Biblia

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Exodus 28:3

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Exodus 28:3

And thou shalt speak unto all [that are] wise hearted, whom I have filled with the spirit of wisdom, that they may make Aaron’s garments to consecrate him, that he may minister unto me in the priest’s office.

3. And thou ] the pron. is emphatic.

wise wisdom ] of artistic cleverness or skill: cf. Exo 31:3; Exo 31:6, Exo 35:10; Exo 35:25-26; Exo 35:31, Exo 36:1-2; Exo 36:4; Exo 36:8; Jer 10:9 (‘cunning’: Heb. wise). The heart is with the Hebrews the seat not of feeling, as with us, but of understanding: Jer 5:21 RVm., Hos 4:11 RVm., Job 12:24, &c.

the spirit of wisdom ] i.e. an impulse and activity, instinct with wisdom (i.e., here, artistic skill): cf. Deu 34:9 (P), Isa 11:2; Isa 28:6; and (in a bad sense) Isa 19:14; Isa 29:10, Hos 4:12. Comp. on Exo 31:3.

to sanctify him ] the investiture is a part of the consecration, Exo 29:5 ff.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Verse 3. Whom I have filled with the spirit of wisdom] So we find that ingenuity in arts and sciences, even those of the ornamental kind, comes from God. It is not intimated here that these persons were filled with the spirit of wisdom for this purpose only; for the direction to Moses is, to select those whom he found to be expert artists, and those who were such, God shows by these words, had derived their knowledge from himself. Every man should be permitted as far as possible to follow the bent or direction of his own genius, when it evidently leads him to new inventions, and improvements on old plans. How much has both the labour of men and cattle been lessened by improvements in machinery! And can we say that the wisdom which found out these improvements did not come from God? No man, by course of reading or study, ever acquired a genius of this kind: we call it natural, and say it was born with the man. Moses teaches us to consider it as Divine. Who taught NEWTON to ascertain the laws by which God governs the universe, through which discovery a new source of profit and pleasure has been opened to mankind through every part of the civilized world? No reading, no study, no example, formed his genius. God, who made him, gave him that compass and bent of mind by which he made those discoveries, and for which his name is celebrated in the earth. When I see NAPIER inventing the logarithms; COPERNICUS, DES CARTES, and KEPLER contributing to pull down the false systems of the universe, and NEWTON demonstrating the true one; and when I see the long list of PATENTEES of useful inventions, by whose industry and skill long and tedious processes in the necessary arts of life have been shortened, labour greatly lessened, and much time and expense saved; I then see, with Moses, men who are wise-hearted, whom God has filled with the spirit of wisdom for these very purposes; that he might help man by man, and that, as time rolls on, he might give to his intelligent creatures such proofs of his Being, infinitely varied wisdom, and gracious providence, as should cause them to depend on him, and give him that glory which is due to his name.

How pointedly does the Prophet Isaiah refer to this sort of teaching as coming from God, even in the most common and less difficult arts of life! The whole passage is worthy of the reader’s most serious attention.

“Doth the ploughman plough all day to sow? doth he open and break the clods of his ground? When he hath made plain the face thereof, doth he not cast abroad the fitches, and scatter the cummin, and cast in the principal wheat, and the appointed barley, and the rye, in their place? For HIS GOD DOTH INSTRUCT HIM to discretion, and doth teach him. For the fitches are not threshed with a threshing-instrument, neither is a cart-wheel turned about upon the cummin; but the fitches are beaten out with a staff, and the cummin with a rod. Bread corn is bruised; because he will not ever be threshing it, nor break it with the wheel of his cart, nor bruise it with his horsemen. This also cometh forth from the LORD of hosts, who is wonderful in counsel, and excellent in working,” Isa 28:24-29.

But let us take heed not to run into extremes here; machinery is to help man, not to render him useless. The human hand is the great and most perfect machine, let it not be laid aside. In our zeal for machinery we are rendering all the lower classes useless; filling the land with beggary and vice, and the workhouses with paupers; and ruining the husbandmen with oppressive poor-rates. Keep machinery as a help to the human hand, and to lighten the labour, but never let it supersede either.

