Two passages of story are recorded in this chapter,
I. The watering of the host of Israel.
1. In the wilderness they wanted water,
Exodus 17:1.
2. In their want they chided Moses,
Exodus 17:2,3.
3. Moses cried to God,
Exodus 17:4.
4. God ordered him to smite the rock, and fetch water out of that;
Moses did so,
Exodus 17:5,6.
5. The place named from it,
Exodus 17:7.
II. The defeating of the host of Amalek.
1. The victory obtained by the prayer of Moses,
Exodus 17:8-12.
2. By the sword of Joshua,
Exodus 17:13.
3. A record kept of it,
Exodus 17:14,16.
And these things which happened to them are written for our instruction
in our spiritual journey and warfare.
The Israelites Murmur for Water.
B. C. 1491.
1 And all the congregation of the children of Israel journeyed
from the wilderness of Sin, after their journeys, according to
the commandment of the LORD, and pitched in Rephidim: and there
was no water for the people to drink.
2 Wherefore the people did chide with Moses, and said, Give us
water that we may drink. And Moses said unto them, Why chide ye
with me? wherefore do ye tempt the LORD?
3 And the people thirsted there for water; and the people
murmured against Moses, and said, Wherefore is this that thou
hast brought us up out of Egypt, to kill us and our children and
our cattle with thirst?
4 And Moses cried unto the LORD, saying, What shall I do unto
this people? they be almost ready to stone me.
5 And the LORD said unto Moses, Go on before the people, and
take with thee of the elders of Israel; and thy rod, wherewith
thou smotest the river, take in thine hand, and go.
6 Behold, I will stand before thee there upon the rock in
Horeb; and thou shalt smite the rock, and there shall come water
out of it, that the people may drink. And Moses did so in the
sight of the elders of Israel.
7 And he called the name of the place Massah, and Meribah,
because of the chiding of the children of Israel, and because
they tempted the LORD, saying, Is the LORD among us, or not?
Here is,
I. The strait that the children of Israel were in for want of water;
once before the were in the like distress, and now, a second time,
Exodus 17:1.
They journeyed according to the commandment of the Lord, led by
the pillar of cloud and fire, and yet they came to a place where there
was no water for them to drink. Note, We may be in the way of our duty,
and yet may meet with troubles, which Providence brings us into for the
trial of our faith, and that God may be glorified in our relief.
II. Their discontent and distrust in this strait. It is said
(Exodus 17:3),
They thirsted there for water. If they had no water to drink,
they must needs thirst; but this intimates, not only that they wanted
water and felt the inconvenience of that want, but that their passion
sharpened their appetites and they were violent and impatient in their
desire; their thirst made them outrageous. Natural desires, and those
that are most craving, have need to be kept under the check and control
of religion and reason. See what was the language of this inordinate
desire.
1. They challenged Moses to supply them
(Exodus 17:2):
Give us water, that we may drink, demanding it as a debt, and
strongly suspecting that he was not able to discharge it. Because they
were supplied with bread, they insist upon it that they must be
supplied with water too; and indeed to those that by faith and prayer
live a life of dependence upon God one favour is an earnest of another,
and may be humbly pleaded; but the unthankful and unbelieving have
reason to think that the abuse of former favours is the forfeiture of
further favours: Let not them think that they shall receive any
thing
(James 1:7),
yet they are ready to demand every thing.
2. They quarrelled with him for bringing them out of Egypt, as if,
instead of delivering them, he designed to murder them, than which
nothing could be more base and invidious,
Exodus 17:3.
Many that have not only designed well, but done well, for their
generation, have had their best services thus misconstrued, and their
patience thereby tried, by unthinking unthankful people. To such a
degree their malice against Moses rose that they were almost ready
to stone him,
Exodus 17:4.
Many good works he had shown them; and for which of these would
they stone him?
John 10:32.
Ungoverned passions, provoked by the crossing of unbridled appetites,
sometimes make men guilty of the greatest absurdities, and act like
madmen, that cast firebrands, arrows, and death, among their best
friends.
