20 lines
14 KiB
JSON
20 lines
14 KiB
JSON
{"id":470,"verse_id":"EXO.4.1","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":1,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"1","reference":"4.1","text":"In chap. , the first part of this extensive call, Yahweh promises to deliver his people. At the hesitancy of Moses, God guarantees his presence will be with him, and that assures the success of the mission. But with chap. , the second half of the call, the tone changes sharply. Now Moses protests his inadequacies in view of the nature of the task. In many ways, these verses address the question, “Who is sufficient for these things?” There are three basic movements in the passage. The first nine verses tell how God gave Moses signs in case Israel did not believe him ( 4:1-9 ). The second section records how God dealt with the speech problem of Moses ( 4:10-12 ). And finally, the last section records God’s provision of a helper, someone who could talk well ( 4:13-17 ). See also J. E. Hamlin, “The Liberator’s Ordeal: A Study of Exodus 4:1-9 ,” Rhetorical Criticism [PTMS], 33-42.","source_note_position":1,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A1/1"}
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{"id":471,"verse_id":"EXO.4.3","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":3,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"2","reference":"4.3","text":"The details of the verse are designed to show that there was a staff that became a snake . The question is used to affirm that there truly was a staff, and then the report of Moses running from it shows it was a genuine snake. Using the serpent as a sign would have had an impact on the religious ideas of Egypt, for the sacred cobra was one of their symbols.","source_note_position":2,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A3/2"}
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{"id":472,"verse_id":"EXO.4.4","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":4,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"1","reference":"4.4","text":"The signs authenticated Moses’ ministry as the Lord’s emissary. This sign will show that the Lord had control over Egypt and its stability, over life and death. But first Moses has to be convinced that he can turn it into a dead stick again.","source_note_position":1,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A4/1"}
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{"id":473,"verse_id":"EXO.4.6","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":6,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"3","reference":"4.6","text":"This sudden skin disease indicated that God was able to bring such diseases on Egypt in the plagues and that only he could remove them. The whitening was the first stage of death for the diseased ( Num 12:10 ; 2 Kgs 5:27 ). The Hebrew words traditionally rendered “leprous” or “leprosy,” as they are used in Lev 13 and 14 , encompass a variety of conditions, not limited to the disease called leprosy and identified as Hansen’s disease in modern times.","source_note_position":3,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A6/3"}
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{"id":474,"verse_id":"EXO.4.9","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":9,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"4","reference":"4.9","text":"This is a powerful sign, for the Nile was always known as the source of life in Egypt, but now it will become the evidence of death. So the three signs were alike, each consisting of life and death. They would clearly anticipate the struggle with Egypt through the plagues. The point is clear that in the face of the possibility that people might not believe, the servants of God must offer clear proof of the power of God as they deliver the message of God. The rest is up to God.","source_note_position":4,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A9/4"}
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{"id":475,"verse_id":"EXO.4.10","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":10,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"1","reference":"4.10","text":"Now Moses took up another line of argumentation, the issue of his inability to speak fluently (vv. 10-17 ). The point here is that God’s servants must yield themselves as instruments to God, the Creator. It makes no difference what character traits they have or what weaknesses they think they have (Moses manages to speak very well) if God is present. If the sovereign God has chosen them, then they have everything that God intended them to have.","source_note_position":1,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A10/1"}
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{"id":476,"verse_id":"EXO.4.11","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":11,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"2","reference":"4.11","text":"The final question obviously demands a positive answer. But the clause is worded in such a way as to return to the theme of “I AM.” Isaiah 45:5-7 developed this same idea of God’s control over life. Moses protests that he is not an eloquent speaker, and the Lord replies with reminders about himself and promises, “I will be with your mouth,” an assertion that repeats the verb he used four times in 3:12 and 14 and in promises to Isaac and Jacob ( Gen 26:3; 31:3 ).","source_note_position":2,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A11/2"}
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{"id":477,"verse_id":"EXO.4.12","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":12,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"1","reference":"4.12","text":"The promise of divine presence always indicates intervention (for blessing or cursing). Here it means that God would be working through the organs of speech to help Moses speak. See Deut 18:18 ; Jer 1:9 .","source_note_position":1,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A12/1"}
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{"id":478,"verse_id":"EXO.4.12","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":12,"note_index":2,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"2","reference":"4.12","text":"The verb is וְהוֹרֵיתִיךָ ( vÿhoretikha ), the Hiphil perfect with a vav ( ו ) consecutive. The form carries the instructional meaning because it follows the imperative “go.” In fact, there is a sequence at work here: “go…and/that I may teach you.” It is from יָרָה ( yara ), the same root behind תּוֹרָה ( torah , “law”). This always referred to teaching either wisdom or revelation. Here Yahweh promises to teach Moses what to say.","source_note_position":2,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A12/2"}
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{"id":479,"verse_id":"EXO.4.14","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":14,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"3","reference":"4.14","text":"S. R. Driver ( Exodus , 29) suggests that the term “Levite” may refer to a profession rather than ancestry here, because both Moses and Aaron were from the tribe of Levi and there would be little point in noting that ancestry for Aaron. In thinking through the difficult problem of the identity of Levites, he cites McNeile as saying “the Levite” referred to one who had had official training as a priest (cf. Judg 17:7 , where a member of the tribe of Judah was a Levite). If it was the duty of the priest to give “torah” – to teach – then some training in the power of language would have been in order.","source_note_position":3,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A14/3"}
