Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Exodus 15:17
Thou shalt bring them in, and plant them in the mountain of thine inheritance, [in] the place, O LORD, [which] thou hast made for thee to dwell in, [in] the Sanctuary, O Lord, [which] thy hands have established.
17. Thou didst bring them in, and plant them in the mountain of thine inheritance,
The place which thou hadst made for thee to dwell in, O Yahweh,
The sanctuary, O Lord, which thy hands have established.
The final goal of Israel’s triumphant progress through the nations ( vv. 14 16): viz. its settlement in Canaan, with Jehovah’s sanctuary established in its midst.
plant them ] fix them in firmly: the figure, as 2Sa 7:10, Amo 9:15, Psa 44:2, and elsewhere.
the mountain of thine inheritance ] i.e. Canaan, called a ‘mountain’ on account of the mountainous character of many of its most important parts (Judah, Benjamin, and Ephraim, for instance). Cf. Deu 3:25, Isa 11:9, Psa 78:54 b (with allusion to this passage).
of thine inheritance ] in so far as it was His possession: cf. JerExo 2:7, Psa 79:1; and (of the people) 1Sa 10:1 ; 1Sa 26:19, 2Sa 14:16; 2Sa 20:19 ; 2Sa 21:3.
a place for thee to dwell in ] These words, exactly as 1Ki 8:13 (‘I have surely built thee an house of habitation, a place for thee to dwell in for ever’), in the poetical fragment ( vv. 12, 13), excerpted, it is almost certain (see Skinner’s note on the passage in the Century Bible, or Barnes’ in the Cambridge Bible), from the ancient ‘Book of Jashar’ (hence also the expression, ‘place of thy ( or his) dwelling,’ in 1Ki 8:39; 1Ki 8:43; 1Ki 8:49, Psa 33:14). Di. thinks that the reference is to the sanctuary of Shiloh (which must have been a substantial building, 1Sa 1:3 ; 1Sa 1:9; 1Sa 3:3; 1Sa 3:15): others think that the terms used point rather to the Temple on Zion (with ‘established,’ in the next line, cf. Psa 48:8; Psa 87:5). Of course, the entire people was not ‘planted’ at either of these places: but the poet, as he goes on, narrows his outlook, and fixes his thoughts on Jehovah’s earthly dwelling, the religious centre of the nation.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Exo 15:17-18
Thou shalt bring them in.
Anticipations of faith
We are, perhaps, hardly surprised at the tone of jubilant confidence which pervades this glorious psalm of thanksgiving. Very strong indeed is the language used; but perhaps not stronger than might naturally have been expected to spring from such circumstances; for what a wonderful event had just transpired! Here they were then, on the other side of the Red Sea, the vast wilderness stretching before them, their long weary march not yet commenced, and wholly destitute of any adequate supplies, and without either arms, or discipline, or any capacity for warfare. Surely the prospect might have seemed most discouraging. They must have known perfectly well–what they soon found out to be a fact–that the wilderness swarmed with wandering nomad hordes, Bedouins of the desert, men of war, who might at any moment come down upon them, cut off their stragglers, or even put the whole undisciplined rabble to rout and make a prey of them. And even supposing they should overcome these difficulties of the journey, what then? There lay Canaan before them, but how were they, who could hardly hold their own against the tribes of the desert, to undertake aggressive warfare against nations dwelling in cities with walls great and high, and equipped with all the appliances of ancient warfare? How chimerical their enterprise would seem on reflection! how improbable that they would ever succeed in taking possession of the land which God had promised to them! But faith looked on beyond all difficulties. Faith never stops for commissariat supplies! Faith does not ask, Where is my daily bread to come from? Faith does not wait to be clothed with armour, save such armour as the power of God supplies. Faith does not stop to weigh the adequacy of the means within our reach to induce the end. Children of God, it is time we endeavoured to apply the lessons suggested by all this to ourselves. We too have been the subjects of a great deliverance, a deliverance as supernatural in its character and as astonishing in its conditions as ever was the deliverance of Israel from Egypt. This deliverance is also the product of redemption. We are saved in order that we may rise to the prize of our high calling, and become inheritors of our true Land of Promise; and the first great deliverance is with us also surely an earnest and a pledge of all that is to follow. I suppose it is because we so imperfectly apprehend the miracle of our deliverance and its completeness, and the new relations which it establishes between ourselves and God, and between ourselves and sin, that our feelings at the outset of our new life are so often just the opposite of those depicted in this triumphant song. Instead of joyous anticipation, how common a thing it is to meet with gloomy forebodings on the part of the newborn children of God, fresh from the Cross of Christ, just rising, as we may say, spiritually out of the waters of the Red Sea. And many of us have scarcely been saved from our condition of condemnation and spiritual bondage before we begin to consider the difficulties that lie before us, the enemies that we shall have to encounter, the sacrifices that we may have to make, the trials that we may have to undergo. The wilderness seems so vast, the enemies so mighty, the supplies so inadequate or precarious; and while our eyes of unbelief are resting upon all these adverse considerations, our heart seems to sink within us until we are ready to turn back again into Egypt. How common a thing it is to meet with young Christians who seem indeed to be on the right side of the Red Sea, but who appear to be more inclined to wring their hands in terror than to sound the loud timbrel in exultation! (W. Hay Aitken, M. A.)
