40-45. they rose up early in the morning, and gat them up into the top
of the mountain--Notwithstanding the tidings that Moses communicated
and which diffused a general feeling of melancholy and grief throughout
the camp, the impression was of very brief continuance. They rushed
from one extreme of rashness and perversity to another, and the
obstinacy of their rebellious spirit was evinced by their active
preparations to ascend the hill, notwithstanding the divine warning
they had received not to undertake that enterprise.
for we have sinned--that is, realizing our sin, we now repent of it,
and are eager to do as Caleb and Joshua exhorted us--or, as some render
it, though we have sinned, we trust God will yet give us the land of
promise. The entreaties of their prudent and pious leader, who
represented to them that their enemies, scaling the other side of the
valley, would post themselves on the top of the hill before them, were
disregarded. How strangely perverse the conduct of the Israelites, who,
shortly before, were afraid that, though their Almighty King was with
them, they could not get possession of the land; and yet now they act
still more foolishly in supposing that, though God were not with them,
they could expel the inhabitants by their unaided efforts. The
consequences were such as might have been anticipated. The Amalekites
and Canaanites, who had been lying in ambuscade expecting their
movement, rushed down upon them from the heights and became the
instruments of punishing their guilty rebellion.
JFB.
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