3. They began to question whether God were with them or not: They
tempted the Lord, saying, "Is the Lord among us or not?
Exodus 17:7.
Is Jehovah among us by that name by which he made himself known to us
in Egypt?" They question his essential presence--whether there was a
God or not; his common providence--whether that God governed the world;
and his special promise--whether he would be as good as his word to
them. This is called their tempting God, which signifies, not
only a distrust of God in general, but a distrust of him after they had
received such proofs of his power and goodness, for the confirmation of
his promise. They do, in effect, suppose that Moses was an impostor,
Aaron a deceiver, the pillar of cloud and fire a mere sham and
illusion, which imposed upon their senses, that long series of miracles
which had rescued them, served them, and fed them, a chain of cheats,
and the promise of Canaan a banter upon them; it was all so, if the
Lord was not among them. Note, It is a great provocation to God for
us to question his presence, providence, or promise, especially for his
Israel to do it, who are so peculiarly bound to trust him.
III. The course that Moses took, when he was thus set upon, and
insulted.
1. He reproved the murmurers
(Exodus 17:2):
Why chide you with me? Observe how mildly he answered them; it
was well that he was a man of extraordinary meekness, else their
tumultuous conduct would have made him lose the possession of himself:
it is folly to answer passion with passion, for that makes bad worse;
but soft answers turn away wrath. He showed them whom their
murmurings reflected upon, and that the reproaches they cast on him
fell on God himself: You tempt the Lord; that is, "By
distrusting his power, you try his patience, and so provoke his wrath."
2. He made his complaint to God
(Exodus 17:4):
Moses cried unto the Lord. This servant came, and showed his
Lord all these things,
Luke 14:21.
When men unjustly censure us and quarrel with us, it will be a great
relief to us to go to God, and by prayer lay the case before him and
leave it with him: if men will not hear us, God will; if their bad
conduct towards us ruffle our spirits, God's consolations will compose
them. Moses begs of God to direct him what he should do, for he was
utterly at a loss; he could not of himself either supply their want or
pacify their tumult; God only could do it. He pleads his own peril:
"They are almost ready to stone me; Lord, if thou hast any
regard to the life of thy poor servant, interpose now."
IV. God's gracious appearance for their relief,
Exodus 17:5,6.
He orders Moses to go on before the people, and venture himself in his
post, though they spoke of stoning him. He must take his rod with him,
not (as God might justly have ordered) to summon some plague or other
to chastise them for their distrust and murmuring, but to fetch water
for their supply. O the wonderful patience and forbearance of God
towards provoking sinners! He loads those with benefits that make him
to serve with their sins, maintains those that are at war with him, and
reaches out the hand of his bounty to those that lift up the heel
against him. Thus he teaches us, if our enemy hunger, to feed him, and
if he thirst, as Israel did now, to give him drink,
Romans 12:20,Mt+5:44,45.
Will he fail those that trust him, when he was so liberal even to those
that tempted him? If God had only shown Moses a fountain of water in
the wilderness, as he did Hagar not far hence
(Genesis 21:19),
that would have been a great favour; but that he might show his power
as well as his pity, and make it a miracle of mercy, he gave them water
out of a rock. He directed Moses whither to go, and appointed him to
take some of the elders of Israel with him, to be witnesses of what was
done, that they might themselves be satisfied, and might satisfy
others, of the certainty of God's presence with them. He promised to
meet him there in the cloud of glory (to encourage him), and ordered
him to smite the rock; Moses obeyed, and immediately water came out of
the rock in great abundance, which ran throughout the camp in streams
and rivers
(Psalms 78:15,16),
and followed them wherever they went in that wilderness: it is called
a fountain of waters,
Psalms 114:8.