An encouraging deliverance
Two ways this great deliverance was encouraging.
1. It was such an instance of Gods power as would terrify their enemies and quite dishearten them (Exo 15:14-16). It had this effect (see Deu 2:4; Num 22:3; Jos 2:9-10).
2. It was such a beginning of Gods favour to them as gave them an earnest of the perfection of His kindness. This was but in order to something further (Exo 15:17). (M. Henry, D. D.)
Christ for ever
When Luther went to his trial at Augsburg from Wittemberg he walked all the distance. Clad in his monks brown frock, with all his wardrobe on his back, the citizens, high and low, attended him in enthusiastic admiration. As they went they cried, Luther for ever! Nay! nay! he answered, Christ for ever!
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 17. Thou shalt bring them in] By thy strength and mercy alone shall they get the promised inheritance.
And plant them] Give them a fixed habitation in Canaan, after their unsettled wandering life in the wilderness.
In the mountain] Meaning Canaan, which was a very mountainous country, De 11:11; or probably Mount Zion, on which the temple was built. Where the pure worship of God was established, there the people might expect both rest and safety. Wherever the purity of religion is established and preserved, and the high and the low endeavour to regulate their lives according to its precepts, the government of that country is likely to be permanent.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
In the mountain of thine inheritance; either,
1. In the country of Canaan, which is a mountainous country, full of hills and valleys, Deu 11:11; not like Egypt, a plain and low country. Or,
2. In and about the mount of Moriah, where the temple was to be built, which is here put for the whole land, it being the most eminent part of it, round about which the people were planted, and to which they were frequently to resort.
Have established; will certainly build and establish, i.e. cause to be built and established. The past tense for the future, to note the certainty of it, according to the style of the prophets.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
Thou shalt bring them in,…. Into the land of Canaan, which is often ascribed to the Lord, as well as his bringing them out of the land of Egypt, see De 8:8,
and plant them in the mountain of thine inheritance; in the country which he chose for the inheritance of his people and himself; one part of which was very mountainous, called the hill country of Judea, and especially Jerusalem, round about which mountains were; and particular respect may be had to Mount Moriah and Zion, on which the temple afterwards stood, and which was called the mountain of the Lord’s house, and seems to be pointed at in the following account: here Israel is compared to a vine as elsewhere, which the Lord took out of Egypt and planted in the land of Canaan, where it took root and was settled, see Ps 80:8
in the place, O Lord, which thou hast made for thee to dwell in; that is, which he had appointed for his habitation; for as yet neither the tabernacle nor temple were built, in which he afterwards dwelt: in this sense the word “made” is used in Pr 16:4
in the sanctuary, O Lord, which thy hands have established; that is, which he intended to establish, and would, and did establish; meaning, more especially, the temple, and the holy of holies in it, which he directed Solomon to build, and was a settled dwelling place for him, 1Ki 8:13, now all this may be considered as typical of the church of Christ, and of his bringing and planting his people there, which is a “mountain”, and often signified by Mount Zion; is visible and immovable, the true members of it being interested in the love of God, on the sure foundation of electing grace, secured in the everlasting covenant, and built on the rock Christ Jesus; and is the Lord’s “inheritance”, chosen by him to be so, given to Christ, and possessed by him as such, and as dear to him, and more so, than a man’s inheritance is to him: this is a “place” he has appointed, prepared, and made for himself to dwell in, and is the habitation of Father, Son, and Spirit; and is a “sanctuary” or holy place, consisting of holy persons established in Christ, as particular believers are, and the church in general is; and though now sometimes in an unsettled state as to outward things, yet ere long will be established