them of their vain attempt, and would feign retreat from it. But it is TOO LATE.
III. IT IS MOST NOTICEABLE HOW AT LAST GOD‘S JUDGMENTS COME IN WITH AN OVERWHELMING FLOOD, WHICH THERE IS NO ESCAPING. “It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.” Upon the ungodly God at the last rains down “snares, fire and brimstone, storm and tempestthis is their portion to drink.” “Sudden destruction comes upon them unawares.” Now it is in financial ruin, now in utter failure of health, now in complete prostration of the spirit, and an intolerable sense of remorse and despair that the judgment descendsblow follows blow, failure succeeds to failure, all the old refuges and supports prove unavailingangry floods pour in on every sidethere is no reaching the shoreall is tossing surf, slippery rock, and entangling sea-weednot a hand is stretched out to save. So they go down to the pitthe devouring waves swallow them upthe water-floods go up over their headsthey disappear, and their place knows them no more. The wages of sin is death; and the end of sin is death. The ultimate end of impenitent sin is eternal death. Let men, while there is time, turn away from sin, give up their wicked enterprises, retrace their stepstaking warning from the awful Red Sea calamity, and the terrible destruction there wrought.
HOMILIES BY J. ORR
Exo 14:23-31
The overthrow of the Egyptians.
“The Egyptians pursued, and went in after them to the midst of the sea,” etc. On this observe:
I. THE INFATUATION OF THE PURSUERS (Exo 14:23). We do not speak of the lessons they had already received as to the folly of contending with Jehovah. The plagues were past. The memory of them had been cast behind their backs. What we do wonder at is, that when the Egyptians reached the shore, and saw there what they did see, they were not deterred from proceeding further. What did they see?
1. They saw the sea divided. They could hardly mistake this for a merely natural phenomenon. The place where the Israelites crossed may have been, under special conditions, and to a limited extent, fordable. But it is safe to say that the division now effected was one the like of which had never been heard of before, and such as, occurring at this particular juncture, ought to have convinced the Egyptians that it was a result of God’s special Providence, and intended for the protection of the Israelites. Special interpositions, on behalf of the Church, ought to arrest the attention of her enemies.
2. They saw the cloud that went with Israel move to the rear, obviously with the design of intercepting their pursuit (Exo 14:19, Exo 14:20). This, with the ominous darkness which enveloped them, was a second circumstance which ought to have warned them that Jehovah was fighting for his people.
3. There was the danger, which could not but present itself to them, of being overwhelmed by the returning sea. In whatever way the division of the waters was conceived Of, whether as a natural phenomenon, or as a fact of supernatural origin, it was plainly a perilous experiment to attempt the pursuit. Viewing it as the result of an ebb-tide, aided by a strong east wind, there was the risk of being caught by the returning tide; or if the wind abated, or changed its direction, of being immediately submerged. In the other case there was the danger, almost the certainty, of the supernatural power which restrained the waters permitting them to flow back on the pursuers. What infatuation, then, possessed the Egyptians, prompting them to enter the sea?
(1) A false sense of honour. Having engaged in the pursuit, it would be deemed a point of honour not to desist from it, so long as the faintest chance of success remained. They had gone too far to retreat now at the water’s edge.
(2) Rage. Fury and disappointment would possess them, as, in the very hour of their fancied triumph, they saw their prey thus elude them. Was Pharaoh and his mighty host to be thus mocked and set at noughtthus suddenly reined up and baffled? What would Egypt think of her warriors, if, setting out on such an expedition, they returned humiliated and empty-handed? At all hazards Israel must be pursued.
(3) There was the chance of getting through. The distance was short; the way lay open; if Israel had got across, so might the Egyptians. On this chance, in the spirit of the gambler, they would stake everything. What havoc have these same motivesa false sense of honour (cf. Mat 14:9), a spirit of uncalculating rage, the headstrong gambling disposition,played in the history of the world! Together, or apart, they account for much of its infatuation. See specially in this conduct of Pharaoh, a picture of the infatuation to which the enemies of Christ’s Church have so frequently been given over, and which will linger among them till the end. Compare e.g. the Apocalyptic gathering of the antichristian powers, to do battle with the Lamb (Rev 16:14-17; Rev 19:11-21).