This principle, that God is the author of all arts and sciences, is too little regarded: Every good gift, and every perfect gift, says St. James, comes from above, from the FATHER of LIGHTS. Why has God constructed every part of nature with such a profusion of economy and skill, if he intended this skill should never be discovered by man, or that man should not attempt to examine his works in order to find them out? From the works of CREATION what proofs, astonishing and overwhelming proofs, both to believers and infidels, have been drawn both of the nature, being, attributes, and providence of God! What demonstrations of all these have the Archbishop of Cambray, Dr. Nieuwentyt, Dr. Derham, and Mr. Charles Bonnet, given in their philosophical works! And who gave those men this wisdom? GOD, from whom alone MIND, and all its attributes, proceed. While we see Count de Buffon and Swammerdam examining and tracing out all the curious relations, connections, and laws of the ANIMAL kingdom; – Tournefort, Ray, and Linne, those of the VEGETABLE; – Theophrastus, Werner, Klaproth, Cronstedt, Morveau, Reamur, Kirwan, and a host of philosophical chemists, Boerhaave, Boyle, Stahl, Priestley, Lavoisier, Fourcroy, Black, and Davy, those of the MINERAL; the discoveries they have made, the latent and important properties of vegetables and minerals which they have developed, the powerful machines which, through their discoveries, have been constructed, by the operations of which the human slave is restored to his own place in society, the brute saved from his destructive toil in our manufactories, and inanimate, unfeeling NATURE caused to perform the work of all these better, more expeditiously, and to much more profit; shall we not say that the hand of GOD is in all this? Only I again say, let machinery aid man, and not render him useless. The nations of Europe are pushing mechanical power to a destructive extreme. He alone girded those eminent men, though many of them knew him not; he inspired them with wisdom and understanding; by his all-pervading and all-informing spirit he opened to them the entrance of the paths of the depths of science, guided them in their researches, opened to them successively more and more of his astonishing treasures, crowned their persevering industry with his blessing and made them his ministers for good to mankind. The antiquary and the medalist are also his agents; their discernment and penetration come from him alone. By them, how many dark ages of the world have been brought to light; how many names of men and places, how many customs and arts, that were lost, restored! And by their means a few busts, images, stones, bricks, coins, rings, and culinary utensils, the remaining wrecks of long-past numerous centuries have supplied the place of written documents, and cast a profusion of light on the history of man, and the history of providence. And let me add, that the providence which preserved these materials, and raised up men to decipher and explain them, is itself gloriously illustrated by them.

Of all those men (and the noble list might be greatly swelled) we may say the same that Moses said of Bezaleel and Aholiab: “GOD hath filled them with the Spirit of God, in wisdom, and in understanding, and in knowledge; and in all manner of workmanship, to devise cunning works; to work in gold and in silver, and in brass, in cutting of stones, carving of timber, and in all manner of workmanship;” Ex 31:3-6. “The works of the Lord are great, sought out of all them that have pleasure therein;” Ps 111:2.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

All that are wise-hearted, i.e. skilful artists. The Hebrews make the heart, not the brain, the seat of wisdom See Job 9:4.

Whom I have filled; either,

1. By my ordinary providence and assistance, giving them both ability and opportunity to learn the arts; or rather,

2. By extraordinary inspiration, which was necessary for the Israelites, whose base and laborious drudgery took off their minds and hands from all ingenious studies and arts. To consecrate him, i.e. to be an outward sign of my calling and consecration of him to my holy service. A metonymical expression.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

And thou shall speak unto all that are wise hearted,…. That have knowledge and understanding in mechanic arts, particularly in making garments; and it required men of more than ordinary skill to be employed in making these, because they were uncommon ones, and required a good deal of thought and judgment, and care and application, to make them exactly as they should be:

whom I have filled with the spirit of wisdom; for besides a common understanding of things, these required a peculiar gift from God, which some men, as Bezaleel and Aholiab had:

that they may make Aaron’s garments, to consecrate him to put upon him at the time of his consecration; and indeed this was one way, by which, as well as by sacrifices, that he was consecrated, see Ex 29:1,

that he may minister unto me in the priest’s office for the priests, without having these garments on, might not minister in their office; for when these garments were off, as they were when they were out of their service, they were as other men, as laymen,

[See comments on Eze 42:14].

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

(3) Thou shalt speak unto all that are wise hearted.By all that are wise hearted we must understand all that had the special knowledge which would enable them to give effectual aid in the production of such garments as were about to be commanded. The Hebrews regarded the heart as the seat of knowledge, with perhaps neither more nor less scientific accuracy than underlies our own current modes of speech whereby the heart is made the seat of the affections.