on the top of the mountains: and hither the Lord brings his purchased people, as sheep into his fold, as children to his house, fitted up for them, as guests to partake of his entertainments; and this is an act of his powerful grace upon them, and of his distinguished goodness to them: and here he also plants them, for the church is a plantation, a garden, an orchard of pomegranates, with pleasant fruits; and such as are planted here are transplanted out of the world, and are first planted in Christ, and receive the ingrafted word; and though ministers may be instruments in planting, the Lord is the efficient; and those that are planted by him are choice pleasant plants, fruitful ones, and shall never be plucked up: but as this follows the passage of the Lord’s people over Jordan into Canaan land, it may rather be considered as an emblem of the heavenly state, and of the Lord’s bringing and planting his people there; which, like a mountain, is an immovable and unalterable state, an inheritance incorruptible and eternal, the dwellingplace of Jehovah, a sanctuary or holy place, which his hand prepared from the foundation of the world; and which he has established as everlasting habitations for his people, where he brings their souls at death, and both souls and bodies in the resurrection morn to dwell with him for ever; and which is a paradise, an Eden of pleasure, where he plants them as trees of righteousness, next to Christ the tree of life, and where they are always green, fruitful, flourishing, and shall never be hurt by any scorching heat or blasting wind, or be trodden under foot or plucked up.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
17. Thou shalt bring them in. The metaphor of planting denotes a firm habitation; as also in Psa 44:2, “Thou didst drive out the heathen with thine hand, and plantedst” our fathers, and causedst them to take root. Moreover, by his commendatory allusion to the temple, Moses excites in the people’s hearts a desire for the land, which was to be God’s “Sanctuary;” and by this secret thought attracts them, indifferent as they were, to seek the enjoyment of this great blessing. He also prophesies of Mount Sion many ages before the temple was erected there; from whence we gather that it was not chosen by man’s will, but consecrated by the eternal counsel and predestination of God. For it behooved that the gratuitous favor of God should manifest itself as to this place, as well as to men’s persons. Thus, in Psa 78:67, it is said,
“
He refused the tabernacle of Joseph, and chose not the tribe of Ephraim; but chose the of Judah,” etc.
Elsewhere also, (Psa 132:13,)
“
For the Lord hath chosen Zion; he hath desired it for his habitation: this is my rest for ever; here will I dwell, for I have desired it.”
But the stability of the temple is also foretold; as in another passage, (167) “Thy hand hath founded Zion.” (Psa 87:1.) And God himself declares by Isaiah that He will not suffer Jerusalem to be laid waste, (Isa 37:26,) because of ancient times He had formed it. But although the whole land of Canaan is elsewhere called God’s rest, and the people was never collected into one city, yet, because God blessed the whole nation and land out c f His sanctuary, therefore is special mention made of His holy mountain. But this prophecy was very needful for the support of their minds, because Jerusalem only came into their power at a late period; and doubtless their posterity would have been still more slow to take possession of it had not their hearts been stimulated by this promise. A short sentence follows concerning God’s eternal reign, on which the perpetuity of the Church is founded. Thus David, (Psa 102:27,) after having said that God would always be the, same, and His years would have no end, thus concludes, “The children of thy servants shall continue, and their deed shall be established before thee.” (Psa 102:28.) Moses, then, would extend the hope of the people to all ages, because of God’s kingdom there is no end.
(167) It will be seen that the sense, and not the words, of the citation are given.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(17) In the mountain of thine inheritance.Some suppose Mount Moriah to be especially intended; but it is better to understand Canaan generally, which is a country consisting almost entirely of mountains, with only two plains of any extentthose of Sharon and Esdraelon.
