THE LAW OF THE FIRSTBORN.
Exo 13:1-22.
Much that was said in the twelfth chapter is repeated in the
thirteenth. And this repetition is clearly due to a formal
rehearsal, made when all "their hosts" had mustered in Succoth after
their first march; for Moses says, "Remember this day, in which ye
came out" (Exo 13:3). Already it had been spoken of as a day much to
be remembered, and for its perpetuation the ordinance of the
Passover had been founded.
But now this charge is given as a fit prologue for the remarkable
institution which follows--the consecration to God of all
unblemished males who are the firstborn of their mothers--for such
is the full statement of what is claimed.
In speaking to Moses the Lord says, "Sanctify unto Me all the
firstborn ... it is Mine." But Moses addressing the people advances
gradually, and almost diplomatically. First he reminds them of their
deliverance, and in so doing he employs a phrase which could only
have been used at the exact stage when they were emancipated and yet
upon Egyptian soil: "By strength of hand the Lord brought you out
from this place" (Exo 13:3). Then he charges them not to forget
their rescue, in the dangerous time of their prosperity, when the
Lord shall have brought them into the land which He swore to give
them; and he repeats the ordinance of unleavened bread. And it is
only then that he proceeds to announce the permanent consecration of
all their firstborn--the abiding doctrine that these, who naturally
represent the nation, are for its unworthiness forfeited, and yet by
the grace of God redeemed.
God, Who gave all and pardons all, demands a return, not as a tax
which is levied for its own sake, but as a confession of dependence,
and like the silk flag presented to the sovereign, on the
anniversaries of the two greatest of English victories, by the
descendants of the conquerors, who hold their estates upon that
tenure. The firstborn, thus dedicated, should have formed a sacred
class, a powerful element in Hebrew life enlisted on the side of
God.
For these, as we have already seen, the Levites were afterwards
substituted (Num 3:44), and there is perhaps some allusion to this
change in the direction that "all the firstborn of man thou shalt
redeem" (Exo 13:13). But yet the demand is stated too broadly and
imperatively to belong to that later modification: it suits exactly
the time to which it is attributed, before the tribe of Levi was
substituted for the firstborn of all.
"They are Mine," said Jehovah, Who needed not, that night, to
remind them what He had wrought the night before. It is for
precisely the same reason, that St. Paul claims all souls for God:
"Ye are not your own, ye are bought with a price; therefore glorify
God with your bodies and with your spirits, which are God's."
And besides the general claim upon us all, each of us should
feel, like the firstborn, that every special mercy is a call to
special gratitude, to more earnest dedication. "I beseech you, by
the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice"
(Rom 12:1).
There is a tone of exultant confidence in the words of Moses,
very interesting and curious. He and his nation are breathing the
free air at last. The deliverance that has been given makes all the
promise that remains secure. As one who feels his pardon will surely
not despair of heaven, so Moses twice over instructs the people what
to do when God shall have kept the oath which He swore, and brought
them into Canaan, into the land flowing with milk and honey. Then
they must observe His passover. Then they must consecrate their
firstborn.
And twice over this emancipator and lawgiver, in the first flush
of his success, impresses upon them the homely duty of teaching
their households what God had done for them (Exo 13:8, Exo 13:14;
cf. Exo 12:26).
This, accordingly, the Psalmist learned, and in his turn
transmitted. He heard with his ears and his fathers told him what
God did in their days, in the days of old. And he told the
generation to come the praises of Jehovah, and His strength, and His
wondrous works (Psa 44:1, Psa 78:4).
But it is absurd to treat these verses, as Kuenen does, as
evidence that the story is mere legend: "transmitted from mouth to
mouth, it gradually lost its accuracy and precision, and adopted all
sorts of foreign elements." To prove which, we are gravely referred
to passages like this. (Religion of Israel, i. 22, Eng.
Vers.) The duty of oral instruction is still acknowledged, but this
does not prove that the narrative is still unwritten.