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{"id":480,"verse_id":"EXO.4.14","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":14,"note_index":2,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"6","reference":"4.14","text":"It is unlikely that this simply means that as a brother he will be pleased to see Moses, for the narrative has no time for that kind of comment. It is interested in more significant things. The implication is that Aaron will rejoice because of the revelation of God to Moses and the plan to deliver Israel from bondage (see B. Jacob, Exodus , 93).","source_note_position":6,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A14/6"}
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{"id":481,"verse_id":"EXO.4.17","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":17,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"1","reference":"4.17","text":"Mention of the staff makes an appropriate ending to the section, for God’s power (represented by the staff) will work through Moses. The applicable point that this whole section is making could be worded this way: The servants of God who sense their inadequacy must demonstrate the power of God as their sufficiency.","source_note_position":1,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A17/1"}
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{"id":482,"verse_id":"EXO.4.18","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":18,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"1","reference":"4.18","text":"This last section of the chapter reports Moses’ compliance with the commission. It has four parts: the decision to return (18-20), the instruction (21-23), the confrontation with Yahweh (24-26), and the presentation with Aaron (27-31).","source_note_position":1,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A18/1"}
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{"id":483,"verse_id":"EXO.4.19","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":19,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"2","reference":"4.19","text":"The text clearly stated that Pharaoh sought to kill Moses; so this seems to be a reference to Pharaoh’s death shortly before Moses’ return. Moses was forty years in Midian. In the 18th dynasty, only Pharaoh Thutmose III had a reign of the right length (1504-1450 b.c. ) to fit this period of Moses’ life. This would place Moses’ returning to Egypt near 1450 b.c., in the beginning of the reign of Amenhotep II, whom most conservatives identify as the pharaoh of the exodus. Rameses II, of course, had a very long reign (1304-1236). But if he were the one from whom Moses fled, then he could not be the pharaoh of the exodus, but his son would be – and that puts the date of the exodus after 1236, a date too late for anyone. See E. H. Merrill, Kingdom of Priests , 62.","source_note_position":2,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A19/2"}
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{"id":484,"verse_id":"EXO.4.20","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":20,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"2","reference":"4.20","text":"Only Gershom has been mentioned so far. The other son’s name will be explained in chapter . The explanation of Gershom’s name was important to Moses’ sojourn in Midian. The explanation of the name Eliezer fits better in the later chapter ( 18:2-4 ).","source_note_position":2,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A20/2"}
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{"id":485,"verse_id":"EXO.4.21","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":21,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"6","reference":"4.21","text":"Here is the first mention of the hardening of the heart of Pharaoh. God first tells Moses he must do the miracles, but he also announces that he will harden Pharaoh’s heart, as if working against Moses. It will help Moses to know that God is bringing about the resistance in order to bring a greater victory with greater glory. There is a great deal of literature on this, but see among the resources F. W. Danker, “Hardness of Heart: A Study in Biblical Thematic,” CTM 44 (1973): 89-100; R. R. Wilson, “The Hardening of Pharaoh’s Heart,” CBQ 41 (1979): 18-36; and R. B. Chisholm Jr., “Divine Hardening in the Old Testament,” BSac 153 (1996): 410-34.","source_note_position":6,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A21/6"}
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{"id":486,"verse_id":"EXO.4.24","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":24,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"2","reference":"4.24","text":"The next section (vv. 24-26 ) records a rather strange story. God had said that if Pharaoh would not comply he would kill his son – but now God was ready to kill Moses, the representative of Israel, God’s own son. Apparently, one would reconstruct that on the journey Moses fell seriously ill, but his wife, learning the cause of the illness, saved his life by circumcising her son and casting the foreskin at Moses’ feet (indicating that it was symbolically Moses’ foreskin). The point is that this son of Abraham had not complied with the sign of the Abrahamic covenant. No one, according to Exod 12:40-51 , would take part in the Passover-exodus who had not complied. So how could the one who was going to lead God’s people not comply? The bold anthropomorphisms and the location at the border invite comparisons with , the Angel wrestling with Jacob. In both cases there is a brush with death that could not be forgotten. See also, W. Dumbrell, “ Exodus 4:24-25 : A Textual Re-examination,” HTR 65 (1972): 285-90; T. C. Butler, “An Anti-Moses Tradition,” JSOT 12 (1979): 9-15; and L. Kaplan, “And the Lord Sought to Kill Him,” HAR 5 (1981): 65-74.","source_note_position":2,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A24/2"}
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{"id":487,"verse_id":"EXO.4.25","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":25,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"2","reference":"4.25","text":"U. Cassuto explains that she was saying, “I have delivered you from death, and your return to life makes you my bridegroom a second time, this time my blood bridegroom, a bridegroom acquired through blood” ( Exodus , 60-61).","source_note_position":2,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A25/2"}
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{"id":488,"verse_id":"EXO.4.29","translation_id":"net-engnet","book_id":"EXO","chapter":4,"verse":29,"note_index":1,"note_type":"study_note","label":"NET study note","caller":"1","reference":"4.29","text":"These are the leaders of the tribes who represented all the people. Later, after the exodus, Moses will select the most capable of them and others to be rulers in a judicial sense ( Exod 18:21 ).","source_note_position":1,"source_url":"https://netbible.org/resource/netNote/Exodus%204%3A29/1"}
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