God showed the care he took of his people in giving them water when
they wanted it; he showed his power in fetching the water out of a
rock; and he put an honour upon Moses in appointing the water to flow
out upon his smiting the rock. This fair water, that came out of the
rock, is called honey and oil
(Deuteronomy 32:13),
because the people's thirst made it doubly pleasant; coming when they
were in extreme want, it was like honey and oil to them. It is probable
that the people digged canals for the conveyance of it, and pools for
the reception of it, in like manner as, long afterwards, passing
through the valley of Baca, they made it a well,
Psalms 84:6,Nu+21:18.
Let this direct us to live in a dependence,
1. Upon God's providence, even in the greatest straits and
difficulties. God can open fountains for our supply where we least
expect them, waters in the wilderness
(Isaiah 43:20),
because he makes a way in the wilderness,
Exodus 17:19.
Those who, in this wilderness, keep to God's way, may trust him to
provide for them. While we follow the pillar of cloud and fire, surely
goodness and mercy shall follow us, like the water out of the rock.
2. Upon Christ's grace: That rock was Christ,
1 Corinthians 10:4.
The graces and comforts of the Spirit are compared to rivers of
living water,
John 7:38,39,Joh+4:14.
These flow from Christ, who is the rock smitten by the law of Moses,
for he was made under the law. Nothing will supply the needs, and
satisfy the desires, of a soul, but water out of this rock, this
fountain opened. The pleasures of sense are puddle-water; spiritual
delights are rock-water, so pure, so clear, so refreshing--rivers of
pleasure.
V. A new name was, upon this occasion, given to the place, preserving
the remembrance, not of the mercy of their supply (the water that
followed them was sufficient to do that), but of the sin of their
murmuring--Massah, temptation, because they tempted God;
Meribah, strife, because they chid with Moses,
Exodus 17:7.
There was thus a remembrance kept of sin, both for the disgrace of the
sinners themselves (sin leaves a blot upon the name) and for warning to
their seed to take heed of sinning after the similitude of their
transgression.
The Conflict with Amalek; The Defeat of Amalek.
B. C. 1491.
8 Then came Amalek, and fought with Israel in Rephidim.
9 And Moses said unto Joshua, Choose us out men, and go out,
fight with Amalek: to morrow I will stand on the top of the hill
with the rod of God in mine hand.
10 So Joshua did as Moses had said to him, and fought with
Amalek: and Moses, Aaron, and Hur went up to the top of the hill.
11 And it came to pass, when Moses held up his hand, that
Israel prevailed: and when he let down his hand, Amalek
prevailed.
12 But Moses' hands were heavy; and they took a stone, and
put it under him, and he sat thereon; and Aaron and Hur stayed
up his hands, the one on the one side, and the other on the other
side; and his hands were steady until the going down of the sun.
13 And Joshua discomfited Amalek and his people with the edge
of the sword.
14 And the LORD said unto Moses, Write this for a memorial in
a book, and rehearse it in the ears of Joshua: for I will
utterly put out the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven.
15 And Moses built an altar, and called the name of it
Jehovahnissi:
16 For he said, Because the LORD hath sworn that the LORD
will have war with Amalek from generation to generation.
We have here the story of the war with Amalek, which, we may suppose,
was the first that was recorded in the book of the wars of the
Lord,
Numbers 21:14.
Amalek was the first of the nations that Israel fought with,
Numbers 24:20.
Observe,
I. Amalek's attempt: They came out, and fought with Israel,
Exodus 17:8.
The Amalekites were the posterity of Esau, who hated Jacob because of
the birthright and blessing, and this was an effort of the hereditary
enmity, a malice that ran in the blood, and perhaps was now exasperated
by the working of the promise towards an accomplishment. Consider
this,
1. As Israel's affliction. They had been quarrelling with Moses
(Exodus 17:2),
and now God sends Amalekites to quarrel with them; wars abroad are the
just punishment of strifes and discontents at home.
2. As Amalek's sin; so it is reckoned,
Deuteronomy 25:17,18.
They did not boldly front them as a generous enemy, but without any
provocation given by Israel, or challenge given to them, basely fell
upon their rear, and smote those that were faint and feeble and could
neither make resistance nor escape. Herein they bade defiance to that
power which had so lately ruined the Egyptians; but in vain did they
attack a camp guarded and victualled by miracles: verily they knew not
what they did.
