2. stood--not necessarily the posture of standing; rather,
were in attendance on Him [MAURER],
hovering on expanded wings.
the--not in the Hebrew.
seraphim--nowhere else applied to God's attendant angels; but to
the fiery flying (not winged, but rapidly moving) serpents, which
bit the Israelites
(Nu 21:6),
called so from the poisonous inflammation caused by their bites.
Seraph is to burn; implying the burning zeal, dazzling
brightness
(2Ki 2:11; 6:17;
Eze 1:13;
Mt 28:3)
and serpent-like rapidity of the seraphim in God's service.
Perhaps Satan's form as a serpent (nachash) in his
appearance to man has some connection with his original form as a
seraph of light. The head of the serpent was the symbol of
wisdom in Egypt (compare
Nu 21:8;
2Ki 18:4).
The seraphim, with six wings and one face, can hardly be identified
with the cherubim, which had four wings (in the temple only two)
and four faces
(Eze 1:5-12).
(But compare
Re 4:8).
The "face" and "feet" imply a human form; something of a serpentine
form (perhaps a basilisk's head, as in the temples of Thebes) may have
been mixed with it: so the cherub was compounded of various animal
forms. However, seraph may come from a root meaning "princely," applied
in
Da 10:13
to Michael [MAURER]; just as cherub comes from a
root (changing m into b), meaning "noble."
twain--Two wings alone of the six were kept ready for instant flight
in God's service; two veiled their faces as unworthy to look on the holy
God, or pry into His secret counsels which they fulfilled
(Ex 3:6;
Job 4:18; 15:15);
two covered their feet, or rather the whole of the lower parts
of their persons--a practice usual in the presence of Eastern monarchs,
in token of reverence (compare
Eze 1:11,
their bodies). Man's service a fortiori consists in reverent
waiting on, still more than in active service for, God.
JFB.
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