From the emphatic language in which Moses urged this double duty,
too much forgotten still, of remembering and showing forth the
goodness of God, sprang the curious custom of the wearing of
phylacteries. But the Jews were not bidden to wear signs and
frontlets: they were bidden to let hallowed memories be unto them in
the place of such charms as they had seen the Egyptians wear, "for a
sign unto thee, upon thine hand, and for a frontlet between thine
eyes, that the law of the Lord may be in thy mouth" (Exo 13:9). Such
language is frequent in the Old Testament, where mercy and truth
should be bound around their necks; their fathers' commandments
should be tied around their necks, bound on their fingers, written
on their hearts; and Sion should clothe herself with her converts as
an ornament, and gird them upon her as a bride doth (Pro 3:3, Pro
6:21, Pro 7:3; Isa 49:18).
But human nature still finds the letter of many a commandment
easier than the spirit, a ceremony than an obedient heart, penance
than penitence, ashes on the forehead than a contrite spirit, and a
phylactery than the gratitude and acknowledgment which ought to be
unto us for a sign on the hand and a frontlet between the eyes.
We have already observed the connection between the thirteenth
verse and the events of the previous night. But there is an
interesting touch of nature in the words "the firstling of an ass
thou shalt redeem with a lamb." It was afterwards rightly perceived
that all unclean animals should follow the same rule; but why was
only the ass mentioned? Plainly because those humble journeyers had
no other beast of burden. Horses pursued them presently, but even
the Egyptians of that period used them only in war. The trampled
Hebrews would not possess camels. And thus again, in the tenth
commandment, when the stateliest of their cattle is specified, no
beast of burden is named with it but the ass: "Thou shalt not covet
... his ox nor his ass." It is an undesigned coincidence of real
value; a phrase which would never have been devised by legislators
of a later date; a frank and unconscious evidence of the genuineness
of the story.
Some time before this, a new and fierce race, whose name declared
them to be "emigrants," had thrust itself in among the tribes of
Canaan--a race which was long to wage equal war with Israel, and not
seldom to see his back turned in battle. They now held all the south
of Palestine, from the brook of Egypt to Ekron (Jos 15:4, Jos
15:47). And if Moses in the flush of his success had pushed on by
the straight and easy route into the promised land, the first shock
of combat with them would have been felt in a few weeks. But "God
led them not by the way of the Philistines, though that was near,
for God said, Lest peradventure the people repent them when they see
war, and they return to Egypt" (Exo 13:17).
From this we learn two lessons. Why did not He, Who presently
made strong the hearts of the Egyptians to plunge into the bed of
the sea, make the hearts of His own people strong to defy the
Philistines? The answer is a striking and solemn one. Neither God in
the Old Testament, nor God manifested in the flesh, is ever recorded
to have wrought any miracle of spiritual advancement or overthrow.
Thus the Egyptians were but confirmed in their own choice: their
decision was carried further. And even Saul of Tarsus was
illuminated, not coerced: he might have disobeyed the heavenly
vision. He was not an insincere man suddenly coerced into
earnestness, nor a coward suddenly made brave. In the moral world,
adequate means are always employed for the securing of desired
effects. Love, gratitude, the sense of danger and of grace, are the
powers which elevate characters. And persons who live in sensuality,
fraud, or falsehood, hoping to be saved some day by a sort of
miracle of grace, ought to ponder this truth, which may not be the
gospel now fashionable, but is unquestionably the statement of a
Scriptural fact: in the moral sphere, God works by means and not
by miracle.
A free life, the desert air, the rejection of the unfit by many
visitations, and the growth of a new generation amid thrilling
events, in a soul-stirring region, and under the pure influences of
the law,--these were necessary before Israel could cross steel with
the warlike children of the Philistines; and even then, it was not
with them that he should begin.
The other lesson we learn is the tender fidelity of God, Who will
not suffer us to be tempted above that we are able to bear. He led
them aside into the desert, whither He still in mercy leads very
many who think it a heavy judgment to be there.
THE BONES OF JOSEPH.
Exo 13:19.