II. Israel's engagement with Amalek, in their own necessary defence
against the aggressors. Observe,
1. The post assigned to Joshua, of whom this is the first mention: he
is nominated commander-in-chief in this expedition, that he might be
trained up to the services he was designed for after the death of
Moses, and be a man of war from his youth. He is ordered to draw
out a detachment of choice men from the thousands of Israel and to
drive back the Amalekites,
Exodus 17:9.
When the Egyptians pursued them Israel must stand still and see what
God would do; but now it was required that they should bestir
themselves. Note, God is to be trusted in the use of means.
2. The post assumed by Moses: I will stand on the top of the hill
with the rod of God in my hand,
Exodus 17:9.
See how God qualifies his people for, and calls them to, various
services for the good of his church: Joshua fights, Moses prays, and
both minister to Israel. Moses went up to the top of the hill, and
placed himself, probably, so as to be seen by Israel; there he held up
the rod of God in his hand, that wonder-working rod which had
summoned the plagues of Egypt, and under which Israel had passed out of
the house of bondage. This rod Moses held up to Israel, to animate
them; the rod was held up as the banner to encourage the soldiers, who
might look up, and say, "Yonder is the rod, and yonder the hand that
used it, when such glorious things were wrought for us." Note, It tends
much to the encouragement of faith to reflect upon the great things God
has done for us, and review the monuments of his favours. Moses also
held up this rod to God, by way of appeal to him: "Is not the battle
the Lord's? Is not he able to help, and engaged to help? Witness this
rod, the voice of which, thus held up, is
(Isaiah 51:9,10),
Put on strength, O arm of the Lord; art not thou it that hath cut
Rahab?" Moses was not only a standard-bearer, but an intercessor,
pleading with God for success and victory. Note, When the host goes
forth against the enemy earnest prayers should be made to the God of
hosts for his presence with them. It is here the praying legion that
proves the thundering legion. There, in Salem, in Sion where prayers
were made, there the victory was won, there broke the arrows of the
bow,
Psalms 76:2,3.
Observe,
(1.) How Moses was tired
(Exodus 17:12):
His hands were heavy. The strongest arm will fail with being
long extended; it is God only whose hand is stretched out still.
We do not find that Joshua's hands were heavy in fighting, but Moses's
hands were heavy in praying. The more spiritual any service is the more
apt we are to fail and flag in it. Praying work, if done with due
intenseness of mind and vigour of affection, will be found hard work,
and, though the spirit be willing, the flesh will be weak. Our
great Intercessor in heaven faints not, nor is he weary, though he
attends continually to this very thing.
(2.) What influence the rod of Moses had upon the battle
(Exodus 17:11):
When Moses held up his hand in prayer (so the Chaldee explains
it) Israel prevailed, but, when he let down his hand from
prayer, Amalek prevailed. To convince Israel that the hand of
Moses (with whom they had just now been chiding) contributed more to
their safety than their own hands, his rod than their sword, the
success rises and falls as Moses lifts up or lets down his hands. It
seems, the scale wavered for some time, before it turned on Israel's
side. Even the best cause must expect disappointments as an alloy to
its successes; though the battle be the Lord's, Amalek may prevail for
a time. The reason was, Moses let down his hands. Note, The church's
cause is, commonly, more or less successful according as the church's
friends are more or less strong in faith and fervent in prayer.
(3.) The care that was taken for the support of Moses. When he could
not stand any longer he sat down, not in a chair of state, but upon a
stone
(Exodus 17:12);
when he could not hold up his hands, he would have them held up. Moses,
the man of God, is glad of the assistance of Aaron his brother, and
Hur, who, some think, was his brother-in-law, the husband of Miriam. We
should not be shy either of asking help from others or giving help to
others, for we are members one of another. Moses's hands, thus stayed,
were steady till the going down of the sun; and, though it was
with much ado that he held out, yet his willing mind was accepted. No
doubt it was a great encouragement to the people to see Joshua before
them in the field of battle and Moses above them upon the top of the
hill: Christ is both to us--our Joshua, the captain of our salvation
who fights our battles, and our Moses, who, in the upper world, ever
lives making intercession, that our faith fail not.