The Sanctuary can only mean the place where God was to put his name. (See the comment on Exo. 15:13.) This is spoken of as already made and established, because it was so in the Divine counsels, as Moses very well knew. (See Deu. 12:5; Deu. 12:11; Deu. 12:14; Deu. 14:23-24, &c.)
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
Exo 15:17. And plant them in the mountain of thine inheritance, &c. As this verse undoubtedly refers to Jerusalem and Mount Sion, it is reasonable to think, that the holy habitation, Exo 15:13 refers to the same. The phrase of planting, expresses their fixed establishment: and the same idea is used in Psa 44:2. This verse might be tendered, Thou bringest them in, and plantest them in the mountain of thine inheritance: in the place, O JEHOVAH! prepared for thee to dwell in; in the sanctuary, O GOD! which thy hands prepare.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Reader! pray consider this spiritually. If the Lord bring you out of spiritual Egypt, depend upon it he will bring you into the heavenly Canaan. Joh 10:27-28 .
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Exo 15:17 Thou shalt bring them in, and plant them in the mountain of thine inheritance, [in] the place, O LORD, [which] thou hast made for thee to dwell in, [in] the Sanctuary, O Lord, [which] thy hands have established.
Ver. 17. Of thine inheritance. ] Provided and purchased by thee for thy firstborn, Israel.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Exodus
THE ULTIMATE HOPE
Exo 15:17
I. The lesson taught by each present deliverance and kindness is that we shall be brought to His rest at last.
The inexhaustibleness of the divine resources.
The steadfastness of the divine purposes.
The long-suffering of the divine patience.
b Thus daily mercies should lead on our thoughts to heavenly things. They should not prison us in their own sweetness. We should see the great Future shining through them as a transparent, not an opaque medium.
c That ultimate future should be the great object of our hope. Surely it is chiefly in order that we may have the light of that great to-morrow brightening and magnifying our dusty to-days, that we are endowed with the faculty of looking forward and ‘calling things that are not as though they were.’ So we should engage and enlarge our minds with it.
II. The form which that ultimate future assumes.
a Perpetual rest. ‘Bring in and plant’-a contrast to the desert nomad life.
b Perpetual safety. ‘The sanctuary which Thy hands have established,’ i.e. made firm.
c Perpetual dwelling in God. ‘Thy dwelling,’ ‘Thy mountain,’ ‘ Thy holy habitation’ Exo 15:13, rather than ‘ our land.’ For Israel their communion with Jehovah was perfected on Zion by the Temple and the sacrifices, including the revelation of priestly national service.
d Perpetual purity. ‘Thy sanctuary.’ ‘Without’ holiness ‘no man shall see the Lord.’
Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren
plant. The word used by God throughout of settling His People. Jer 18:9. Amo 9:15. Rom 6:5. 1Co 3:6-10.
place = appointed place.
O LORD. One of the 134 places where Jehovah was altered, by the Sopherim, to Adonai. App-32.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
plant: Psa 44:2, Psa 78:54, Psa 78:55, Psa 80:8, Isa 5:1-4, Jer 2:21, Jer 32:41
mountain: Psa 78:54, Psa 78:68, Psa 78:69, Jer 31:23
Reciprocal: Exo 29:45 – General Jos 22:19 – unclean Psa 79:1 – into Psa 106:13 – They soon forgat Hab 3:6 – and measured
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Exo 15:17. Thou shalt bring them in If he thus bring them out of Egypt, he will bring them into Canaan; for he has begun, and will he not make an end? Thou wilt plant them in the place made for thee to dwell in It is good dwelling where God dwells, in his church on earth, and in his church in heaven. In the mountains The mountainous country of Canaan. The sanctuary which thy hands have established Will as surely establish as if it were done already.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
15:17 Thou shalt bring them in, and plant them in the mountain of thine {i} inheritance, [in] the place, O LORD, [which] thou hast made for thee to dwell in, [in] the Sanctuary, O Lord, [which] thy hands have established.
(i) Which was mount Zion, where later the temple was built.