8-18. we passed . . . through the way of the plain--the Arabah or
great valley, from Elath ("trees") (the Ailah of the Greeks and Romans).
The site of it is marked by extensive mounds of rubbish.
Ezion-geber--now Akaba, both were within the territory of Edom; and
after making a circuit of its southeastern boundary, the Israelites
reached the border of Moab on the southeast of the Salt Sea. They had
been forbidden by divine command to molest the Moabites in any way; and
this special honor was conferred on that people not on their own
account, for they were very wicked, but in virtue of their descent from
Lot. (See on
De 23:3).
Their territory comprised the fine country on the south, and partly on
the north of the Arnon. They had won it by their arms from the original
inhabitants, the Emims, a race, terrible, as their name imports, for
physical power and stature
(Ge 14:5),
in like manner as the Edomites had obtained their settlement by the
overthrow of the original occupiers of Seir, the Horims
(Ge 14:6),
who were troglodytes, or dwellers in caves. Moses alluded to these
circumstances to encourage his countrymen to believe that God would
much more enable them to expel the wicked and accursed Canaanites. At
that time, however, the Moabites, having lost the greater part of their
possessions through the usurpations of Sihon, were reduced to the small
but fertile region between the Zered and the Arnon.
JFB.
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