Whom I have filled with the spirit of wisdom.Few passages in the Bible are more antagonistic than this to the general current of modern thought. God speaks of Himself as having infused His Spirit into the hearts of men, in order to enable them to produce satisfactory priestly garments. Moderns suppose such things to be quite beneath the notice of the Creator of the universe. But it has to be remembered, on the other hand, (1) that God is the fountain whence all knowledge is derived; (2) that He alone knows what is beneath Him and what is not beneath Him; and (3) that dress is not a wholly insignificant matter, or so much would not have been said in Scripture about it (Gen. 3:21; Gen. 37:3; Gen. 41:42; Lev. 8:7-9; Lev. 16:4; Num. 15:38, &c.). Garments intended for glory and for beauty (Exo. 28:2) required artistic power in those who were to make them; and artistic power, like all other intellectual excellence, is the gift of God.

To consecrate him.Investiture in the holy garments was a part of the ceremony of consecration. (See Lev. 8:7-9; Lev. 8:13.)

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

3. Wise hearted Those gifted with the genius and skill for such artistic work as is here contemplated . The spirit of wisdom is here and in Exo 31:3, shown to be a gift of God, and those who possessed the tact and knowledge for making appropriate garments for the priestly office were to be regarded as divinely qualified for just such kind of service.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Exo 28:3. All that are wise-hearted, whom I have filled with the spirit of wisdom These two clauses depend one upon the other: the meaning is, all the wise in heart, whom I have made so, by filling them with the spirit of wisdom. Spirit, in the Hebrew, is often used for an affection or quality of the mind; as Num 5:14 the spirit of jealousy: Isa 19:14 a perverse spirit. The Hebrews were accustomed to consider God, most justly, as the Author of all wisdom, and the Giver of every good gift: to him, therefore, they justly ascribed every useful invention and every beneficial art; see Isa 28:26. Le Clerc has well observed, that Seneca (in his 4th Book, De Beneficiis) has a fine sentiment to the same purpose: “It is God who has invented so many arts; for those things which we invent are no more our own than the increase of our bodies. As the secret kind of God has implanted seeds in the body, whereby it springs up to a proper growth in all the stages of life; so he has implanted in the minds of men the seeds of all arts, and, being the great Master, calls them forth as he pleases.”

To consecrate him See an account of this consecration in the next chapter.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Isa 28:24-26 .

Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

Exo 28:3 And thou shalt speak unto all [that are] wise hearted, whom I have filled with the spirit of wisdom, that they may make Aaron’s garments to consecrate him, that he may minister unto me in the priest’s office.

Ver. 3. That they may make, &c ] Vides, in sacerdotibus nil plebeium reperiri, nil populare, saith Ambrose. Nothing in the priests but what was above the ordinary. The very workmen are to be filled with the Spirit of wisdom, to make their attire.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

whom I have filled. This agrees with the Severus Codex (App-34), “I have filled them”. See Exo 35:30 – Exo 36:7.

spirit. Hebrew. ruach. App-9.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

consecrate

Heb. qodesh= “set apart” for God. Trans. “holy,” Exo 28:2; “consecrate,” Exo 28:3. Often trans. “sanctify.” See summary, (See Scofield “Zec 8:3”). This is always the fundamental idea of a holy, consecrated, separated, or sanctified person or thing–something set apart for God. Infinite confusion would have been spared the reader if qodesh had been uniformly trans. “set apart.”

Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes

wise hearted: Exo 31:3-6, Exo 35:30, Exo 35:35, Exo 36:1, Exo 36:2, Pro 2:6, Isa 28:24-26

filled: Deu 34:9, Isa 11:2, 1Co 12:7-11, Eph 1:17, Jam 1:17

Reciprocal: Exo 29:1 – to minister Exo 29:29 – holy Exo 30:30 – consecrate Exo 31:6 – wise hearted Exo 35:25 – General Isa 28:26 – For his God

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

28:3 And thou shalt speak unto all [that are] wise hearted, whom I have filled with the spirit of wisdom, that they may make Aaron’s garments to {b} consecrate him, that he may minister unto me in the priest’s office.

(b) Which is to separate him from the rest.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes