15. Get thee unto Pharaoh--Now began those appalling miracles of
judgment by which the God of Israel, through His ambassadors, proved
His sole and unchallengeable supremacy over all the gods of Egypt, and
which were the natural phenomena of Egypt, at an unusual season, and in
a miraculous degree of intensity. The court of Egypt, whether held at
Rameses, or Memphis, or Tanis in the field of Zoan
(Ps 78:12),
was the scene of those extraordinary transactions, and Moses must have
resided during that terrible period in the immediate neighborhood.
in the morning; lo, he goeth out unto the water--for the purpose
of ablutions or devotions perhaps; for the Nile was an object of
superstitious reverence, the patron deity of the country. It might be
that Moses had been denied admission into the palace; but be that as it
may, the river was to be the subject of the first plague, and
therefore, he was ordered to repair to its banks with the
miracle-working rod, now to be raised, not in demonstration, but in
judgment, if the refractory spirit of the king should still refuse
consent to Israel's departure for their sacred rites.
JFB.
Picture Study Bible