III. The defeat of Amalek. Victory had hovered awhile between the
camps; sometimes Israel prevailed and sometimes Amalek, but Israel
carried the day,
Exodus 17:13.
Though Joshua fought with great disadvantages--his soldiers
undisciplined, ill-armed, long inured to servitude, and apt to murmur;
yet by them God wrought a great salvation, and made Amalek pay dearly
for his insolence. Note, Weapons formed against God's Israel cannot
prosper long, and shall be broken at last. The cause of God and his
Israel will be victorious. Though God gave the victory, yet it is said,
Joshua discomfited Amalek, because Joshua was a type of Christ,
and of the same name, and in him it is that we are more than
conquerors. It was his arm alone that spoiled principalities and
powers, and routed all their force.
IV. The trophies of this victory set up.
1. Moses took care that God should have the glory of it
(Exodus 17:15);
instead of setting up a triumphal arch, to the honour of Joshua (though
it had been a laudable policy to put marks of honour upon him), he
builds an altar to the honour of God, and we may suppose it was not an
altar without sacrifice; but that which is most carefully recorded is
the inscription upon the altar, Jehovah-nissi--The Lord is my
banner, which probably refers to the lifting up of the rod of God
as a banner in this action. The presence and power of Jehovah were the
banner under which they enlisted, by which they were animated and kept
together, and therefore which they erected in the day of their triumph.
In the name of our God we must always lift up our banners,
Psalms 20:5.
It is fit that he who does all the work should have all the praise.
2. God took care that posterity should have the comfort and benefit of
it: "Write this for a memorial, not in loose papers, but in a
book, write it, and then rehearse it in the ears of
Joshua, let him be entrusted with this memorial, to transmit it to
the generations to come." Moses must now begin to keep a diary or
journal of occurrences; it is the first mention of writing that we find
in scripture, and perhaps the command was not given till after the
writing of the law upon the tables of stone: "Write it in perpetuam
rei memoriam--that the event may be had in perpetual remembrance;
that which is written remains."
(1.) "Write what has been done, what Amalek has done against Israel;
write in gall their bitter hatred, write in blood their cruel attempts,
let them never be forgotten, nor yet what God has done for Israel in
saving them from Amalek. Let ages to come know that God fights for his
people, and he that touches them touches the apple of his eye."
(2.) Write what shall be done.
[1.] That in process of time Amalek shall be totally ruined and rooted
out
(Exodus 17:14),
that he shall be remembered only in history." Amalek would have cut off
the name of Israel, that it might be no more in remembrance
(Psalms 83:4,7);
and therefore God not only disappoints him in this, but cuts off his
name. "Write it for the encouragement of Israel, whenever the
Amalekites are an annoyance to them, that Israel will at last
undoubtedly triumph in the fall of Amalek." This sentence was executed
in part by Saul
(1 Samuel 15:1-35),
and completely by David
(1 Samuel 30:1-31,2Sa+1:1,8:12);
after his time we never read so much as of the name of Amalek.
[2.] This is the mean time God would have a continual controversy with
him
(Exodus 17:16):
Because his hand is upon the throne of the Lord, that is,
against the camp of Israel in which the Lord ruled, which was the
place of his sanctuary, and is therefore called a glorious
high throne from the beginning
(Jeremiah 17:12);
therefore the Lord will have war with Amalek from generation to
generation. This was written for direction to Israel never to make
any league with the Amalekites, but to look upon them as irreconcilable
enemies, doomed to ruin. Amalek's destruction was typical of the
destruction of all the enemies of Christ and his kingdom. Whoever
make war with the Lamb, the Lamb will overcome them.
Matthew Henry "Verse by Verse Commentary for 'Exodus' Matthew Henry Bible Commentary".
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