II. THE RECEPTION WHICH THEY RECEIVED FROM GOD.
1. In “the morning watch,” and when the Egyptians were in “the midst of the sea,” God looked forth upon them from the pillar of cloud (Exo 14:23). The expression is a pregnant one. The look was a “fire-look”some fire-appearance of a startling kind which issued from the cloud, and shed terror over the pursuers. It was accompanied with thunderings and lightnings (Psa 77:18, Psa 77:19). God’s looks are potent. When God “looked” on Israel (Exo 2:25), it meant that he was about to bring salvation to them. When he “locked” on the Egyptians, it was the prelude to their destruction. Through that pillar glares forth an eye which sends a separate dismay into each Egyptian heast and all is felt to be lost. We find two imitations of this in modern poetryone by Coleridge, in his ‘Ode on the Departing Year,’ where he prays God to
“Open his eye of fire from some uncertain cloud,”
and another (by Southey) in the ‘Curse of Kehama,’ where, after the ‘Man Almighty,’ holding his Amreeta Cup, had exclaimed
“Now, Seeva, look to thine abode!”
it is added, when the cup is drunk
“Then Seeva open’d on the accursed one
His eye of angerupon him alone
The wrath beam fell He shudders, but too late.”
(Gilfillan.)
2. God troubled their hosts (Exo 14:24, Exo 14:25). There is meant by this some supernatural exertion of power. It was not due to natural causes alone that the chariot wheels were “taken off,” and that they drave heavily. It was God who, by his heavy hand upon them, was thus obstructing their progress. The invisible powers were fighting against the Egyptians, as “the stars in their courses fought against Sisera” (Jdg 5:20). Those are sure to drive heavily, who drive in the face of God’s inhibition, and under his ban.
3. God brought the sea back upon them (Exo 14:26). Swiftly, fatally, at the stretching forth of Moses’ rod, the sea returned in its strength, and utterly overwhelmed them. And such, in its main outline, is the reception which Jehovah must give to all his enemies. His wrath already rests upon them. His fiery look will one day scare them. Even now they are troubled and impeded by it, and by the resistance which he opposes to their plans. Finally, he will overwhelm them in the sea of his wrath. He will visit them with “everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power” (1Th 1:9). Hence
III. THEIR COMPLETE DESTRUCTION (Exo 14:27, Exo 14:28). They perished suddenly, miserably, and all together. Type of the overthrow of God’s enemies in the end (2Th 2:8; Rev 16:16, Rev 16:17; Rev 19:17-21; Rev 20:9). The blow was a crushing one to Egypt, It filled up the measure of her punishment for the evil she had done to Israel. After the death of the first-born, there could remain nothing to Pharaoh and his servants, in the event of their still hardening themselves, but “a certain fearful looking for of judgment, and fiery indignation” (Heb 10:27). Does some one say, what a waste of human lifehow unlike a God of mercy! Rather, surely, how striking a testimony to the reality of retributionhow sure a token of the righteous doom which in the end will infallibly overtake every obdurate transgressor! God will not permit sinners always to defy him. His wrath and power are resistless. The “ungodly and sinner” must expect to feel the weight of them (1 Peter 17, 18).
IV. RESULT (Exo 14:30, Exo 14:31).
1. Israel was saved.
2. The Egyptian dead were found strewn upon the shore. This
(1) A memorial of God’s vengeance.
(2) An awful satire on so-called human greatness.
(3) A pledge of security to Israel.
3. The people were filled with gratitude and fear. They “believed the Lord.” The wonder is that after so marvellous a deliverance they could ever again doubt him.J.O.
Fuente: The Complete Pulpit Commentary
Pause, my soul, over this awful verse. To what a desperate length will sin drive men. See Pro 7:22-23 ; Isa 43:16-17 .
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Exo 14:23 And the Egyptians pursued, and went in after them to the midst of the sea, [even] all Pharaoh’s horses, his chariots, and his horsemen.
Ver. 23. And the Egyptians pursued. ] God permitting it, and making fair weather before them, they also blustering, and “breathing out threatenings,” saying, “I will pursue, I will overtake, I will divide the spoil,” &c., till anon “they sank as lead in the mighty waters.” Exo 15:9-10
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Exo 14:17, Exo 15:9, Exo 15:19, 1Ki 22:20, Ecc 9:3, Isa 14:24-27
Reciprocal: Exo 14:6 – people Exo 14:7 – General Deu 11:4 – how he made 1Sa 6:6 – the Egyptians Pro 28:14 – but Isa 43:17 – bringeth
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Exo 14:23. And the Egyptians went in after them into the midst of the sea They thought, Why might they not venture where Israel did? They were more advantageously provided with chariots and horses, while the Israelites were on foot.