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This is the text and a scan of the actual, original, first printing of the 1611 King James Version, the 'HE' Bible, for Exodus Chapter 5. The KJV does not get more original or authentic than this. View Exodus Chapter 5 as text-only. Click to switch to the standard King James Version of Exodus Chapter 5
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CHAP. V.
1 Pharaoh chideth Moses and Aaron for their message. 5 Hee encreaseth the Israelites taske. 15 Hee checketh their complaints. 19 They cry out vpon Moses and Aaron. 22 Moses complaineth to God.
3 And they said, The God of the Hebrewes hath met with vs: let vs goe, we pray thee, three dayes iourney into the desert, and sacrifice vnto the Lord our God, lest hee fall vpon vs with pestilence, or with the sword.3
6 And Pharaoh commanded the same day the taske-masters of the people, and their officers, saying;
9 Let there more worke be layde vpon the men, that they may labour therein, and let them not regard vaine wordes.9
11 Goe ye, get you straw where you can find it: yet not ought of your worke shall be diminished.
13 And the taske-masters hasted them, saying; Fulfill your workes, your dayly taskes, as when there was straw.13
17 But he said, Ye are idle, ye are idle: therefore ye say, Let vs goe and doe sacrifice to the Lord.
20 ¶ And they met Moses and Aaron, who stood in the way, as they came foorth from Pharaoh.
21 And they said vnto them; The Lord looke vpon you, and iudge, because you haue made our sauour to be abhorred in the eyes of Pharaoh, and in the eyes of his seruants, to put a sword in their hand to slay vs.21
23 For since I came to Pharaoh to speake in thy Name, he hath done euill to this people, neither hast thou deliuered thy people at all.23
View Wesley's Notes for Exodus Chapter 5
5:1 Thus saith the Lord God of Israel, Let my people go - Moses, in treating with the elders of Israel, is directed to call God the God of their fathers; but, in treating with Pharaoh, they call him the God of Israel, and it is the first time we find him called so in scripture. He is called the God of Israel, the person, #Gen 33:20|, but here it is Israel the people. They are just beginning to be formed into a people when God is called their God. Let my people go - They were God's people, and therefore Pharaoh ought not to detain them in bondage. And he expected services and sacrifices from them, and therefore they must have leave to go where they could freely exercise their religion, without giving offence to, or receiving offence from, the Egyptians.
5:2 Who is the Lord that I should obey his voice? - Being summoned to surrender, he thus hangs out the flag of defiance. Who is Jehovah? I neither know him nor care for him; neither value nor fear him. It is a hard name that he never heard of before, but he resolves it shall be no bugbear to him. Israel was now a despised, oppressed people, and by the character they bore he makes his estimate of their God, and concludes that he made no better figure among the gods, than his people did among the nations.
5:3 We pray thee, let us go three days journey into the desert - And that on a good errand, and unexceptionable: we will sacrifice to the Lord our God - As other people do to theirs; lest if we quite cast off his worship, he fall upon us - With one judgment or other, and then Pharaoh will lose his vassals.
5:5 The people are many - Therefore your injury to me is the greater, in attempting to make them rest from their labours.
5:6 The task - masters, were Egyptians, the officers were Israelites employed under them.
5:7 Straw - To mix with the clay, or to burn the brick with.
5:8 They are idle - The cities they built for Pharaoh, were witnesses for them that they were not idle; yet he thus basely misrepresents them, that he might have a pretence to increase their burdens.
5:9 Vain words - Those of Moses and Aaron.
5:14 In thy own people - For if they had given us straw, we should have fulfilled our task.
5:21 The Lord look upon you, and judge - They should have humbled themselves before God, but instead of that they fly in the face of their best friends. Those that are called to public service for God and their generation, must expect to be tried not only by the threats of proud enemies, but by the unjust and unkind censures of unthinking friends. To put a sword in their hand to slay us - To give them the occasion they have long sought for.
5:22 He expostulated with him. He knew not how to reconcile the providence with the promise, and the commission he had received. Is this God's coming down to deliver Israel? Must I who hoped to be a blessing to them become a scourge to them? By this attempt to get them out of the pit, they are but sunk the farther into it. Wherefore hast thou so evil entreated this people - Even when God is coming towards his people in ways of mercy, yet sometimes he takes such methods that they may think themselves but ill - treated: when they think so, they should go to God by prayer, and that is the way to have better treatment in God's good time. Why is it that thou hast sent me - Pharaoh has done evil to this people, and not one step seems to be taken towards their deliverance. It cannot but sit very heavy upon the spirits of those whom God employs for him, to see that their labour doth no good, and much more to see that it doth hurt, eventually, though not designedly.
Exodus Chapter 5 Sidenote References (from Original 1611 KJV Bible):
3 Chap.3. 18.
9 Heb. let the worke be heauy vpon the men.
13 Hebr. a matter of a day in his day.
21 Hebr. to stinke.
23 Heb. deliuering thou hast not deliuered.
* Courtesy of Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of Pennsylvania
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