It is certain that Moses, in the days of his greatness, must
often have mused by the sepulchre of the one Israelite before
himself who held high rank in Egypt. The knowledge that Joseph's
elevation was providential must have helped him at that time, now
many years ago, to think rightly of his own. And now we read that
Moses took the bones of Joseph with him. In the Epistle to the
Hebrews (Heb 11:22) it is recorded as the most characteristic
example of the faith of the patriarch, that instead of desiring to
be carried, like his father, at once to Canaan, he made mention of
the departure of the children of Israel, and gave commandment
concerning his bones. To him Egypt was no longer an alien land.
There only he had known honour without envy, and happiness without
betrayal. There his bones could rest in quiet; but not for ever.
Personal elevation, which had not rent the cord between him and his
unworthy family, could still less sever the bands between him and
the sacred race. Let him sleep in Egypt while his grave there was
honoured: let the remembrance of him be kept fresh, to protect
awhile his kindred; and when the predicted days of evil came, let
his ashes share the neglect and dishonour of his people, if only
they would remember his remains when the Lord would lead them forth.
This confidence in their emancipation was his faith--which meant,
here as always, not a clear view of truth, but an assuring grasp of
it. He had straitly sworn the children of Israel saying, "God will
surely visit you; and ye shall carry up my bones away hence with
you."
Many a Christian might well envy a confidence so practical, so
thoroughly realised, entering so naturally into the tissue of his
thoughts and calculations. And their actual remembrance of him goes
to show that the tradition of his faith had never completely died
out, but was among the influences which kept alive the nation's
hope.
And as the people bore his honoured ashes through the desert,
these being dead spoke of bygone times, they linked the present and
the past together, they deepened the national consciousness that
Israel was a favoured people, called to no common destiny, sustained
by no common promises, pressing toward no common goal.
If Israel had been wise, they would have thought of him, the
Israelite in heart, though glittering in the splendours of Egypt;
and would have considered well that as little as men detected his
secret life from his appearance, so little could theirs be judged.
To the eye, they were free from the foreign trammels in which he was
seemingly entangled, yet many of them in heart turned back to all
which strove in vain to bind his affections down. The lesson holds
good today. Many a modern religionist looks askance at the
"worldliness" of high office and rank and state; little dreaming
that the "world" he censures is strong in his own ambitious and
self-asserting spirit, and is overcome by the gentle and tranquil
spirit of hundreds of those whom he condemns.
Bearing this hallowed burden, which might easily have become an
object of superstitious regard, the nation moved from Succoth to
Etham on the edge of the wilderness. And with them a Presence moved
which rebuked all others, however venerable. The Lord went before
them. It has already been pointed out that throughout the early
history of this nation, just come out of an idolatrous land, and too
ready to lapse back into superstition, God never reveals Himself
except in fire. To Abraham and to Jacob He appeared in human form,
and again to Joshua; but in the interval, never. So now they see Him
by day in a pillar of cloud to guide them on the way, and by night
in a pillar of fire to give them light. The glory of the nation was
that manifested Presence, lacking which, Moses besought Him to carry
them up no farther. Nothing in the Exodus is more impressive, and it
sank deep into the national heart. Many centuries afterwards, the
ideal of a golden age was that the Lord should "create over the
whole habitation of Mount Zion, and over her assemblies, a cloud of
smoke by day, and the shining of a flaming fire by night" (Isa 4:5).
But it has been well observed that, amid the various allusions to
it in Hebrew poetry, not one treats it as modern literature has
done, with an eye to its marvellous sublimity and picturesque
effects:
"By day, along the astonished
lands
The cloudy pillar glided slow:
By night, Arabia's crimsoned
sands
Returned the fiery column's
glow."
The Hebrew poetry is vivid and passionate, but all its concerns
are human or divine--God, and the life of man. It is not artistic,
but inspired. "The modern poet is delighting in the scenic effect;
the ancient chronicler was wholly occupied with the overshadowing
power of God."[24]
FOOTNOTES:
[24] Hutton's Essays, Vol.
ii., Literary: The Poetry of the Old Test.